Alien Nation: Round 2
The debate on immigration is hampered by the fact that immigration
enthusiasts don't want it to take place
Summary: The author of 'Alien Nation' got many negative
reviews from print journalists, but regular Americans
calling in to talk shows generally agreed with the
author's conservative sentiments. Journalists should be
honest and admit facts.
Peter Brimelow
National Review, April 22, 1996 v48 n7 p43(5)
Adapted from the afterword to the paperback edition of
Peter Brimelow's
Alien Nation: Common Sense about America's
Immigration Disaster, published by HarperCollins.

He does
not seem to know what an argument is. He never uses
arguments himself. He never troubles himself to answer
the arguments of an opponent. . . . It has never
occurred to him . . . that when an objection is raised,
it ought to be met with something more convincing than
"scoundrel" or "blockhead."
LORD MACAULAY ,
"Essay on Southey's Colloquies"
ALIEN
NATION
was published in April 1995 and was, somewhat to my
surprise, immediately and almost universally reviewed. I
also found myself defending the book on a multitude of
television and radio shows, so that by the fall I
was—rather alarmingly—being recognized on the streets of
New York.
(Actually, I received only one death threat, on
my voicemail at Forbes. The caller was
apparently incensed by my deriding, both the
New York Times's
A. M. Rosenthal and
Ira Glasser of the American Civil Liberties
Union for their obsession with Alien Nation's
single reference to the blue eyes and blond hair
of my son, Alexander. This scandalous revelation
was probably the
most cited passage in the book.
(And not once, as far as I have seen, was it
cited in its context: the paradoxical and
destructive effect of the interaction between
non-white immigration and
affirmative-action quotas upon native-born
Americans who are not members of the
"protected classes.")
"We at AEI
[American Enterprise Institute]," Judge Robert Bork told
me with mock ceremony during
Norman Podhoretz's retirement dinner in May, "are
very grateful to you for drawing fire away from
Charles Murray"—co-author of
The Bell Curve.
In fact,
the first (and in the publishing business most
important) reviews, in the New York Times
(twice), the Washington Post, and
The Atlantic, were serious, respectful, and
sometimes—notably the one by the Times's
Richard Bernstein—strikingly generous. After that,
as Wellington said at Waterloo, it was hard pounding
--the only question being who could pound hardest.
"Hateful,
racist," "gentrified racism," "openly
racialist," "narrow-minded,"
"deliberately misleading," "an ugly jeremiad," "tirade,"
"diatribe,"
"a
fervent and obsessive polemic," "breathtaking
disingenuousness," "inflammatory," "incendiary,"
"Conspicuous bad faith,"
"utterly wrong,"
"beyond the pale," "bigoted,"
"intellectualized white rage . . . in-your-face
vileness." Etc., etc., etc. I was blamed for the
Oklahoma City bombing (by Ramon Mestre in the Miami
Herald) and compared to Hitler and Germany's
neo-Nazi skinheads (by Jeff Turrentine in the Dallas
Morning News). My favorite hostile review: probably
Lawrence Chua's in the Village Voice—"His
fear is justified. We will bury him."
Naturally,
I found these reactions encouraging. After all, the same
incredulous rage has greeted the conservative movement
at each successive stage of its three-decade-long march
through U.S. institutions, since the nomination of
Barry Goldwater in 1964.
I also had
a simple test that I applied to every review: Did it
discuss the 1965 Immigration Act? Or did it instead just
burble on about the glories of immigration in principle,
missing Alien Nation's key point: that the
operations of the 1965 Act in practice have resulted in
an influx far larger,
less skilled, and far more dominated by a few Third
World sources than anything envisioned at the time. In
other words, even if you want a million immigrants a
year—and the American people
overwhelmingly does not—why this particular million?
A
shamefully large number of reviews flunked this test.
For the purposes of America's current immigration
debate, they were just not in the game. Unsurprisingly,
Mestre, Turrentine, and Chua all got a big fat F. Other
prominent examples:
Reed Ueda, Wall Street Journal; Stuart
Anderson,
Washington Times; Linda Chavez,
USA Today; Clarence Wood, Chicago Tribune;
Peter Skerry,
Commentary . . .
