Time to Rethink
Immigration? (PART 2)
by Peter Brimelow
from National Review, June 22, 1992
Mr. Brimelow is Editor at
VDARE.com.

Click here
to return to Part 1...
Asking the Right Questions
SUPPOSING AMERICA'S political elite suddenly
decided to notice immigration, what questions should they
consider?
Is immigration really
necessary to the economy?
Audiences always burst out
laughing at one apparently gagless scene in the hit movie
Back to the Future: the time-transported hero drives up to a
gas station in the 1950s, and an
army of uniformed attendants leaps forth to pump the gas,
clean his windshield, fill his tires, polish his hubcaps, offer
him maps, and so on. The joke was in the shock of
self-recognition. It was only yesterday—and yet completely
forgotten, so accustomed is everyone now to self-service.
"We need immigrants to
meet the looming labor shortage/do the dirty work Americans
won't do." This
further item from the pro-immigration catechism seems to be
particularly resonant for the American conservative movement,
deeply influenced by libertarian ideas and open, somewhat, to
the concerns of business.
But it has always seemed
incongruous, given persistent high levels of unemployment among
some American-born groups. Since these groups obviously eat, it
would appear that public policy is subsidizing their choosiness
about work, thus artificially stimulating the demand for
immigrants.
And if there is a looming
labor shortage (hotly disputed), it could presumably be
countered by natalist policies—encouraging Americans to step up
their below-replacement birthrate. Even the current high
immigration inflow is exceeded by the 1.6 million abortions in
the U.S. each year.
For example, the federal
income-tax code could be adjusted to increase the child
allowance. In 1950, this provision exempted the equivalent (in
1992 dollars) of $7,800 for each child; now, after inflation, it
exempts only $2,100. Or the "marriage penalty"—by which a
couple pay more in taxes if they marry than if they live
together out of wedlock-could be abolished. Or the public-school
cartel could be broken up, reducing the crushing costs of
educating a child.
But Back to the Future
makes a more fundamental point: labor is not an absolute. Free
economies are infinitely ingenious at finding methods, and
machinery, to economize on labor or any other scarce resource.
The implicit assumption
behind the economic argument for immigration appears to be
something like this:
Labor x Capital = Economic
Growth
So, for any given capital
stock, any increase in labor (putting aside the question of its
quality) will result in at least some increase in output.
This assumption is just
wrong. Typically, technical studies that attempt to account for
economic growth find that increases in labor and capital account
for at most half and often much less of increases in output.
Simon Kuznets's survey of the growth of the West over the last
two centuries concluded that increases in labor and physical
capital together were responsible for less than 10 per cent of
the greatest output surge in human history. The rest seems to be
attributable to changes in organization—to technological
progress and ideas. Or:
Economic Growth = Labor x
Capital x {???}
And {???} is dominant.
Back to the Future
illustrates this process in action. On the face of it, gas
stations have simply substituted capital (the self-service
pumps) for labor (gas jockeys). But actually what has happened
is more complex: the cost of making the pumps, and of designing
the computer system behind them, is far exceeded by the savings
on labor, which extend indefinitely into the future. It is
reorganization that has resulted in a permanent increase in
productivity.
From an economist's
standpoint, the factors of production are not absolutes, but a
fluid series of conditional interacting relationships. This
insight won Julian Simon one of the famous debating victories of
our age. In 1980, he bet the well-known liberal doomster Paul
Ehrlich that several commodities Ehrlich claimed were running
out would in fact be lower in price in 1990, the economy having
adjusted in the meantime. They were, and Ehrlich had to pay up.
Paradoxically, however, when it comes to immigration, Simon
seems to revert to a classic non-economic view: Labor is good,
more labor is better.
The economic view of labor
has influenced the current immigration debate only in one
direction: it is triumphantly produced by the pro-immigration
side to refute any unwary critic of immigration who assumes that
native-born workers must inevitably be displaced. They aren't,
necessarily, in aggregate, because the economy adjusts; and
because the increase in the factors of production tends to
create new opportunities. "Immigrants not only take jobs,"
writes Julian Simon, "they make jobs."
Maybe. But missing from the
current immigration debate is the fact that this effect operates
in the other direction too. On the margin, the economy is
probably just as capable of getting along with less labor.
Within quite wide boundaries, any change in the labor supply can
be swamped by the much larger influence of innovation and
technological change.
