Dr. Rudy Acuña was my mentor when I began to study the Mexican American experience. I taught my first Chicano Studies course using his classic "Occupied America: A History of Chicanos." He was an early supporter of the Viequense struggle andvolunteered to engage in civil disobedience to dramatize the Vieques struggle against the U.S. Navy. Here he educates a neo-con Neo-Con Mexican American who always tries to get accolades from conservatives.
No Dreams
The Case of Ruben Navarette
By
Rodolfo F. Acuña
I
usually ignore people who take cheap shots in order to make themselves look intelligent.
However, Ruben Navarrete’s column titled, “If I offended demanding DREAMers,
I'm not sorry” crossed the line. My gut reaction was who gives a dump? But I
guess I do.
Navarette begins his
column in his usual self-congratulatory way: “Even for someone who has written
more than 2,000 columns over the last 20 years, sometimes the words come out
wrong.”
I have known Ruben for
those two decades, and my impression is that he is always trying to impress you.
The first words that came out of his mouth when we first met were that he had graduated
from Harvard as if that somehow qualified him as an expert.
At 25 Ruben wrote an
autobiography A Darker A Shade of
Crimson. It was about telling us he was from Harvard.
The
Amazon promo says that Navarette spent “his turbulent years as a Mexican-American
undergraduate at one of the nation's most prestigious universities.” According the piece, the autobiography was Navarrette’s
“declaration of independence, spurning the labels `people of color' (offensive)
and ‘Hispanic’ (too general), preferring ‘minority’ and ‘Latino.’” (Four years
before that he had been a Chicano).
In
A Darker A Shade of Crimson, Ruben
brags how he confronted bigotry. Ruben pulled himself up by his own bootstraps.
Ruben was a self-made boy, got straight
A's, a valedictorian, and his efforts
alone got him into Harvard. Affirmative action and the sacrifices of others had
nothing to do with it.
I
could not believe that this was the same chubby kid that I met a couple of years
before who tried to impress me with how Chicano he was – high fives and all.
Ruben was Mr. Aztlán.
The
tone of Navarette’s article offended my sense of history, and no one should mess
with Chicana/o history.
I
know that I am getting old. And my memory is not what it used to be. However, I
remember witnessing firsthand students, educators and organizations pressuring Ivy
League universities to admit highly qualified minorities. Even Michelle Obama,
an excellent student, was reputed to have taken part in a sit-in at Harvard in
1988.
However,
Ruben thinks he is exceptional, and the sacrifices of others had nothing to do with
his admission. He was a boy genius from Sanger, California.
Perhaps
at one time Ruben could be forgiven for his historical myopia. He was once a young
man who wanted to make it. He had a dream
of being someone. Of being called Mr. Harvard. But last month he completely
blew any credibility he once had.
Navarette
preached, “I know just what a lot of those so-called DREAMers deserve to get for
Christmas: a scolding. There are good and bad actors in every movement and the
bad ones -- if not kept in check -- can drag the good ones down with them.”
He
continues, “Having declared their intention to better themselves, some in the
DREAMer movement now insist that they're entitled to better treatment than run-of-the-mill
illegal immigrants. You know, like the hardworking and humble folks who cut
your lawn, clean your house or care for your kids. In fact, the DREAMers seem
to suggest they're due a reward for good behavior.”
Then
he gets nasty, “Gee, kids, can we get you anything else? Maybe free massages the
next time you stage a sit-in? These kids want it all” …While they probably don't
realize it, their public tantrums are turning people against them and hurting
the chances for a broader immigration reform package.”
Some
might call this a cheap shot.
This
man who says he has written “more than 2,000 columns over the last 20 years,”
offers no solution while playing to the xenophobes. Indeed, other than he went
to Harvard, what has he accomplished?
Most
recent research shows that people deprived of entering the dream phase of sleep
“exhibit symptoms of irritability and anxiety.” Their brains stop growing. This
is what has apparently happened to Ruben.
On August 28, 1963,
Martin Luther King gave his famous “I Have A Dream” Speech. Like all visionaries
Dr. King wanted a more perfect society. The
reverend spoke of the gap between the American dream and the American lived
reality and how white supremacists violated the dream. The reaction of his
fellow Dreamers was “Now.”
The response to Dr. King
was not all positive. The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) expanded their
COINTELPRO operation against the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, and
targeted King specifically as a public enemy of the United States. Some accused Dr. King of provoking enmity between
the races.
Dr. King was scolded in
the press. Called a troublemaker, and certainly his civility was questioned. In
the end, history has judged him as it will the Dreamers.
As I have often pointed
out when I arrived at San Fernando Valley State College, there were barely
fifty students of Mexican origin at the college. Students opened it up by
demanding and often being discourteous. They were the children of “the hardworking
and humble folks who cut your lawn, clean your house or care for your kids.”
They dreamt of a better life, of escaping low paying jobs much the same as
Navarette escaped Sanger.
Like Dr. King the
Dreamers have led a nonviolent struggle and practiced civil disobedience to bring
attention to the injustices in our society. For the information of Ruben Navarette,
civil disobedience is an American tradition dating back to the Boston Tea Party
and the abolitionist movement. Today’s
Dreamers follow in the footsteps of other American Dreamers, which is probably
hard for Navarette, suffering from intellectual insomnia, to fathom.
Aside from the equitable
argument that the Dreamers are entitled to a path to citizenship because they
came to the United States through no fault of their own – most were minors when
brought here by their parents—there are more compelling reasons. In spite of
living in poor neighborhoods and often attending decaying schools, they have
displayed considerable initiative and perseverance in pursuing their education
and being good citizens in their community.
I argue that they came to
the United States not through their own fault but because the United States has
not been the best of neighbors.
Mexico has a population
of 115 million people. Most of Mexican immigrants migrated to the United States
because of economic reasons. The North American Free Trade Agreement has been a
disaster to the small subsistence farmer driving millions off their farms.
Relatively little technical aid has been given to Mexico to help build its
infrastructure whereas the United States is pumping in hundreds of millions of
dollars to induce the Mexican government to purse a failed War on Drugs that
has devastated the country.
The Nation Magazine
reported “Beyond the undiplomatic opinions … the WikiLeaks cables revealed the
astonishing degree to which the United States exercised its power and influence
at the highest levels of the Mexican government. In some cases it appears that
an essential part of the decision-making process on matters of internal
security is actually designed not in Mexico City but in Washington. For
Mexicans, the cables have reinforced once again that famous adage ‘Pobre Mexico:
tan lejos de Dios, y tan cerca de los Estados Unidos.’ Poor Mexico: so far from
God and so close to the United States.”
In the case of the
Dreamers from Central America, the U.S. wrecked the economy of those countries
and spent billions tearing them up. Lately, the U.S. has been exporting made in
the U.S. gang members to El Salvador.
One might say the
migration of the Dreamers was in most cases induced.
This debate could go on
forever. But for Navarette’s information, the actions of the Dreamers that
Navarette objects to are the ones that got him into Harvard. The Dreamers never
would have gotten this far if they had relied on the Ruben Navarettes. Most of them have worked hard, gotten good
grades and not gotten swallowed up in the apathy that often paralyzes the poor.
They dare to dream, and refuse to take less by just existing. Perhaps Ruben
should re-read A Darker Shade of Crimson and
remember how it was to dream.
Ruben has a point.
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