Fusion (Opinion)
By Jorge Ramos
June 23, 2015
When he announced
that he was officially entering the 2016 presidential race, Donald Trump
won a different contest altogether by becoming the Hispanic community’s
most hated man. He dethroned the likes of
Joe Arpaio – the staunchly anti-immigrant Arizona sheriff who has been
accused of racial profiling – and even conservative author Ann Coulter,
who recently declared that Mexican immigrants are as dangerous as
Islamic State jihadis.
“When Mexico sends
its people [to the U.S.],” Trump said at his campaign announcement last
week in New York, “they’re not sending their best … They’re sending
people that have lots of problems, and they’re
bringing those problems with us. They’re bringing drugs. They are
bringing crime. They’re rapists. And some, I assume, are good people.”
Trump’s
characterization of undocumented immigrants is, of course, absurd. Not
only do the facts, well, trump his assertions, but his prejudiced views
demonstrate a deep ignorance about Mexican immigrants
in the United States. According to the Pew Research Center, about 33.7
million people of Mexican origin lived in the United States in 2012. And
the vast majority who reside here today are not, as the billionaire
real estate mogul suggested, drug dealers and
rapists. On the contrary, most immigrants are here to work. In fact,
about 570,000 businesses owned by Mexican immigrants in the United
States generate more than $17 billion every year, according to data from
the Mexican government.
Additionally,
immigrants from Mexico not only harvest the food that Trump eats, they
have helped build his hotels and apartment buildings in the U.S. They
contribute to his net worth, which he says is about
$8 billion. Like millions of other Americans, Trump profits greatly
from the labor of Mexicans. Yet he feels it necessary to attack them.
I have visited
Trump’s National Doral Miami Hotel and the Trump International Hotel and
Tower in New York in recent months. Many of the wonderful workers who
took care of me at these establishments were,
indeed, from Mexico. So why does Trump speak so hatefully about them?
Those familiar with
Trump’s popular TV show “The Apprentice” know that he likes to send
contestants on challenges, then “fire” the ones who fail. I’d like to
propose one for him: Trump should go a single
day without Mexican employees. I have no doubt that his business
interests would grind to a halt and his empire would be paralyzed.
Furthermore, it’s
incredible that a businessman like Trump doesn’t understand the
importance of Mexican-Americans, who represent about 65% of the Hispanic
population. Overall, Hispanic consumers in the U.S.
make up a market worth more than $1.2 trillion a year. It seems that
Trump needs some lessons in history and economics. Or at the very least
he should take a tour of the kitchens, basements and service elevators
at his own hotels.
In his speech,
Trump also floated the ridiculous notion of sealing the 1,900-mile
southern border with Mexico in order to curb the influx of undocumented
immigrants crossing into the U.S. “I would build a
great wall,” he said, “and nobody builds walls better than me.” That
would be a waste of time and money, since almost 40% of undocumented
immigrants arrive by plane and overstay their visas. No wall built by
Trump can stop that. And let’s not forget that the
number of undocumented Mexicans arrested at the southern border has
dropped from 1.6 million in 2000 to 229,999 in 2014 – the lowest number
in four decades, according to Pew.
Additionally, when
Trump criticizes Mexicans, he is forgetting that many immigrants from
there have given their lives fighting for the U.S. on the battlefields
of Iraq and Afghanistan. Just look at the lists
of fallen troops; they are full of Hispanic names. To Trump they may be
criminals, but to the rest of us they are heroes.
Sadly, Trump is
unaware of how much his words matter. When a presidential candidate uses
such a public platform to spout hatred against an ethnic group, other
people may follow his lead or, worse, be moved
to violence. Even more worrisome is the fact that other presidential
hopefuls have, for the most part, kept silent about Trump’s venomous and
ignorant comments. The silence was as painful as his words.
Trump thought that
he’d gain some political points with his prejudiced statements, but he
was wrong. He has lost the Latino vote and, hence, the White House. Mr.
Trump: You’re fired.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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