-Caveat Lector-

http://www.townhall.com/columnists/paulcraigroberts/pcr20001207.shtml

townhall.com
Paul Craig Roberts
December 7, 2000

For whom the bells toll

There won't always be an England or a United States. Both are already
fading, not from military conquest but from their own immigration policy.
Demographers have calculated that by the end of this century the English
people will be a minority in their homeland. The English are not having
enough children to reproduce themselves. In contrast, the "people of color"
who have flooded into England have a high fertility rate. Non-whites will
comprise a majority of the population of London in just nine years.

It is amazing how fast it is happening. Half a century ago, there were only
a few tens of thousands of non-whites in the entirety of Great Britain. In
another half century, there will be the beginnings of a black government.
What will be the fate of the white minority after decades of being demonized
as "white racists" by their own kind at Oxford, Cambridge and the University
of London?

The English may be finished as a people, but they still have twice as long
as American whites. Demographers predict that whites will comprise a
minority of the U.S. population by mid-century. It has already happened in
California and in many cities.

Like the English, American whites are failing to reproduce. More than 42
percent of American women of childbearing age are childless. The figure is
rising as gender quotas, and the breakdown of marriage and family pull more
white women onto career paths that don't lead to children.

Examining the situation, the London Observer said that that this is "the
first time in history that a major indigenous population has voluntarily
become a minority, rather than through war, famine or disease."

It is amazing that the two most important and powerful countries of the past
two centuries have legislated their own path to extinction. But it is
astounding that it is occurring in the same two countries where
intellectuals prattle on endlessly about the need for diversity. There are
many more non-white countries than white ones; yet, it is the white ones
that are slated to disappear.

What's wrong with having an England? What a colorful and unique place! What
character and genius! The cradle of the rule of law and representative
democracy! The font of the scientific and technological revolutions! It is
absurd to think these accomplishments are happenstance unrelated to
Englishness. Do we really need yet another black country, another India, or
a mixture of the two? Why can't we keep England English for diversity's
sake?

And the United States. What other country has such a strong sense of right
and wrong, and such determination to see justice done all over the world?
Who but the United States sends its treasure, not as tribute to the powerful
but as gifts to the poor? What other country sends its troops to stop
genocides and wars in foreign lands? Central and South America are full of
Hispanic populations. Do we really need another one here?

What is it that compels the United States and England to destroy themselves
with an immigration policy designed to replace the indigenous population
with different racial stock? In these two lands, agitators fight to preserve
every wetlands weed, sand fly and snail darter. What's wrong with preserving
England and America?

People had better give this some thought, because the decision won't be
theirs to make for much longer.

The 21st century may bring the extinction of white populations. Confined to
a small area of the world, white populations are everywhere in decline.
Italy, once a fecund Catholic nation where a large family was everything,
has such a low birth rate that its population is declining. Everywhere else
in Europe birth rates have fallen below replacement rates. European
governments open the borders to Third World immigrants in order to keep a
tax base for the expensive social welfare systems that have crowded children
out of the household budgets of the indigenous population. Canada, also, is
well on her way to becoming a Third World country.

Russia, too, has a declining population reeling from the environmental and
economic destruction after 75 years of communist rule. Pressed on her
eastern and southern borders by Asiatic populations, Russia is slowly
retreating from her empire.

In the far Pacific, two island nations, New Zealand and Australia, hang on
to an exported British culture. Perhaps they will be preserved, like the
Galapagos Islands, as a place where creatures reside who have disappeared
elsewhere.

©2000 Creators Syndicate, Inc.

http://www.townhall.com/columnists/paulcraigroberts/pcr20001207.shtml


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http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/immigrat/kennf.htm

December 1994
Must It Be the Rest Against the West?
Absent major changes in North-South relations, the wretched should inherit
the earth by about 2025

by Matthew Connelly and Paul Kennedy

"Now, stretching over that empty sea, aground some fifty yards out, [lay]
the incredible fleet from the other side of the globe, the rusty, creaking
fleet that the old professor had been eyeing since morning. . . . He pressed
his eye to the glass, and the first things he saw were arms. . . . Then he
started to count. Calm and unhurried. But it was like trying to count all
the trees in the forest, those arms raised high in the air, waving and
shaking together, all outstretched toward the nearby shore. Scraggy
branches, brown and black, quickened by a breath of hope. All bare, those
fleshless Gandhi-arms. . . . thirty thousand creatures on a single ship!"
--The Camp of the Saints

Welcome to the 300-page narrative of Jean Raspail's disturbing, chilling,
futuristic novel The Camp of the Saints, first published in Paris twenty-one
years ago and translated into English a short while later. Set at some vague
time--perhaps fifteen or twenty years--in the future, the novel describes
the pilgrimage of a million desperate Indians who, forsaking the ghastly
conditions of downtown Calcutta and surrounding villages, commandeer an
armada of decrepit ships and set off for the French Riviera. The catalyst
for this irruption is simple enough. Moved by accounts of widespread famine
across an Indian subcontinent collapsing under the sheer weight of its
fast-growing population, the Belgian government has decided to admit and
adopt a number of young children; but the policy is reversed when tens of
thousands of mothers begin to push their babies against the Belgian consul
general's gates in Calcutta. After mobbing the building in disgust at
Belgium's change of mind, the crowd is further inflamed by a messianic
speech from one of their number, an untouchable, a gaunt, eye-catching "turd
eater," who calls for the poor and wretched of the world to advance upon the
Western paradise: "The nations are rising from the four corners of the
earth," Raspail has the man say, "and their number is like the sand of the
sea. They will march up over the broad earth and surround the camp of the
saints and the beloved city. . . ." Storming on board every ship within
range, the crowds force the crews to take them on a lengthy, horrific
voyage, around Africa and through the Strait of Gibraltar to the southern
shores of France.

