On mass immigration as a phenomenon
While writing The Tribe
I found two of my main interests, in the existential background to life and in
mass immigration as a phenomenon, fusing and coming together in ways that I am
still exploring and finding interesting.
I think this coming-together has helped me to address one of
the fundamental questions of our time in the book, namely,
Why is mass immigration such a troubling phenomenon for ‘host’ communities or people?
Even using this word ‘phenomenon’, which I know annoys some
people in its vagueness, helps to guide us towards the sort of answers I have
been coming up with.
It helps because it does not limit how we address what is
going on in the act of describing it. For one thing, it helps us to avoid
locating the source of trouble in immigrants themselves, as if there is
something wrong with them. But it also avoids locating the troubles in what I
am calling here, for want of a better word, ‘host’ communities or people – as if
there is something wrong with them.
Treating mass immigration as a phenomenon allows us to avoid
committing ourselves to the fray on one side or another simply in the act of
describing it. It may appear too broad
and wide-ranging. But in being so, it allows us to include the full range of
aspects which others do not consider; indeed how they seek to describe it can feature as part of what we are
looking to describe.
This points towards one of the underlying themes of my book:
that the way we interpret the world
is part of the world we are looking to interpret – and must be taken into
account if we are to see things accurately. The
phenomenon of mass immigration includes
how we interpret mass immigration and
different aspects of it. It allows us to consider immigrants themselves as a
block but also as individual people who have decided to move countries. It allows us to consider those who feel
uncomfortable about immigration, but who do not convert that discomfort into
hostility towards immigrants – and also those who do. It allows us to consider
the role of pro-immigration activists and politicians. It allows us to consider
how tabloids treat immigration in an often crude way, at least in their
front pages – and how other news media have made it an issue in different ways,
indeed sometimes primarily as a reaction
to the tabloid treatment.
To allow all these considerations to exist is what
addressing mass immigration as a phenomenon means in practice. It means seeing
the world not as an object to be described in the same way we would describe
objects, with fixed properties and easily-reached conclusions, but as a dynamic
whole in which we are all participants and our participation is crucial to what
is going on. It brings us towards the nature of social and political power, in
which some participants are more important than others, and in which we can grab a piece
of that power by aligning to it.
In The Tribe, I have
written extensively about mass immigration in this way, as a phenomenon which
is much wider and more interesting than our judgemental, rationalistic political
discourse allows. Of course I’ve written about it principally in relation to liberal-left
politics, because that’s what the book is all about. In doing so I’ve drawn out
how these politics are often dubious and even dishonest, but also how they have been successful and looking at some of the consequences of
this success – not least on working class people in the Unfavoured Groups
chapter.
Sometimes looking over the book I’ve thought that maybe I’ve
talked about immigration too much – at the expense of other issues. On the other
hand though, I think it deserves this level of treatment. As one of the
defining issues of our times, immigration remains little understood in public life.
Hopefully, my book will help to change that a little bit.
The Tribe
is now available for £12 (RRP £14.95) with free postage to UK addresses. Use
coupon TRIBE
at imprint.co.uk/tribe.
For more about the book, see my previous blogpost here.
Given that the mass immigration of the last twenty years, not to mention that of the post war era, has changed Britain and England in particular, more profoundly than at any point in its previous history, I don't see how you cannot write so much about it.
ReplyDeleteFrankly, I am very open in saying that I think it has been an utter catastrophe. The post-war immigration was problematic enough introducing as it did race politics and new forms of crime. But the waves of the last twenty years have already started a non-violent civil war, and if Islam continues to grow and its associated atrocities of mass child rape, suicide bombings and gangsterism in Labour run locales do not abate then there will be a real civil war.
And if you think I'm exaggerating, consider that three different Army officers have all told me that they regularly train for, in their words, 'the day it goes tits up with the Muslims'.
One thing I find fascinating is why when the major Jewish organisations are up in arms about anti-semitism, does one a) not find them placing the blame where it really lies (Islam) and b) why they do not relent in their decades long support for mass immigration and multiculturalism.
It has hard to have sympathy with organisations which have invited a problem on to themselves (though one which has barely impacted their lives compared to what its down to thousands of children in Rotherham, Rochdale, Telford, Oxford, Newcastle etc etc.) and yet don't have the guts to really reflect on their own role in that.
Frankly, I think we are all in huge collective denial and at the same time, the political class is s###ing themselves about it.