Friday, October 31, 2008

Could Obama be the 1st Latino President or the Latinization of Racial Identity in the USA

Could Obama be the first Latino president of the United States?
The Latinization of racial identity

Ten years ago, writer Toni Morrison called Bill Clinton the nation's first black president. The winner of the Pulitzer Prize for her book "Beloved", Morrison never meant it as an accolade, but as a characterization of the former President's background and how he was treated around here in Washington.

A decade later an African-American may win the presidency.

I'm no Pulitzer-prize winner, but I'd like to proffer this: no matter on what side of the aisle you sit, if elected, Barack Obama could be the first Latino president of the United States.

This is not a political speech. I in no way am trying to sway how you'll vote on Tuesday. But rather I'd like to talk about how Obama to me represents the Latinization of racial identity in the United States.

Let me explain.

The press may call Obama black, but he is equally white. In that, he has more in common with Latinos on a racial level than either European or African-Americans.

Let me explain further.

Unbeknownst to most people in the states, even to Latinos themselves, Hispanics belong to no one race.

To many of you, this may be befuddling. Well as a Latino myself, I didn't fully grasp it myself until I went to Spain first hand.

Fifteen years ago, I was on a train traveling to Granada to see the Alhambra, the Moorish palace in southern Spain. On the train with me was a young Anglo woman. And we started chatting. She hailed from of all places Alhambra, California and grew up with many Mexican-Americans.

At one point, she said with a bit of astonishment: "The Spanish are so white. They really don't look like Mexicans."

I nodded and thought a while to myself. Yes, the Spanish are white just like Italians, the French or Greeks. Cesar Chavez doesn't look Spanish; he looks native American. I don't look Spanish, I look native American.

Despite that revelation, it didn't really sink in until three years ago. I was at a reception for minority journalists at the Gannett headquarters, the nation's largest newspaper publisher where I worked at the time.

I struck up a conversation with a man who I thought for sure was Mexican-American from the Southwest. He indeed was from the Southwest, but he was no Latino – but Navaho. Derrick Henry works as a web producer for the New York Times.

All of this points to one thing – a fundamental difference in the way Anglo and Latin Europeans colonized the world.

Everywhere the English went to colonize, they brought racist segregation – in New Zealand with the Maori, in Australian with the Aborigines, in India with every Indian, in the Americans with the native Americans and of course in South Africa with the Africans.

In contrast, everywhere the Spanish and Portuguese went they brought racist assimilation. The missions in California, Texas and southwest were not churches for Spanish immigrants, but rather camps to forcibly Latinize the native Americans.

But it was more than cultural assimilation.

In the early 1500s, Spanish priests urged their colonists to inter-marry with the natives in an effort to Christianize the locals.

Many Mexicans point to Martin Cortez as the first true Mexican. He's the the son of the conqueror of Mexico Hernan Cortes and his native American guide Malintzin.

A century later, Maryland, the state founded by English-speaking Catholics - enacted the first U.S. law criminalizing interracial marriage in 1664.

Can you image the child of John Smith and Pocahontas described as the first true American?

The result has been a more fluid idea of race wherever the Spanish and Portuguese colonized.

Today someone would not hesitate to call Sammy Sosa from the Dominican Republic "Spanish" but wouldn't think of calling Bob Marley from nearby Jamaica "English" even though Marley's father hailed from the British Isles. Mayan activist Rigoberto Menchu is routinely called "Spanish" but no one would think to call native American activist Russell Means "English."

I have a friend name Kara Andrade who is a Mayan Indian from Guatemala. She thinks of herself as cien per ciento Latina. During the recent AARP member conference, I met a woman from the west African island of Cape Verde. Her name is Loretta Andrade, and she also thinks of herself as Latina.

In places as remote as Macau near China, villages in south India and Sri Lanka, Guam, the Philippines and east, west and north Africa you can find people with local faces and Latin names.

But Latiness goes beyond Latin names.

Obama says he has a "funny name." But what about these names – Salma Hayek or Shakira Meberak. Both Hayek – the Mexican bombshell actress – and Shakira - the Colombia rock superstar - have Arab names and Arab ancestry.

How about this name: Mario Kreutzberger. He's better know as Don Francisco – the host of one of the most popular Spanish-language television shows Sabado Gigante . His ancestry is German and Jewish via Chile. His family escaped the Holocaust.

With that, I leave you with the words of the Jose Maria Morelos – who lead the fight for Mexican independence from Spain.

