Sunday, May 26, 2019

Latinos and their History in the United States

Although slackly united by a common heritage as native Spanish speakers from the Americas or their descendants, the numerous Latino groups in the unify States are ethnically, racially, and socio-economically heterogeneous each Latino subgroup representing a distinct culture and geographical area of the Americas. Using the wrong Latino and the more official Hispanic, which the U.S. count Bureau adopted in 1970, to describe the cultures of peoples from Mexico and the countries of Central and South America and the Caribbean is problematic in several respects.The term Hispanic is rejected by some authors as too reductive in its association with Spain and Spanish culture, thereby ignoring the indigenous and African heritage of many Latin American and Caribbean people. The term Latino, establish more neutrally on an identity shared through the use of language, is perceived as more useful, if still an unsatisfactory label. Chicano and Nuyorican, more recent terms, are now and then inte rchangeable with Mexican American and Mainland Puerto Rican, although the former in particular reflects a political expression of ethnic pride and the latter is now geographically limiting.The distinctions amongst these terms, even after being outline, remain in many situations vague. Indeed, even the US Census fails to make accurate and definitive definitionsPeople who identify with the terms Hispanic or Latino are those who classify themselves in one of the specific Hispanic or Latino categories listed on the questionnaireMexican, Puerto Rican, or Cubanas well as those who indicate that they are other Spanish, Hispanic, or Latino. Origin can be viewed as the heritage, nationality group, lineage, or country of birth of the person or the persons parents or ancestors before their arrival in the join States. People who identify their first as Spanish, Hispanic, or Latino may be of any race. (US Census, effect Definitions, 2000)Current statusToday the Latino presence has emerged, a s a fact of American life this diverse group has come to the United States and themselves become Americans. In fact, Latinos comprise the largest minority in the US today according to US Census studies. Furthermore, their data shows that the estimated Hispanic population of the United States as of July 1, 2005 was 42.7 million making people of Hispanic origin the nations largest ethnic or race minority. Hispanics constituted 14% of the nations total populationEven today, this group continues to endure obstacles of racialism in public policy and wide spread discrimination in the US. Being grouped together has made the situation for many of what can loosely be considered Latino sub-groups both challenging and difficult. From the anti-Cuban sentiment in Florida to the anti-Mexican wall that has been proposed by President Bush, despite being the largest minority group in the US, these types of incidents and policies agree that they remain just that in the minority.FutureAs the next U.S.-born generations of Latinos come of age, the barriers and pain of systemic racism could be attacked more openly. Many young people will lolly to openly reject the assumptions and generalizations that perpetuate stereotypes and keep Latino people in the grip of racism.Historically, in the organized pursuit of cultured rights and equality in the United States black Americans have usually led the way. Since at least the early 1900s they have forced the passage of all major civil rights laws and the majority of the glacial executive orders and court decisions protecting or extending antidiscrimination efforts. Latinos as well as Native and Asian Americans have been able to make some use of these civil rights mechanisms to fight discrimination against their own groups, and this will likely continue in the future.Census data shows that in 2004, 21.9% of Latino people in the US were living in poverty and a further 32.7% lacked adequate health insurance. Yet conversely, the same st udies show that there were1.6 million businesses owned by Latino people in 2002 and that from 1997 to 2002, the rate of growth for businesses owned by Latino people was 31% compared to the national average of 10%. According to 2004 data, 2.7 million Latinos over the age of 18 had at lest a bachelors degree. This means that things could well be shifting in the right direction. Education and business savvy could well be conquering the effects of poverty and poor medical care. While these people continue to experience racism and ethnic stereotyping, there is an underlying spirit of exertion that keeps them going and will no doubt pave the way for a brighter future.ReferencesAgosn Marjorie. Literature. Latinas of the Americas. Ed. K. Lynn Stoner. Westport Greenwood Press, 2000.Everett C. Ladd, Moving to an America beyond Race, The Public Perspective 7 (February/ establish 2003)Harry J. Brill, Why Organizers Fail ( Berkeley University of California Press, 2001).John H. Bunzel, Words tha t Smear, Like Racism, Provoke Polarization, San Francisco Chronicle, July 26, 2000U.S. Census Bureau. Hispanic Americans By the Numbers. Retrieved November 15, 2006 from http//www.infoplease.com/spot/hhmcensus1.htmlUS Census Bureau. Hispanic Population of the United States. Retrieved November 15, 2006 from http//www.census.gov/population/www/socdemo/hispanic.html

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