It Can’t Happen Here!
By Patrick
J. Buchanan
Friday, thousands in Moscow, giving Nazi
salutes and carrying placards declaring, “Russia for the Russians!” marched
through the city shouting racial slurs against peoples from the Caucasus.
In Nigeria, Boko Haram, which is Hausa for
“Western education is sacrilege,” massacred 63 people in a terror campaign to
bring about sharia law. Seven churches were bombed.
Sunday, the New
York Times reported
that Uzbeks in Kyrgyzstan are suffering “horrific abuse [1]”
following last year’s pogrom.
Ethnic nationalism, what Albert Einstein
dismissed as “the measles of mankind,” and religious fanaticism are making
headlines and history.
Welcome to the new world disorder.
What has this to do with us? Perhaps
little, perhaps everything.
In three weeks of my radio-TV tour to
promote Suicide of a Superpower [2], no question has occurred more often than one about
the chapter “The End of White America.” Invariably, the question boils down to
this:
Why should we care if white Americans
become a minority? America, interviewers remind me, assimilated the immigrants
of a century ago — Italians, Poles, Jews, Slavs — and we can do the same with
peoples from the Third World.
And perhaps they are right. Perhaps the
year 2050 will see an America as united as the America of Dwight Eisenhower and
JFK.
Yet there are reasons to worry.
First, the great American Melting Pot has
been rejected by our elites as cultural genocide, in favor of a
multiculturalism that is failing in Europe. Second, what we are attempting has
no precedent in human history.
We are attempting to convert a republic,
European and Christian in its origins and character, into an egalitarian
democracy of all the races, religions, cultures and tribes of planet Earth.
We are turning America into a gargantuan
replica of the U.N. General Assembly, a continental conclave of the most
disparate and diverse peoples in all of history, who will have no common faith,
no common moral code, no common language and no common culture.
What, then, will hold us together? A
Constitution over whose meaning we have fought for 50 years?
Consider the contrasts between the old and
new immigration. Where the total of immigrants in the “Great Wave” from 1890 to
1920 numbered 15 to 20 million, today there are 40 million here.
In 1924, the United States declared a
timeout on all immigration. But for almost half a century since 1965, there has
been no timeout. One to 2 million more immigrants, legal and illegal, arrive
every year.
Where the old immigrants all came from
Europe, the new are overwhelmingly people of color. But America has never had
the same success in assimilating peoples of color.
The Indians we fought for centuries live
on reservations. And if we did not succeed with a few million Native Americans,
what makes us think we will succeed in assimilating 135 million Hispanics who
will be here in 2050, scores of millions of Indian ancestry?
We have encountered immense difficulty,
including a civil war, to bring black Americans, who have been here longer than
any immigrant group, into full participation in our society.
This was a failing that the last two
generations have invested immense effort and enormous wealth to correct. But we
cannot deny the difficulty of the problem when, 50 years after the civil rights
revolution, one yet hears daily the accusation of “racist!” on our TV channels
and in our political discourse.
Ought we not first solve the problem of
fully integrating people of color, before bringing in tens of millions more?
Another factor is faith. After several
generations, Catholics and Jews melded with the Protestant majority. But
Muslims come from a civilization that has never accepted Christian equality.
The world’s largest religion now, with 1.5
billion believers, Islam is growing in numbers, strength and militancy, even as
Muslim fanatics engage in eradicating Christianity from Nigeria to Ethiopia to
Sudan to Egypt to Iraq to Pakistan.
Is it wise to bring millions more into our
country at such a time?
Will that advance national unity and
social peace? Has it done so in the Turkish enclaves of Berlin, the banlieues
of Paris, Londonistan or Moscow?
Here, again, are but a few of the
differences between the old and new immigration:
Today’s numbers are twice as large. Where
the old immigration stopped after 30 years, ours never ends.
Where the old immigrants were Europeans,
today’s are Third World people who have never been fully assimilated by any
Western country. Where those arrived from Christian nations, many of today’s
come from a civilization that battled Christianity for 1,000 years.
Where Western powers ruled the world in
1920, today the West is aging and dying, and much of the world is on fire with
anti-white and anti-Western resentment of 500 years of European domination.
In 1920, Western people were nearly
one-third of mankind. Today, Western man is down to one-sixth of the world’s
population, shrinking to one-eighth by 2050, and not a tenth by century’s end.
When did the American people assent to our
taking this risk with their republic?
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