The historical importance
of immigration to the U.S. can be exaggerated. Surprising as it
may seem, demographers agree that the American population would
be about half its present size that is, much bigger than
Germany's and about as big as Japan's-even if there had been no
immigration after 1790. Even more significantly, the Harvard
Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups estimates that
immigration did not increase U.S. per-capita output at all.
Indeed, both France and Germany outstripped the U.S. in growth
of per-capita output in the hundred years after the mid
nineteenth century.
Absolute size can be useful
while seizing a continent or fighting wars. But in the end it is
output per capita that determines living standards. And both
proportionately and absolutely, in an increasingly technical
age, what will count is not the quantity of people but their
quality—and the quality of their ideas.
The {???} factor is the
explanation for the great counter-factual episode hanging like
the sword of Damocles over contemporary pro-immigration
polemics: the success of Japan since World War II. Despite its
population of only 125 million and virtually no immigration at
all, Japan has grown into the second-largest economy on earth.
The Japanese seem to have been able to substitute capital for
labor, in the shape of factory robots. And they have apparently
steadily reconfigured their economy, concentrating on high
value-added production, exporting low-skilled jobs to factories
in nearby cheap-labor countries rather than importing the
low-skilled labor to Japan.
It is highly significant of
the false nature of the American immigration debate that,
despite all the public hysteria about Japan, no attempt is ever
made to look for lessons in its immigration policy. Incredibly,
although his book is called The Economic Consequences of
Immigration, Julian Simon simply ignores the subject
altogether. Asked about it by Forbes magazine's Jim Cook,
he in effect struck out: "How Japan gets along I don't know.
But we may have to recognize that some countries are sui
generis."
However, Simon's view of
the impact of immigrants does include important qualifications,
which his enthusiastic acolytes often miss. Simon believes that
native-born workers are not necessarily displaced in aggregate.
In his book, he frankly and repeatedly acknowledges that "Any
labor-force change causes some groups to suffer some harm in the
short run... It is true that some particular groups may be
injured by a particular group of immigrants ..." (This works
in reverse. Agribusiness lobbies for cheap immigrant labor
rather than mechanize itself, regardless of the overall cost to
the economy. Ironically, agribusiness is itself often
subsidized—for example, by federal water projects.)
As it happens, the U.S.
contains one particular group that is clearly vulnerable to
competition from immigration: blacks. This question has
attracted attention for years. Immigration from Europe after the
Civil War is sometimes said to have fatally retarded the
economic integration of the freed slaves. Conversely, no less an
authority than Simon Kuznets felt that the Great Immigration
Lull after the 1920s enabled Southern blacks to begin their
historic migration to the cities and the economic opportunities
of the North.
Blacks themselves take a
dim view of immigration, according to opinion polls. In the FAIR
poll cited above, 83 per cent of blacks thought Congress should
curb immigration. But George Borjas found that blacks living in
areas of immigrant concentration did not appear to have suffered
significantly reduced incomes compared with those elsewhere. The
reason, he theorizes, is that during the years in question—the
1970s—the effect of immigration was overwhelmed by the effects
of baby-boomers and women entering the labor market. Now, of
course, these factors no longer apply. Additionally, studies of
high-immigrant areas may fail to capture a tendency for
native-born workers to relocate because of the increased
competition. Across the entire country, the wages of native
high-school dropouts fell by 10 per cent in the 1980s relative
to the wages of more educated workers. Borjas calculates that
about a third of that decline is attributable to immigration.
Borjas, moreover, was
perturbed by the tendency of low-skilled recent immigrants, not
necessarily to displace American blacks, but to join them in
swelling the ranks of the underclass: "Few issues facing the
U.S. are as important, and as difficult to resolve, as the
persistent problem of poverty in our midst... The empirical
evidence presented here suggests that immigration is
exacerbating this problem."
Since the Great Society, a
significant part of the black community has succumbed to social
pathology. There is at least a possibility that this is related
to the simultaneous opening of the immigration floodgates. In
which case, it is perhaps to current policy, and not to critics
of immigration, that the over-used epithet "racist" might
best be applied.
