Alien Nation Review: The
Mises Review, Summer 1995
By David
Gordon
Come One, Come All?
Summer 1995
ALIEN NATION: COMMON SENSE ABOUT AMERICA'S
IMMIGRATION DISASTER
Peter Brimelow
Random House, 1995, xix + 327 pp.
The customary approach to immigration by
libertarians has been a simple one. No restrictions on
freedom of entry into a country (or exit from it) can
be justified; as Robert Bartley's Constitutional
Amendment has it, "There shall be no
borders" (p. 140). Peter Brimelow challenges this
view in Alien Nation and in doing so raises
fundamental issues of political theory.
Brimelow begins by building a prima facie
case that current immigration to the United States
does indeed pose a problem. The 1965 Immigration and
Nationality Act Amendments, according to supporters
such as Senator Edward Kennedy, intended to bring
about no drastic change in the American population.
Quite the contrary, the new legislation sought to
remedy the alleged inequities of the 1920s national
origins system. Supporters of the reform, including
President Lyndon Johnson, castigated those who
predicted an inundation from the Third World as
alarmists.
The alarmists have turned out to be right."Every
one of Senator Kennedy's assurances has proven
false. Immigration levels did surge upward.
They are now running at around a million a
year, not counting illegals. Immigrants do come
predominantly from one area—some 85 percent of the
16.7 million legal immigrants arriving in the United
States between 1968 and 1993 came from the Third
World" (p. 77, emphasis in orig<%0>inal).
Brimelow skillfully deflates efforts by immigration
advocates to minimize the significance of these
figures. True, as a percentage of the U.S. population,
the Great Surge of 1900–1910 in immigration exceeded
the influx of the 1980s and 1990s. But the new groups
have a higher birthrate than that of the white ethnic
stock that predominated until 1965; and, to an
unprecedented extent, few of the new entrants return
to their native countries. Brimelow, a master of
explaining statistics in clear fashion, uses two
charts, the Wedge and Pincers, to show the radical
impact of post-1965 immigration. By 2050, according to
Census Bureau estimates, non-Hispanic whites will
cease to be a majority of the population, should
present immigration trends continue.
Arguments that deny the present danger because
American society has assimilated successfully vast
numbers of immigrants fail to impress our author. In
the past, waves of immigration have been followed by
"great lulls": the period from 1920–1940,
for example, saw a massive drop in immigrants. But,
since the 1965 legislation, no period of digestion
seems in sight for the new arrivals to be
Americanized.
And do our new entrants even wish to be
Americanized? In contrast to past eras, when
immigrants spurned the label
"hyphenated-American," many newcomers avow
their contempt for the existing order. "Groups
like the campus-based MEChA . . . are openly working
for Aztlan, a Hispanic-dominated political unit to be
carved out of the Southwest and (presumably) reunited
with Mexico" (p. 194).
Further, and here Brimelow broaches the most
controversial point of his provocative book, past
immigrants came mainly from Europe; in 1950, the U.S.
population was about 90% white. If whites from
Southern and Eastern Europe did manage, with
substantial difficulty, to become absorbed into the
majority culture by the 1960s, does it follow that
vast numbers from Asia, Latin America, and Africa can
do so as well? Brimelow thinks not: he fears that the
growth of racial enclaves will polarize the United
States into what an earlier writer of similar views
termed "clashing tides of color."
Absent decisive action, the trends that Brimelow
fears will almost certainly continue and worsen. Once
residents in the country, immigrants find it quite
easy to bring their relatives to our shores under very
liberal "family reunification" provisions of
the law. And, once granted citizenship, relatives may
be imported with even greater facility. As if this
were not enough, enormous number of illegal immigrants
(perhaps 2-3 million temporarily and 3-500,000
permanently per year in the early 1990s), have arrived
here. And, by the terms of the Fourteenth Amendment,
any child born in the United States, regardless of his
or her parents' status, at once attains citizenship.
The new citizen may now bring in, quite legally, more
relatives, and so on in an ever-repeating cycle.
But the dire picture that Brimelow paints once more
returns us to the question posed at the outset: Why is
the situation just described a problem? What, if
anything, is wrong with an ethnically diverse society?
Leftists, including the libertarian variety, will
dismiss Brimelow as a racist; and are not advocates of
the free market committed to the unhampered movement
of people across artificially drawn political
divisions? Julian Simon has argued on many occasions
that immigration promotes prosperity: those who
prophesy otherwise, he thinks, are doomsayers along
the lines of the radical environmentalists.