But it is not the huddled mass of Indians, with their "fleshless
Gandhi-arms," that is the focus of Raspail's attention so much as the varied
responses of the French and the other privileged members of "the camp of the
saints" as they debate how to deal with the inexorably advancing multitude.
Raspail is particularly effective here in capturing the platitudes of
official announcements, the voices of ordinary people, the tone of
statements by concerned bishops, and so on. The book also seems realistic in
its recounting of the crumbling away of resolve by French sailors and
soldiers when they are given the order to repel physically--to shoot or
torpedo--this armada of helpless yet menacing people. It would be much
easier, clearly, to confront a military foe, such as a Warsaw Pact nation.
The fifty-one (short) chapters are skillfully arranged so that the reader's
attention is switched back and forth, within a two-month time frame, between
the anxious debates in Paris and events attending the slow and grisly voyage
of the Calcutta masses. The denouement, with the French population fleeing
their southern regions and army units deserting in droves, is especially
dramatic.

The Voyage of the Golden Venture

Why revisit this controversial and nowadays hard-to-obtain novel? The
recovery of this neglected work helps us to call attention to the key global
problem of the final years of the twentieth century: unbalanced wealth and
resources, unbalanced demographic trends, and the relationship between the
two. Many members of the more prosperous economies are beginning to agree
with Raspail's vision: a world of two "camps," North and South, separate and
unequal, in which the rich will have to fight and the poor will have to die
if mass migration is not to overwhelm us all. Migration is the third part of
the problem. If we do not act now to counteract tendencies toward global
apartheid, they will only hurry the day when we may indeed see Raspail's
vision made real.
One of us (Kennedy) first heard The Camp of the Saints referred to at
various times during discussions of illegal migration. One such occasion was
in the summer of 1991, following media reports about the thousands of
desperate Albanians who commandeered ships to take them to the Italian ports
of Bari and Brindisi, where they were locked in soccer stadiums by the local
police before being forcibly returned to a homeland so poor that it is one
of the few parts of Europe sometimes categorized as "developing" countries.
Apparently, one reason for this exodus was that the Albanians had been
watching Italian television--including commercials for consumer goods, cat
food shown being served on a silver platter, and the like. More than a few
colleagues mentioned that the incident struck them as a small-scale version
of Raspail's grim scenario.

If a short trip across the Adriatic seems a far cry from a passage from
Calcutta to Provence, the voyage of the Golden Venture was even more
fantastic than anything imagined by Raspail. This 150-foot rust-streaked
freighter left Bangkok, Thailand, in February of 1993 carrying ninety
Chinese refugees, mostly from the impoverished Fujian province. Two hundred
more Chinese boarded in Mombasa, Kenya. When they finally came ashore, on
June 6, in the darkness and pounding surf off Rockaway, Queens, in New York
City (eight drowned trying to swim to land), all had traveled a much greater
distance than Raspail's fictional refugees.

What was remarkable about the Golden Venture was not that Chinese refugees
tried to smuggle themselves into the United States--some experts estimate
that 10,000 to 30,000 manage to do so each year--but that in traveling west
rather than east, they were taking a new route to America. In the past most
Chinese illegal immigrants came ashore on the West Coast or crossed into
California after landing in Mexico. But the Golden Venture rounded the Cape
of Good Hope and thus crossed some of the same waters as Raspail's imaginary
armada.

The Camp of the Saints was also to some extent recalled in a special report
of October 18, 1992, by the New York Times correspondent Alan Riding, about
the remarkable increase in illegal immigration across the Strait of
Gibraltar, the narrowest gap between Africa and Europe. The most startling
fact in the report was not that ambitious, unemployed North Africans were
heading to Europe to find jobs but that such traffic has now become
pan-continental or even global. Of the 1,547 immigrants detained by the
Spanish authorities in the first ten months of the year of Riding's report,
258 were from Ethiopia, 193 from Liberia, seventy-two from South Africa, and
sixty-four from Somalia. Seventy-two from South Africa! Did they walk,
hitchhike, or take buses across the entire continent? Even a journey that
long pales beside Riding's further point that "word of the new route had
spread far beyond Morocco, with not only Algerians and growing numbers of
sub-Saharan Africans, but also Filipinos, Chinese and even the occasional
Eastern Europeans among those detained." Take a look at an atlas and pose
the question, Just how does a desperate citizen of, say, Bulgaria get to
Morocco without going through western Europe?

The Doom of the White Race

Jean Raspail, born in 1925, has been writing works of travel and fiction
since the 1950s. Many of his books recount his experiences in Alaska, the
Caribbean, the Andes; he is not ignorant of foreign lands and cultures.
Raspail won prizes from the Academie Francaise, and last year only narrowly
failed to be elected to that august body. The Camp of the Saints is
different from his other writings. In the preface, written a decade after
the book, he states that one morning in 1972, at home by the shore of the
Mediterranean, he had this vision: "A million poor wretches, armed only with
their weakness and their numbers, overwhelmed by misery, encumbered with
starving brown and black children, ready to disembark on our soil, the
vanguard of the multitudes pressing hard against every part of the tired and
overfed West. I literally saw them, saw the major problem they presented, a
problem absolutely insoluble by our present moral standards. To let them in
would destroy us. To reject them would destroy them."

"During the ten months I spent writing this book, the vision never left me.
That is why The Camp of the Saints, with all its imperfections, was a kind
of emotional outpouring."

