Importing A New UnderClass?
Peter Brimelow Comments On His Forbes
Charticle
Peter
Brimelow writes: Government statistics are wonderful
things. Forbes
Magazine has just (May 28 issue) published my charticle
on the silent dropout disaster of the 1990s – a
disaster that the government school complex has been
forced to acknowledge only by activist pressure. Not
only is the dropout rate (22% in 1999) far greater than
is usually reported, but it has actually been
increasing.
Now the immigration dimension:
black and white dropout rates have increased only
slightly. The real problem is the increasing proportion
of Hispanics, the result of America’s ongoing
immigration disaster. Their dropout rate is appalling
– 45% in 1999. By contrast, the dropout rate for
blacks – blacks! – was only 27%. Not all dropouts
will be welfare cases and criminals. But many will.
Which suggests public policy is importing a new and even
more serious underclass problem.
Of course, we can expect that they
will all vote for George W. when the pressing need for
capital gains tax cut is explained to them. The Wall
Street Journal Editorial Page has told us so.
Meanwhile, however, no doubt some massive new government
transfer programs are in order.
Another point (exclusive to VDARE!):
perhaps the white and black, i.e. native-born American,
dropout rate has increased because of the immigrant influx into the schools? After all, it must
divert teacher time and energy.
A couple of years ago, I asked a
leading neoconservative education expert (and closet
immigration reformer) whether there was any research on
the impact of immigration on native-born children’s
education performance. I could see there was research on
immigrant performance. But what about the – well -
Americans?
“Not only is there no
research,” she said, “but there isn’t going to be
any research – because no-one
wants to know the answer.”
The answer, however, wants to know
us.
(See Reader's Letter...)
(Click here
for the charticle – don’t forget to click on through
to the chart, better displayed in the treezine, alas.
You may have to register with Forbes,
but the only risk is a grateful email from Tim
Forbes.)
May
14, 2001