{"id":132337,"date":"2020-06-30T09:53:11","date_gmt":"2020-06-30T17:53:11","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/?p=132337"},"modified":"2020-07-04T09:59:07","modified_gmt":"2020-07-04T17:59:07","slug":"the-things-they-say-behind-your-back-stereotypes-and-the-myths-behind-them","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/?p=132337","title":{"rendered":"The Things They Say behind Your Back: Stereotypes and the Myths Behind Them"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><A HREF=\"https:\/\/www.washingtonpost.com\/archive\/lifestyle\/1982\/12\/27\/changing-a-light-bulb-illuminating-ethnic-stereotypesthe-things-they-say-behind-your-back-stereotypes-and-the-myths-behind-them-by-william-b-helmreich-doubleday-288-pp-1495\/53be1fe0-0148-4c20-9c84-5be0a857f3ee\/\">The Washington Post published in 1982<\/a>: <\/p>\n<blockquote><p>In the section on blacks, Helmreich writes, &#8220;No group in American society has suffered as much from discrimination as Afro-Americans. The fact is reflected in the paucity of positive stereotypes about them.&#8221; In that section, stereotypes of hypersensitivity, sexual and athletic prowess and criminality are explored.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p><A HREF=\"https:\/\/www.amazon.com\/Things-They-behind-Your-Back-ebook-dp-B0761XQFT6\/dp\/B0761XQFT6\/ref=mt_other?_encoding=UTF8&#038;me=&#038;qid=\">Here are some highlights from this 1982 book by William Helmreich<\/a>:<\/p>\n<p>* Among the most common explanations is that it  is simply a very efficient way of coping with our environment, an  environment so complex that we have to break it down into categories before we can understand it. It would clearly be impossible for us to function if everything that happened were dealt  with on an individual basis. Without stereotypes everything  would be treated as if it were taking place for the first time.  <\/p>\n<p>* The reader glancing through the Contents will find, for example,  that almost all of the stereotypes attributed to Blacks, namely,  lazy and shiftless, violent, stupid, and so forth, are negative. This  does not mean that any of them are true or that Blacks possess  no positive traits. Black people have made enormous contributions throughout history and have innumerable positive characteristics. But it is not the purpose of this book to detail them.  Rather, the focus is on how others perceive (read: stereotype)  Blacks. <\/p>\n<p>* The story is told of a Jewish mother who went to the beach with  her son and daughter-in-law. The son, a physician, swam a bit too  far away from shore and began struggling in the water as he tried  to make his way to safety. His mother, in an effort to attract attention to his plight, began running up and down the beach screaming  at the top of her lungs, \u201cHelp! Somebody please help! My son, the  Great Neck psychiatrist, he\u2019s drowning!\u201d  <\/p>\n<p>* In difficult economic times her role became even more important. When, as was the case with the East European immigrants  who came to this country around the turn of the century, the  husband was forced to work long hours away from home, the  mother occupied a central place in the lives of her children. It is  here that the guilt factor became important. Having made a  major contribution to the upbringing of her offspring, she was  able to gain not only their affection but also their loyalty and dependence. Her children were often imbued with a strong sense  of guilt when they failed to measure up to the expectations of  their mother, who \u201cworked so hard so that you should be  happy.\u201d The values transmitted to the child were rooted in the  strong sense of morality that permeated the culture. A mother  said to her child, \u201cEat for the sake of your parents, who love you  and want only the best for you. Study so that your parents will  be proud of you.\u201d Thus the biblical notion of responsibility for  others became part of the secular belief system.  If Jewish mothers (and fathers as well) pushed and fought  for their children and taught them never to be satisfied (\u201cSo you  got a 98. But who got the 100?\u201d), it was in large part due to  their perception of a world hostile to their kind. Since their  names were not Stuart or Baker or Blake, it was necessary to  give them strong egos. Only then would they have the  confidence to offset the disadvantages of their religion. Unfortunately, this was sometimes carried too far, with the child  brought up to think of himself or herself (the Jewish Prince and  Jewish Princess syndromes) as number one.  <\/p>\n<p>* The general view held by many non-Jews (as well as Jews  who seem almost proud of it) is that Jewish parents spoil their  children. In one community study, the sociologist Benjamin  Ringer reported the following attitudes of Gentile parents in a  Chicago suburb toward their Jewish neighbors:  &#8220;Jewish parents.. .let them [children] run wild in the stores without  reprimanding them. They don\u2019t care how much trouble they cause,  they don\u2019t punish them enough&#8230; they\u2019re always M am a&#8217;s angel  &#8230; [They] raise their children to feel superior to Gentile children  either materially or else purely defensively&#8230; For example, my gun  is better than yours. My house is better&#8230; My daughter came  home from a Jewish home and asked why we didn\u2019t have seven telephones.