If the upward mobility of the impending Hispanic majority doesn’t improve, the state’s economic future is in peril.By Heather Mac Donald
California is in the middle of a far-reaching demographic shift: Hispanics,
who already constitute a majority of the state’s schoolchildren, will be a
majority of its workforce and of its population in a few decades. This is an
even more momentous development than it seems. Unless Hispanics’ upward
mobility improves, the state risks becoming more polarized economically and
more reliant on a large government safety net. And as California goes, so goes
the nation, whose own Hispanic population shift is just a generation or two
behind.
The scale and speed of the Golden State’s ethnic transformation are
unprecedented. In the 1960s, Los Angeles was the most Anglo-Saxon of the
nation’s ten largest cities; today, Latinos make up nearly half of the county’s
residents and one-third of its voting-age population. A full 55 percent of Los
Angeles County’s child population has immigrant parents. California’s schools
have the nation’s largest concentration of “English learners,” students from
homes where a language other than English is regularly spoken. From 2000 to
2010, the state’s Hispanic population grew 28 percent, to reach 37.6 percent of
all residents, almost equal to the shrinking white population’s 40 percent.
Nearly half of all California births today are Hispanic. The signs of the
change are everywhere—from the commercial strips throughout the state catering
to Spanish-speaking customers, to the flea markets and illegal vendors in such
areas as MacArthur Park in Los Angeles, to the growing reach of the Spanish-language
media.
The poor Mexican immigrants who have fueled the transformation—84 percent of the state’s Hispanics have Mexican origins—bring an admirable work ethic and a respect for authority too often lacking in America’s native-born population. Many of their children and grandchildren have started thriving businesses and assumed positions of civic and economic leadership. But a sizable portion of Mexican, as well as Central American, immigrants, however hardworking, lack the social capital to inoculate their children reliably against America’s contagious underclass culture. The resulting dysfunction is holding them back and may hold California back as well.
Three members of the Crazy
Little Stoners, a small but violent drug-dealing gang, are hanging out on a
ficus-lined residential street in Santa Ana, America’s largest predominantly
Spanish-speaking city (located in what was once solidly Republican Orange
County). A white truck filled with members of a local graffiti crew slowly
pulls up to check out their gang affiliation; since CLS and the taggers are not
at war, the truck passes on.
Salvador, 16, Casimiro, 16, and Michael, 15, joined CLS three years ago and
promptly racked up serious criminal records, including convictions for armed
robbery and burglary that would have sent them to state prison had they not
been juveniles. Casimiro, in red love beads and baggy shorts, is a short,
self-consciously cocky tough (“I’ve got people doing my homework ’cause I show
’em my fist,” he brags); he faces 20 years if caught again. Salvador, the most
articulate of the three, has a nine-and-a-half-year suspended sentence hanging
over him. Michael has been kicked out of school for fighting and now attends an
alternative school—but not for long, all evidence suggests. “They don’t teach
us nothing; I didn’t know how boring it would be,” he says sullenly. Salvador
claims that their long suspended prison terms have taught them a lesson and
that they’re “done” with the criminal life; now they just want to make steady
money with a job, he says.
The family situations of these young gangbangers are typical of California’s
lower-class Hispanic population, characterized by high rates of single
parenthood, teen pregnancy, and welfare use. Michael’s unmarried mother is on
welfare. The mother of Salvador’s 16-year-old girlfriend recently sent her to
Washington State to keep her away from him—too late, since she is already
pregnant. “If she has the kid, I’ll stop messing around and take care of it,”
he says. Salvador’s father was arrested in January for drug possession and
deported after serving time in the Orange County jail; he is presently planning
his return. Casimiro claims that his parents tolerate his gang activities: “I
be going to parks and I be like, I was like kind of nervous in the beginning
but I was like, ‘Get used to it,’ but they were cool with it,” he says. Perhaps
Casimiro is accurately conveying his family’s attitudes toward his
gang-banging; social workers in Santa Ana and Los Angeles tell of
multigenerational gang families in which the fathers smoke pot and take meth
with their children. Equally likely, however, is that Casimiro’s parents oppose
criminality but cannot keep him away from the streets.