Is this simply a work of imagination or, as Raspail's critics charge, a
racist tract dressed up as fiction? In some parts of the novel Raspail
appears to be resigned, fatalistic, not taking sides: "The Good are at war
with the Bad, true enough," he says at one point. "But one man's 'Bad' is
another man's 'Good,' and vice versa. It's a question of sides." And he has
the President of France, puzzling over the question of inequality among
races, attribute to the Grand Mufti of Paris the idea that it is "just a
question of rotation," with "different ones on top at different times"--as
if to imply that it is quite natural for Europe, having expanded outward for
the past 500 years, to be overwhelmed in turn by non-Western peoples.
Indeed, Raspail claims that in depicting the French armed forces fleeing
from confrontation rather than bloodily repulsing the armada, he shows he is
no racist, for "I denied to the white Occident, at least in my novel, its
last chance for salvation."

Yet for much of the rest of the novel Raspail makes plain where his cultural
and political preferences lie. Whereas the Europeans all have characters and
identities, from the Belgian consul in Calcutta, trampled to death by the
crowd, to the French politicians paralyzed by their impending fate, the
peoples of the Third World, whether already laboring in the slums of Paris
or advancing upon the high seas, are unrelentingly disparaged. "All the
kinky-haired, swarthy-skinned, long-despised phantoms; all the teeming ants
toiling for the white man's comfort; all the swill men and sweepers, the
troglodytes, the stinking drudges, the swivel-hipped menials, the womanless
wretches, the lung-spewing hackers; all the numberless, nameless, tortured,
tormented, indispensable mass. . . . They don't say much. But they know
their strength, and they'll never forget it. If they have an objection, they
simply growl, and it soon becomes clear that their growls run the show.
After all, five billion growling human beings, rising over the length and
breadth of the earth, can make a lot of noise!"

Meanwhile, along with Josiane and Marcel, seven hundred million whites sit
shutting their eyes and plugging their ears.

If anything, Raspail's contempt for sympathizers and fellow travelers in the
West is even more extreme. The collection of churchmen who plead for
tolerance of the approaching armada; the intellectuals and media stars who
think this is a great event; the hippies, radicals, and counterculture
people who swarm south to greet the Indians as the panic-stricken Provencois
are rushing north--all these get their comeuppance in Raspail's bitter,
powerful prose. In one of the most dramatic events, close to the book's end,
the leader of the French radicals is portrayed as rushing forward to welcome
the "surging mob" of Indians, only to find himself "swept up in turn,
carried off by the horde. Struggling to breathe. All around him, the press
of sweaty, clammy bodies, elbows nudging madly in a frantic push forward,
every man for himself, in a scramble to reach the streams of milk and
honey." The message is clear: race, not class or ideology, determines
everything, and the wretched of the earth will see no distinction between
unfriendly, fascistic Frenchmen on the one hand and liberal-minded bishops
and yuppies on the other. All have enjoyed too large a share of the world's
wealth for too long, and their common fate is now at hand.

It is not just the people of France who suffer that fate. Near the end of
Raspail's novel the mayor of New York is made to share Gracie Mansion with
three families from Harlem, the Queen of England must marry her son to a
Pakistani, and just one drunken Russian general stands in the way of the
Chinese as they swarm into Siberia. "In the Philippines, in all the stifling
Third World ports--Jakarta, Karachi, Conakry, and again in Calcutta--other
huge armadas were ready to weigh anchor, bound for Australia, New Zealand,
Europe. . . . Many a civilization, victim of the selfsame fate, sits tucked
in our museums, under glass, neatly labeled."

To describe The Camp of the Saints as an apocalyptic novel would be a
truism. The very title of the book comes, of course, from Saint John's
Apocalypse, the lines of which are uttered almost exactly by the messianic
untouchable early on in the book. The work is studded with references to
much earlier clashes between "the West" and "the Rest": to Charles Martel,
to the fall of Constantinople, to Don John of Austria, to Kitchener at
Omdurman--all to fortify the suggestion that what is unfolding is just part
of a millennium-old international Kulturkampf that is always resolved by
power and numbers. When Europe dominated the globe, the Caucasian race's
relative share of world population achieved its high point; as the
proportion shrinks, Raspail argues, so the race dooms itself. In his 1982
preface he spells it out again: "Our hypersensitive and totally blind West .
. . has not yet understood that whites, in a world become too small for its
inhabitants, are now a minority and that the proliferation of other races
dooms our race, my race, irretrievably to extinction in the century to come,
if we hold fast to our present moral principles."

"Not Since Genghis Khan"

When The Camp of the Saints first appeared, in 1973, it was, to put it
mildly, not well received. Sixties radicalism still prevailed in Paris; a
century of capitalist imperialism was blamed for the problems of the Third
World, though the feeling was that Africans and Asians now at least had
control of their own destinies; and French intellectuals and bureaucrats
believed that they had a special rapport with non-European cultures, unlike
the insensitive Anglo-Saxons. Besides being shocking in its contents,
Raspail's book was also offensive: it insulted almost everything that
Sorbonne professors held dear. The Camp was swiftly dismissed as a racist
tract. As for Raspail, he went off to write other novels and travel books.
But in late 1985 he offended again, by joining forces with the demographer
Gerard Dumont to write an article in Le Figaro Magazine claiming that the
fast-growing non-European immigrant component of France's population would
endanger the survival of traditional French culture, values, and identity.
By this time the immigration issue had become much more contentious in
French politics, and only a year earlier Jacques Chirac, then the mayor of
Paris, had publicly warned, "When you compare Europe with the other
continents, it's terrifying. In demographic terms, Europe is disappearing.
Twenty or so years from now our countries will be empty, and no matter what
our technological power, we shall be incapable of putting it to use." The
Raspail-Dumont article was highly embarrassing to the French Socialist
government, which, though pledged to crack down on illegal immigrants, was
deeply disturbed by the potential political fallout from such a
controversial piece. No fewer than three Cabinet Ministers, including Prime
Minister Laurent Fabius, attacked it as "racist propaganda" and "reminiscent
of the wildest Nazi theories." It was no consolation to them that Jean-Marie
Le Pen, the head of the fast-growing National Front, was making immigration
the leading issue as he campaigned among the discontented French electorate.

