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MULTICULTURALISM, IMMIGRATION AND AZTLAN*
By Maria Hsia Chang
Professor of Political Science, University of Nevada Reno
One of the standard
arguments invoked by those in favor of massive immigration into the United
States is that our country is founded on immigrants who have always been
successfully assimilated into America's mainstream culture and society. As
one commentator put it, "Assimilation evokes the misty past of Ellis
Island, through which millions entered, eventually seeing their
descendants become as American as George Washington."1
Nothing more vividly
testifies against that romantic faith in America's ability to continuously
assimilate new members than the events of October 16, 1994 in Los Angeles.
On that day, 70,000 people marched beneath "a sea of Mexican flags"
protesting Proposition 187, a referendum measure that would deny many
state benefits to illegal immigrants and their children. Two weeks later,
more protestors marched down the street, this time carrying an American
flag upside down.2 Both protests point to a disturbing and
rising phenomenon of Chicano separatism in the United States — the product
of a complex of forces, among which are multiculturalism and a generous
immigration policy combined with a lax border control.
The Problem Chicanos refer
to "people of Mexican descent in the United States" or "Mexican Americans
in general."3 Today, there are reasons to believe that Chicanos
as a group are unlike previous immigrants in that they are more likely to
remain unassimilated and unintegrated, whether by choice or circumstance —
resulting in the formation of a separate quasi-nation within the United
States. More than that, there are Chicano political activists who intend
to marry cultural separateness with territorial and political
self-determination. The more moderate among them aspire to the cultural
and political autonomy of "home rule". The radicals seek nothing less than
secession from the United States whether to form their own sovereign state
or to reunify with Mexico. Those who desire reunification with Mexico are
irredentists who seek to reclaim Mexico's "lost" territories in the
American Southwest.4 Whatever their goals, what animates all of
them is the dream of Aztlan.
According to legend, Aztlan
was the ancestral homeland of the Aztecs which they left in journeying
southward to found Tenochtitlan, the center of their new civilization,
which is today's Mexico City. Today, the "Nation of Aztlan" refers to the
American southwestern states of California, Arizona, Texas, New Mexico,
portions of Nevada, Utah, Colorado, which Chicano nationalists claim were
stolen by the United States and must be reconquered (Reconquista) and
reclaimed for Mexico.5 The myth of Aztlan was revived by
Chicano political activists in the 1960s as a central symbol of Chicano
nationalist ideology. In 1969, at the Chicano National Liberation Youth
Conference in Denver, Rodolfo "Corky" Gonzales put forth a political
document entitled El Plan de Aztlan (Spiritual Plan of
Aztlan).6 The Plan is a clarion call to Mexican-Americans to
form a separate Chicano nation:
In the spirit of a new people that is conscious not only of its
proud historial heritage, but also of the brutal "gringo" invasion of
our territories, we, the Chicano inhabitants and civilizers of the
nothern land of Aztlan from whence came our forefathers ...declare that
the call of our blood is...our inevitable destiny.... Aztlan belongs to
those who plant the seeds, water the fields, and gather the crops, and
not to the foreign Europeans. We do not recognize capricious frontiers
on the bronze continent.... Brotherhood unites us, and love for our
brothers makes us a people whose time has come .... With our heart in
our hands and our hands in the soil, we declare the independence of our
mestizo nation. We are a bronze people with a bronze culture. Before the
world, before all of North America, before all our brothers in the
bronze continent, we are a nation, we are a union of free pueblos, we
are Aztlan.7
How Chicanos are Unlike
Previous Immigrants
Brent A. Nelson, writing in 1994, observed
that in the 1980s America's Southwest had begun to be transformed into "a
de facto nation"8 with its own culture, history, myth,
geography, religion, education, and language.9 Whatever
evidence there is indicates that Chicanos, as a group, are unlike previous
waves of immigrants into the United States.
In the first place, many
Chicanos do not consider themselves immigrants at all because their people
"have been here for 450 years" before the English, French, or Dutch.
