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  #1  
Old 12-14-2009, 06:51 PM
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ilbegone ilbegone is offline
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Default Most young Latinos U.S.-born, feel labeled as immigrants, study finds

Most young Latinos U.S.-born, feel labeled as immigrants, study finds


Quote:
December 14, 2009

By DAVID OLSON
The Press-Enterprise

Two-thirds of young Latinos are now U.S.-born, a shift from 14 years ago when nearly half were immigrants and a portent of an increasingly Latino U.S. society, a new study finds.

“If you want to understand what America will be like in the 21st century, you need to understand how young Latinos … will grow up,” said Paul Taylor, director of the Pew Hispanic Center, the Washington, D.C.-based nonpartisan research organization that is releasing the report today.

Latinos now comprise 18 percent of all U.S. youths and 42 percent of California youths, which Pew defines as people aged 16 to 25.

No U.S. minority ethnic group has ever made up such a large share of the nation’s young people, Taylor said. It reflects the influx of nearly 40 million immigrants between 1965 and 2008, half of them Latin American.

More than 15 percent of U.S. residents are now Latino, according to 2008 U.S. Census estimates. In Riverside and San Bernardino counties, nearly 46 percent are.

The study used census demographic data to analyze young Hispanics’ economic and educational status, and a national survey of more than 2,000 young Latinos to probe issues of identity, life priorities and aspirations.

Even though the terms “Latino” and “Hispanic” are often used by the news media, politicians and Latino-advocacy organizations lump together the tens of millions of people with Latin American ancestry, 52 percent of young Latinos use national-origin words like “Mexican” or “Salvadoran” as the first term to identify themselves, compared to 20 percent who use “Hispanic” or “Latino” and 24 percent who use “American.”

Amanda Rudd, 19, of Riverside, is half European ancestry. Her maternal great-grandparents were born in Mexico but her mother and maternal grandparents were born in the United States. Rudd said she considers herself an American.

Yet, she said, “When people ask me, I say, ‘I’m Mexican-American’ or ‘half-Mexican.’ ” She doesn’t use “American” because “ ‘American’ is just a generic way of saying white.”

Jennifer Nájera, an assistant professor of ethnic studies at UC Riverside and an expert on Mexican-American culture, said most young Latinos’ preference to use terms other than “American” to initially identify themselves reflects society’s views of them. Popular culture often portrays Latinos as immigrants, even though most are not. Non-Hispanics often pigeonhole Latinos by their ethnicity and physical appearance in a way they do not for European immigrants and their descendants, she said.

Discrimination and other challenges that many Hispanics face can also affect Latinos’ self-identification, said Susan Brown, an associate professor of sociology at UC Irvine and an expert on generational trends among Latinos. Nearly 40 percent of young Latinos said they or a relative or close friend has been a victim of ethnic or racial discrimination.

Roy Beck, executive director of Virginia-based NumbersUSA, which supports greater limits on immigration, said young Latinos’ tendency to not identify first as Americans is “troubling.”

He said the constant waves of immigration into many of the neighborhoods where young Latinos live is continually exposing young Latinos to the language and culture of their ancestors’ homelands, making it more difficult for them to see themselves as American.

The study found that second-generation Latinos do much better than their immigrant parents economically and educationally, but the third generation and beyond tended to have higher poverty, school dropout and teen-pregnancy rates.

Ruben Rumbaut, a professor of sociology at UC Irvine and an expert on Latino generational patterns — who cautioned that there are relatively few descendants of non-Mexicans immigrants now in the third generation — said the second generation does better than the first because immigrant parents typically come to the United States for their children, and they push them to do well.

“By the third generation, that drive has faded,” Rumbaut said.

The Pew report is entitled “Between Two Worlds” and it illustrates how many young Latinos embrace both aspects of American culture and of the culture of their parents or grandparents.

By the second generation, 98 percent of young Latinos speak primarily English or use both English and Spanish. But 70 percent of all young Latinos say they sometimes speak “Spanglish,” a mix of English and Spanish.

Taylor said there was no similar research done on immigrants and their offspring 100 years ago. But he said it is possible young Latinos are more likely to preserve elements of their parents’ and grandparents’ culture because they are closer to their ancestors’ homelands and because Spanish-language TV and radio, e-mail, texting and other technological tools make it easier to stay in touch with relatives abroad and with Latin American culture.

http://www.pe.com/localnews/inland/s...351935672.html
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Old 12-16-2009, 09:27 AM
Kathy63 Kathy63 is offline
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When someone is open about their self identification and loyalty to another country, there is nothing wrong with classifying them as immigrant. The only other classification would be alien and disloyal American. Would they prefer that?
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Old 12-16-2009, 11:42 AM
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Good point Kathy.
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Old 12-16-2009, 02:51 PM
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This report has been out a couple weeks now