Another important Simon
qualification, unnoticed by his acolytes, is his concept of
"negative human-capital externalities." Most recent
immigrants have lower skill levels than natives, he notes. If
enough of them were to arrive, they could overwhelm and render
less effective the higher skills of the natives. "In other
words, if there is a huge flood of immigrants from Backwardia to
Richonia, Richonia will become economically similar to
Backwardia, with loss to Richonians and little gain to
immigrants from Backwardia ... So even if some immigrants are
beneficial, a very large number coming from poorer countries ...
may have the opposite effect."
This is a crucial
theoretical concession. Coupled with the fact that the numbers
and type of potential immigrants are unknown, it is the reason
Simon quietly declines to follow the logic of his other
arguments and endorse completely open borders (as, for example,
the Wall Street Journal editorial page has done). Of
course, he insists that immigration levels could be much higher
than at present. But Richonians in California, Florida, and New
York City might not agree.
"You have to accept the
free movement of people if you believe in free trade/free
markets." You do?
It's a more radical proposition than appears at first sight.
Third World populations are very large and their wage levels
very low—Mexican wages are a tenth of those north of the border,
and Mexico is relatively advanced. So calculations of the
market-clearing wage in a U.S. with open borders necessarily
imply that it must be some fraction of its present level. This
arrangement might optimize global economic utility. But it can
hardly improve American social harmony.
However, a calculation of
this sort requires impossible assumptions. The fact is that a
belief in free markets does not commit you to free immigration.
The two are quite distinct. Even Julian Simon, although he
favors immigration, says explicitly that immigration's benefits
are not from "trade-like effects":
Contrary to intuition, the
theory of the international trade of goods is quite inapplicable
to the international movement of persons. There is no immediate
large consumer benefit from the movement of persons that is
analogous to the international exchange of goods, because the
structure of supply is not changed in the two countries as a
whole, as it is when trade induces specialization in production
... the shifts due to international migration benefit only the
migrant.
On a practical level, free
trade actually tends to operate as a substitute for immigration.
Hence the Japanese have factories in the Philippines rather than
Filipinos in Japan. And Victorian Britain, with its grand
strategy of "splendid isolation" from the quarrels of
Europe, combined total free trade with almost no immigration, a
policy that satisfied Liberal "Little Englanders" and
Tory Imperialists alike.
In theory, free trade with
Mexico should help reduce the current immigrant flood by
providing work south of the border. In practice, however,
"free-trade negotiations" (a paradox: what's to negotiate?)
often get captured by political elites seeking to favor client
constituencies. Rumors that the current talks with Mexico might
lead, absurdly, to an increase in immigration suggest this
insidious process is well under way.
A commitment to free trade
and free markets does not mean that you would sell your mother
if the price was right. The free market necessarily exists
within a social framework. And it can function only if the
institutions in that framework are appropriate. For example, a
defined system of private property is now widely agreed to be
one essential precondition. Economists have a word for these
preconditions: the "metamarket." Some degree of ethnic
and cultural coherence may be among them. Thus immigration may
be a metamarket issue.
At the very least, a
diverse population increases what in economics-speak are called
"transaction costs." Dealing with people whom you don't
know and therefore can't trust requires expensive precautions. I
suspect this is one factor behind the legalism infesting
business practices in the U.S., as compared to Britain. Beyond
this, capitalism generates inequality and therefore envy. And
such emotions can be much more intense across ethnic and racial
lines—witness the fate of the Korean storekeepers in Los
Angeles.
This is not an
unprecedented insight. Friedrich von Hayek, the first classical
liberal to win the Nobel Prize for economics, used to advance a
sort of sociobiological argument for the apparently immortal
appeal of socialism. Cities and civilization have come very late
in human history, he pointed out. Almost all mankind's
experience has been in small hunter-gatherer bands. Face-to-face
relationships are still much more comprehensible to us than
impersonal ones. Thus an increase in rent is blamed on the greed
and obnoxiousness of the individual landlord, and provokes an
irresistible urge to bash him with rent controls, despite all
the evidence that this leads merely to shortages and inequity.
And, to extend Hayek's argument, it is obviously easier to
demonize a landlord if his features are visibly alien.
Another classical liberal
Nobel Laureate, Milton Friedman, has speculated that the culture
of the English-speaking world itself may be, from an economic
standpoint, sui generis . . . in Simon's phrase. I interviewed
him for Forbes magazine in 1988:
FRIEDMAN:... The history of
the world is the history of tyranny and misery and stagnation.
Periods of growth are exceptional, very exceptional.