If any of these Crazy Little Stoners is going to turn his life around,
Salvador seems to have the greatest chance, based on his ability to make steady
eye contact and engage with an interlocutor. He “thinks about” going to
college, he says, adding, without irony, that he likes studying criminal
justice for “what it teaches you about the world.” Some children do, in fact,
put aside their gang affiliations after their first encounters with the law;
others muddle through their young adult years in a dim, semi-criminal limbo. As
I take leave of the group, Casimiro asks casually, “You got a dollar?”—already
displaying the entitlement mentality of a Haight-Ashbury or Venice Beach gutter
punk (see “The
Sidewalks of San Francisco,” Autumn 2010).
A more plausible candidate for bourgeois respectability may be found on a
street corner not far from the CLS hangout. Jessica, a plump eleventh-grader in
a low-cut black tank top, has just exited from Cesar Chavez High School, a
fashionably industrial edifice, during the last week of remedial summer
classes. Her family, too, demonstrates the ravages of underclass culture,
including “multiple partner fertility”: her 23-year-old brother, 18-year-old
sister, and 14-year-old brother have different fathers from her own. Jessica’s
father shows up occasionally from Riverside, but she doesn’t know if he works
or not. Jessica’s mother, never married, was born in the U.S. but raised in
Mexico. She now works as a security guard but has ceded child-rearing to
Jessica’s grandmother. Both parents have roots in Santa Ana’s largest and
oldest gang, F Troop.
Self-contained and cautious, Jessica says that she has learned from other
people’s mistakes just by watching. She takes a jaundiced view of her
classmates: “Most students don’t do the work.” (Her own favorite class is earth
science.) As for the pregnant girls, “I’m sure that they knew what they were
doing.” Since the sixth grade, she has been picking up various wind
instruments, including the bass clarinet and the sax, and she plays in the
marching band. “It’s something to keep us off the streets ’n’ stuff,” she
observes coolly of this last endeavor. Her older siblings don’t provide much
inspiration: her brother has been amassing low-level police citations but is
otherwise “doing nothing,” she tells me, and her sister barely passed the
watered-down California high school exit exam. But as to her future, “it’s on
me,” she says. “It’s up to me to do something.”
Jon Pederson works as a pastor
in the Willard area of Santa Ana, a formerly middle-class neighborhood of
stucco apartment blocks whose balconies now sport bright blue tarps and small
satellite dishes. Participation in gangs and drug culture is rising in the
second and third generation of Hispanic immigrants, he observes. “It’s a
perfect storm. When a family comes from Mexico, both parents need to work to
survive; their ability to monitor their child’s life is limited.” Families take
in boarders, often kin, who sometimes rape and impregnate the young daughters.
“Daddy hunger” in girls raised by single mothers is expressed in promiscuity,
Pederson says; the boys, meanwhile, channel their anger into gang life. Nearly
53 percent of all Hispanic births in California are now out of wedlock, and
Hispanics have the highest teen birthrate of all ethnic groups. Pederson saw
similar patterns as a missionary in Central America: teen pregnancy,
single-parent families with six or eight serial fathers, and high poverty
rates.
Routine domestic violence is another Third World import, especially from
Mexico. More than a quarter of the 911 calls to the Santa Ana Police Department
are for domestic violence, reports Kevin Brown, a former Santa Ana cop who now
serves on an antigang intervention team. “Children are seeing it at
home—they’re living the experience,” he says.
The complicated reality of
Hispanic family life in California—often straddling the legitimate and the
criminal worlds, displaying both a dogged determination to work and poor
decision making that interferes with upward mobility—helps explain why the
state’s Hispanic population has made only modest progress up the educational
ladder. Most parents want their children to flourish, yet they may not grasp
the study habits necessary for academic success or may view an eighth-grade
education as sufficient for finding work. Julian Rodriguez, a Santa Ana gang
detective, recalls a case several years ago in which two parents had taken
their 14-year-old daughter out of school to care for their new baby—a classic
display of “Old World values,” he says.
