9 September 2007

Dems Debate In Spanish

The Democrats are holding a debate in Spanish, to signify how much they want to pander go the Hispanic vote.

Univision Goes Mainstream With Democratic Debate - Decision 2006 News Story - WTVJ | Miami
Univision Goes Mainstream With Democratic Debate

POSTED: 11:10 am EDT September 9, 2007

MIAMI — For the first time in a U.S. presidential campaign, candidates vying for the Democratic nomination will take part in a debate Sunday that will be broadcast across the U.S. in Spanish.

The event, held at the University of Miami and broadcast by the Univision Network, marks the Democratic candidates’ recognition of the growing political muscle that the country’s more than 44 million Hispanics could wield in the 2008 election.

Just a reminder–millions of those Hispanics are legal immigrants who can’t vote, although they’re frequently registered to vote, because of Motor Voter laws. Millions more are illegal immigrants, who really not allowed to vote, although since many states give them Driver’s Licenses, they too are registered to vote in many jurisdictions.

Then there are Hispanic American citizens, fewer than half of whom bother to turn up and vote.

Furthermore, the Hispanic vote is reliably Democratic, in spite of all Karl Rove’s sincerest pandering. And the Hispanic vote is only concentrated in a few states, which are going to go Democratic anyway.

NBC quotes Harry Pachon of the Tomas Rivera Policy Institute

“You used to talk about California, New York, Florida and Texas. This marks that there is now a national Latino presence, rather than a regional presence.”

Yes, there are Hispanics all over the place, but in fact those are the states where they’re concentrated enough to be an electoral force, and those states aren’t in play.

I suppose the reason the Democrats are pandering to Hispanics is because they like pandering. Now, if the Republicans would only respond by pandering to nativists…

No Joking Around At OSU

FIRE, the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, has just posted its “Speech Code Of The Month.” It bans jokes. I am not making this up, and I’m not joking.

FIRE - Speech Code of the Month: The Ohio State University
Speech Code of the Month: The Ohio State University

September 6, 2007
FIRE announces its Speech Code of the Month for September 2007: The Ohio State University.

The Office of University Housing at Ohio State, a public university, maintains a Diversity Statement [PDF]that severely restricts what students in Ohio State’s residence halls can and cannot say. Students are instructed: “Do not joke about differences related to race, ethnicity, sexual orientation, gender, ability, socioeconomic background, etc.” Of the many hundreds of policies FIRE has catalogued over the years, this is the first that flatly instructs students, “do not joke” about controversial topics. As anyone who has ever lived in a dormitory can likely attest, dorms are where some of the freest and most frank discussions among college students take place. And some of those discussions will almost certainly include—gasp!—jokes about controversial topics such as race, ethnicity, and yes, possibly even ability. It was my own personal experience that in my very diverse residence hall freshman year, humor—sometimes even quite offensive humor—was a common ground that brought together and forged friendships among people of very different backgrounds. But rather than embrace the type of frank expression that often characterizes college student communication—expression that can indeed lead to offense but can also lead to friendships based on greater understanding—Ohio State has chosen to squelch it in favor of a superficially polite and politically correct environment. Not only is that an unfortunate choice, it is also one that, at a public university like Ohio State, violates students’ constitutional right to free speech. There is no exception to the First Amendment for ethnic jokes or dumb blonde jokes.

Of course, differences of “race, ethnicity, sexual orientation, gender, ability, socioeconomic background, etc.” include all the differences you can imagine, so if there are any budding comics on the OSU campus, they’ll have to start out by saying “There were two people who were exactly the same.”

For more about ethnic jokes, see Why Ethnic Humor Is Funny, and Preventing Kid Prejudice The Sailer (One Point) Plan.