The Americanization Of Frank Wu
By James
Fulford
Frank Wu, the first Asian
law professor at Howard University (Howard is an
“historically black” college, de facto exempt
from Justice Department diversity scrutiny) recently
published an article in the Chronicle of Higher
Education called
The Invisibility of Asian-American Scholars
(link requires subscription). In it, Wu claimed that “There
are no Asian-American public intellectuals.” and
lamented that Asian-Americans have yet to develop a
Commentary magazine, or produce a
Norman Podhoretz.
Hmmm. What about Francis
Fukuyama, [Click
here for his review of
Alien Nation]
who has been enormously influential? Or Dinesh
D’Souza - given that India is part of Asia?
[Click
here for
Peter Brimelow’s review of D’Souza’s
The End Of Racism.]
Wu knew you’d say that. He
insists they don’t count:
Two exceptions worth
noting are Francis Fukuyama and Dinesh D'Souza. The
former is of Japanese heritage; the latter, Indian
origins. While both have to their credit best sellers
that require serious attention, neither dissents from
prevailing norms and, thus, fulfills the critical
function of the public intellectual. To the contrary,
Fukuyama celebrates the triumph of Western liberal
democracy, and D'Souza is known for his attacks on
academic culture and
black culture. It would be wrong to impose any
ideological test on who constitutes a public
intellectual, for members of the species populate the
liberal-conservative spectrum and defy the idea of such
classification. Still, Fukuyama and D'Souza are unlike
their African-American and Jewish counterparts. Even the
formerly progressive and now reactionary
African-American and Jewish theorists who have mass
appeal, no different from those who remained radicals,
articulate or at least allude occasionally to their
status or others' stereotypes of them. In contrast, it
is unclear whether either Fukuyama or D'Souza would
consent to being called "Asian-American." They exemplify
what they seem to foresee Asian-Americans essentially
vanishing into honorary whiteness.
This “honorary whiteness” that Wu
refers to is, of course, what
others would call “becoming an American.”
Curiously, Wu’s insistence that a
“public intellectual” should dissent from prevailing
norms apparently doesn’t apply to everyone. Peter
Brimelow’s dissent on immigration comes in for a shellacking in
Wu’s book
Yellow: Race in America Beyond Black and White,
which argues for
affirmative action, against
racial profiling, and against any form of
immigration restriction whatsoever, especially if it
favors WASPs.
Edward Countryman’s [send him
mail] Washington Post
review of
Yellow applauded Wu’s attack on Peter Brimelow:
Wu
understands that Brimelow's insistence that "the
American nation has always had a specific ethnic core
[and] that core is white" is not new. Madison Grant made
effectively the same point (about "Nordics," "Alpines"
and "Mediterraneans") in his 1921 book
The Passing of the Great Race,
which went on to influence Nazi thinking. Wu understands
that this appeal to the American nation's fixed
Caucasian "core" is both historically incorrect and
culturally pernicious. America began not with Europeans
and an empty continent but rather with the meeting and
mingling of Europeans, Africans and native people.
Brimelow’s point may be pernicious, but it is
nevertheless historically correct, as he recently
demonstrated
in exposing Jonah Goldberg’s characteristic acceptance
of this characteristic liberal myth. America began with
“meeting and mingling” only in the sense that the
“meeting and mingling” of one horse and one chicken can
be said to result in a half-horse, half-chicken stew.
VDARE.COM’s readers will notice
that Wu gets everything exactly backward. His
perspective lets him see things that others don’t. (Did
you know that when Gore Vidal attacked Norman Podhoretz
and Midge Decter, he also attacked Asians?) But it also
lets him see things that aren’t there at all. In ’96, he
was
arguing that aliens at the border should have the
same constitutional rights as Americans. He seems
astonished that Brimelow thinks that Englishmen,
Australians, and Canadians would assimilate better than
Asians or Pat Buchanan’s famous “million Zulus,”
although the evidence is very clear in the
welfare participation rates of different immigrant
groups. In a way, Wu’s obsession with racial grievances
is a symbol of his assimilation to modern American
culture. Most actual Asians don’t seem to care.
Equally all-American is Wu’s idea
that the U.S. should have open immigration with no
national origin restrictions. No country in Asia
allows it. In Alien Nation, Peter Brimelow
reported the responses of the Chinese, Taiwanese,
Indian, and Filipino embassies, when asked if an
American could immigrate to their country:
China: “China does not accept any immigrants. We
have a large enough population.”
Taiwan: You need Taiwanese relatives by blood or
marriage.
India:
“Are you of Indian origin?”
By Indian origin, the Indians mean
Indian descent - an outright racial
classification.
Every country in Asia has policies
like that. If America were to adopt Asian-style
immigration policies, perhaps as a result of the
influence of Asian-American public intellectuals, I
don’t think the Americanized Professor Wu would
appreciate it.
June 12, 2002 |