A significant portion of Hispanic children lag cognitively, a problem that
led David Figueroa Ortega, the Mexican consul general of Los Angeles, to sound
the alarm this past October: “Our children, when they arrive in primary school,
sometimes arrive behind in skills. They don’t have sufficient training to keep
up with the rest of the group.” Nationally, 42 percent of Latino children
entering kindergarten are in the lowest quartile of reading preparedness,
compared with 18 percent of white children, reports UCLA education professor
Patricia Gándara in her 2009 book The Latino Education Crisis. By
eighth grade, 43 percent of whites and 47 percent of Asians nationally are
proficient or better in reading, compared with only 19 percent of Latino
students.
Many of California’s Hispanic students who have been schooled in the U.S.
for all their lives and are orally fluent in English remain classified as
English learners in high school because they have made so little academic
progress. In the Long Beach Unified School District, for example, nearly
nine-tenths of English learners entering high school have been in a U.S. school
at least since first grade. The lack of progress isn’t due to bilingual
education: Long Beach got rid of its last bilingual program in 1998, and the
current ninth-grade English learners have been in English-only classrooms all
their lives. Some come from families that immigrated to the U.S. two or three
generations ago.
True, Hispanics’ cognitive skills have been improving over the last decade;
the percentage of Hispanic eighth-graders deemed proficient in math and reading
on the California Standards Tests doubled from 2004 to 2010. But the gap
between Hispanics’ performance and that of whites and Asians narrowed only
modestly, since white and Asian scores rose as well. Latino students’ rate of
B.A. completion from the University of California and California State
University is the lowest of all student groups and has slightly declined in
recent years, reports the Institute for Higher Education Leadership and Policy
at California State University, Sacramento. The state spends vast sums each
year trying to get more Hispanics into college and to keep them there—$100
million in 2009, for instance, on the education of full-time community-college
students who dropped out after their first year, according to the American
Institutes for Research. (Facilitating transfers from community college is a
favored strategy for increasing Hispanic enrollment in four-year colleges.)
Hispanic underperformance contributes to California’s dismal educational
statistics. Only Mississippi had as large a percentage of its eighth-grade
students reading at the “below basic” level on the 2011 National Assessment of
Educational Progress (NAEP); in eighth-grade math, California came in third,
after Alabama and Mississippi, in the percentage of students scoring “below
basic.” Only 56 percent of ninth-graders graduate in four years in Los Angeles;
statewide, only two-thirds do.
Since the 1980s, California’s
economic growth has been powered by skilled labor. Silicon Valley, for example,
added jobs at a rate of 3.2 percent for the year beginning in November 2010,
despite the continuing economic slump. If current labor-market trends continue,
41 percent of California’s workers will need a B.A. by 2025, according to the
Public Policy Institute of California (PPIC). But California already has
trouble finding skilled employees. Because it can’t produce all the skilled
workers that it needs, it imports them: in 2006, for example, 33 percent of all
college-educated California workers had been born in other states and 31
percent had been born abroad, PPIC says. Moreover, since 2000, more college
graduates have been exiting California than entering. California will need to
attract almost 160,000 college-educated workers annually for 20 years in a row
to meet the projected demand, PPIC estimates—three times the number who have
been arriving from elsewhere since 2000.
Unfortunately, though Hispanics will make up 40 percent of the state’s
working-age population by 2020, just 12 percent of them are projected to have
bachelor’s degrees by then, up from 10 percent in 2006. Moreover, their fields
of academic concentration are not where the most economically fertile growth
will probably occur. At California State University in 2008, just 1.7 percent
of master’s degree students in computer science were Mexican-American, as were
just 3.6 percent of students in engineering master’s programs. The largest
percentage of Mexican-American enrollment in M.A. programs was in education—40
percent—despite (or perhaps because of) Mexican-Americans’ low test scores.