In 1812, he said: "Let that mouthful of conditions (native Americans, mulattos, mestizos etc) be abolished by calling them one and all Americans."

Mr. Morelos' ancestry was European from Spain, native American from Mexico and African, most likely from west Africa.

Barack Obama's candidacy shows us we in the United States have moved one step away from the English idea of race and one step closer to the more inclusive Latino one.

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

AdWeek: Univision teams up with Microsoft's Zune

Spanish-language network Univision and Zune, the Microsoft music and entertainment service, today said they were launching a music download service via Univision.com.

The new service will be branded Baja Zune Musica en Univision.com (Download Zune Music on Univision.com).


http://www.adweek.com/aw/content_display/news/nontraditional/e3i8c3efd0edfe72551877c3c4694c7dc75


My comments: Two companies with massive market power in their respective markets team up.

Monday, October 27, 2008

Reuters: Televisa moving forward with its suit against Univision

Televisa said on Friday it is moving forward with a lawsuit against its U.S. partner Univision, as the Mexican media giant seeks a more profitable way to tap the attractive U.S. Hispanic market.
http://www.reuters.com/article/marketsNews/idUSN2452114320081024

Sunday, October 26, 2008

Bloomberg: Obama appealing to Latinos

``Latino community, you hold this election in your hands,'' Obama said last night at the Albuquerque rally. The event also featured New Mexico's Bill Richardson, the country's only Hispanic governor, and comedian George Lopez. The Democrat also urged New Mexico residents to vote early.
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aW8_E.DQSXBg&refer=home

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

L.A.Times: Study shows L.A. cops more likely to stop & arrest minorities. "Driving while Latino" shouldn't be cause for being stopped.

Los Angeles police officers are far more likely to stop, search and arrest minorities than they are whites -- even after statistics were adjusted for high- and low-crime areas -- according to a nongovernmental report released Monday.
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-aclu21-2008oct21,0,4850652.story

Monday, October 20, 2008

Navarette: U.S.born Latinos sucked into immigration debate

"Most Latinos aren't immigrants," she said. "More than 80 percent of Hispanics in this country are U.S. citizens or legal residents. But the truth is, Hispanics understand that this issue is about all of us."
http://www.dailyherald.com/story/?id=177562

Friday, October 17, 2008

USATODAY: Latino protestants going for Obama

Latino Protestant voters appear to be swinging away from the Republican Party, a new poll shows, and immigration is a key factor.


http://www.usatoday.com/news/religion/2008-10-17-latino-protestant-vote_N.htm

Thursday, October 16, 2008

L.A.Times: Undecided Latinos key to New Mexico prez election

"Undecided Latino voters, particularly socially conservative ones like Sepulveda, could play the pivotal role in deciding who wins the five electoral votes in the Land of Enchantment, a state known for razor-thin margins in presidential races."
http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/laplaza/2008/10/undecided-latin.html

Monday, October 13, 2008

Venezuelan media big wig gets award

Gustavo Cisneros, who I call the Rupert Murdoch of Latin America, wins award. Cisneros runs Venevision, one of the largest Spanish-langauge media companies.
http://www.dominicantoday.com/dr/this-and-that/2008/10/8/29676/Cisneros-Foundation-receives-prestigious-Global-Leadership-Award

Wednesday, October 8, 2008

Survey: Many Latinos undecided or open to persuasion in presidential race

A significant percentage of Latino voters in key battleground states are either undecided or still open to persuasion in the presidential contest, according to a survey released today by The National Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials (NALEO) Educational Fund.
http://www.marketwatch.com/news/story/new-survey-shows-significant-numbers/story.aspx?guid={C7ACD093-29F7-47B3-95F3-33996BE338A6}&dist=hppr

Monday, October 6, 2008

Sunday, October 5, 2008

MiamiHerald: Obama could win Colorado

"An Obama win in once-red Colorado, which voted twice for President Bush but has since elected a Democratic governor and senator, could tip the election. The race is still close, however, and Republicans outnumber Democrats in the state by about 74,000. About one-third of Colorado's 3 million voters don't belong to either party."
http://www.miamiherald.com/news/politics/AP/story/713838.html

Friday, October 3, 2008

AP: Mayans protest opera concert at Mayan ruins

(Placido) Domingo's concert inside Chichen Itza violates a law that requires the ruins to be preserved to educate Mexicans about ancient cultures, said Cuauhtemoc Velasco, a leader of the archaeologists' union
.http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20081003/ap_en_mu/lt_mexico_pyramid_concerts