Despite attempts by centrist politicians to ignore this touchy topic, it
refuses to go away. For example, although the early 1990s were supposed to
mark the culmination of the decades-long drive toward the European Union's
integration, an increasing number of Europeans were looking over their
shoulders, especially after the British Broadcasting Corporation raised the
specter of a "march" on Europe in a 1990 made-for-TV movie of that name. In
the program a band of Sudanese refugees decide to walk straight across the
Sahara rather than slowly starve on the paltry rations of Western relief
agencies. With timely assistance from the Libyan government, which calls
them the "spirit of suffering Africa," a throng swollen to 250,000 finally
arrives at the Strait of Gibraltar. "We've traveled almost as far as
Columbus," says their leader, now called the Mahdi. "We have no power but
this: to choose where we die," he proclaims before embarking for the
European shore. "All we ask of you is, watch us die." On the advice of a
media-savvy African-American congressman, the flotilla washes ashore in the
glare of flashbulbs and prime-time TV broadcasts--and a large force of EU
soldiers. The movie ends there, and what happens next is left to the
viewer's imagination. But its production was enough to provoke Raspail to
complain. The producers insisted that when they began the project they had
been unaware of the earlier work--an insistence that only confirmed that the
themes of The Camp continue to resonate. The March has itself become
something of a cult classic. Though rejected by the Public Broadcasting
System as "not suitable to their programming" (nobody actually said it was
too hot to handle), after four years it continues to be shown to audiences
throughout Europe.

All of which brings us to the present day. Raspail may have written the most
politically incorrect book in France in the second half of the twentieth
century, but the national mood concerning immigration is nowadays much less
liberal than it was two decades ago. In fact, France's tough new
Conservative government began this year by announcing a series of crackdowns
on illegal immigrants, including mass deportation. "When we have sent home
several planeloads, even boatloads and trainloads, the world will get the
message," claimed Charles Pasqua, the hard-line Cabinet Minister in charge
of security and immigration affairs. "We will close our frontiers." Last
year he announced that France would become a "zero immigration" country, a
stunning reversal of its 200-year-old policy of offering asylum to those in
need. That Pasqua believed it was in fact possible to halt immigration was
called into doubt when he later remarked, "The problems of immigration are
ahead of us and not behind us." By the year 2000, he asserted, there will be
60 million people in Algeria, Morocco, and Tunisia under the age of twenty
and "without a future." Where else to go but France, whose television
programs they can view every evening, much as Albanians goggle at Italian
cat-food commercials?

The Camp of the Saints is not well known in the United States, but it has
attracted some attention in predictable circles. The only English-language
edition we could find came from the American Immigration Control Foundation,
which, as its name suggests, campaigns for stricter policies. That is an aim
also expressed by the Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR) in
its recent publication Crowding Out the Future: World Population Growth,
U.S. Immigration, and Pressures on Natural Resources, which presents the
following argument very early on: "A traditional moralist may object,
asserting, "I am my brother's keeper." We must ask him: "And what about your
children? And your children's children? What about the children of your
neighbor next door? Must we subdivide and distribute our patrimony among the
children of all the world?" Americans are already outnumbered twenty-to-one
by the rest of the world. Our grandchildren will be outnumbered even more.
Must we condemn them to the poverty of an absolutely equal distribution? How
would that benefit them or the descendants of other people?"

"Total poverty can be avoided only if people agree that the ancient
admonition "Charity begins at home" is still the best guide to philanthropic
action."

The Washington Times is also strongly in the "let's regain control of our
borders" camp, and its staff writers and op-ed contributors find reference
to Raspail particularly useful in attacking the United States' liberal
immigration policy. Illegal immigrants caught coming by boat--Chinese,
Haitians --make for especially neat comparisons, and nowadays the language
is as blunt as Raspail's own. "Not since Genghis Khan rode out of the Asian
steppes has the West--Europe as well as the United States--encountered such
an alien invasion," the Washington Times columnist Samuel Francis has
written. His fellow columnist Paul Craig Roberts predicts "a cataclysmic
future." Roberts has written, "Not since the Roman Empire was overrun by
illegal aliens in the fifth century has the world experienced the massive
population movements of recent years." Both writers posit what others have
called a growing "Third-World-ization" of America's cities, with a
privileged minority increasingly besieged by a disgruntled, polyglot
lumpenproletariat. (Raspail had carefully built such a situation into The
Camp of the Saints: the night came when the "black tide," learning what had
happened in Provence, rose up and overwhelmed the elegant apartments around
Central Park.)

Readers made uncomfortable by all this nativist and racist opinion will no
doubt find it easy to counterattack. Migrants are not usually the poorest of
the poor--instead they are the ones best informed about opportunities
elsewhere and able to act on them. Paul Craig Roberts's figure of an
"estimated" three million illegal aliens who find their way into the United
States each year is much higher than other guesses we've seen. And
historically, the greatest population migrations of all consisted of the
tens of millions of "illegal aliens" who sailed from Europe to the Americas,
Africa, and Australasia during the past 250 years; in the face of them the
aboriginal inhabitants could do little but submit or be annihilated. In
pointing to the reversal of that flow, Raspail was at least willing to
concede that "different ones [are] on top at different times." Moreover,
many economists--Julian Simon, at the University of Maryland, is one--argue
that immigration gives a net boost to the United States, a position also
held by the free-market paper The Wall Street Journal. Those who predict
that immigration will become one of the hottest political issues of the
1990s may be correct; what is less certain is that Fortress America
attitudes will win the day. Yet if the United States maintains a liberal
policy while every other rich nation decides, like France, to do the
opposite, will that not simply increase the pressures on this country's
borders?