&#8221; (The Edge of Friendliness, pp. 71\u201472)  <\/p>\n<p>Such indulgence can perhaps best be understood in light of the  heavy demands Jewish parents make upon their children in  other areas. Because they expect so much from their children in  terms of getting good grades, being admitted to the right school,  marrying well, and so forth, the parents compensate in other  areas, buying them what they want, letting them talk back, and  generally pampering them. This often leads to overprotectiveness. The Jewish mother has therefore been immortalized in  countless jokes and novels as the woman who asphyxiates her  child in warm clothing, drowns him in chicken soup, and is constantly yelling at him to put on his galoshes. <\/p>\n<p>* being brought up in this fashion must  have some positive points if one is to judge by the considerable  success enjoyed by Jews as a group. If nothing else, delaying independence in the child tends to increase the educational level  of many children by increasing the amount of time they will  spend in school. More fundamentally, the fact that the Jewish  parent lets his children know how much he believes in them can  often be a crucial factor in their ultimate success and confidence  in themselves. Finally, the strong family structure gives the Jew a strong sense of family responsibility, thus giving rise to yet  another Jewish stereotype\u2014that Jews make good husbands.  <\/p>\n<p>* A Jewish agent in a Catholic insurance firm did exceptionally well  for a number of years and was recommended for a top executive  post. His religion posed a serious problem, however, because the  company felt it would harm their relations with top members of other  firms. After a good deal of agonizing, they decided to call in a  leading priest to convert the Jew. A meeting was held in the private  office of the company\u2019s president, during which the clergyman attempted to persuade the Jew to accept the Christian faith.  Finally, after almost three hours, the two emerged.  \u201cWell, Father,\u201d asked the president. \u201cHow did you make out? Do  we have a new Catholic?\u201d  \u201cNo, we don\u2019t,\u201d replied the priest, \u201cbut he did sell me a $50,000  policy.\u201d  <\/p>\n<p>* In The Pawnbroker there is a famous scene in which Rod  Steiger, who plays the Jewish immigrant pawnbroker, sternly  lectures a young Puerto Rican boy who works for him about the  importance of having and holding on to money. It is easy to see  in this film the caricature of the Jew as a greedy, money-hungry  man without taking into account the experiences sometimes responsible for such obsessions. Lacking a homeland for thousands  of years, always dependent on the whims of others, never certain  when persecution might strike, the Jew, perhaps more than any  other nationality, has come to see money as a means of survival.  In medieval times Jews often bartered their lives in exchange for  money, which they gave to local overlords for protection from a  hostile population. Unlike the Gentile, who could work the land  and benefit from its use, the Jew owed his shelter, safety, food,  and anything else of value he possessed to money. Small wonder  that it became so important to many Jews. During the Nazi era,  to take a case in point, many Jews survived because they were  able to purchase protection from individual Gentiles in various  occupied lands.   <\/p>\n<p>* An Italian comedian regaled his audience with story after  story of Jews and their preoccupation with money. In one joke a  Jewish watchdog was described as one who says to the burglar,  \u201cTake anything you want. It\u2019s all insured.\u201d  <\/p>\n<p>* In his book Anti-Semite and Jew, Jean-Paul Sartre says: \u201cThe anti-Semite readily admits that the Jew is intelligent and hardworking; he will even confess himself inferior in these respects&#8230;  [for] the more virtues the Jew has, the more dangerous he will be.\u201d <\/p>\n<p>* This stereotype [that Jews are cheap] can perhaps best be answered with the following statement: Jews are more likely to be in business than any  other ethnic group. It is a fact of economic life that the lower  the cost of producing an item and the greater the sale price, the  larger the profit. Any businessman, be he Jewish or a member of  another group, seeks to maximize his profit. Since more Jews,  proportionately, are in business, they are more likely to be accused of what is, in fact, a basic feature of capitalism.  <\/p>\n<p>* Perhaps the majority  of businesses in which Jews are to be found involve retail trade.  Examples are clothing, food, and real estate. This means that  they are likely to have greater personal contact with the public  than, say, those in businesses such as utilities, oil, or steel. Consequently, they will bear the brunt of consumer antagonism even  though such hostility is probably a natural by-product of customer\/store or management\/tenant relationships. <\/p>\n<p>* Jewish influence in banking today is virtually nonexistent. Several banks such as Bank Leumi and Republic National Bank of  New York are under Jewish ownership, but the vast majority of  banks are not only controlled by non-Jews but do not, in fact,  employ Jews in high positions. For example, in New York City,  where two million Jews live, there are almost no Jews among the  top executives of the city&#8217;s seven largest banks. Elsewhere in the  country the proportion is even smaller.