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It’s a horrible thing to say,
but
But at the same time, and despite constant propaganda to
the contrary, an extraordinary grass-
roots
backlash has undeniably developed. This, and only this, is what has stalled the
Senate’s amnesty/ wish-list legislation, which never even made it to conference
with the House.
Of course, it’s not over:
experience teaches that the special interests benefiting from mass immigration
have ways of making legislators talk—and vote. The setback, however, was
stunning.
Immigration reform institutions are developing too,
independent of the political establishment, in a process very reminiscent of
the 1950s-1960s institutional ferment that became the late, great American
conservative movement and culminated in the 1980 election of Ronald Reagan.
Examples would be the internet-based lobbying group NumbersUSA, my own webzine
VDARE.COM, even, among its other specialties, TAC.
But what really impresses me, as a long-time observer of
the immigration reform movement, is how often ordinary Americans are now
reported spontaneously organizing in their neighborhoods against the
transformation of their country. For example, across the country illegal alien
demonstrations are now regularly picketed by anonymous citizens, something that
requires real physical courage. As in
Four years ago, reviewing
Michelle Malkin’s book
Invasion: How America Still Welcomes terrorists,
Criminals, and Other Foreign Menaces to Our Shores in the first issue of
The
American Conservative (October 7 2002)
, I paraphrased Tolstoy to the
effect that all pro-immigration books resemble each other (triumphalist,
rhapsodic about the author’s forbears from Russia, fatally data-free) whereas
books critical of immigration policy, are more diverse, usually specializing in
quite different areas of this huge new debate, often earnestly technical.
Typical of an emerging paradigm, this remains very much
true of this season’s anti-immigration books. As for the pro-immigration
books…well, there don’t seem to be many pro-immigration books at the moment.
Commercial publishers, at least the less New York-oriented smaller ones, seem
to have little doubt where the country’s preferences lie.
Several of these books
provide little-known detail on recent grass-roots firefights. In
Whatever It Takes, Congressman J.D.
Hayworth (R-AZ) reports that when the
All were met with threatened
and actual violence as well as intense hostility from local political elites,
telling evidence of the extent to which American government has become the
enemy of the American nation.
The
Minutemen were actually blocked, to the great discredit of
But the result seems only to
be the further radicalization of the American patriotic resistance movement.
For that is what this is.
Similarly, after years of
being kept out of politics by a bipartisan Beltway consensus, in the 2006
election cycle the issue of immigration has spontaneously appeared in too many
federal, state and local races to mention. Minutemen founder (and Minutemen
co-author) Jim Gilchrist even got a remarkable quarter of the vote on a third
party line in a House special election in December, support for those of us who
agree with the late Lynn Nofziger, the celebrated Reagan operative, that
immigration is one of those rare epochal issues with the potential to break the
two-party system.
The conclusion is
unavoidable: like the U.S. Army in
Daniel Sheehy’s
Fighting
Immigration Anarchy: American Patriots Battle to Save the Nation is a
symbol and a symptom of this grass-roots backlash. Sheehy is a former corporate
writer who self-published this collection of profiles of key immigration
reformers in 2005. He achieved so much success that it was reissued in revised
form by a commercial house in mid-2006.
The profiles probably aren’t
of anyone you’ve heard about, with the exception of Rep. Tom Tancredo (R-CO).
But they explain a lot of what is happening at immigration Ground Zero.
For example, back in 1993 Barbara Coe of the California
Coalition for Immigration Reform was fired by the Anaheim Police Department,
where she managed the Crime Analysis Unit, because she persisted in drawing to
the attention of her superiors the dramatic increase in immigrant crime. Coe is
a veteran of many subsequent demonstrations and the object of violence and
death threats, which law enforcement officials never seem to be able do
anything about. Her group has repeatedly put up billboards criticizing illegal
immigration, which are invariably taken down by cowardly landlords after
threats of violence.
Instrumental in the victory
of California’s Proposition 187, which would have cut off taxpayer subsidies to
illegal immigrants and which was sabotaged by Democratic Governor Gray Davis’
refusal to defend it in court, she has been involved in several subsequent
efforts to get anti-immigration measures on the ballot, all falling short of
the required signature total partly because of the opposition, also cowardly,
of California’s Republican organizations. (Although Proposition 187 was what
got the last Republican governor, Peter Wilson, re-elected in 1994.) Coe did,
however, play a role in the recall of Gray Davis.
Coe was 70 when Sheehy
interviewed her, and at work on another ballot initiative. (She’s been in the
headlines more recently because a Republican campaign staffer apparently used
forged CCIR letterhead in a mailing warning Hispanic immigrants not to vote
illegally. Typical of current debate, this drew more outrage than the fact that
Hispanic immigrants notoriously do in fact vote illegally.)
Her life of obscure
sacrifice is not one that appeals to many professional politicians, and even
less to their media groupies. Nevertheless, it is the cumulative effect of many
such lives that ultimately creates an irresistible political movement.
Coe told Sheehy that her own
radicalization dates partly from watching a destitute friend enter a low-cost
nursing home, where she believes poor care from the non-English speaking staff
hastened his death. Documenting the devastating impact of radical demographic
change on those unable to afford gated communities and private schools is a
valuable contribution of Sheehy’s book.
Sheehy himself opens with a
lyrical account of the paradise that southern California appeared to him as a
12-year old moving there in 1964—one year before Congress opened the floodgates
with the disastrous 1965 Immigration Act—and his horror on returning a
generation later to find it becoming Mexifornian urban wasteland.
And Terry Anderson, the
anti-immigration black radio show host (KRLA-870 AM and nationwide on the RBN
network), shows Sheehy his once-black neighborhood of South Central Los Angeles
and says:
Thirty illegal Hispanics live in that three-bedroom house
across the street…That house behind my house had lots of rabbits in the yard.