Cornucopian Hopes

Let us now get to the heart of the matter. Readers may well find Raspail's
vision uncomfortable and his language vicious and repulsive, but the central
message is clear: we are heading into the twenty-first century in a world
consisting for the most part of a relatively small number of rich, satiated,
demographically stagnant societies and a large number of poverty-stricken,
resource-depleted nations whose populations are doubling every twenty-five
years or less. The demographic imbalances are exacerbated by grotesque
disparities of wealth between rich and poor countries. Despite the easy
references that are made to our common humanity, it is difficult to believe
that Switzerland, with an annual average per capita income of about $35,000,
and Mali, with an average per capita income of less than $300, are on the
same planet--but Raspail's point is that they are, and that a combination of
push and pull factors will entice desperate, ambitious Third World peasants
to approach the portals of the First World in ever-increasing numbers. The
pressures are now much greater than they were when Raspail wrote, not only
because we've added 1.5 billion people to our planet since the early 1970s,
but also, ironically, because of the global communications revolution, which
projects images of Western lifestyles, consumer goods, and youth culture
across the globe. Ambitious peasants no longer need a messianic untouchable
to urge them to leave by boat for Europe; they see the inducements every day
on their small black-and-white television sets.

Is all this gloom and doom justified? What about rosier visions of the
future? What about the good news? The apocalyptic literature appears to be
at odds with an equally large array of writings, chiefly by free-market
economists and consultants, that proclaim a brave new world of ever-greater
production, trade, wealth, and standards of living for all. In these
portrayals of "the coming global boom," a combination of market forces,
diminished government interference, ingenious technologies, and the creation
of a truly universal customer base will allow our planet to double or treble
its income levels during the next few decades. In the view of those who
believe that the global technological and communications revolution is
making the world more integrated, rather than more envious, the constant
modernization of the world economy is leading to a steady convergence of
standards of production and living. As more and more countries open up to a
borderless world, the prospects for humankind--or, at least, for those able
to adapt--are steadily improving.

Yet a closer look at this cornucopian literature reveals that its focus is
overwhelmingly upon the world's winners--the well-educated lawyers,
management consultants, software engineers, and other "symbolic analysts"
analyzed by Secretary of Labor Robert Reich--who sell their expertise at
handsome prices to clients in other rich societies. To the extent that they
consider the situation in the Third World, the cornucopian writers typically
point to the model minority of global politics--the East Asians. The
techno-liberals pay hardly any attention to the mounting human distress in
Calcutta or Nicaragua or Liberia, and no wonder: were they to consider the
desperate plight of the poorest two billion beings on our planet, their
upbeat messages would sound less plausible.

Our global optimists might consider Robert D. Kaplan's horrific analysis, in
the February, 1994, Atlantic Monthly, of the collapse of entire societies
across West Africa. With governments losing control of any areas they cannot
intimidate through their armies and police, groups of unemployed young men
plundering travelers, AIDS and tuberculosis joining malaria to kill people
in their prime, forests cut down and topsoil washed away, the region
increasingly looks like strife-torn, plague-ridden medieval Europe. Even The
Economist, claiming to detect "a flicker of light" in Africa amid the gloom,
admits that if the sub-Saharan countries did grow at the (overoptimistic)
rates recently predicted by the World Bank, "Africans would have to wait
another 40 years to clamber back to the incomes they had in the mid-1970s.
Exclude Nigeria, and the wait would last a century." What The Economist did
not ask was whether the more than a billion and a half Africans likely to be
living in 2035 will be content to watch the Northern Hemisphere grow and
prosper while they themselves struggle to attain the same standard of living
their great-grandparents had.

It is often argued that Africa is a special case (the Third World's Third
World, as the saying goes), although Kaplan's more general point is that the
same combination of rapid population growth, mass unemployment among youth,
environmental devastation, and social collapse is to be seen, in a less
acute form, everywhere from central China to the Euphrates Valley.
Reportedly the State Department has sent copies of Kaplan's article to many
embassies and missions abroad; the Pentagon prefers Martin Van Creveld's
grim portrayal of future chaos and ethnic conflict, The Transformation of
War (1991)--to which Kaplan's article pays tribute--as recommended reading
for its service officers. Perhaps the most significant thing about these
writings is their assumption that the demographically driven breakdown of
order will not be confined to one continent but will be global in its
manifestations--precisely what Raspail sought to convey in his stark account
of swarms of immigrants moving out of Jakarta, Karachi, and Conakry.

If the problem is global, it is not all of a piece. There is a world of
difference between, say, Mexican immigrants searching for a better life and
Rwandan refugees fleeing a grisly death. But the most relevant divide is not
between migrants and refugees--we will be seeing a lot more of both--but
rather between what they lack and what we have to offer. Regardless of
whether it is in an increasingly resentful American labor market or an
overcrowded relief camp, the West will be hard put to provide answers to
this burgeoning problem.
The techno-liberals are right to draw attention to the fact that virtually
all the factors of production--capital, assembly, knowledge,
management--have become globalized, moving across national boundaries in the
form of investments, consulting expertise, new plants, patents, and so on.
What they ignore is that one factor of production has not been similarly
liberated: labor. Even the most outre proponent of free-market principles
shrinks from arguing that any number of people should be free to go anywhere
they like on the planet. This irony--or, better, this double standard--is
not unnoticed by the spokespeople of poorer countries, who charge that while
the North presses for the unshackling of capital flows, assembly, goods, and
services, it firmly resists the liberalization of the global labor market,
and that behind the ostensible philanthropic concern about world demographic
trends lies a deep fear that the white races of the world will be steadily
overwhelmed by everyone else.

