The Failure of Pluralism. By Robert W. Merry. The National Interest, April 24, 2013.
True Americanism. By Theodore Roosevelt. The Works of Theodore Roosevelt: American Ideals. New York: P.F. Collier and Son, 1897. Originally published in The Forum, Vol. 17 (1894).
Americanism. By Theodore Roosevelt. Speech to the Knights of Columbus, Carnegie Hall, New York, October 12, 1915. Immigration and Americanization: Selected Readings. Edited by Philip Davis and Bertha Schwartz. Boston: Ginn and Company, 1920.
Theodore Roosevelt’s Last Message. Constitutional Review, Vol. 6, No. 3 (July 1922). Also find it here.
Merry:
Around
the turn of the last century, Theodore Roosevelt offered some blunt but
friendly counsel to the large numbers of immigrants then making their way to
America. “We have no room,” he declared in 1894, “for any people who do not act
and vote simply as Americans, and as nothing else.” He noted that large numbers
of immigrants had become “completely Americanized,” and they stood upon the
same plane as “the descendants of any Puritan, Cavalier, or Knickerbocker among
us.” But, he added, “where immigrants, or the sons of immigrants, do not
heartily and in good faith throw in their lot with us, but cling to the speech,
the customs, the ways of life, and the habits of thought of the Old World which
they have left, they hereby harm both themselves and us.” Immigrants who remain
“alien elements, unassimilated, and with interests separate from ours,” said
Roosevelt, become “mere obstructions” to the current of American life. He
summed up, “We freely extend the hand of welcome . . . to every man, no matter
what his creed and birthplace, who comes honestly intent on becoming a good
United States citizen . . . , but we have a right, and it is our duty, to
demand that he shall indeed become so, and shall not confuse the issues with
which we are struggling by introducing among us Old-World quarrels and
prejudices.”
By
today’s standards of political correctness, this TR manifesto, as it might be
called, was an almost breathtaking demand for assimilation on the part of the
country’s immigrants. It assumed a prevailing American culture to which
newcomers would have to adapt if they wished to be successful in the New World.
This view, prevalent and unremarkable in TR’s time, eventually was challenged
by those who embraced what they called “cultural pluralism”—the idea that
assimilation into a prevailing American culture was neither possible nor
desirable and that America should encourage all to retain whatever cultural
thoughts, impulses and sensibilities they brought from their lands of origin.
That is the prevailing view today among intellectuals and policy experts.
These
historical musings are prompted by the horrific human destruction wrought in
Boston last week by Tamerlan and Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, whose stealthy bomb
assaults certainly seemed motivated at least in part by Old World impulses and
sensibilities. Though many politicians and commentators seem intent on brushing
aside the fundamental questions of immigration and assimilation posed by those
pitiless acts, they really can’t be ignored. We must ask ourselves how we
invited into our midst children from another land who would grow up to wreak
such havoc upon innocent Americans going about their daily lives in their own
country.
Journalistic
coverage has focused, and no doubt will continue to focus, on every aspect of
the lives of these two young men of Chechen origin—their family histories,
their experiences on the edge of a horrendous ethnic and religious conflict,
their difficulties making it in America, their parents’ separation, Tamerlan’s
religious odyssey, his psychological dominance of his younger brother. All this
is relevant and warrants attention. But none of it is likely to answer in any
satisfying way the question on everyone’s mind: Why did they do it? As the old
1930s radio show used to ask, “Who knows what evil lurks in the minds of men?”
But if
we step back and look at it in a larger context, the questions take on a
broader scope—and perhaps a more ominous tone. These two brothers proved
themselves incapable of heeding the Roosevelt manifesto, of leaving behind Old
World quarrels and prejudices, of somehow fitting their intensifying Muslim
faith into the everyday customs and mores of a welcoming American society. As
Tamerlan told a campus-publication interviewer before his brutal assault on
innocents, “I don’t have a single American friend. I don’t understand them.”
This
raises a serious question about the level of success demonstrated by Muslims
generally in assimilating into the Western societies that have received them
over the past generation or so. The answer is that it is not a very high level
of success at all. Of course hackles are inevitably raised among devotees of
cultural pluralism whenever such broad generalizations are expressed. And these
critics are correct in noting that the vast majority of Muslims blend into
their adopted Western societies just fine. But large numbers of Islamic
immigrants have had difficulty accepting the underlying precepts of their
adopted Western nations, and currents of hostility run through the Muslim
communities in those nations, including the United States.
