Editorial Reviews For The Book:
Mexifornia
"A State of Becoming"
From Booklist
*Starred Review* Classics professor Hanson is also, like
generations of his family before him, a fruit farmer in California's central
valley. He has employed immigrants, seen them flood his community during the
last 30 years of mass flight from Mexico, and endured the crime associated with
illegal immigrants. Hanson is immensely sympathetic to poor Mexicans, however,
and the most powerful chapter here outlines the harried life of the illegal
alien. But he hates to see the ordered culture in which he grew up drowned by an
alien inundation whose undeserving beneficiaries are Mexico's kleptocratic
rulers, for whom an open border is a safety valve expelling the potential for
democratic change. The four solutions to the mess that Hanson enumerates include
continuing de facto open borders but insisting on rapid acculturation;
patrolling the border effectively and reducing legal immigration; imposing
"sweeping restrictions on immigration" and ending Mexican chauvinism in the
U.S.; and allowing present policies to make California increasingly mirror an
unreformed Mexico. Hanson thinks that the U.S. "still need not do everything
right" to prevent social collapse in the Southwest and that the totalitarian
uniformity of valueless mass culture may soften that collapse. He also sees very
clearly what has brought this crisis on: the American globalist ideology's lust
for cheap labor and emphasis on "raw inclusiveness" instead of "standards and
taste." Ray Olson
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Linda Chavez, author of An
Unlikely Conservative
"Hanson's 'Mexifornia' is that rare book that combines
scholarship with personal experience to provide genuine insight into a complex
issue."
Mark Krikorian, Center for
Immigration Studies
"Victor Davis Hanson brings a lifetime of experience in
California's Central Valley to this indictment of multiculturalism and mass
immigration."
Book Description
"Massive illegal immigration from Mexico into California,"
Victor Davis Hanson writes, "coupled with a loss of confidence in the old
melting pot model of transforming newcomers into Americans, is changing the very
nature of state. Yet we Californians have been inadequate in meeting this
challenge, both failing to control our borders with Mexico and to integrate the
new alien population into our mainstream."
Part history, part political analysis, and part memoir, "Mexifornia" is an intensely personal work by one of our most important writers. Hanson is perhaps known best for his military histories and especially his social commentary about America and its response to terror after 9/11. But he is also a fifth-generation Californian who runs a family farm in the Central Valley and has written eloquent elegies for the decline of the small farm such as "Fields Without Dreams" and "The Land Was Everything." Like these books, "Mexifornia" is an intensely personal look at what has changed in California over the last quarter century. In this case, however, Hanson's focus is on how not only California, the Southwest, and indeed the entire nation has been affected by America's hemorrhaging borders and how those hurt worst are the Mexican immigrants themselves.
A large part of the problem, Hanson believes, comes from the opportunistic coalition that stymies immigration reform and, even worse, stifles an honest discussion of a growing problem. Conservative corporations, contractors, and agribusiness demand cheap wage labor from Mexico, whatever the social consequences. Meanwhile, "progressive" academics, journalists, government bureaucrats, and La Raza advocates envision illegal aliens as a vast new political constituency for those committed to the notion that victimhood, not citizenship, is the key to advancement. The problems Hanson identifies may have reached critical mass in California, but they affect Americans who inhabit "Mexizona," "Mexichusetts" and other states of becoming.
Hanson writes wistfully about his own growing up in the Central Valley when he was one of a handful of non-Hispanics in his elementary school and when his teachers saw it as their mission to give all students, Hispanic and "white" alike, a passport to the American Dream. He follows the fortunes of Hispanic friends he has known all his life--how they have succeeded in America and how they regard the immigration crisis. But if "Mexifornia" is emotionally generous at the strength and durability of the groups that have made California strong, it is also an indictment of the policies that got California into its present mess. But in the end, Hanson strongly believes that our traditions of assimilation, integration, and intermarriage may yet remedy a problem that the politicians and ideologues have allowed to get out of hand.
Click here to be transferred to Amazon.com to buy Mexifornia