The Guardian (Op-Ed)
By Tina Vasquez
September 10, 2015
Donald
Trump’s hate speech against Latinos seems to be emboldening white
Americans’ racism. For many, it may be hard to wrap their minds around
the fact that that a reality
TV star and failed businessman who characterized Mexican immigrants as
the “most unwanted people,” calling them “criminals, drug dealers,” and
“rapists”, was not only running for president, but is now polling well.
I can’t say I’m surprised.
A
couple of weeks ago, while I was running errands in my neighborhood, a
stranger asked me if I was “illegal”. Around 10 minutes earlier another
stranger asked me if I
spoke English. Both were white and one of them even called me
“senorita.” Then, late last week, I was standing in line to use the ATM
when a white man approached me cautiously, asking if I spoke English. He
was lost and said he didn’t want to be in a “bad
area” longer than he needed to. He was holding a King Taco cup in his
hand. I’ve seen white guys like him at the neighborhood taco spot. Stay
for the tacos, leave before you have to interact with Mexicans who
aren’t serving you.
This
is the world Trump wants when he says he’s going to “make America great
again.” It’s the America of 1950s TV shows, where people of color don’t
exist in the lives
of white Americans unless they’re being served or entertained by them.
This appears to be a world longed for by many, as a recent poll found
that 47% of white Americans look upon Trump “favorably.”
I’ve
lived in Los Angeles for 29 of my 30 years. As a light-skinned,
biracial Latina in one of the most diverse and Mexican-centric cities in
the nation, I have never
been asked the type of questions I’m now fielding from white people.
I’m not the only one experiencing an uptick in seemingly out-of-the-blue
racist exchanges. Latina journalist Aura Bogado recently tweeted about a
strange interaction at a grocery store. My
father recently told me a white neighbor he’s been friendly with since
moving into the neighborhood 15 years ago, casually inquired about his
citizenship status. As the days go on, I hear more of these kinds of
stories from Latino friends and family members.
White
Americans can argue Trump is the all-American underdog, the anti-PC,
shoot-from-the-hip politician they’ve been waiting for; that their
support stems from an appreciation
for someone willing to stand up for everything that once made America
“great.” Yes, Trump is unabashedly American – in the way that racism and
xenophobia are as American as apple pie. His demonization,
dehumanization and push to further criminalize undocumented
immigrants while having utilized their labor to build Trump Tower is
also painfully American.
We’re
seeing headlines from both conservative and liberal news sources,
seemingly confused by Trump’s popularity and polling numbers. “Why is
Trump so popular?” “Why do
people support Donald Trump?” “Trump can’t actually win, can he?” He
can win, and it’s because he’s utilizing a very dangerous tactic: he’s
preying on white Americans’ fear of “the other.” In this case, the
“other” is Mexican immigrants, who are here to take
Americans’ jobs, sell their children drugs, and rape the white women in
their lives.
Strangely,
Trump is the only presidential candidate willing to discuss race
head-on, but he’s approaching the subject by doing nothing more than
tapping into Americans’
fears of “the end of white America,” when ethnic and racial minorities
will comprise a majority of the US population. While it’s true that
demographics are shifting, focusing on immigration is a lazy tactic,
even while immigration flows are falling to their
lowest level in at least two decades.
When
media fails to call Trump’s “rants” what they truly are – hate speech –
we move toward normalizing his racism and xenophobia, which emboldens
others to behave similarly.
As long as Trump has a platform and a microphone, people of color will
be put in harm’s way. That can take the form of the type of racist
interactions I’m experiencing – or violence.
When
white brothers, Scott and Steve Leader, beat and urinated on a
58-year-old homeless Mexican man last month, they cited Trump as the
reason why they did it. “Trump
was right” about “deporting all these illegals”, they said. Trump
responded by saying he would never “condone violence.” But when will
Trump take responsibility for breeding hatred? And when will society –
and the media – call Trump exactly what he is: a racist?
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