Sandoval
Is
the Supreme Court about to require American
governments to function in foreign languages on
demand? Incredibly, it’s on the verge of doing just
that. This is not just a question of peppering stump
speeches with a few sentences of mindless, George P.
Bush-style, feel-good pandering.
As VDARE has repeatedly noted, “bilingualism” has
powerful public-choice
consequences: it advantages the minority and
dispossesses the majority. It’s the cutting edge of
the Abolition of America. Watch this space.
By Scott McConnell
Recovering
from the epic of the dimpled chads, the Supreme Court
on Tuesday, January 16, will hear Sandoval
v. Alexander, a much more significant case about
“Official English.” The ruling may reveal whether
the American future might still be that of an
ethnically diverse but culturally united country; or
instead one where substantial ethnic divisions are
hardened by mandated official multilingualism.
Martha
Sandoval is a fifty-year old Mexican woman with nine
children and a second grade education, who wanted to
drive rather than walk to her jobs in Mobile, Alabama.
Problem was, she couldn’t pass the driving test,
which in Alabama is given - following an Official
English statute passed ten years ago - only in
English.
After she
was arrested repeatedly for driving without a license,
the Southern Poverty Law Center and the American Civil
Liberties Union took up Sandoval’s case. She won
when a district court judge held that the English
requirement amounted to unlawful discrimination on the
basis of “national origin” - and thus a
violation of Title VI of the 1964 Civil Rights Act
(which of course says nothing about language.)
Her victory threatens the entire edifice of law
and custom pushing new immigrants to learn English.
Appealing
the district court's ruling is the Alabama
Department of Public Safety. Several English language
advocacy groups including Pro-English,
English First,
as well as the Center
for American Unity
(the sponsor of this website) have filed an amici curia brief, alongside several Republican Congressmen.
If
Sandoval’s attorneys prevail, the implications are
vast: anyone inconvenienced by the use of
“official” English will be able (or more
realistically, encouraged) to claim
“discrimination” under Title VI and sue for
damages. Official multilingualism is already widespread. The Clinton
administration has tried, as quietly as possible, to
widen its margins. Last August it issued an Executive
Order claiming that foreign language rights were a
civil right under Title VI. A court victory for
Sandoval would reinforce this bizarre claim, one which
could never pass Congress in broad daylight.
A growing
heap of legal cases over language bears witness to the
discord and unease over the nation’s accelerating
ethnic diversity. The silence of many conservative
Republicans (and of Dubya’s campaign) may be taken
as acknowledgement of the futility of the politically
safe “assimilation” position on immigration pushed
with so much fanfare by the establishment conservative
press a year or so ago.
What sort
of country will we become as we take in too many
immigrants to assimilate comfortably, then reduce even
further their incentive to make the effort?
One sign:
the case literature about “speak English in the
workplace” regulations (obviously on the endangered
list if Sandoval prevails) contains several references
to one of its little-known purposes: to deter
immigrant employees from hurling racial slurs at their
American colleagues in their native tongues. Perhaps
that is a problem to be dealt with by more expansive
“hate speech” statutes.
The
choices are clear and unavoidable: we can demonstrate
in word and deed that we expect immigrants to learn
English and assimilate (the anti-bilingual education
ballot initiatives organized by Ron
Unz may
be turning the tide in the right direction on that
question). Or we can pursue national deconstruction as
a fevered goal, seeking abjectly to accommodate
immigrants in their native tongues, urging them to sue
when we fall short.
How
interesting it would be to listen to the deliberations
at the Southern Poverty Law Center and like groups as
they beat the bushes for mediagenic plaintiffs and
lawsuits to file. A scant generation ago, the leading
lights of American liberalism talked naturally about
this country’s need to strengthen its common civic
culture - pointing to “fellowship, community,
shared patriotism” as “essential values of our civilization” (in the words of Bobby
Kennedy) and vital for America’s success.
For their
part, today’s multiculturalist liberals - from the
Clinton White House to the ACLU - have grabbed the
statutes of the civil rights movement in order to
twist them into a shape never intended or imagined,
and are using them to hammer away at the common
culture. Knowing that the English language once served
as a great unifier which helped the nation absorb a
huge mass of immigrants and turn them, eventually,
into Americans, they have now put Official English on
the chopping block. What can they be thinking?
Other
VDARE articles on bilingualism.
January 13, 2001