By Mark Krikorian
Tuesday, September 1, 2015
The ongoing migration crisis in Europe, with its
drownings and other deaths, is forcing Europe’s post-borders elites into an
uncomfortable position. Because they preside over polities that are still
somewhat democratic — and the peoples of Europe do not choose to commit
national suicide — governments there can’t abolish immigration limits
altogether, much as they might want to. At the same time, Europe’s rulers are
unwilling to take the steps needed to enforce the limits nominally on the
books.
The result is hundreds of thousands of people from less
happier lands calculating that it’s worth the relatively small risk of death to
make it to Europe, where they will almost certainly be permitted to stay,
whether they’re formally awarded refugee status or not.
Given the Middle East’s disintegration and sub-Saharan
Africa’s general dysfunction, this means that Europe is at the mercy of the
countries to its immediate south. So long as Qaddafi kept order in Libya and
Turkey was willing to contain most of the Middle Easterners trying to pass
through, a spineless Europe could maintain the façade of immigration limits.
There was a lot of immigration even then, but the heat rose slowly enough that
the frog, while increasingly restless, had not yet been induced to jump out of
the pot.
But with Libya’s collapse into anarchy and Turkey’s
evident unwillingness to stop the flow through its territory, the charade can
no longer be maintained. There are hundreds of millions who would undertake the
journey — whether jobs await them or not — to ensure that their children grow
up in Germany, France, England, or Sweden rather than Syria, Chad, Afghanistan,
or Mali. What we are seeing is the vanguard of those millions calling Europe’s
bluff.
And Europe’s elite seems to have no idea how to respond.
Germany’s immigration chief on Monday said “There can be no upper limit set on
the intake of people who are fleeing persecution and need protection.” And
France’s prime minister over the weekend said that anyone and everyone “fleeing
war, persecution, torture, oppression, must be welcomed.” The push for a common
EU response to the migration crisis is basically an attempt by Germany to get other
nations to take some of the illegal aliens off its hands.
But the publics of Europe’s various nations aren’t going
to tolerate unlimited flows. The diminution of sovereignty engineered by the EU
is bad enough for some share of the population, but many more will object to
extinguishing their national existence à la Camp of the Saints. (And
“extinguishing” is the right word; just read this piece by an open-borders
supporter on how U.S. society would change if 1 billion immigrants moved here.)
Either Europe’s governments will start taking muscular
action to stem the flow, or those governments will be replaced. I don’t think
the people running those governments have it in them to do what’s required,
which means they might have to start getting used to addressing Marine Le Pen
as “Madame la Présidente.”
The Central American border surge in South Texas was our
own decaffeinated, low-calorie version of what Europe is facing. And our elite
is at least as weak and emasculated as Europe’s. But we are, yet again, blessed
by chance — on our southern flank is Mexico, with a functioning, relatively
strong state. That enabled the Obama administration to contain the political
fallout by slowing the flow without undertaking any meaningful enforcement.
After all, virtually all the families and kids waved across the border on
Obama’s orders are still here, and there is little chance they will ever be
made to leave. But through a combination of threats and bribes, the White House
got Mexico to do the enforcement for us, and thus Mexico has doubled its
deportations of Central Americans. The flow of Central American illegals across
the Rio Grande continues, but at “only” the 2013 level (which was the highest
up until that time).
The only other country immediately to our south is Cuba,
which holds the possibility of turning into our Libya. I don’t like the Castros
any more than Qaddafi, but we might miss them when they’re gone if Cuba’s
government unravels, the cartels establish a presence, and illegal aliens from
around the world use the island as a jumping-off point. Which is why we’d be
foolish to ever give up Guantanamo — we’re going to need somewhere to drop off
the illegal aliens that’s not on U.S. soil.
The recent examples of Australia and Israel suggest that
advanced democracies are indeed capable of stopping uncontrolled immigration
from the Third World. Whether Europe and the United States are up to the
challenge remains to be seen.
No comments:
Post a Comment