Don't Slam The Door—America Has Consistently Benefited From Those Who
Legally Pass Through Its Portals.
The Philadelphia Inquirer—Editorial
June 12, 1995 Monday
An immigrant-bashing mood is rising in America.
Last year, Californians voted to cut off public
education and welfare benefits for illegal immigrants.
This year, Congress is slashing welfare benefits for
legal immigrants. In Campaign '96, immigrants are sure
to be demonized as a threat to America's well-being—and
to its very identity.
It's a ripe time for scapegoating. There's economic
insecurity, and anxiety about where society is heading.
Politicians are already catering to this sour mood with
pseudo-solutions to crime and welfare. So get ready for
demagogues to raise the specter of an America weakened
and balkanized by hordes of newcomers.
As a magnet for dreams in a world of woe, the United
States can't escape the delicate and emotion-laden
challenges of managing a tide of would-be residents.
But crying "A pox on them!" helps not at all. What's
needed is an open, fair-minded review of immigration—one
that clearly distinguishes the more than 800,000 legal
immigrants per year from the hundreds of thousands who
sneak in.
The flow of illegals is a crisis that calls for a
range of initiatives—from stronger law enforcement to
more financial reimbursement to hard-hit states such as
California, Texas and New Jersey. Still, contrary to the
hype, legal immigration is not a crisis, and therefore
policymakers ought to act with great care.
The prospects for sane decision-making were bolstered
last week with a
Commission on Immigration Reform report that touts
the benefits of legal immigration, while recommending a
reduction in the numbers and changes in the priorities
for acceptance.
This agenda is in sharp contrast to a competing,
slam-the-door approach that's abroad in the land—an
attitude that, however understandable its economic
roots, remains steeped in racial and ethnic prejudice.
The polemical assault on immigration has just landed
on bookshelves everywhere in the form of a cheeky book,
Alien Nation, by Peter Brimelow. Let's give the
author, a Brit turned U.S. citizen, his due. He is
correct that catering to newcomers can go too far—for
example, long-running bilingual curricula that slow a
student's integration into American society.
He also points out that the average immigrant today
is less job-ready, and more of a welfare risk, than the
average citizen. He and the
blue-ribbon commission agree that the 1965
Immigration Act, which emphasized family reunification,
put too little emphasis on job skills.
Mr. Brimelow also delights in discrediting some giddy
estimates of immigration's economic benefits vs. its
costs. In so doing, he makes a case that immigration is
not economically necessary to the United States. (After
all, Japan Inc. has soared with a closed-door policy.)
He falls far short, however, of proving that it's not
beneficial overall.
But Alien Nation is thoroughly
unpersuasive—and at times offensive—in arguing that the
last 30 years of immigration have been a "disaster," and
that for the next three to five years, legal immigration
should be slashed or cut off entirely.
This apocalyptic vision seems to be animated less by
economics than by ethnicity: The author believes that as
immigration changes America's complexion, literally and
figuratively, it gravely erodes national identity and
unity.
Currently, four out of every five legal immigrants
are Hispanic or Asian. Sometime in the next century,
maybe 70 years from now, white Americans will slip below
50 percent of the population—becoming the largest
minority group. "There is no precedent for a sovereign
country undergoing such a rapid and radical
transformation of its ethnic character in the entire
history of the world," he warns.
Racial and ethnic shifts already cause social
friction in places such as Miami and Los Angeles. Mr.
Brimelow claims these frictions are sure to spread and
worsen. Why risk that future, he asks, when the nation
could change the rules to favor whites again—as they did
before 1965.
The answer, of course, is that this is America, not
some cut-and-paste colony or czar-hatched empire.
Beginning with 1776, America has done more than a few
things without precedent in world history.
If the original settlers had followed Mr. Brimelow's
lead, almost everybody from New York to L.A. would look
like John Cleese or Margaret Thatcher. Instead, America
is a mosaic that has incorporated—never without
friction, but never with disaster—such "aliens" as
Italians, Nigerians, Mexicans and Vietnamese.
Pessimists such as Mr. Brimelow, who wouldn't have
dared the Atlantic as the first settlers did, see a
multiethnic America and think Yugoslavia or Rwanda.
People more in touch with America's soul picture a
U.S. Olympic team—or a nobly grief-stricken Oklahoma
City—and insist that color is a division we shall
overcome.