Even more
encouraging: throughout the print-media barrage I was
spending hours a day on television and talk radio all
around the country. And there it was not at all unusual
to get 100 per cent supportive calls—from real
Americans. The only exception was National Public Radio,
and even there, the calls were usually fifty-fifty.
Indeed, as
a print journalist I am appalled to say that my
experience has left me gloomily convinced that
electronic media, particularly talk radio, really do now
carry the brunt of American public discourse. This is
not just because a lot of talk-show hosts—Gordon Liddy,
Oliver North, David Brudnoy, and many others, thanks to
them all—were totally supportive in a way that no
self-respecting print journalist seems able to be. Even
my critics were generally polite and reasonable. When an
angry caller complained to Larry Mantle, a liberal host
on Los Angeles KPCC-FM, that I was being allowed to
spread my noxious propaganda without anyone to oppose
me, Mantle reprovingly said no one ever objected when he
had liberals on alone.
On live
radio furthermore, I could compel questioners to address
the central question: Why do you want to transform
America? Quite often they were honest or naive enough to
answer—as did Larry Josephson on his "Bridges" NPR
show—that America in 1965 was just too homogeneous ("white
bread") for their taste. Then I could move in for
the kill: "That's great! Now let's ask the American
people if they agree."
In
addition, events moved Alien Nation's way.
Democratic former Congresswoman Barbara Jordan's
Commission on Immigration Reform, recommending a
one-third cut in the legal influx, in effect rolling
back the 1990 Immigration Act and conceding that the
system was broke and needs fixing—Alien Nation's
much-denounced point.
President
Clinton actually endorsed the
Jordan Commission's findings, but House Majority
Leader Dick Armey
reflexively denounced them. "I'm hard-pressed,"
he said later, "to think of a single problem that
would be solved by shutting off the supply of willing
and eager new Americans."
This was
an astonishing comment, and indicative of the fatal
intellectual inertia still prevailing among many
immigration enthusiasts. A nanosecond's thought would
have revealed to Armey that, if immigration drives the
U.S. population up 50 per cent by 2050—the Census
Bureau's current estimate—it must inevitably cost the
taxpayers massive additional moneys for schools,
prisons, and other infrastructure, regardless of whether
it also offers some benefit (which it does not).
As to
other problems, I randomly picked these two stories out
of the same newspaper (New York Times, December
10, 1995) as I was writing this:
MEXICO
WOOS U.S. MEXICANS, PROPOSING DUAL NATIONALITY
[Mexican
President Ernesto Zedillo supports an amendment to the
Mexican constitution allowing Mexicans to retain their
nationality when they
take out U.S. citizenship.! "You're
Mexicans—Mexicans who live north of the border," Mr.
Zedillo told Mexican-American politicians in Dallas this
year. He said he hoped the amendment would not only
permit Mexican-Americans to better defend their rights
at a time of rising anti-immigrant fervor, but also help
create an ethnic lobby with political influence similar
to that of American Jews.
See
Alien Nation, pages 193-195. And --
FEMALE
GENITAL MUTILATION BY IMMIGRANTS IS BECOMING CAUSE FOR
CONCERN IN
THE U.S.
"As you
get more and more immigrants from countries where this
is a practice, particularly from Somalia, there are
pockets of it
[clitoridectomy]
popping up wherever you see concentrations of
settlements," Representative Pat Schroeder, the
Colorado Democrat, said in an interview.
. . . Ms.
Schroeder [has] proposed laws similar to ones in Britain
and France making
genital mutilation a crime.
Of course,
this is completely hypocritical. Either values are
relative or they are not. What it shows once again is
that immigration enthusiasts' enthusiasm for "diversity"
is highly selective. They fully intend to pick and
choose among diversities. In effect, immigration just
gives them an excuse to remake America.
THERE are
basically two views about how you can influence public
debate. The Thin End of the Wedge Theory, favored by
gentle souls like James W. Michaels and John O'Sullivan,
respectively my editors at Forbes and NATIONAL
REVIEW, is that while emphasizing how much agreement
there is between you and everyone else, you politely but
firmly insinuate modifications into the discussion, all
of such an eminently sensible character that no one can
possibly (or, at least, reasonably) object. Over time,
you turn people around.
