88 NATIONAL ORIGINS PROVISION OF IMMIGRATION LAW
Mr. Lewrs. Yes, sir; that is largely it. But here is a people that
Is not fused. I think it is 36,000,000 of the white population out of
the 94,000,000 that are foreign born and the children of foreign born.
I do not say a word against their worth or law-abiding character.
I think that would be a caddish statement. But it is simply that no
country is an ordered unit, or can have order in politics and, I think,
even in literature unless the people have lived a long time together
and understand each other and have a common basis, and it takes
time to get that. We have gone far enough in unstabilizing our
population and we need to settle down. I do not know whether we
are ready to restrict totally or not.
Senator CoreLaNp. You spoke of crime. We are not advised, but
do you live in Chicago?
Mr. Lewis. Yes, sir—I work in Chicago and live outside.
The Crarrman. He lives in a beautiful suburb of Chicago.
Senator Kine. Do you believe in standardization of the people of
a State so as to have them all of one blood. all one mentality. all one
culture ?
Mr. Lewis. No, sir.
Senator Kine. Do you not think that the introduction of diverse
streams of culture and thought and civilization adds to the general
welfare and the general culture.
Mr. Lewis. Well, sir, I believe a reasonable infusion of that is a
good thing. Let us take the principal great countries of Europe—
England, Germany, and France, for example. As far as I know,
Germany has had very little immigration from any country, and
France has had very little immigration from any country.
Senator Kine. You know France is composite. It has more
than a dozen nationalities there, or the ethnics of it.
Mr. Lewis. How long ago did they stop introducing new elements?
Senator Kine. They have not stopped it yet.
Mr. Lewrs. There is very little immigration into France.
Senator Kine. There have been more than 50,000 Armenians
introduced into France in the past five years.
Mr. Lewis. I do not know about the introduction of Armenians,
but since the war there has been infiltration of Italians—not that
Italians are bad people, but they are a different people.
Senator Kine. But is not your work based upon economical rather
than ethnic conditions?
Mr. Lewis. If they let too much go on, it will be ethnic, sir. 1
think that the greatest necessity for the Nation is unity, something
like fusion, common understanding, like-mindedness. We are in
danger of losing our unity by this infiltration or, rather, say, flood—
the infiltration of a few individuals is comparatively all right. That
will give all the urge of population you want. But when it comes
in a flood, so that in the last 30 or 40 vears we have introduced
23,000,000.
Senator CopELand. We have no flood now.
Mr. Lewis. No. But I was asked by the chairman if I wished
total exclusion. I am getting off the subject. I do think this country
needs to settle down and unify.
Senator Coperanp. Will you ask him what he means by “unity »?
Senator Kine. All right. I take it from your name, you are of
Welsh origin ?