<\/p>\n<p>* There are, incidentally, almost no Jews at the upper echelons of major  industries such as insurance, oil, steel, and the utility companies.  <\/p>\n<p>* the median income of Jews is significantly higher  than that of non-Jews. Demographers have pointed out, however, that this is directly related to education. When Jews and  others in the population with similar educational levels are compared, the differences are less than 10 percent.  <\/p>\n<p>* One major reason for the common perception of Jews as rich  is their concentration in retail businesses ranging from grocery  stores to large department stores. As a result, they must often  deal directly with the poor and the working class, many of  whom are apt to focus general resentment at their economic status on an easily identifiable scapegoat. The same is true in the  housing area. It is much simpler to focus on the Jewish landlord  (or slumlord) than on the impersonal gas or electric company,  whose wealth is far greater. It makes little difference to a  poverty-stricken ghetto dweller that his Jewish landlord is middle-class. Compared to his own economic plight, the Jew is rich.  As long as Jews are heavily involved in highly visible occupations of this sort, such stereotypes are likely to persist.  <\/p>\n<p>* &#8220;I am super-conscious of being Jewish. I will overtip in a restaurant  because I know people think Jews are cheap. I\u2019ll order in a soft  voice, and my taste in cars, clothes, and the furniture I buy for our  home is very conservative because 1 know what others think of Jews.&#8221;  <\/p>\n<p>ITALIANS<\/p>\n<p>* In his autobiographical account of life  in an Italian family in Rochester, New York, Jerre Mangione  writes:  &#8220;There was a banquet for as many occasions as my father could  imagine, and his imagination was fertile. He once gave a banquet  for some relatives who were moving to California and, when they  were suddenly obliged to change their plans, he gave another banquet to celebrate their staying&#8230; Like the rest of my relatives he  believed implicitly in the goodness of food and liked to repeat the  motto: \u201c Food is the only thing you can take with you when you die.\u201d  &#8230; The dinner usually closed with my Uncle Nino making a speech  in pure Italian&#8230; He would&#8230; talk about the glories of Italy or  the wonders of New York City, but always he remembered to finish  up with Dante. (Mount Allegro, pp. 131\u201432, 141\u201442)&#8221;  <\/p>\n<p>In short, food becomes a way of holding the family together,  a setting for sharing common experiences and reinforcing common bonds. Moreover, the ethnic foods serve not only to reunite  the family but to root it in a larger common culture and history. <\/p>\n<p>* Most Italian-Americans come from southern Italy and Sicily, a  traditional peasant culture that stressed strong family and community ties and nurtured extreme distrust of outsiders. Although  Italy was unified in 1870, it has always been divided into at least  two distinct societies\u2014that of the North and that of the South.  Northerners viewed the South as backward and only halfcivilized, fit only for exporting agricultural produce to the  wealthier and more developed North. The educational system in  the South was controlled by the North, which, among other  things, used literary Italian in the schools and held local culture  in contempt.  Like all peasant societies, southern Italians considered education or knowledge to be the accumulated wisdom, moral codes,  and experiences of the community and looked upon the schools  as cultural wastelands. In southern Italy the term buon educato  means that a person has learned how to act morally and properly within his community and not that he has gone to college.  \u201cDo not make your child better than you are\u201d is a popular saying in southern Italy that typifies this attitude. <\/p>\n<p>When southern Italians arrived in the United States, they  brought with them these attitudes. They often moved into neighborhoods populated by relatives or friends from the old country.  While Jews, with whom the Italians are often compared, came  from a tradition that valued education, Italians saw it as valuable only if it helped the person \u201clearn a trade.\u201d This was because in Italy one went to school beyond the fifth grade only to  acquire a profession. Many Italians were unable to understand  how a school could waste a young man s energy by teaching him  sports or take up his time by giving him lessons in how the government worked. The important thing was practical learning. <\/p>\n<p>* When the fascists came to power in Italy during the 1920s and  began a campaign against the Mafia, many came to the United  States, hoping to get rich quickly. Their optimism was justified,  for this was the era of Prohibition, when qualities such as  ruthlessness, lust for power, and a tightly knit organization paid  off. The Mafia established itself in American crime circles and  has remained there ever since. True, the Jews and the Irish had  their gangs too\u2014actually, the Irish got started long before the  Italians\u2014but neither group had a history of criminal activity  that stretched back for centuries. <\/p>\n<p>* The ancient Romans