In
contrast, there's the Thick End Theory. You pick up the
wedge by its thin end and pound the opposition with the
thick end, as hard as possible. Then you stand back and
see what happens.
I have to
admit that I lean toward the second approach. Some
reviewers appreciate this. Jack Miles, in his very
thoughtful essay in The Atlantic Monthly,
said I was occasionally "an inspired
controversialist, determined to storm the enemy's
redoubt where it is strongest, not where it is weakest."
But other
reviewers simply could not stomach the resulting
bloodshed. For example, Jacquie Miller in the Ottawa
Citizen worried, all too presciently, that
"phrases can be plucked out of Brimelow's book that,
shoved only slightly out of context, provide ammunition
for [the charge of racism]." She instanced my
references to
high black crime and Laotian welfare rates. Miss
Miller also felt that the "credibility" of my account of
Robert Kennedy's ludicrous underestimate of Asian
immigration resulting from the 1965 Act somehow suffered
from what she described as "a typical slur": my
adding that "tragically, Robert Kennedy himself was
to be assassinated by an
immigrant counted by the INS as Asian."
My first
reaction to this sort of thing is incredulity. I believe
truth should be an absolute defense, as it is in libel
law. Laotians do have disproportionately high welfare
rates, etc. And I said "tragically," didn't I?
Still, I
recognize a problem. There is no point in repelling
readers, at least those who show Miss Miller's symptoms
of open-mindedness.
The
problem, however, is not easily resolved. The truth, we
are told after all, shall set us free. And it is
precisely because of the media's flinching from facts
that many Americans are unaware of the immigration
dimensions of major public-policy dilemmas. It is
because Americans are never reminded of the Jordanian
origins of Sirhan Sirhan that they don't think to put
him at the head of a list of infamous immigrants to
counter the immigration enthusiasts' silly ploy of
reeling off, in place of argument, the names of
distinguished immigrants.
Former New
York Mayor Ed Koch pulled this trick on me in the course
of a disappointingly weak review in the New York Post:
"Albert Einstein, Arturo Toscanini, Madeleine
Albright, I. M. Pei, Patrick Ewing, John Shalikashvilli,
Henry Kissinger, [etc., etc.] . . . Brimelow
should squirm at their very mention."
My
unsquirming answer, in part:
Sirhan;
Giuseppe Esposito (founder of the Italian Mafia in the
U.S.);.
Meyer Lansky, "Lucky" Luciano, Al Capone (all
organized crime); V. K. Ivankov (of the
emerging "Russian Mafia"); Bruno Richard Hauptmann
(Lindbergh kidnapper); Rosario Ames (wife and
co-conspirator of traitor Aldrich Ames); Civil War
Colonels
John B. Turchin, USA, and
Henry Wirz, CSA (respectively dismissed from U.S.
Army for atrocities against Southern civilians and
hung for atrocities against Union prisoners of war
as camp commandant at Andersonville) . . .
And
Charles Ponzi (inventor of the type of financial
fraud named after him, whereby early investors are paid
of with later investors' money, luring more in—just like
the
immigration enthusiasts' fantasy of how immigrants
will bail out the
Social Security system). Ben Wattenberg was still
repeating this in his syndicated column in late 1995,
despite Alien Nation's conclusive refutation.
Still, I
have hope for Koch, who is sensible about illegal
immigration and other things. It seems he was simply
unable to focus on my book's content because of the
memory of his own immigrant parents. One of my happiest
moments in taping the three-part immigration debate for
William Buckley's
Firing Line was establishing through
cross-examination that Koch did not realize his parents
could not immigrate under current law anyway (because
they came from European countries that have been
shouldered aside by the family-reunification inflow
triggered by the 1965 Act).
I am less
hopeful about the ACLU's Ira Glasser. In the second part
of the Firing Line debate, he so far forgot
himself as to accuse me of "lying" and bet me a year of
his salary ($127,950, according to the 1993 American
Institute of Philanthropy yearbook) that I had not
discussed in Alien Nation the fragmentary
evidence that the proportion of immigrants in state
prisons does not repeat their over-representation at the
federal level. Of course, I had (p. 184).