BRIMELOW: You've mentioned
what you see as the institutional prerequisites for capitalism.
Do you think there might be cultural prerequisites too?
FRIEDMAN: Oh, yes. For
example, truthfulness. The success of Lebanon as a commercial
entrepot was to a significant degree because the merchants' word
could be trusted.
It cut down transaction costs.
It's a curious fact that
capitalism developed and has really come to fruition in the
English-speaking world. It hasn't really made the same progress
even in Europe—certainly not in France, for instance. I don't
know why this is so, but the fact has to be admitted.
Eschewing these more subtle
considerations, George Borjas focuses on the quantifiable. His
conclusion is stark. "The economic arguments for immigration
simply aren't decisive," he told me recently. "You have
to make a political case—for example, does the U.S. have to take
Mexican immigrants to provide a safety valve and keep Mexico
stable?"
Put it another way: for the
U.S., immigration is not an economic necessity. It is a luxury.
Like all luxuries, it can help-or it can hurt.
Is immigration really
beneficial to society?
Forty-four years ago,
Richard Weaver published a book the title of which, at least,
convinced the conservative movement: Ideas Have Consequences.
It is now time to recognize a further truth: Immigration Has
Consequences.
The crudest consequences
relate to political power. Because many libertarians and
economic-growth conservatives are so reluctant to admit this
logical possibility, it is worth emphasizing that there are
plenty of examples of immigrants and their descendants
threatening the political balance of a state (polity), from the
Uitlanders in the nineteenth-century Boer Republics to the
Indian politicians recently elected to govern Fiji and promptly
deposed by the
ethnically Fijian army. And how about this chilling comment
from the Harvard Encyclopedia?
In obtaining land grants in
Texas, Anglo immigrants agreed to become Mexican citizens, obey
Mexican laws, accept the
official Catholic faith, learn Spanish, and take other steps
to become fully assimilated as law-abiding citizens. However,
over the years, it became clear that these settlers, now
Anglo-Mexicans, were not becoming integrated into the nation and
that Anglo immigration had become a problem . . . The strains
and disagreements ultimately led to the
Texas Revolution in 1835.
Er, quite.
These political
consequences need not threaten the integrity of the state
(polity)—just its foreign policy.
Thus domestic ethnic-group
pressure clearly plays a role in Washington's essentially
contradictory attitudes to the white settler communities of
southern Africa and the Middle East.
But probably the most
important consequences are cultural. "The most obvious fact
about the history of racial and ethnic groups," writes
Thomas Sowell in The Economics and Politics of Race,
"is how different they have been—and still are." Sowell's
work, carried on in Ethnic America: A History,
conclusively demonstrates that cultural patterns are pervasive,
powerful, and remarkably persistent, even after generations of
living under common institutions, as in the United States.
(Similarly, David Hackett Fischer's monumental Albion's Seed
recently traced America's dominant folkways all the way back to
four distinct waves of colonial immigration from different
regions of Britain.)
"But aren't these
consequences good?"
Naturally, there isn't anything in the pro-immigration script
about cultural consequences. However, this is the usual reaction
if you insist on raising the point. It's embarrassing, of
course. In the current climate, it is impossible to discuss the
failings of any ethnic group.
But look at it this way:
Thomas Sowell's work shows that cultural traits, such as
attitudes to work and education, are intrinsically related to
economic success. Germans, Japanese, and Jews are successful
wherever they are in the world. Conversely, the work of George
Borjas and others shows that national origin, a proxy for
culture, is an excellent predictor of economic failure, as
measured by propensity to go on welfare. In a recent paper,
Borjas has demonstrated that disparities among the 1880-to-1920
immigrant groups have persisted for as much as four generations.
Thus there can be absolutely no question that the cultural
characteristics of current immigrant groups will have
consequences for the U.S.—in this case, economic
consequences—far into the future.
The same argument applies
to crime. Random street crime, the great scandal of American
cities since the 1960s, is clearly related to impulsiveness and
present orientation, a key cultural variable. More significant,
however, is organized crime. This has typically been ethnically
based, partly because it reduces the criminals' transaction
costs and because such groups are difficult to penetrate.
