America Disintegrates
By Sam
Francis
While
Time magazine’s cover
story this week gurgled cheerfully over the happy
“whole new world” it spies in the disappearance of
the U.S. border with Mexico, a more sober article in
the June issue of American
Demographics analyzes the new borders that are
sprouting up—inside what used to be the United
States.
The second article, by veteran
demographer William
Frey, looks at the findings of the recent census
and discovers that while some parts of the country
really are “melting”—that is, becoming more
ethnically “diverse” due to massive non-white
immigration and higher non-white birth rates—other
parts aren’t. While Dr. Frey, one of the country’s
leading population and immigration experts, doesn’t
quite say it, what his findings mean is that the
United States, so far from remaining united, is facing
serious regional, racial and cultural polarization.
“America’s racial and ethnic
patterns have taken on distinctly regional
dimensions,” Dr. Frey writes. While “Hispanics
dominate large portions of counties in a span of
states stretching from California to Texas” and
“Blacks are strongly represented in counties of the
South as well as selected urban areas in the Northeast
and Midwest,” “the minority presence” in much of
the interior of the country “is still quite
limited.”
“The most notable aspect of
this map [showing the new national ethnic
distribution] is the broad stretch of counties from
the upper West and Rocky Mountains to the Midwest and
Northeast that are mostly white, and where none of the
minority groups come close to approximating their
national averages.” Looking at Dr. Frey’s map, you
can see that what constitutes the central geographical
core of the United States in Wyoming, Colorado,
Nebraska, Kansas, Missouri and Iowa—with outliers in
Minnesota, Idaho, and Texas—remains overwhelmingly
white.
The “overall gains” of
Hispanics in the past decade “are heavily
concentrated in the core counties of immigrant metro
areas, and in the West and Southwestern U.S. Just 100
of these core counties accounted for more than 70
percent of all the nation’s Hispanic gains during
the decade.”
Though Dr. Frey doesn’t
mention it in this article, one reason for the
persistence of the white center is that whites are and
have been leaving the peripheral parts of the country
to which non-white immigrants are flocking. Writing in
The New York Times Magazine in 1995, Dr. Frey and
co-author Jonathan Tilove noted, “For every
immigrant who arrives [in large metropolitan areas], a
white person leaves. Look collectively at the New
York, Chicago, Los Angeles, Houston and Boston
metropolitan areas--5 of the top immigration
destinations. In the last half of the 80’s, for
every 10 immigrants who arrived, 9 residents left for
points elsewhere. And most of those leaving were
non-Hispanic whites.” (1)
As they also pointed out, what
is known as “white flight” originally occurred
when whites left urban neighborhoods for the suburbs.
Now it occurs when whites leave entire states. The
Third World migration flood isn’t the only important
population movement of our time; another is the First
World flight away from the Third World flood.
The myth of the “melting
pot” holds that as aliens enter American
society, they “melt” or assimilate into a larger,
homogeneous, national porridge. Maybe that happened in
the country’s past,
but Dr. Frey’s article shows it’s not happening
now.
What’s happening now is that
the historic white population of the United States is
voting with its feet and surrendering the periphery of
the nation to non-white immigrants and native blacks.
Not only does that contradict the treasured melting
pot mythology but also it points to major conflicts in
the future between the unmelted ethnic and racial
lumps.
The racial breakdown of voting
behavior became obvious enough this last election,
with the Democrats sweeping blacks
and Hispanics
into their pockets and the Republicans winning a smaller
majority of whites. Once the whites and non-whites
have divvied up the nation between them, as Dr.
Frey’s map shows is happening, the political
polarization of the two regions—the coastal and
border areas vs. the interior—will follow. So will
the cultural polarization, as the values, manners,
tastes and beliefs of the different regions also pull
apart. The polarization also has major economic
implications, as corporate marketeers try to surf
their products and services through different cultural
waves.
The polarization by race,
culture, politics, and region may or may not lead to
the much-ballyhooed second civil war or the actual Balkanization
of the nation into separate political and territorial
units, but it will certainly mean that America will be
less of a nation, enjoy less of a common way of life
and become less than it once was and could have been
had not our short-sighted and selfish
ruling class insisted on permitting mass immigration.
COPYRIGHT 2001 CREATORS
SYNDICATE, INC.
(1) Frey,
William H. and Jonathan Tilove, "Immigrants In,
Native Whites Out," The New York Times
Magazine,
August 20, 1995
June
07, 2001