Dear Pissed-Off in Tucson: Wow, you and your hermana must be mega-nerds to have a conversation about whether I’d answer your question! Anyhoo, the two of you as faithful readers should know my contention that Mexican-hating has long been a characteristic of the American Southwest due to its proximity to Mexico and forgotten pasts we are condemned to repeat. Everyone now knows about your home state’s war against Mexicans, especially given that Governor Bruja—I mean, Jan Brewer—signed another Know Nothing bill in addition to the racial profiling-loving SB1070: HB2281, which bans ethnic studies classes in Arizona public schools. The law’s proponents claim such a discipline teaches racial division, but what they don’t like is that what’s taught is the unvarnished, ugly truth of its home state. To give you just one egregious example: Did you know that, in 1904, a group of Mexicans in the Arizona mining towns of Clifton and Morenci tried to adopt 40 Irish orphans, only to see their new wards kidnapped by gabachos furious that Mexicans dared want to raise white children? And that the gabachos weren’t prosecuted for their terrorism? True story; one Know Nothings Copper Staters desperately try to keep out of classrooms lest children connect the dots between past injustices and present-day stupidities—better to keep the masses dumb than honest, you know? Sorry that you and other good people must live among such a bola de pendejos.
Dear Mexican: The Texas Board of Education voted to remove Dolores Huerta, co-founder of the United Farm Workers union and well-known Xingona, because they didn’t like her politics. How long will this Manifest Destiny crap last? —Michicano in Texas
Dear Wab: Forever. You refer, of course, to the people in charge of textbook standards for the Lone Star State’s public schools, people so ahistorical they banned Huerta’s legacy from being taught because of her socialist politics. Chicano studies doesn’t peddle lies, but rather fosters a grown-up perspective on our great land instead of an untruthful, John Wayne dream world. And so, I conclude this columna with the words of Carey McWilliams, the legendary progressive historian whose 1949 book North from Mexico: A History of the Spanish-Speaking People of the United States still remains a prophetic vision of Mexicans and how gabachos view them and their relationship to them more than 60 years after its publication: “When one examines how deeply this fantasy heritage has permeated the social and cultural life of the borderlands, the dichotomy begins to assume the proportions of a schizophrenic mania …”
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