More Conservative Establishment mush about Mexico
By Steve Sailer

"The stunning victory of Mexico's president-elect Vincente Fox � opens the
door to a period of sustained economic prosperity that could carry Mexico
into the front-ranks of the information-age global economy,� supply side
economist Larry Kudlow has excitedly announced in National Review Online,
[http://www.nationalreview.com/kudlow/kudlow071100.html]

Sorry, Larry, but it's not going to happen. No politician has that kind of
power. Nothing Fox could possibly do will convert the Mexican people into a
bunch of Mountain Dew-mainlining way cool Java geeks.

How do I know? Because immigrants are leading indicators. If the only thing
holding down a particular people's inventiveness is their native country's
bad government, then their immigrants will prosper in America. For example,
it was no surprise that Bangalore, India has become a software boomtown.
Until the Nineties, India had nightmarish Fabian socialist policies, but
Indian immigrants had long been doing brilliant work here in America.
Similarly, it was obvious from watching Israeli immigrants that even the
Knesset's socialist laws couldn't keep the Israeli people poor forever.

In contrast, the heart of the global information economy, California, is
currently home to about ten million people of Mexican descent. Their
creative contributions to Silicon Valley, however, are miniscule.

There is, however, a minority within Mexico that could join the high tech
world if it wished. It's largely unknown to Americans because its scions
have no need to immigrate. They only come to the U.S. for advanced degrees.

My introduction to Mexico's ruling caste occurred at UCLA's Graduate School
of Management. In an elaborate marketing strategy simulation game, my team
got drubbed by a three-man squad consisting of one American and two
dark-blonde young men from Mexico. The American explained the secret of
their success: when they couldn't agree on their next move, Alfredo and Jose
would start talking in Spanish and after a few minutes they would tell him
what the team was going to do. Mexico's white technocrats, however, have
traditionally found it far more lucrative and less work to simply reign over
Mexico's brown masses than to compete on the world market.

This is not the first time supply-siders have fallen deeply, madly in love
with a new El Presidente with a glib line of patter about "free markets" and
"globalization." Robert Bartley, the Wall Street Journal's influential
Editorial Page Editor, recalled his romance with President Carlos Salinas
(1988-1994) in a WSJ column on July 10. To find out how well the Journal's
infatuation worked out, you don't have to be a National Security
Administration cryptographer to be able to read between Bartley's lines:

I was particularly close to Carlos Salinas, who served a time as director of
Dow Jones & Co. after finishing his presidency. I was of course familiar
with the controversies that surrounded him, for example visiting him in
Mexico City on the eve of his flight from the country. Mexican cynicism to
the contrary, the analysts I most credit say he did win the 1988 election,
with plenty of electoral fraud on two sides but northern voters moving into
the PRI camp to avert a leftist victory. I suppose his brother [Raul]
belongs in jail, but I see little reason to believe he's guilty of the
assassination conspiracy of which he was convicted. And while Mexican
economic policies concocted an explosive mixture in 1994, I think a crisis
as huge as the 1995 collapse might have been averted if Pedro Aspe had been
kept at the hard-money tiller.

(To get the unbowdlerized story on the Salinas Gang, read my May 5th VDARE
column, "Shackled to an Ungrateful Corpse" at
http://www.vdare.com/sailer_mexico.htm)

Kudlow goes on to say, "[Fox] also favors closer relations with the U.S.
Expect a clear foreign-policy tilt toward America in diplomacy, defense,
and � perhaps most importantly � trade and immigration." Well, to the extent
that America's political, corporate, and media establishment already favor
even more immigration from Mexico, Fox will certainly do his best to be
"pro-American."

Fox appeared on ABC's "This Week" gabfest and trumpeted his solution for
illegal immigration: legalize it. "Asked whether he would like to see a
totally open border between the United States and Mexico, Fox said, 'Yes, 10
years from now... That's what we should shoot for, and then we finish with �
illegal migration.'''
http://dailynews.yahoo.com/h/nm/20000709/pl/mexico_usa_dc_7.html]

Does this sound crazy? Well, he's crazy like a Fox. By pushing fantasy
policies like this, Fox is making it easier for him to get the next American
President to agree to some sort of "compromise" like his recent trial
balloon that America should let in more Mexican legal immigrants in return
for Mexico's purported help in cracking down on illegal immigrants.

