January 13, 2005
Immigration Policy Bad For America!—Not Just GOP
By Sam Francis
"No issue, not one, threatens to
do more damage to the Republican coalition than
immigration," gasps
neoconservative David Frum in National Review's
Dec. 31
cover story. [Full
article
here].
Mr. Frum, the original
"patriotic conservative" who
tried to smear the entire
anti-war right as "unpatriotic" back in 2003,
has now defected from the ranks of the Open Border
lobby, at least in a way.
Should those who were
never part of that lobby welcome him?
Not especially. He still doesn't
quite get what the real problem with mass immigration
is—in part because he's not that much of a patriot
himself.
Mr. Frum's article pants that the
Republican Party will
actually be harmed by the mass immigration it has
refused to control for the last two decades and that
it's high time the GOP did something about it.
Indeed, that seems to be the major
thrust of his case against immigration—it's
bad for the Republicans.
That there are other reasons for
being for tighter immigration control or even for a
complete
moratorium he only obliquely suggests.
There are some
national security problems with letting
millions of aliens ramble across your borders, and
there are some economic problems with permitting
"entry by an ever-expanding number of
low-skilled workers, threatening the livelihoods of
low-skilled Americans."
But nowhere does our Patriot
mention the major problem immigration causes—the
creation of a massive subculture of unassimilated Third
World aliens inside the country.
For Mr. Frum, the immigration
problem is
mainly political, and
partisan politics at that. "GOP You Are Warned,"
the article's title rumbles.
Of course Mr. Frum is right about
that, but it's interesting that this is hardly the first
time National Review has issued such a warning. Back in
1997, Peter Brimelow, then an NR senior editor,
and
Ed Rubenstein wrote an
article warning the Republicans of the same
thing—but for rather different reasons.
The Brimelow-Rubenstein article
argued that immigration would hurt Republicans because
immigrants would vote for the Democrats (and they do).
Mr. Frum is arguing that
Republican failure to deal with the immigration
crisis could
alienate the party's base (and it will).
"There's no issue where the
beliefs and interests of the party
rank-and-file diverge more radically from the
beliefs and interests of the party's leaders," he
writes. "Immigration for Republicans in 2005 is what
crime was for Democrats in 1965 or abortion in 1975: a
vulnerable point at which a strong-minded opponent could
drive a wedge that would shatter the GOP."
But what he misses is just why
the "party rank-and-file" is so upset about
immigration.
It's upset for precisely the
cultural and national reasons I noted and which Mr. Frum
rather manages to miss. National security and economics
are significant parts of
the case against immigration, but mainly Americans
don't like their nation being colonized by an alien,
Third World mass that speaks a
different language, imports different
values and is often loyal to a different country.
The problem, as Mr., Frum sees it,
is that sooner or later the Democrats will seize the
immigration issue if Republicans don't deal with it—as I
argued also in
a recent column, quoting none other than Hillary
Clinton's
dim views of illegal immigration.
Mr. Frum quotes the same remarks,
but if Hillary can't walk off with the GOP base, he
suggests, there may well be other Democrats who could
use the immigration issue to do just that.
He thinks the way the party should
deal with the issue is to "develop and practice a new
way of speaking about immigration, one that makes clear
that enforcement of the immigration laws is not
anti-immigrant or
anti-Mexican: It is
anti-bad employer," because employers hire
illegals at the expense of Americans and legal
immigrants.
Of course, the
Open Borders people have an easy and perfectly
logical answer to that:
Legalize it all.
If the only problem with illegal
immigration is that it's illegal, if you're not willing
to say
mass immigration by itself is a problem, then why
should we have any laws against it at all?
The famous
Wall Street Journal position—"there
shall be open borders"—is the logical
conclusion.
Mr. Frum's only response to this,
apparently, would be that there's the
security problem, but that's flaccid enough.
His real problem is that he—like
most of the rest of the neo-conservatives—will not
affirm the reality and significance of the nation, the
national identity.
Security, economy and party
interests are all well and good, but the fundamental
issue in the immigration debate is
who we are and what sort of nation we want to be.
Mr. Frum, like a lot of his
neo-con buddies, for all their ballyhoo about
"patriotism," doesn't seem to offer a very clear
answer.
COPYRIGHT
CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
Sam Francis [email
him] is a nationally syndicated columnist. A selection
of his columns,
America Extinguished: Mass Immigration And The
Disintegration Of American Culture, is now available
from
Americans For Immigration Control.
Click here
for Sam Francis' website. Click
here to order his monograph,
Ethnopolitics: Immigration, Race, and the American
Political Future.