Allan has published a tour de force with this article, which essentially summarizes why the Americans in California, Arizona, Texas and New Mexico are no longer free: because a foreign government now directly influences their elections and the policies and laws of their governments. That's what happens when you let a foreign populace, unnaturalized and uninvited, simply walk in, and assert that they are sovereign.
It's funny to read people on this forumn fulminate about the interference of the federal government in state business and then be utterly silent about the obvious intervention of a foreign and hostile government. When will they realize that laws for Americans are being in written in Mexico City?
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In English, the Sanchez ads promote common sense conservative values, values of rural Texas, cutting government waste, eliminating unnecessary programs, getting tough on crime, support for the death penalty and holding taxes down. In an ad that could just as easily have been produced by the NRA, Sanchez declared that we dont need more gun laws.
But the Spanish-language ads never utilized the word conservative, never talked about being tough on crime or about Sanchez support for the death penalty. The Spanish ads didnt mention the right to bear arms or cutting government waste or keeping taxes low.
They did, however, contain a number of veiled and not-so-veiled ethnic appeals to Hispanics. I got warmer, folksier, more intimate vibes being expressed through the Spanish ads, which often addressed the listeners as my dear friends or something similar. The Spanish-language ads emphasized that Sanchez no se olvida de sus raíces [hasnt forgotten his roots] and was el amigo del pueblo [the friend of the people]. They often referred to nuestra gente or nuestro pueblo [our people]. Another lamented the fact that nos falta tratamiento (sic, should be trato) con igualdad [we lack equal treatment] and nuestra gente buscan las mismas oportunidades de los demas [our people seek the same opportunities as the others]. Unlike the English ads, inmigrantes and colonias were mentioned in the Spanish Ads. One ad said bluntly that En toda la historia de Tejas nunca hemos tenido un gobernador de nuestro pueblo méxico-americano [In the entire history of Texas we have never had a governor of our people Mexican-American].
When I was in Texas in October, I heard another ad on a Spanish-language radio station which didnt appear on Sanchez campaign website. This ad was a blatant appeal to Hispanic solidarity to frustrate the Republicans, who according to the ad thought that Hispanics are lazy and wont turn out to vote!
In contrast, one of Sanchez English-language ads promoted the virtue of bipartisanship!
This seems to be an emerging trend. Spanish-language political ads are no longer simply translations of English-language ads. They are now designed differently, to appeal to what are perceived as Hispanic interests. A recent California news article points out (read it here) that gubernatorial candidates Davis and Simon both put on a different face in Spanish ads.
Whats the big deal? some readers might ask. Dont all politicians tailor their message to particular interest groups? Even in a monolingual society, pandering is a politicians specialty.
Maybe. But at least in a monolingual society, an informed voter can more easily monitor what a politician is saying to another audience. Americas hapless English-speaking majority, on the other hand, is blissfully ignorant of most of what is being said in the parallel Spanish-language media, whether its politics, journalism or entertainment.
You got it. Fox knew there would be no penalty from Bush for not supporting our actions in Iraq. Bush is as much an advocate of Illegal Immigration as Fox is.