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Mexifornia: A State of Becoming Hardcover – July 25, 2003

4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars 287 ratings

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This book is part history, part political analysis and part memoir. It is an intensely personal book about what has changed in California over the last quarter century.

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Editorial Reviews

From Booklist

*Starred Review* Classics professor Hanson is also, like generations of his family before him, a fruit farmer in California's central valley. He has employed immigrants, seen them flood his community during the last 30 years of mass flight from Mexico, and endured the crime associated with illegal immigrants. Hanson is immensely sympathetic to poor Mexicans, however, and the most powerful chapter here outlines the harried life of the illegal alien. But he hates to see the ordered culture in which he grew up drowned by an alien inundation whose undeserving beneficiaries are Mexico's kleptocratic rulers, for whom an open border is a safety valve expelling the potential for democratic change. The four solutions to the mess that Hanson enumerates include continuing de facto open borders but insisting on rapid acculturation; patrolling the border effectively and reducing legal immigration; imposing "sweeping restrictions on immigration" and ending Mexican chauvinism in the U.S.; and allowing present policies to make California increasingly mirror an unreformed Mexico. Hanson thinks that the U.S. "still need not do everything right" to prevent social collapse in the Southwest and that the totalitarian uniformity of valueless mass culture may soften that collapse. He also sees very clearly what has brought this crisis on: the American globalist ideology's lust for cheap labor and emphasis on "raw inclusiveness" instead of "standards and taste." Ray Olson
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Review

"Hanson's 'Mexifornia' is that rare book that combines scholarship with personal experience to provide genuine insight into a complex issue." -- Linda Chavez, author of An Unlikely Conservative

"Victor Davis Hanson brings a lifetime of experience in California's Central Valley to this indictment of multiculturalism and mass immigration." --
Mark Krikorian, Center for Immigration Studies

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Encounter Books; 1st edition (July 25, 2003)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 150 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1893554732
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1893554733
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 13.6 ounces
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6.4 x 0.72 x 8.6 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars 287 ratings

About the author

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Victor Davis Hanson
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Victor Davis Hanson is a senior fellow in military history and classics at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University and a professor emeritus of classics at California State University, Fresno. He is the author of over two dozen books, including The Second World Wars, The Dying Citizen, and The End of Everything. He lives in Selma, California.

Customer reviews

4.7 out of 5 stars
287 global ratings

Customers say

Customers find the book well-written and readable. They also appreciate the insights, interesting points, and scholarly information. Readers describe the book as an excellent, thought-provoking, and in-depth study.

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37 customers mention "Readability"37 positive0 negative

Customers find the book well-written, well-reasoned, and educational. They say it's one of the best on the subject and well-thought-out. Readers also mention the author has a valid point and his points are well-made.

"...A great book, easily read in a few hours, and though an erstwhile Californian like me is glad he's no longer residing in that wasteland..." Read more

"...Very readable!" Read more

"..."deep" in a few spots but very few and nothing to ruin an enjoyable and educational read...." Read more

"...But otherwise this is a well-written and well-reasoned book that is appropriately critical of our country's current love affair with political..." Read more

21 customers mention "Insight"20 positive1 negative

Customers find the book insightful, interesting, and full of scholarly information. They say it's thought-provoking yet down-to-earth. Readers mention the book provides insight into the problems from an individual who has the experience.

"Surprisingly personal, yet balanced and objective, Hanson accurately depicts the California of his (and my) past, its current woes, and its possible..." Read more

"...He has some interesting points to make in, generally, an easy to read style...." Read more

"...this is a well-written and well-reasoned book that is appropriately critical of our country's current love affair with political correctness,..." Read more

"...In summary, this book is a worthwhile, thought provoking, and easy read at 150 pages but will disappoint by not providing broader evidence for many..." Read more

4 customers mention "Empathy"4 positive0 negative

Customers find the author's empathy genuine, dispassionate, honest, and objective.

"...in central California - he knows and has lived it - and has genuine empathy for those he writes about...." Read more

"...that complex and controversial topics can be discussed with passion, compassion, and respect...." Read more

"Frank and articulate with humanity and empathy." Read more

"dispassionate, honest , and objective..." Read more

Mexifornia's "Twenty Years Later" chapter adds content for Chapter 10 of "California Madness"
5 out of 5 stars
Mexifornia's "Twenty Years Later" chapter adds content for Chapter 10 of "California Madness"
The new "Twenty Years Later" chapter in the 2021 edition is perfect timing for my latest sapient conservative textbook "California Madness: A SAPIENT Being’s Guide to the State’s Recall, Leftist Policies & Progressive Downward Spiral" to be published one week ahead of the Governor Newsom recall election on September 14, 2021. This latest edition provides the introduction and primary content for Chapter 10 - Mexifornia: Why the State's Largest Ethnic Group is Falling Behind the Others." Victor Davis Hanson is one of California's favorite sons and has the sapience (and courage) to tell it like it is without bias or false narratives.
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Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on December 24, 2008
VDH is a professor who is a registered Democrat that votes for Democrats at local levels, but has conservative-leanings on the national level, especially since 9-11. With the movement left of the national Democrats and their lack of ideas and interest in our most pertinent matters, many of us, including myself, are similar. He's also more qualified to write a short book such as this than perhaps anyone in America -- and surely more so than your local, agenda-driven hypocritical Chicano Studies "professor."

