[Peter
Brimelow’s response to this extraordinary personal
attack is referred to in Chilton Williamson's
Miller Watch (1).
Meanwhile, we can’t resist sharing VDARE.COM annotations
by
James Fulford]
REMEMBER the immigration debate of the ‘90s?
[For Sam Francis’ definitive
answer to this silly question,
click here]
Just a few years ago, immigration was a major issue in
national politics. No longer.
[Of course, this was written
before 9/11, but it was still strikingly superficial].
Back then, Congress was on the verge of cutting
immigration levels. Now it's considering raising them.
In the polls, public support for reductions in legal
immigration has dropped 20 points from its mid-'90s
peak. Republicans in California, who once thought they
could make big gains by appealing to anti-immigration
sentiment, now blame their efforts to do so for
destroying the state party. Nationally, Republicans take
every opportunity to say how good immigration has been
for America.
What
happened? My colleague John J. Miller wrote an
article for Reason two years ago that listed
several reasons for the shift: the tendency of public
support for immigration to wax and wane with the
economy; the development in Washington of a savvy
pro-immigration lobby linking business and ethnic
groups; and the widespread belief among Republicans that
an anti-immigrant image hurt them badly among Hispanic
and
Asian voters.
[Most of whom weren't going to vote Republican anyhow,
and many of whom don't vote at all. See below.]
Miller's article was persuasive on each point.
[See what Chilton Williamson
meant about
mutual admiration?]
But he did not linger on the question whether the
restrictionists could have done a better job making
their case—and for those of us who find that case
compelling, it is an important question. The
anti-immigration movement of the '90s raised serious
issues, especially about the way continued mass
immigration contributes to the balkanization of America,
that had been too long ignored. Anxiety about those
issues is bound to find political expression again in
years to come. If restrictionists draw the right lessons
from their failure last time, it may help them to
prevail then.
TACTICAL ERRORS
The
first tactical mistake was to insist on a moratorium on
immigration, as leading critics of the status quo such
as National Review and Patrick Buchanan did. The
appeal of a moratorium was understandable. America had
blundered into its current immigration policy rather
than deliberately chosen it; a cutoff would let us
design a rational policy from scratch. Simply proposing
a moratorium forced a debate on the costs and benefits
of continuing the existing policy, Restrictionists hoped
that it would produce a compromise in which immigration
was cut.
It
didn't quite work out that way. The demand for a
moratorium obscured the true position of the
restrictionists. It made it seem as though they opposed
all immigration, when in the main they wanted less
immigration or different criteria for immigration or
both. Proposing to end all
[Actually, not all. A moratorium means no net
immigration. Gross immigration could be as high as
2-300,000. This is one of a number of signs that Ponnuru
has not grasped the basic reform argument]
immigration, even temporarily (A qualification that was
usually, and predictably,
[Predictably in this case
means that we're giving a "handle" to the left, who will
call us racists. But they will anyway.]
ignored), also raised the emotional temperature of the
debate on both sides.
The
moratorium may have excited anti-immigration voters more
than a proposal to halve immigration levels would have.
But it also struck many voters as a sign of blanket
hostility to immigrants—which was unwise in a country
where 14 percent of adult citizens are either immigrants
themselves or the children of immigrants.
[How did that happen?
See Alien Nation for the answer.]
The exit polls from the Republican presidential
primaries in 1996 told the tale: In places where few
immigrants lived, the issue favored Buchanan but was not
important; [There are
fewer places
where few immigrants live, but they are the GOP
heartland. However, the truth is that Buchanan barely
mentioned immigration, focusing instead on trade. And
his real problem was that he was demonized, not least by
National Review, for being
"out of the mainstream."
The immigration issue could do a lot of good for
Republicans - if the leadership would get behind it. Cf
the tax cut issue, now a GOP mantra but regarded as
impossibly radical in the 1970 – which Ponnuru is too
young to remember] where there were more
immigrants, the issue had greater power but, on balance,
hurt him. Where immigrants were an issue, they were also
a constituency.