The future mismatch between labor supply and demand is likely to raise
wages for college-educated workers, while a glut of workers with a high school
diploma or less will depress wages on the low end and contribute to an
increased demand for government services, especially among the less educated
Hispanic population. U.S.-born Hispanic households in California already use
welfare programs (such as cash welfare, food stamps, and housing assistance) at
twice the rate of U.S.-born non-Hispanic households, according to an analysis
of the March 2011 Current Population Survey by the Center for Immigration
Studies. Welfare use by immigrants is higher still. In 2008–09, the fraction of
households using some form of welfare was 82 percent for households headed by
an illegal immigrant and 61 percent for households headed by a legal immigrant.
Higher rates of Hispanic poverty drive this disparity in welfare
consumption. Hispanics made up nearly 60 percent of California’s poor in 2010,
despite being less than 38 percent of the population. Nearly one-quarter of all
Hispanics in California are poor, compared with a little over one-tenth of
non-Hispanics. Nationally, the poverty rate of Hispanic adults drops from 25.5
percent in the first generation—the immigrant generation, that is—to 17 percent
in the second but rises to 19 percent in the third, according to a Center for
Immigration Studies analysis. (The poverty rate for white adults is 9 percent.)
That frustrating third-generation economic stall repeats the pattern in high
school graduation and college completion rates as well.
Hispanics’ reliance on the
government safety net helps explain their ongoing support for the Democratic
Party. Indeed, liberal spending policies are a more important consideration for
Hispanic voters than ethnic identification or the so-called values issues that
they are often said to favor. “What Republicans mean by ‘family values’ and
what Hispanics mean are two completely different things,” says John Echeveste,
founder of the oldest Latino marketing firm in Southern California and a player
in California Latino politics. “We are a very compassionate people; we care
about other people and understand that government has a role to play in helping
people.” That Democratic allegiance was on display in the 2010 race for
lieutenant governor, when Hispanics favored San Francisco mayor Gavin Newsom,
the epitome of an elite tax-and-spend liberal, over the Hispanic Republican
incumbent, Abel Maldonado, despite Newsom’s unilateral legalization of gay
marriage in San Francisco in 2004. La Opinión, California’s largest
Spanish-language newspaper, cited Newsom’s “good progressive platform” in
endorsing him. In the 2010 race for state attorney general, Hispanic voters
helped give the victory to liberal San Francisco district attorney Kamala
Harris, who was running against Los Angeles district attorney Steve Cooley, a
law-and-order moderate—even in Cooley’s own backyard of L.A.
Republican political consultants routinely argue that California’s Hispanics
were driven from their natural Republican home by a 1994 voter
initiative—backed by then-governor Pete Wilson, a Republican—denying most
government benefits to illegal aliens. But it would be almost impossible today
to find a Hispanic immigrant who has even heard of Proposition 187. Jim Tolle,
pastor of one of the largest Hispanic churches in Southern California, La
Iglesia En El Camino, says that his congregation knows nothing about Prop. 187.
The fact is that Hispanic skepticism toward the Republican Party derives as
much from its perceived economic biases as from Republicans’ opposition to
illegal immigration and amnesty. A March 2011 poll by Moore Information asked
California’s Latino voters why they had an unfavorable view of the Republican
Party. The two top reasons were that the party favored only the rich and that
Republicans were selfish and out for themselves; Republican positions on
immigration law were cited less often.
Hispanics’ low rates of naturalization and civic participation have depressed
their political influence below their population numbers. Nearly 40 percent of
Latino adults are ineligible to vote, according to Lisa Garcia Bedolla, an
education professor at UC Berkeley. But Hispanics’ representation in the state
legislature has been growing even faster than their population numbers, and a
string of recent speakers in the state assembly have been Hispanic. The Latino
Caucus has already made its mark on higher education, putting constant pressure
on the University of California to admit more Hispanic students or face
draconian budget cuts. “If campuses don’t capitulate, you’ll get killed. The
Latino Caucus will march with torches,” says John Moores, a former chairman of
the UC Board of Regents. Moores resigned the chairmanship “in disgust,” he
says, at his inability to restore color-blind admissions to the system.
