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Arizona Bans Ethnic Studies (Also, Reason and Justice)
While much condemnation has rightly been expressed toward Arizona's anti-immigrant law, SB 1070, a less-reported and potentially more insidious measure is set to take effect on January 1, 2011. This new law, which was passed by the conservative state legislature at the behest of then-School Superintendent (and now Attorney General-elect) Tom Horne, is designated as HB 2281 and is colloquially referred to as a measure to ban Ethnic Studies programs in the state. As with SB 1070, the implications of this law are problematic, wide-ranging, and decidedly hate-filled.
Whereas SB 1070 focused primarily on the ostensible control of bodies, HB 2281 is predominantly about controlling minds. In this sense, it is the software counterpart of Arizona's race-based politicking, paired with the hardware embodied in SB 1070's "show us your papers" logic of "attrition through enforcement" that has already resulted in tens of thousands of people leaving the state. With HB 2281, the intention is not so much to expel or harass as it is to inculcate a deep-seated second-class status by denying people the right to explore their own histories and cultures. It is, in effect, about the eradication of ethnic identity among young people in the state's already-floundering school system which now ranks near the bottom in the nation.
There's a word for what Arizona is attempting to do here: ethnocide. It is similar to genocide in its scope, but it reflects the notion that it is an ethnic and/or cultural identity under assault more so than physical bodies themselves. By imposing a curriculum that forbids the exploration of divergent cultures while propping up the dominant one, there's another process at work here, what we might call ethnonormativity. This takes the teachings of one culture - the colonizer's - and makes it the standard version of history while literally banning other accounts, turning the master narrative into the "normal" one and further denigrating marginalized perspectives. America's racialized past abounds with such examples of oppressed people being denied their languages, histories, and cultures, including through enforced indoctrination in school systems.
As if to add insult to injury, HB 2281 barely makes a pretense to hide any of this in its language and intended scope. A close reading of the law lays bare some of the more stark and disconcerting aspects of its potential application in a state where Hispanic students fill nearly half the seats in the public schools (the domain to which HB 2281 will apply). In particular, there are three primary aspects of the law that merit further investigation as contributing factors to the ongoing erasure of ethnic identities and the further marginalization of people of color in Arizona.
First, there is the perverse Declaration of Policy preamble, in which the legislature expresses its intention that pupils "should be taught to treat and value each other as individuals" and likewise "not be taught to resent or hate other races or classes of people." The irony here is palpable, since SB 1070 precisely singles out "races or classes of people" in its coded language requiring police to demand legal papers from anyone who is deemed "reasonably suspicious" of being undocumented - which in the southwest obviously correlates with skin color and ethnic origin. Moreover, HB 2281 itself was aimed specifically at abolishing the Raza Studies program in Tucson (as well as all Ethnic Studies programs statewide), which translates literally to "race" as noted in the working definition adopted by the program at San Francisco State University:
"The term Raza literally means race or colloquially, the people. The term figuratively has reference to the Spanish conquest of the indigenous Indians of Mexico and the resulting mestizaje or the mixed racial and ethnic identity of indigenous, European and African heritage unique to the Americas. In practical usage, the term Raza refers to mestizos or mixed peoples; we have the blood of the conquered and conqueror, indigenous, (i.e., Aztec, Mayan, Olmec, Yaqui, Zapotec and numerous other Native Americans), European, African, and Asian. The term Raza was popularized by Mexican educator, Jose Vasconcellos who wrote about La Raza Cosmica to inclusively refer to a new ‘race' of people born out of the neo-Columbian New World."
In this sense, we come to perceive the aim of banning Ethnic Studies as an attempt to single out the histories and cultures of certain people based expressly on race and class. While the Arizona legislature states its intention to prevent resentment and hatred of others, the new law fosters precisely that, and in denying people their histories further encourages self-hatred as well. Indeed, people kept from knowing where they come from have a difficult time knowing where they are going, creating a self-fulfilling downward spiral that is common where people are categorized and labeled as "other" and/or "lesser" vis-à-vis the dominant norm. As such, we see that HB 2281 actually violates its own provisions by promoting that which it claims to eliminate.
