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Immigration See other Immigration Articles Title: The Sun People Tsunami and the Inevitability of Lifeboat Ethics Our Ruling Classs anxieties about the Russians, and their anxieties about us, have a deckchairs-on-the-Titanic quality about them. Peering forward into the middle 21st century as best I am able, there are much bigger issues looming. Nine years ago I wrote a piece titled The Arctic Alliance. My argument, in a nutshell, was that the north-Eurasian nationsthat is, Europe (along with some of its settler nations like Australia and the U.S.A.), Russia, China, Japan, and the Koreasshared common strengths and a common weakness. The common strengths are high average IQ and a long record of civilizational attainment, with the aforementioned blots duly noted. The common weakness is demographic collapsebelow-replacement birth rates. I suggested that these Arctic nations should stop bickering among themselves and join forces in self-preservation against the ballooning low-average-IQ populations of the temperate and tropical zones. Hence the Arctic Alliance. Now, nine years on, with millions of Sun People pouring into those Ice People nations, I think Im entitled to at least a whispered I told you so. Recently, the New York Times ran a report headlined Heat, Hunger and War Force Africans Onto a Road on Fire. The piece is about the Sahel: that east-west strip along Africa where the southern Sahara Desert meets the grasslands and woodlands further south. The Road on Fire is the road out of there, on the people-smuggling routes across the Sahara , north to the Mediterranean and Europe. Steve Sailer n oticed the same report, and has some pithy comments about it. I cant improve on Steve, but I urge listeners to check out the report. Its revealing in two different ways. Way One, which Steve concentrates on, is the style of the reporting, in which all the appalling problems of this regionoverpopulation, poverty, the loss of trees and arable landare blamed on the demon white man. Way Two is the utter hopelessness of the situation there. As the population surges upwards it becomes ever more difficult to make a living. The land has been sucked dry. Whatever you think about global warming, it sure doesnt look as though itll be getting cooler and wetter down there any time soon. And the human capital is poor: low-IQ populations, not well adapted to modern societies, with no native industries or expertise in anything much. There has been no civilization down there in the Sahel, other than what European colonizers brought in. Its not smug or spiteful to point that out, its just factual. Yet still the populations surge. Niger, right in the middle of the strip, has a total fertility rate of almost seven children per woman, the highest in the world. Seven children per woman. Mali and Burkina Faso, to the west, are just below six; Chad to the east is a comparatively feeble four and a half. Those numbers are way different from the corresponding numbers for Ice People. For Europe as a whole, the total fertility rate is 1.6 children per woman. Russia and China are about the same. Japan is 1.4, South Korea 1.25, North Korea
who knows? Thats the demographic tsunami thats been starting to come ashore in Europe this past year and a half. Set against that, our children and grandchildren in the middle of this century will look back with amazement at our intra-Arctic bickering about whether Vladimir Putin did or did not assist in releasing John Podestas emails. There are ethical and ideological issues to go along with the demographic ones. For example: How will moral universalism hold up as the demographic waters rise? Right now millions of people from these hopeless regions, and other places like Afghanistan (total fertility rate 5.22) are journeying north across the Sahara or westwards through the Middle East to break into Europe; and the Europeans, in their naïve moral universality, are letting them in. That at least offers some relief to those swelling populations in Hopelessland. But what happens when Europeans decide, as they surely will, that while a million or two African and Muslim migrants is OK, ten or twenty million is not, and a hundred million is totally out of court? Africa alone easily has a hundred million desperate souls to spare. All sorts of questions arise. Will the word racist continue to be a premier insult when everyoneeveryone but a small rearguard of moral-universalist cranksagrees that our Ice People nations have all the black Africans they can handle? And how will the black population of the U.S.A. process that? Will they clamor for solidarity with their African brothers and sisters, demanding that we admit a few tens of millions of them? Or will First-Worldiness trump racial solidarity, and blacks join whites in calling for the drawbridge to be pulled up? What about the other end of Eurasia? Will the Japanese, Chinese, and Koreans continue to keep their nations doors tight shut even as their populations dwindle? Will they be able to? Theres a lot of questions there, but I dont have any answers. When I think about these things, all I can come up with is Lifeboat Ethics. Quote from the foundational text: So here we sit, say 50 people in our lifeboat. To be generous, let us assume it has room for 10 more, making a total capacity of 60. Suppose the 50 of us in the lifeboat see 100 others swimming in the water outside, begging for admission to our boat or for handouts. We have several options: we may be tempted to try to live by the Christian ideal of being our brothers keeper, or by the Marxist ideal of to each according to his needs. Since the needs of all in the water are the same, and since they can all be seen as our brothers, we could take them all into our boat, making a total of 150 in a boat designed for 60. The boat swamps, everyone drowns. Complete justice, complete catastrophe
