A By-the-Book Look at Priorities Instead of People
By George Ramos
Los Angeles Times, May 1,
1995
In the post-Proposition
187 climate in Southern California, author Peter
Brimelow's new book adds more fuel to the anti-immigrant
firestorm. In "Alien
Nation," Brimelow argues that the United
States has lost control of its borders and needs a fresh
approach to be a great nation once again.
After all, he says and writes,
"Immigration is a luxury, not a necessity."
He has an assortment of solutions
to the dilemma that he says is threatening the nation.
High on his list is his demand that the U.S. government
abolish its longstanding policy of family
unification-allowing newly naturalized U.S. citizens and
legal residents to petition to have family members join
them in this country. Instead, he favors granting entry
to professionals with marketable skills. He says taking
in so many unskilled laborers is unhealthy.
He also thinks temporarily halting
legal immigration to this country for three to five
years might have a positive impact as the nation
struggles to absorb the nearly 1 million who already
come here each year.
Brimelow, a
naturalized U.S. citizen from
Great Britain, dissected the problem neatly when he
blew through town last week to promote his book. He
cited numerous statistics but few personal stories from
immigrants to buttress his contentions or refute them.
He didn't spend much time talking to them; he said he
didn't need to. I'm an immigrant, is his premise; I
talked to me.
If he had, he would have learned
that the solution to the immigration quandary isn't as
simple as he suggests. Two events that occurred after he
left town on Wednesday would have given him a whole new
perspective on his so-called alien nation.
A crowd of mostly native-born
Chicanos-Mexican Americans, if you will-turned out
Thursday night for the West Coast premiere of
"My Family," the story of how a Mexican familia
came to the United States and settled in East L.A.
It's a story that resonated with
the audience, many of whom said that they saw members of
their own family depicted in the characters played by
such mainstream Latino actors as Edward James Olmos,
Jimmy Smits, Esai Morales, Elpidia Carrillo and Maria
Canals.
Such stories are nice, says
Brimelow of such personal accounts, but the United
States has had its fill of immigrants who come
illegally, as the family patriarch in the movie did back
in the 1920s.
He maintains that it's equally
wrongheaded to extend citizenship to children of
illegals
just because they were born here.
But for the people who saw
"My Family" at the Cinerama Dome, Brimelow's
theory is as old-fashioned as the one that said the
Earth is flat. In the film, the children of the family
patriarch make their own marks: One joins the Navy and
another becomes a nun. A third becomes a writer and a
fourth goes to UCLA in pursuit of a law degree and a
white wife.
Another is killed by the police,
and yet another son goes to prison.
These stories, the audience members
said, were Mexican in origin, yet all-American to the
core.
"That's my story," one
Chicano moviegoer said over and over. "That's my
family's story. It's a history of giving to this
country, of
going to war for this country, of being American and
yet speaking Spanish."
Brimelow thinks the many Latinos'
insistence on speaking mostly Spanish threatens the U.S.
social fabric, but to the Establishment Chicanos at the
premiere, he's missing the point.
"We all speak English; no one is
going to deny the importance of English," one
Chicana said. "Speaking Spanish to me is just as
American as rooting for the Dodgers."
And then Sunday, at the Cinco de
Mayo celebration dubbed
L.A. Fiesta Broadway, Brimelow's contention that the
U.S. is being overwhelmed by illegals looked true
enough. He frets over the many young, unskilled laborers
and what they will do to the U.S. work force. And there
were a lot of them Downtown, swaying to the music of
salsa queen
Celia Cruz or the gyrations of Garibaldi, a
high-stepping
merengue group.
Brimelow would have us believe the
new arrivals are more of a burden than a help, and that
they have little purchasing power compared to a
native-born worker who Brimelow thinks is more likely to
buy a house, a car-the American investments.
But some of the biggest crowds
along Broadway were made up of families. They waited at
booths where Sears passed out credit applications by the
hundreds under a banner that read "Todo para ti"
(Everything for you). AT&T's booths had similar long
lines of people inquiring about long-distance services.
Brimelow wants some of these brown
people deported, and those who are here legally to be
the last such immigrants for years to come.
But when corporate America sets up
shop on Broadway, it apparently sees nothing in them but
good old American green.