Alien Nation Review: Natterings Of A Neo-Nativist
By Reed Ueda
Wall Street Journal
April 18, 1995
As the great
example in world history of a country built from
international migration, the U.S. has experienced
recurrent public debates over immigration, most notably
in the early decades of this century. In the 1990s, this
debate has burst out once more. Defenders of immigrants'
contributions to our national progress advise that we
hold our gates open to newcomers, while critics, citing
immigration's ill effects, argue that we should slam the
gates shut. "Alien
Nation: Common Sense About America's Immigration
Disaster" (Random House, 279 pages, $24), by the
political journalist Peter Brimelow, is a new broadside
from the camp of the gate-closers.
Mr. Brimelow offers
up a jeremiad about the "evils" and "disaster"
of America's immigration. He contrasts his
"rational" case for immigration restriction with the
emotional arguments of "immigration enthusiasts,"
whom he dismisses as blindly sentimental. Mr. Brimelow
poses as an American "patriot" unflinchingly
exposing the deceptions underlying the
"species of treason" that opened U.S. floodgates
to world-wide immigration. He thinks the friends of
immigration slight its problems. These include, in his
view, immigration's
downward push on wages, its drain on
government funds, its association with
criminality and its connection to the rise of
political multiculturalism.
It is true that
large-scale immigration is not without its problems. But
Mr. Brimelow's book is far from reasonable and
objective. It is a fervent and obsessive polemic.
Ultimately, his analysis of immigration pivots on a
crudely deterministic and tribalist view of American
society.
Mr. Brimelow
asserts that
"race is destiny in American politics," and
policies that assume universal capabilities for humanity
are based on myths. He
argues that "it is simply common sense that
Americans have a legitimate interest in their country's
racial balance" and "to insist that it be shifted
back." Mr. Brimelow compares a host nation to an
"extended family," adding that we should recognize
the moral obligation
"to protect our own family." He
assumes sweepingly that the "new immigrants are
from completely different, and arguably incompatible,
cultural traditions."
Mr. Brimelow's
statements echo the rhetoric and logic of previous
nativists who sought to keep out immigrants from
southern and eastern Europe—Italians, Greeks, Slavs and
Jews. His alarm over an "alien nation" in the
1990s—replete with unassimilating
Latino,
Asian and
Caribbean immigrants—is reminiscent of
restrictionists'
outcries in the
1920s against "the shibboleth of the `melting
pot.'" Mr. Brimelow admits that he is no longer
troubled by his predecessors' "sheer extremes of
pessimism" because they obtained a desirable
"cut-off" of immigration. He
prophesies that, due to current immigration
patterns, "America will become a freak among the
world's nations because of the unprecedented demographic
mutation it is inflicting on itself." Though perhaps
somewhat more
artfully phrased, this assertion vaguely resembles
late-19th-century forecasts of Anglo-Saxon "race
suicide" formulated by the immigration experts of
the day.
Mr. Brimelow, who
is an
immigrant from Britain, proclaims he is an American
nationalist. Yet he advocates abandoning the traditional
American conception of nationhood for an alien,
old-world definition. In
1915, Woodrow Wilson
stated, rightly, that the U.S. commitment to
accepting immigrants was "the long-established policy
of this country, a policy in which our people have
conceived the very character of their Government to be
expressed, the very mission and spirit of the Nation."
Mr. Brimelow seeks to replace this American tradition
with an ethnic nationalism that has been the historic
anchor of European states.
Mr. Brimelow
embraces what the immigration historian
Oscar Handlin once
described as the "one fundamental premise" of
earlier restrictionists: that "the national origin of
an immigrant was a reliable indication of his capacity
for Americanization." Indeed, he holds the same
assumptions about the explanatory power of collective
identities as do the multiculturalists he criticizes.
Despite many
arguments to the contrary, Mr. Brimelow concludes
dogmatically that immigration detracts socially,
culturally and politically from the life of the nation,
while yielding little economic benefit. If immigration
cannot be terminated, he advocates tests for admission
that will select the more advantaged groups.
Such tests,
however, would subvert America's historic position as a
society of opportunity, in effect penalizing applicants
who have lacked opportunity in the past. Our forebears
were pioneers who embraced great challenges and
surmounted inherited limits to discover a newer, freer
world. By contrast, Mr. Brimelow counsels withdrawal
into a safe haven of the familiar and the homogeneous.
His message is a call for national retreat.
In Mr. Brimelow's
eyes, America is for those who have settled in and who
keep the old ways fixed. It is not for those in the
process of assimilation who bring the new. His book is a
blueprint for a resurgent isolationism, for the return
of a fortress mentality.
Mr. Ueda is a history professor at
Tufts University and the author of "Postwar
Immigrant America" (1994).