Numbers Count

It is impossible to isolate population growth from the economy, environment,
politics, and culture of each country to prove that it causes external
migration--though it is suggestive that Haiti and Rwanda have about the
highest fertility rates in Latin America and Africa. What cannot be
contested is that the sheer size of other countries that are "at risk" will
make international migration a problem of ever greater magnitude. Similarly,
in broad figures the future pattern of global population increases is not in
dispute. At present the earth contains approximately 5.7 billion people and
is adding to that total by approximately 93 million a year. It is possible
to estimate the rough totals of world population as the next century
unfolds: by 2025 the planet will contain approximately 8.5 billion people.
The pace of growth is expected to taper off, so the total population may
stabilize at around 10 or 11 billion people by perhaps 2050, although some
estimates are much larger. By the second quarter of the coming century India
may well rival China as the world's most populous country--with 1.4 billion
to China's 1.5 billion inhabitants--and many other countries in the Third
World are also expected to contain vastly expanded numbers of people:
Indonesia 286 million, Nigeria 281 million, Pakistan 267 million, Brazil 246
million, Mexico 150 million, and so on.

Of the many implications of this global trend, four stand out--at least with
respect to our inquiry. The first and most important is that 95 percent of
the twofold increase in the world's population expected before the middle of
the next century will occur in poor countries, especially those least
equipped to take the strain. Second, although globally the relative share of
human beings in poverty is expected to shrink, in absolute numbers there
will be far more poor people on earth in the early twenty-first century than
ever before, unless serious intervention occurs. Third, within the Third
World a greater and greater percentage of the population is drifting from
the countryside into gigantic shanty-cities. Even by the end of this decade
Sao Paulo is expected to contain 22.6 million people, Bombay 18.1 million,
Shanghai 17.4 million, Mexico City 16.2 million, and Calcutta 12.7
million--all cities that run the risk of becoming centers of mass poverty
and social collapse. (Right now there are 143,000 people per square mile in
Lagos and 130,000 per square mile in Jakarta, as compared with 23,700 per
square mile in the five boroughs of New York.) And fourth, these societies
are increasingly adolescent in composition--in Kenya in 1985, to take an
extreme case, 52 percent of the population was under fifteen--and the
chances that their resource-poor governments will be able to provide
education and jobs for hundreds of millions of teenagers are remote. In many
North African cities unemployment rates among youth range from 40 to 70
percent, providing highly combustible levels of frustration among young men
who turn with interest to the anti-Northern messages of fundamentalist
mullahs or, equally significant, to tempting televised portrayals of

European lifestyles.

Regardless of the rosy prospects for East Asia, the gaps between rich and
poor countries--between Europe and Africa, between North America and Central
America--are widening, not closing; and, as Raspail bluntly put it, numbers
do count. The southern European states of Spain, Portugal, France, Italy,
and Greece, whose combined populations, it is estimated, will increase by a
mere 4.5 million between 1990 and 2025, lie close to North African
countries--Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Libya, Egypt--whose populations are
expected to grow by 107 million in the same period. The population of the
United States is expected to rise by 29 percent by 2025, while its southern
neighbors Mexico and Guatemala may grow by 63 percent and 135 percent
respectively. Together Europe and North America, which contained more than
22 percent of the world's population in 1950, will contain less than 10
percent by 2025.

In any case, even if tremendous economic progress were to be made over the
next few decades in some of the poor regions of the globe, the result,
ironically, would also challenge the West, as the economic and political
balances of power swung toward countries that, on current evidence (the 1993
human-rights conference in Vienna, the Singapore caning), will actively
resist cultural homogenization. Kishore Mahbubani, the deputy secretary of
Singapore's Foreign Ministry, recently suggested as much when he pointed to
a "siege mentality" in the West, affirming that "power is shifting among
civilizations." "Simple arithmetic demonstrates Western folly," he wrote.
"The West has 800 million people; the rest make up almost 4.7 billion. . . .
no Western society would accept a situation where 15 percent of its
population legislated for the remaining 85 percent." Westerners' "fatal
flaw," according to Mahbubani, is "an inability to conceive that the West
may have developed structural weaknesses in its core value systems and
institutions." He added, "The West is bringing about its relative decline by
its own hand." It is probably still premature to predict when China will
overtake the United States as the world's largest economy, but it is
undeniable that a shift in material power toward Asia is under way.
Raspail's "seven hundred million whites" may well confront two very
different challenges by early next century:

Africa's collapse and Asia's rise.

Perhaps the global problem of the early twenty-first century is basically
this: that across our planet a number of what might be termed
demographic-technological fault lines are emerging, between fast-growing,
adolescent, resource-poor, undercapitalized, and undereducated populations
on one side and technologically inventive, demographically moribund, and
increasingly nervous rich societies on the other. The fault line central to
The Camp of the Saints lies along the Mediterranean, but it is easy to point
to several others, from the Rio Grande to central Asia. One of the most
interesting lines of all runs right through China, dividing most of the
coastal provinces from the interior. How those on the two sides of these
widening regional or intercontinental fissures are to relate to each other
early in the next century dwarfs every other issue in global affairs.

If one accepts that this is our biggest long-term challenge, then the
inadequacies of simplistic, knee-jerk responses assume great importance. The
zero-immigration policies of France and Japan do nothing to affect tilting
population balances and probably increase the resentment of these countries'
poorer neighbors, but denying that migration is an international problem, as
some American liberals do, invites the possibility that a continuing (and
growing) flow of immigrants will place even greater strains on this
country's social and cultural politics.

Yet what are the alternatives? Even if we wished to alter demographic
balances, is there any acceptable prospect of doing so? When Raspail said,
obliquely, that our "present moral principles" were dooming the West, was he
really getting at the idea that rich societies could expect to preserve the
status quo only if they were prepared to use any means necessary to cut
global population? It is easy to see where that logic leads. To take but one
of the more extreme examples, a Finnish philosopher has become a
best-selling writer in his country by arguing that the world can continue to
be habitable only if a few billion human beings are eliminated; another
world war would therefore be "a happy occasion for the planet."

