6/2/2016 - Victor Davis Hanson Townhall.com
When standing today at Hadrian's Wall
in northern England, everything appears indistinguishably affluent and
serene on both sides.
It was not nearly as calm some 1,900 years ago. In
A.D. 122, the exasperated Roman emperor Hadrian ordered the construction of an
80-mile, 20-foot-high wall to protect Roman civilization in Britain from the
Scottish tribes to the north.
We moderns often laugh at walls and fortified
boundaries, dismissing them as hopelessly retrograde, ineffective or
unnecessary. Yet they still seem to fulfill their mission on the Israeli border,
the 38th parallel in Korea and the Saudi-Iraqi boundary, separating disparate
states.
On the Roman side of Hadrian's Wall there were
codes of law, habeas corpus, aqueducts and the literature of Cicero, Virgil and
Tacitus -- and on the opposite side a violent, less sophisticated tribalism.
Hadrian assumed that there was a paradox about
walls innate to the human condition. Scottish tribes hated Roman colonial
interlopers and wanted them off the island of Britain. But for some reason the
Scots did not welcome the wall that also stopped the Romans from entering
Scotland.
The exasperated Romans had built the barrier to
stop the Scots from entering Roman Britain, whether to raid, trade, emigrate or
fight.
Today, the European Union has few problems with
members that do not enforce their interior borders. But European nations are
desperate to keep the continent from being overwhelmed by migrants from North
Africa and the Middle East. Like the Romans, some individual EU nations are
building fences and walls to keep out thousands of non-European migrants, both
for economic and national security reasons.
Many Middle Easterners want to relocate to Europe
for its material and civilizational advantages over their homes in Algeria,
Iraq, Libya, Morocco or Syria. Yet many new arrivals are highly critical of
Western popular culture, permissiveness and religion -- to the extent of not
wanting to assimilate into the very culture into which they rushed.
Apparently, like their ancient counterparts, modern
migrants on the poorer or less stable side of a border are ambiguous about what
they want. They seek out the security and bounty of mostly Western systems --
whether European or American -- but not necessarily to surrender their own
cultural identities and values.
In the case of Hadrian, by A.D. 122 he apparently
felt that Rome's resources were taxed and finite. The empire could neither
expand nor allow tribes to enter Roman territory. So his solution was to wall
off Britain from Scotland and thereby keep out tribes that sometimes wanted in
but did not wish to become full-fledged Romans.
The same paradoxes characterize recent,
sometimes-violent demonstrations at Trump rallies, the controversy over the
potential construction of a fence on the Mexican border 25 times longer than Hadrian's
Wall, and the general furor over immigration policies.
Mexico is often critical of the United States and
yet encourages millions of its own people to emigrate to a supposedly
unattractive America. Some protestors in turn wave the flag of the country that
they do not wish to return to more often than the flag of the country they are
terrified of being deported from. Signs at rallies trash the United States but
praise Mexico -- in much the same manner that Scots did not like Roman Britain
but were even less pleased with the idea of a fortified border walling them off
from the Romans.
What are the answers to these human contradictions?
Rome worked when foreigners crossed through its
borders to become Romans. It failed when newcomers fled into the empire and
adhered to their own cultures, which were at odds with the Roman ones they had
ostensibly chosen.
There were no walls between provinces of the Roman
Empire -- just as there are no walls between the individual states of America
-- because common language, values and laws made them all similar. But
fortifications gradually arose all over the outer ring of the Roman world, once
Rome could no longer afford to homogenize societies antithetical to their own.
If Mexico and other Latin American countries were
to adopt many of the protocols of the United States, their standard of living
would be as indistinguishable from America's as modern Scotland is from today's
Britain.
Or if immigrants from Latin America were to
integrate and assimilate as rapidly as possible, there would be less of a need
to contemplate walls.
Historically, as Hadrian knew, walls are needed
only when neighboring societies are opposites -- and when large numbers of
migrants cross borders without necessarily wishing to become part of what they
are fleeing to.
These are harsh and ancient lessons about human
nature, but they are largely true and timeless.
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