It is the reason these whelps marched with mexican flags , they don't understand the concept of America
They will never be American

They should all be deported with their illegal parents

Sooner or later its going to get ugly
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Old 12-16-2009, 04:27 PM
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How about labeling them as "Pseudo Citizens?" That's a way better description than "immigrants" who found their "road" to U.S. citizenship via the vagina of an illegal alien. We need to quit giving REAL immigrants a bad name by mixing them in with the criminals who break our immigration laws and the anchor babies they spawn.
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Old 12-16-2009, 05:38 PM
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ilbegone ilbegone is offline
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I generally don't agree with the Pee-Yoo Hispanic Center, and I further believe Olson is biased due to his slanted education. Yet I placed this here as food for thought and I do believe there are elements in it which are correct.

Quote:
Latinos now comprise 18 percent of all U.S. youths and 42 percent of California youths, which Pew defines as people aged 16 to 25.

No U.S. minority ethnic group has ever made up such a large share of the nation’s young people, Taylor said. It reflects the influx of nearly 40 million immigrants between 1965 and 2008, half of them Latin American.
****

Quote:
"...American’ is just a generic way of saying white.”
I've caught myself using the word "American" when I meant "white" and "white" when I meant to say "American"
****

Quote:
Popular culture often portrays Latinos as immigrants, even though most are not.
I believe this to be more true than not.

****

Quote:
“Between Two Worlds”
For many, true.

***

Quote:
By the second generation, 98 percent of young Latinos speak primarily English or use both English and Spanish. But 70 percent of all young Latinos say they sometimes speak “Spanglish,” a mix of English and Spanish.
There are degrees of Mexicanization. I believe Mexicanization of adults having Mexican parents and who grew up in America is greater in places where there is itinerant labor and the kids are shuffled around, sometimes returning to Mexico in the middle of the school year for a couple of months or so. I've seen it in those areas with adults who barely speak English or have heavily accented English. I've seen it mostly in agricultural areas, and some who grew up in heavily Mexicanized metropolitan areas. And these people still won't be recognized as "Mexican" by Mexican nationals, except in the racial sense. And many Mexicans will disapprove of their (imperceptable to us) lack of "Mexicaness". Think of Villaraigosa going to Mexico trying to prove to Mexicans that he's not pocho, the only reason they'll talk to him is because they perceive something to gain.

However, while not a scientific survey and it's only been a month, I have recently gone out of my way to take every opportunity to listen to junior high and high school Brown kids in Van Nuys (where white is definitely a minority), and was surprised to hear most of them doing their thing amongst each other in English. I've heard more Spanglish in San Bernardino.

On the other hand, I have noticed quite a few Mexican Nationals who speak a sufficient degree of English to conduct business try to get the white English speaker to speak Spanish, or have the Mexican National accompanying the English speaker or a child relay and conduct the business between them. It's pissed me off on several occasions at the way it was done, no respect.

On the other hand, something which blew me away was one occasion I witnessed school kids doing their homework while speaking English in their Mexican parent's small business, and the parents weren't fluent in English by any means. It's my belief that most Mexican parents tell their children to speak Spanish in the home and around them. I've only seen this before in Asian businesses.

****

Since the 60's, it's been a race based numbers game. Affirmative Action. Scholarships. Representation. Voting. The open borders people are counting on prejudicing those who can vote, hire, or do anything else beneficial for another person. 42% of people 16 to 25 in California are brown and the majority of those who are citizens will be eligible to vote in two years.

And the number is going to be bigger five years down the road.

I believe that many who are not the immediate descendants of illegal immigrants do not have sympathy for illegal migration - illegals beat them out of work just like they do white people. But the open borders crowd harp non stop about real, imagined, or invented "white racism" in order to turn whites into dehumanized oppressors of brown people.

So, my conclusion is that if the stand against illegal immigration is actually or widely perceived to be a stand concerning race rather than willful illegality, the battle is over. We can rightfully bitch about bullshit political correctness all we want, but it's not going to make any difference if we shovel ammunition to our enemies.

For what it's worth.
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Hay burros en el maiz

RAP IS TO MUSIC WHAT ETCH-A-SKETCH IS TO ART

Don't drink and post.

"A nickel will get you on the subway, but garlic will get you a seat." - Old New York Yiddish Saying

"You can observe a lot just by watching." Yogi Berra

Old journeyman commenting on young apprentices - "Think about it, these are their old days"

SOMETIMES IT JUST DOESN'T MAKE SENSE.

Never, ever, wear a bright colored shirt to a stand up comedy show.


Last edited by ilbegone; 12-16-2009 at 08:37 PM.
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