To Reunite a Nation

Peter Brimelow comments:         Pat Buchanan is a feline-lover and the Awful         Truth, not apparently obvious to everyone for         reasons that are inexplicable to me, is that he's         really just a big pussycat himself. Today's         immigration speech (Jan. 18), the first he's         given in this campaign although immigration was         slugged as a key issue on his website, is positively         cuddly. "Like all of you, I am awed by the         achievements of many recent immigrants." "Northern         Virginia…[as a result of immigration] has         become a better place, in some ways, but nearly         unrecognizable in others, and no doubt worse in         some realms, a complicated picture over all…"         Aw, phooey! The plain fact is that post-1965         immigration has been on balance a DISASTER for         the American nation. Say it's so, Pat!

Nevertheless, Buchanan's position as         outlined today is infinitely better than the         position of all the other candidates –         infinitely, because their positions are actually         negatives. Dubya is particularly awful. He wants         to increase immigration, something for which every poll         agrees there is absolutely no support, except         possibly in Silicon Valley country clubs.

At least, that's what Dubya appears to         want. Sharp questioning last week in New         Hampshire by Project USA's incomparable Craig Nelsen has revealed         that he doesn't know what "chain migration"         is – unlike         Buchanan - embarrassing him to the point         where he said he "would have to review legal         immigration policy."  [WATCH         VIDEO]

Yeah, right. Quite probably Dubya had         indeed never confronted these issues before, for         which the conservative Establishment media is         definitely to blame.

Sometimes I amuse myself by composing         answers for public figures who are undergoing         politically correction. (For John Rocker: "Truth         is an absolute defense. Is this a free country         or what?")

In this spirit, I append my version of         what Buchanan should have said at the Nixon         Library today. The biggest difference is that I         would have had him address the question of the         shifting racial balance – protected, I would         argue, by that fact that President Clinton has         already done so, in his 1998 address at Portland         State. Of course, there is no protection against         accusation of racism and Pat would no doubt have         found himself in a massive brawl again. But he         could have handled it. And in the immigration         debate, the alternative is being ignored.

Patrick         J. Buchanan

January         18, 2000
Richard Nixon Library
Yorba Linda, CA

Let me begin with a story: In 1979, Deng         Xiaoping arrived here on an official visit.         China was emerging from the Cultural Revolution,         and poised to embark on the capitalist road.         When President Carter sat down with Mr. Deng, he         told him he was concerned over the right of the         Chinese people to emigrate. The Jackson-Vanik         amendment, Mr. Carter said, prohibited granting         most favored nation trade status to regimes that         did not allow their people to emigrate.

"Well, Mr. President," Deng cheerfully         replied, "Just how many Chinese do you want?         Ten million. Twenty million. Thirty million?"         Deng's answer stopped Carter cold. In a few         words, the Chinese leader had driven home a         point Mr. Carter seemed not to have grasped:         Hundreds of millions of people would emigrate to         America in a eyelash, far more than we could         take in, far more than our existing population         of 270 million, if we threw open our borders.         And though the U.S. takes in more people than         any other nation, it still restricts immigration         to about one million a year, with three or four         hundred thousand managing to enter every year         illegally.

There is more to be gleaned from this         encounter. Mr. Carter's response was a         patriotic, or, if you will, a nationalistic         response. Many might even label it xenophobic.         The President did not ask whether bringing in 10         million Chinese would be good for them. He had         suddenly grasped that the real issue was how         many would be good for America? Mr. Carter could         have asked another question: Which Chinese         immigrants would be best for America? It would         make a world of difference whether China sent         over 10 million college graduates or 10 million         illiterate peasants, would it not?

Since the Carter-Deng meeting, America has         taken in 20 million immigrants, many from China         and Asia, many more from Mexico, Central America         and the Caribbean, and a few from Europe. Social         scientists now know a great deal about the         impact of this immigration.

Like all of you, I am awed by the         achievements of many recent immigrants. Their         contributions to Silicon Valley are         extraordinary. The over-representation of         Asian-born kids in advanced high school math and         science classes is awesome, and, to the extent         that it is achieved by a superior work ethic,         these kids are setting an example for all of us.         The contributions that immigrants make in small         businesses and hard work in tough jobs that don't         pay well merits our admiration and deepest         respect. And, many new immigrants show a visible         love of this country and an appreciation of         freedom that makes you proud to be an American.

Northern Virginia, where I live, has         experienced a huge and sudden surge in         immigration. It has become a better place, in         some ways, but nearly unrecognizable in others,         and no doubt worse in some realms, a complicated         picture over all. But it is clear to anyone         living in a state like California or Virginia         that the great immigration wave, set in motion         by the Immigration Act of 1965, has put an         indelible mark upon America.