In recent years the Mafia
or Cosa Nostra has been in decline, not least because of the
acculturation of Italian-Americans. But this is "dirty work"
that some of the post-1965 immigrant groups are positively
anxious to do-more violently, particularly in the burgeoning
drug business, than the Mafia ever was. There are several such
new "mafias,"
staffed by Russian Jews, Hong Kong Chinese, Colombians, and even
less well-known communities like the Chaldeans—Iraqi Christians
whose convenience stores in the Detroit ghetto are centers of
criminal activity.
Today such news would be
judged unfit to print regardless of its accuracy. Researchers
find that official figures on immigrant and ethnic crime
patterns are rarely collected. That certain ethnic cultures are
more crime-prone than others, however, must be considered a real
possibility.
Curiously, Congress appears
to have shaken off its general paralysis to recognize that
immigration can have cultural consequences—for Pacific
Islanders. Five U.S. territories, American Samoa, Micronesia,
the Marshall Islands, the Northern Marianas, and Palau, have
been given control over immigration to protect their ethnic
majorities. In American Samoa and the Northern Marianas, U.S.
citizens cannot even own land unless they are Samoan, Chamorro,
or Carolinian.
This double standard has
incensed an extremely erudite and energetic professional writer
in Rye, New York,
Joseph E. Fallon. Fallon
argues that controlling immigration is simply a question of
American self-determination. And he is attempting to organize a
class-action law suit challenging current policy on the grounds
of the 1948 Genocide Convention, which banned "deliberately
inflicting upon a [national] group conditions of life calculated
to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part."
Which, after all, is no
crazier than much liberal litigation.
Is immigration really good
for (ahem) the Republicans?
The fate of the Republican
Party may not be of concern to the political elite as a whole.
But it should worry those aspiring members of the elite who also
consider themselves conservatives.
Ethnicity is destiny in
American politics. This point was made definitively in Kevin
Phillips's brilliant The Emerging Republican Majority
(1968), which demonstrated that ethnic settlement patterns had
an amazingly persistent influence on voting patterns. Phillips
predicted on the basis of demography that the Republicans would
replace the Democrats as the majority party. And he was
undeniably right in the presidential contest, even if timid and
unimaginative leadership has squandered the opportunity on the
congressional level.
As a glance around any of
their meetings will tell you, the Republicans are the party of
the American majority; the Democrats are the party of the
American minorities. On its WASP foundation, the Republican
Party has been able to add the children of each immigrant wave
as they assimilate. This was the unmistakable subtext of the
1988 presidential election. With a Greek-American nominee, and
implicitly anti-WASP attacks on George Bush's "preppie-ness,"
the Democrats hoped to hold the 1880-to-1920 immigrant wave. But
they failed, just as nominating John F. Kennedy in 1960 did not
prevent the continued defection of Irish-Americans.
The post-1965 immigrants,
however, are overwhelmingly visible minorities. These are
precisely the groups that the Republican Party has had the most
difficulty recruiting. And, Jack Kemp please note, this is not
necessarily a question of the Republicans' making nice, or
nicer, to minorities. It may reflect the more divergent
minorities' different values, and their more radical feeling of
alienation from white American society. Current immigration
policy is inexorably reinforcing Jesse Jackson's Rainbow
Coalition.
The strained sound you hear
is the conservative leadership whistling as they pass by the
rainbow. Prohibited by the Bland Bargain from discussing the
problem, they have indulged in a frenzy of wishful thinking.
"We get quite a good vote from some Hispanic groups." Well,
Hispanics are not quite as Democratic as blacks—that's a
statistical impossibility—but the Republicans still face an
uphill struggle. Even the much-lauded Cuban vote has actually
been quite split, electing the likes of Claude Pepper and
Dante Fascell to Congress. And Republican success with
Hispanics, as with other minorities, is often at the expense of
conservative principles. "West Indians are different."
Some West Indians do appear to have been more economically
successful than American blacks, although it must be said that
nowadays part of their enterprise goes into drug "posses"
and car-theft rings. However, the skill level of the post-1965
wave of West Indian immigrants has deteriorated sharply.
Caribbean immigrants are now the most prone of all to welfare
dependency. And anyway, the political consequences were always
illusory.
Shirley Chisholm and
Stokely Carmichael are both of West Indian descent. "The
Asians are small-business types, education-minded,
family-oriented—they're natural Republicans." So were the
Jews, and look how they vote—still overwhelmingly and
outspokenly Democratic despite the best efforts of a brilliant
generation of conservative Jewish intellectuals. And Hawaii,
where Asians predominate, is a Democratic stronghold. The truth
is that no one really knows how the Asians will vote. But since
1965 they have become a minority twice as large as the Jews, and
potentially at least as influential.
