Peter Brimelow writes:
Like Steve Sailer, I kind of like Ron Unz,
despite his propensity for Paul Gigot-type
childishness like calling critics of immigration
policy “anti-immigrant.” (And me
quote-unquote “respectable.” What is that
supposed to mean?)
This is an extract from his enormous post on
Steve Sailer’s confidential Human Biodiversity
email group. Ron is defending himself against
Steve’s point that his policies are implicitly
anti-black by arguing that immigration reform
won’t win black votes either. Note his
inability to distinguish between facts and
values, very typical of immigration enthusiast
mystagogues.
[Ron Unz:]
[VERY LARGE snip]
…For example, I would characterize Peter
Brimelow as America's most prominent
"respectable" white nationalist
intellectual, and his 1995 anti-immigration book
Alien Nation has enormous impact in that
movement. The book repeatedly claims that
"Race and ethnicity are destiny in American
politics." Furthermore, Brimelow suggests
that despite multiculturalist claims to the
contrary, America began as a white nation, since
although blacks made up 20% of the population,
they were nearly all slaves, couldn't become
citizens, and had no political rights; as late
as 1950, he claims Americans considered America
to be "the racial hegemony of white
Americans." I suspect that these quite
inflammatory sentiments and policies, described
with clear approval, would not win many black
votes.
[Peter Brimelow reply:] List members who
flinched at this great tide of Unzprose can
count themselves lucky: Ron talks like this too!
To deal with his paragraph on me:
1] "race..is destiny in American
politics" - i.e. in the U.S., voting is
more importantly determined by ethnicity than
class. This is simply a fact - not, as Ron seems
to think, a "sentiment" or a
"policy."
2] "America began as a white
nation" - again, this is simply a fact. The
1790 Naturalization Act required applicants to
be "free white persons." In other
words, the view that the U.S. was founded as a
"proposition nation" that anyone could
join without regard to origin is a myth.
3] "as late as 1950, he claims Americans
considered America to be "the racial
hegemony of white Americans..."" This
is Ron's rather perverse way of reporting my
comment that this curious phrase, which began
circulating in the early 90s, would have had no
meaning four decades earlier, when the U.S. was
90% white. In those days, that *was* the nation.
4] I don't know that I described these facts
"with clear approval." But it
certainly appears they provoke Ron's visceral
*disapproval*. Hence, presumably, his
determination to America as it existed in 1965.
I do think that any political party
representing the ethnic majority will have a
problem attracting ethnic minorities, who are
inevitably alienated to some degree...like Ron.
But if you have the ethnic majority, why worry?
April 20, 2000