We are no longer a biracial society; we are         now a multi-racial society. We no longer         struggle simply to end the divisions and close         the gaps between black and white Americans; we         now grapple, often awkwardly, with an         unprecedented ethnic diversity. We also see the         troubling signs of a national turning away from         the idea that we are one people, and the         emergence of a radically different idea, that we         are separate ethnic nations within a nation.

Al Gore caught the change in a revealing         malapropism. Mr. Gore translated the national         slogan, "E Pluribus Unum," which means "Out         of many, one," into "Out of one, many."         Behind it, an inadvertent truth: America is         Balkanizing as never before.

Five years ago, a bipartisan presidential         commission, chaired by Barbara Jordan, presented         its plans for immigration reform.         The commission called for tighter border         controls, tougher penalties on businesses that         hire illegal aliens, a new system for selecting         legal immigrants, and a lowering of the annual         number to half a million. President Clinton         endorsed the recommendations. But after ethnic         groups and corporate lobbies for foreign labor         turned up the heat, he backed away.

The data that support the Jordan         recommendations are more refined today. We have         a National Academy of Sciences report on the         economic consequences of immigration, a Rand         study, and work by Harvard's George         Borjas and other scholars. All agree that         new immigration to the United States is heavily         skewed to admitting the less skilled. Unlike other         industrialized democracies, the U.S. allots the         vast majority of its visas on the basis of         whether new immigrants are related to recent         immigrants, rather than whether they have the         skills or education America needs. This is why         it is so difficult for Western and Eastern         Europeans to come here, while almost entire         villages from El Salvador have come in.

Major consequences flow from having an         immigration stream that ignores education or         skills. Immigrants are now more likely than         native-born Americans to lack a high school         education. More than a quarter of our immigrant         population receives some kind of welfare,         compared to 15 percent of native-born. Before         the 1965 bill, immigrants were less likely to         receive welfare. In states with many immigrants,         the fiscal impact is dramatic. The National         Academy of Sciences contends that immigration         has raised the annual taxes of each native         household in California by $1,200 a year. But         the real burden is felt by native-born workers,         for whom mass immigration means stagnant or         falling wages, especially for America's least         skilled.

There are countervailing advantages.         Businesses can hire new immigrants at lower pay;         and consumers gain because reduced labor costs         produce cheaper goods and services. But,         generally speaking, the gains from high         immigration go to those who use the services         provided by new immigrants.

If you are likely to employ a gardener or         housekeeper, you may be financially better off.         If you work as a gardener or housekeeper, or at         a factory job in which unskilled immigrants are         rapidly joining the labor force, you lose. The         last twenty years of immigration have thus         brought about a redistribution of wealth in         America, from less-skilled workers and toward         employers. Mr. Borjas estimates that one half of         the relative fall in the wages of high school         graduates since the 1980s can be traced directly         to mass immigration.

At some point, this kind of wealth         redistribution, from the less well off to the         affluent, becomes malignant. In the 1950s and         '60s, Americans with low reading and math         scores could aspire to and achieve the American         Dream of a middle class lifestyle. That is less         realistic today. Americans today who do poorly         in high school are increasingly condemned to a         low-wage existence; and mass immigration is a         major reason why.

There is another drawback to mass         immigration: a delay in the assimilation of         immigrants that can deepen our racial and ethnic         divisions. As in Al Gore's "Out of One,         Many."

Concerns of this sort are even older than the         Republic itself. In 1751, Ben Franklin asked:         "Why should Pennsylvania, founded by the         English, become a Colony of Aliens, who will         shortly be so numerous as to Germanize us         instead of our Anglifying them?" Franklin         would never find out if his fears were         justified. German immigration was halted by the         Seven Years War; then slowed by the Great Lull         in immigration that followed the American         Revolution. A century and half later, during         what is called the Great Wave, the same worries         were in the air.

In 1915 Theodore Roosevelt told the Knights         of Columbus: "There is no room in this country         for hyphenated Americanism…. The one         absolutely certain way of bringing this nation         to ruin, of preventing all possibility of its         continuing to be a nation at all, would be to         permit it to become a tangle of squabbling         nationalities." Congress soon responded by         enacting an immigration law that brought about a         virtual forty-year pause to digest, assimilate,         and Americanize the diverse immigrant wave that         had rolled in between 1890 and 1920.

Today, once again, it is impossible not to         notice the conflicts generated by a new "hyphenated         Americanism." In Los Angeles, two years ago,         there was an anguishing afternoon in the         Coliseum where the U.S. soccer team was playing         Mexico. The Mexican-American crowd showered the         U.S. team with water bombs, beer bottles and         trash. The Star Spangled Banner was hooted and         jeered. A small contingent of fans of the         American team had garbage hurled at them. The         American players later said that they were         better received in Mexico City than in their own         country.

