Sunday, December 11, 2022

More Proof that PJBuchanan Was Right

Not only was PJ 'right,' he was Right From the Beginning.  (dad pun)

Imagine that you are a U.S. immigration officer, handing out green cards to the would-be Americans of the world. You have before you two applicants who look almost completely the same; for some arcane, unspecified bureaucratic reason, you can only approve one of them. They’re both well-educated by American standards, both bringing identical families, both passed their background checks.

The major difference is their nation of origin. One is from a nation with a strong tradition of rule of law, free markets, and democratic pluralism. The other is from a country where kleptocracy, autocracy, and socialism are standard. The difference, in other words, is the character of the society that your two would-be immigrants come from. The question is: Should this difference matter?

The basic argument of The Culture Transplant, the new book from George Mason University professor Garett Jones, is that at least in the aggregate, the answer to this question is "yes." The marginal immigrant, to be sure, may not matter. But Jones shows, through an engaging and digestible tour of the academic literature, that people bring their national character with them when they migrate; that those values persist for up to several generations; and that some values really are better for societal flourishing than others, so the values immigrants bring matters a great deal....

Pat Buchanan made the same point, but cut to the real chase:  religion makes the difference.  He contended that the US' immigration policy should favor people coming from Judaeo-Christian cultures.  That's largely European, but does not exclude people from the Southern Hemisphere.  To Buchanan, 'cultural compatibility' is the key. 

There are a number of assertions from Jones (described in the review) which are questionable, such as stating that the Chinese and Japanese are 'innovators' rather than the skilled copy-cats they really are.  But his general point--that culture is critical--is spot-on.

Just remember this:  "culture" is derived from "cult."  Were Jones to have that, his book could have been shorter.

5 comments:

JTLiuzza said...

It's intriguing and irritating at the same time to watch America's academic and pundit classes put forth what really are ideas from the Captain Obvious realm as if they were some cutting edge thought.

Magic dirt, civnat, multiculturalism was never intended to work for the improvement of the USA and the west. The intent was just the opposite and, on that score, it is succeeding tremendously.

The authors of these destructive ideas are enemies of the west and western man. They sold the ideas using media control to generate guilt for fabricated crimes. That's the conversation that needs to increase in reach and volume.

Anonymous said...

I’ll take the Christian ones
However,
After observing the reformed judeo ones in action in our federal government and the especially the corporate as hoodlems working to steel elections like CEO of pfizer, Amazon, faceless book ad Nadeem…: I’ll take a pass

Dad29 said...

"Judaeo-Christian" is shorthand for ACTUAL PRACTITIONERS of those religions.

Or--in another sense--it's shorthand for the Big Principles espoused by those religions.

It is no way an endorsement of the Jews (or Christians) who are undermining this Republic.

Fr. VF said...

Once upon a time, the major threat of the novus ordo cult seemed to be stupid felt banners and execrable music.

Now we know this cult is fully on board with the global genocide outlined on the Georgia Guidestones. Starving, freezing, and injecting the human race into oblivion--this is the agenda of the Satanists in government, the schools, the media, and the Vatican.

Saint Revolution said...

H1-B indian hadji third world toilet job-stealing lying cheating carpetbagging opportunistic filth. Proves the point in one simple curry-stinking package. Look what Big Tech has done, destroyed, and is now. Hadji pig tentacles from Big Tech affecting every corner of what used to be Norman RockWell American life.