Such a push for meritocratic admissions shouldn’t even be necessary, given
the 1996 voter initiative banning racial preferences in state government,
including the university systems. The UC and CSU systems, however, quickly
devised stratagems for evading Proposition 209—and even those schemes haven’t
gone far enough for the Latino Caucus. “Minority students are not getting an
equal shake in our state, and as an elected official I’m going to do everything
in my power to change that,” declared caucus member Ed Hernandez in September
2011, as his pet project, a bill to give campuses the official go-ahead to
restore open racial preferences in admissions, once again landed on the governor’s
desk. Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger had vetoed the bill in the past, and
Governor Jerry Brown, to his credit, did so again in October, citing its patent
unconstitutionality. Hernandez and the caucus can console themselves with the
fact that UC’s “holistic” and “comprehensive” admissions gambits are
accomplishing sub rosa much of what the bill aimed to make official.
The caucus did score a major legislative victory last year. The University
of California, California State University, and the community-college system
already grant in-state tuition to illegal aliens. (Back in 2003, when then–UC
regent Ward Connerly asked university officials why illegal aliens should get a
$12,000 annual tuition break when, say, a citizen from Washington State did not,
they answered: Our budget will be cut if we don’t go along.) This past October,
however, Brown signed a bill going even further and granting illegal aliens
taxpayer-funded tuition assistance and fee waivers. The so-called California
Dream Act was not a popular bill, except among Latinos: 55 percent of voters
opposed the law, and only 30 percent of whites supported it, but 79 percent of
Latinos approved of it. In one generation, observes CSU San Jose political
scientist Larry Gerston, California has gone from outlawing affirmative action
and banning nonessential government services to illegal aliens to granting them
free tuition subsidies, a change that “speaks to the growing pressure of
Latinos on the legislative process.”
Even as Hispanics are gathering clout in Sacramento, the immigrant
populations of some small, almost entirely Latino, cities in the Los Angeles
basin have been politically passive toward local governance. As a result, the
city councils and managers of Bell, Maywood, La Puente, and other localities,
unchecked by their residents, have engaged in rampant self-dealing, virtually
bankrupting those cities’ governments.
Such extreme civic miscarriages will diminish as Latinos become further
integrated into American society. And there may be advantages to an
increasingly Latino-populated state legislature, which may prove less prone to
job-killing regulation than one led by white liberals.
But the cost of government
services for the Hispanic poor is not likely to abate soon—a serious problem
for a state suffering budget woes. The most expensive of those services is
education, which is increasingly dominated by enormous programs to try to close
the achievement gap; Santa Ana’s Willard Intermediate School, for example,
where Pastor Pederson once taught, is on the receiving end of a $35 million
state transformation grant. As for health-care spending, Los Angeles has become
the HMO to the world, says County Supervisor Mike Antonovich, who recommends
establishing medical centers south of the Mexican border to remove the
health-care incentive for illegal immigration. Crime perpetrated by Latinos
burdens communities and taxpayers as well. Though the Hispanic crime rate is
generally less than half the black crime rate, it is still several times the
rate of crime among whites. Four out of ten state prisoners were Hispanic in
2008.
Poor Hispanics don’t pay in taxes what they cost in state expenditures. And
with rising Latino political power, California’s welfare policies will probably
become even more redistributionist, predicts CSU San Jose’s Gerston—at least if
Latinos remain poor, their drop-out rates don’t improve, and they don’t feel
they can climb the economic ladder. A 1996 study for Pepperdine University
found that Latinos in Southern California achieved middle-class status by
pooling wages from three or more workers in a single household, rather than
through an “education-based meritocratic formula—as is more common with Asians
and Jews.” While such a collective work ethic is praiseworthy, it is limited as
a strategy for further upward mobility.
Of course, California’s budget problems have plenty of causes unrelated to
its growing Hispanic population. One, a 1999 law that contributed to the
current pension crisis for public employees by granting them retroactive
pension increases of up to 50 percent, was pushed through by the teachers’ and
state prison guards’ unions, which aren’t dominated by Hispanics. Nevertheless,
the imminent Hispanic majority will surely put additional fiscal pressure on
the state.