The second critical aspect concerns the law's main prohibitions against any education programs that (1) "promote the overthrow of the United States government," (2) "promote resentment toward a race or class of people," (3) "are designed primarily for pupils of a particular ethnic group," and (4) "advocate ethnic solidarity instead of the treatment of pupils as individuals." The problems here are manifest, starting with the reflexively implicit link to terrorism contained in the first provision - as if to say that ethnic solidarity is somehow akin to attempting to overthrow the government. The third provision is even more problematic in its potential implications, since a plausible argument can be made that the entire mainstream public education curriculum is precisely designed for pupils of a particular ethnic group - namely the dominant, white, Eurocentric group that defines its history and worldview as the "normal" or "standard" ones against which subaltern perspectives are to be judged as deviant and, under HB 2281, banned.
The fourth provision does double duty in prioritizing individualism over group-centric processes, reflecting another deeply-rooted cultural bias and projecting it back as the norm. The libertarian and individualistic foundations of Western culture are viewed as iconic in Arizona, and it is no coincidence that the more communitarian impulses of Raza peoples are denigrated as politically dangerous and pedagogically bereft. Again, the worldview of the oppressor is normalized in its rugged individualism, and attempts to break down any movement toward solidarity and unified action among people of the disfavored class. This also expresses contemptuous judgment toward solidarity-based movements grown in the Western world, including the rise of union organizing, anti-globalization and anti-war activism, and the mobilizations of people against totalitarianism in the Eastern bloc nations. What the Arizona legislature completely fails to grasp is that individual identity arises out of cultural consciousness - in other words, that it is ethnic solidarity in itself that provides people with the grounding necessary to know who they are as individuals.
Finally, HB 2281 contains an exemption for teaching students about episodes such as the Holocaust, genocides, and "the historical oppression of a particular group of people based on ethnicity, race, or class." In essence, combined with the provisions noted above, this means that students of a particular group can be taught about their history of subjugation but not about their spirit of solidarity; they can focus on their decimation but not their emancipation. This sinister portion of the bill strives to reinforce pain at the expense of pride, encouraging young people to internalize the oppression delivered by the dominant culture and make it part of their self-consciousness as "other" in a world whose norms are built on the inherent superiority of the master class. Thus, the law seeks not only to prevent the teaching of histories and values that might empower marginalized people, but further endorses the transmission of destructive episodes and ideologies that can only serve to increase the group's collective disempowerment.
In all of these ways, HB 2281 is a potent example of legislative bigotry and open persecution of people based on factors such as race and class. As with SB 1070, HB 2281 is also self-violating in that it promotes precisely what it claims to prohibit, namely ethnic chauvinism and "resentment toward a race or class of people." Both of these laws - as well as similar ones in the offing being considered by the Arizona legislature - are entirely counterproductive and manifestly unjust. Confronting similar patterns of legislated intolerance and the widespread attempt to reduce a category of people to second-class status based primarily on ethnic origin, Martin Luther King, Jr. famously wrote in his landmark essay Letter from a Birmingham Jail, following the teachings of St. Augustine, that "an unjust law is no law at all." King further reminds us that "injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere," calling upon us to recognize the interlinked nature of destinies and, indeed, the inherent solidarity of our struggles, and further counsels that in this effort "one has a moral responsibility to disobey unjust laws."
Carrying the logic further, King articulates a framework for resistance that applies as much in Arizona today as it did in the South during the Jim Crow era:
"Any law that degrades human personality is unjust. All segregation statutes are unjust because segregation distorts the soul and damages the personality. It gives the segregator a false sense of superiority and the segregated a false sense of inferiority. Segregation, to use the terminology of the Jewish philosopher Martin Buber, substitutes an ‘I it' relationship for an ‘I thou' relationship and ends up relegating persons to the status of things. Hence segregation is not only politically, economically and sociologically unsound, it is morally wrong and sinful.... An unjust law is a code that a numerical or power majority group compels a minority group to obey but does not make binding on itself. This is difference made legal.... A law is unjust if it is inflicted on a minority that ... had no part in enacting or devising the law.... We should never forget that everything Adolf Hitler did in Germany was ‘legal' and everything the Hungarian freedom fighters did in Hungary was ‘illegal.'"
