A reader born in India writes:
Away from  the glowing, glass-tinted visions of India harboured by the "Indo-philes",  there is a different India - one that is seething with social, economic and  political conflict.
Consider this article "Quota:  India Inc. Gives In?" The idea that "reservations" (quotas  for backward castes) ought to be introduced into the Private Sector has been  floating around for some time but Indian corporates managed to keep these  pressures at bay. It was, however, always going to be an uphill struggle and now  they seem to have caved in to some degree. Note also that the main proponents of  these quotas are actually high caste politicians (similar in their opportunism  and lack of principle to white politicians who favour affirmative action). The  difference between the West and India is that in the West, affirmative action  rests on whites feeling guilty. It is therefore more tenuous because if whites  stop feeling guilty at some future date (and they remain a majority), the quotas  can be got rid of. In India, that would be impossible because the "backward  caste" population is about 80-85 percent. In a one man one vote political  system, ignoring the resentments of 85 percent of the electorate is akin to  committing political suicide.
The other point that needs to be mentioned is that these quotas were enshrined  in the Constitution. The Government created quotas for the Dalits (untouchables)  and those were at 20 percent initially. The lawyers who drafted the Indian  constitution (barring one) were all English educated, upper caste men who got us  into this mess in the first place. The reservations were meant to be (as the  constitution originally provided) for a period of 10 years (one has to laugh at  stupidity of these so-called "statesmen" (I'm thinking principally of  Nehru) who thought that 6000 year old caste inequality could be negated by  government quotas within 10 years). Of course, they lasted well beyond their 10  years and they were soon expanded well beyond the more limited untouchable  population to include all sorts of other castes and groups that hadn't suffered  anything like the same level of discrimination.
It is difficult to say how damaging these "reforms" are likely to be.  If it is no more than just as irritant, then we could go back to business as  usual, hire the odd favoured caste candidate and hire the rest of the workforce  as before. But if the requirements are more stringent than that (quotas in the  public sector now exceed 50 percent), then we could eventually start seeing an  outflow of business and capital from India.
This is a perfect example of what America could end up becoming - a country with  an economically successful minority and a hostile, poor and incapable majority  that seeks to grab the wealth of the productive through the medium of political  power. And once that happens, there is no going back to the old ways. Once the  people have the vote, it's game over.
And yet, caste quotas in India are more defensible than quotas for immigrants in America. Indeed, almost nobody who has ever thought about their existence ever tries to defend quotas for immigrants. Thomas Sowell writes:
There is  another aspect of the immigration issue that has received little or no attention  but can have a serious impact anyway. Amnesty would mean, for many illegal  immigrants, that they would not merely have the same rights as American  citizens, but special privileges as well.
Affirmative action laws and policies already apply to some immigrants. Members  of a multimillionaire Cuban family have already received government contracts  set aside for minority businesses. During one period, an absolute majority of  the money paid to construction companies in Washington, D.C., went to Portuguese  businessmen under the same preferences.
Immigrant members of Latino, Asian, or other minority groups are legally  entitled to the same preferential benefits accorded native-born members of  minority groups.
The moment they set foot on American soil, they are entitled to receive benefits  created originally with the rationale that these benefits were to compensate for  the injustices minorities had suffered in this country.
The illegal status of many "undocumented workers" can at least make  them reluctant to claim these privileges. But, take away the illegality and they  become not only equal to American citizens, but more than equal.
Preferential access to jobs, government contracts, and college admissions are  among the many welfare state benefits that add to the costs of immigrants which  are not paid by employers of "cheap labor" but which fall on the  general public in taxes and in other ways.
Even when illegal immigrants do not claim preferential treatment, employers are  still under pressure to hire according to the demographic composition of the  local labor force, which includes these "undocumented workers."  Employers are subject to legal penalties if the ethnic composition of their  employees deviates much from the ethnic composition of the population.
"Cheap labor" can turn out to be the most expensive labor this country  has ever had.
It's amusing in a sad way to see libertarians try to respond to the problems exacerbated by immigration: "All we have to do is get rid of affirmative action! All we have to do is get rid of the welfare state!" Well, swell ...
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
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