They’re raised for food. The other house behind mine had roosters…They have
their parties and play their music loud…The black family next door can’t take
it so they move. Well, who’s going to buy the house next to these loud people?
It’s another Mexican family…And that’s how they take over a neighborhood—house
by-house, block-by-block….nobody wants to live next to them, and it’s not for
racial reasons, it’s for cultural reasons.
All of which is very
depressing. But it should actually be more depressing for the immigration
enthusiasts. What it means is that, when and if the some version of their
wish-list legislation is passed, their political problems will be not ending
but just beginning. The more immigration, the more backlash.
As Patrick J. Buchanan
writes in
State of Emergency: The
Our great cities will all look like
Which, of course, is a
recipe for revolution. But my conclusion, from careful if not loving study of
immigration enthusiasts, is that they quite genuinely have never thought about
this inevitable outcome. Either they really believe their own Kumbaya claptrap
or (as is frequently the case with die-hard adherents of putrefying
orthodoxies) they just aren’t very bright. Or both.
And it’s fatally easy for immigration enthusiasts to stay
in their state of denial. Buchanan’s
State of
My paranoid sense (sometimes
justified—see previous sentence) is that what Buchanan calls “the elites” are
now shaken by Americans’ immigration insurrection. Their instinctive reaction:
to suppress debate. Hence no reviews at all—in marked contrast to Buchanan’s
other recent books. (Similarly, at VDARE.COM, we’ve noticed a sudden jump in
webfilters denying our readers access at work and in public places on the
grounds that we are a “hate” site.)
Needless to say, I don’t
think that some cabal met somewhere and sent out the word that Buchanan’s
arguments were not to be engaged. I think it’s more a matter of collective
psychology—what Joe Sobran, looking at liberal intellectual lockstep, has
called the “hive.”
At least, I think I think
that.
This suppression would have
been very effective 15 years ago. But to a significant extent, the combination
of the electronic media, the internet and Amazon.com has allowed Buchanan to
bypass the would-be gatekeepers, as other conservative authors have been able
to do.
So in
this way too, the immigration issue is slipping out of the American political
elite’s control.
This instinct to suppress
debate goes to the heart of the Bush Administration. Incredibly, J.D. Hayworth
reports that when he raised with Bush
consigliere Karl Rove some doubts
he had about the Social Security totalization agreement with Mexico, which
allegedly co-coordinates both countries’ social insurance systems, Rove “became
somewhat exasperated and spluttered”—in a
private meeting, to an
elected
official of his own party —”‘You just don’t want to help brown people, do
you?’”
The real question, of
course, is whether the Bush Administration wants to help Americans.
And the answer, according to
Jerome Corsi, is no. His collaboration with The Minuteman Project’s Gilchrist
is not the definitive account of this remarkable civilian border-watch
phenomenon and its unexpected public relations success. (Corsi and Gilchrist
are reportedly working on another Minuteman book.) Instead, it consists of
various loosely-woven but interesting strands—some Minuteman details,
interviews with Gilchrist about his admirable combat service in
One of these is Corsi’s
widely-publicized discovery of documents apparently showing that President Bush
has already committed the U.S. to a “Security and Prosperity Partnership” with
Mexico and Canada—essentially extending the North American Free Trade Agreement
into a “North American Union,” a full-blown common market along the lines of
the European Union with free movement of capital, labor and, ultimately, pooled
sovereignty.
Ironically, this agreement
was reached at the very same March 2005 meeting in Waco, Texas, at which Bush
notoriously dismissed the Minutemen as ”vigilantes.” And you can see how
enforcing American law at the border must seem like a boring irrelevance if
you’ve decided that the American and Mexican labor forces will shortly be
merged anyway.
Of course, any such merger
will be devastating to American workers and taxpayers—and to American
democracy—but it is the sort of thing that appeals to the short-sighted
corporate interests with whom Bush appears to identify. And, after all,
European governments did manage to hornswoggle their very reluctant historic
nations into institutional merger. It’s as good an explanation as any for Bush’s
extraordinary systematic refusal to uphold immigration law.
There is, however, the
inconvenient detail that Bush did take an oath to uphold that law. If merger is
actually his hidden agenda, it is impossible to avoid the conclusion that he
consciously forswore himself. And this, much more than any perjury about sex,
calls out for impeachment.
Like the insurgents in
Like his colleague,
Congressman Hayworth, Tancredo has written an excellent book,
In Mortal
Danger: The
Similarly, Tancredo notes
March 2006 FBI testimony that the terrorist group Hezbollah has been implicated
in alien smuggling from Mexico—striking, as he says, because the FBI buried the
testimony in an annual report and also because the mainstream media, committed
to the official line that only busboys cross the southern border, ignored it.
This underlines Tancredo’s public vow that, if a terrorist attack occurs in the
Extreme Remedies
Extreme problems call forth
extreme remedies. One of the constant themes of all these books is Hispanic
activists’ arrogant attitude of entitlement. Thus J.D. Hayworth reports that in
2004 Lizabeth Ramon de Harvey was arrested for smuggling recently deported
illegal aliens back into the
Hayworth laments in one
chapter the immigration enthusiasts’ ability to pervert the language, so that
Congressman Luis Gutierrez of Illinois can seriously object to the term
“amnesty” because ”there’s an implication that somehow you did something wrong”
and the
Wall Street Journal can regularly describe critics of illegal
immigration as “anti-immigrant.” But Hayworth does not mention the obvious
linguistic corollary: immigration enthusiasts have no loyalty to the historic
American nation. What they are doing, in fact, can fairly be described as
“anti-American.” And there is a single word to summarize this, which needs to
be reintroduced into contemporary debate. That word is: treason.