By denying marginalized peoples their own stories and understandings, HB 2281 likewise denies the "conquerors" the capacity to come to terms with the full implications of history, thus literally enabling the perpetuation of a state of "denial" that inhibits the development of necessary processes of atonement, accountability, and reconciliation. As with laws associated with segregationist and tyrannical regimes throughout history, HB 2281 and SB 1070 are inherently unjust, and hence are "no laws at all." They must be disobeyed, not out of spite or hatred, but more so to uplift the oppressors and the oppressed alike, as Paulo Freire has suggested. In this sense, solidarity transcends its narrow bounds, and the struggle itself is our finest education.
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105 Comments so far
Show AllAh, Arizona. My parents live there and I can't visit them because it's too hard stifling responses to the outrageous things that people who live there believe -- and say to you. They say it in such a way that there is no choice except to argue or agree.
The crackpot pseudofacts that come out of Arizona have an unfortunate way of leaking into the rest of the country.
In a similar way, I can't visit my fmily members in Virginia anyomre, except for a quick trip in and then back out.
But just about anywhere in the US, on ordinary conversation, bringing up the most nutty extreme-right viewpoints is met with expressions of agreement and nodding of heads - but if I dare attempt to epress disagreement and explain why, I get attacked for "bringing up politics".
So we on the left must bite out tongues and keep our mouths shut.
I would gladly leave this country if I could. I know I'd miss the good things, but there's so much more lately to despise. It really is starting to resemble 1930s Germany.
Actually, I have already left the United States (hence my moniker, "Americans Anonymous"), and am currently residing in the Czech Republic, but I still have my American citizenship, tho I'm not sure I want to retain it for that much longer.
Ironically, I left in January of 2000, hence before the coming of Bush the Younger and the terrorist attacks, and I left for reasons of employment (I teach English as a foreign language), but I would never come back to the Evil Empire now unless there was some kind of "regime change", which seems rather unlikely.
In your case, I would suggest that you write down a list of just what negative changes or incidents would prompt you to leave the United States, put the list under your pillow, and then consult it from time to time. Just like the proverbial frog in a pot of slowly boiling water, it's easy to "get accustomed" to the gradual erosion of our rights and freedoms in the US, but if you already have it in writing that you have promised yourself that you will leave if certain types of concrete events actually do occur, you're less likely to rationalize and to try to convince yourself that "it really isn't so bad", or that "it couldn't possibly get any worse", or some such thing. You can call it your "froggy list"!
I have already suggested this to my sisters who are still living in the US, so that they won't get "boiled" when the pot gets too hot;-)
Great post, and great advice, thanks.
In 1972 my brother and I went to Mexico for several months on a road trip, and I was sorely tempted not to come back if I could help it. If I had known the United States would take the path it's on I would still be in Mexico. I actually thought the "flower children" phenomenon would have an effect on the United States and lead it to a more equitable society. There are many things wrong with Mexico, and some horrible people there, but mostly we were met with wonderful hospitality by people who put family and friends first, who realized that living is what is important--not some goal of wealth and success. I know that there is a flow of people trying to get into the United States, but they are driven by extreme poverty and most of them don't plan to stay in the United States for ever. They just want to feed their families, not climb the gringo's ladder of success'.
In response to, "if you don't like it here, leave!" - I've always replied, "This is MY country and I'll stay here and fight for it... against internal enemies." But, every day it seems to be getting worse and worse.
Now, with Obama selling out this nation... running for president on a bed of LIES - the last knife to our brave hearts! The despair comes from not even being able to trust the Dems. (I know, I know). They can't speak out, or are terrified. (after all the right wing KILLS those who stand up to them - or stands between them and their PROFITS.) The Dems are completely impotent and can't or own't defend us against the psychopaths in the Senate... they act like they are the minority and bow and scrape... never daring to even WHISPER the TRUTH OUT LOUD.
OUR GOVERNMENT HAS GONE COMPLETELY INSANE. MAYBE IT IS TIME MANY OF US LEFT... EXCEPT WE WOULD LEAVE OUR LOVED ONES BEHIND... MAYBE IN THE PATH OF THE TANKS... (as in Tianaman Square).
"He who does not punish evil commands it." -- Leonardo da Vinci
If someone said "If you don't like it here, leave" in person to me in my face, my answer would be: Foot the bill for my ticket and a little bit for walking around money and I'm gone.