Some would argue that we must reverse the decline of Western populations,
and that any people that falls below the replacement fertility rate (2.1
children per woman) is committing demographic suicide. This is a sensitive
topic. Quite apart from environment-oriented objections to a rise in the
birth rates of rich societies (the average American or European baby will
consume in its lifetime hundreds of times as many resources as the average
Chadian or Haitian baby), there are simply too many social and cultural
obstacles to reversing a declining national birth rate. Japanese and
American politicians who bemoan the failure of "bright, well-educated women"
to bear enough children have been noticeably unsuccessful in their
campaigns. Perhaps, then, we should just accept that the global demographic
imbalances are so huge that nothing can be done to affect them, and, like
the old professor in Raspail's book, simply hunker down and survey the
impending invasion through a spyglass.

The only serious alternative, it seems to us, is simultaneously to persuade
our political leaders to recognize the colossal, interconnected nature of
our global problem and to strain every element of our human ingenuity,
resourcefulness, and energy to slow down, or if possible reverse, the
buildup of worldwide demographic and environmental pressures. Such an effort
cannot rest upon a single policy, such as urging Third World countries to
reduce their population growth; it must instead be part of a major
North-South package wherein all parties, in accepting changes to their
present policies, are persuaded to see that a comprehensive and coordinated
response is the only way forward. If political leaders and their advisers
cannot come up with some sort of win-win solution, in which every country
can see benefits for itself, serious reforms are unlikely and humankind's
prospects by 2025 may indeed be bleak.

A New (North-South) Deal

What elements should be included in such a package? In offering some answers
to that question, it is important to stress that nothing that follows is
either new or impossible. In theory, there are lots of things that the
global community could do to improve its condition, and such ideas have been
around for decades, if not longer. The real problem has been the lack of
political commitment to change, or, to put it more charitably, the tendency
of national leaders and delegates to see only the elements of the package
that call for sacrifices on their part--the North to contribute more money,
the South to accept environmental monitoring--and to ignore both the
individual and the collective gains that could flow from a linked set of
agreements between developed and developing countries. If that mind-set can
be changed, so can everything else.

* What if, for example, the rich Organization for Economic Cooperation and
Development countries actually fulfilled their quarter-century-old promise
to allocate 0.7 percent of gross domestic product annually to development
aid, instead of (for the most part) falling far short of that target? The
United States, with one of the poorest records of all, now contributes less
than 0.2 percent of GDP each year. What if the OECD countries were bold
enough to contribute one percent of GDP each year? As a kind of global
insurance premium--protecting not only poorer countries but also ourselves
from the worst consequences of mismatched demographics and development--this
is not very much. In fact, if viewed more positively, as an investment in
the future of the people of our planet, it is a modest sum indeed.

* What if this money could actually be spent efficiently and appropriately,
instead of falling into the wrong hands and being devoted to the wrong
purposes? For the fact is that international-aid agencies have (again for
the most part) acquired a reputation for investing in ambitious,
technologically inappropriate schemes, channeling funds to highly paid
consultants and local leaders and ignoring the ideas of indigenous
inhabitants, while poor countries themselves have provided far too many
examples of corrupt, oppressive, or simply inefficient regimes that have
squandered their treasuries and their resources for years. Extra development
aid has no chance of succeeding unless it is accompanied by vastly improved
accounting and supervisory techniques. However, the failings of present
regimes and of previous aid programs are no reason not to continue to try to
assist development; if anything, these provide compelling reasons to
redouble--and reform--our efforts.

* What if we were able to use some of this money to employ the tens of
thousands of scientists and engineers now released from Cold War-related
research to seek solutions to our global environmental problems? Such
solutions might include a truly dramatic breakthrough in solar or
photovoltaic energy production, achieving such a drop in the cost of
sun-powered energy that it could be made available to the peoples of Asia
and Africa, and could wean them from their reliance on wood, oil, coal, and
other fossil fuels. The enhanced technology might also include the mass
production of small solar ovens, sufficient to cook a village's meals
without a daily search for firewood. The results of breakthroughs in biotech
agriculture (new disease-resistant and heat-resistant crop strains) might be
shared without requiring large patent and user fees from poor nations.

* What if it were possible to respond to the desire of hundreds of millions
of women in Third World countries for access to safe and inexpensive
contraceptives, to allow them to stabilize family size and concentrate on
nurturing their existing children? The costs involved are not enormous--a
few billions of dollars rather than hundreds of billions--and when such
programs are administered through women's groups and supported by
enlightened governments, they can have a dramatic effect on fertility rates,
as has recently been demonstrated in Kenya and Egypt. (Such programs ought
to be kept apart from the issue of abortion, which is much more problematic
politically and which, in any case, is used disproportionately in many Third
World countries to prevent the birth of girls.)

* Since order is the precondition of social betterment, what if, instead of
the nations of the world having to respond to or rebuff the United Nations
Secretary General's pleas to send troops for peacekeeping purposes to one
crisis spot after another, some of the more useful schemes to improve the
UN's capacities--from creating a military staff to establishing
"ready-to-go" units--were agreed upon by the Security Council nations and
implemented in the next year or two?

* And what if, as a separate yet parallel measure to reduce violence, a much
more serious effort were made to stem the flow of arms (simple guns as well
as sophisticated systems) into Third World countries--arms that are
manufactured primarily by the five permanent members of the Security
Council?

