Niall Ferguson's AEI Bradley Lecture is illuminating on many levels. Here's the concluding paragraph:
I understand Samuel Huntington is worried that Mexican culture is taking a firm root in this country and shows no sign of being dissolved into the traditional American melting pot. I read an alarmist article by him in Foreign Policy this week. Well, I have good news for him. Long before the mariachis play in Harvard Yard, long before that, there will be minarets, as Gibbon foretold, in Oxford. Indeed, ladies and gentlemen, there already is one. The Center for Islamic Studies is currently building in my old university a new center for Islamic studies. I quote: "Along the lines of a traditional Oxford college around a central cloistered quadrangle, the building will feature a prayer hall with traditional dome and minaret tower." It will open next year. I wonder what Gibbon would have said.
As a fully-integrated bilingual American born of Hispanic (non-Mexican) middle-class parents, Huntington's not looking at a couple of points:
1. Present-day Mexican society comes from a Western base: culturally, morally and historically.
2. All the American-born children of Hispanic imigrants that I have met, of all socio-economic backgrounds, speak English among themselves and their siblings (and Spanish to their parents), and lead "American" lives; for instance, 15% of the Marines are hispanic. If you want a more extreme example, watch the movie Spellbound, with the first contestant's story.
Huntington's got a lot more to worry about when it comes to jihad-oriented, terrorist-condoning immigrants.
I read that only about 15% of second generation Mexican imigrants even speak spanish.