Well, Dave, better buy your ticket out now. You don't want to risk sailing in a leaky boat. I've got just the ticket for you, alls you need to do is send me a cash only envelope filled with a mere 50,000 Euros and I can guarantee that I'll be able to get you out of the Fascist States of America when the time comes. You can reach me at, just a sec, there's a knock at my door....
You can leave, you know. Just go to the airport or walk to the border crossing. That's more than you could have done in '30's Germany.
How ignorant. Leaving takes LOTS of planning. It is the most difficult decision concerning friends, family, roots, and PRACTICAL matters of survival. Clearly you have never gone through it.
I have a 93 year old bed ridden mother to care for. That's the main reason for not leaving. Plus all the things mentioned in the other post.
By the way, I have driven to Sasabe, a little border town about 20 miles from here as the crow flies. I crossed the border and was greeted by a nice, very attractive young man to wished me well and waved me on. The way back was a little different--45 minutes answering questions from an ugly, fat, obnoxious US guard who had my car searched thoroughly though there was nothing suspicious about me or the car. I think he was just bored. It's not a busy crossing.
And they are so abrupt: "I love Ronald Reagan!" as if to tell you that you are crazy and how dare you question their idols -- and don't dare give them any information or a whit of truth... They won't have it!
It's not just IGNORANCE.. IT'S WILLFUL IGNORANCE... AND DEFENSE OF THEIR IGNORANCE.
IT'S APPALLING! And frightening.
My parents live in VA and it is the same. Virginia is a pretty screwed up state too. My mother emigrated from China as a child, but you would think she was a 10th generation European descent. She is a rabid Fox viewer and has now decided she is "conservative" because she is afraid of those brown hordes at our southern border who are, in her opinion, bringing the country to ruin by stealing American jobs, forcing her to learn Spanish, sucking off the welfare teat and threatening her medicare benefits. In the same conversation she will condemn US policy to exclude Chinese immigrants and the anti-Chinese racist history in the US. It was wrong to close the borders to Chinese immigrants, but it's OK now to close the borders to Mexican immigrants. The hypocrisy is so palpable that I gag on it every time the topic comes up, yet she is completely convinced that she is being consistent and somehow not racist at all. She believes she is protecting America from outside invasion and those who would come here to take advantage of our social welfare programs, when in actuality all she cares about is protecting her own US government provided Medicare benefits. (maybe she should join the Tea Party). She even admitted that protecting her Medicare benefits were more important to her than providing unemployment benefits for her unemployed son (hypothetically unemployed thankfully for the sake of argument that particular day).
I even know naturalized citizens of Puerto Rico living in affluent Ridgewood, NJ who condemn Mexican immigrants as a danger to society, claiming they are prowling American high schools in gangs looking to rape white girls. The level of ignorance and anti-immigrant hate, even between Latin and Central Americans, is growing and any attempt to have a discussion on the subject is met with incredulous looks and condemnation as if I were supporting the mass murder, genocide, bestiality, and, heaven forbid, Socialism and/or Communism. I was even accused of being a Castro supporter because I starting giving off a scent of Socialism.
If it were not for the fact that I have two young children who split time between me and their mother from whom I am divorced, I would have already left this country. When the opportunity presents itself, I will be making plans to leave this sinking ship. Maybe I should move to Mexico to piss off my mother.
Republicans are the party of fear and we are a country living in fear. We will consume ourselves as well as our own young because we are afraid of our own shadows.
THis seems an argument for Multiculturalism which is puzzling. Multiculturalism is a failed theory being rejected even by its originators as we speak.
And at least be honest in your language... "Arizona's anti-immigrant law, SB 1070" This sentence identifies you as a liar and means trhat everything else you say is suspect. Arizona's law has nothing at all to do with "immigrants" it only address's "illegal immigrants" and the immorality of their criminal behavior.
Wha?
Ignorance is bliss, I guess. Oh, no, wait--that's what this is all about isn't it. Arizona's law has everything to do with the bigotry of mostly white, middle class anglos against hispanics--and lets throw in blacks and Native Americans while we are at it. And what's with this word 'multiculturalism'? Is that a bad thing, like 'socialism' or 'communism'? Who's lying here?
Arizona, you have a history of bigotry towards hispanics and with every law like SB1070 you pass you you are going to the dogs, and I don't mean los perros.
George Markley
Arivaca, AZ
ummm, sorry to disabuse you of your belief...
