Media figures attacked Mexican-flag-wavers, but not those waving
Irish, Italian, or Israeli flags
http://mediamatters.org/items/200604030012
Following the recent demonstrations throughout the United States
in which protesters marched against proposed legislation that
would criminalize undocumented workers, some in the media have
criticized the demonstrators for carrying Mexican flags. But
these same media figures have not complained about people waving
other nations' flags, such as Irish flags at St. Patrick's Day
events, Italian flags at Columbus Day events, or Israeli flags
at Israel Day events.
For example, on the March 29 edition of Fox News' The Big Story
with John Gibson, syndicated columnist and Fox News contributor
Robert D. Novak asked:
NOVAK: Where did all these flags come from? Do the young Latinos
keep the Mexican flags in their homes?
[...]
I am no hard-liner on immigration who wants to expel 11 million
illegal immigrants, but flags are a symbol of national identity.
The student brandishing the Mexican flag signals divided loyalty
or perhaps loyalty to a foreign power.
Similarly, on the March 29 broadcast of his nationally
syndicated radio program, Bill O'Reilly cited the Mexican flags
as evidence of an emerging "race war" in the United States:
O'REILLY: You have no policy unless you have border security.
There's no policy. All the other stuff doesn't matter. Because
you just cannot keep assimilating millions of people in here at
the rate they're coming without unintended consequences. And
you've got them all day long.
So now, it's becoming a race war. That's what it's becoming -- a
race war. You see half a million people show up in L.A. and they
were waving Mexican flags. And they're saying, "Hey, we have a
right to be here." No, you don't. If you're illegal, you don't
have a right to be here. But they don't see it that way.
In addition to Novak and O'Reilly, the following media figures
have also criticized those who waved Mexican flags at the recent
protests without criticizing similar flag-waving on behalf of
other nations:
* Weekly Standard executive editor Fred Barnes stated on the
March 27 edition of Fox News' Special Report with Brit Hume that
"a lot of illegal immigrants ... waving Mexican flags, that
doesn't help their cause." Barnes also stated that waving
Mexican flags "just alienates Americans and will only further
anger the anti-immigrant forces."
* On the March 27 edition of CNN's The Situation Room with Wolf
Blitzer, CNN anchor Jack Cafferty declared: "These folks march
around our streets carrying Mexican flags and complaining the
United States may actually want to have some control over who
comes here. Imagine that." On the March 30 edition of The
Situation Room, Cafferty also stated: "Mexican demonstrators
blocking southern California freeways and other streets around
the country while waving the Mexican flag in the faces of U.S.
citizens is probably not going to win them a lot of friends
here."
* On the March 27 edition of CNN's Lou Dobbs Tonight, Dobbs
asked reporter Peter Viles: "Did you have the opportunity to ask
[protestors] why they are waving a Mexican flag when they are
talking about U.S. rights?" Viles responded that "[o]ne woman
told us, 'Yes, I am an American, but I have to stand up for my
culture, and I have to support my heritage and other people with
that heritage.' " Viles said the woman's statement was "[n]ot a
particularly American idea when it comes to civics and politic,
but it is certainly prevailing here [at the protests] in Los
Angeles."
* In a March 28 syndicated column, National Review editor Rich
Lowry wrote that what makes the display of Mexican flags
"ominous is their hint of a large, unassimilated population
existing outside America's laws and exhibiting absolutely no
sheepishness about it."
* As Media Matters for America previously noted, National Public
Radio correspondent Juan Williams stated on the March 29 edition
of Fox News' The O'Reilly Factor: "A lot of these [protestors]
are poor kids, struggling along in those schools and struggling
to gain some sense of identity so they're going to wave the
Mexican flag because they feel somehow they are fighting for
Mexicans living in the United States. And they're even going to
get into cray arguments about whether California should truly
belong to the Mexico or the United States -- all kinds of
stupidity."
* On the March 29 edition of Hannity & Colmes, Fox News' Sean
Hannity stated that the actions of protestors -- including "[p]eople
holding the Mexican flag up" -- "seemed to be, in many, many
ways, outrageous." Hannity subsequently asked a former adviser
to Mexican President Vicente Fox to "condemn some of" the
protestors' actions, but did not specify which actions.
* On the March 30 edition of Hannity & Colmes, Fox News analyst
and former House Speaker Newt Gingrich (R-GA) stated that "the
American people, frankly, when they see a huge crowd in a city
carrying flags other than the U.S., I think they're pretty
unimpressed, and frankly, a little bit irritated by the idea of
people who are here illegally telling us they're going to
blackmail our politicians into passing bad laws."