[They may be rioting in the streets of Los Angeles, but
elected officials are unwilling to do anything to offend
those of them who vote.]
The
restrictionists might have succeeded had they staked out
a position that was anti-immigration (or at least
against constantly high levels of immigration) but
pro-immigrant. Had they done so, they would have
really pressed the argument that reducing immigration
levels would encourage the assimilation of those let in
and thus serve the long-term interests of immigrants
themselves. Restrictionists did, in fact, make that
argument. But it was drowned out by less palatable ones.
The moratorium was one reason for this. Another was the
kitchen-sink quality of the prevailing critique:
Immigrants were damned for stealing American jobs, and
also for going on welfare.
[Maybe it’s the "kitchen-sink" quality of the
problem. Some immigrants are working, some are on
welfare, and some are doing both. Think about it.]
Which
brings us to California's Proposition 187. That ballot
initiative was, in retrospect, the high-water mark of
the restrictionist campaign. But it was a
Pyrrhic victory. Proposition 187 was an attempt to
end government benefits, such as welfare and public
education, for illegal immigrants. The distinction
between legal and illegal immigrants was a distraction:
It didn't matter in terms either of the restrictionists'
ultimate goals or public opinion. As Mark Krikorian,
executive director of the restrictionist-leaning
Center for Immigration Studies,
puts it, "There's a perception by a lot of folks that
immigration I like must be legal immigration and
immigration I dislike must be illegal immigration."
The
emphasis on government benefits, meanwhile, might in
theory have provided common ground between
pro-immigration and anti-immigration conservatives,
although many pro-immigration conservatives opposed 187
because of its spirit.
[It's the wrong spirit to stop taxing Americans to pay
for illegal immigrants? The welfare magnet in California
is actually
bad for Mexico,
anyway.]
But nothing could have been calculated to alienate
Hispanics more than the perceived suggestion that they
were welfare chiselers when, as their labor-force-participation
rates suggest, they have a strong work ethic. The
campaign for the initiative, especially the infamous,
they-keep-coming ad [We
wish people wouldn't say
"infamous" when
they mean "complained of by the Establishment media."
And they do keep coming, and coming, and coming, like
the Energizer Bunny. And finally – how many times do we
have to say this – PETE WILSON WON!]
featuring grainy footage of Mexicans crossing the
border, didn't help.
The
libertarian compromise—immigration sí, welfare no, as
Tom Bethell put it in The American Spectator—was
also reflected in the welfare-reform bill Congress
passed in 1996. Half of the savings it projected came
from benefit cuts for legal, unnaturalized immigrants.
The cuts, again, made the Republicans appear to be
anti-immigrant even as they remained objectively
pro-immigration. (They also put restrictionists in the
curious position of telling immigrants to naturalize in
order to get welfare.)
[Ponnuru's talk about benefit cuts to legal immigrants
is about the law that an immigrant is not supposed to be
a "public
charge." This has
always been the law; the "mean-spirited" among us were
suggesting that it might be enforced. But yes, "welfare
rights" do only come with citizenship, so that people
who wish to have the rights without the obligations of
citizenship would be left out.]
That anti-immigrant reputation was reinforced by
Congress’s decision to toughen deportation laws but also
to make the new laws retroactive.
[The Illegal Immigration
Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act (IIRIRA) didn't
make punishment retroactive. It changed the criteria for
allowing foreign criminals to stay in the country.
Ponnuru is taking the same position as the
immigration lawyers:
that it's unfair to deport thieves and fraud artists,
when at the time of their crime, they could
expect to be permitted to stay in the US after serving
their sentence. But this is a privilege, not a right.
Americans have the right to change it any time.]
A political backlash caused the quick reversal of most
of those policies, but the damage to the Republicans was
done.
[Some of this damage is only visible to the
intelligentsia, other damage is caused by demographic
changes in the voting population; see "Swept
Away"
for the latest figures, unpublished, needless to say, by
the post-purge NR.]
