September 3rd, 2008
Mexican Bashing Goes Bipartisan
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September 2nd, 2008
The Myth of Widespread Noncitizen Voting
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August 29th, 2008
Is this the English we should be learning?
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There is a small segment of the American population that occupies the "fringe" of American political debate. They care little for reasoned debate or civil discourse. They advocate hate - and sometimes violence - toward certain religious, ethnic, or racial groups. Everyone knows that they exist but would rather not acknowledge their presence as an active political voice in America.
When it comes to immigration reform, however, they no longer are relegated to the fringe. The rhetoric of hate groups, nativists, and vigilantes has taken over the lexicon of the public debate; their policy positions frame the country's political discourse, and their members have infiltrated the media as well as the ranks of those seeking to lead our country. In short, hate and extremists are defining the debate on immigration - and the portrayal of Hispanic Americans - at every level.
The time has come to take hate out of the debate. Immigration is a serious issue requiring a reasoned and thoughtful debate.
This website:
The National Council of La Raza (NCLR), which hosts this site, believes strongly in the values of this nation, in pluralism, and the ability of every American to share in the rights and responsibilities of this great country. We believe that hate speech is un-American and undermines the strength and integrity of our country.
NCLR is calling on presidential candidates and elected officials at the national, state, and local levels to:
Hate speech should have no place in the discussion of public policy at any level of government.
NCLR is also challenging the nation’s media to: