Time To Rethink Immigration (II): Freeing America From The Immigration Gulag
"Yes, the taiga and the tundra awaited them, the record cold of Oymyakon and the copper excavations of Dzhezkazgan; pick and barrow; starvation rations of soggy bread; the hospital; death. The very worst.
"But there was peace in their hearts.
"They were filled with the fearlessness of those who have lost everything, the fearlessness which is not easy to come by but which endures."
— Alexander Solzhenitsyn, The First Circle
[P. 579]
I don't care if he's unfashionable, I continue to be impressed by the great Russian novelist Alexander Solzhenitsyn. I opened my 14,000-word 1992 Time To Rethink Immigration? cover story in the pre-purge National Review with a disguised homage to his novel about Stalin's Gulag, The First Circle. (This article just had a huge spike in traffic, thanks to a generous column by Ann Coulter.) I often close my speeches—for example, here and here —with his powerful Nobel Prize address evocation of the absolute value of nations ("The disappearance of nations would impoverish us no less then if all men had become alike with one personality, one face. Nations are the wealth of mankind…" So why abolish America?)
On May 25, despite heroic resistance from patriots like Jeff Sessions (R.-AL), the U.S. Senate passed S.2611—which should properly be called the Kennedy-Bush Amnesty/ Immigration Acceleration bill, since it is fundamentally a Democratic measure, supported by only a minority of Republicans, made possible solely by the fanatical support of the Bush White House. Among many other awful things, including amnesty, this disgusting special-interest feeding frenzy will at least double legal immigration from its current unprecedented highs. It is a further, giant step towards abolishing America. It is quite plainly treason.
Now that Congress has returned after the Memorial Day recess, Kennedy-Bush, or some poisonous part of it, may well pass the House and become law. The moral of recent immigration legislation history is that Washington's insiders have ways of making elected officials talk—and vote.
Judging from VDARE.COM's huge email traffic, the controversy over the Senate's sell-out has for the first time alerted many ordinary Americans to what is being done to their country and to their children's future. They have fought hard to prevent it. They may very well be shocked and dismayed if it goes through.
But, as a scarred veteran of the struggle for patriotic immigration reform, I am not. It has been obvious for some time that this will be a long and terrible war. So to these new patriotic reformers, and to my fellow scarred veterans in the struggle, I offer another passage from Solzhenitsyn, which forms the epigraph to this article.
It comes at the end of The First Circle. The sharashka, the relatively privileged prison for scientists, has been dissolved. The novel's characters are being dispatched back into the maw of the worst mass murder in European history. "But there was peace in their hearts. They were filled with the fearlessness of those who have lost everything…"
Maybe nobody is going to die if Kennedy-Bush becomes law—apart, of course, from the steady but unpublicized toll from drunk driving, crime, disease, financial ruin and so on—although ever more American communities will be debauched and destroyed. (Think Maywood, CA, writ state-wide…region-wide.) Otherwise, however, this total dispossession is actually the situation in which America's immigration reform patriots have been for several years.
They had already lost everything. By the late 1990s, they were effectively excluded from the mass media and, especially after the disaster of the Bush clan's recapture of the Republican Party in 2000, from all political expression. They were treated with a radical contempt virtually unique in the otherwise relatively collegial and difference-splitting political culture of American democracy. They had nowhere to go but up.
And, amid the lies and hysteria that invariably accompany any immigration-enthusiast assault on America, there is clear evidence that immigration reform patriots are indeed going up—and that they will continue to go up, until ultimately they and their cause prevail.
As we've said before on VDARE.COM, it took thirty years for Americans to cut off the last (1880-1920) Great Wave of immigration. By that measure, however unlikely it may now appear, in two or three election cycles the next cut-off will be here.
The Goldwater Effect
After a trauma like a stroke, the human brain is galvanized to rewire itself around the damaged area. Political trauma has a similar effect. The paradoxical result of Barry Goldwater's disastrous defeat in 1964 was that it left the American conservative movement with its own independent rapidly-developing networks and institutions. These eventually enabled it to elect Ronald Reagan and solve an earlier generation of problems, bypassing an equally arrogant, ignorant and intransigent political Establishment.