Is
immigration really good for the environment?
American liberalism has
survived the loss of its traditional issue, economic management,
by improvising new ones. And environmentalism is one of the most
important, both because it particularly appeals to the vocal
upper middle class and because it appears to necessitate an
interventionist government. Yet the single biggest problem for
the environment is the fact that the U.S. population, quite
unusually in the developed world, is still growing quickly.
Immigration is currently an unusually large factor in U.S.
population growth.
Like the impact of
immigration on native workers, the relationship between
population and pollution is subtler than it looks. A primitive
band of slash-and-burn agriculturalists can cause more
devastation than a much larger community of modern ex-urbanites
with sealed sewage systems and manicured horse farms.
But only within limits.
Something has clearly got to give if the population of
California grows from 20 million in 1970 to 60 million by 2020,
which is Leon Bouvier's upper-limit projection. (His lower-limit
projection: a mere 44 million. Phooey!) The fragile desert
ecologies of the Southwest may not be utterly destroyed. But
they must be transformed. California will cease to be the Golden
State and become the Golden Subdivision.
This prospect is presumably
anathema to true environmentalists, who value wilderness in
itself. But although a few were active in rounding FAIR, most of
the professional environmentalist community in Washington avoid
the issue. Which is a measure of the extent to which they have
been co-opted by the liberal establishment-just like the
civil-rights lobby, which never voices the anti-immigration
sentiments widespread among the black masses.
No reason, however, why
conservatives should not use the immigration issue to wrong-foot
them all.
Is the
U.S. still culturally capable of absorbing immigrants?
Let's be clear about this:
The American experience with immigration has been a triumphant
success. It has so far transcended anything seen in Europe as to
make the application of European lessons an exercise to be
performed with care.
But in the late twentieth
century, the economic and political culture of the U.S. has
changed significantly— from classical liberalism to an
interventionist welfare statism. In the previous two hundred
years of U.S. history, a number of tried-and-true, but
undeniably tough, techniques of assimilation had been perfected.
Today, they have been substantially abandoned. Earlier waves of
immigrants were basically free to succeed or fail. And many
failed: as much as a third of the 1880-to-1920 immigrants
returned to their native lands. But with the current wave,
public policy interposes itself, with the usual debatable
results.
"You can't blame the
immigrants for our bad policies."
Of course you can't. But if there's a shower when you've got
pneumonia, you don't blame the rain. You just stay indoors.
Some of public subsidies to
immigrants are direct, like welfare. Others are indirect, such
as the wholly new idea that immigrant children should be taught
in their own language, thus transferring part of the costs of
immigration from the immigrant to the American taxpayer. New
York's public-school system now offers courses in more than a
hundred languages—and is hunting for teachers of Albanian, who
will probably themselves be immigrants.
Pro-immigration advocates
are fighting furiously to defend the proposition that subsidies
to immigrants are not a net cost to native-born Americans
because of the taxes immigrants pay. But they are clearly
losing.
George Borjas's most recent
estimate is that immigrants' cash welfare benefits alone cost
about $1 billion more than is paid in taxes each year.
(Tellingly, immigrants prone to welfare dependency seem to get
more addicted as they assimilate.) And he points out that there
is no guarantee that any increase in total economic output from
immigration will compensate those specific Americans paying
taxes in high-immigrant areas.
Whatever the academic
argument, Wall Street in its unideological, money-grubbing way
is already pulling back its snout. As the investment firm
Sanford C. Bernstein commented tersely in downgrading
California's bond rating last year: "The primary reasons for
the State's credit decline are above-average population growth
and shifting demographics ... the degree of public assistance
required by two of the fastest growing groups, Latinos and
political/ethnic refugees, is substantially higher than that of
the general population." Governor Pete Wilson has been
trying to control welfare and get more remedial federal aid. But
he has only himself to blame. As a U.S. senator, he worked hard
for the 1986 amnesty for illegal immigrants favored by
agricultural interests.
Ultimately, however, any
overall break-even calculation is irrelevant. The nature of
averages dictates that many immigrants must get more than they
give. And any public subsidies must affect whatever demand/
supply balance exists for immigrants. A year for one student in
the New York City public-school system, for example, involves an
average taxpayer expenditure greater than the per-capita
national income of Haiti. National health care, if enacted,
could be an even greater magnet.
