The West is too cowed by guilt to look honestly at immigration. Is immigrating from less-developed countries to the West a good or a bad thing, for host and guest? Is the immigrant angry at, or nostalgic for, the country he left? Is he thankful to or resentful of the country he has come to? Does the Westerner know why the other seeks him out or why he himself chooses not to emigrate to the non-West? These questions and dozens like them are not so much never answered as never even asked. The result is chaos. Thousands of refugees from the mess in North and East Africa are hiring smugglers to ship them across the Mediterranean into the southern ports of Europe — often with tragic results, as boats sink and passengers drown.
Any visitor to Athens quickly notices that tens of thousands of
Pakistanis, Bangladeshis, and Albanians have arrived illegally in Greece
in hopes of reaching more prosperous Western European countries. In
fact, the downtown of almost any European city is full of impoverished
non-Western immigrants. Yet in ten years, some of those same Middle
Eastern immigrants will demand space for new mosques, while they would
never have allowed a church to be built in their homeland, and many
newcomers will have complaints against their hosts about their own lack
of parity with the established citizenry. Such is the strange effect of
contemporary Westernism upon immigrants.
More @ National Review
No comments:
Post a Comment