Exactly the same process has been underway among immigration reform patriots. The immense difference between immigration reform in 2006 and ten years earlier is that, then, backroom Republican traitors like Senator Spencer Abraham could sabotage the Smith-Simpson immigration bill, which embodied the reduction proposals of the Jordan Commission, and be protected by Wall Street Journal Op Ed page propaganda. Now there is a critical mass of organizations with websites willing to expose such perfidy in devastating detail and radio talkshows willing to publicize it. These organizations have evolved different specialties and are, generally speaking, as collegial as can be humanly expected. It all reminds me very much of the conservative movement when I first immigrated into it in 1970.
Of course, the MSM remains pretty much a desert—but increasingly irrelevant, thanks to the internet. And even here, individuals like the Washington Post's Robert Samuelson, Slate's Mickey Kaus and above all CNN's Lou Dobbs have begun to speak up, albeit sometimes uncertainly. Additionally, the Washington Times' Jerry Seper and Stephen Dinan now provide real news coverage.
The most recent and surprising (to me) development: politicians—politicians!—have begin to speak up too, with what looks like an almost Solzhenitsynian fearlessness.
VDARE.COM has written frequently about the heroism of Colorado congressman Tom Tancredo who has deservedly become a national figure on the immigration issue. But there are others: it would be hard to match the vitriol of the press release with which Georgia congressman Charlie Norwood greeted the Senate sell-out. I'm particularly taken with the explanation for his vote against Kennedy-Bush offered by Senator Chuck Grassley, the popular veteran Republican Senator from Iowa:
"I voted for amnesty in 1986 when we had a 1 million illegal immigrant problem. [It turned out to be 3 million—hint!] Now we have a 12 million illegal immigrant problem. Amnesty didn't work in 1986 and I don't think it's going to work in 2006."
(In other words, legislators learn from experience—bad news for immigration enthusiasts.) And then there's this conclusion to his savage Washington Times Op Ed (May 23 2006), subtly entitled "The 'Shamnesty' Legislation," by California Republican congressman Dana Rohrabacher:
"The definition of insanity is to do the same thing over and over again expecting a different result."
"Insanity"? Rohrabacher is talking about his own party's White House here (G.W. Bush, current proprietor.)
How's that for "fearlessness"?
The Gathering Storm
One of the recent rituals of the immigration debate has been loud post-election proclamations by MSM immigration enthusiast commentators that immigration is not working as an electoral issue. This is disingenuous, as usual. It suppresses the fact that immigration has produced two of the most stunning electoral upheavals of modern times—California's Proposition 187 in 1994 and Arizona's Proposition 200 in 2004, both grass-roots triumphs in the teeth of united bipartisan Establishment opposition.
But what it also reflects, of course, is that these commentators have no understanding of nascent political movements—either because they only got into politics after the American conservative movement was in power (and, perhaps not coincidentally, able to reward supporters) or because they were actually Democrats at the time, like the neoconservatives. (Or even, in the case of the agile David Brooks, now token conservative columnist for New York Times where he is pro-immigration, natch—a socialist.)
The immigration issue has been gathering over American politics like an immense thundercloud. At first, you get lightning flashes—noble individuals who run as token protest candidates, like our Joe Guzzardi in the 2003 California gubernatorial race. Then you get thunder—contested primaries. Then you get isolated raindrops —captured nominations. Then, you get flurries of raindrops—election victories. Then the storm breaks—the movement comes to power.
It takes time. But you get to recognize the signs.
One sign right now is the absolutely extraordinary difficulty that President Bush has had (and may still have) in getting his amnesty passed.
Other scattered signs—for those who have eyes:
Arch immigration enthusiast Utah Republican congressman Chris Cannon, whose costly defeat of an immigration reform primary challenger in 2004 was greeted with the usual triumphalist braying, faces an even more serious challenge this year. He may well lose—but the real point is that the trend is unmistakable.
In California, a special congressional election June 6 is a head-to-head clash between an immigration critic, former congressman and FAIR lobbyist Brian Bilbray, and a pro-immigration Democrat. Showing a fine sense of party loyalty, Senator John McCain has reneged on a commitment to appear at a fund-raiser for Bilbray. Once again, the trend is clear.
