Brimelow P., Alien Nation ... America's Immigration Disaster.pdf

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Acclaim
for
Peter
Brimelow’s
Alien
Nation
“Brimelow
provides
us
with
much
common
sense on
declaring
our
independence
from
the
mounting
migration
pressures
coming
to
bear
on
our
nation.
Brimelow’s
message
is
as
badly
needed
today
as
Thomas
Paine’s
was
in
1776.”
—Senator
Eugene
McCarthy
“Those
who
think
the
system
needs
no
fixing
cannot
responsibly
hold
to
that
position
unless
they
take
Mr.
Brimelow’s
urgent
appeal
to
change
into
account.”
—Richard
Bernstein,
New
York
Times
“If
his
book
is
at
times
uncomfortably
personal,
it
is
also
painfully
honest.
Sometimes
it
takes
a
personal
book
to
make
a
public
debate
finally
and
fully
public.
This
could,
just
possibly,
be
one
of
those
times.”
—Jack
Miles,
Los
Angeles
Times,
in
Atlantic
Monthly
“Don’t
be
misled
by
the
verbal
pyrotechnics:
Brimelow
presents
his
case
with
a
prosecutor’s
thoroughness.
. .
.
No
reformer
can
avoid
grappling
with
the
formidable
work
of
Peter
Brimelow.”
—David
Frum,
author
of
Dead
Right,
Financial
Post
(Toronto)
“Does
an admirable
job
of
explaining
the
unintended
consequences
of
the
Immigration
Act
of
1965
. . .
also
correct
in
raising
the
most
important
issue
of
all:
why,
exactly,
should
large-scale
immigration
continue?”
—Tom
Morganthau,
Newsweek
“Destined
to
become
the
handbook
for
the
national
debate
on
im­
migration.”
—Jeffrey
Hart,
King
Features
Syndicate
“Witty
and
conversational,
full
of
clever
asides.”
—Philip
Kasinitz,
New
York
Newsday
“The
most
comprehensive
and
the
most
readable
contribution
to
the
anti-immigration
side
now
available
...
an
important
contribu­
tion
to
American
political
thought.”
—Sam
Francis,
syndicated
columnist,
National
Review
“Engagingly
written
and
informative.
...
It
is
a
pleasure
to
read
Peter
Brimelow
at
length.
He
writes
with
wit,
honesty,
and
good
humor.”
—Glenn
C.
Loury,
Boston
University,
in
National
Review
“Outstanding,
sharp
and
amusing
. . .
full
of
wry
asides
and
occa­
sionally
pungent
epigrams.”
—Scott
McConnell,
New
York
Post
“Brilliant
and
extremely
important.
. . .
Thank
God
Brimelow
mi­
grated
here.”
—Taki,
New
York
Post
“The
shock
book
about
immigration
...
has
turned
all
the
old
shib­
boleths
inside
out.
...
A
myth-exploder,
combatively
written.”
—Géorgie
Anne
Geyer,
syndicated
columnist
“A
gem
of
a
popular
book
that
provides
a
non-academic,
easily-
digestible
source
of
information
which
ought
to
make
unthinking
acceptance
of
mass
immigration
impossible
for
anyone
who
reads
it.”
—Mark
Krikorian,
Center
for
Immigration
Studies
“As
Dr.
Johnson
said,
‘It
was
a
brave
man
who
first
ate
an
oyster,’
and
Peter
Brimelow
deserves
acknowledgement
for
somewhat
the
same
sort
of
courage
in
opening
up
the
immigration
problem.
. .
.
The
bigots
who
hate
the
American
system
will
be
very
disappointed
to
see
the
truth
get
out.”
—James
P.
Lucier,
in
the
Richmond
Times-Dispatch
“Put
off,
for
a
while,
reading
another
Stephen
King
novel
and
give
Peter
Brimelow
a
try
instead.
If
you’re
looking
for
a
good
fright,
Brimelow
provides
it...
a
non-fiction
horror
story
of
a
nation
that
is
wilfully
but
blindly
pursuing
a
course
of
national
suicide.
...
A
pretty
persuasive
case
.
. .
timely
reading.”
—Jesse
E.
Todd
Jr.,
Daily
Press
(Newport
News,
VA)
“Brimelow
has
an
impressive
command
of
the
relevant
facts,
and
writes
in
the
accessible
and
aggressive
manner
of
a
debater
out
to
score
points.
And
score
he
does.
This
is
a
very
important
book:
any­
body
who
wants
to
get
in
on
the
immigration
debate
has
to
read
it.”
—Fr.
Richard
John
Neuhaus,
First
Things
“Has
the
quality
of
an
embarrassing
dinner-party
guest—boorish,
noisy
and
loquacious
but
also,
maddeningly,
often
right.”
—The
Economist
(London)
“A
brave,
searching,
provocative
treatment
of
an
oncoming
crisis.
...
If
you
care
about
America’s
future,
read
this
book.”
—John
Attarian,
St.
Croix
Review
“Peter
Brimelow’s
skill
in
exposition
conceals
the
magnitude
of
his
achievement.
Behind
the
smooth
and
easy
flow
of
his
prose
lies
a
penetrating
grasp
of
the
literature
of
history,
economics,
demogra­
phy
and
political
theory
relevant
to
his
inquiry.
Brimelow’s
analy­
sis,
and the
distinctive
nationalist
point
of
view
it
expresses,
contribute
in
a
bold
and
original
way
to
the
debate
on
immigration.
Those
who
wish
to
argue
with
him
must
contend
with
a
bom
polemicist,
who
has
been
careful
to
anticipate
counterarguments.”
—David
Gordon,
The
Mises
Review
“Discusses
one
of
those
burning
issues
that
certainly
is
not
dis­
cussed
intelligently
in
Academe.
...
I
know
Brimelow
has
given
me
reason
to
think
this
matter
through
at
greater
length.”
—R.
Emmett
Tyrrell,
American
Spectator
“Speaking
of‘Bravehearts,’
welcome
Peter
Brimelow
to
that
distin­
guished fellowship.
...
He
makes
his
case
gently,
with
a
cheerful
buoyancy.
Yet...
he
has
found
himself
battered
and
beset.”
—William
Murchison,
Dallas
Morning
News
“Advances
the
debate
by
masterfully
pointing
out
some
major
flaws
in
the
nation’s
immigration
policy.
...
A
valuable
contribu­
tion.”
—Frederick
Robinson,
National
Minority
Politics
magazine
“What
we
need
is
a
real
debate
about
immigration....
Peter
Brime­
low’s
Alien
Nation
makes
him
top
choice
for
the
contrary
position.”
—Thomas
Sowell,
Hoover
Institution
Alien
Nation
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