Multiculturalism has been working just fine in Canada for the last - some argue - 200 years. We've been living in a nation that merged the French and English (who'd been fighting each other since the Roman Empire collapsed in the west) in a peaceful federation. We've had some troubles expanding the concept since then, but most Canadians still seem to think multiculturalism works far better than trying to force everyone to become WASPs in some 'melting pot' rubbish.
yes, or oui. J'ai les ecouter. Or I've heard of them, they're not a new thing. The first version of them existed long before the 1840s when the people who lived in lower Canada joined in the revolutions demanding popular rule.
There have been English groups who also have protested against letting the French have any rights at all. The most famous of those groups was led by a rebellious arsehat named George Washington, and had some other rabble rousers who led a successful revolt south of the border.
My point was that in general we accept the best of the other cultures and try to accept them for who they are. Unless of course those beliefs would break the law, or cause disruption in the ideal of peace, order and good government. It's an ideal, but we've been doing it longer than anyone else has.
"Multiculturalism is a failed theory"
hogwash.
Earmite (that's a good one!) is one of those white guys who doesn't understand what the fuss is about with minorities. Everything is hunky dory in his opinion; in fact it would be even more hunky dory if we could go back to the 50s before minorities got all militant and multi-cultural.
Sorry earmite. Someday, very soon, you are no longer going to be in the majority. What are you going to do with your superiority complex then?
Numbers don't change a thing, vato.
Some cultures have values and achievement that have a distinct advantage over others in the modern world. The U.S. will merely have a Mexico within to which your ethnic studies students will , unfortunately, be bound.
I really don't know what they would even talk about in one of their ethnic classes. Here in New Mexico Hispanics like to distinguish themselves as Spaniard and openly act superior to the Mexicans. It's funny cause they're all mestizo. They in-fight like hell and get nabbed for such petty crap -theft, embezzlement, bribes. All scrabbling to be at the top of their little heap. All the stuff you here about down in Mexico. Despite the publicity the Latino "movement" receives most anglos shrug and just move along. Anglos don't need to compete with numbers.
Viva ethnic studies!
Down with life skills!
An easy "A" for certain students at taxpayers expense.
Greetings, read
And how is life at the top of YOUR little heap?
When your "centroamericanos" get here they buy bananas. Self-perpetuating, isn't it?
Multiculturalism has been shining out here in New York and in your state of Texas. SB 1070 looks very harsh to me. One day they'll say it's just the illegal ones and then the next day they could add some new "groupies" to the list.
"Arizona's law has nothing at all to do with "immigrants" it only address's "illegal immigrants" and the immorality of their criminal behavior."
Whoa dude ! Who's to say that all "illegal immigrants" are immoral? That myth is getting disproven with modern psychological and background tests and checkups.
Rubbish . Multiculturalism works fine in Canada. The First nations peoples are now teaching their own languages and histories in schools and I say GOOD on them!! Sending them to Residential schools to "erase their culture and make them into "Little white people" is a crime that will tar us for centuries.
So Mightymite. Am I to understand you supported the notion of "Residential Schools" where natives were beaten when they spoke their own language and were forced to abandon their own Cultural traditions.?
Is it your contention that a EVERYONE speaking English and having the same Culture as everyone else is a superior and preferable model?
And now "Illegal Immigrants" are "immoral"?
What do you call dropping DU Munitions on Fallujah?
I actually encourage latinos to speak Spanish. It can get them extra pay at the call-center.
And you should know.....
"Arizona's law has nothing at all to do with "immigrants" it only address's "illegal immigrants" and the immorality of their criminal behavior."
What criminal behavior? being an illegal immigrant? If their only crime is to come to this country to seek a better life but did not get the necessary papers, then I think many people living in this country are criminals. Your statement is asinine and only fuels the misconception and wild exaggeration that illegal immigrants are all criminals who are smuggling drugs, murdering good old Americans, burglarizing American homes and raping American girls. While there are criminal elements associated with any wave of immigration, it is false to say that all immigrants, illegal or otherwise, are criminals.
SB 1070 is 'anti-immigrant' because it singles out a particular immigrant group, Mexicans and other from Latin and Central America. I hardly think it possible that an illegal immigrant from the UK or other European country will be picked out for questioning based on their appearance as an "illegal immigrant".