* On the March 30 edition of Hardball, MSNBC host Chris Matthews
t ated that potential legal immigrants are "waiting in line
somewhere at a U.S. consulate ... waiting in line dutifully. You
show up every day, you fill out the papers, and you wait, and
you wait, and you wait. Meanwhile, people are slam-banging
across the Mexican border every night with the searchlight on,
and now we're saying put them ahead of you in line."
Responding to Newsweek magazine chief political correspondent
Howard Fineman's assertion that a family of legal immigrants he
interviewed were "furious about the flow of immigrants coming
across the border," Matthews stated that legal immigrants are
"waving little American flags and the other people [coming
across the border] are waving little Mexican flags, because they
get in here first." When Fineman stated that "some of them
[coming across the border] are waving Mexican flags," Matthews
responded: "Then they get in here first."
* On the Apri 2 edition of Fox News Co.'s Fox News Sunday, Fox
News anchor Brit Hume stated that the sight of "tens of
thousands of people demonstrating, waving foreign flags, on
behalf of illegal immigration and against the idea that America
should enforce its own laws" was a "repellent spectacle." Hume
added that as a result, "reasonable Americans are probably
having a difficult time finding anybody to root for in this
debate."
A Media Matters search* of the Nexis database revealed that of
the above media figures, only Dobbs had also criticized the
flying of other nations' flags. On the March 27 edition of Lou
Dobbs Tonight, Dobbs stated: "I don't think that we should have
any flag flying in this country except the flag of the United
States." He later added: "I don't think there should be a St.
Patrick's Day. I don't care who you are. I think we ought to be
celebrating what is common about this country, what we enjoy as
similarities as people."
O'Reilly and Lowry have acknowledged -- but dismissed --
comparisons of the waving of Mexican flags at the recent
protests and the flying of non-U.S. flags at celebrations of St.
Patrick's Day or Columbus Day. In his March 28 column, Lowry
asked: "Well, aren't there plenty of Irish flags at St.
Patrick's Day parades, and Italian flags at Columbus Day
celebrations?" He then went on to call the Mexican flag-waving
"more ominous" than the St. Patrick's Day or Columbus Day
displays. Similarly, when a guest on the March 30 edition of The
O'Reilly Factor asserted that protestors had raised the Mexican
flag in "[e]xactly the same way [as at] the St. Patrick's Day
parade," O'Reilly responded: "Come on."
While not commenting on the use of the Irish flag in St.
Patrick's Day celebrations, Matthews dubbed the March 17 edition
of his program "O'Hardball," bestowing Irish-sounding nicknames
on two of his Hardball "Hotshots" panel guests. Matthews named
MSNBC host Joe Scarborough "Joe O'Scarborough," and MSNBC
contributor Ron Reagan "Ron O'Reagan." The third member of his
panel, MSNBC chief White House correspondent Norah O'Donnell,
did not receive a nickname.
*(irish or italian or israeli or ireland or italy or israel) w/5
flag and (st. patrick's day or saint patrick's day or columbus
day or israel day) and (rich lowry or bob novak or robert novak
or chris matthews or fred barnes or bill o'reilly or sean
hannity or newt gingrich or jack cafferty or lou dobbs or peter
viles or brit hume or juan williams)
From the March 29 edition of Fox News' The Big Story with John
Gibson:
NOVAK: This is springtime, when young people like to go into the
streets to demonstrate and cause trouble all over the world. And
even 55 years ago, when I was a college student -- though in
those days we went on nonpolitical panty-raids, the French
students just love to disrupt everything, as they did in Paris
this week, protesting the idea that their work has to satisfy
their employers in order to keep their jobs.
But the half million people who demonstrated in Los Angeles last
Saturday was something else. They were overwhelmingly Latinos
and preponderantly young people. And this was not, not just a
normal right of spring. The demonstrators were called into the
streets of L.A. by the city's 10 Spanish-speaking radio stations
to protest hard-line, anti-immigration legislation.
However, what really got my attention in L.A. was the omni
presence of the flags of a foreign government, the Republic of
Mexico. Red, white, green, Mexican flags were carried, waved,
and draped bout the bodies of the young people, some of whom
were natural-born American citizens.
Where did all these flags come from? Do the young Latinos keep
the Mexican flags in their homes? Were they distributed by
somebody? These demonstrators were not grape pickers who just
popped over the border. Many are students in American public
schools. I am no hard-liner on immigration who wants to expel 11
million illegal immigrants, but flags are a symbol of national
identity. The student brandishing the Mexican flag signals
divided loyalty or perhaps loyalty to a foreign power.
From the March 27 edition of Fox News' Special Report with Brit
Hume:
BARNES: If you double it, it would be an interesting test -- if
you doubled the wages. But even then, I agree with Mort. I don't
think you would get a lot of -- a lot of domestics.