A
pro-immigrant, anti-immigration position would arguably
have been both more humane and more politically
sustainable than the position Republicans, influenced by
a misguided restrictionist movement, actually took. But
that position was made impossible by an even deeper, and
more morally serious, mistake of the movement: its
racialization of the issue.
THAT OLD BUGABOO, RACE
Peter Brimelow, formerly
[i.e.
until purged
when Buckley decided to toe the new GOP line]
a
senior editor of NR, was the chief intellectual
force behind the restrictionist movement of the 1990s.
In a 1992
cover story for the magazine, his 1995 book
Alien Nation, and
subsequent NR articles, Brimelow bravely and
wittily challenged the elite pro-immigration consensus
and the taboos that sustained it. In so doing, he opened
a debate that had been artificially closed for too long.
But for all his impressive polemical talents, he opened
the debate on terms that almost guaranteed the
restrictionists' failure.
In
Alien Nation, Brimelow repeatedly declared that mass
immigration is a threat to the commonweal because it
alters the country's racial composition. But he never
made a cogent argument why the country's racial balance,
as opposed to its culture or cultural cohesion, is worth
preserving. Nor did he argue that a culture can be
preserved in its essentials only through racial stasis.
Instead, he said that this thesis was a matter of
"common sense" that only the blinkered politically
correct would deny, supplementing this obscurantism with
frequent cryptic remarks about race being "destiny in
American politics."
[Is race destiny? On an individual basis, no. But when
92 percent of blacks vote Democrat, then more black
people mean more Democrats absolutely. The same is true,
mutatis mutandis, of Hispanics and Asians. That's
the political end of it. The cultural, rather than
racial, end of it is that it's simply harder, and less
likely, for visible minorities to assimilate.]
Cultures
and races overlap, of course, and admitting Asians and
Hispanics to America at the rate we are doing will have
cultural consequences because they are bearers of their
cultures. But it is those consequences that ought to
concern us, not race per se. The point of assimilation
is that culture can transcend race.
[Can is right.
Ponnuru himself is presumably assimilated to the
Anglo-American culture he works in. But most of the time
culture goes with race. And it's much harder for
visible minorities to forget their roots in foreign
lands and assimilate than it is for whites.]
The biologization of the argument against immigration
distorted that argument in several ways. The
implications for American blacks, for example, became
hopelessly muddled. Brimelow frequently argued that
immigrants pose a threat to the economic interests of
black Americans. But in order to further the case
against immigration, he also argued that biracial
societies inevitably fail.
Supporters of continuous mass immigration would
certainly have painted restrictionists as racists in any
case, as indeed they had done before Brimelow. But the
restrictionists handed them ammunition.
[They don't need ammunition.
Everyone
can be called racist by the Left.]
In the
afterword to the paperback edition of Alien
Nation, Brimelow suggests that by raising the topic
of racial balances he freed more timid souls to make
other objections to immigration. But this seems a
misreading. The restrictionist cause was made
disreputable by what could fairly be described as its
obsession with race.
[The April 2 issue of NR, in which this appears,
mentions race three times on page 6, twice on page 8,
twice on page 10, once on page 12, twice on 14, once on
15, pages 26, 27, and 28 are all one story calling for
the firing of the black woman who heads the Commission
on Civil Rights, once on page 31. Perhaps this obsession
with race is catching. But obsession with race is more
like Ken Starr's fabled "obsession with sex." Any
prolonged investigation of Bill Clinton will turn up
stories of kinky sex and even sex crimes. That's not the
investigator's fault. By the same token, any
serious look at politics in America will involve race.
This has been true since the Missouri Compromise.]
That
obsession also led to an ahistorical analysis of
America’s experience with immigration. Previous
immigrant waves
were thought
to be
less disruptive than today’s because yesterday’s
immigrants were “white”—even though Italians and Slavs
were by no means regarded as such at the time. One
conservative columnist,
[Don Feder, not named here.]
for example,
wrote that
immigration at the turn of the last century was not
analogous to immigration today because, back then,
immigrants "all came from societies that respected law
and had common concepts of justice, liberty, and
individual responsibility." Like czarist Russia?