Brimelow's case rests on no claims of genetic
inferiority of Third World immigrants. "There are
quite enough reasons to worry about immigration
without using Herrnstein and Murray's work [The
Bell Curve]. Would-be demagogues should note that
I do not so use it here" (p. 56). What, then, is
his complaint?
He maintains that a nation is constituted by a
common ethnic heritage: sufficiently diversify a
country racially and you cease to have a nation.
"The word `nation' is derived from the Latin nescare;
to be born. It intrinsically implies a link by blood.
A nation in a real sense is an extended family"
(p. 203). By advancing this definition, Brimelow
commits himself neither to saying that all
residents of a nation must be of the same race nor to
asserting that those of the dominant group should have
more political rights than others. But the Universal
Nation of Ben Wattenberg and his cohorts is a
contradiction in terms: a nation of its essence
partakes of the particular. (Incidentally, Brimelow I
think errs in seeing his own characterization of
nation as like that of Senator Moynihan. Neither is a
sufficient or necessary condition of the other [p.
203].)
But again, our question recurs: why does this
matter? If Brimelow is right, a society with "too
much" ethnic diversity does not constitute a
nation. So what? Why should one concern oneself about
what appears an argument from definition? Do we not
know, as libertarians, that the basis of social order
is the rights of individuals, not the supposed
conditions on which a collective entity rests?
Brimelow's argument will not so readily go away. If
you say to him, "I am no nationalist: I do not
care whether a nation, in your sense, exists,"
his reply will jar your complacency. "The free
market necessarily exists within a societal framework.
And it can function only if the institutions in that
framework are appropriate. . . . Some degree of ethnic
and cultural coherence may be among these
preconditions" (p. 175, emphasis removed).
Brimelow calls history to witness that societies have
never successfully <%0>continued for long with
the degree of ethnic mixing that the 1965 Act has
brought about. His case does not at all depend on
acceptance of his own vigorous brand of nationalism.
Rather, his argument against libertarian free-immigrationists
takes this form: should you open the borders in the
way you desire, you will destroy the free society that
you advocate. His criticism, then, is that free
immigration is a self-defeating position, to use Derek
Parfit's term in his Reasons and Persons.
But what of the economic advantages of immigration?
Does not free movement across borders promote the
international division of labor? Brimelow responds by
drawing a vital distinction. The circumstances that
obtain in a complete free market differ altogether
from those of a welfare state. Those who enter the
United States education at taxpayers' expense;
further, they often at once count in affirmative
action quotas, thus securing for themselves preferred
employment. Hardly the free market in action!
And what of the economic benefits of an increased
number of workers? Brimelow does not altogether deny
their existence; but, following the calculations of
George Borjas rather than those of Julian Simon, he
suggests that they have no great importance. As Borjas
sees matters, much of the gains that come from an
increased number of workers go to the immigrants
themselves; a good part of the remainder of the gains
goes to capital by depressing the level of wages. I
think it worth noting, though, that not only
capitalists but consumers benefit from reduced labor
costs.
Brimelow uses a philosophically interesting
argument in building his case for immigration reform.
He asks, what happens if, respectively, his and his
critics' policies are applied but turn out badly? If
he has erred, we have forfeited the benefits of a
certain amount, probably small, of economic growth. If
his critics are wrong, we have taken a giant step
toward national suicide. If we are uncertain what to
do, should we not avoid the action that threatens the
most harm? Here Brimelow's work intersects with the
contention of many decision theorists that, in a
situation of uncertainty, one should primarily act to
avoid the worst possible outcome. An argument like
Brimelow's, though deployed to very different
political ends, plays a large part in Rawls' Theory
of Justice. (Pascal's wager is a variant of the
same line of thought.)
Peter Brimelow's skill in exposition conceals the
magnitude of his achievement. Behind the smooth and
easy flow of his prose lies a penetrating grasp of the
literature of history, economics, demography, and
political theory relevant to his inquiry. [See
endnote.] Brimelow's analysis, and the distinctive
nationalist point of view which it expresses,
contribute in a bold and original way to the debate on
immigration. Those who wish to argue with him must
contend with a born polemicist, who has been careful
to anticipate counterarguments.
ENDNOTE: One minor historical slip: Edmund Burke's Reflections
on the Revolution in France does not
contain a "famous lament for the executed Queen
Marie Antoinette" (p. 275).