Column of the Americas: Census pushes for Indian removal
Saturday, January 22, 2005 at 06:27PM
TheSpook
Years of U.S. governmental assimilationist policies have succeeded in
convincing about half of all the people within the ''Latino/Hispanic''
Census category to see themselves racially as white. Now, for the 2010
census, the U.S. Census Bureau wants the other half. On its face,
this move to eliminate the ''other race'' category appears to be
neutral. Yet if the bureau gets its way, by 2010, the people within the
category of Latino/Hispanic will essentially become a subcategory of
''white.'' The bureau should not prevail. And it probably won't,
because Rep. Jose Serrano, D-N.Y., has blocked the bureau's move to
eliminate the ''other race'' option through language in the recent
omnibus bill. However, keeping ''other race'' is not a solution either,
but is the problem. The bureau's perceived problem is of its own
making. About 97 percent of all those who checked the ''other race''
category (10 million and 15 million in 1990 and 2000, respectively) are
Latinos/Hispanics. The bureau has long believed that those who
exercise this option are racially confused. Thus, without their
consent, it has traditionally re-categorized virtually all of them into
the white category. The bureau's 2010 proposal would have the same
funnel effect of corralling them into the white category because they
don't perceive the other categories as being designed for them. It's a
bureaucratic way to arrest the browning of the nation. Anyone who
reads a biology book knows that racial categories are unscientific. But
if we play along with the bureau's fiction of forcing everyone into
black/white/Asian and American Indian categories, what's undeniable is
that the vast majority of Latinos/Hispanics are not white. Those who
choose the ''other race'' category have long been sending out this
message. [more]
Article originally appeared on (http://brownwatch.com/).
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