R
Radio_Realist
Guest
"Hispanics in any one place (Peru or Argentina or Mexico) are unified by the country they are in, not by skin color or ancestry."Fine. If anyone wants to enjoy "Hispanic" culture, then let him live in an "Hispanic" country. When someone is in this country, the United States of America, the culture here is "American", not "Hispanic". I'm 100% in favor of radio stations programming individual programs celebrating the cultures of whatever "old country" a listener (or his ancestor) left behind in order to move to America and become Americans. There's nothing wrong with being nostalgic for a culture one has left behind in order to become an American. And listening on the radio to an hour or two a week of the culture of the country one has renounced when one became an American strike me as a positive thing. But those people who have chosen to legally immigrate to the United States and become Americans need to do what the ancestors of all the rest of us did. They need to learn to speak English and to accept and participate in American culture, not to cling slavishly to the culture that they left behind to come here. If "Hispanic" refers to the culture of "Hispanic" nations, then the only people from those nations who are living here in the United States should be "ex-Hispanics". "Hispanics in the US present different problems,"Yeah, they want to live here, but they don't want to be here. They don't want to move to America to become Americans, they want to move to America to turn America into something it isn't. Radio spectrum space is finite. There's no excuse for allocating airwave bandwidth in America, which is a public resource, for use by stations programming for people who want to live here without becoming Americans.