[EMAIL PROTECTED] (mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED])  (who  
complained about stereotyping in the Sopranos) wrote:

Assimilation, anyone?

I bravo this  column.  Enjoy:
______________________________________

The  Politically Incorrect Americanism of Alba, Pacino, and Arnold....Hablas  
Espanol? 

Jessica Alba doesn't. Is there anything wrong with that?  Apparently so. 

 
"Heckuva job," All those conservative bloggers are doin.'   Bravo!
 
Are more culture wars what we really need when we have huge serious  
problems, across the board, from the international to local levels.
 
Can they be serious?  Or just going after ratings by pushing the hot  
buttons? Or another way to distract us from the missing emails?
=======================
_E-mails? What e-mails??_ 
(http://www.cbsnews.com/blogs/2007/06/19/couricandco/entry2948018.shtml) 
CBS News -  <NOBR>10 hour


Let’s play a game this Tuesday. See if  you can guess who/which organization 
offered this gem : “The rule of law, the  very foundation for a free society, 
has been under assault, not only by  criminals from the ground up, but also 
from the top down.
_Casual Lawbreaking at the White House_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/blog/2007/06/19/BL2007061900924.html)
   <NOBR>Washingto
_Report: White House aides used GOP e-mail to skirt  law_ (http://www.cn
n.com/2007/POLITICS/06/18/white.house.emails/)  <NO
_Computerworld_ 
(http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&taxonomyName=legislation_regulation&articleId=9025266&taxonomyId=70
&intsrc=kc_top)  - _Monsters and  Critics.com_ 
(http://news.monstersandcritics.com/roundups/article_1319803.php/News_Roundup)  
- _VNUNet.com_ 
(http://www.vnunet.com/vnunet/news/2192394/storm-grows-missing-white-house)  - 
_Brad  Blog_ 
(http://www.bradblog.com/?p=4703) 
_all  396 news articles »_ 
(http://news.google.com/news?ned=tus&ncl=1117388858&hl=en)  
=============================
Or nuclear waste, or health care, or New Orleans, or the housing market, or  
poor inspections of our ports, of food and medicines, or the deficit, or 
golden  parachutes,,,, or a no-way-out war?
 
Are those topics too politically correct?
 
Good Grief, Charlie Brown!  
Mary Ham, a 2002 college graduate, gets good tutoring about serious (as in  
profitable) journalism from Ms. Malkin.
 
=====================================================
In a message dated 6/19/2007 7:02:51 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time,  
[EMAIL PROTECTED] continued:

The  third-generation American and actress is under fire this week 
from fellow  Latinos for comments she made to Para Todos magazine: 

Alba is my last  name and I'm proud of that. But that's it. My 
grandparents were born in  California, the same as my parents, and 
though I may be proud of my last  name, I'm American. Throughout my 
whole life, I've never felt connected to  one particular race or 
heritage, nor did I feel accepted by any. If you  break it down, I'm 
less Latina than Cameron Diaz, whose father is Cuban.  But people 
don't call her Latina because she's blonde… 

My  grandfather was the only Mexican at his college, the only 
Hispanic person  at work and the only one at the all-white country 
club. He tried to forget  his Mexican roots, because he never wanted 
his kids to be made to feel  different in America. He and my 
grandmother didn't speak Spanish to their  children. Now, as a third-
generation American, I feel as if I have finally  cut loose. 

My whole life, when I was growing up, not one race has ever  accepted 
me, ... So I never felt connected or attached to any race  
specifically. I had a very American upbringing, I feel American, and 
I  don't speak Spanish. So, to say that I'm a Latin actress, OK, but 
it's not  fitting; it would be insincere.


She never felt connected to any  race, specifically, but she always 
felt American. That doesn't sounds like  a bad thing, does it? And 
yet, it is, in the eyes of many activists.  

One blog post on the comments remarks, "Guess sell-outs come in all  
races and sizes." Another calls it a "disturbing hoard of quotes."  
Another claims she "hates Mexicans." 

Comments about Alba's  comments include, "F**K YOU THEN, JESSICA…VIVA 
LA RAZA!!!," "She should  just change her last name to White, then," 
and "I thought she could be a  good role model for Latinas, but she 
is a fake, tryin' to be white."  

Alba wasn't trying to make a political statement. Instead, she  
sounds like she was trying to avoid speaking for an entire ethnicity  
and many recent immigrants when she barely speaks Spanish, and  
identifies as an American first. But because she didn't reflexively  
take upon herself her ethnic mantle and collective responsibility,  
she's bashed as a traitor to her race. 

