LETTER: An Indian Immigrant Comments on
Libertarianism and Immigration...
Letter from a Libertarian…
By Randall
Parker
Dear Mr. Brimelow: When your book
about immigration originally came out, I did not
pay much attention to the ensuing debate. The
immigration issue just didn't seem that important. As,
basically, a libertarian, I thought the free movement
of labor ought to be up there with the free movement
of capital.
However, this election and the
rather sordid spectacle of Democrats preaching about
the mystical "Will Of The People" spurred me
to go back and read Madison's Federalist
Paper No. 10, in which he warned about the dangers
of the tyranny of the majority. Then shortly
thereafter I happened across a link to a Steve Sailer
article and hence to his web
site and then to VDARE. Well, I came to your
articles about immigration with the right mindset this
time: Migratory laborers are not just a set of
economic actors in a perfect free market. Those
laborers become political actors where they move to as
well.
The problem with the libertarian
argument is that the libertarians ignore the need for
a citizenry that is sufficiently trained and cultured
to respect and understand the rights of others. The
libertarians argue that laborers should be able to
move anywhere and offer their services. That sounds
nice in theory. But then how will each area that the
laborers move to be governed?
If you create a system of law and liberty in a
country, and then everyone comes and votes in a
welfare state, what have you gained?
The number of people in the US
who understand the Lockean conception of liberty is
too few. Well, immigrants from most parts of the world
are diluting those numbers even further.
Here is where you need to direct
your thrusts. You need to get someone like Jacob
Sullum at Reason
Magazine to engage on the topic of how governments
should be chosen, and then to address the issue of how
a group of people who embrace the idea of limited
government based on law can hope to protect it if
large numbers of people ignorant or hostile to this
idea can move in and vote. You need to turn some of
the libertarians. You've turned my thinking so I can
attest that this is possible to do.
Here's a hypothetical for
consideration: Imagine that a change to immigration
law is enacted that allows totally free immigration to
the US. In a few years it is possible that a few
hundred million Muslims could immigrate. This does not
seem impossible by any means as the amount of poverty
in Muslim lands is considerable and hence the
incentive to move to a place with higher salaries is
strong. The first to immigrate can get jobs that will
allow them to save the money for the fare of still
others to come. Then suppose after several years here
all the Muslim immigrants get citizenship and vote for
candidates that will institute Sharia Law. Then the
government they elect decides to pack the Supreme
Court with Mullahs and said Supreme Court decides that
any speech that is blasphemous should be punishable by
death (see Salman Rushdie's problem). It would be
naive to argue that Muslim conceptions of the proper
functions of government are compatible with the
Lockean view.
Similar hypotheticals can easily
be imagined that would involve the mass immigration of
other poor peoples whose number would come to exceed
the number of current residents of the US. So, to take
another example, the US could suddenly find itself
with such a large mainland
Chinese population that elected officials who
would vote to force Taiwan to surrender to the
mainland and simultaneously transfer large amounts of
weapons technology to the Chinese government.
One needs to push a principle to
its logical conclusion to test it. The thinkers of the
English and Scottish Enlightenment were empirical in
their approach to political philosophy. Any
libertarian who claims to be an heir to this tradition
needs to demonstrate how a particular libertarian
principle can be treated as an absolute that can work
when put into practice.
When a particular principle
(unlimited free immigration) can be argued to be
capable of causing irreparable damage to the cause of
liberty, then the onus is on the advocates of
immigration to show that their proposed policy will
not cause more damage than benefit.
The biggest problem with
immigration that needs to be addressed is not
economic. It is political. How can a country stay free
when it accepts a large number of immigrants who come
to it for economic reasons - while those immigrants do
not understand or accept the political principles that
allow a system of liberty to be practiced?
Peter
Brimelow replies: This nice letter is further evidence
that people quite often do change
their minds
on immigration, once exposed to facts and logic. I
don’t think this will include anyone at Reason
Magazine however! – even my esteemed former National
Review colleague Jacob Sullum. Doesn’t matter,
though, because there’s an alternative
paleolibertarian tradition, grouped around http://www.lewrockwell.com/
and the Von Mises
Institute, that actually does take account of the
cultural metamarket.
more
on libertarians and immigration
February 07, 2001