Of course, we already know from experience what will happen after these races. If the immigration reformers lose, there will be great MSM—and WSJ—trumpeting. If they win, they will be instantly blanked out, like Propositions 187 and 200.
Washington State Republican convention delegates voted over the Memorial Day weekend to call for the revocation of the notorious "anchor-baby" interpretation of the Fourteenth Amendment. Party leaders, needless to say, are panicking.
Nebraska Republican Congressman Tom Osborne, a legendary state football hero, lost the gubernatorial primary earlier this month because of his support for in-state college tuition rates for illegals.
Also in Nebraska, incumbent Democratic Senator Ben Nelson has succeeded in outflanking his Republican challenger, Peter Ricketts, by attacking him for supporting Kennedy-Bush, of which Nebraska's senior Senator, Republican Chuck Hagel, was an architect. [Nelson challanges Ricketts on immigration, by Don Walton, Lincoln Journal-Star, May 31, 2006]
In Herndon, Virginia, the mayor and five town councilors were replaced on May 2 by voters enraged at their complacency about illegal immigrants, which included sponsoring a day labor site.
In Texas, there is now reportedly "no overlap between the Texas GOP and Bush on immigration." Their state party platform calls for "suspension of automatic U.S. citizenship for the children of illegal immigrants."
These signs will appear with increasing frequency and intensifying urgency. But whether the political Establishment chooses to recognize them is another matter.
On the immigration issue, the American elite has reacted with a bipartisan intransigence exceptional in democratic politics. The astonishing spectacle of a seriously unpopular President expending the last of his political capital to impose a policy that alienates his own base and dooms his party to ever-worsening minority status is merely the latest example of this phenomenon. There are several reasons for this bizarre behavior, but the consequence is the same: no evasive action in the face of the gathering storm.
As a result, in the end the current party system may just be swept away. This doesn't happen often in American politics, but it does happen. Significantly, it was immigration (from Ireland) that provoked the Know-Nothing American Party and destroyed the Whig-Democrat "Second Party System" in the 1850s. The outbreak of the Civil War obscured this, because the Know-Nothings were also generally strong abolitionists—notwithstanding recent efforts to smear them as proto-Nazis—and chose to join the new Republican Party.
You didn't hear it here first. (Well, I did discuss it in Alien Nation, pp. 199-201.) Recently, a variety of well-known names have been quietly speculating that something of the sort may be in the wind: veteran Reagan operative Lynn Nofziger, shortly before his death (scroll down to May 19, 2005 entry); Richard Viguerie, whose direct-mail operations played a key role in the Reaganite capture of the Republican Party; David Frum, despite being author of the cheerleading Bush biography The Right Man
; Peggy Noonan, despite being a WSJ Op Ed columnist (although that must certainly give her first-hand familiarity with the problem).
It's hard for people to believe that the political parties they grew up with could ever disappear. All I can say is: I've seen it before, in Canada.
In 1986, I finished my (also much-denounced) book on Canadian politics, The Patriot Game: Canada and the Canadian Question Revisited, by predicting that two new federal parties would appear: one Western-based, English-speaking, conservative; the other Quebec-based, French-speaking, separatist.
It took a few election cycles. But Stephen Harper is now Prime Minister in a minority government and the Bloc Quebecois holds the balance of power in Parliament.
No doubt my check (cheque in Canadian) is in the mail.
Political parties are distressing in their habits. But they appear to be necessary to run democratic government. Replacing them is a pain in the neck—and very awkward for individuals with careers invested in them, including many old friends from my days on the Senate staff. But in America's immigration disaster, there will be plenty of pain to go around.
And more important things than political parties will be hurt. The whole American political concordat as it had evolved by the second half of the twentieth century is beginning to unravel.
I can see this in microcosm in editing VDARE.COM. We are a coalition. Many of our strongest articles are by patriotic American Catholics articulately appalled by much of their hierarchy's relentless support for immigration. But I increasingly get equally articulate articles from non-Catholic readers who have simply decided, on the basis of the bishops' behavior, that the Catholic Church is a Bad Thing and, in particular, incompatible with the survival of the American nation-state.