Hanson has lived in Selma (CA) his entire life, as have his ancestors. He has seen the changes but, understanding history better than any of us, keeps a very open mind. He's also traveled the world, guided tours in the middle east and Eurabia, as well as spoken in many major US cities on a bevy of topics. Most of those castigating him in reviews or comments likely know little about him, so they call names and make absurd declarations and emotional assumptions. I have read many of his books and probably 90-95% of his columns and blogs for the past five years. This man has credibility. So enough with claims of "fearmongering." This is priceless coming from those who FEAR "global warming" but not Al Qaeda, the economic catastrophes here and abroad, or how their lives will be affected (financially, educationally, politically etc.) by millions of ILLEGAL immigrants, no matter if they live in California, Massachusetts or the midwest as I do.

I read this book, coincidentally, on a flight back from visiting my wife's avuncular family in South America. ALL of them fear what is occurring in Mexico in terms of their disingenuous media bashing America or academics abusing immigrants for political profits/exploits. Most do. You just don't hear about it on Katie Couric and Anderson Cooper.

As my Jewish ancestors know, as do any of yours who emigrated to our "salad bowl," America is, for better or worse, the MOST diverse, accepting, multi-cultural place on earth. We are more tolerant and less racist than ANY nation, especially many left-leaning elite's beloved Europe, which due to secularism, racism, selfishness and media lies, is falling into decay at the hands of angry, bellicose Muslims. America's history proves we are, THANKFULLY, NOT Europe. Our accepting of immigrants departing heinous places like Mexico is legendary and a source of pride. But any reader of history know that this is done when immigrants come to America and become Americans, renouncing and leaving behind the land they wisely fled. They take pride in being Americans as pre-1960 "Chicanos" did before the revisionist business took hold of academia.

VDH explains that, due to proximity and no thanks to the hypocritical elite academics with their Cal PHDs and SUVs via our educational system, Mexicans cannot and will not do this. And again, with a ridiculos curriculum full of 62 "Mexican Pride classes" (only ONE on the Civil War and NONE of the heroes of WW2) we allow them to with our white guilt, "progressive" (really, they're REgressive as they look back and revise history/events for their benefit) academic/media cheerleaders and a myriad of idiotic policies (affirmative action not for skin color but by virtue of success and grievances -- my wife's family received none) that keep places like California looking more like Mexico than the US.

VDH points out how we somehow allow wealthy & successful Mexicans here to tell their brainwashed students about the glory of a country (Mexico) that they'd never want to live in and that their parents rightly fled so that their offspring could live lavishly here. My former colleagues in LA were the same. And then there's the lies about the Mexican-American War, land, etc. It's all rubbish that VDH wisely clarifies about midway through the book, while being adept at also blaming the "right" in the business sense of exploitation of workers. It's quite a craft to be so non partisan --- yet some leftists separatists, seldom thinking and always calling names, refuse to read or have a debate. They are the true enemy of freedom.

Fearmongering? Please. These charged words don't work among any but the most ignorant. No one's living in fear, but rather they're dealing with reality. John Stewart and Bill Maher are not the ones leading the discourse in these matters either. {You can go fight carbon emmissions with al-Gore from his 30k sq foot mansion and private jets if you'd like while deeming sketpical/truthful folks like meterologists/climatologists and the founder of the Weather Channel akin to Holocaust deniers, while we tell our grandchildren we saved the world from Islamic-fascism.}

A great book, easily read in a few hours, and though an erstwhile Californian like me is glad he's no longer residing in that wasteland (imagine if resourceful midwesterners lived in CA how different the topography and politics would be with religion and hard work and without the PC balderdash), we do need to protect our most populous state from becoming "Mexifornia." Those working hard and becoming citizens should be proud Americans as our ancestors rightly were, and though many are, more could be if we release them from the nefarious agendas of the elite of SF, LA, etc.

Name calling is unacceptable toward folks speaking the truth, ok? It proves we're right and makes you look like the silly leftists you are. You're NOT liberal as "liberal" means open-minded and tolerant.

Dr. Hanson, as always, so well done and articulate. Thank you for this contribution. Too bad schools like yours will stick to Howard Zinn anti-American texts and not this honest and valuable assessment.