Before California and the Southwest were seized by the United States, they
were the lands of Spain and Mexico. As late as 1780 the Spanish crown laid
claim to territories from Florida to California, and on the far side of
the Mississippi up to the Great Lakes and the Rockies. Mexico held title
to much of Spanish possessions in the United States until the Treaty of
Guadalupe Hidalgo ended the Mexican-American war in 1848. As a
consequence, Mexicans "never accepted the borders drawn up by the 1848
treaty."10
That history has created
among Chicanos a feeling of resentment for being "a conquered people,"
made part of the United States against their will and by the force of
arms.11 Their resentment is amply expressed by Voz
Fronteriza, a Chicano student publication,12 which referred
to Border Patrol officers killed in the line of duty as "pigs (migra)"
trying to defend "the false frontier."13
Chicanos are also distinct
from other immigrant groups because of the geographic proximity of their
native country. Their physical proximity to Mexico gives Chicanos "the
option of life in both Americas, in two places and in two cultures,
something earlier immigrants never had." Geographic proximity and ease of
transportation are augmented by the media. Radio and television keep the
spoken language alive and current so that Spanish, unlike the native
languages of previous immigrants into the United States, "shows no sign of
fading."14
A result of all that is the
failure by Chicanos to be fully assimilated into the larger American
society and culture. As Earl Shorris, author of Latinos: A Biography of
the People, observed: "Latinos have been more resistant to the melting pot
than any other group. Their entry en masse into the United States will
test the limits of the American experiment...."15 The
continuous influx of Mexican immigrants into the United States serve to
continuously renew Chicano culture so that their sense of separateness
will probably continue "far into the future...."16
There are other reasons for
the failure of Chicano assimilation. Historically, a powerful force for
assimilation was upward social mobility: Immigrants into the United States
became assimilated as they rose in educational achievement and income. But
today's post-industrial American economy, with its narrower paths to
upward mobility, is making it more difficult for certain groups to improve
their socioeconomic circumstances. Unionized factory jobs, which once
provided a step up for the second generation of past waves of immigrants,
have been disappearing for decades.
Instead of the
diamond-shaped economy of industrial America, the modern American economy
is shaped like an hourglass. There is a good number of jobs for unskilled
people at the bottom, a fair number of jobs for the highly educated at the
top, but comparatively few jobs for those in the middle without a college
education or special skills. To illustrate, a RAND Corporation study
forecasts that 85 percent of California's new jobs will require
post-secondary education. Note 1
For a variety of reasons,
the nationwide high-school dropout rate for Hispanics (the majority of
whom are Chicano) is 30 percent — three times the rate for whites and
twice the rate for blacks. Paradoxically, the dropout rate for Hispanics
born in the United States is even higher than for young immigrants. Among
Chicanos, high-school dropout rates actually rise between the second and
third generations.
Their low educational
achievement accounts for why Chicanos as a group are poor despite being
hardworking. In 1996, for the first time, Hispanic poverty rate began to
exceed that of American blacks. In 1995, household income rose for every
ethnic group except Hispanics, for whom it dropped 5 percent. Latinos now
make up a quarter of the nation's poor people, and are more than three
times as likely to be impoverished than whites. This decline in income has
taken place despite high rates of labor-force participation by Latino men,
and despite an emerging Latino middle class. In California, where Latinos
now approach one-third of the population, their education levels are far
lower than those of other immigrants, and they earn about half of what
native-born Californians earn. This means that, for the first time in the
history of American immigration, hard work is not leading to economic
advancement because immigrants in service jobs face unrelenting
labor-market pressure from more recently arrived immigrants who are eager
to work for less.
The narrowing of the
pathways of upward mobility has implications for the children of recent
Mexican immigrants. Their ascent into the middle-class mainstream will
likely be blocked and they will join children of earlier black and Puerto
Rican migrants as part of an expanded multiethnic underclass. Whereas
first generation immigrants compare their circumstances to the Mexico that
they left — and thereby feel immeasurably better off — their children and
grandchildren will compare themelves to other U.S. groups. Given their
lower educational achievement and income, that comparison will only lead
to feelings of relative deprivation and resentment. They are unlikely to
be content as maids, gardeners, or fruit pickers. Many young Latinos in
the second and third generations see themselves as locked in irremediable
conflict with white society, and are quick to deride successful Chicano
students as "wannabes." For them, to study hard is to "act white" and
exhibit group disloyalty.17
That attitude is part of the
Chicano culture of resistance — a culture that actively resists
assimilation into mainstream America. That culture is created, reinforced,
and maintained by radical Chicano intellectuals, politicians, and the many
Chicano Studies programs in U.S. colleges and universities.