In effect, the post-1965 immigration disaster, and the bishops' foolish response to it, threatens to revive a controversy about the Catholic Church in America that had been dormant since the days of Nation editor Paul Blanshard's 1949 best-selling polemic American Freedom and Catholic Power
and John F. Kennedy's celebrated 1960 speech to Protestant ministers in Houston, which was in many ways an answer. American Catholics may face the prospect of being forced by their bishops to chose between their country and their faith. Americans who are not Catholics face the prospect of losing not just their country but their friends.
Even darker is the issue raised by Larry Auster, author of the seminal The Path to National Suicide (click here for free download). Brooding on his View From the Right blog over the 11-0 vote of Jewish Senators for Kennedy-Bush and assorted other current Jewish open-borders manifestations, he asked recently:
"If America had known when admitting Jewish immigrants between 1880 and 1920 that the descendants of those immigrants would oppose America's right to have any future control over immigration, would America have admitted those immigrants in the first place?
"As a descendant of Eastern Europe Jews, I never would have imagined that to be descended from immigrants requires a person to have more allegiance to future prospective immigrants than to America; nor would most European-Americans who are descended from 19th and early 20th century immigrants imagine such a thing. But many Jews, as well as many Catholics, think otherwise. They think that because they come from immigrants, their sacred mission in the universe is to crusade for open borders and deny any ability on America's part to have any say about who comes into this country.
'I say that this is a legitimate point to make to the open-borders Jews and Catholics. 'Was this part of the deal when your grandparents were admitted into America? That the fact that America let your grandparents into this country requires you to subvert America's national existence? In that case, your grandparents shouldn't have been admitted in the first place.'"
Auster, with his celebrated cheeriness, thinks that this might "shock at least some of them into realizing how offensive their position is to other Americans, and they would shut up." I think it would provoke foaming rage.
Still—so what? As I said, this is shaping up to be a long and terrible war. But a hard core of immigration patriots is forming that does not fear it. And the blame for it falls squarely on the heads of the immigration enthusiasts.
The fundamental internal contradiction of increasing immigration
In a 1997 Wall Street Journal column propagating an early version of the myth that Proposition 187 hurt Republicans in California—the exact reverse of the truth—Paul Gigot, in his role as mouthpiece for Editor Bob Bartley, took the opportunity to decree to the conservative peasantry that the immigration debate was now officially concluded. And the immigration enthusiasts had won—so shut up.
Gigot wrote:
"…the crusade by a few columnists and British expatriates to turn the GOP into an anti-immigrant party seems to have failed. Immigrant-bashing has proven to be lousy American politics. When even California conservatives admit this, the debate should be over." Potomac watch: GOP confronts future without Hispanics: Adios! By Paul A Gigot, Wall Street Journal, Aug 22, 1997
Nine years later, in an amusing case of failing upwards, Gigot has succeeded Bartley—but the immigration debate, far from being "over," has become so incandescent that, for example, his own star columnist now thinks that the failure of the Republican elite a.k.a. the Wall Street Journal Edit Page to respond appropriately could destroy the party. (See Peggy Noonan, above.)
At the time, Gigot's bullying bluster got my attention because I had private knowledge that Bill Buckley had just fired one of those pesky "British expatriates," John O'Sullivan, as editor of National Review—apparently because of this sort of pressure. (It was announced the following January with the typically effeminate Buckleyesque dissimulation that O'Sullivan was "resigning to write a book.") I suspected, rightly, that this meant the elimination of National Review's brief resistance to Establishment immigration enthusiasm—and of another "British expatriate" writing for National Review: moi.
But I never worried about the immigration debate being "over." This was always obviously absurd. Almost unique in public policy, immigration enthusiasm contains within itself what Marxists used to call a "fundamental contradiction." The reason goes to the point that Enoch Powell, who increasingly must be judged the greatest British political leader of modern times, made in his prophetic 1968 immigration speech: "Numbers are of the essence." By increasing the number of immigrants, the enthusiasts increase the number of problems—their problems.
At VDARE.COM, we exist to provide journalism on these problems because the MSM won't. But in case anyone has forgotten, the problems include: crime; disease; destroyed schools; destroyed neighborhoods; congestion; racial friction;