Everything you say in your posts is suspect and disingenuous.
do an internet search on the 14 points of fascism...
it describes our country perfectly.
(it's too long to fit here)
Or even just the ten points made here by best-selling author Naomi Wolf in her documentary "The End of America" (based on her book of the same name) would suffice. I highly encourage everyone to watch this documentary, if you haven't already seen it.
http://www.snagfilms.com/films/title/the_end_of_america/
So, Arizona seems to be in a competition with Texas to produce the biggest idiocies. I wonder who'll really 'win'?
I'm afraid that if they complete the border fence it may block our escape route FROM Arizona some day... Fences work both ways.
One of Amster's best essays. In my view it's brilliant.
Thank you, CD for posting this one. I plan to save it.
"it is ethnic solidarity in itself that provides people with the grounding necessary to know who they are as individuals."
Not necessarily - it may still hold true for some, but we don't need the colour of our skin or the traces of our ancestors to know who we are.
Nor should we value the thoughts of those who judge us on these.
yes - you are.
3 CHEERS FOR VDB for capping rbtl !
"Still sore because I didn't accept your hypocritical apology, huh, kiddy-o?"
Hardly, I'm still laughing at you. Have another beer, skippy.
Your ad hominem attacks speak poorly of you. Get help.
"What you are preaching is assimilation and cultural genocide."
Here, too, you are wrong; I do not preach, merely comment and vainly attempt to amuse. I am well aware of the wonderful contributions various cultures throw into the mix and would never deny their continuance. What I state is that these heritages are but a formative part of who we are and who we can be, together.
(As a young immigrant kid in '50's LA I was flabbergasted to learn that this beautiful state was once a part of Mexico. We made piñatas and serapes and "celebrated" this heritage, but it was never explained to us how the transition was made. For a time I thought Zorro had liberated it. I returned to Europe in '71 - the madness drove me back.)
As for your Spanish land grants - more indefensible theft; although some may argue that, as the natives had no concept of land ownership, the land was never stolen.
It must hurt to carry around the racist bitterness you appear to be infected with, or does it define you?
perhaps you spend too much time reading between the lines - you gathered nothing from what I wrote.
as for genocide - my parents survived Hitler's camps.
but they had it real easy there, not being jews.
why did you bother reading it?
thank you
being tied too tightly to our past, or present, leaves us wallowing as pigs in comfortable filth, concerned about far too little, and unable to generate enough individual fortitude to acknowledge, question and redress the wrongs around, and within, us...
we can't even stop the illusion known as Coca-Santa-Cola, much less the reality of violent control of resources...
there comes a time when each person must stop being who they have come to believe themselves to be, based on heritage, or culture, or media input, and become who they truly are: individuals responsible for their own thoughts, actions and consequences regarding all aspects of this living planet...
I apologize if I transmogrified your direction, but I was inspired by your post...
thank you - your thoughts add and clarify.
It is the tribalism inherent in "ethnic solidarity" that I protest.
When I first read it I thought it said they were banning ethics studies, which is what they really should do so we can be done with all the hypocrisy of USA'ns saying this is an ethical country.
"Force without judgment will fall of its own weight." -- Horace
Unfortunately, as Chris Hedges has recently described, the university portion of the liberal establishment is now gutless, fragmented and moribund and will not speak out against this academic totalitarianism in sufficient numbers to do any good. Our over-extended empire has degenerated and snowballed beyond any coherent attempt at reform; beyond the control of the fools who've deluded themselves into thinking they can still steer this wanton monstrosity. It's locked into its own imperial death spiral and will crash and fall of its own weight regardless of how American politics play out.
Uh oh, I hope AZ doesn't ban interracial dating and marriages next !
I wouldn't put it past them.
Two facts hardly ever mentioned:
"White" is a skin color, not an ethnicity.
Most US whites are not ethnically English.
'of European origin' would work, and not have the name-calling value that 'gringo' has. Although, I might be wrong, aren't the Mexicans also descended from European stock? (ie, the Spanish, or if you want to use a racist term 'spics', or perhaps 'wops'. I never learned to use them correctly, so I might be wrong about which ethnic group is meant by what slur)
"Although, I might be wrong, aren't the Mexicans also descended from European stock?"
Correct.