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WARREN Disgusted by the recent appearance of white supremacist stickers on signs along a main thoroughfare here, several dozen demonstrators rallied on Sunday in front of Town Hall, where speaker after speaker called for individual and political action to curb racism.
“Now is not the time for complacency, fear or denial,” said Mel Bynum, one of the organizers of the Warren Spread Peace Protest Rally. “Hate in this country is as epidemic as COVID-19. There is no cure for racism no vaccine because such hatred, though born of ignorance, is taught. No one is born racist. Seek truth in facts, not stereotypes or agenda-inspired lies.”
Deconstructing the Myth of a Monolithic “Latinx Community”
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From left, Karen Alzate 13, Marcela Betancur 11 and Leonela Felix 13 We have a tendency to take ethnic minorities and look at them as monolithic groups, says Valerie Endress, professor of communications and civic engagement at Rhode Island College. The Latinx community is a perfect example of this. While it is often spoken of in this country as a single identity applying to nearly all Spanish-speaking people in the Western Hemisphere, it s actually a richly diverse swath of the population, encompassing different races and ethnic identities from dozens of countries.
Deconstructing the National Myth of a Unified “Latinx Vote”
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Both before and after November s election, there was much discussion about the Latinx vote, as if that were one monolithic thing. In truth, the Latinx population in the United States is not the same culture or race. Latinx people represent a great variety of regional, ethnic and political orientations. This is the main reason why it has not been easy for commentators to understand the Latinx vote, which accounts for about 32 million, in this past election – and, in particular, the unexpected level of Latinx support for Donald Trump.
Professor Valerie Endress, who teaches political communication at Rhode Island College and organizes the school s chapter of the American Democracy Project, explains that what we know of the Latinx population is that they are a whole lot of different constituencies that can t easily be counted as Democrats or Republicans. She adds, Given that in our two party sy