Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Immigration To The West: ‘A Moral And Intellectual Embarrassment’
Immigration To The West: ‘A Moral And Intellectual Embarrassment’
Dec 16, 2025 4:21 AM

Victor Davis Hanson, writing for National Review, takes up the immigration issues facing the West. His assessment is that the West suffers from a “schizophrenia” of a sort, where those of us in the West accept “one-way” immigration as a given.

Westerners accept that these one-way correspondences are true. Nonetheless, they are incapable of articulating the social, economic, and political causes for the imbalances, namely the singular customs and heritage that make the West attractive: free-market capitalism, property rights, consensual government, human rights, freedom of expression and religion, separation of church and state, and a secular tradition of rational inquiry. Much less are they able to remind immigrants from the non-West that they are taking the drastic step of forsaking their homelands, often rich in natural resources, because of endemic statism and corruption, the lack of the rule of law, religious intolerance, misogyny, tribalism, and racism — the stuff that does not lead to prosperous, safe, and happy lives.

People are literally dying to get to the West. And why would they not want to leave behind massive poverty, violence, political upheaval and the chaos that is the Middle East, Latin America, the Balkans? Here in the U.S., we are still seeing thousands of children being sent here from their homes in Latin America, but according to Hanson, the West seems unable to find fault with anything or anyone: simply send us more people.

Government has abjectly failed in Latin America. These governments are at most indifferent to their people’s departure, and often encourage them to leave. Elites callously see multiple advantages in losing their own people, especially when remittances arrive in the billions of dollars and provide sustenance for those whom the government cannot or will not assist.

The exodus is sometimes seen as a safety valve: Potential dissidents and revolutionaries head northward rather than going to Mexico City to demand social justice and reform. Within the United munities of poor immigrants can serve as powerful lobbying groups for even more immigration — as they do now in Europe as well. Amnesties and blanket naturalizations eventually create bloc voters. In the United States, anchor children draw in more immigrants. The home government is never blamed for forcing out its own; the new host is always faulted for not being more ing.

Our ignorance, indifference and blindness, says Hanson, results in chaos in the West as well.

Immigration to the West will remain a moral and intellectual embarrassment until Westerners insist that ers arrive in numbers that can be assimilated, that they meet meritocratic criteria that are ethnically blind, and that e legally and on the terms adjudicated by the host. Europeans and Americans need not be chauvinistic, but they do need to be candid about why people leave one country for another. From such es realization that the best way to stop mass, illegal immigration is for other societies to emulate Western paradigms so that there is no need to emigrate — after all, Japanese and Singaporeans do not hide in cargo boats to reach California. But to do all that, Westerners need first to understand their own culture and then to defend it.

Will we in the West be able to learn from failed immigration policies? Will we be able to find the courage to say, “This is not working for us. We will not lose our country, our culture, our way of life. We will reform”? We shall see.

Read “The Strange Case of Modern Immigration” at National Review.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
UK Northern Ireland abortion act oversteps legal boundaries: Expert
The UK Parliament has taken a step to overturn legislation on two of the most sensitive issues in politics, in violation of an agreement that grants authority over those issues to a lower level of government. The move to legalize abortion and to allow marriage between members of the same sex in Northern Ireland will “drive a coach and horses through the devolution settlement,” according to one Northern Irish Member of Parliament. On Tuesday, the House of Commons voted to...
Rene Girard on the responsible use of language
Those of us who deal with ideas can often throw words around without being sufficiently careful about their meaning or attentive to their impact. We can be tempted to use terms to make a splash or win an argument at the expense plexity. Which Liberalism? You see this today with everyone condemning or praising liberalism. The term has e so vague that it increasingly means “stuff I don’t like” to some and “progress and freedom” to others. But like most...
News: Stephen P. Barrows joins the Acton Institute
Economist and Aquinas College Executive V.P. Stephen P. Barrows has been named Managing Director of Programs at the Acton Institute. Barrows, who also holds the titles of Provost and Dean of Faculty at Aquinas in Grand Rapids, begins his work at Acton on July 30. “I am delighted to be joining the Acton Institute and am eager to connect others to Acton’s inspiring and life changing ideas,” Barrows said. “Having benefited from the Acton Institute’s programming and seen its impact...
The Bookmonger podcast talks to Samuel Gregg about his new book
Samuel Gregg, director of research at the Acton Institute, released a new book titled,Reason, Faith, and the Struggle for Western Civilization. In his book, Gregg discusses the dangers that an unbalanced relationship between faith and reason imposes on a society. Gregg recently discussed this book with John J. Miller on National Review‘s The Bookmonger podcast. You can listen to the episode here. ...
Why should Christians support free markets?
One of the abiding joys of working at a think tank like the Acton Institute is that interesting people are always asking you big questions. I was recently asked, “Why should Christians support free markets?” The question is large, interesting, and necessitates the answering of a more basic question first, “Why should Christians be interested in economics?” Adam Smith, and his many antecedents, began crafting the analytical tools which we e to call economics in response to phenomena which they...
What does Judeo-Christian mean?
The Acton Institute was founded on the basis of ten principles that integrate “Judeo-Christian Truths with Free Market Principles.” You’ve probably heard the term your entire life, but do you know what “Judeo-Christian” means? And where exactly did the e from? While the concept of Judeo-Christian originated in the first century AD, as a number of Jewish believers aligned with the new movement of Christianity, the term was re-invented in America in the 1920s. As Eboo Patel, founder and president...
Solzhenitsyn: Freedom’s habits and hindrances (video)
Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn spent his life suffering the inhumanity of Communism, then revealing it to the world, then exhorting the West to revive the values that made it the world’s greatest bulwark of freedom. His work proved so invaluable that William F. Buckley Jr. once called the Russian dissident “the outstanding figure of the [twentieth] century.” David P. Deavel, Ph.D., offers a retrospective view of Solzhenitsyn’s life, and a reminder of his message to the world, in a new essayposted at...
Recalling the one lesson: The US-China trade war revisited
Influential thinker Henry Hazlitt argued that the “art of economics” could be distilled to a generally applicable single lesson: looking not merely at the immediate but at the longer effects of any act or policy [and] tracing the consequences of that policy not merely for one group but for all groups. Recent news and reports require application of this lesson to the trade war between China and the United States. On the surface, if the goal of Donald Trump’s increased...
Education, efficiency and liberty
Alaska’s university system is currently facing $130 million in funding cuts to an annual budget of $900 million, which included $327 million in state funding last year. These potential cuts have sparked criticism from researchers at other universities, University of Alaska President James Johnsen, Alaskan state legislators, and citizens. If the cuts stemmed from a budgetary crisis, perhaps the response would have been gentler. However, Alaska’s Governor Mike Dunleavy is seeking to give the money back to Alaskans each year,...
Can summer jobs reduce violent crime?
Several decades of social science has shown a correlation between joblessness among disadvantaged youth and violent crime. While remediation has not been shown to lead to prevention, there is some evidence that summer jobs can. For example a2015 study published in the journal Science found that giving disadvantaged youth a summer job significanty reduces violent crime: In a randomized controlled trial among 1,634 high school youth in Chicago, assignment to a summer jobs program decreased violence by 43 percent over...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved