"For them… life is going to be miserable.”
By
Peter Brimelow
(Them, by the way = You.)
My favorite quote in the endless
coverage of the September 11 attacks comes from the
September 22 New York Times advertorial that
assured us “Arab-Americans
Are Finding New Tolerance Amid the Turmoil.” Ismael
Ahmed, Executive Director of the Detroit-based
Access (“an organization that provides social
services here for a large and growing community of Arab
immigrants”), confronted with reports that Arabs had been
excluded from airline flights at the demand of their
alarmed fellow-passengers, reacted thusly,
“I feel
sorry for people who don't understand yet what America
has become," he said, referring to Americans who
scapegoat their countrymen based on skin color or
religion. "For them, I'm afraid, life is going to be
miserable."
You see his point, of course. After
all, because law enforcement authorities are too
terrified to engage anything that can be smeared as
“racial profiling,” a lot of those
Americans-who-scapegoat etc. etc. may very well be blown
to bits. That’s enough to make them pretty miserable.
But more importantly, the reason
American law enforcement authorities, and politicians,
are terrified is because public policy, beginning with
the 1965 Immigration Act, has imported alien
constituencies that have empowered ethnic political
entrepreneurs like I. Ahmed. [Send him
email.] Ahmed is very frankly telling
Americans-who-scapegoat etc. etc. that government policy
has caused their country to be taken away from them.
Which should make them very miserable indeed.
And mad.
My second favorite quote: from
Jonathan Tilove’s Newhouse News Service story on the
fear and trembling among our friends in the immigration
enthusiast community in case anyone should notice their
role in making
possible the September 11 attacks: “Attacks
Likely to Reverse Push to Ease Immigration.”
Steve Moore, a senior fellow with the immigration
enthusiast Cato Institute and head of the Club for
Growth,
said that
for immigration advocates like himself the best tack
right now may be to "lay low and don't talk about it a
lot."”
Yeah.
My message to Steve [email
him], echoing the heavyweight champion
Joe Louis: you can run, but you can’t hide.
Peter Brimelow is the author of
Alien Nation: Common Sense About America’s Immigration
Disaster
September 23, 2001