Well, folks, another year, another crushing defeat for you in the annual
vote for the Sierra Club's board of directors and various ballot
initiatives. The Club has again (and again) rejected the idea that erecting
higher barriers to U.S. immigration will curb global population growth and
save the environment, and rejected the candidacy of those of you who again
sought to make that case.
Last year, lots of muddy politics came your way courtesy of Club
traditionalist majoritarians and a six-figure mass mailing thundering
against you as racist/fascist take-over conspirators. There was less of
that this time around, but the real difference between last year and this
year is that you were also bested on the field of ideas.
While the Sierra Club's neutral position on U.S. immigration policy is still
in place, and the issue-dodging defense that "we won't amend this position
because doing so would disrupt the Sierra Club" is still too often offered
up a la carte (a rhetorical habit on which former Club president Adam
Wehrbach has acidly commented, "Neutrality? This is our bold statement of
justice?"), nevertheless, something new has been added. A better idea than
yours has arisen: The Sierra Club has grasped the fact that migration is
part of the issue of corporate globalization, and has started making a point
of it ("Our Stance on Migration").
The findings disseminated in academic articles such as "Past and Present
Acts of Exclusion: Immigration and Globalization" (M/C: A Journal of Media
and Culture, April 2001) and in venues such as the 2001 conference "Global
shifts: U.S. immigration and the cultural impact of demographic change," the
1998 Peoples' Summit of the Americas in Santiago, and the Globalization
Caucus for the NGO Forum of the UN World Conference Against Racism have all
pointed at the same thing: Rising human migration is an effect, not a cause,
of social and environmental impoverishment, and globalization is a primary
cause of that impoverishment and that migration.
That's why our local corner of the Sierra Club here passed a resolution
saying just that in Feb. '04, the last time this issue was heating up the
Club. It's clear that you didn't like this idea, but in the course of the
campaign you didn't do much in the way of refutation, content to
characterize this as "blame the evil Americans." You were also content to
promulgate the notion that people leave their native countries as though
comparison shopping -- because they think they can parlay their so-so lives
into really good lives, not because their lives have become unlivable and
their families will starve unless they flee their country and seek to
improve their lot elsewhere.
The Western corporate model of global trade is understood throughout the
Third World -- and in pockets of the First World -- as the extension of
colonialism under another name. It typically involves fewer gunboats and
more currency transactions and is more far-reaching and devastating. The
outcome has remained the same as it was in the 16th century: the
impoverishment and exploitation of the global South by the imperial North.
Gregory, I know it is easier for you to assert that "much of the poverty in
the Third World has absolutely nothing to do with trade policy," because
that feels intuitively right. But it's not.
When Ben and Dick came through town a few months ago to drum up support,
Ben was likewise dismissive. He said migration as an outcome of
globalization was "only part of the picture" (which is always entertaining
when coming from folks whose whole focus on population growth as an
environmental problem is slashing U.S. immigration quotas) because Chinese
migration is on the rise and "globalization has nothing to do with China" --
then he ran to the salad bar, before I could commend to his attention
"Chinese Globalization and Migration to Europe," a March 2004 research paper
from the Center for Comparative Immigration Studies. It concludes: "crudely
reinforcing the barrier between China and the West will only make migration
more difficult or costly, but will not address the underlying factors that
generate and promote migration in the first place."
China has proven perfectly capable of exploiting itself via the massive
privatization program it began in 1997, resulting in 20 million unemployed.
For countries that need forcible encouragement, Structural Adjustment
Programs, imposed by the World Bank and International Monetary Fund, force
draconian austerity measures on Third World countries as a qualification for
development loans, invariably forcing governments into tax restructuring,
wage-slashing privatization and layoffs, deep cuts in health care, and
diversion of funds from education and social services into the repayment of
crushing debt. The disastrous social outcomes -- the recipe for forced
migration -- are a matter of record.