As examples, according to
its editor, Elizabeth Martinez, the purpose of Five Hundred Years of
Chicano History, a book used in over 300 schools throughout the West, is
to "celebrate our resistance to being colonized and absorbed by racist
empire builders." The book calls the INS and the Border Patrol "the
Gestapo for Mexicans."18 For Rodolfo Acuna, author of Occupied
America: The Chicano's Struggle Toward Liberation, probably the most
widely assigned text in U.S. Chicano Studies programs, the Anglo-American
invasion of Mexico was "as vicious as that of Hitler's invasion of Poland
and other Central European nations...."19 The book also
includes a map showing "the Mexican republic" in 1822 reaching up into
Kansas and Oklahoma, and including within it Utah, Nevada, and everything
west and south of there. At a MEChA conference in 1996, Acuna referred to
Anglos as Nazis: "Right now you are in the Nazi United States of
America."20
The effect of books such as
those is to radicalize young Chicanos. As an example, although Chicano
undergraduates at Berkeley lacked any sort of strong ethnic identity
before entering college, in Berkeley they became "born again" as Chicanos
because of MEChA and Chicano Studies departments. 21
The strident rhetoric of
intellectuals is echoed by some Mexican-American politicians. Former
California state senator Art Torres called Proposition 187 "the last gasp
of white America" and spoke of "reclaiming" Southern California. The
Mexican government also contributes to the Chicano sense of separateness
through its recent decision that migrants will not forfeit their Mexican
citizenship by becoming U.S. citizens and are allowed to vote in Mexican
elections.22
Multiculturalism and Immigration
All of this is exacerbated by the
U.S. government's immigration policy and a new ethic of multiculturalism
that has become almost an official dogma in the mass media and in academe.
Exponents of multiculturalism maintain that all cultures are equal, and
that the United States must accept its destiny as a universal nation, a
world nation, in which no one culture — especially European culture — will
be dominant. "The ideal of multiculturalism is a nation which has no core
culture, no ethnic core, no center other than a powerful state
apparatus."23
The social ethic of
multiculturalism is actively supported by an official government policy of
"corporate pluralism" which militates against America's earlier ideal of
assimilation. According to Gunnar Myrdal, "corporate pluralism" refers to
a society where racial and ethnic entities are accorded formal recognition
and standing by the state as groups in the national polity, and where
political power and economic reward are based on a distributive formula
that postulates group rights and defines group membership as an important
factor in the outcome for individuals. By replacing individual meritocracy
with group rewards, corporate pluralism "strongly discourages assimilation
in the conventional sense because if a significant portion of one's
rational interests are likely to be satisfied by emphasis on one's
ethnicity, then one might as well stay within ethnic boundaries and at the
same time enjoy the social comforts of being among people of one's own
kind."24 More on Multicuturalism
Corporate pluralism is
realized through such government policies as affirmative action,
court-ordered busing, and bilingual education. In the case of the latter,
by the late 1970s, bilingual education has become "a Hispanic
institution." A bilingual establishment has been formed which "fights for
jobs and perks" and is determined to maintain Spanish as both language and
culture. Being supported by government laws, that establishment cannot
easily be dislodged.25
Conclusion
Chicanos are not the only
ethnic groups in the United States who resist assimilation and are
geographically concentrated in certain areas and cities. The Cubans in
Miami and Chinese in Monterey Park are other examples, but neither group
is large enough to practice autonomism or separatism. Chicanos in the
Southwest, however, are great in numbers and "are producing spokesmen
for...autonomism, separatism, and even irredentism."26
Since 1977, INS has
apprehended over a million illegals a year, the majority Hispanics;
anywhere from 2 to 5 million eluded the INS. By the early 1980s, the
number of illegal aliens in the United States, mostly Hispanic, totalled 3
to 12 million. In 1980, the Census Bureau counted 14.6 million Hispanics
in the United States, increasing to 15.8 million by 1982, and 17.3 million
by 1985 — making America the 5th or 4th largest Spanish-speaking country
in the world.27 According to the 1990 Census, Latin America
accounted for 38 percent of America's foreign-born, well over half of whom
were from Mexico. The real percentage is probably higher because illegal
aliens avoid the census and most illegals are from Latin
America.28
According to a report by the
Urban Institute in 1984 entitled The Fourth Wave: California's Newest
Immigrants, by the year 2000, 42 percent of Southern California's
residents will be Caucasian, 41 percent Hispanic, 9 percent Asian and 8
percent black. Demographers Leon F. Bouvier and Cary B. Davis in
Immigration and the Future Racial Composition of the United States expect
that, by 2080, Hispanics (more than half Chicano) will constitute 34.1
percent of the total U.S. population, even if immigration were restricted
to 2 million entrants a year from all areas of the world and birthrates of
Hispanics converge with those of non-Hispanics. In 2080, Hispanics will be
either a plurality or a majority of the population in California and Texas
at 41.4 percent and 53.5 percent, respectively, assuming an influx of a
conservative one million immigrants a year.29 Former Senator
Eugene McCarthy, writing in 1987, had warned of a "recolonization".
