I'm embarrassed it took me so long to grasp the phoniness of the
charge that it's "anti-immigration" to oppose current U.S.
immigration policy and the even worse "comprehensive reform" bill,
which thankfully failed. I can only plead blind piety. After all, I
live in the great immigrant metropolis, lit by the Statue of
Liberty's torch, under which all my grandparents sailed a century
ago to reach a land that amply fulfilled its promise to them. I
feared that my misgivings about today's immigrant flood were but a
short step from the nativist know-nothingism that dismissed my
forebears and their fellow newcomers as defective both mentally and
culturally, sure to debase American society with their ignorance,
poverty, and crudity. Isn't the lesson of my grandparents'
generation simply this: that American freedom and opportunity have
a special magic, an alchemy for transforming tired, poor, huddled
masses into free American citizens whose energy and grateful
patriotism, and whose progeny, greatly strengthened the nation?
However unpromising today's largely uneducated and unskilled
immigrants may appear, do they really look any worse than their
predecessors?
Such was the consensus among the writers at City
Journal, the conservative magazine I edited from 1994 through
2006. But some years ago, when I sent a writer out to see how the
magic Americanizing machine was working, he came back dismayed.
After several weeks in a heavily Hispanic Manhattan neighborhood,
talking to Catholic priests and their immigrant flocks, he
concluded that the alchemy of assimilation was fizzling out. The
priests saw their duty as signing up immigrants for every possible
subsidy, especially the child-only welfare benefit available to
American-born kids of immigrant mothers, a munificent sum to a
newcomer from a peasant village. The clerics also were pressing
local schools to teach the newly arrived kids in Spanish, so they
wouldn't "lose their cultural heritage."
Oh dear, my writer thought: Now we have a system that subverts
rather than promotes economic enterprise and cultural assimilation,
the twin engines of Americanization. That was a story he didn't
want to write.
To this unsettling report Heather Mac Donald piled on disturbing
anecdotes from her frequent visits to southern California, stories
about Mexican gangs and Latino family breakdown. Then Victor Davis
Hanson poured out a vivid tale that sharpened these impressions. He
grew up in a half-Mexican town in California's San Joaquin Valley,
he told me, where he still lived and worked the family farm. With
Mexican-American friends going back to his school days, when he was
one of five Anglos in a class of 40, and a web of Mexican relatives
by marriage, he'd chosen a career teaching the classics to mostly
Mexican students, because (among other reasons) he likes Mexicans.
But things had changed. In his childhood, Mexicans assimilated. Now
-- with multiculturalism stoked up to boiling by armies of Latino
advocates and by schoolteachers skeptical of the worth of the
American culture that has produced all the advantages that Mexicans
have flocked here to enjoy -- they don't. And as the population of
Hanson's little town neared 90 percent Mexican, deeper problems
emerged. He chased away three Mexican housebreakers at gunpoint at
3 a.m., he said; another time, outgunned, he had to let a carload
of Mexicans get away with 100 pounds of oranges from his grove.
I ASKED VICTOR TO TURN THESE reflections into an article, the first
of what became a series of City Journal re-examinations of
the immigration question by Hanson, Heather Mac Donald, and Steven
Malanga, now revised and just published as a book, The
Immigration Solution (Ivan R. Dee). It takes a very different
position from where we started out.
The issue, we quickly realized, is a lot more specific than we
had thought. Though advocates have tried to obfuscate it, the
debate isn't about whether immigration in general is good for this
nation of immigrants, a truism that's hard to fault. The argument
isn't about Indians or Chinese or Poles but about Central
Americans, primarily Mexicans, who, because we have lost control of
our southern border, have entered the country illegally. The
advocates' real point is that these specific 11 or 12 million
illegal Central American immigrants, most of them uneducated and
unskilled, are a boon to our economy and society, because of their
powerful work ethic and willingness to do "jobs Americans won't
do," and because of their strong family values. We need them, the
advocates contend, and as a practical matter we can't round them up
and deport them even if we wanted to, so we'd better face reality
with an amnesty program that will integrate them and a guest worker
program to bring in still more of them.
Our writers found that none of these claims holds water. Steven
Malanga made short work of the claim that this army of the
unskilled enriches the nation, hard as many of them certainly work.