* What if, as a contribution to reducing the forecast clash of
civilizations, the United Nations strove to promote agreement not just in
the important sphere of human rights but also on the equally important issue
of recognizing cultural diversity, both within countries and between
technologically dominant cultures and the rest of the globe? This is not a
call for a revival of the crude and ideologically inept UNESCO programs of
the early 1980s. We would, however, argue that a genuine North-South entente
is unlikely unless Third World countries grow less fearful that their
cultures will be swallowed up by the technologies and material way of life
of richer nations, especially the United States. Cultural arrogance bedevils
our planet and gives rise to many conflicts and antagonisms, just as it
suffuses The Camp of the Saints. If the relationship between North and South
is to be improved significantly, a set of norms (and agreements to disagree)
must be established that all or at least most nations can abide by.

Various other matters--from measures to enhance the status of women in Third
World countries to improved coordination between UN agencies and the Bretton
Woods institutions--might also be incorporated into a North-South package of
linked agreements. As it is, any one of the aforementioned elements--more
aid more efficiently allocated, appropriate and accessible technological
advances, reduced fertility rates, enhanced peacekeeping powers, acceptance
of cultural diversity--might by itself make all the difference, though we
cannot know which one that might be.

Donne's Island

How likely are any of these changes to come about during the next few years?
This is the critical period if we hope to change the socio-economic
condition of humankind in the early decades of the twenty-first century. A
global idealist could point to some promising indicators even in the midst
of our present woes. There is a growing awareness in at least a few rich
societies (the Scandinavian countries, Germany, the Netherlands, Canada)
that a serious effort has to be made to improve the lot of poorer countries
and protect their environments. There are the impressive economic successes
of most of the nations of East Asia, which are raising the quality of life
of hundreds of millions of people and which, provided that further
environmental damage can be avoided (a big proviso, admittedly), offer a
possible model to Third World countries. The end of the Cold War, while
certainly not signaling the start of any new world order, has at least
permitted the UN Security Council to function as it was designed to.
International agencies, especially those within the UN but also innumerable
nongovernmental ones, are actively pursuing policies that not only are more
realistic than those of previous decades (for example, no more World Bank
loans for giant dam projects) but also reveal a greater awareness of the
interconnectedness of agendas for real improvement: economic growth,
environmental protection, population control, the status of women,
migration, jobs, investment, education, human rights, and democracy are all
related considerations in any serious effort to improve the condition of the
poorer half of humanity. And at least some commentators are openly arguing
that the need for concerted action ought to be presented no longer in
humanitarian-response terms (because, for example, after the fifth or sixth
Ethiopian famine "aid fatigue" sets in) but in terms of a global ethic that
recognizes our common human destiny and the necessity for shared stewardship
of our delicate global ecosystem.

But can these sporadic signs of promise really prevail against the lack of
effective political leadership, the turning inward of so many rich
societies, the problem of global structural unemployment in an age of
intensified modernization, the resistance to many programs to encourage the
limitation of family size (even when the thorny issue of abortion is
excluded), and the widespread lassitude and even downright hostility that
exist in many quarters toward the idea of helping the world's two billion
poorest? As Zaire, Rwanda, and Yemen follow Somalia, Sudan, Bosnia, Georgia,
and Tajikistan into bloody chaos and ethnic wars, while Boutros
Boutros-Ghali finds fewer and fewer nations willing to contribute
peacekeeping forces, can one seriously expect significant reforms soon? With
the political leadership of the world's most powerful nation deeply divided
over scandals and parochial issues, with its public evincing exhaustion in
respect to international problems, and with irresponsible though powerful
senators blaming the United Nations for every peacekeeping mishap (such as
the deaths of U.S. Rangers in Somalia), is it not naive and unrealistic to
hope for a North-South package of reforms along the lines suggested above?

Perhaps it is. Perhaps, as some observers fear, we shall have to observe
truly awful and widespread societal destruction--the collapse of continents
rather than single states; oceans of dead rather than mere rivers--with
repercussions that significantly affect rich countries as well as poor
before our public and our political leadership finally appreciate that an
intelligent and far-reaching response is unavoidable, and that, tempting
though it is to turn away from the world, too large a proportion of
humankind is heading into the twenty-first century in too distressed a
condition for any nation to imagine that it can avoid the larger
consequences. We will have to convince a suspicious public and cynical
politicians that a serious package of reform measures is not fuzzy liberal
idealism but a truer form of realism. It is simply a matter of
perspective--or of timing. Doing little or nothing at present seems the more
practical course; yet given the pace and intensity of global change, the
richer societies need to recognize that John Donne's reasoning applies on an
international scale. "No man is an island, entire of itself"--with
massacres, social collapse, and migrations occurring across our planet on a
weekly basis, do not ask "for whom the bell tolls; it tolls for thee."

These are, of course, idealistic arguments, and just how many Americans,
Europeans, and citizens of other privileged countries will heed the tocsin
is unclear. For the remainder of this century, we suspect, the debate will
rage over what and how much should be done to improve the condition of
humankind in the face of the mounting pressures described here and in other
analyses. One thing seems to us fairly certain. However the debate unfolds,
it is, alas, likely that a large part of it--on issues of population,
migration, rich versus poor, race against race--will have advanced little
beyond the considerations and themes that are at the heart of one of the
most disturbing novels of the late twentieth century, Jean Raspail's The
Camp of the Saints. It will take more than talk to prove the prophet wrong.

Matthew Connelly is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of History at Yale
University. He is now in Paris doing research for his dissertation, on the
diplomatic history of the Algerian war of independence.
Paul Kennedy is the J. Richardson Dilworth Professor of History and the
director of international security studies at Yale University. He is
internationally known for his writings and commentary on global political,
economic, and strategic issues. Kennedy is the author of The Rise and Fall
of the Great Powers (1988), among many other books, the most recent being
Preparing for the Twenty-first Century (1993).

Copyright © 1994, The Atlantic Monthly Company. All rights reserved.
The Atlantic Monthly; December 1994; Must It Be the Rest Against the West?;
Volume 274, No. 6; pages 61-84.

http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/immigrat/kennf.htm

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