And it's not just the
American economic culture that has changed. So has the political
culture. Ethnically fueled "multiculturalism" taught in
the public schools, as described by Lawrence Auster and by the
eminently establishmentarian Arthur Schlesinger in his current
best-seller The Disuniting of America, raises the question of
whether there is still an "American Idea"— and if so,
what is it?
Actually, the outlines of
what might be described as the new American Anti-Idea are
already appallingly clear. It's a sort of neosocialism, derived
from what
Thomas Sowell calls "the
Civil Rights Vision" and amounting to a sort of racial
spoils system. Government power is used not to achieve economic
efficiency, which traditional socialism can no longer promise,
but ethnic equity—most importantly, the extirpation of
"discrimination."
That's private
discrimination, of course. Government-sponsored discrimination
is not merely acceptable but mandatory, in the form of
"affirmative action" quotas. "Quotas were originally
supposed to be remedial," says Professor Frederick R. Lynch
of Claremont College, author of
Invisible Victims: White Males and the Crisis of Affirmative
Action. "Now they are being justified by
affirmative-action professionals as a way of 'managing
diversity.'" That "diversity," needless to say, is
being substantially introduced into the U.S. by current
immigration policy.
Indeed, absurd as it may
appear, all brand-new immigrants from the right "protected
class"—black, Hispanic, Asian—count toward government quota
requirements that were allegedly imposed to help native-born
Americans. Hence a number of the African PhDs teaching at
American colleges. The 1986 Immigration Act prohibited
discrimination against legalized "undocumented" aliens
and set up an office in the Justice Department to enforce this
new law.
Symptomatic of the American
Anti-Idea is the emergence of a strange anti-nation inside the
U.S.—the so-called "Hispanics." The various groups of
Spanish-speaking immigrants are now much less encouraged to
assimilate to American culture. Instead, as a result of ethnic
lobbying in Washington, they are treated by U.S. government
agencies as a homogeneous "protected class," even though
many of them have little in common with one another. (Indeed,
some are Indian-language speakers from Latin America.) And they
have been supplied with "leaders"
financed to a significant extent by the
Ford Foundation.
In effect, Spanish-speakers
are still being encouraged to assimilate. But not to America.
Many current public
policies have an unmistakable tendency to deconstruct the
American nation. Apart from official bilingualism and
multiculturalism, these policies include: multilingual ballots;
defining citizenship so as to include all children born
here-even the children of illegals; the abandonment of English
as a prerequisite for citizenship; the erosion of citizenship as
the sole qualification for voting; the extension of welfare and
education benefits as a right to illegals and their children;
congressional and state legislative apportionment based on legal
and illegal populations.
Finally, there is a further
ominous change in American political culture since 1910: a
peculiar element of emotionalism that has entered intellectual
life.
Julian Simon in The
Economic Consequences of Immigration makes an admirable
effort to be honest about his
underlying motives: "Perhaps a few words about my tastes
are appropriate. I delight in looking at the variety of faces I
see on the subway when I visit New York . .. [telling innocent
visiting schoolgirls] about the Irish in New York and about
other groups too—I get tears in my eyes, as again I do now in
recalling the incident." This is obviously somewhat
different from my own reaction to the New York subway, although
presumably we are both also studying those faces to see if their
owners plan to mug us.
But in debate Professor
Simon is notably quick to attribute unattractive motives if
anyone dares raise America's shifting ethnic balance—although
logically the onus should be on him to show why the balance
should be shifted, and what he has against the American nation.
To Forbes magazine, Simon was flatly dogmatic: "The
notion of wanting to keep out immigrants in order to keep our
institutions and our values is pure prejudice." This intense
reaction surely goes beyond "taste."
Even more significant was
this recent column from
A.M. Rosenthal in the New York Times:
Almost always now, when I read
about Haitians who risk the seas to get to this country but wind
up behind barbed wire, I think of an illegal immigrant I happen
to know myself, and of his daughters and his son.
Then a shiver of shame and
embarrassment goes through me...
The illegal immigrant
was—Rosenthal's father. He came here from Russia via Canada.
