Posts Tagged ‘United States’

Manipulating minorities is not the American way to promote your public policy position

Guest post by Jorge Bauermeister, owner and blogger of Latino Internet Justice

Jorge Bauermeiter

Jorge Bauermeister

I really could not believe it. The same organization that has called net neutrality the civil rights issue of the new century has created a strategy to take advantage of the minorities it claims to protect. The New York Times and The Hill, reported that advocacy group Free Press and the Pacific Foundation joined forces with the Harmony Institute to develop a report on how to change our minds on net neutrality… at the movies.

After overcoming the initial shock, and coming to terms with the fact that Free Press had actually paid for a report that suggests people can be persuaded to support their own version of net neutrality I dove in for the details.

(more…)

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The future of Latino culture: Will it survive?

This Youtube video, by the cultural marketing group GlobalHue, is a brief discussion about the future of Latino culture in the United States. The children of those parents and grandparents who have immigrated here to the United States are between two worlds. One world is their cultural heritage of their parents and grandparents and the world that they have been raised in, the United States. It seems that the young generation does not have that anchor to their past and so they grow up without the full knowledge of their language and heritage. My thoughts turn to the Cubans who, though they love their country very much, struggled to make it to the United States for a better life for themselves and their children and children’s children. If Cuba’s government improves for the better and allows those who have escaped back in, will today’s Cuban-American children find it a culture shock if given the chance to go back to the island of their parents’ and grandparents’? I’m sure they have read about it in books, watched it on television or have been told by their older family members throughout their lives, but to actually experience it in person will be totally different. (more…)

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A brief Hispanic history

During the early 16th century, Spain and Portugal began to colonize the Western Hemisphere of what is today North & South America. In order to cultivate the land for agricultural production & commerce, the colonizers began to enslave the conquered the Ameri-Indians and use them for labor. However, this proved inefficient because the Ameri-Indians were not accustomed to being under the hot sun and enduring such harsh physical labor so colonizers began bringing slaves from Africa to improve agricultural business.

A large majority of Africans were shipped to Brazil, the Caribbean such as Puerto Rico and Cuba and near the coast of Central and South America. With these 3 ethnic groups now permanently established in the “New World” the people began to intermingle within the colonial society, creating groups and subgroups within a caste system, a system that describes each particular ethnic group according to their social status in society. Hispanics began to identify themselves according to their rich tradition, culture, history, and food, all originating from 3 distinct societies merging together.

The Three Major Groups in Hispanic Society

Iberian: Those originating from Spain & Portugal.

Ameri-Indian: Those originating from Native Americans such as the Tainos, Aztecs, and Mayans.

Africans: Those originating from Africa. Ethnic subgroups emerged from intermingling:
Afro-Cuban
Afro-Caribbean
Afro-Brazilian
Afro-Panamanian

When marketing to a particular Hispanic ethnic group you must also study the geography in relation to which ethnic population resides according from the largest to the smallest number of groups within a local area. Hispanics tend to gather around major urban areas. This allow Hispanics to maintain their language and culture because they’re in close proximity to other individuals that share ethnic characteristics.

Hispanics also group themselves according to their country of origin. For example, Mexicans live in the Southwest such as Texas, Cubans tend to reside in Florida and Puerto Ricans and Dominicans largely populate Puerto Rico.

I managed to find an example of a illustration of a typical caste system in early Spanish colonial times. The caste system in a way acts like a status report for the Spanish monarchy on how the colonies are doing.

Caste System

Caste System

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