“His Panic: Why
Americans Fear Hispanics in the U.S.”
by Geraldo Rivera
c.2008,
Celebra / Penguin USA • $24.95 • 262 pages
Almost
122 years ago, the nation of France gave America a very large gift. At the bottom of the gift, a plaque
immortalizes the words of Emma Lazarus: “Give me your
tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free…”
But
now a wall is going up to our south.
Bilingualism has a backlash.
Membership in racist groups is rising. Some argue that illegal
immigrants should be “rounded up and sent back.”
Others
aren’t so nice.
Why
is illegal immigration such a hot topic in America today? In the new book “His Panic: Why Americans
Fear Hispanics in the U.S.” by Geraldo Rivera, you’ll see that it’s a mucho grande problema.
Born
in New York to a Puerto Rican father and a Jewish mother, Geraldo Rivera has
seen his share of racism. In this book,
writing as an Hispanic man, he examines the issues of
race, illegal immigration, and American opinions.
Americans,
Rivera says, are afraid that their identity will be changed if Hispanics are
allowed to immigrate with impunity, meaning that Latino culture will overtake
“American” ways. He says we’re afraid
we’ll become a nation of people who don’t speak English. Some are concerned
about terrorism, increased crime, and disease. Others think Mexican mothers are
coming here for the sole reason of “dropping anchor” for the free health care
their newborn American citizen would get.
Rivera
counters all these arguments with facts and statistics. Hispanic culture, food, and language has only enriched our country. Most second-generation
immigrants speak fluent English, and few third-generation Mexicans in America
speak the language of their grandparents.
Hispanics don’t like crime any more than anybody else. And the truth about “anchor babies” is that
their mothers work hard to stay here with their American-born children, paying
into a Social Security system they’ll never have the right to tap.
While
much of “His Panic” is sound journalism and includes hard data from several
authentic sources, I couldn’t help but believe that author Geraldo Rivera was
up to his usual newsmaking tricks. He’s flippant and dismissive, dropping names
with the wave of a pen, and his narrative smacks of stirring the pot and
inciting more panic.
Do
Americans “fear” Hispanics? In reading
this book, I didn’t think so. Rivera
makes sense on many levels, but from the venom in the e-mail examples he cites
and from other examples he offers, it appears to me that Americans who “fear”
Hispanics “fear” immigrants, period.
It’s been happening since the Pilgrims stepped onto the continent. Rivera even says it himself when he pokes fun
at the idea of fencing the Canadian border, and when he recalls the anti-Irish
signs and anti-Catholic attitudes in America in the early part of the last
century and before.
This
is a thought-provoking book, yet I can’t help but think someone more neutral
should’ve co-authored it, to balance Rivera’s backhandedness. Yes, “His Panic” will open the floodgates to
more dialogue on the issue of immigration.
I fear it will also muddy the waters further.