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- <text id=93TT1072>
- <title>
- Mar. 01, 1993: The Melting Pot Is Still Simmering
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Mar. 01, 1993 You Say You Want a Revolution...
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ESSAY, Page 72
- The Melting Pot Is Still Simmering
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Richard Brookhiser
- </p>
- <p> America thinks of itself as a diverse society--a "gorgeous
- mosaic," in the words of New York City Mayor David Dinkins;
- a quilt of many ethnic and racial patches, in a favorite metaphor
- of the Rev. Jesse Jackson's. But the figures of the 1990 census,
- only now crunched, suggest that the demographic surface of life
- in the U.S. is a lot smoother than one thinks. So is the cultural
- surface, unless the politicians ruffle it.
- </p>
- <p> Fifty-eight million Americans, out of a total population of
- 248 million, claim German ancestry. In second place are 38 million
- who say they are wholly or partly Irish. Those of English ancestry
- come in third, at 32 million, followed by African Americans,
- at 23 million.
- </p>
- <p> This lineup of America's major minorities has been extraordinarily
- stable over the years. The top four ancestry groups of the 1990
- census were not only the top four groups of the 1980 census
- but also the top four of the 1790 census, as far as one can
- tell from the surnames collected by the founding headcounters.
- The relative sizes of the big four were different then: English
- Americans made up almost half the population, while African
- Americans were one-fifth. But America has been turning up the
- same ethnic cards for a long time.
- </p>
- <p> The stability is shown by the people Americans have put in the
- White House. Every U.S. President except for the all-Dutch Martin
- Van Buren has descended in whole or part from the three largest
- white demographic groups. In the 1980s the Democrats tried to
- vary the mix by fielding Norwegian-Italian and Greek-Danish
- tickets. Last year they reverted to form and managed to replace
- George Herbert Walker Bush with William Jefferson Clinton.
- </p>
- <p> This is a pretty simple mosaic, at least as far as its biggest
- pieces are concerned, and the consequences for cultural integrity
- and social peace have not been complex. The largest ethnic group--nearly one-quarter of the U.S. population--turns out to
- be one of the least visible, a template of assimilation. "I
- have often thought that the Germans make the best Americans,"
- wrote the critic Karl Shapiro, "though they certainly make the
- worst Germans." German Americans assimilated partly because
- of two world wars with the old country, but also because the
- Germans who came here--Catholics and Protestants, peasants
- and city dwellers--were so diverse. It takes cohesion to stand
- apart: Germans in America did not have it, and they blended
- in, leaving only the Katzenjammer Kids behind.
- </p>
- <p> English Americans did not have to worry about the melting pot;
- they made the pot. African Americans, of course, have been in
- the frying pan or the fire for more than 300 years, while Irish-American
- Catholics, because of their religion and their clannishness,
- found themselves in a variety of brawls (often with Irish-American
- Protestants). But time has taken down the NO IRISH NEED APPLY
- signs, and if it doesn't do the same for blacks, it won't be
- for lack of decades of black and white effort.
- </p>
- <p> Will continuing immigration upset the balance? The totals of
- various Asian groups, though rising rapidly, are still quite
- small, and it is hard to think of people who seem to be so successful
- as being difficult to absorb. The real numbers are coming from
- south of the border. Mexicans are the seventh largest ancestry
- group, at 11 million, up from 10th place and 7 million in 1980--a big leap. The census predicts that if today's birthrates
- hold up (a big if), Hispanics will be nearly a fifth of the
- U.S. population by 2050. Multiculturalism, now on the doorstep,
- will have moved in.
- </p>
- <p> But as the census was making this forecast, organizers of a
- huge private study of Hispanic opinion released some surprising
- results. The Latino National Political Survey found that the
- very labels "Hispanic" and "Latino" are rejected by those on
- whom they are pasted. Americans of Latin American origin think
- of themselves as urban Americans, Mexican Americans or Puerto
- Ricans whenever they think in ethnic terms. Mostly they think
- of joining the American mainstream. Huge majorities of all these
- groups think residents of the U.S. should learn English, while
- large majorities--two-thirds or more--think America is admitting
- too many immigrants. "Hispanics" are going the way of the Germans.
- By 2050, burritos will be as all-American as Budweiser.
- </p>
- <p> The assimilation of Hispanics is news because two allied groups
- of political operators are trying to pretend that it isn't happening.
- Leaders of ethnic communities fear the success of members of
- their communities because it makes special favors unnecessary
- and deprives leaders of their status as favor brokers. Meanwhile,
- liberal believers in the problem-solving omnicompetent state
- mourn any group's graduation from maladjustment because it gives
- them one less thing to do at the office. Both sets of people
- would protest that they are motivated by idealism and a desire
- to right wrongs. Always distrust a saint when his charity generates
- his paychecks.
- </p>
- <p> Talk of mosaics and quilts is both an attempt to describe the
- way America is headed and an effort to hurry it along. The description
- is inaccurate, and in a world of ungorgeous mosaics and fraying
- quilts, the goal is undesirable. The U.S. has had historic success
- with heavy bursts of immigration, interspersed with decades
- of digestion, but only because people are asked to check their
- identity at the door. If the mild-mannered Czechs and Slovaks
- couldn't hold a multiethnic country together, and if the even
- milder-mannered Canadians are having trouble, we Americans should
- have second thoughts about becoming a true mosaic. Fortunately
- we're not one yet, except at the level of boiler plate. Let's
- hope we never take our speeches seriously.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-