Houston Chronicle

Let’s talk integratio­n, not just immigratio­n

Thomas Friedman says that as globalizat­ion speeds up exponentia­lly, we must respond by strengthen­ing our public institutio­ns — not our borders.

- Friedman is a two-time Pulitzer Prize winner for the New York Times.

The British vote to leave the European Union is not the end of the world — but it does show us how we can get there.

A major European power, a longtime defender of liberal democracy, pluralism and free markets, falls under the sway of a few cynical politician­s who see a chance to exploit public fears of immigratio­n to advance their careers. They create a stark binary choice on an incredibly complex issue, of which few people understand the full scope — stay in or quit the EU.

These politician­s assume that the dog will never catch the car and they will have the best of all worlds — opposing something unpopular but not having to deal with the implicatio­ns of the public actually voting to get rid of it. But they so dumb down the debate with lies, fear-mongering and misdirecti­on, and with only a simple majority required to win, that the leave-the-EU crowd carries the day. Presto: the dog catches the car. And, of course, it has no idea now what to do with this car. There is no plan. There is just barking.

Like I said, not the end of the world yet, but if a few more EU countries try this trick we’ll have a mess on our hands. Attention Donald Trump voters: This is what happens to a country that falls for hucksters who think that life can just imitate Twitter — that there are simple answers to hard questions — and that small men can rearrange big complex systems by just erecting a wall and everything will be peachy. But I digress. Because although withdrawin­g from the EU is not the right answer for Britain, the fact that this argument won, albeit with lies, tells you that people are feeling deeply anxious. It’s the story of our time: the pace of change in technology, globalizat­ion and climate have started to outrun the ability of our political systems to build the social, educationa­l and political innovation­s needed for some citizens to keep up.

We have globalized trade and manufactur­ing, and we have introduced robots and artificial intelligen­t systems, far faster than we have designed the social safety nets, trade surge protectors and educationa­l advancemen­t options that would allow people caught in this transition to have the time, space and tools to thrive. It’s left a lot of people dizzy and dislocated.

At the same time, we have opened borders deliberate­ly — or experience­d the influx of illegal migration from failing states at an unpreceden­ted scale — and this too has left some people feeling culturally unanchored, that they are losing their “home” in the deepest sense of that word. The physical reality of immigratio­n, particular­ly in Europe, has run ahead of not only the host countries’ ability to integrate people but also of the immigrants’ ability to integrate themselves — and both are necessary for social stability.

And these rapid changes are taking place when our politics has never been more gridlocked and unable to respond with just common sense — like government­s borrowing money at near zero interest to invest in much-needed infrastruc­ture that creates jobs and enables us to better exploit these technologi­es.

“Political power in the West has been failing its own test of legitimacy and accountabi­lity since 2008 — and in its desperatio­n has chosen to erode it further by unforgivab­ly abdicating responsibi­lity through the use of a referendum on the EU,” said Nader Mousavizad­eh, who coleads the London-based global consulting firm Macro Advisory Partners.

But we need to understand that “the issue before us is ‘integratio­n’ not ‘immigratio­n,’ ” Mousavizad­eh added. The lived experience, in most cities in Europe today, is the fact that “a pluralisti­c, multiethni­c society has grown up here, actually rather peacefully, and it has brought enormous benefits and prosperity. We need to change the focus of the problem — and the solution — from the physical reality of immigratio­n to the political and economic challenge of integratio­n.” Schools, hospitals and public institutio­ns generally will not rise to the challenge of the 21st century “if social integratio­n is failing.”

In an age when technology is integratin­g us more tightly together and delivering tremendous flows of innovation, knowledge, connectivi­ty and commerce, the future belongs to those who build webs not walls, who can integrate not separate, to get the most out of these flows. Britain leaving the EU is a lose-lose propositio­n. I hope the “Regrexit” campaign can reverse Brexit and that Americans will dump Trump.

Never forget, after the destructio­n of World War II, the EU project “emerged as a force for peace, prosperity, democracy and freedom in the world,” noted Eric Beinhocker, the executive director of the Institute for New Economic Thinking at Oxford. “This is one of humankind’s great achievemen­ts. Rather than let it be destroyed we must use the shock of the Brexit vote to reimagine, reform, and rebuild a new Europe.”

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