The Latino Wave: How Hispanics Will Elect the Next American President

The Latino Wave: How Hispanics Will Elect the Next American President - Jorge Ramos Another one of the books I read in early 2005. The following are notes about the book from my journal: >>According to the author, "this book's central argument is that Latinos are changing this country in many significant ways" (226). When the book was advertised, it was billed as a book about how Latinos will elect the next President of the U.S. And he does address that using the example of the 2000 Election and the techniques Republicans used to court the Latino vote. But this book is about so much more. One way to look at this book is as a primer about Latinos in the U.S. The author does an excellent job of highlighting our differences and yet showing what traits and issues we share in common. Issues like education and poverty are issues we all share. The book also explains and illustrates the benefits of immigration, especially the economic contributions that immigrants, legal and illegal, make to the U.S., even illustrating how more often than not those immigrants give more to the U.S. than they get, no matter what the racist anti-immigrants say. They probably should read this book and think a bit, but odds are they won't since railing against immigrants is easier than fixing problems and dealing with the issues. The U.S. has a pattern of often using immigrants as scapegoats. But, as Ramos argues, the Latino Wave is here, and it is inevitable. By 2059, whites will no longer be the majority. And most interesting is that while America (the U.S.) is getting "latinized," Latinos are getting "americanized" as well, even as they preserve their culture. Many second and third generation immigrants do not speak Spanish, yet they are proud Latinos. Just one example that things are not simple, but rather diverse. We should embrace this diversity, why can't others see it?Overall, this is for me a highly recommended book. Anyone wanting to learn more about Latinos in the U.S. without some stuffy academic text should read this.