A rational
immigration reform would attempt to reorient, not accelerate, current policy
Most countries in
the world have irrelevant numbers of “immigrants.” In the Americas, for
example, only Canada, America, and the British West Indies have significant
non-native populations. In Mexico, immigrants account for 0.6 percent of the
population, and that generally negligible level prevails all the way down
through Latin America until you hit a blip of 1.4 percent with Chile and 3.8
percent in Argentina. There’s an isolated exception in Belize, which, like the
English Caribbean, has historical patterns of internal migration within the
British Commonwealth, such as one sees, for example, in the number of New
Zealand–born residents of Australia. But profound sweeping demographic
transformation through immigration is a phenomenon only of the Western world in
the modern era, and even there America leads the way. Over 20 percent of all
the immigrants on the planet are in the United States. The country’s
foreign-born population has doubled in the last two decades to 40 million —
officially. Which is the equivalent of Washington taking a decision to admit
every single living Canadian, and throwing in the population of New Zealand as
a bonus. Thank goodness they didn’t do that, eh? (Whoops.) Otherwise, America
would have been subject to some hideous, freakish cultural transformation in
which there would be hockey franchises in Florida, and Canadian banks on every
street corner in New York trumpeting their obnoxious jingoistic slogans (“TD:
America’s neighborhood bank”), and creepy little pop stars with weird foreign
names like Justin and Carly Rae doing the jobs America’s teen heartthrobs won’t
do. What a vile alien nightmare that would be to wake up in.