Certain policies may help avoid
a future of growing income inequality and social decline. One is to stop the
emigration of California’s best talent. The state should meet the demand for
college-educated workers by making itself attractive to the highly educated,
not by trying to dragoon all students into college. California cannot hope to
retain the entrepreneurs it still has and to attract others unless it radically
revamps its business climate and lowers its taxes (a course made more
difficult, though, by the demands on government social services imposed by the
growing Hispanic population). Congress could help California stay globally
competitive by letting foreign-born Ph.D. students in science and technology
automatically obtain green cards to work in the U.S. after completing their
degrees.
California should also create a robust vocational-education system. The
fashionable prejudice against vocational education will end up bankrupting the
school and college systems by forcing students into academically oriented
classrooms that hold no interest for them and for which they are not qualified.
Further, the blue-collar skilled trades are desperate for workers and pay much
better than many a service-sector job (see “Wanted: Blue-Collar Workers,”
Autumn 2011). Only 55 percent of Hispanic male students graduated from
California high schools in 2007, reports the California Dropout Research
Project; many of the dropouts would undoubtedly have welcomed the opportunity
to learn a trade. At the same time, California must stop decimating what
remains of its manufacturing sector with business-killing regulations (see “The Long Stall,” Autumn 2011).
And Washington should institute an immigration pause for low-skilled
immigrants. In 1970, the average Southern California Latino spoke only English
and had assimilated to Anglo culture, according to the Pepperdine study. Since
then, even though California’s Hispanic population has expanded outside its
traditional enclaves and spread across the state and nation, the acculturation
process has slowed. In 1988, when accountant and entrepreneur Martha de la
Torre began El Clasificado, a free Spanish classified-advertising
newspaper, she assumed that the demand for Spanish-language publications would
last only a few decades; instead, the market for El Clasificado has
grown far beyond its original base in Los Angeles, even as similar
English-language publications have gone bankrupt. “I’m surprised by how people
in some communities try not to change,” she observes. Teachers, service
employees, police officers, and ordinary private-sector workers report that
many California residents now expect to be addressed in Spanish.
The reason for this assimilation reversal is our de facto open-borders
policy, argues Michael Saragosa, a public-relations consultant who oversaw
Latino outreach for Meg Whitman’s 2010 gubernatorial campaign. “We need to
allow people who are already here to grow into the American Dream over
generations,” he says. “That can’t happen when they have a steady flow of
people behind them.” Illegal immigration, which did not drop in California
during the recession, should be reduced, and legal immigration should be
reoriented toward high-skilled immigrants rather than the family members of
existing immigrants.
Empresarios
It doesn’t get any more assimilated than this: for his
daughter’s third birthday party this year, Alex Guerrero, who lives in a
wealthy equestrian suburb of Los Angeles, rented a miniature horse dressed as a
pink unicorn to entertain his daughter’s young guests. Guerrero is part of a
highly successful, upwardly mobile cohort of California Latinos who manipulate
symbols for a living, manage other employees, and start businesses. An informal
survey suggests that the children of South Americans and Cubans are
overrepresented among them.
Guerrero’s parents emigrated in 1966 from Colombia.
His father, who had worked as a railroad porter in Colombia, changed sheets at
Los Angeles’s Beverly Wilshire hotel, while his mother, who had run a hair
salon out of her garage in Colombia, worked as a seamstress. “Our parents
instilled in us that we had to go to college,” he says. Guerrero graduated from
USC with a business degree and worked in Latin American marketing for a record
company before joining a friend’s construction firm as an executive vice
president in charge of finance.
