Mexican people

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    “Introduction” and “What Is So Different about Mexican Immigration?” Victor Hanson’s presents his historian viewpoint of California's immigration issue in “What is So Different about Mexican Immigration.” Hanson goes into depth on how Mexican immigration into the United States has changed over the course of a century and how it is different than other countries immigration. . He supports his argument with four key points that explain his viewpoint and how Mexican Immigration is different from…

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    A few degrading words that people use when referring to Mexicans are; Wetback, Spic, and Beaner, whether American or not. They also have many stereotypes against them such as lazy, machismos, drunks and many more. One of the main reasons they are discriminated against is because of their illegal immigration into the United States. Mexicans were left no choice but to cross illegally to seek a better life, because of the cost and many obstacles it made it difficult to become a citizen. Often…

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    1. Interview After having an interesting interview with Vanessa Hernandez, a Mexican student at Durham Tech in the library on October 20th, I understood more about the culture as well as food of Mexican people. First, when we were talking about Mexican culture, I realized that Mexican culture and Vietnamese culture have some common values. Vanessa was born in Michivacan, Mexico. When she talked about most of the population in her hometown were Christian, I was thinking about the movie “Conquest…

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    Demographic Summary

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    issues that Mexican immigrants are presumed to be an “ethnically homogenous population” (Fox and Salgado pg1). The authors’s that the Mexican immigrant population is not only becoming more “geographically diverse, but also “increasingly multi-ethnic” (Fox and Salgado pg1). Many of the authors’s sub-claims connect economical, political, and social reason to why indigenous Mexicans are becoming their own ethnic group. For example, one of their sub-claims dispute that indigenous Mexicans have a…

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    “What 's gone on is still going on” (Professor Ambruster, lecture Oct. 6, 2014). History repeats itself over the years in different circ The Mexican lower-class society has gained rights throughout the years. The Mexican Constitution of 1824 was an almost perfect document where the people were given rights and they gained free elections. Even though this document was established, the promises were not actually put to practice. The population found itself in the same problems that had existed…

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    Transnationalism In Mexico

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    the films created by Mexican directors and the movie’s journey across political boarders. These…

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    all african americans and white people have the same cultural. I Am Mexican, born in the united states but, i have been in Mexico most of my life.I miss one of the main parts of my culture, my language. My first language is spanish, there is a lot of different type of spanish. Mine is Mexican spanish.I had to learn English to be able to defend myself in the United States.I hate that English is not my first language, sometimes people don't understand me.The only people I talk to in Spanish are…

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    He critiques those who have fears of a Mexican invasion by invoking immigration, the fertility of Latinas, and repopulation. Although Mexicans have been the primary focus of this discrimination, Chavez indicates that it also includes people from Latin America in general. He agrees that Latinos are different from past immigrants, primarily because they have been part of the United States since…

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    Let me start off with some background information for those of you who do not know what a “Zoot Suiter” is and how they came about. “Zoot Suiters” were often belonging to Mexican American Culture and often times were young in age, most under 25 years of age. These individuals were famously known for wearing a unique style of clothing, hence the name Zoot suit, and were usually found in groups. This movement in style and culture originated in East L.A. and rapidly spread into Hollywood and onto…

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    second-generation Mexican American who has defied odds in the eyes of many people. How so? Compared to other races, Mexican Americans have been the least educated in the United States. An exuberant 47.3 percent of Mexican Americans compared to the 23 percent of African Americans, 15.2 percent of Asians, and 13.7 percent of Caucasians did not graduate high school in 2008. The statistics are overwhelming. The alarming distinction has caused scholars and policy makers to doubt if Mexican Americans…

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