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CNN, You Can't Have It Both Ways:
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It's Either Dobbs or Your Latino Future
By Roberto Lovato
On
the eve of CNN's Latino in America series (LIA) -- its most important
and expensive attempt to capture Latino audiences -- Latinos are of one
mind about the two faces of CNN. I know this because I just spent the
last two weeks traveling the country talking to Latino communities about
Lou Dobbs and CNN. I got to meet some of the more than 50,000 people
who, in just the last four weeks, have signed our petition at
www.bastadobbs.com.

To see this vido,
click here or on the image above
What I heard among the many voices that make up the Latino United States
-- Puerto Ricans and Dominicans in New York, Cubans in Miami, Mexicans and
Salvadorans and many others in the Southwest -- was an unexpected unity and
an intense concern about CNN's Latino hypocrisy: thinking that a few hours
of serious reporting on Latinos by sunny Soledad O'Brien can make up for
thousands of hours of anti-Latino extremism from the dark Lou Dobbs. This
paradox has Latinos everywhere asking questions about CNN -- and so far we
haven't gotten much in the way of answers. One questioner was
Latino media executive Jeff Valdez, who, during the Los Angeles LIA
screening, pointedly asked Soledad O'Brien, "Will Latino in America include
Lou Dobbs?" The answer: no. That's right, four hours about the Latino
experience in the U.S.,
and not a word on the country's most notorious anti-immigrant, anti-Latino
"news" anchor. "What do you think Latinos should do about Lou
Dobbs?" asked another member of the audience. Obrien's response -- that we
should watch and support positive depictions of Latinos like those of LIA --
satisfied no one; neither do the rumors that
Dobbs has started talking to Fox News about leaving CNN.
At the New York screening of LIA, an audience member asked about
how CNN squares Latino in
America
with the hatred that shows up on Lou Dobbs show every night. Visibly
irritated by having to defend CNN over Dobbs, a CNN executive answered, "I
have nothing to do with Lou Dobbs. I don't confer with Lou Dobbs. He has not
seen this program. My unit has no contact at all. So I don't answer that. I
don't have an answer for it." This, in a nutshell, is the CNN position: when
the question is about Lou Dobbs, they have no answer. Such
questions by and about Latinos form part of a larger dialogue that will be
at the center of this week's immigration reform mobilizations as well as in
CNN's LIA premiere next week. At a time when polls indicate Latinos
experiencing increased levels of discrimination -- a time when hate crimes
against Latinos are on the rise -- Lou Dobbs' war on immigrants and Latinos
occupies a central place in the hearts and questions of Latinos. People are
noticing CNN's attempt to have its Lou Dobbs cake and have Latinos eat it
too.
Among the most creative and committed to bringing CNN's hypocrisy into the
national dialogue about Latinos is 26-year-old Mexican immigrant Arturo
Perez, an award-winning filmmaker, who just produced
an inspired and inspiring video about CNN's Dobbs problem. The fantastic
film was born during dinner table dialogues about Dobbs that then teenager
Perez and his mother held over the course of many years. These dialogues are
now taking place in thousands of bilingual households throughout the
country.
"We would listen to Lou Dobbs and my mom and I would get
very upset," Perez told me. "Ever since I was a teenager, I got so angry
that I sent Dobbs and CNN many emails correcting his "facts" and warning
them about the dangers of the kind of lies and hate he spread about Latinos.
He never wrote me back. So, now I get to talk to him through my video."
Latinos, it seems, are clearer than ever that, thanks to Lou Dobbs, watching
CNN has become an exercise in disrespecting ourselves and denying our
dignity. Of all the questions I heard in my travels, one of them
sums up the issue better than all the rest. "Does CNN really believe that
they can have it both ways?" asked Guadalupe Vazquez, a Mexican immigrant
living not far from CNN's headquarters in
Atlanta. "They're trying to make money by reporting
on us (Latinos) with this (Latino in America)
show and with CNN en Espanol at the same time as they're making money off of
hating us with Lou Dobbs!" exclaimed Vazquez, who I met through a community
leader in Atlanta.
As if speaking for the mass movement calling out Dobbs and CNN, Vazquez
added, "I'll be damned if I allow them to get away with it."
Read
more at:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/roberto-lovato/cnn-you-cant-have-it-both_b_318475.html
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