Suppose we decide to preserve our small safety factor and admit no more to the lifeboat. Our survival is then possible although we shall have to be constantly on guard against boarding parties. Lifeboat Ethics: the Case Against Helping the Poor by Garrett Hardin, Psychology Today, September 1974 Yes, thats bleak, but whos got anything else to say? Who, actuallyother than mewho is thinking about these issues? Steve Sailer, in his commentary on the New York Times report, implies that we need to get Africans using birth control. Havent we been trying that for, like, my entire lifetime? Like Steve, Im a gentle soul who wishes no harm to anyone. Im sorry for those folk in the Sahel, in their poverty and hopelessness. They didnt ask to be born there, any more than I asked to be born in the West. I got lucky and they didnt. Its a shame. Its not fair. I entirely agree. At the same time, I very much want Western Civilization to survive; and I want my children and grandchildren to live in it, in peace and prosperity. I really hope there is some humane way we can science our way out of this colossal problem thats bearing down on us. But I dont see it. Look at our reaction to the taking of Aleppo in Syrias civil war. The city seems definitely to have fallen this week, to the forces of Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad and his Russian allies. A good thing? A bad thing? Well, a lot of people, including a lot of unarmed civilians, have been maimed and killed. Thats bad. But then, if the fall of Aleppo means the civil war is coming to an end, thats good. But then again, if the civil war ends with Assad and Putin the victors, thats bad because they are both deeply unpleasant people who regard constitutional government and the rule of law with scorn. But then again again, if Assad isnt fighting his own rebel generals, maybe he and his Iranian pals will concentrate on fighting ISIS, which would be good. Thats all grist for ruminations in journals of geopolitical strategy. But what does any of it mean for the U.S.A.? Not a darn thing, so far as I can see. When the U.S.A. was having our own very bloody civil war, the great-great-grandparents of the current inhabitants of Aleppo were subjects of the Ottoman Empire. Did the Ottoman Sultan and his pashas fret over the suffering people of Atlanta and Richmond? Did the traders and craftsmen of Aleppo? I doubt it. Nations will have civil wars, and they do tend to be nasty affairs. If you feel an urge to help the people of Aleppo, all the usual organizations are making efforts to get stuff in, though apparently with mixed success: the International Rescue Committee, Save the Children, Médecins Sans Frontières, and so on. If the spirit of charity moves you, theyll be glad of your donations. However, to judge from conversations Ive had and comment threads Ive seen, Americans are not much stirred by the Aleppo horrors. It seems to me in fact that there has been a general hardening of hearts in the West during my lifetime towards human catastrophes in the Third World. I remember for example the Nigerian civil war of the late 1960s. I was living in England at the time so I cant speak about American attitudes; but I recall a lot of people being genuinely distressed at all the suffering there. Im not seeing that in relation to Syria. Compassion fatigue? Middle East mayhem fatigue? Or were those upset Brits of 1968 just indulging in post-imperial guilt? (Nigeria had been a British colony until 1960. I can still, for some reason, remember the name of the first Prime Minister of independent Nigeria: Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa, last seen sprawled in a ditch outside Lagos with a very nasty case of lead poisoning, victim of a coup.) Thats impressionistic, and might be wrong. Still, if Lifeboat Ethics is in fact going to be the default outlook of mid-21st century Ice People, it may be that the necessary adjustmentthe hardening of hearts, the averting of eyeshas been under way for a while. The future, said Arthur Koestler, casts a shadow back into the past. John Derbyshire [email him] writes an incredible amount on all sorts of subjectsfor all kinds of outlets. (This no longer includes National Review, whose editors had some kind of tantrum and fired him. ) He is the author of We Are Doomed: Reclaiming Conservative Pessimism and several other books. Hes had two books published by VDARE.com: FROM THE DISSIDENT RIGHT (also available in Kindle) and From the Dissident Right II: Essays 2013. His writings are archived atJohnDerbyshire.com. (Reprinted from VDare.com by permission of author or representative) Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread
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