Guys, virtually your whole argument is that immigrants to the U.S. promptly
commence consuming resources at or near the same wasteful level as you and
I, but none of you have as yet announced that you are moving to Mexico in
order to selflessly shrink your biological footprint. And for the sake of
candor, you might want to drop the "I don't blame the immigrants" pose,
another belief in which you are doubtless sincere, though blaming immigrants
is central to your thesis: They have too many children, and it's their
fault. They live in poverty, which is their problem or the problem of their
native country. And advocacy for immigrant's rights -- which is to say
human rights, the same rights that secure your freedom and protect you from
harm -- is translated by you as "advocacy for large-scale immigration into
the United States."
When it comes to environmental destruction, wrote George Monbiot in 2002,
"population growth is the one factor for which the poor can be blamed and
from which the rich can be excused, so it is the one factor which is
repeatedly emphasized." When one's whole focus is basic survival, one will
seek to have many children, knowing that most of them will not survive
infancy and that the survival of the family depends on the ones who do. It
is not overpopulation that breeds poverty -- see Barry Commoner's helpfully
titled landmark 1975 essay "How Poverty Breeds Overpopulation (and Not the
Other Way Around)." See also former population bomb-er Paul Ehrlich, who has
gone beyond the original simple formula he co-authored in the late 60s and
which you have seized upon and stuck with as holy writ, I=PAT: Human
(I)mpact on the environment is equal to the size of the (P)opulation times
the average level of (A)ffluence times the environmental impact of the
(T)echnologies providing the goods consumed.
When last the thorny matter of immigration and the environment appeared on a
Sierra Club ballot, San Francisco social justice activist Chris Crass
pointed out the problem with I=PAT, which "averages everyone into an
equation that completely removes economic and political institutions that
shape and determine consumption." This meant that "the entire system of
global capitalism and the exploitation of the land, ecosystem and workers
are nowhere to be seen" in a neat, simple formula that "blurs all
distinctions between economic class and consequently determines that poor
immigrants have the same environmental impact as wealthy families regardless
of the consumption levels of either."
By the time of a 2004 NPR interview, Ehrlich's views had expanded. "What we
want to do is develop a foreign policy that reduces the need of other people
to come here," he said, "change our agricultural policy so that farmers in
poor countries, instead of having to send their children to the United
States to get money, would be able to thrive on their own. But, right now,
our trade policies, which are free trade for the rich and high tariffs for
the poor, are just hurting the poor people of the world and forcing them to
try and come and make a living in our country."
Hence your current tortured relationship to Ehrlich, who once offered you
simplicity and the ability to blame poor people. The guru must have fallen
into Error, as what he is saying now isn't the same thing he said then. You
are unable to connect his statement "No sensible reason has ever been given
for having more than 135 million people [in the United States]" with his
statement above. You can't see how they connect. You can't believe they
don't contradict each other. Once, I would have hesitated to accuse you of
such a drastic inability to grasp a point, but no longer. I've seen you
prove it a dozen times over. Hence: Immigrants come here. They consume. They
have babies. They must be kept out. Period. It's all you know, and all you
want to know.
David Brower, the Sierra Club's 20th-century motive force, journeyed along
much the same path Ehrlich did (and hence, by your lights, must have
originally been Right, until he learned more, thought about it, integrated
what he learned into his original thinking...and thereby became Wrong).
Toward the end of his life, Brower dryly observed that it was not surprising
that residents of countries that have been mugged by the relentless
exploitation of the West should be inclined "to come to the U.S. to
share the loot we stole, fair and square."
"Rather than complaining about immigration from Mexico," Brower wrote, "the
U.S. could stop causing it."
As John Muir pointed out, we're finding that when we tug on any one thing,
we find it is hitched to everything else in the universe. The environmental
movement has come to a deeper understanding of the world we live in and is
pointing the way forward on this issue. Alternatives are being fashioned.
The big picture is being grasped. You should step back and take a look.
Andrew Christie is Chapter Coordinator for the Sierra Club's Santa Lucia
chapter in San Luis Obispo, CA
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