Alien Nation Review: The Immigration Wave: A Plea to Hold It Back
By Richard Bernstein
The New York Times
April 19, 1995
ALIEN NATION Common Sense About
America's Immigration Disaster By Peter Brimelow 327
pages. Random House. $24.
Three years ago, Peter Brimelow, a
writer for Forbes magazine and an immigrant from
Britain, wrote a
powerful and elegant article, published in
National Review, in which he argued that current
American immigration policies were leading to disaster.
For many conservatives Mr. Brimelow's argument was a
kind of heresy, because it contradicted the faith in
immigration as an aspect of the free market. Liberals do
not generally read National Review, but many of
them have tended to view immigration as an enriching
process, certainly a humanitarian requirement.
"Alien Nation" is Mr.
Brimelow's book-length treatment of this subject. He has
included more data this time around than he did in his
National Review article, and yet some of the
force of his original position has been strangely lost
in the book. This is in part because Mr. Brimelow has
opted for a choppy polemical style, with chapters broken
up into brief sub-chapters and almost every page in turn
festooned with indented, boldfaced or italicized
segments in which Mr. Brimelow highlights certain
points. Mr. Brimelow's personality also comes through,
and it is entirely engaging. But the essay as a whole
reads too much like one of those solicitations you get
in the mail urging a contribution to a political cause.
Still, Mr. Brimelow has made a
highly cogent presentation of what is going to be the
benchmark case against immigration as it is currently
taking place. Those who think that the system needs no
fixing cannot responsibly hold to that position any
longer unless they take Mr. Brimelow's urgent appeal for
change into account.
His starting point is the Federal
legislation in 1965 that, after a pause of nearly half a
century, opened up the gates to the country's third
great post-independence wave of immigration, one that is
far larger in absolute numbers than its predecessors,
and one that is conspicuously non-European and nonwhite
in nature. Sometime in the middle of the next century,
if current trends continue unchanged, whites will no
longer be a majority, and blacks will no longer be the
largest minority.
The strong racial element in
current immigration has made it more than ever before a
delicate subject. It is to Mr. Brimelow's credit that he
attacks it head on, unapologetically. Among his most
telling points is that a certain sentimental indulgence
toward immigration, combined with the fear that to be
opposed to it will be seen as racist, has blinded us to
its disastrous consequences. Mr. Brimelow demonstrates
what he sees as the looming danger with a concept called
"the wedge." By 2050, he argues, the total American
population will be nearly 400 million, of whom more than
one-third ("a staggering 139 million people") will be
post-1970 immigrants and their descendants.
To those of us who have seen
neighborhoods revitalized by recent arrivals, and who
have been heartened by the well-publicized success of
some groups, especially the Asians, the obvious question
is: what is so threatening about this wedge? Mr.
Brimelow demonstrates (and he is well furnished with
statistics) that by putting the stress on family
reunification, rather than job skills, the country has
made immigration a kind of civil right for the
inhabitants of a small number of third world countries.
And, he says, the new immigrants are disproportionately
prone to poverty, crime and welfare dependency. In the
great immigrant wave of 1890 to 1920, Mr. Brimelow
argues, about one-third returned home. Largely because
of the welfare system today, he says, that has changed:
"The failures are no longer winnowed out. Instead, they
are encouraged to stay -- at the expense of the American
taxpayer."
Those most likely to be harmed by
the current wave of immigration, moreover, are
American-born blacks, Mr. Brimelow says. Citing the
economist Simon Kuznets, he argues that a major reason
for black progress in this century is that immigration
virtually halted between 1920 and 1965. The new wave, it
stands to reason, will drive blacks out of jobs. In
addition, the emergence of new racial minorities --
especially Asian and Hispanic -- will fundamentally
alter the nature of the American nation-state, which has
for most of our history been white, with a strong black
minority. What Mr. Brimelow calls "the new American
Anti-Idea" will produce "a sort of bureaucratically
regulated racial spoils system, rather like Lebanon
before its ethnic divisions finally erupted."
Mr. Brimelow does very little
on-the-scene reporting, which makes his stress on
statistics seem not only abstract but also detached from
the concrete human and spiritual reality involved in
immigration. He is critical of the press, which, he
argues, has given us only the bright side of the picture
and left out other matters, like the fact that 25
percent of the prisoners in Federal penitentiaries are
immigrants. And yet he himself passes rather too quickly
over what the press has perhaps overstressed: the
genuinely moving spectacle of millions of people making
better lives for themselves in this country than they
could in the countries they came from. He may also
underestimate the force of assimilation, the eagerness
of immigrants to adopt American values as their own.
But Mr. Brimelow also shows that
America is not so much a country of immigration as it is
one of "intermittent immigration." The periods where
there was almost no immigration are more characteristic
of our history than the briefer periods when the door
was open. The lulls provided time to digest and
Americanize the masses of strange and different
newcomers. Mr. Brimelow's argument that without a
lengthy new lull we will be in trouble is too
persuasively made to be ignored.