Last summer, El Cenizo, a small town in south         Texas, adopted Spanish as its official language.         All town documents are now to be written, and         all town business conducted, in Spanish. Any         official who cooperates with U.S. immigration         authorities was warned he or she would be fired.         To this day, Governor Bush is reluctant to speak         out on this de facto secession of a tiny Texas         town to Mexico.

Voting in referendums that play a growing         part in the politics of California is now         breaking down sharply on ethnic lines. Hispanic         voters opposed Proposition 187 to cut off         welfare to illegal aliens, and they rallied         against it under Mexican flags. They voted         heavily in favor of quotas and ethnic         preferences in the 1996 California Civil Rights         Initiative, and, again, to keep bilingual         education in 1998. These votes suggest that in         the California of the future, when         Mexican-American voting power catches up with         Mexican-American population, any bid to end         racial quotas by referendum will fail. A         majority of the state's most populous         immigrant group now appears to favor set-asides         and separate language programs, rather than to         be assimilated into the American mainstream.

The list of troubling signs can be extended.         One may see them in the Wen Ho Lee nuclear         secrets case, as many Chinese-Americans         immediately concluded the United States was         prosecuting Mr. Lee for racist reasons.

Regrettably, a cultural Marxism called         political correctness is taking root that makes         it impossible to discuss immigration in any but         the most glowing terms. In New York City         billboards that made the simple point that         immigration increases crowding and that polls         show most Americans want immigration rates         reduced were forced down under circumstances         that came very close to government-sponsored         censorship. The land of the free is becoming         intolerant of some kinds of political dissent.

Sociologist William Frey has documented an         out-migration of black and white Americans from         California, some of them seeking better labor         market conditions, others in search of a society         like the one they grew up in. In California and         other high immigration states, one also sees the         rise of gated communities where the rich close         themselves off from the society their own         policies produce.

I don't want to overstate the negatives.         But in too many cases the American Melting Pot         has been reduced to a simmer. At present rates,         mass immigration reinforces ethnic subcultures,         reduces the incentives of newcomers to learn         English; and extends the life of linguistic         ghettos that might otherwise be melded into the         great American mainstream. If we want to         assimilate new immigrants—and we have no         choice if we are remain one nation—we must         slow down the pace of immigration.

Whatever its shortcomings, the United States         has done far better at alleviating poverty than         most countries. But an America that begins to         think of itself as made up of disparate peoples         will find social progress far more difficult. It         is far easier to look the other way when the         person who needs help does not speak the same         language, or share a common culture or common         history.

Americans who feel it natural and right that         their taxes support the generation that fought         World War II — will they feel the same way         about those from Fukien Province or Zanzibar? If         America continues on its present course, it         could rapidly become a country with no common         language, no common culture, no common memory         and no common identity. And that country will         find itself very short of the social cohesion         that makes compassion possible.

None of us are true universalists: we feel         responsibility for others because we share with         them common bonds — common history and a common         fate. When these are gone, this country will be         a far harsher place.

That is why I am proposing immigration reform         to make it possible to fully assimilate the 30         million immigrants who have arrived in the last         thirty years. As President, I will ask Congress         to reduce new entry visas to 300,000 a year,         which is enough to admit immediate family         members of new citizens, with plenty of room for         many thousands with the special talents or         skills our society needs. If after several         years, it becomes plain that the United States         needs more immigrants because of labor         shortages, it should implement a point system         similar to that of Canada and Australia, and         allocate visas on a scale which takes into         account education, knowledge of English, job         skills, age, and relatives in the United States.

I will also make the control of illegal         immigration a national priority. Recent reports         of thousands of illegals streaming across the         border into Arizona, and the sinister and cruel         methods used to smuggle people by ship into the         United States, demand that we regain control of         our borders. For a country that cannot control         its borders isn't fully sovereign; indeed, it         is not even a country anymore.

Without these reforms, America will begin a         rapid drift into uncharted waters. We shall         become a country with a dying culture and         deepening divisions along the lines of race,         class, income and language. We shall lose for         our children and for the children of the 30         million who have come here since 1970 the last         best hope of earth. We will betray them all—by         denying them the great and good country we were         privileged to grow in. We just can't do that.

With immigration at the reduced rate I         recommend, America will still be a nation of         immigrants. We will still have the benefit of a         large, steady stream of people from all over the         world whose life dream is to be like us –         Americans. But, with this reform, America will         become again a country engaged in the mighty         work of assimilation, of shaping new Americans,         a proud land where newcomers give up their         hyphens, the great American melting pot does its         work again, and scores of thousands of immigrant         families annually ascend from poverty into the         bosom of Middle America to live the American         dream.