Glasser
has now conceded this, buried in a long abusive
ink-cloud of a private letter to me. Unaccountably,
however, he neglected to include his check. As a
gentleman, he will no doubt have rectified this
oversight by the time the paperback edition is in
readers' hands. But you can fax him at the ACLU and
ask—212-354-5290.
UNLIKE
Charles Murray when he came to
review the reviews of The Bell Curve, I have
no intricate technical counter-arguments to refute,
because no one provided any. My critics tended to behave
like Macaulay's description of Southey in debate: either
they simply reasserted their opinion, often using points
that I had just painstakingly refuted; or they resorted
to abuse. Or, quite often, both.
A
classic example: Ben Wattenberg. At the start of
my book tour, we had an affable disputation on
Diane Rehm's celebrated WAMU talk show in
Washington, not surprisingly since (we agreed)
we had substantial policy proposals in
common—such as the utility of an
English-language preference.
A
month later, with Alien Nation getting
famous and legislation to reduce immigration
being introduced by Rep. Lamar Smith and Sen.
Alan Simpson, Wattenberg was transformed. He
bristled with determination to anathematize me
for mentioning the fact that government
immigration policy is shifting the U.S. racial
balance.
Particularly comic was Wattenberg's behavior when we
taped his PBS-TV show
Think Tank. He made the very common error of
claiming that Alien Nation advocates a shift to
white immigration (instead of the "time-out" from all
immigration that I actually recommend). I objected that
I had said nothing of the sort. Confidently, he started
to read something from his lectern. It began, "Brimelow
says . . ."
"That's a
review!" I interjected. It was a knockdown blow. So much
so that before the show appeared, Wattenberg (or his
handlers) took the unusual but masterful step of going
into the tape and editing out the exchange.
I never
got my promised review copy of Wattenberg's own book,
presumably because it tries to shrug off Alien Nation
as "half hokum, half racism." Its title:
Values Matter Most. Yeah.
Other high
points:
Harvard's
Stephan Thernstrom in the
Washington Post: "Has recent immigration to
the U.S. really been huge? Not really . . . in
proportion to total population, the more relevant
comparison, it continues to be fairly low by historic
standards . . ."
I had
devoted all of Chapter 2 to crushing this vulgar error,
basically by demonstrating that immigration is now high
relative to population growth. When I politely pointed
out Thernstrom's mistake he replied huffily,
extemporizing that when population growth is static,
even one immigrant would be 100 per cent of population
growth. True, and so would 100 million immigrants—which
is why I invented "the Wedge Chart" on page 47, showing
the actual situation of 50 per cent higher population by
2050 because of immigration. Reviewers notoriously don't
read books. But did Thernstrom even look at the
pictures?
Jacob
Weisberg in
New York magazine: ". . . Brimelow resorts to
statistical abuses that would make a high-school debater
blush. His first distortion is a chart that shows
immigration in absolute numbers. By including those who
applied for legal status under the temporary amnesty of
a few years ago, he succeeds in producing a recent
'spike.' "
In fact,
the
IRCA amnesties are included in the official INS
figures (Chart 1, pp. 30 - 31). And I discuss this
problem and correct for them (Chart 2, p. 32). Even if
Weisberg had not turned the page, he was present at my
address to the Manhattan Institute when I pointed this
out. But New York contemptibly refused to publish
a correction letter from my researcher, Joseph E.
Fallon.
Interestingly, there was a similar incident involving
Weisberg and The Bell Curve. He wrote that at an
AEI conference, the book's linking of intelligence and
race was raised only when Glenn Loury, who is black, had
left the room. In fact, Juan Williams, who is also
black, was present throughout. And it was
Weisberg himself who had raised the topic.
My theory: Weisberg is one of those people whose verbal
slickness exceeds his intellectual powers. Faced with an
argument that disturbs him emotionally, he cannot
confine himself to the truth, let alone logic.