[This is a direct slap at Feder's ancestors, immigrants
from czarist Russia who were not
Cossacks,
but Jews. Russian Jews used to devote as much of their
spare time as they could to the study of the Talmud,
with its thousands of pages of ethical arguments on the
subjects of, yes, justice, liberty, and individual
responsibility. This is different from importing the
same number of
Hindus,
Muslims,
or
Chinese.
Some of those societies are opposed to justice,
liberty, and individual responsibility. An example that
springs to mind is that of K. S. Sudarshan, chief of the
RSS
party in Ponnuru’s ancestral India. Sudarshan has
officially come out
against
individual rights, on the Hindu religious grounds that
people aren't individuals. Even the Czar didn’t agree
with that; when it came to individual rights, he was the
individual and he had the rights.] To treat racial
categories as fixed and immutable leads not only to bad
history but to bad predictions. The notion that American
whites will soon become a minority surrounded by Asians
and Hispanics, which is central to Alien Nation,
depends on the assumed unasimmilabsility of those
groups. But one of the arguments for reducing
immigration is that it would encourage assimilation,
including intermarriage, and thus reduce the importance
of racial distinctions. It is not, however, an argument
that can be made by those for whom such distinctions are
everything.
Pro-immigrationists refuse to engage in any analysis of
what level of immigration would be best for America. And
the restrictionists are complicit in this failure.
The
fixation on race has become more pronounced as the
restrictionists' political influence has declined. A
case in point is Brimelow's recent
attack on NR for having "caved on
immigration"--an attack posted on his website, VDARE.COM
(named for
Virginia Dare, the first English child born in North
America). [i.e. in itself
proof of “racism.”] His proof is that William
F Buckley Jr. does not believe that America should try
to preserve its racial balance-even though Brimelow also
notes that immigration is about much more than race. He
refers as well to a "magisterial
review" in another publication
[American Renaissance,
which, again, Ponnuru doesn't name]
by one James Lubinskas, an essay that laments
that NR gave up on defending racial segregation
in the South. So much for Brimelow's previous argument
that immigration should be opposed out of tender-hearted
solicitude for the economic interests of the black
underclass.
[Well, actually, not so much for Brimelow's
previous argument. This is what one W. Buckley would
call a non sequitur. Immigration harms both
blacks and whites. It hurts blacks worse because they're
poorer. Hispanic immigration means black unemployment.
It hurts whites in a different way, because they're the
majority, and they don't qualify for affirmative
action.]
Brimelow
quotes Lubinskas's remark that NR has sunk so low
that it now publishes attacks on "popular white
conservatives"—he means, oddly enough, Pat Buchanan
[Buchanan is popular, and he is a conservative.
NR’s lengthy history of trying to rule on who is
and who isn't a conservative gets them much disliked.]—by
"senior editors with Indian surnames." NR can
thus no longer be considered an ally, Lubinskas writes,
in fighting "the displacement of the country's founding
stock by aliens." (The Lubinskas clan, one assumes, came
over on the Mayflower.) [Lithuaniuans
like Lubinskas are closer culturally to the Pilgrims
than: the Chaldeans of Detroit, the Somalians of
Manhattan, the Cape Verdeans of Massachusetts, or for
that matter the Aztecs and
Apaches
who were here
before
the Plymouth Colony. It's even possible that they're
closer to the Pilgrims than, for example, unassimilated
Hindus,
who, unlike the civilised Ponnuru or
Tunku Varadarajan,
do things like "murdering
Christian missionaries, destroying
mosques
and churches, and even objecting to
Valentine's Day."
We would have refrained from mentioning that if it
hadn't been for the attacks on Feder's and Lubinskas'
ancestry.]
Since even most whites find this sort of stuff repellent
and absurd, a movement that traffics in it will quickly
achieve the irrelevance it deserves. No matter how much
it talks about preserving America, its hostility to the
country we actually live in will speak louder.
[Some of the present problem is recent and reversible.
