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Friday, June 22, 2007
Linda Chavez :: Townhall.com Columnist
Arnold, Speak English, Please
by Linda Chavez
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Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger deserves two cheers for his comments to Hispanic journalists last week that Hispanics should "turn off the Spanish television set. It's that simple. You've got to learn English." But I'm holding back on the third cheer, in part because the governor hasn't always followed his own advice.

Like most politicians, Schwarzenegger is quick to embrace English as the national language and hint thnat Hispanics aren't learning it fast enough, but he is also eager to habla Espanol when election-time rolls around. In his re-election bid last year, the governor not only ran ads in Spanish but was interviewed frequently on Spanish-language television and radio. He was also happy to take more than $4 million since 2003 in contributions to his political causes from former Univision chairman A. Jerrold Perenchio, who made his fortune airing soap operas and game shows in Spanish. And, if you want to practice your Spanish skills, a good place to start might be listening to the governor's weekly radio address in Spanish or signing on to his website "Arnold Schwarzenegger: El Gobernador del Pueblo" (gov.ca.gov/espanol).

Schwarzenegger is not alone in this practice. Presidential aspirant Mitt Romney may be talking tough on immigration these days (though not when he was governor of Massachusetts), but he's also airing Spanish-language ads in states with large Hispanic populations. As I've argued for decades, such ads don't reach most Hispanic voters -- who are predominantly U.S.-born and prefer to get their news in English.

But the hypocrisy doesn't end here. In 2006, when Republicans were still in control of both houses of Congress, they couldn't muster enough votes in their own ranks to drop a requirement for bilingual ballots from the Voting Rights Act, which was up for extension. Rep. James "No Amnesty" Sensenbrenner, then chairman of the Judiciary Committee, argued that bilingual ballots facilitate "the participation of language minority citizens in the political process." Nonsense.

When I testified against the bilingual ballots measure -- as I have each time it has come up for extension -- I was treated by my fellow Republicans as the skunk at the tea party. They didn't want to hear evidence that the overwhelming majority of Hispanics who are eligible to vote speak, read and write English. Indeed, for those who are third-generation Americans, three out of four can't speak Spanish at all. The relatively few voters who need language assistance could be accommodated by allowing them to take translations into the polling booth, to have family members help them or to cast absentee ballots so that they could get translation assistance at home. Bilingual ballots are a waste of money, send a mixed signal to new citizens that it isn't necessary to learn English, and cause resentment and ill-will among other Americans.

But my reservation of a third cheer for Arnold isn't solely based on the hypocrisy factor. The governor also seems not to recognize that what Spanish-speaking newcomers are going through today in their transition to English is nearly identical to what every group has encountered at periods of high immigration over the last 200 years. Arnold may not have met many German speakers when he came to California in 1968, but if he'd arrived 100 years earlier, he'd have been awash in German-language newspapers, German-language theater, German civic associations, and his children likely would have attended German bilingual schools.

As Richard Alba and Victor Nee point out in their authoritative work "Remaking the American Mainstream: Assimilation and Contemporary Immigration": "German immigrants sometimes thought of themselves as recreating a separate German cultural sphere in the United States, and numerous towns where they settled were given German names (such as King of Prussia, Pennsylvania, and Frankfort, Kentucky.). At a relatively late point in American history, the great majority of the foreign-language press was published in German. . . . [T]he German language was unusually tenacious across the generations, supported by bilingual public education in many states."

Even today, nearly 1.4 million Americans still speak German at home; it is the fourth most popular foreign language spoken in the U.S. after Spanish, Chinese and French. The real question for Hispanic immigrants is, will they learn English over time, as the Germans, Italians, Poles and others did before them? The evidence, based on studies of Hispanic immigrants' children and grandchildren, suggests they will. But it might help if policymakers like Schwarzenegger didn't speak out of both sides of their mouth on this issue.

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About The Author

Linda Chavez is chairman of the Center for Equal Opportunity and author of Betrayal: How Union Bosses Shake Down Their Members and Corrupt American Politics .

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©Creators Syndicate
Subject: Bias
LInda,
Your bias is showing! For someone who speaks American english in America, to sometimes use other languages is not hipocrosy, it is American.
As a nation of immigrants, we understand that our American english is uniquely American. The issue is not sometimes using other languages in our speech, it is learning and using American english as the standard. It is our first language
by birth and practice, not preference.

ANOTHER IMBECILE ON TOWNHALL
"NoMansLand writes: Friday, June, 22, 2007 10:39 AM
Linda you have lost all credibility ~
Who are YOU to advise us about anything, even if we may happen to agree with you on some lesser matter? When you lost out on an important position that GW Bush offered you at the beginning of his administration, I was rather sorry for you and your Nanny. I'll hazard a guess that your "Nanny" or another questionable [illegal] immigrant is still in your employ. Now I've come to realize that your attitude includes much more than your former "Nanny problem". You think you and your motives are so special and the rest of us have no rights to our own choices to be hospitable [open the doors of our country] to people whom we belive will become assets to our communities, in accordance with the just laws of this Nation. Just be quiet, Ms Chavez and stop publishing your worthless opinions."

NOMANSLAND WRITES ABOUT LINDA CHAVEZ'S "NANNY." YET ACCORDING TO FIRSTHAND PRESS ACCOUNTS OF THE "NANNY" THAT THIS TOWNHALL POSTER REFERRED TO, SHE WAS NO NANNY AT ALL: JOHN MILLER EDITOR AT NATIONAL REVIEW WROTE AT THE TIME THAT THE WOMAN LIVING IN CHAVEZ'S HOME "certainly wasn't a nanny--the youngest of Chavez's three children was 13 or 14 years old and didn't require that kind of attention. No, my impression of Mercado was that she definitely wasn't an employee."

YOU CAN READ THE ENTIRE ACCOUNT OF THE INCIDENT HERE:

http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1282/is_2_53/ai_69388680/pg_2

SO PLEASE, TOWNHALL AND IT'S POSTERS DO NOT NEED TO SMEAR CHAVEZ WITH ANY MORE LIES, SIMPLY BECAUSE THEY DISAGREE WITH HER STANCE ON IMMIGRATION.
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