were, of course, great soldiers. The \u201ccoward\u201d stereotype did not appear in the literature or in the popular  mind until the 1940s. It owes its origins to World War II, in  which the Italians performed poorly. The Italians were hardly  enthusiastic about a campaign of aggression under the banner of  fascism. Even Mussolini admitted that fascism had achieved its  greatest popularity in 1937. One commentator at the time characterized the Italian Army as one predominantly made up of  conscientious objectors. Italy entered World War II against a  backdrop of having suffered reverses at the hands of antifascist  forces during the Spanish Civil War. Nor had its reputation been  enhanced by reports that it had liberally sprayed poison gases  on Ethiopian villages. After some initial victories in North  Africa, the Italians were decisively defeated by the British and  driven out of Egypt, which they had briefly occupied. This was  followed by humiliating defeats in Greece and Albania.  The failure of the Italian war effort in these areas was due not  so much to incompetence as to poor preparedness and dilation. Mussolini\u2019s generals had told him that Italy\u2019s Army was  not ready to go to war, but he ignored their advice. He had invaded Greece without informing Hitler and was subsequently  forced to beg him for help. The Nazi leader obliged, but in the  process Italy almost became a colony of Germany to be exploited at will. Throughout the war Italy was successful only  when it fought alongside the Germans or with massive aid. By  itself it lacked the firepower to successfully engage the Allies.  <\/p>\n<p>BLACKS<\/p>\n<p>* &#8220;Persisting to this day is an attitude, shared by black and white alike, that blacks are inferior. This belief permeates every facet of this  country, and it is the etiological agent from which has developed the national sickness.&#8221; (Grier and Cobbs, Black Rage, p. 25)  These words, written in 1969 by two prominent Black psychiatrists, summed up the prevailing perception of Blacks in this  country. <\/p>\n<p>* \u201cYou know, all this reminds  me of a joke I heard the other day while I was walking on the  City College campus down Convent Avenue. There were students  walking ahead of me and I heard one say to the other, \u2018Wanna  hear a good joke?\u2019 \u2018Yeah&#8217; said the other. \u2018What\u2019s the easiest way to kill a Jew? Throw a nickel into the  middle of the street.&#8217; \u201d The entire class burst out laughing at this  caricature of the Jew\u2019s stereotyped preoccupation with money.  \u201cNow let me tell you another joke,\u201d I said after the laughter had  subsided somewhat. \u201cI was in a store in Forest Hills, Queens,  when I heard the following exchange: What\u2019s the easiest way to  kill a schvartzer  said one man. \u2018I don\u2019t know&#8217; replied the other.  \u2018Throw a bottle of Old Grand-Dad into the middle of 125th  Street\u201d. This time there was no laughter, only dead silence. The class appeared stunned as I went on. \u201cWhy isn\u2019t anybody laughing? Why isn\u2019t this joke as funny as the other one? Is it because  it\u2019s about your own people? Why is it that we fail to perceive  that others have the same feelings that we do?\u201d <\/p>\n<p>* Black women of status may  often reject Black men as sexual partners simply because their social status is inferior. <\/p>\n<p>* By putting white women on a pedestal of purity and chastity,  Southern white men set into motion a vicious cycle from which  it was almost impossible to escape. Having designated their  wives as chaste, they often succeeded in making them frigid. In  response, they sought out Black women whom their society had  debased. Forced by their own code to deny having achieved satisfaction in this manner, they were compelled to deny having  initiated or even taken part in such liaisons. And finally, they  suspected their own white wives of similar entanglements, reasoning \u201cIf I can, then perhaps she can too.\u201d In this manner the  white male was able to accuse the Black male of the \u201cmongrelization\u201d that was often his own doing.  <\/p>\n<p>* Interestingly, there is evidence that Blacks are more athletic and stronger physically than whites. In his doctoral dissertation  anthropologist Robert Malina studied the growth, maturation,  and performance of a sample of Philadelphia schoolchildren between the ages of six and twelve. Black children of both sexes  had greater strength values in four measures of static strength.  In another study on the nutritional status of adult Black women,  researchers found them to have greater grip strength than white  women. Although there are studies reporting no significant  differences, most research on this issue suggests that Blacks generally have better muscle development than whites. The same is  true for studies of athletic ability. For example, Blacks outperform whites in gymnastic tests of jumping ability, running (except for long-distance running, where whites seem to do better),  throwing, and other areas. Because of the unpopularity of  research on racial differences, and because of methodological  problems in doing such research, conclusions on this matter cannot be drawn. <\/p>\n<p>* Although recent studies point to a steady decline in anti-Black  stereotypes, the depth of feelings expressed in this Newsweek article on prejudice indicates that association of Blacks with that  which is unclean is deeply embedded in the minds of many  whites. The color black has always had negative connotations in  the English language. Some examples are: black magic, black as  the night, a black day, black as the devil, and so forth. Conversely, white is seen as pure, clean, and chaste.  