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May 25, 2007
In
Occupied America, Amnesty Would Confirm Reconquista
By Joe
Guzzardi
The other day, I received
a panicked phone call from an
English as a Second Language teaching colleague at
the
Lodi Adult School.
"I need help," she said,
"None
of my citizenship students speak English!"
Here’s the background: in
response to requests from neighborhood Hispanics—who no doubt
anticipate amnesty legislation—the Adult School added a
section of ESL that focuses on the
U.S. citizenship test.
I had taught this
exact class twenty years ago during the
disastrous 1986 amnesty. But since I am on leave, another
teacher stepped in.
What she discovered, only two
sessions into the class, is that few of her students could carry
on a basic conversation in English—even though most have lived
in the U.S. for
more than a decade.
"I can’t teach them English
and citizenship at the same time," she told me.
And, of course, she is right.
Students don’t need to be fluent to master the basics of the
citizenship test. God knows we can’t expect that. But they
should be able
to speak and understand English at a fundamental level
before taking an examination to become citizens.
No one can learn about the
Constitution or the
Supreme Court if they cannot answer the question: "Where
do you live?"
(In fact, fluency in English is
technically a pre-requisite for becoming a citizenship—but, like
the passage in the oath about
“abjuring foreign potentates” and the provision that
immigrants should not become a
“public charge”, it’s been quietly deep-sixed. For example,
applicants over fifty don't
even have to try to speak English. )
My friend will muddle on, hoping
for the best. What she will soon learn is that, in addition to
not speaking English, students will, for example, enroll during
her lesson on the
Civil War despite having missed her preceding lectures on
the 100 years of U.S. history
leading up to it. This, if
Teddy Kennedy has his way, is what will pass for "mastering"
civics.
So I repeat
a theme that I have touched on in
other VDARE.COM columns: no matter what Kennedy, et al.
promise, very few among the amnesty hopefuls—I predict
statistically none—will learn English and U.S. history.
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First and foremost, why, as a
practical matter, should they? For those who get as far as
the citizenship interview, none will be sent home to polish
their English.
The whole idea of amnesty is to
make
aliens into citizens (and
voters). The rest of it—like the language requirement—is
window-dressing.
Kennedy, et al. can say what they please because they know
that none of us will ever be able to figure out whom among the
aliens dedicated themselves to learning English and who ignored
the requirement. They will all be amnestied anyway.
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Second, as the alien
population grows by leaps and bounds, the
need to learn English diminishes proportionately. Every
meeting between non-English speaking adults and teachers,
principals, doctors and auto mechanics can be
conducted in Spanish.
Why, again as a practical matter,
should prospective students bother learning? Hard work is
involved. Personal time will be lost in a boring classroom.
Summer is here. Who wants to wrestle with an English grammar
workbook when he can picnic on
Lodi Lake?
But there also is something
unmistakably sinister, from the point of view of any America
patriot, about many Hispanics’
refusal to learn English.
I am a fan of The ProEnglish
newsletter. (Sign up for ProEnglish language related action
alerts
here.) In its April 2007 issue was this quotation from Maria
Cantu-Dougala—an assistant vice president of the Second Federal
Savings in
Chicago [send them
mail] and a naturalized U.S. citizen.
Said Cantu-Dougala about her
Mexican heritage:
"We’re never giving up our Mexican roots. I still consider
myself Mexican. That’s where we’re so
different from other immigrants. We just can’t give it up."
[Mexican,
American—or both? By Lennox Samuels, Dallas Morning News,
October 11, 2006]
Cantu-Dougala’s arrogant attitude
of entitlement is, after
twenty years on the immigration front line, nothing new to
me. While I would not say that her arrogance is common, neither
is it uncommon.
And a great problem is that the
Mexico now and forever philosophy is passed down to
American-born children.
One of my clearest classroom
recollections is of a
high school teaching aide born, raised and educated in the
U.S. But her car’s bumper sticker read: "Latina para la
vida."(Latin for life.)
I wish I could say that the other
aides thought differently. But I can’t.
And, as with their parents, why
should their teenage views be different? After all, many of them
are on their way to a special
Latino graduation ceremony where
Mexican traditions will be celebrated. These are now common
throughout California.
What our thick-skull Senators
need to wake up to is this: the
overwhelming majority of Mexicans have little interest in
assimilation.
If the Senators need proof, they
can
follow me around Lodi for a day or two.
What they will see is that within
a one-mile radius of the Lodi Adult School, little English is
spoken. Yet few in the neighborhood
bother to attend English language classes, even though the
school is within walking distance for all but the most infirm.
I recommended to my teaching
colleague that she prod her non-English speaking citizenship
students to attend regular ESL sessions first to build a
foundation before advancing to the citizenship class.
Her reply: "They say they have
no time."
How odd, I thought. Many
don’t work. And for those who do, classes are offered from
dawn to dusk five days a week.
The obstacle isn’t time.
The truth is that the
Mexican students have no interest in learning English—or in
becoming real Americans.
Joe Guzzardi [e-mail
him] is the Editor of VDARE.COM Letters to the Editor.
In addition, he is an English teacher at the Lodi Adult School and has
been writing
a weekly newspaper column since 1988. This column is exclusive
to
VDARE.COM. |