Review of Alien Nation: U.S. becoming an alien nation
By Paul Craig Roberts
April 22, 1995
Scripps Howard News Service
A dramatic preview of the first decades of the 21st
century was
published in the Atlantic Monthly in February
1994. Robert Kaplan used the current dissolution of West
Africa to illustrate the coming anarchy as borders
crumble and nations break up under the tidal flow of
refugees from ethnic conflicts and environmental
disaster.
Kaplan believes that the future's winners will be
countries that have maintained cultural identity. This
leaves the United States out. Kaplan writes that ''it is
not clear that the United States will survive the next
century in exactly its present form. Because America is
a multi-ethnic society, the nation-state has always been
more fragile here than it is in more homogeneous
societies like Germany and Japan.''
The United States, he believes, has been transformed
from a country into a collection of cultures.
Kaplan will be even more pessimistic once he reads
Peter Brimelow's new book, Alien Nation,
published this month at Random House. Brimelow shows
that Camelot liberals used the 1965 Immigration Act to
abolish the ''national origin'' basis for immigration
and to destroy the melting pot.
Prior to 1965 immigrants to our shores had cultural
ties. Moreover, there were lulls in the flow of
immigrants which permitted time for them to become
assimilated. Today, however, 83% of legal immigrants and
practically all of the illegal immigrants are
''protected minorities'' and there are no lulls in the
massive inflow of diversity.
The flood of immigrants, together with their higher
reproductive rates, is changing the racial character of
the U.S. population. Sometime after the middle of the
21st century, whites will become a racial minority.
Brimelow shows that the United States is already on
the road to break-up. Four separate regions are
emerging: an Asian Pacific coast, a Hispanic southwest,
a black and white southeast and northeast and a white
landlocked center.
Why is the United States using its immigration policy
to import the ethnic strife and social failure that
breeds anarchy? For what reasons has the United States
elected to become ''a colony of the world?''
There is no answer to these questions. Some
economists have attempted to argue that immigration is
necessary to stimulate economic growth and to fill
unattractive jobs that the native-born won't take.
Brimelow examines the economic case for immigration and
finds it to be totally without merit.
Some immigrants are highly skilled, but there has
been a sharp relative deterioration in immigrant skills
in recent years. Consequently, they are earning less
than the native-born and contributing to a widening
income inequality that politicians use to justify more
welfare spending.
The increased job competition from immigration has
taken a toll on American blacks, too, whose unemployment
rate has risen with the post-1965 opening of the
immigration floodgates. Politicians have responded by
expanding racial preferments, thus further undermining
social cohesiveness.
Brimelow has made a sound case that U.S. immigration
policy quickly needs a radical overhaul. If not, the
racial polarity and social fragmentation that Robert
Kaplan catalogued over a year ago will accelerate. A
collection of diverse cultures is not a people, and
without a people there is no country.