PETER BRIMELOW THE GREEN
by John Wall
The Lost Colony was
established approximately 12,000 years after humans
first entered North America from Asia via a land
bridge across the Bering Strait. As in Australia
and Madagascar, extinction followed the
dispersal of humans across North and South
America. Among the losses were most of the megafauna, from elephants to
giant ground sloths, and many
endemic species of the Caribbean islands,
including giant flightless owls. Species that
were able to adapt to the presence of the
skilled hunters and the fires they introduced
continued to prosper, and the east coast of
North Carolina must have remained for the most
part a wilderness of pine and hardwood forests, cypress swamps and
freshwater marshes when the English settlers
arrived at Roanoke Island in 1587.
After 425 years of
increasingly sophisticated disturbance, no
habitat remains in its original state in eastern
North Carolina. A few areas have recovered
from earlier settlement, however, though without
all of the original fauna, such as Carolina Parakeets. The
preservation of such patches of original America
are now threatened by the world human population
boom that recently has spread to the United
States with massive immigration.
In the postwar years,
those of us with an interest in natural history
stood by helplessly as our favorite woods were
cut, fields built upon and waters dammed and
polluted, under the onslaught of human
population growth promoted by virtually all
politicians. Finally, in the 1960s, to the
consternation of the pols, it appeared that zero
domestic population growth would be achieved
through the individual decisions of millions of
Americans. That was not allowed to happen.
Liberal Democrats had
sought for years to expand immigration for quite
a rational reason - immigrants tended to vote
for their candidates, whereas native Americans
increasingly did not. Turning to my collection
of Herblock books, I found editorial cartoons
supporting increased immigration from the 1950s,
when most people weren't giving it a thought.
There was sufficient resistance in Congress to
prevent liberalization until the unexpected
happened - the Republicans nominated a candidate
for President, Barry Goldwater, who spoke
casually about dropping nuclear bombs on
Vietnam. The Goldwater reverse landslide of 1964
produced a lopsided Democratic majority in
Congress, and they promptly passed the
Immigration Act which Peter Brimelow has
dissected in his book Alien Nation.
(Instead of using nuclear weapons, the U.S.
sprayed terrible, chemical defoliants on Vietnam
that still poison the land and people.)
Now, after thirty years
of massive immigration, legal and illegal,
Americans are increasingly recognizing the
adverse effects of international and domestic
human overpopulation and environmental
degradation. They commute on packed freeways.
Airports and flights are congested. New
buildings go up on space that always had been
open. Familiar native wildlife vanishes, to be
replaced by a few species of urban survivors.
Farms and suburban lawns treated repeatedly with
a cocktail of poisons approach the toxicity of
Superfund sites. Immigrants pour into
communities from Mount Kisco to Mountain View,
leading long-time residents to move to maintain
their quality of life.
The most prominent
conservative leaders applaud these changes. Over
the years I can't recall any public works
project opposed by environmentalists that wasn't
championed by the Wall Street Journal's
editorial page. "Overpopulation fears
fading fast", declares the headline of a
narrow-minded, front-page article in Investor's Business Daily.
(November 28, 1999).
These are views that
have come historically from the left. Subsidized
destruction of natural resources to create
"jobs" has been a touchstone of the
Soviet Union, the New Deal, and the World Bank.
Moreover, it was the left who championed
liberalization of immigration and opposed all
efforts to link welfare benefits to birth
control. Conversely, the one
"environmental" U.S. President was a
Republican, Theodore Roosevelt. Never before or
since has there been a President interested in
or capable of keeping a bird list for the White
House grounds, who went on expeditions to South
America and Africa to observe wildlife, and who
believed passionately in the preservation of
wild places.
Unfortunately, the
conservative leadership have incorporated the
left's historic insistence upon growth at any
cost into their dogma, insisting that there are
no foreseeable limits. Since they place no value
whatsoever on animal and plant species without
immediate, measurable monetary value, the
ongoing, worldwide mass
extinction of non-human species is of no
concern. While mouthing platitudes about
government waste [name one wasteful program or
agency eliminated by the Republican Congress],
they support nearly all plans for subsidized
highways, dams, and nuclear power plants and the
below cost sale to extractive interests of the
bits of remaining wilderness owned by the
federal government. Among their top priorities
are reversing or limiting American women's right
to choose to have abortions and eliminating aid
for international population control projects.
Yet despite their
prominence on the television and radio talk
shows and in the established press, the
conservative spokesmen seem to have made little
headway in gaining popular support for a crusade
against the environment. To their credit, they
for the most part support ballot initiatives, in
which measures characterized as
"pro-environment" have fared well. For
example, recent referenda to criminalize certain
abortion procedures failed decisively in
Washington, Colorado and Maine, suggesting that
anti-abortion laws would lose almost everywhere
if put to a popular vote. Californians voted
overwhelmingly for Proposition 187, which would
have eliminated benefits to illegal aliens, but
it was effectively repealed by the actions of a
liberal federal district judge. Environmental
bond issues have passed in a number of states,
even though, as in New York, bond issues for
traditional spending programs sometimes have
been misrepresented as "environmental"
to win voter approval. Furthermore, public
opinion polls reflect strong popular support for
preservation of wilderness, for cleaning up and
curtailing pollution, and for severely
restricting immigration.
Though
Peter
Brimelow never has represented himself to be
an environmentalist, his proposals to reform
immigration would have a profound, positive
environmental impact in the U.S. and abroad --
greater than anything being accomplished by the
well-funded Beltway environmental groups. Had a
time-out from immigration been implemented when
first proposed by Peter in 1992, the population
of the U.S. would be approximately 10 Million
less than it is today - about the equivalent of
a second Los Angeles metropolitan area!
Furthermore, U.S. immigration reform would be
beneficial in the long run to the immigrants'
native countries. With the U.S. acting as an
escape hatch for excessive population, those
countries have been able to delay taking steps
to deal with the overpopulation crisis while
continuing to grow irresponsibly and destroy
irreplaceable natural resources.
The next time you read
about an environmental group conferring an award
upon a citizen for some well-meaning, but de
minimus effort (e.g., recycling newspapers,
cleaning oiled seabirds), consider whether the
award might better have been conferred upon
Peter Brimelow, whose sensible proposals would
have a vastly greater, positive environmental
impact than the best efforts of all the local
activists combined.