Michael Lind in
The New Yorker:
"uses the rhetoric of an
after-dinner speaker at a Klavern banquet,"
etc. Well, the meteoric Lind, once a hanger-on
of the conservative movement and NATIONAL
REVIEW, is a special case. Less than two
years earlier, Lind had written in The New
Republic (August 23, 1993) that my original
NR cover story, which constitutes about a
quarter of Alien Nation, was "an
eloquent restatement . . . of traditional
American conservative arguments." I even
received an effusive four-page private letter
from him on the subject.
Alien
Nation
posed a peculiarly acute problem for Lind. His own
soon-to-be-published book,
The Next American Nation, actually called for
immigration restriction just like Alien Nation,
although in a way that tried to appeal to political
liberals. Much of the debunking of
immigration-enthusiast myths was eerily similar. Lind
had adopted many arguments first developed in NR,
such as the economic impact on blue-collar workers. He
could purge NR from his footnotes, and he did.
But he could not afford to have his new friends making
close comparisons with Alien Nation. So he tried
to drive it out of public debate.
It won't work, of course. Although there are good
traditional liberal reasons to oppose immigration,
modern liberalism is differently motivated. And sooner
or later, another, younger Lind is going to come along
and make his reputation with an article on "Michael
Lind's Tainted Sources"—to paraphrase the title of
Charles Lane's notorious
attack on The Bell Curve. Additionally, Lind
himself is too quarrelsome to
remain within any political tendency for long. I
suspect this strange, driven figure will next become a
Mormon. No doubt of a heretical kind.
Wall Street Journal
editor
Bob Bartley, in conversation when I was
asking to defend myself on his editorial page
(vainly, of course—Journal readers have
been able to follow immigration critics'
arguments only by deducing them from between the
lines of continuous denunciations, like
Pravda readers under Stalin): "The
destiny of Europe has already been decided in
North Africa" (because of the population
explosion there).
"That's a poor lookout for the nation-state,"
I said,
surprised.
"Oh yes,"
Bob said calmly. "I think the nation-state is finished. I think
[Kenichi]
Ohmae [a prophet of
economic regionalism popular among businessmen]
is right."
I was
thunderstruck. I knew the fans of the Journal's
editorial page, overwhelmingly conservative patriots,
had no inkling of this. It would make a great Wall
Street Journal front-page story:
WALL
STREET JOURNAL
EDITOR
REVEALED AS SECRET ONE-WORLDER—CONSTERNATION
AMONG FAITHFUL—IS POPE CATHOLIC?
SO, having
given the immigration enthusiasts a good pounding with
the thick end of the wedge, what do I see when I stand
back? Writing in the
Spring 1995 issue of The Social Contract, the
restrictionist movement's house magazine, Ira Mehlman
offered this insight:
Brimelow
actually makes a very broad case against current
immigration policies, but not surprisingly, almost
everybody has focused on those chapters that deal with
race, ethnicity and culture. . . . By bringing up
subjects that had heretofore been considered taboo,
Brimelow has scared a lot of people who have been
observing the debate from the sidelines into conceding
that our current immigration policies don't make
economic sense.
In effect,
I had won the economic debate by raising the question of
racial balance and culture. The pattern that Mehlman
spotted was so immensely powerful as to become funny.
Again and again, reviews denounced me and Alien
Nation, and then went on to say in effect that "of
course" there are things wrong with immigration . . .
just not the things I had in mind. Examples: Christopher
Farrell, Business Week; Tom Morganthau,
Newsweek; Michael Lind; Jeff Turrentine; Jacob
Weisberg.
"Glad to hear it, Mr. Weisberg,"
wrote
Richard Brookhiser in the New York Observer.
"Where can we find those earlier analyses of illegal
immigration, and of the flaws of the 1965 Immigration
Act? The ones you wrote pre-Brimelow?"
John
Dizard, in a story in the New York Observer on
the civil war among conservatives provoked by Alien
Nation, quoted me as saying that "my opponents
are hopelessly overextended intellectually and
empirically, and are facing annihilation up and down the
line."
Today,
having been confronted with no new contrary argument or
fact, I still think that. Special interests may win
congressional battles. Ideas, and principles, will
win the political war.