News   GLOBAL  |  Apr 02, 2020
 8.5K     0 
News   GLOBAL  |  Apr 01, 2020
 39K     0 
News   GLOBAL  |  Apr 01, 2020
 4.8K     0 

allabootmatt

Senior Member
Member Bio
Joined
May 13, 2007
Messages
1,437
Reaction score
172
*****Woops--mods, could you change the title to "Will Wilkinson: Toronto and The Immigration Fallacy." Thanks!******


Relatively high-profile American blogger and journalist Will Wilkinson has the following column up, which has had some pick-up in the blogosphere--notably from Andrew Sullivan. I think his view is pretty simplistic--leaving out, obviously, that Canada is extremely selective about who gets to immigrate--but he makes some good points. Anyway, thoughts?


The immigration fallacy
Here is what Toronto is not: Toronto is not dirty, dangerous, or poor. Toronto is not a hell of lost liberties or a babble of cultural incoherence or a ruin of failed institutions. Yet a popular argument against high levels of immigration suggests it should be.

In his 2004 book Who Are We?: The Challenges to America's National Identity, the late Harvard political scientist Samuel Huntington warned that "the United States of America will suffer the fate of Sparta and Rome," should its founding Anglo-Protestant culture continue to wane. Commenting sympathetically on Huntington's argument, conservative writer John O'Sullivan asserts that if traditional patterns of national life are "removed or destroyed, then anomie, despair, and disintegration tend to be among the consequences." So we must take care to protect our precious cultural patrimony from the acid of "denationalizing" economic and cultural globalization. We must keep outsiders out.

Successful societies (so this argument goes) owe their liberty and prosperity to distinct institutions which, in turn, depend on the persistence and dominance of the culture that established and nurtured them. Should that culture fade—or become too diluted by the customs, religions, and tongues of outsiders—the foundation of all that is best and most attractive about that society cannot long last.

But somebody forgot to tell Toronto! Nearly half the denizens of Canada's most populous metropolis were born outside the nation's borders—47 percent according to the 2006 census, and the number is rising. This makes Toronto, the fifth biggest city in North America, also the most diverse city in North America. Neither Miami, nor Los Angeles, nor New York City can compete with Toronto's cosmopolitan credentials.

Here is what Toronto is: the fifth most livable city in the world. So said the Economist Intelligence Unit in a report last year drawing on indicators of stability, health care, culture, environment, education, and infrastructure. (The Economist's world champion of livability, Vancouver, harbors a treacherous 40 percent foreign-born population.) Toronto is wealthy, healthy, well-educated, and much safer than any sizable American city. In 2006, its murder rate was 2.6 per 100,000 residents, which makes it less than half as deadly as Des Moines. The most culturally mixed city on the continent truly is one of Earth's closest approximations of urban paradise.

Of course, Canada's legacy of slavery and segregation is far less brutal and defining than is America's. And Canada does not share a long border with a much poorer country, millions of whose people will cross it looking for opportunity no matter what the law says. High levels of low-skilled immigration from Mexico and Central America create real problems in the United States, and Americans are right to worry about them. But these problems have solutions (guest-worker programs, not walls) and imply nothing about the general viability of healthy immigrant-rich societies.

The United States, this fabled land of immigrants, has fallen dismally far behind countries like Australia and Canada in openness to immigration. The Statue of Liberty may as well be moved to Vancouver's English Bay where the "huddled masses yearning to breathe free" are now rather more welcome than in New York Harbor. Many Americans, convinced by arguments like Samuel Huntington's, have come to believe that the institutions we so rightly cherish are too dependent on a feeble, endangered cultural inheritance to survive the bustling presence of strange languages, exotic gods, and pungent foods. That cultural fragility argument is false, and it deserves to die.

Toronto, which has an Anglo-Protestant heritage as strong as any, has proved it dead wrong. In fact, Toronto shows that a community and its core institutions can not only survive a massive and growing immigrant population but thrive with one. Multicultural Toronto and cities like it prove that the institutions of liberal modernity are robust. Life within them is so good that people the world over flock to them. And newcomers do not take these institutions for granted. They have a stake in seeing them last. They can and do make them stronger.

None of this is to say that Toronto doesn't have its problems. (Or that it’s not boring to New Yorkers.) But we would do well to learn the lessons of cultural accommodation and integration from our neighbors to the north. American cities could host much larger immigrant populations and thrive. Maybe someday an American city will place in the top 10 on the list of the world's most livable places. Maybe—if it becomes more like Toronto.

- WILL WILKINSON is a research fellow at the Cato Institute and editor of Cato Unbound. He writes on topics ranging from Social Security reform, happiness and public policy, economic inequality, and the political implications of new research in psychology and economics. He is a regular commentator on public radio's Marketplace and his writing has appeared in The Economist, Reason, Forbes, Slate, Policy, Prospect, and many other publications.
 
Well, matt, there is a crucial difference between immigration to Toronto and immigration to the United States. In Toronto, no group dominates. Sure, there are proportionally more Chinese and people from the Indian subcontinent, but there isn't this vast sea of people from one place who form such a critical mass of people that they can live extensive lives non-removed from their original country, let alone assimilate. Although LA county might have a lower percentage (36.2%) of foreign born than Toronto, a majority come from one country. Entire quadrants of LA are almost entirely Mexican and Spanish speaking such that the city doesn't resemble the ethnic mosaic of contemporary Toronto but rather a polar ethnic, linguistic and wealth divide that is much more characteristic of Montreal on the eve of the Quiet Revolution.

Then there is the issue of documentation, and the right to settle in a country. Hard working or not, there are an estimated 2.8M illegal immigrants in California - over 8% of the population. Ontario would have to have 1 million illegal immigrants to match this rate. This isn't the same as engineers from India who came over here on the points system - these are people who jumped a fence with few of the skills that the host country is really seeking. I don't think Canadians can be so smug about immigration when ours is really selective and deliberate while theirs is largely foisted upon them.
 
Comparing immigration laws in both countries is like comparing apples and oranges, there are good points and bad points of how either one of them run their immigration system.:rolleyes:
 

Back
Top