Let the Younger People Take Over
You Have Paid Your Dues
Chicana/o Studies at Cal State Northridge will be
taking close to sixty Latinos and Asians students to Tucson later this month.
It will be our third trip as a group within a year. Friends keep saying, “That
is a big responsibility; you have paid your dues; why don’t you slow down and
enjoy life?” In other words, take it easy, and let the young people clean
up our mess.
Some make ridiculous statements such as that you
must enjoy the pressure. What is probably meant to be a compliment is an
insult. Only someone who is nuts enjoys constant stress and sleepless nights.
Frankly, I would be delighted if others would step
up. No one enjoys constantly working as if there were no more tomorrows.
No one enjoys sandwiching in writing and teaching, and never having enough time
to edit and reflect – the tension of being constantly on stage gets to you.
I often wish that I would have become a monk. But,
as a member of a community – a husband, father, grandfather, and teacher – I
have no choice but to fight. The bottom line is that I care about the
kind of world we leave behind.
Many of my Latino friends tell me not to worry; the
Latino population is booming, and we are the future. Today Latinos are just
over 15 percent of the population – over 50 million. If we were a nation, we
would be the second largest Spanish-speaking country in the world. By 2050
Latinos will be almost a third of the U.S. But will it really make a difference?
Knowing history I realize that what we do today will
affect 2050. Population is not a silver bullet, and this growth is precisely
what worries me.
In the 1970s I had a conversation with the late
Willie Velásquez, the founder of the Southwest Voter Registration Project, who
was at the time leading a drive to register more Mexican Americans. I asked
Willie if he were not being overly optimistic about the importance of
registering and voting Mexican Americans. We could register more Latinos, but
what was being done about the quality of representation once we turned out the
voters?
Willie responded that everything went in cycles, and
we first had to register our people. Over the years I have thought about this
conversation. Looking at the outcome, I think Willie is probably turning over
in his grave when he sees the quality of our political representives,
especially the trend of some Latinos running as Republicans. Who would
have thought in the 1970s that Mexicans and other Spanish-speaking people would
today be Hispanics?
As a group Latino politicos have not been especially
progressive. Indeed, they have been less than courageous when it comes to
police brutality and capital punishment. Latino politicos have been invisible
during the escalation of tuition that is killing access to higher education for
most. Few have spoken out on the Middle Eastern wars thus empowering
President Barack Obama as he wags the dog’s tail.
In 2050, the Latino population will reach 30
percent. Surely, the gene pool will get darker; today in Los Angeles the
probability of a first grade male marrying or partnering up with a Latina is
about fifty percent. The only factors slowing down this process are where
people live, go to school and economic class.
Has the political awareness of Latinos and Mexican
Americans grown proportionately? I don’t think so! Political
consciousness is like vocabulary -- it is learned and acquired, and it is not
cultivated through the use of third grade clichés such as the Decade of the
Hispanic or Chicana/o power. It is learned through political education and
awareness.
The growth or development of political consciousness
depends on individual and group experiences. The media has a lot to do with
this socialization process.
However, when we look at the content of most
programs Latinos have access to, it is disastrous. Univision, the largest
of the Spanish language networks, is run by conservative investors, and its
content is heavily influenced by right wing Cuban Americans in Miami.
Consequent to this, the most informative pundit is Jorge Ramos, a Mexican
transplant who is progressive on immigration but to right of center on Latin
American and domestic issues. This begets programs such as Don Francisco
that features contests such as Señorita Colita (Miss “Little Tail”).
The Democratic Party and the left have done very
little to fill the vacuum in the Latino’s political education, although it is
becoming its largest bloc of voters. It takes Latinos for granted because they have
no other place to go, given the racism of the Republican Party.
Truth be told, the left media like poverty has fed
off the Latino’s misery while reaping the benefits of their votes. It sheds
tears over racism and inequality, theorizing about it and doing little more.
Aside from “Democracy Now,” there is not a prominent
Latino writer nurtured by this gaggle of left media that includes The Nation,
Mother Jones as well as others. The tragedy is that, if and when the Latino
community votes Republican, there will be expressions of shock and blaming the
victim.
What I have learned during my years of struggle is
that I don’t have enough money, or prestige to change the group. I
probably would have even less influence if I were at a a pampered professor at
a prominent university, so I make changes through teaching working class
students and by example.
At the moment I am concentrating on Mexican American
and Central American students, a sector that includes most Latinos. According
to the 2010 Census, Mexican Americans are officially 63 percent, and could be
as high as 70 percent of the total Latino population. The Mexican origin
population will grow the fastest during the next forty years due to Mexico’s
proximity to the United States and the median age of Mexican women.
U.S. births are disproportionately Latino,
accounting for one-in-four of the nation’s newborns in 2008. The growth is
driven by Mexican Americans women who account anywhere from about 20 percent to
50 percent more children than non-Mexican Latinas.
The median age of Mexican origin women in the U.S.
is 25, compared with 30 for non-Mexican-origin Latinas, 32 for blacks, 35 for
Asians and 41 for whites. The typical Mexican American woman, ages 40 to 44,
gives birth to 2.5 children versus 1.9 non-Mexican-Latinas.
Demographers predict that most future growth in the
U.S. among Latinas will come from women with documents. Most of the
growth within the Mexican American community will be poorer, less educated and
concentrated in the working class sector.
The reality is simply that it is becoming more
hazardous and costly for working class Latin Americans to migrate to the U.S.
through the Mexican corridor that has been closed to them by drug gangs spawned
by U.S. policy that has channeled the drug trade through Mexico.
In this scenario, the Mexican American middle-class
plays an exceedingly important role. Necessarily they have to advocate for the
civil rights of those not enjoying their privileges. However, the increase in
tuition is threatening the stairway we built in the late 1960s for more Mexican
Americans and Latinos going to college. There are also class divisions that
occur among people of all color.
The only factors slowing this down assimilation are
food and group consciousness, which lasts only so long.
Arizona as in the case of California Proposition 187
(1994) reminds the group that racism still exists. It defines who the bad guys
are. However, this political education has to go much further.
In the past couple of years I have been writing
pieces on Arizona to educate a small circle on the importance of that struggle.
Good education is often a case of redundancy. It is the practice of
constantly deducing and then applying lessons – much like the conjugation for
verbs in Latin.
That is why we are taking students to Arizona. We
want to educate them, and the best way is for them to experience it. In the
last two trips, we have also been taking Asian students with us because we live
in a multi-racial society, and we have to learn to work together. We share
humanity.
Many of the
students who have gone on the trips had never been out of California, some had
never been out of LA. This effort will pay off because they in turn will
use a more sophisticated political vocabulary, which they will teach their
family members and eventually their children.
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