“Muslims,
particularly Arab Muslims,” wrote the late Samuel P. Huntington in his last
book, Who Are We?, “seem slow to
assimilate compared to other post-1965 groups”—post-1965 groups being the large
numbers of non-Westerners who migrated to the United States after the
Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965, which ended the previous “national
origins” formula that brought to U.S. shores primarily western and northern
Europeans and replaced it with a preference based on skills and family
relationships with U.S. citizens or residents. Huntington noted a Los Angeles
poll showing that, as poll officials put it, “a significant number of Muslims,
particularly immigrant Muslims, do not have close ties or loyalty to the United
States.” The poll revealed that 57 percent of immigrant Muslims and 32 percent
of those born in America said that, if given a choice of staying in the United
States or migrating to an Islamic country, they would opt for an Islamic
country. Fifty-two percent of the interviewees said it was “very important” to
replace U.S. public schools with Islamic schools, while another 24 percent said
it was “quite important” to do so.
Huntington
draws a distinction between national security, concerned primarily with
sovereignty, and societal security, concerned largely with national identity,
the ability of a people to maintain their culture, institutions and way of
life—in other words, the very things Theodore Roosevelt was concerned about in
issuing his 1894 manifesto. “In the contemporary world,” writes Huntington, “the
greatest threat to the societal security of nations comes from immigration.”
And immigration without assimilation constitutes the greatest threat of all.
That’s
because it often leads to internal immigrant communities that are isolated and
insulated in varying degrees from the broader society. This has happened, of
course, with North Africans in France, Turks in Germany and other immigrant
groups in other European countries. And in nearly all instances there has been
a backlash against immigration in general. Writes Huntington: “Immigration
without assimilation thus generates countervailing pressures and usually cannot
be sustained indefinitely.”
And yet
there appears to be little recognition of this in the United States today, as
reflected in the current congressional debate on immigration reform and in the
journalistic reaction to the Tsarnaev bombings. In Congress, little focus has
been devoted to the assimilation question posed by those bombings, and
Judiciary Committee chairman Patrick Leahy of Vermont aggressively sought to
intimidate his opponents in the immigration debate by alleging they were bent
on using the Boston killings to “derail” the immigration bill. “A nation as
strong as ours,” he said, “can welcome the oppressed and persecuted without
making compromise in our security.” That sentence may be a bit hard to swallow
by the families of those killed and maimed on Boylston Street.
And few
journalists explored the story in the context of the assimilation question. Two
exceptions bear notice. The Wall Street
Journal, in its April 20-21 editorial, discussed the phenomenon of Muslim
alienation turning into jihad in Western countries, citing particularly the
London bombing of 2005, perpetrated by middle-class Pakistani immigrants from
Birmingham, and the failed Times Square bomb attempt by Faisal Shahzad, a
naturalized U.S. citizen from Pakistan. “After the London bombings,” wrote the Journal, “many Americans took comfort in
the belief that immigrants to the U.S. are better assimilated than they are in
Europe. But that may be more conceit than fact, at least in regard to some
young men.”
And
Anne Applebaum, writing in the Washington
Post, suggested also that the Tsarnaev brothers resemble “the
second-generation European Muslims who staged bombings in Madrid, London and
other European cities.” Educated and brought up in Europe, these young men
nevertheless felt alienated there. Suggesting this phenomenon may be making its
way to America, she writes, “We don’t expect to hear it from someone who grew
up in Boston, a city that has taught generations of foreigners to become
Americans in a country that likes to think of itself as a melting pot. But now
it might be time to change our expectations. These terrorists are a lot less
like the 9/11 attackers . . . and a lot more like the men known as the Tube
bombers of London or the train bombers of Spain. Our response is going to have
to be different—very different—as well.”
Whether
a different response is in prospect remains highly speculative in a country
that has abandoned the TR manifesto in favor of the cultural plurality
advocated by people such as Senator Leahy—who, in warning his opponents about
inserting the Boylston Street bombings into the immigration debate, issued a
plea for “the dreams and futures of millions of hardworking people,” presumably
future immigrants. It could be argued that Leahy and other national leaders
have a higher responsibility to protecting the lives and limbs of current U.S.
citizens enjoying the innocent experience of running or witnessing a marathon
race in a great American city.