Ideologues Have Hijacked an Important Debate
By Jonah Goldberg
Los Angeles Times, February 24, 2002
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WASHINGTON—I first met Pat Buchanan almost 33 years
ago, though I can't say I remember him—I was 8 days old.
My dad's great friend, Victor Lasky, the late, great
conservative muckraker, brought Buchanan to attend my
bris (the Jewish celebration that brilliantly marries
ritual circumcision and smoked fish on a bagel). Lasky
introduced the future three-time presidential candidate
to my Dad: "This is Pat Buchanan, he's a terrific
redbaiter." Since my family's apartment on the Upper
West Side of Manhattan was, for political conservatives,
what the catacombs were for Christians in ancient
Rome—sanctuary from the pagan authorities—it was
probably the only place north of Lincoln Center that
someone could be called a "terrific redbaiter" and it
would be both offered and received as a high compliment.
The reds are gone for the most part, thank God. But
Buchanan remains a great baiter. Now, though, rather
than attack the manifest evil of international communism
and its sympathizers here at home, Buchanan finds
himself arguing about demographics and what immigration
is doing to American (read Anglo-American) culture. It
is a debate that has marginalized Buchanan and those in
his orbit. But far more disturbing, it has marginalized
the entire debate about immigration at the exact moment
that the issue needs all the intelligent discussion it
can get. At a time when Latinos make up 13% of American
citizens, 28 million Americans are foreign-born and tens
of millions of Americans are the children or
grandchildren of immigrant-success stories, it hardly
seems constructive to declare that immigrants, in
general, and Mexicans in particular are "enemies" and
"invaders" who threaten Western civilization. Rather, a
constructive discussion might simply focus on the idea
that we want immigrants—no matter where they come
from—to become assimilated Americans, not aliens in our
midst, and that maybe our current policies at home and
on the border are not promoting that effectively.
Instead, we get Buchanan and his new book
"The Death of the West," which warns
hysterically that the white race is becoming an
"endangered species," about to be swallowed up by the
duskier Third World (defined as all nonwhites no matter
how rich, educated or democratic). We get Peter Brimelow,
a once-respected conservative voice who now runs the
shrill anti-immigration website VDARE.com, named for
Virginia Dare, the first British child born in North
America. We get syndicated columnist Samuel Francis
(widely considered Buchanan's personal ideologist of
choice) who has argued earnestly for "imposing adequate
fertility controls on nonwhites." These are not stupid
men—indeed, they are extremely talented individuals—but
they have become dismayingly obsessed in recent years
with creating, to borrow a phrase from my colleague at
the National Review, Ramesh Ponnuru, an
"identity politics for white people."
Rather than focusing on how to create a rational
immigration policy that recognizes the permanence of
America's ethnic diversity, they live in denial about
how to get back to the days when America was 90% white.
Buchanan even seems to imply in his book that Russian
ultranationalist Vladimir V. Zhirinovsky wasn't totally
off his rocker when he introduced a bill in the Duma
denying Russian women the right to leave the country and
permitting ethnic Russian men to marry up to five wives.
Hiding out in their bunkers on the web and in the
pages of a few obscure publications, these unhappy
paleoconservatives and neo-nativists have rallied the
troops under a single flag: white supremacy. No, they
aren't Klansmen or skinheads, and, no, they won't like
that label. But they are very serious about keeping
America a white country because, in their view, white
people, on the whole, make better Americans.
Take Brimelow's VDARE.com, which features—pardon the
expression—a Chinese menu of white-pride dishes. Some
authors concentrate on genetic questions, others focus
almost entirely on cultural arguments, but pretty much
everyone agrees that immigration spells the doom of
America (some even claim that all immigration after 1865
was bad for the Republic).
Francis, whose writings Buchanan borrows from
heavily, once declared at a conference, "The
civilization that we as whites created in Europe and
America could not have developed apart from the genetic
endowments of the creating people."
Whether the emphasis is on race or culture, this sort
of thinking is hardly new. Racial doom-and-gloom
ideologies have a long history on the right (and on the
left—the founder of Planned Parenthood, for example,
Margaret Sanger, was a repugnant racist and eugenicist).
In many respects, the intellectual antecedent of
Buchanan's "The Death of the West" is Oswald
Spengler's classic "The Decline of the West."
Spengler, too, worried that the darker peoples would
overtake Europe and topple the white man as the ruler of
the world. Spengler also worried that the introduction
of nonwhites and their culture into Western civilization
was a cancer. World War II and the Cold War shrank the
tumor of this sort of thinking on the right, but it
didn't excise it.
So, why this latest round? You could point to a lot
of things, but the most important is that it is a
response to the left. Seriously. As the left has sunk
ever deeper into multicultural absurdity, many white
folks have come to buy into the tribal logic of
Afrocentrists, feminists, La Raza fanatics and the like.
Perhaps the most recurring theme of resentment on the
racial right goes like this: "If Afrocentrism is great,
if Asian pride is great, if Hispanics can champion la
raza (the race), then how come a preference for
Eurocentrism, white pride and the white race is evil?"
When hearing a case about a more qualified white law
student being denied a slot in favor of a black, U.S.
Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall noted, "You guys
have been discriminating for years. Now it's our turn."
Well, if we're just taking turns, then maybe it's our
turn again, reason lots of disgruntled, fed-up but
perfectly decent white folks. Yes, the writings of the
anti-immigration right are a bonfire of fear and
hyperbole. But the multiculturalists provide kindling at
every turn. The resulting conflagration draws attention
away from what's really important.
Such as asking what unprecedented levels of
immigration—both legal and illegal—do to a culture
uncomfortable with demanding assimilation. Or the simple
fact that illegal immigration is, well, illegal. No
matter what approach you favor, if you aren't against
illegal immigration, you have no policy at all. And,
needless to say, no American should start his new life
here as a criminal: It breeds contempt for both the law
and the lawbreaker and undermines assimilation terribly.
Also, simply as a matter of foreign policy, we need to
respond to the fact that the president of Mexico is
developing political constituencies on both sides of the
border to influence politics on both sides of the
border. This would be troubling if Mexico were as white
as Canada.
Which brings us back to the basic issue: Race isn't
the point, so drop it. Now.
Jonah Goldberg is the editor of National Review
Online and a nationally syndicated columnist.
Published in VDARE.COM - April
03. 2002