A Reader Sees Three Signs of Intelligence...
It's Past Time to Curb
Immigration…
By Froma Harrop
AMERICANS
WHO SAY "I hate sprawl, I hate congestion, I hate
long commutes and I hate polluted drinking water"
cannot be encouraged by the latest Census Bureau
numbers. With population growth showing its biggest
jump in three decades, Americans can expect to suffer
more of the above.
The American population grew more than 13 percent in
the last 10 years, to 281 million. Indeed, there are 6
million more people than the bureau's demographers
estimated there were three months ago.
The signs are everywhere. California's population is
now growing faster than India's. There's already
California-style traffic gridlock in Austin, Seattle,
Boston, Denver and numerous other cities.
Here in the crowded Northeast, developments continue
to gobble up farmlands and forests. New Jersey, the
most densely populated state, expects another million
inhabitants in the next 20 years. Where in the world
are they going to go?
American environmentalists know full well that
population growth is a serious threat to our ecology.
But only a handful has worked up the courage to speak
out. That's because stabilizing the population will
require a cut in the immigration numbers. Immigration
is a contentious issue.
The statistics, however, cannot be ignored. America's
"resident population" has been growing very
slowly for the past 20 years. The rise in immigration
and the high birth rates among recent immigrants are
responsible for nearly all the growth.
If our population continues expanding on the present
path, it will double in the next 70 years. Did you
hear that? Today's babies will be retiring in an
America with over half a billion people.
The Sierra Club has been hiding from the issue for
quite some time. In 1998, a group called Sierrans for
U.S. Population Stabilization put forth a club
initiative to address the matter. It called for a
comprehensive policy on population growth that would
include a frank discussion of immigration.
The Sierra Club leadership fiercely opposed the
initiative and created a confusing ballot.
Nevertheless, 40 percent of the membership voted in
favor of it.
Since then, stark reality has forced the Sierra Club
to ease up on its stance. In 1970, the club set a goal
to stabilize the U.S. population by the year 1990 --
obviously a dismal failure. The club now recently
began to advocate an actual reduction in population,
without publicizing the change.
For 30 years, the League of Conservation Voters has
rated members of Congress for their environmental
record. In giving out scores, the LCV considers votes
on such matters as public lands, pollution, energy
issues and consumption. Population growth, however, is
off the radar with one strange exception. The LCV
score card considers votes on family planning programs
in Africa.
Instead of worrying about population, many
environmentalists argue, why not concentrate instead
on reducing American consumption? Well, good luck to
them. Others want to go the "smart growth"
route of directing population growth in healthy ways.
These efforts are highly worthwhile, but how much good
can they do in the face of a doubling population?
Alan Kuper, retired engineering professor at Case
Western Reserve University, has been trying to drag
population issues onto the environmental agenda. He
was the one who founded Sierrans for U.S. Population
Stabilization. On his Web
site,
Kuper has devised his own congressional scoring
system, which includes votes on issues related to
population.
Kuper, a self-styled liberal, understands the
environmental movement's reluctance to get involved in
population, and therefore, immigration issues.
"For many environmentalists concerned about
ancient trees in the Northwest or free-flowing
streams, they know in their bones the population
connection," Kuper says. "But population is
untidy. It involves the emotions surrounding
immigration."
Calls by environmentalists to reduce immigration will
surely make them some enemies. The pro-immigration
forces comprise an odd mix of social liberals and
cheap-labor conservatives. Liberals will try to cut
the conversation short by calling them xenophobes.
Conservatives will accuse them of being anti-growth.
Environmentalists should know that stabilizing the
population does not require a ban on immigration. Had
immigration been reduced in 1970 to more traditional
levels, the U.S. population would stabilize at 230
million in 2050.
Whatever. If environmentalists don't get involved in
the numbers issue, then their other efforts will be
futile. It's time for them to bite the bullet and
speak out.
Froma Harrop is a syndicated columnist and Journal
editorial writer. She may be reached by e-mail at: fharrop@projo.com.
January 15, 2001