Alien Nation Review: America
Press, April 1995
America, April 22, 1995 v172 n14 p6(1)
Terry Golway.
© America Press Inc. 1995
THE 19TH CENTURY had its Know
Nothings, and now we in the 1990's have our
Neo-Nothings. Historians one day will note with some
bewilderment that the latter included members of the
very groups demonized by the former. How could this
have happened?
The Neo-Nothing Movement gained
its most notable win last November, when voters in
California--a state known for the scarcity of its
natives--voted to ban illegal immigrants and their
offspring from dip ping into the public treasury for
such frivolities as education and health care. It
would appear from the gathering clouds that
Proposition 187 was but a roll of distant thunder.
Next year, when Presidential candidates take their
opinion polls and respond accordingly, will come the
lightning, fierce and dangerous.
This nation of immigrants gave
its official approval of the Neo-Nothing movement
several weeks ago, when the House of Representatives
voted to ban legal--though non-citizen--immigrants
from such Federal programs as food stamps, Medicaid
and Aid to Families with Dependent Children. Those who
voted for such cuts clearly put ideology ahead of
historical memory, for the roll call of ayes listed
names that resonated with the immigrant experience of
yesteryear: Italians, Irish and Jews, prosperous
enough to qualify for membership in the Republican
Party and indifferent to the lessons that their
grandparents might have taught them. Neo-Nothings,
indeed.
Of the several travesties that so
mark the current round of immigration-bashing,
however, none is quite so absurd as the arguments
contained in a new book entitled Alien Nation. Its
attacks ought to enrage the grandsons and
granddaughters of Catholic and Jewish immigrants who
arrived on these shores to a welcome of scorn and
contempt. Alien Nation argues that America must close
its borders before it is overrun with unskilled,
violent, uneducated, service-demanding and
job-stealing hordes from beyond the seas.
Such immigrants, the author
argues, are hauling along with their luggage all sorts
of diseases, social pathologies and vaguely
un-American traditions. Among the author's solutions
is a proposal that the United States make fluency in
English a requirement for new immigrants, in order to
preserve American culture and traditions. Alas, such a
measure would do nothing to protect our shores from
the Rupert Murdochs of the world. The media magnate,
Aussie-born but a U.S. citizen for reasons having to
do with the making of money, has used his tabloids and
his Fox Television Network to ensure that U.S. culture
continues its spiral downward. But Alien Nation sees
nothing wrong with immigrants such as the white,
Anglo-Saxon, English-speaking Rupert Murdoch.
The new book's arguments, of
course, have been marshaled before. "Tom Paine in
his book Common Sense declared that America would be
an asylum for mankind, but in fact the country has
operated in a different way in different eras,"
said Eric Foner, a professor of history at Columbia
University. "There has always been a racial
element [to the anti-immigration movement]. In the
19th Century, Italians, Jews and Irish were considered
their own races."
To be sure, the history of the
American immigrant is hardly the sanitized version
enshrined on the Statue of Liberty. But what so
distinguishes Alien Nation is the combination of
author and publisher. Peter Brimelow, who wrote the
book, is an immigrant from Britain. So is Harold
Evans, who published the book for Random House.
In Alien Nation Brimelow is
attempting to impose his made-in-Britain values on
U.S. society. This is just the sort of cultural
atrocity critics have been expecting since the British
began infiltrating American media outlets a decade
ago. Like nearly every other European country, Britain
is wary of immigrants, even (or especially) the white
ones from Ireland. To suggest that America look upon
Europe and do likewise is to see America as a mere
extension of the Continent. Such thinking ought to be
roundly condemned--especially by the Neo-Nothings who,
after all, resent all things foreign.
Such thoughts are but wishful,
for the Neo-Nothings no doubt will claim Brimelow as a
kindred spirit and Alien Nation as a required text.
None dares to contemplate the irony of an immigrant
author bemoaning the awful effects of immigration, for
to do so might lead a Neo-Nothing into even deeper
reflection, and that would prove dangerous. If the
immigrant Brimelow's argument is ironic, what is one
to make of immigrant-bashing by the granddaughter of
the Italian grocer, or the grandson of the Jewish
peddler or the son of an Irish nurse?
"There's a famous cartoon
from the 19th century showing a group of
affluent-looking types trying to prevent a downtrodden
immigrant from getting off a gangplank," said Ed
O'Donnell, a Ph.D. candidate at Columbia who conducts
tours of old immigrant neighborhoods in Manhattan.
"The shadows cast by the affluent men are drawn
as caricatures of an Italian, an Irishman and a Jewish
peddler." Imagine what fun the cartoonist would
have today.
"When you take a poll of
1,000 Americans and ask them to list the top 10 things
that make America great, they'll say something about
the immigrant experience," O'Donnell said.
"Go back and poll them a month later and ask them
to list the top five threats to America in the next
century. They'll mention immigration."
If we are, as O'Donnell suggests,
two-faced on the question of immigration, these days
we seem intent on showing our scarred and ugly side.