In the end, it's our children who lose out, while university "activists" and middle class teachers who couldn't care less so far as their agenda is pushed and they get large paychecks. Racial division is a huge business.
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Reviewed in the United States on March 11, 2024
Surprisingly personal, yet balanced and objective, Hanson accurately depicts the California of his (and my) past, its current woes, and its possible future. Very readable!
Reviewed in the United States on February 19, 2007
I think this is a fantastic book. A must read for anyone interested in learning more about legal or illegal immigration from Mexico and other points south of our border.

What impressed me was the background of the author, several generations of working the land in central California and a faculty member of a major university.

He has some interesting points to make in, generally, an easy to read style. He does get "deep" in a few spots but very few and nothing to ruin an enjoyable and educational read. I am also a university faculty member and live in south-central Texas and maybe that influenced my read a bit. However, I believe anyone could benefit from reading the book, whichever side of the topic you may be on.

One of his very interesting points is how immigration of Mexicans in the past, say the 1950s, is different than today..and why it is so. Another interesting point is how the Atlantic ocean has played a major role in how immigration has worked in the past.

I've promised to lend the book to several people...but I want it back. In fact, once I finished it, I immediately turned to the opening and started to re-read it. Not something I've done too often with books.
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Reviewed in the United States on February 11, 2007
Four stars only because this otherwise excellent writer failed to provide citations of authority for the some of the facts and figures he gives. But otherwise this is a well-written and well-reasoned book that is appropriately critical of our country's current love affair with political correctness, multiculturalism and moral relativism. The best thing about the author is that he does not come from a position of racism and hatred of Mexicans;he has empathy for these people. What he never says, and what I would say to the reviewers here who accuse him of racism, is that he is simply complaining of a rapid change of the culture of his community. That is, in my opinion, what many people are complaining about when they complain of immigration. One day they realize that English isn't being spoken around them anymore. That the streets are no longer kept fixed; that school performance drops along with student enrollment; that government becomes less competent; and that crime rates skyrocket. These changes occur as more and more recent immigrants settle in an area and, quite naturally, take over the housing, the roads and schools, and the local goverment, and impose the culture of their native land on the area. So, the question becomes, is this a better culture than the current one? Are we complaining because the incoming culture is superior to our existing culture and we simply can't keep up? Because having to learn Spanish is not the issue. Having the government, schools, streets and state of peace detriorate --- this is the issue. Is the immigrants' culture superior to the anglo-based culture(or melting pot culture, if you wish)that it is displacing? We only have to ask that question of the immigrants, or take a look at the land from whence they came. There are some wonderful elements to the culture of Mexico -- the food, the passions, the respect for family, and other aspects of which I'm not even aware. But one has only to visit the country to realize that there are many more aspects that are quite inferior to the culture in this country. I would start with an utterly corrupt government and the peoples corresponding disrespect for the law, but the author details many other aspects that are definitely NOT superior to the indigenous U.S. culture. Indeed, in many ways the immigrants come to escape the burdens of the culture they are leaving. I do not understand why the political groups representing the Mexican immigrants do not see that the problem is with the numbers who come each year --- far too many to adjust to the culture they wish to enjoy, and as a result they end up destroying the very culture they wish to migrate to. I have grown tired of hearing the same old arguments advanced by supporters of even more immigration -- that the U.S. is a nation of immigrants and that the immigrants are all hard-working people looking for jobs. Of course the U.S. *is* a nation of immigrants, but the sheer numbers and the finite nature of natural resources tells us that it cannot always be so, and as with any other wave, the number of people in the wave and the time period over which the migration occurs is critical to the stability of the land to which they are migrating. There is also the significant and differentiating fact (for those who point to the earlier waves of Irish, German, etc., immigration) that the body of immigrants from Mexico is hardly a cross-section of the mexican culture. Instead, we are receiving (now) mostly the most uneducated, and the least sophisticated of the Mexican population. Thus, the supposed "gift" the U.S. receives from this group is limited entirely to people suitable for fruit picking, floor washing, and other unskilled jobs. And that's it: No engineers, teachers, or businessmen, as has been the case with earlier immigrant waves. Certainly, the potential is there, but the very word potential implies that there is a mechanism in place to educate and train the immigrants. Here, at least in California, the numbers are so great that the means of education, training -- the means of creating the potential -- are being swept away in the wave of incoming people. Were the U.S. a totalitarian state, perhaps some control and change could be asserted to maintain the schools, the markets and the infrastructure while the people were educated and assimilated. But we are a democracy, and all those benefits derive from the citizens of each municipal area. This book points to all of these issues, but does not put it into cultural terms; it nevertheless paints an accurate picture of how the enormous waves of people coming to the United States, if not throttled back soon, will wash away the very thing that attracted the immigrants in the first place.
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Top reviews from other countries

Jan-Dinant Schreuder
4.0 out of 5 stars No comments
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on July 15, 2018
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