Two AZ Readers Are Shocked, Shocked At Any Mention Of R---
“Racism”? Or Treason?
By Peter Brimelow
If
San Diego columnist and talk show host Raoul Lowery
Contreras (click here
or here
to email)
did not exist, we would have to invent him. The cause
of immigration reform is immeasurably aided by his
thuggery (comparing
Cuban-born Harvard economist and immigration critic
George Borjas to the Jewish Kapos in Nazi
concentration camps) and general boneheadedness (he
appears genuinely unable to grasp that a 50 percent
increase in the GOP’s Hispanic vote is still
terrible if the base is small).
Recently,
the
Arizona Tribune took the almost unprecedented step
of asking me to reply to Contreras’ latest attack on
us. (Not available online, alas.) My response,
infinitesimally edited, appeared on June 25 under the
heading “Racist”
slam
clouds real immigration
issue.
I’ll
post some reader emails and my answers over the weekend.
Raoul Lowery Contreras claims (Tribune, June 8) that my colleague Steve Sailer and I, and our
webzine www.vdare.com,
are “racist” because we dare to criticize current
immigration policy.
Ho hum. Yawn. Big deal. It’s
simply a fact of American political life today that
anyone who criticizes immigration policy is going to be called
a racist. The people who benefit from the current
mess, such as professional ethnics like Contreras, have
too much at stake to allow a rational debate. They have
in effect redefined the term “racist”–it now just
means “anyone who is winning an argument with an
immigration enthusiast.” Or a liberal. Or, all too
often, a complacent country-club Republican. (Hello,
John McCain?)
And we are winning the argument.
The plain truth is that current immigration policy is
indefensible. It can only survive through
intimidation–and lies.
The combination of the1965
Immigration Act, which accidentally unleashed mass
immigration after a four-decade pause, and
Washington’s abject failure to defend the borders
against illegal immigration, has resulted in an extraordinary situation. Basically, because of the
perverse selection process built into the current
system, the U.S. population is going to be vastly
larger, much more non-white and much less skilled than
would otherwise be the case. By 2050, there will be 400
million people living in the U.S. instead of maybe
280-290 million. And whites, 90 per cent of the
population in 1960, will be on the verge of becoming a
minority.
This is an ethnic transformation
without precedent in the history of the world. It is
happening for one reason only: the federal government is
making it happen. Those who favor this policy, like
Contreras, ought to say plainly what they have against
America as it exists right now.
Because the transformation is
wholly without economic justification. When I was
researching my book Alien
Nation: Common
Sense About America’s Immigration Disaster, I was
amazed to discover that the consensus among labor
economists was that native-born Americans did not
benefit at all, in aggregate, from the immigrant
presence in their midst. Indeed, since increased wage
competition was shifting two-three percent of GDP from
labor to capital, one group of Americans was really
being hurt–the poor, including African-Americans and
native-born Hispanics.
Since then, this finding has been
confirmed by the National Research Council’s 1997
report "The
New Americans".
Indeed, NRC studies showed that taxpayers in
immigration-impacted states were actually subsidizing
the immigrant presence–at an annual net rate of over a
thousand dollars per native-born family in California.
(This suggests that in Arizona, you’re probably paying
several hundred dollars at least.)
Needless to say, Contreras
hasn’t shared that finding with his San Diego radio
audience.
But, hey, he’s not unusual. The
NRC findings have never been reported in The Wall
Street Journal either. Political correctness on
immigration goes right across the spectrum–the worst
I’ve seen in thirty years in mainstream journalism.
Which is why patriotic
Americans who want the facts out helped us start
VDARE. Every cloud has a silver lining!
Naturally, Contreras hates Alien Nation. (Didn’t stop him bumming a free copy off me,
though.) He says “proof” of our “racism” is that
“Alien Nation
was nationally scorned as a racist tract by almost every
major newspaper in the country.”
But in fact Richard Bernstein of The
New York Times said this: “Those who think the system needs no
fixing cannot responsibly hold to that position unless
they take Mr. Brimelow’s urgent appeal to change into
account.”
Contreras, quite obviously, does
not feel responsible for mere details like how many
immigrants should there be, how diverse, how skilled --
and how subsidized. His sole and only concern is a blind
and reflexive defense of Mexico and Mexican immigrants,
currently shaping up to be a second underclass.
Thus he is particularly angry
that Steve Sailer has pointed out
that Mexico consists of a white elite ruling a mestizo
and Indian majority. “Only a racist would do such a
thing,” he says.
Are facts racist? An
understanding of Mexico’s precarious racial dynamic
makes it all too appallingly clear why Mexican leaders
are so frantic to dump their poor on the U.S.
Of
course, this contradicts Mexico’s national myth. But
so what?
So everything, probably. The real
issue here is not whether those opposing current mass
immigration are guilty of “racism.” It is whether
those supporting it, and the consequent destruction of
America as it now exists, are guilty of treason.
Peter Brimelow is the author of Alien
Nation (Harper Collins) and an editor of vdare.com
June 29, 2001