Intelligent Life Reported in Conservative
Establishment!
By Peter Brimelow
It's happened to me maybe a dozen times since
I published Alien Nation in 1995:
at some conservative gathering in Washington or
New York, a well-known figure in the movement
takes me aside and, glancing around to make sure
no-one from The Wall Street Journal Edit
Page is watching, hisses:
"I agree with you about
immigration!"
Then he (or she - really true, in this case)
scuttles off.
I don't blame them for being cautious ...
well, not much. It's hard enough for
conservatives to get published in the national
media. And the few outlets that are available to
them take a notoriously uncollegial view of
anyone who questions the immigration enthusiast
orthodoxy.
Actually, considering the reign of terror,
it's surprising how many established
conservatives have quietly spoken out. That's
why we recently linked to an article http://www.hudson.org/American_Outlook/articles_nov-dec_00/reynolds.htm
by Alan Reynolds, one of the architects of the
Reagan supply-side revolution, now at the Hudson
Institute http://www.hudson.org/.
Reynolds takes the moderate position that
immigration can be a good thing - but the
current policy isn't. (Another article by
Reynolds, on Texas, health insurance and
immigration, is at http://www.vdare.com/reynolds_texas_kid.htm).
The most dramatic evidence yet of intelligent
life within the conservative establishment: the
December issue of American Enterprise
magazine http://www.theamericanenterprise.org/taedec00.htm,
published by the Washington D.C.-based American
Enterprise Institute. It's an immigration
special issue with a really critical cast. Note
especially the debate on assimilation http://www.theamericanenterprise.org/taedec00b.htm
between John Fonte and Michael Barone (who
continues to show NO SIGN OF HAVING READ ALIEN
NATION or any other critique of immigration,
alas). Editor Karl Zinmeister's lucid summary http://www.theamericanenterprise.org/taedec00a.htm
is studiedly moderate ("Currently, my wife
and I are helping settle a Sudanese family of
six in our hometown through a church refugee
program") but nevertheless makes it crystal
clear that the current policy is broke and needs
fixing.
Ideas do have consequences, and it's possible
that we may be pleasantly surprised by the new
Republican Congress's attitude to immigration.
Some time ago, TV pundit John McLaughlin
publicly predicted that immigration reform would
be passed in the second year of the Gore
Administration.
I'll believe it when my conservative friends
stop hissing in my ear.
November 22, 2000