Multicultural peace -
at what cost? Anyone who pretends you can introduce hundreds of thousands of
empty-handed newcomers into an affluent country without incident either has
rocks in their head
How easily the
immigration debate lends itself to extremes. Photo: AP
Europe is
trying to figure out how to close its borders to 10 million immigrants fleeing
civil war and poverty. Sections of America are trying to figure out how to
discourage Mexicans and Muslims.
And Britain
devoted the past week to argument about an immigration ban on just one man:
Donald Trump.
The formal
legislative debate occupied Westminster for three hours on Wednesday, despite
several serious – some would say terminal – snags with the plan, including the
lack of any parliamentary authority to ban the ginger miscreant in question,
the concurrent lack of any express intention evinced by the target to travel
personally to Britain in the immediate future, and the fact that (unlike, one
imagines, many putative immigrants) he already owns $1.5 billion worth of golf
courses there.
Nevertheless!
A robust and proper democracy is never deterred by anything so trivial as the
complete unworkability of the legislative proposition at hand (See: The
Australian Parliament and about the last five federal Budgets.)
And the proposition was not entirely without merit. For instance, Stopping The
Trump is massively easier than Stopping The Syrians. There's only one of him.
He's pretty easy to spot. And there's no real moral quandary involved, given
that he's not fleeing persecution, unless you count MSNBC.
How easily
the immigration debate lends itself to extremes. It acts like an ideological
centrifuge, driving participants either to radical nationalism or radical
compassionism, the most entrenched proponents of either approach developing –
over time - spookily similar hints of demagoguery.
On the one
hand, let's take Trump himself. He advocates building a large wall, at Mexican
expense, to deter Mexicans from coming to America. This is a pleasing
arrangement for Trump because it appeals not only to the Mexican-fearing part
of his constituency, but also the part which worries that America is spending
too much already on masonry.
He also
advocates a travel ban on Muslims – whether tourists, business visitors,
migrants or refugees – entering the United States.
Voters
despise self-interestedness in their political leaders, so it is just
conceivable that the whiff of economic hara-kiri in the Trump proposal (he has
large business interests in Dubai, Azerbaijan, Turkey and Indonesia, raising
the distinct possibility that the Trump travel bans would afflict his own
employees and business partners) might play to his advantage.
But
otherwise, of course, it is weapons-grade craziness.
Watching the
Republican primary at the moment is like watching a kid build a rocket.
Every day,
the kid bolts on some unfeasible new attachment (last week's was Sarah Palin)
and onlookers aren't sure how to react. Surely the rocket will never actually
get to the moon. But the kid's polling 37 per cent in Iowa, so no Republican
can afford to call him an idiot just yet. This is why Republicans get a kind of
fixed, Stepford-wife grin when asked about Trump.
And no
Democrat would be stupid enough to stop him from building the greatest pile of
junk ever conceived in the history of American democracy, which is saying
something.
The problem,
in the meantime, is that this kind of extremism is catching.
Banning
Donald Trump from Britain?
It's the
kind of hyper-aggressive daffiness you'd expect from the man himself.
It's a
harmless spot of fun, though, compared to the sinister murk of what happened in
Cologne and other cities on New Year's Eve, when sexual assaults on women by
men of Middle Eastern or North African appearance were under-reported or not
reported at all, seemingly due to concern about inflaming community tensions
around Muslim refugees.
Maintaining
peaceable and hospitable communities is – of course – an admirable objective.
But to
ignore or downplay criminality in the interests of maintaining multicultural
peace is a grotesque piece of extremism every bit as damaging as the racist
commentary the behaviour seeks to avoid.
Why? Because
in seeking to defray community attitudes of fear and suspicion, it instead
confirms them. Where a dozen offences have been covered up, or even a hundred,
the fertile human imagination is wont to conjure many more.
Mass
immigration is a big deal. And anyone who pretends you can introduce hundreds
of thousands of empty-handed newcomers into an affluent country without
incident either has rocks in their head, or does not live in the areas to which
such newcomers are introduced in any significant number.
Australia is
a good international demonstration of how well mass immigration can pan out
over time.
But it can't
work out if you pretend bad stuff isn't happening. It can't work out if you're
so desperate to demonstrate that everything is going to work out okay that you
actively disguise instances where it's not.
To remain
silent – even in the interests of some kind of compassion - is to do no-one a
kindness.
Annabel Crabb is an ABC writer and broadcaster.
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