When Rudy Giuliani was first elected, was he hostile
towards the New York he "actually lived in," with its
2000 murders annually? Or was he trying to restore it?]
GETTING BACK ON OUR FEET
None
of this is to excuse the follies of the pro-immigrationists.
They have never thought much about the cultural
preconditions of nationhood. They constantly say that
"America is more than a nation, it's an idea." But the
restrictionists rightly observe that America is more
than an idea—it's a nation. And nations are held
together not just by shared political ideas, on which
people of the same nation can disagree and people of
different nations can agree, but by a common culture.
Because they generally do not recognize the importance
of a common culture, advocates of high immigration have
given lip service, at best, to assimilation. Some
pro-immigration conservatives, to be sure, have argued
that big levels of immigration are compatible with
vigorous efforts at assimilation. They argue, for
example, that the schools should teach English. But even
they have not drawn any lessons from the failure of any
practical politician to follow their lead in making a
distinction between high immigration and
multiculturalism. Hispanics voted heavily against the
English-language initiative in California in 1998. And
George W Bush, in seeking the Hispanic vote,
[Steve
Sailer
and
Sam Francis have
written at length about the pointlessness of pandering
to Hispanics, especially from the point of view of a
Presidential candidate. It's the Electoral College that
elects the President, and 73% of Hispanics are in two
states.]
challenged neither immigration nor "bilingual
education."
And
like the restrictionists, the high-immigration crowd has
its own historical myths. They will often note that a
century ago people had the same concerns about Italian
immigrants as they do now about Hispanics.
[Click
here for Michael
Barone's recitation of this belief and
here for Steve
Sailer's refutation.]
They do not stop to consider that the assimilation of
Italian-Americans took place largely during an
immigration pause—let alone that there might have been a
connection between the two phenomena.
Very
few supporters of immigration take the extreme view of
the editors of the
Wall Street Journal, who want a constitutional
amendment that says,
"There shall be open borders." (No joke.) But few of
them take their opposition to open borders to its
logical conclusion: that if there is no reason in
principle that immigration cannot be limited, there is
also no reason in principle that that limit cannot be
set at a lower level than today's. They refuse to engage
in any analysis of what level of immigration would be
best for America.
And
the restrictionists, because they have made it so easy
for supporters of immigration to avoid this analysis,
are complicit in this failure. It isn't as though there
were no other models of an anti-immigration politics
available: In the mid '90s, Nathan
Glazer, Glenn
Loury, and the
commission led by Barbara Jordan all advocated a
moderate restrictionist position. And there were, in
fact, lively disagreements among anti-immigration
activists. But too many of them indulged the fantasy
that they could make immigration the central, realigning
issue of American politics. They used apocalyptic
rhetoric: The country was being "inundated," it might
not survive, etc.
[This was written before the latest
figures
on illegal immigrants were released, and before 9/11,
immigration's
Pearl Harbor,
but that's no excuse for ignoring the demographic
realities. "Inundated" by the way, means flooded. What
would you call it?]
Even
if they believed their own rhetoric, they should have
been more careful. Seven years ago, John O'Sullivan
concluded a cover story on immigration in NR by
asking pro-immigration conservatives to reconsider their
position because "the survival of America is a big thing
to get wrong." I favor cutting immigration not because
America's survival is at stake, but because it would
make for a stronger, more cohesive America. But if
uncontrolled immigration really does put America's
survival at stake, a strategy to change that policy is a
pretty big thing to get wrong, too.
[If by get it wrong, you mean political feasibility, you
might want to take a look at the numbers of the last
election. Here's what John O'Sullivan
wrote
in the Pre-Purge National Review:
What they demonstrate, of course, is that conservative
nervousness and Republican passivity over the
multicultural fraying of America is politically foolish
as well as morally obtuse. These Americans know, with
Macaulay, that an acre in Middlesex is better than a
principality in Utopia, and they know, with Bob Dole,
that their little acre was once safer and better tended
than it is today. They would like to restore it to its
earlier condition. Their only problem is that
conservatives [now including NR] are giving them
no one to vote for. ]