Alien Nation Review: Has the Melting Pot Begun to Boil?
By Stephan Thernstrom,
The Washington Post
April 02, 1995
IF YOU liked California's Proposition 187, you'll
love Peter Brimelow's Alien Nation. It, too, is raw meat
that will offend politically correct members of the
cultural elite. It may also strike a responsive chord
with a great many ordinary Americans.
In 1965 the United States lifted many of the
restrictions it had placed on immigration in the 1920s.
As a result of the 1965 reforms, the total number of
immigrants entering the country each year has increased
dramatically; it is now quadruple the average in the
Eisenhower and Kennedy years. In addition, the
proportion of arrivals from Europe has fallen sharply,
while the share from Asia and Latin America has soared.
Many more immigrants are coming, and most are coming
from other parts of the world than their predecessors
did.
Is this a bad thing? Brimelow thinks so. It is no
accident, he suggests, that the liberalization of our
immigration law took place at the same time as the Civil
Rights Act of 1965, the liberalization of the social
welfare and criminal justice systems, and a variety of
other Great Society social uplift programs. Many of
these experiments had unintended and highly unfortunate
consequences, and so too, he argues, did immigration
reform. The central thesis of this volume is that over
the past three decades immigration has become "so huge
and so systematically different from anything that had
gone before as to transform -- and ultimately, perhaps,
even to destroy -- the . . . American nation." We are
living through a "demographic mutation" without
precedent "in the entire history of the world." Has
recent immigration to the United States really been
"huge"? Not really. In absolute numbers, current
immigration is on about the same level as in the peak
years earlier in this century. But in proportion to the
total population, the more relevant comparison, it
continues to be fairly low by historic standards.
American history offers a long and clear precedent for
immigration at something like the current level. As of
1990, the census reported that just 7.9 percent of the
residents of the United States had been born in another
country. That is lower than the figure on every census
between 1850 and 1940. Indeed, it is not much more than
half the proportion in 1870, 1890 and 1910. Even after
making allowance for the fact that some of the millions
of illegal immigrants in the country today doubtless
eluded the census-taker, it is absurd to claim that the
sheer number of immigrants in the country today
constitutes an unprec edented challenge.
The claim that recent immigration is "systematically
different from anything that had gone before" is equally
misguided. By this, Brimelow means that almost all of
the earlier immigrants to reach these shores were
Europeans and that most of those today are "visible
minorities from the Third World." By "visible" he means
people with dark skins. When you enter the waiting room
at an office of the Immigration and Naturalization
Service, he reports in dismay, "you find yourself in an
underworld that is not just teeming but is also almost
entirely colored."
The contrast with the past is not nearly as sharp as
he thinks. Early in this century, the Poles, Italians
and Jews pouring in through Ellis Island were not
welcomed by native observers as fellow "Europeans." The
"new immigrants," the U.S. Immigration Commission
reported after a massive, pseudoscientific study, were
very different from the "old immigrants" of the previous
century. They belonged to lower "races" and were
innately unassimilable. Henry James recoiled as strongly
from the immigrants he saw crowded in the lower East
Side as Brimelow did from those at the INS office. But
the "racial" differences that so horrified Henry James
have long since faded into insignificance. It is quite
possible -- though by no means certain -- that the color
differences that obsess Brimelow today will likewise
become inconsequential with the passage of time.
If Brimelow is wrong in his superheated claim that
the post-1965 immigration has resulted in a "demographic
mutation" that threatens the very survival of the
American nation, he is on stronger ground in arguing
that our society may be much less capable of absorbing
newcomers than in the past. The most recent immigrant
wave has crested on our shores at a time when the
melting-pot ideal has been under assault and the concept
of "Americanization" is frowned upon in enlightened
circles. That many immigrants now belong to "protected"
racial groups and are accordingly given
affirmative-action preferences in education and
employment conveys the unfortunate message that American
whites would treat them unfairly in the absence of legal
coercion -- not a sentiment calculated to spur patriotic
zeal. Moreover, our public schools, vital instruments of
assimilation in the past, are caught up in the promotion
of bilingual education and multiculturalism.
As a telling sign of what has changed, consider the
tactics employed in the recent struggle against
Proposition 187. Earlier immigrant groups understood how
stupid it would be for them to brandish the German or
Italian flag when protesting some public policy they
opposed. When opponents of Proposition 187 decided to
wrap themselves in the flag at rallies, though, it was
the
Mexican flag that they brandished.
Our problem is not too many immigrants, or even too
many of the wrong kind of immigrant. The problem is with
the larger political and social context within which
immigration takes place. We need to breathe new life
into the melting-pot ideal and discard social policies
that encourage the Balkanization of our society.
Stephan Thernstrom, the Winthrop Professor of
History at Harvard University, is the editor of
"The Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups."
GRAPHIC: Illustration,
Joseph Keppler's 1880 cartoon,
"Welcome to All."