I'll tell you what does not help the pro-immigration side. And
that was that huge demonstration in Los Angeles yesterday where
many, many people were waving Mexican flags. That just alienates
Americans and will only further anger the anti-immigrant forces.
Mickey Kaus, who is a blogger and a political analyst -- I think
we all know him -- wrote that if you went to that demonstration,
and every time you saw a Mexican flag, you said, "Mexican flag"
- he said you'd be talking the whole time. There were so many of
them.
Even when they were instructed, or told by the organizers of
that demonstration to only bring American flags. So, you have a
lot of illegal immigrants there waving Mexican flags, that
doen't help their cause.
From the March 27 edition of CNN's The Situation Room:
CAFFERTY: The problem is completely out of control, and it's
getting worse every day. What do the politicians want to do
about it? Why they want to pass more laws, of course. You see,
it's an election year, so they want us to think that they're
actually doing something about illegal immigrants.
One wants a guest worker program. Somebody else wants to close
the borders. Another one wants to make illegal immigration a
felony. Meanwhile, the streets of many of our cities are clogged
with people protesting immigration reform. These folks march
around our streets carrying Mexican flags and complaining the
United States may actually want to have some control over who
comes here. Imagine that.
And at the end of the day, it's very much an open question
whether anything meaningful will get done. If I were you, I
wouldn't hold my breath. Here is the question. What do you think
should happen t illegal immigrants? E-mail us at
CaffertyFile@CNN.com or go to CNN.com/CaffertyFile. Wolf?
From the March 30 edition of CNN's The Situation Room:
CAFFERTY: The Mexican flag has become a source of irritation to
a lot of Americans during the immigration debate that's heating
up in this country. Carried as a source of pride by
demonstrators, the idea could backfire.
You see, this isn't Mexico.
Mexican demonstrators blocking southern California freeways and
other streets around the country while waving the Mexican flag
in the faces of U.S. citizens is probably not going to win them
a lot of friends here.
From the March 27 edition of CNN's Lou Dobbs Tonight, which
featured Janet Murguia, president of the National Council of La
Raza:
DOBBS: As you were just speaking, Pete, a young man with
enthusiasm waving the Mexican flag behind you. Did you have the
opportunity to ask them why they are waving a Mexican flag when
they are talking about U.S. rights?
VILES: Well, not these fellows here, but we have asked others
why the flag of Mexican -- Mexico and the flags of Guatemala and
other nations. One woman told us, "Yes, I am an American, but I
have to stand up for my culture, and I have to support my
heritage and other people with that heritage."
Not a particularly American idea when it comes to civics and
politics, but it is certainly prevailing ere in Los Angeles.
[...]
DOBBS: Why are all those demonstrators out there carrying
Mexican flags?
MURGUIA: Well there's a sense of pride with anybody. We just had
St. Patrick's Day. Are you saying that Irish, because they're
holding up their Irish flags, that all of a sudden they're not
loyal or they're un-American? It's a double standard to say that
people from one country can wave their flag, but people who want
to be Americans can wave another flag, but they're not being
loyal. That's a double standard. Irish Americans --
DOBBS: -- are you accusing me of a double standard?
MURGUIA: Well, I'm just saying. You ought to be --
DOBBS: Because I want you to look me in the eye, and I want you
to hear me loud and clear.
MURGUIA: Yes, I'm right here.
DOBBS: OK. Are you ready to listen to me loud and clear?
MURGUIA: I'm here.
DOBBS: I don't think that e should have any flag flying in this
country except the flag of the United States. And let me tell
you something else, since we're talking about double standards,
and I think you're right about people who would believe that.
But, let's be clear. I don't think there should be a St.
Patrick's Day. I don't care who you are. I think we ought to be
celebrating what is common about this country, what we enjoy as
similarities as people, and as Peter Viles was reporting,
talking about the culture and the heritage of their people, and
that's why they want to hold up the Mexican flag or Ecuadorian
flag.
From the March 29 edition of Fox News' The O'Reilly Factor:
O'REILLY: Continuing now with our lead story: the consequences
of rampant illegal immigration. With about 12 million illegals
already here, and about 75 percent of them Hispanic and millions
more on the way, what will America look like 10 years from now?
Joining us now from Washington with analysis on that is Juan
Williams.
Before I get to that bigger picture, what did you think when you
watched the Los Angeles demonstrations particularly, and you saw
these kids holding the Mexican flags? What -- what did you think
about that?
WILLIAMS: Well, these kids don't know anything. I mean, all the
kids are doing is looking for identity. I think these -- a lot
of these are poor kids, struggling along in those schools and
struggling to gain some sense of identity, so they're going to
wave the