Elsewhere, a phenomenally  successful first-generation immigrant was 
sharing his secret to success in  America, which was much the same as 
the approach Alba's college-educated  grandfather took. When 
addressing the national Association of Hispanic  Journalists, and 
responding to question about how Hispanics can improve  academically, 
California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger said:  


"You've got to turn off the Spanish television set" and avoid  
Spanish-language television, books and newspapers, the Republican  
governor said Wednesday night… 

"You're just forced to speak  English, and that just makes you learn 
the language faster,"  Schwarzenegger said. 

"I know this sounds odd and this is the  politically incorrect thing 
to say, and I'm going to get myself in  trouble," he said, noting 
that he rarely spoke German and was forced to  learn English when he 
emigrated from Austria.


The response from  those in attendance? 


"I'm sitting shaking my head not believing  that someone would be so 
naive and out of it that he would say something  like that," said 
Alex Nogales, president and chief executive of the  National Hispanic 
Media Coalition.

Naïve, out-of-it, hateful,  traitorous. There is a large segment of 
the country that believes it's  somehow disrespectful to emphasize 
assimilation among new immigrants to  the country. 

And, it's not just among leftist activists and left-coast  gossip 
bloggers that this idea prevails. Just last year, Sen. Harry Reid  
called a proposal to make English the official language of 
America  "racist,"  despite the fact that a large majority of 
Americans  support such a measure. 

More recently, Barack Obama called the very  discussion of English as 
an official language, "divisive" during a  Democratic debate: 


I have to say that this is the kind of question  that is designed 
precisely to divide us. You know, you're right: everybody  is going 
to learn to speak English if they live in this country. The issue  is 
not whether or not future generations of immigrants are going to  
learn English. The question is, how can we come up with both a legal  
and sensible immigration policy? And when we get distracted by those  
kinds of questions, I think we do a disservice to the American  
people.


But is everyone going to learn English, Sen. Obama? It  seems that 
Schwarzenegger's encouragement of English-language immersion  for 
immigrants and Alba's family's decision to speak English only are  
put down in pretty harsh terms by folks on your own side of the 
aisle.  

The movement to make English the official language of America is, in  
part, a response to the Left's active discouragement of 
assimilation.  Even the idea of the "melting pot" went out of style 
when I was in grade  school, replaced in text books by the less 
offensive "mosaic." You see,  now we don't do anything so gauche as 
melt into one, cohesive society.  Instead, we are all obligated to 
hold onto our various ethnic and cultural  identities and languages, 
building little barriers between communities,  lest we be accused 
of "selling out" or trying to be too "white."  

There is certainly a way to assimilate without losing all touch with  
one's culture. Being American does not mean 
being "white." "American"  is, by definition, many colors and 
characteristics. But the strength of  America has always been in 
creating Americans of all colors and  characteristics, not all colors 
and characters who happen to live in  America. 

The English language and cultural assimilation are unifying  forces, 
economic passports, essential parts of preserving the American  dream 
and all its blessings for everyone who comes to our shores.  

When talking about comprehensive immigration reform, some have  
compared today's illegal immigrants—the challenges and the 
prejudices  they face—to legal immigration of Italians and Irishmen 
and others who  came through Ellis Island just a few generations ago. 
But those same  people conveniently overlook that anti-assimilation 
forces in America  weren't nearly so strong at that time. 

Al Pacino is a  second-generation American whose grandparents 
emigrated from Sicily, but  despite living in his grandparents' home, 
he speaks no Italian. Would  anyone accuse that iconic Baby Boomer of 
being a traitor to his ethnicity?  Well, he better watch out, if he 
keeps talking like this:  


Explain to me what Italian-American culture is. We've been here  100 
years. Isn't Italian-American culture American culture? That's  
because we're so diverse, in terms of intermarriage. Most everybody  
who's Italian is half Italian. Except me. I'm all Italian. I'm 
mostly  Sicilian, and I have a little bit of Neapolitan in me. You 
get your full  dose with me.


Alba, Schwarzenegger and Pacino have got it right.  Their concern is 
with becoming successful, individual Americans, not with  specious 
collective responsibilities imparted to them by their skin  colors, 
accents, or surnames. As a result, they have all done both America  
and their ancestors proud. They are all walking, talking, acting  
illustrations of the American dream in action. 

When considering  legalizing 12 million illegal immigrants, Congress 
should consider  seriously the fact that the walking, talking 
American dream is now  politically incorrect. That doesn't bode well 
for its  survival.


Mary Katharine Ham is the managing editor for  Townhall.com




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