Peter Brimelow on Ron Unz
Ron
Unz asks Peter Brimelow a Question
Unzism - The
(New) Doctrine of American Decline, by Steve
Sailer
Unzism Strikes Back
by Steve
Sailer
Ron Unz, the California political
entrepreneur, has graciously distributed my VDARE critique
of his pro-immigration / pro-assimilation
strategy to his email list of supporters. This
was an admirable gesture of open-mindedness
and/or intellectual self-confidence. Either is a
rare attribute among proponents of the current
immigration system, whose first instincts are
typically to stifle rather than encourage fresh
thinking on the topic.
Here are Ron's introductory comments and his
response to my VDARE column.
Dear Friends,
My "Race and Republicans"
article in The American Enterprise [http://www.onenation.org/0004/0400.html]
generated a considerable amount of
response, mostly quite positive.
However, Steve Sailer
replied to the article with a friendly
but very skeptical analysis, suggested
that my policy of "Unzism"
(pro-immigration & pro-assimilation)
was a defeatist strategy of American
decline, similar to Henry Kissinger's
approach to the Soviet Union, prior to
the coming of Reaganism…
Mr. Sailer is a conservative
intellectual of growing prominence,
described by National Review as
one of the leading "evolutionary
conservatives" attempting to
reconcile conservative doctrine with the
implications of Darwinism. He is
also the manager of the Human
Bio-Diversity (h-bd) e-mail discussion
group, whose members (including myself)
range from liberals to conservatives,
and engage in a free-wheeling discussion
of controversial issues of evolution,
race, ethnicity, and social policy.
His article appeared on the
www.vdare.com web site, [among whose
editors is] Peter Brimelow, whom I would
describe as America's most prominent
"respectable" white
nationalist intellectual (unsurprisingly
Mr. Brimelow is in very strong
disagreement with my assimilationist
arguments).
As for my response to Mr. Sailer's
arguments, I would suggest that what he
calls "Unzism" was actually
the position of Pres. Ronald Reagan, the
neo-conservatives, most old-line
liberals, and probably the bulk of
America's thinking elite since before I
was even born---and was hardly regarded
as "defeatism" by any of these
individuals.
That few prominent Democrats or
Republicans today maintain this position
is a sign of their cowardice in the face
of ethnic activists, rather than any
change in the underlying facts.
Sincerely,
Ron Unz, Chairman English for the
Children
Steve Sailer replies:
Ron's strategy of mass immigration mitigated
by old fashioned melting pot techniques would
certainly be better for America than what the
two main parties are proposing to either greater
or lesser degrees -- mass immigration
exacerbated by multiculturalism. But, as Ron
implicitly admits, he's finding himself
increasingly lonely in the middle. Why? It is
now the general opinion of professional
politicians that pushing Ron's assimilation
agenda would be more dangerous to their personal
careers than appeasing the diversitycrats. The
politicos may not know jack about what's in the
public interest, but they are the world's
leading experts on what's in their own interest.
Why is "cowardice in the face of ethnic
activists" growing at a time when fewer and
fewer living white politicians bear any guilt
for Jim Crow? One big reason is that immigration
is multiplying the number and power (current and
prospective) of the Army of the Professionally
Resentful. They may or may not represent the
minorities they claim to represent. But they are
out there laying snares to catch Republicans in
the high crime of making "insensitive
comments."
Not even George W. "Family values don't
stop at the Rio-Grande" Bush is immune.
Take this extract from an April 19th AP story:
Bush appointee apologizes to
lawmakers about remarks
By Jim Vertuno
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) -- The state's
health commissioner apologized a second
time Wednesday for remarks about
Hispanics and teen pregnancy that
sparked outrage in Hispanic communities
and prompted calls for his resignation….
Last week, he apologized in writing
for his comments in The New York Times
and Austin-American Statesman. He had
been quoted as saying Texas has a high
teen pregnancy rate because the state's
Hispanic population lacked the belief
"that getting pregnant is a bad
thing."
He told the Times: "If I were to
go to a Hispanic community and say,
'Well, we need to get you into family
planning,' they say, 'No, I want to be
pregnant,' it doesn't work very well…."
By the way, Hispanic 15 to 19 year old
females give birth 2.66 times more often than
non-Hispanic whites (see U.S. government
statistics at http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/releases
/00news/00news/nrbrth98.htm). But, of
course, truth is no defense when the charge is
Ethnic Insensitivity. In fact, the more truth
you tell, the more unspeakable your guilt.
So, Ron, could it be that this epidemic of
"cowardice" in the Republican
establishment isn't based purely on
hallucinations after all?
[Steve Sailer [email
him] is founder of the Human Biodiversity Institute and
movie critic for
The American Conservative.
His website
www.iSteve.blogspot.com features his daily
blog.]
April 20, 2000 |