Dear Mexican: I believe that the words people use to describe
other people, intentionally or unintentionally, reflect their political
values. But I want to give you the benefit of the doubt, so I write
to you. You described Cesar Chavez as hating “illegals” in a previous
column, and as being ethnocentric early in his career. This isn't
the first time that you’ve used the word “illegal” to describe undocumented
immigrants, and I have problems with that. Now, if we are going
to use that term to describe undocumented immigrants, then a lot
of U.S. citizens who have committed crimes such as drug trafficking,
corruption, murder, embezzlement, rape, warrant-less wiretapping,
harassment, stealing, and many, many others, including the ones
perpetrated by our departed president are really the ones who should
be called ILLEGALS. Using this term only plays out to the right-wing
agenda (the Minutemen, Rush Limbaugh, the Real Housewives of Orange
County, the wackos in Congress, etc.) and contributes to the bashing
of immigrants and Latinos in general, whether they are documented
or not. You must realize that Latinos, especially if they are poor
and uneducated, are perhaps the last “safe” target for bigotry and
scapegoating in our land of the free and home of the brave.
Saw You Once Moderate a Panel Discussion
Dear Pocha: This was the question I fished out of your ramble:
“Why do you use the term ‘illegal immigrant’ in your column, when
it’s such a hateful term to describe human beings?” The easy answer
is that this is my column, and why aren’t you upset that I regularly
call Mexicans wabs, gabachos gabachos, African-Americans
negritos, Asian-Americans chinitos, Muslims Mohammedans
and bash Guatemalans (the true last acceptable target for
bigotry) every couple of weeks? Read a bit more closely, and you’ll
realize any slur used against a group of gente in ¡Ask a
Mexian! is for satirical, reappropriating reasons ; the only sacred
vaca I’ll never slander is undocumented college students.
On a more fundamental level, however, I use “illegal immigrant”
to make a point. As it stands, it’s the most moderate term to describe
those millions of folks who live in this country in violation of
immigration law. Think about it: Know Nothings love to use “illegal
alien” because it allows them to describe Mexicans as an invading
menace. Aztlanistas, on the otra hand, use “undocumented
immigrant,” as gratuitous a bit of P.C. pendejada as Chicana/o.
For leftists like yourself, Saw You Once, to avoid using “illegal”
in describing someone’s immigration status implies that something
is shameful about the word and their status, and we should all therefore
avoid using it. Not this Mexican. On that note, I’ll always use
“illegal immigrant” and “illegals” with pride and turn the question
around to others, one asked long ago by the iconic Chicago Chicano
punk group Los Crudos: Ilegal, ¿y que?
I’m engaged to a Mexican who doesn’t have papers, but I’m an
American. For two years, he supported me while I was a stay-at-home
mom. But recently, he has been unable to work because his working
permit expired, so I got a good job and started supporting the family.
To me, he is doing the best thing he could for his family by being
a stay-at-home dad. Why is it that his familia can’t be just
as supportive about it? Since I started working, they haven’t stopped
nagging at him about him not being the man of the house, and letting
a woman support him. If he doesn’t have a problem with it, why should
they care?
Chulo, I’m Home!
Dear Gabacha: What a bola of pendejos! Let me assure
you that your problem is all in your man’s family and not a Mexican
thing, since a gabacho solely supporting us is as big a Mexican
wet dream as retaking over the southwest United States and Guatemala
for good.