Jose Villa, who has a Harvard B.A. in economics and a
Wharton M.B.A., owns a multicultural advertising agency, Sensis. His father had
been a salesman for Colgate Palmolive in Cuba before fleeing the country in the
1960s; in Los Angeles, his father worked in a factory alongside mostly Mexican
immigrants, but eventually moved into life insurance and then real estate. Many
of Villa’s classmates in the San Fernando Valley who spoke Spanish at home
didn’t necessarily get the same relentless message of upward mobility from
their parents that he received. “With Cubans, there’s a lot of emphasis on
education and moving ahead—you have to be a doctor or an engineer or you’re an
embarrassment to the family.” (Despite the trendy multiculti focus of his
business, Villa is building a website with some Hispanic colleagues to honor
the libertarian Guatemalan economist Manuel Ayau. Another libertarian
economist, Robert Barro, was Villa’s most important influence at Harvard, he
says.)
Martha de la Torre, an accounting major at Loyola
Marymount University, worked for Arthur Young on a portfolio of businesses targeting
the Hispanic market before starting her newspaper, El Clasificado,
in 1988. One-third of de la Torre’s Hispanic colleagues at Arthur Young were
Ecuadorian-Americans like herself. “My parents were determined that their
children would go to college,” she says. “We had to write the alphabet by age
5.”
To be sure, there are plenty of highly successful
Mexican-American businessmen, but they appear—based, again, on a nonscientific
sample—to belong disproportionately to an older generation, whose parents were
more likely to have emigrated legally than today’s Mexican arrivals. Likewise,
South Americans, Cubans, and Spaniards generally had to buy a plane ticket and
obtain a visa to enter the U.S., and thus brought more social capital with
them. “If you emigrate from a really poor community,” speculates Guerrero,
“maybe a roof over your head is enough.”
The entrepreneurial spirit is not particularly strong
among California’s Mexican farm laborers, according to George Lugo, a grower in
Temecula who flamboyantly hawks his cantaloupes and watermelons at the Irvine
Farmers Market. “There’s not many workers moving into ownership positions, not
at all,” Lugo says (an observation corroborated by the low number of Mexican
owners at Southern California farmers’ markets).
“If you talk to people who farm anywhere in
California, they’ll tell you that their workers don’t have much aspirations of
upward mobility. They like what they do, and when we have a good strawberry
crop, you’ve never seen a bigger smile on someone’s face that says: ‘This is
mine.’ But they don’t want to be owners and have the responsibility of dealing
with government overseers and time management. My guys say to me: ‘Go do some
paperwork;’ they know what to do on the farm and they do it.”
The reluctance to be enmired in California’s huge
regulatory apparatus is more than understandable. But those farmworkers are not
always preparing their children for more promising work. Lugo organizes study
sessions for the children of his workers: “I try to foster in them that they
have to get good at something other than farming.” Lugo calls some of the
children in his tutoring group his “sparkplugs” because of their curiosity
about the world and their eagerness to discover something that he doesn’t know.
But he says that if he weren’t overseeing their schooling, they wouldn’t get
the same message about education.
Pastor Tolle says that he feels
“both hope and consternation” when he contemplates his congregation, the
majority of whom are illegal immigrants. Though the grounds for concern are
obvious, there are numerous reasons for hope as well. The most striking thing
about the teens I spoke to in Santa Ana—even those with criminal records—was
that they were nice kids, despite Casimiro’s thuggish
braggadocio and Michael’s sullen disengagement. The students filing out of
Cesar Chavez High School toward the bus stop were orderly; there was little
chance that they would start walking on the tops of parked cars, as sometimes
happens in Philadelphia or Brooklyn. Though it is taboo to say so, the greatest
advantage possessed by the Mexican-American poor and middle class is that they
are not burdened with the anger and resentments that afflict parts of black
society.
Jose Cruz, head of the Literacy Council of San Diego, is just one of the
thousands of Mexican-Americans in California who exemplify the grounds for
hope. His father, born in Mexico but raised in the U.S., was a chef; his
mother, born in Texas but raised in Mexico, pressed shirts. “My parents were
steady workers; they didn’t make a big deal of it,” he says. “They taught me
and my siblings: Go to work every day. Do what you are told. And never question
your boss, a police officer, or a teacher.” If California’s Hispanics can
better avoid single parenthood and school failure, that reverence for work and
authority could become one of the state’s biggest assets.
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