Alien
Nation Review: Newsweek, May 1995
Fear Of An Immigrant Nation
Ideas: A controversial call for 'racial balance'
Newsweek, May
8, 1995
By Tom Morganthau.
If immigration becomes a wedge issue in the 1996
campaign, Peter Brimelow may be the guy who drives it
home. Brimelow, born in Britain but a U. S. citizen now,
is a Forbes magazine editor who has produced a
controversial new book called "Alien Nation" (327
pages. Random House. $24). The book warns that current
U.S. immigration policies are a recipe for disaster.
Like
Pat Buchanan, Brimelow is concerned for the survival
of our English-speaking heritage. And like Buchanan, he
is unafraid to speak plainly on race and ethnicity.
"Race is destiny in American politics," he writes.
"It is simply common sense that Americans have a
legitimate interest in their country's racial balance.
It is common sense that they have a right to insist that
their government stop shifting it. Indeed, it seems to
me that they have a right to insist that it be shifted
back."
"Alien Nation"
in fact does an
admirable job of explaining the unintended consequences
of the immigration act of 1965, which eliminated the
pro-European bias in previous U.S. policy. But the law
also led, quite unexpectedly, to much higher levels of
immigration, virtually all of it from Latin America, the
Caribbean and Asia. Critics say the law's emphasis on
kinship—awarding visas to relatives of immigrants who
are already here—has produced "chain migration"
by millions of extended families from the Third World.
Add the fact, as Ronald Reagan once said, that the
United States has lost control of its borders, and you
have a policy train wreck. Illegal immigration,
including those who abuse the asylum process and those
who enter on tourist visas, totals at least 500,000
person spite Congress's attempt to tighten the system
with the Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986.
By common estimate, upwards of 80 percent of all these
"new immigrants" are persons of color, which is
where Brimelow's prejudices come in. Does it matter that
the overwhelming majority of these new arrivals aren't
European? Does it matter that by the the year 2050, if
current immigration trends continue, the United States
will no longer be a white-majority country? Brimelow
says it does, and seems alarmed about it. He thinks
successful nationhood requires "links by blood."
He sees racial and ethnic polarization rising and
societal breakdown ahead—like Yugoslavia, he says, or
Lebanon. This is racialism, if not racism: Brimelow
thinks race counts, though he never actually says other
racial groups are inferior to whites. But he implies it,
by rehashing tendentious research on immigrant welfare
dependency and the net economic burden on native-born
citizens, and by making much of the irrelevant ad that
immigrants now compose 25 percent of the federal prison
population.
You don't have to be racist to believe that Congress
should rethink U.S. policy.
America has welcomed more than 16 million immigrants
over the past 30 years, and as Brimelow suggests, the
cumulative total of foreign-born residents, now 7.9
percent of the U.S. population, reasonably raises old
questions about assimilation and acculturation. What
does being American mean in the age of multiculturalism?
Which values are essential to our political culture, and
how well do we teach them to new immigrants?
Brimelow is right to stress that U.S. immigration has
historically been discontinuous, and that interruptions
in the flow have allowed the nation to absorb successive
waves of the foreign-born. He is also correct in raising
the most important issue of all: why, exactly, should
large-scale immigration continue?
As he suggests, Washington's support for further
immigration is not supported by the voters—who, in any
event, have almost no knowledge of the way our
extraordinarily complicated immigration laws actually
work. Crucially, the economists' rationale for
immigration—cheap labor plus more consumers equals
rising GNP—seems less and less relevant to
postindustrial societies. As Brimelow says, Japan has
risen to a position of enormous national wealth without
any immigration at all. If an educated work force is the
key to high-tech prosperity, why should America continue
to import cheap labor?
These are the real questions about U.S. immigration
policy—not race, multiculturalism or even bilingual
education. America has long been a pluralistic society,
and it has always muddled through. Why should
second-generation Pakistani-Americans be less adaptable
than their Polish-American counterparts 70 years ago?
Brimelow needs reminding that the melting pot still
works—and that his alarmist views on race and ethnicity
are exactly what country is trying to outgrow.