McCarthy's warning was sounded five years earlier by a historian of race
relations, George Fredrickson. Speaking at a colloquium on race relations
in 1982, Fredrickson observed that:
There are two ways that you can gain territory from another group.
One is by conquest. That's essentially the way we took California from
Mexico and... Texas as well. But what's going on now may end up being a
kind of recolonization of the Southwest, because the other way you can
regain territory is by population infiltration and demographic dominance
.... The United States will be faced with the problem that Canada has
been faced with... and which our system is not prepared to
accomodate.30
Mario Barrera, a faculty
member of U.C. Berkeley's Department of Ethnic Studies, admitted that
multiculturalism "would help prepare the ideological climate for an
eventual campaign for ethnic regional autonomy."31 In January
1995, El Plan de Aztlan Conference at UC Riverside resolved that "We shall
overcome...by the vote if possible and violence if
necessary."32 The rise of Mexican irredentism as a serious
political movement "awaits only the demographic transformation of the
Southwest."33 As an article entitled "The Great Invasion:
Mexico Recovers Its Own" in 1982's Excelsior, Mexico's leading daily
newspaper, put it:
The territory lost in the 19th century by...Mexico...seems to be
restoring itself through a humble people who go on settling various
zones that once were ours on the old maps. Land, under any concept of
possession, ends up in the hands of those who deserve it.... [The result
of this migration is to return the land] to the jurisdiction of Mexico
without the firing of a single shot.34
Multiculturalism and United
States government's immigration policy have contributed towards the rise
of Chicano ethnic separatism within the American Southwest that has all
the makings of an incipient Nation of Aztlan.
NOTES
* Paper presented at the
Second Alliance for Stabilizing America's Population Action Conference,
Breckenridge, CO, August 6, 1999.
1. Scott McConnell,
"Americans No More?" National Review (December 31, 1997), p. 30.
2. Samuel P. Huntington, The
Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of World Order (New York: Simon
and Schuster, 1996), pp. 19, 20.
3. Mario Barrera, Beyond
Aztlan: Ethnic Autonomy in Comparative Perspective (NY: Praeger, 1988), p.
7.
4. "It is not clear whether
most Chicano nationalists favor independence for Aztlan itself or seek its
annexation by Mexico." Brent A. Nelson, America Balkanized: Immigration's
Challenge to Government (Monterey, VA: American Immigration Control
Foundation, 1994), pp. 31, 26.
5. Reconquista! The Takeover
of America (California Coalition for Immigration Reform, 1997), p. 2.
6. Barrera, op. cit., p. 3.
7. http://www.aztlan.org/planaztl.html
8. Nelson, op. cit., p. 27.
9. Thomas Weyr, Hispanic U.S.A.: Breaking the Melting Pot (NY: Harper & Row, 1988), p. 1.
10. Ibid., pp. 1, 16, 6.
11. Ibid., p. 2.
12. A publication of the Chicano movement, MEChA (Movimiento Estudiantil Chicano de Aztlan),
founded in 1969.
13. McConnell, op. cit., p. 35.
14. Weyr, op. cit., p. 6.
15. McConnell, op. cit., p. 33.
16. Weyr, op. cit., pp. 8, 5.
17. McConnell, op. cit., pp. 32, 33.
18. Ibid., p. 35.
19. Nelson, op. cit., p. 31.
20. McConnell, op. cit., pp.
33, 34.
21. Ibid., p. 35.
22. Ibid., pp. 34, 35.
23. Nelson, op. cit., p.
110.
24. Ibid., p. 12.
25. Weyr, op. cit., p. 9.
26. Nelson, op. cit., p. 26.
27. Weyr, op. cit., p. 3.
28. McConnell, op. cit., p. 32.
29. Nelson, op. cit., pp. 4, 2-3.
30. Ibid., pp. 1, 2.
31. Ibid., p. 19.
32. Reconquista! p. 1.
33. Nelson, op. cit., p. 32.
34. Ibid., p. 34; McConnel,
op. cit., p. 30.
Note 1 In 2004 the controversy over out-sourcing of middle-class jobs to cheap overseas labor markets has generated massive political controversy in an election year. Thus many skilled college-level jobs are going the way of manufacturing jobs. Instead of producing an "hour glass" it's producing a broad based pyramid with no middle class at all and most jobs on the bottom.
L. Loflin
From: http://www.diversityalliance.org/docs/Chang-aztlan.html

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