To begin with, the U.S. economy is hardly crying out for such
workers. They are in such oversupply that unemployment among the
native-born unskilled is double the overall unemployment rate, and
the labor glut has pushed down their wages by about 8 percent, no
trivial matter for millions of native-born high-school dropouts,
many of them minorities, including Hispanics. Such cheap labor
benefits a few industries, such as home repair and the hotel and
restaurant business, and it provides prosperous Americans with
low-cost babysitters and gardeners. It's a mixed blessing to
agriculture, one of the biggest employers of unskilled immigrants,
since it has retarded mechanization, without which American growers
soon won't be able to compete with foreign suppliers with even
cheaper labor forces.
But weren't my grandparents' generation of immigrants also
unskilled? In fact, the National Research Council reports, they
were slightly more skilled than the native population, and
the rapidly urbanizing U.S. economy of that time desperately needed
all the tailors, stonecutters, retail clerks, and so on, arriving
by the shipload. Unlike today's knowledge-based economy, it also
needed plenty of unskilled labor to build its new cities and work
its unmechanized and still inefficient farms. In addition, Malanga
argues, those earlier immigrants brought with them a rich store of
social capital: strong families, self-reliance, entrepreneurialism,
a belief in education for their children, optimism about the future
and belief in their new land rather than fatalism and cynicism.
That's why their children were just as likely to end up lawyers,
engineers, or accountants as the children of native-born Americans.
By contrast, the American-born children of Mexican immigrants, two
and a half times likelier to drop out of high school than the
average American-born kid, earn less than the national average as
adults.
If the benefit to the U.S. economy of such immigrants is modest,
the cost they impose is hefty. Each low-skill immigrant household,
whether legal or illegal, consumes some $20,000 per year more in
government-funded services -- including education, school lunches,
health care, prison guards, and welfare -- than it contributes in
taxes, estimates the Heritage Foundation's Robert Rector. U.S.-born
children of Mexican immigrants are twice as likely to be on welfare
as the American average, and -- disturbingly -- their children are
even more likely to be welfare-dependent. The lack of such programs
a century ago meant that only those came here who thought they
could take advantage of American freedom and opportunity by their
own efforts, the key to the old immigration's success. Today, of
course, such benefits attract the un-entrepreneurial and
un-self-reliant to these shores, along with the hardworking. That's
why Milton Friedman impatiently exclaimed: "It's just obvious that
you can't have free immigration and a welfare state."
IF MEXICAN AND OTHER CENTRAL AMERICAN immigrants are a net loss for
the U.S. economy, their net benefit to American society is also
unimpressive. Just as the nation seems about to solve, or at least
stabilize, its native underclass problem, Hispanics are creating a
new underclass, even more unassimilated than the old one because of
its self-identification as Mexican, not American. As Heather Mac
Donald shows in her thickly reported chapters of The
Immigration Solution, based not only on the data but also on
interviews with gang-bangers, jail inmates, single mothers, cops,
teachers, social-service providers, and others from neighborhoods
ranging from the Los Angeles barrio to New York's outer boroughs,
the prevalence of crime and illegitimacy among Mexican and other
Central American immigrants and their children is as troublingly
high as the rate of school-dropout and welfare dependency. It
appears that these immigrants are forming ethnic enclaves in which
social pathology flourishes and gets passed down from one
generation to the next.
The crime statistics are stark. Nationally, the Hispanic felony
arrest rate approaches triple that of non-Hispanic whites, and 30
percent of federal prisoners in 2000 were foreign-born. In
California, home to 40 percent of America's immigrant population,
Hispanics, who in 1970 were 12 percent of the state's population
and 16 percent of its new prison admits, grew to 30 percent of its
population in 1998 and 42 percent of its new prisoners. In Los
Angeles, almost all of the more than 1,200 outstanding murder
warrants were for illegal aliens. In a heavily Hispanic Manhattan
neighborhood, cops estimate that 70 percent of the drug dealers and
other criminals are illegal aliens. If, as the widely accepted
"broken windows" theory of policing has it, such low-level crimes
of disorder as subway fare-beating or public urination encourage
more serious crime, since the criminally inclined conclude that no
one cares about lawbreaking, then surely our nation's
non-enforcement of its immigration laws, Mac Donald concludes,
especially in the big cities that have adapted "sanctuary" policies
for illegal aliens, is the biggest crime breeder of them all.