Mexico's economic problems are so fundamental, so deeply rooted in Mexico's
oppressive racial structure, that the surest thing any Mexican president
could do to substantially improve his people's standard of living is help
more of them get the hell out of Mexico. Fox hopes to build a permanent
political base among Mexicans in the U.S. and their relatives back home who
get remittances from them.

So Fox will use his Yeltsin-like glamour as the liberator of Mexico to
badger Washington into accepting more immigrants. Not that he would have to
push Dubya terribly hard. How better to show the Compassionate
Conservative's sensitivity to Hispanic concerns than by letting in a million
or two more?

Hey, it might not be the first time for the Bush family. A reliable source
familiar with the NAFTA negotiations reports that in return for Salinas
cutting the price subsidies that would have allowed Mexico's peasant corn
farmers to compete with Midwestern agribusiness, President Bush Sr., in
violation of his oath to faithfully execute the laws, secretly agreed to let
in more illegal immigrants.

Although the Bush dynasty has had close political and business ties to
Mexico's discredited Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), Kudlow urges
Dubya to view Fox as a comrade in arms: "The Fox victory in Mexico could
well portend a rising political tide of conservative victories in the U.S.
and Canada during the next 12 months." No doubt, if Dubya wins, the
libertarian right will push this we're-all-in-it-together line of thinking
on Bush. The unexpressed flip side to Kudlow's thinking is that if Fox
falters, then it could turn the tide against Dubya. So, Bush had better be
ready to bail out Fox to preserve his own hide.

Fox needs a compliant American President just as much as Boris Yeltsin
needed an acquiescent Bill Clinton to survive all those years of corrupt,
drunken misrule. But Mexico's most important law limits presidents to a
single six year term. Why would Fox need so much American support?

First, though Fox talks about reducing the enormous power of the President,
he won't do it to any important extent. He'll have no problem talking
himself into the belief that decentralization can wait until after he's used
the full power of the Presidency to root out corruption from Mexico. Since
this will prove a Sisyphean task, he'll find endless justifications for
postponing imposing checks and balances on himself. Peru's formidable
Alberto Fujimori has followed this road into authoritarianism.

Second, assuming Fox enjoys some success, then I predict that Fox will try
to run again (and again after that). That's what democratically elected
Latin American politicians do if they are at all effective. In Argentina,
Menem almost succeeded in getting around his country's two-term limit.
Fujimori strong-armed his way to a third term in violation of the law.

Fox will be able to make a case that will seem persuasive to Americans that
letting him run again is a "democratic reform." After all, since Mexican
presidents have traditionally been instant lame ducks, they don't have to
worry about pleasing the voters. That's one reason why they steal such
enormous sums.

What Americans won't understand is the cynical wisdom behind Mexico's one
term tradition. President Calles instituted it in 1929 to keep ambitious
politicians and generals from murdering the President, as had happened so
often over the previous two decades. The one-term limit inculcated patience
as the prime political virtue.

By attempting to stay in power for twelve (and possibly 18 or even 24
years), Fox will vastly raise the stakes in Mexican politics. Ambitious
middle-aged men in other factions will fear that Fox will block them from
ever getting a crack at supreme power. Tensions will mount and political
violence will flare. Washington will grow worried that a new Mexican
revolution, like the one that began in 1910 and killed millions, will send
twenty million refugees fleeing north toward the border.

The American president will ask Fox what could we do to help preserve
democracy in Mexico and stave off civil war. Well, he'll reply, it would
sure let off steam if you'd double or triple your intake of immigrants. All
you'd have to do is tell the INS to go easy.

We're all paying the price for America's delusions about Yeltsin. The people
of America and of Mexico will both suffer if America's elites continue to
ignore the harsh truth about the Mexican power structure.

Steve Sailer (http://www.iSteve.com) is president of the Human Biodiversity
Institute and an Adjunct Fellow of the Hudson Institute.

July 12, 2000


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