Many years later, when his
children told the story of their father and his determination to
find work in America, to hell with borders, people smiled in
admiration of this man. And always, his children were filled
with pride about him ... I know that if he had been born in
Haiti or lived there, he would have broken every law that stood
between him and work in the U.S.
In short, because one
generation of Americans failed to catch an illegal immigrant,
their children must accept more, transforming their nation into
a charity ward.
Imagine what a quick pickup
[a] lobby, or parade, demanding succor for the Haitians could do
if it were headed by a few Irish-American cardinals, a batch of
rabbis, and the presidents of Eastern European, Greek, Italian,
Arab, and Turkish organizations. American Blacks and Wasps
welcome too! . . . Even reluctantly recognizing some economic
limitations, this country should have the moral elegance to
accept neighbors who flee countries where life is terror and
hunger, and are run by murderous gangs left over from
dictatorships we ourselves maintained and cosseted.
If that were a qualification
for entry into our golden land, the Haitians should be welcomed
with song, embrace, and memories.
Be careful about those
embraces. A significant proportion of Haitians are reported to
be HIV positive.
The search for an
explanation for the paralysis of the American immigration
debate, and the drive to transform America from a nation into a
charity ward, need go no further than this fretful psychodrama
in the mind of the man who, as editor of the New York Times,
substantially set the national media agenda.
Actually, Rosenthal is
unfair to Jewish organizations. They have generally supported
immigration. FAIR's Director of Media Outreach, Ira Mehlman—who
like his chairman, Dan Stein, is himself Jewish—looks depressed
at the thought. "They still think it's 1939," he says.
"But even if we took all the Soviet Jews, and all the Israelis,
that would still only be 6 million people." As it is, FAIR
expects 15 million immigrants in the 1990s.
End of Chapter
NEXT YEAR will see the
hundredth anniversary of Frederick Jackson Turner's famous
lecture on
"The Significance of the Frontier in American History."
The Superintendent of the Census had just announced that there
was no longer a continuous line of free, unsettled land visible
on the American map. Closing with the frontier, said Turner, was
"the first period of American history." A century later,
it may be time to close the second period of American history
with the announcement that the U.S. is no longer an
"immigrant country."
Because just as the
American nation was made with unusual speed, so it is perfectly
possible that it could be unmade. On speeded-up film, the great
cloud formations boil up so that they dominate the sky. But they
also unravel and melt away.
And why do I, an immigrant,
care? For one reason, I am the father of a nine-month-old
American, Alexander James Frank. He seems to like it here. A
second reason: just as Voltaire said in the eighteenth century
that every man has two countries, his own and France, so in this
century no civilized person can be indifferent to the fate of
America.
Beyond this ... I have an
infant memory, more vivid even than my later purgatory in INS. I
am playing with my twin brother in the back yard of my aunt's
home in a Lancashire cotton town. Suddenly, great whooping
giants in U.S. Air Force uniforms (although with the
crystal-clear recollection of childhood, I now realize that they
had the lithe figures of very young men) leap out and grab us.
We are terrified and struggle free.
Which always made me feel
bad in subsequent years. They were far from home, lodging with
my aunt. And they just wanted a souvenir photograph.
They were the cold-war tail
of that vast host that had come to Britain during World War II,
when the whole town had resounded night and day to the roar of
B-24 engines on the test beds at the great
Burtonwood airbase, and everyone had been glad to hear them.
They were, as Robert E. Lee once
described his troops, not professional soldiers, but
citizens who had taken up arms for their country. However,
Housman's "Epitaph on an Army of Mercenaries" applies to
them:
Their shoulders held the sky
suspended;
They stood, and earth's
foundations stay.
I don't know what happened
to them, although I remember one young wife showing us the first
color slides we had ever seen, of Southern California, and
explaining that they hoped to move to this breathtaking paradise
when they got out of the service. They will be old now, if they
are still alive. I don't know what they or their children think
of the unprecedented experiment being performed, apparently by
accident and certainly with no apprehension of the possible
consequences, upon the nation they so bravely represented.
I do know, however, that
they ought to be asked.
POSTSCRIPT:
"At a Cabinet meeting today, Attorney General William P.
Barr said nearly one-third of the first 6,000 [Los Angeles] riot
suspects arrested and processed through the court system were
illegal aliens, according to a senior Administration official.
Barr has not proposed any special effort to have them deported,
a Justice Department spokesman said."
—Washington Post,
May 6, 1992