But such encouragement aside, Hispanic crime is high because
Mexican and other Central American immigrants have brought with
them a gang-ridden culture. Even in the high schools, gangs
flourish, with names like SOK (Still Out Killing) and HTO
(Hispanics Taking Over) in South Central Los Angeles. One
Salvadoran kid told Mac Donald that most of his fellow eighth
graders were already "locked up or dead"; he himself had done time
for "GTA" -- grand theft auto. The gang bangers take violence for
granted. "We're amazed at the openness of the shootings," a
suburban New York homicide detective told Mac Donald. "When we do
cases with Hispanic gangs, we often get full statements of
admission, almost like they don't see what's the big deal." And as
Hispanics fan out across the country, they bring gang crime in
their wake. California's Ventura County, once crime-free, has had
to get an injunction against one gang responsible for a murder
spree; Virginia police view with alarm the spread of gang violence
from suburban Washington down toward Charlottesville and the
Shenandoah Valley.
Social scientists on the right and the left now agree, after
decades of argument, that children of unwed mothers do less well on
average than kids from two-parent families in every department of
life, from education to employment to marriage, and single
parenthood, unsurprisingly, is a key marker of underclass status.
So it's troubling that, for all the talk of Latino family values,
illegitimacy is epidemic among Hispanic immigrants and their
grown-up daughters. Hispanic women are having babies at twice the
rate of the U.S. average; half those new mothers aren't married;
and that extremely high illegitimacy rate is skyrocketing. Like the
old underclass, Mac Donald reports, many Hispanics see
out-of-wedlock childbearing as normal, a matter for celebration not
embarrassment. Like the old underclass too, a significant number of
those out-of-wedlock children are receiving welfare benefits, and
California is already caring for a second generation of Hispanic
foster care children and group home residents.
MEXICAN IMMIGRATION may offer few benefits to the U.S., but it is
an immense boon to Mexico, providing a safety valve for that
country's unreformed political culture and failed economy, which
has seen per capita GDP decline from 37 percent of the United
States' in the early 1980s to 25 percent of it now. To workers
accustomed to $8 a week in Mexico, $8 an hour in the California
fields or Arkansas chicken processing plants looks like a fortune
(though it's the low wages of these immigrants that account for
much of the apparent uptick in U.S. income inequality). Those low
wages, however, give newcomers enough to send money to their
families in Mexico, in a stream of remittances that are Mexico's
second largest source of hard currency and the lifeblood of entire
villages.
It's no wonder that Mexican officials, along with Mexico's
consuls in the U.S., vigorously promote the northward flight of
their nationals, even providing an instruction manual, in
comic-book form, on how to sneak across the border and not get
caught later. But when high Mexican officials self-righteously and
undiplomatically assert that any U.S. effort to stem Mexican
immigration would be a human-rights violation, American officials
might quietly encourage them to get their own house in order and
foster economic growth, so their citizens don't have to abandon
ship.
Advocates are right that the United States needs a new
immigration policy, though one along very different lines from what
they propose. We need an open and welcoming policy, shaped solely
by the interests of our own nation, not by pressure from our
neighbors or by passive acquiescence in the illegal status quo. No
one, except for scare-mongering amnesty advocates, is suggesting
the massive roundup and deportation of the millions of illegal
immigrants already here. Instead, The Immigration Solution
suggests we start by enforcing the laws already on the books,
policing our borders vigorously, and stiffly fining employers who
hire illegals. If judges object that the machinery for identifying
illegals -- the federal government's system for verifying Social
Security numbers -- is flawed, Washington should fix it at once.
Without an opportunity to work, illegal immigrants would return
home, just as 60 percent of immigrants from the first great
migration went home when the Depression dried up jobs here.
Then we should craft an immigration policy that is generous in
the number of people we admit, but that chooses newcomers not
because they are a citizen's elderly parents or adult child or
brother, however needy or unskilled, as at present, or because they
successfully snuck into the country some years ago, like the 3
million illegal Mexicans amnestied in 1986, but because they have
skills that the U.S. economy needs, including the ability to speak
English. Immigrants most certainly do enrich our country, and not
just those who are electrical engineers or medical researchers but
also those who can fix an engine or run an X-ray machine or manage
a small business. Other advanced nations that are immigration
magnets, as Steven Malanga recounts in The Immigration
Solution, have devised such selective policies with great
success. Since we can only admit a fraction of the millions who
would like to come and participate in the prosperity and freedom
that Americans have built by their own efforts and with the benefit
of their uniquely American culture and political system, let's
choose our immigrants by asking not what this country can do for
them, but what they can do for this country.
Original Source: http://spectator.org/archives/2008/02/05/immigration-reversals