Anti-Hispanic Hatred Spreads on Talk
Radio
PHOENIX (By Brian Alexander, MSNBC
)
May 7, 2009
— “No contact
anywhere with an illegal alien!”
conservative talk show host Michael
Savage advised his U.S. listeners
this week on how to avoid the swine
flu. “And that starts in the
restaurants" where he said, you
“don’t know if they wipe their
behinds with their hands!”
And Thursday, Boston talk radio host
Jay Severin was suspended after
calling Mexican immigrants "criminalians"
during a discussion of swine flu and
saying emergency rooms had become
"essentially condos for Mexicans."
That’s tepid compared to some of the
xenophobic reactions spreading like
an emerging virus across the
Internet. “This disgusting blight is
because MEXICANS ARE PIGS!” an
anonymous poster ranted on the
“prison planet” forum, part of radio
host and columnist Alex Jones’ Web
site.
There is even talk of conspiracy.
Savage speculated terrorists are
using Mexican immigrants as walking
germ warfare weapons. “It would be
easy,” he said, “to bring an altered
virus into Mexico, put it in the
general population, and have them
march across the border.”
As more than 140 cases of H1N1
virus, known as swine flu, have been
confirmed across the United States —
from San Diego to New York City —
the growing public health concern
has also exposed fear and hate.
Fear and blame are counterproductive
and even dangerous in any disease
outbreak because the more
stigmatized any group feels, the
more reluctant people in that group
may be to seek medical care. That
only helps propagate the disease.
The attempt to scapegoat Mexicans,
immigrants and Hispanic Americans is
no surprise to Latino rights groups,
who are now mobilizing a
countereffort.
‘Ignorant beyond the pale’
Angelica Salas, executive director of
the Coalition for Humane Immigrant
Rights of Los Angeles, called such
comments “racist and ignorant beyond the
pale … these so-called commentators
shame themselves turning public health
concerns into an immigrant bashing
fest.”
“What we have seen is that the
anti-immigrant groups are using this to
shamelessly to promote their agenda,”
said Liany Arroyo, director of the
Institute for Hispanic Health at the
National Council of La Raza.
While the war of words is mainly between
the conservative commentariat and Latino
advocacy groups, individual
Mexican-Americas are beginning to worry.
“Our people are calling us and they are
concerned,” said Florencia Velasco
Fortner, chief executive officer of
Dallas Consilio of Hispanic
Organizations, an umbrella of affiliated
service groups. “Even our staff members
are starting to get a little
discouraged. There was anti-immigrant
sentiment prior to this and this adds
fuel to the fire.”
The Consilio has mounted its own
education campaign to teach Dallas-area
Hispanic audiences proper disease
prevention and hygiene techniques.
Because many are uninsured and may avoid
seeking medical care, the Consilio is
also helping them find non-profit
clinics and encouraging them to visit
these immediately if they develop
symptoms rather than waiting until they
are severely ill.
As swine flu fears have spread, the
backlash has also affected some Mexican
restaurants’ business, possibly fueled
by disparaging comments like those of
Savage questioning the hygiene of
workers.
Jennifer Pesqueira, whose family has
owned and operated El Indio Mexican
restaurants in San Diego since 1940,
said her business has seen a 20 percent
drop in business since the outbreak
began.
Activist groups have advised their
communities to be aware and on guard.
“Board members put an alert out,” said
Jan Hanvik, executive director of
Clemente Soto Velez Cultural and
Educational Center in New York. “It was
a heads up, saying ‘pay attention.’ ”
Blaming ‘the other'
Fear mongering and blame are almost a
natural part of infectious disease
epidemics, experts say.
“This is a pattern we see again and
again,” said Amy Fairchild, chair of
sociomedical sciences at Columbia
University's Mailman School of Public
Health in New York City. “It’s ‘the
other,’ the group not seen as part of
the nation, the one who threatens it in
some way that gets blamed for the
disease.”
Often, a disease outbreak is an excuse
to vent pre-existing prejudices. “It’s
fear of people we do not know or who
look different,” said Dr. Howard Markel,
a medical historian at the University of
Michigan and author of “When Germs
Travel: Six Major Epidemics That Have
Invaded America Since 1900 and the Fears
They Have Unleashed.” “You take the fear
of the unknown that already exists and
then combine that with a real or
perceived threat that is contagious
disease and it’s explosive.”
During the medieval Black Plague,
Europeans blamed Jews, saying they
poisoned the wells. In an 1892 cholera
pandemic, the U.S. blamed immigrant
European Jews. In the flu of 1918,
Markel said, “Italians blamed the
Spanish. The Spanish blamed the
Italians. For HIV it was gay men and
Haitians.”
Americans “have a history of trying to
keep ourselves ‘pure,’ ” Fairchild
explained. “You saw it after the Civil
War when slaves were denied citizenship,
in the late 19th and early 20th
centuries when we were alarmed over
southern and eastern European
immigrants. There were fears that they
would pollute America’s germ plasm, make
us a weak nation of imbeciles.”
Americans have time and again responded
to emergencies by clamoring to shut the
borders and pull up the bridges.
“I’ve blogged for years about the spread
of contagious diseases from around the
world into the U.S. as a result of
uncontrolled immigration,” conservative
columnist Michelle Malkin wrote on her
Web site. “9/11 didn’t convince the
open-borders zealots to put down their
race cards and confront reality. Maybe
the threat of their sons or daughters
contracting a deadly virus spread from
south of the border to their Manhattan
prep schools will.” (The cluster of New
York school students who first
contracted H1N1 brought the virus back
from Mexico. The school is in Queens.)
“People who do not really know anything
are creating ideas that don’t really
exist,” said Sergio Ornelas, owner of a
bi-national publishing and advertising
business in El Paso. “I am worried these
kinds of articles and comments might
create panic.”
Fighting racism with information
Blame-the-victim reactions can be fought
with clear, accurate information about
the disease and about how it is
spreading, said Dr. Larry Kline, a San
Diego physician and member of the United
States-Mexico Border Health Commission.
“People get snippets of information here
and there, and unfortunately much of it
is inaccurate. That makes things ripe
for blame and blame and fear never
helped anybody.”
Tamping down blame and fear isn’t just
the right thing to do morally, experts
agree, it’s also the right thing to do
medically. Germs, Markel stressed, don’t
care about skin color or national
origins or borders.
“These are naturally occurring events,”
he said. “We expect flu pandemics every
30 to 40 years. It’s the cost of living
in a world of emerging infectious
diseases. That’s the folly of prejudice.
They are wherever humans are.”