As Dr. Jordan has pointed out in White Over Black, blackness  as a synonym for dirt was transferred to the general perception  of Africans from the time Europeans first came into contact with  them. Indeed, even prior to that period the Oxford English Dictionary defined black as \u201cfoul, atrocious, baneful, deeply stained  with dirt, soiled,\u201d and so forth. <\/p>\n<p>* The English think the Irish are dirty; the Poles in Europe  held the same view of Jews; in America poor whites are called  \u201cwhite trash\u201d; there are Polish jokes about dirt&#8230;<\/p>\n<p>* Lazy and shiftless:  Whites will often point to the number of unemployed Blacks  to support this assertion. The ratio of unemployed Blacks to  whites has been about 2 to 1 since 1954 and is even higher  among Black teenagers. This is, however, due to complex developments in our society that have little to do with the willingness  to work hard.  Automation and other technological improvements in industry  have rendered many jobs obsolete. Those most affected have  been unskilled workers, many of whom are Black. There has also  been a movement by industry to relocate in areas outside the  center of cities, where most Blacks live, because land there is  cheaper. In addition, the increased use of the automobile and  greater highway construction since World War II have made  such areas more accessible. However, because of their generally  lower socioeconomic status, Blacks find it difficult to commute to  the outer areas of the city. <\/p>\n<p>* What many whites do not realize is that working slowly, feigning illness or incompetence, or quitting entirely can be a  passive form of aggression, whether it is used consciously or unconsciously. This method of \u201cone-upping whitey\u201d was used in  slavery days as well. Numerous studies have shown that slaves  frequently engaged in sabotage (e.g., destroying farm implements or driving animals very hard) and in general did as little  work as possible. Some even cut off toes and hands to escape the  often unbearable conditions of plantation labor. Today quitting  a job without notice can be a way of expressing hostility, as is  coming late or pretending not to understand instructions. Needless to say, it is also engaged in by whites who find themselves in  dead-end jobs.  <\/p>\n<p>* The \u201clazy and shiftless\u201d stereotype is almost always directed at  lower-class Blacks. Middle-class Blacks who work as business  managers, teachers, lawyers, merchants, are rarely portrayed in  this manner. <\/p>\n<p>* Big Cadillacs and flashy clothes  \u201cWhere do they get the money for all those fancy clothes?\u201d a  white person will ask. \u201cIf they\u2019re so oppressed, how can they  afford to drive around in a Cadillac while I\u2019m making do with a  Dodge Dart?\u201d asks another.<\/p>\n<p>Sociologists and psychologists refer to such behavior as  \u201csymbolic status striving.\u201d When people are blocked from advancement or denied social acceptance, they will seek other means to  attain their goals. Sociologist David Caplovitz calls this mechanism \u201cconspicuous compensation.\u201d The Black person who wears  expensive jewelry in an ostentatious manner, who buys a two hundred-dollar pair of shoes despite a modest income, or who  favors only expensive, showy automobiles is, in effect, compensating for being denied the opportunity to, say, purchase a nice  home in a good (white) neighborhood. This pattern is not limited to Blacks, given the materialistic nature of American society; it has a high rate of occurrence among Jews, Italians, and  other discriminated against groups, especially if they are new arrivals to this country.  How much truth is there to the stereotype? A good deal, from  whatever evidence is available. According to D. Parke Gibson,  an authority on Black consumer behavior,  &#8220;&#8230; being able to dress well carries some built-in status and he  [i.e., the Black man] knows that above almost anything else his  appearance as he moves about today must be smart.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Citing figures on consumer expenditures, Gibson observes that  the average Black spends 30 percent more on clothing than the  typical white.  <\/p>\n<p>* Automobiles, long seen as both sex and power symbols, seem  to have a special appeal within the community\u2014and not merely to pimps and numbers racketeers. In a 1966 article by Ronald G.  Shafer that appeared in the Wall Street Journal, Leroy Jeffries,  then Midwest advertising manager for Ebony, noted that status  considerations were the most important factor when a Black  buyer selected a car. Others in Detroit\u2019s auto industry agree, and  while no one knows precisely how many Blacks buy luxury  autos, it is believed to be substantially higher than among  whites. <\/p>\n<p>* Tony Brown, a  Black marketing consultant in Detroit, asserted: &#8220;With a big car a Negro is saying I\u2019m as good as you are. Also many  Negroes don\u2019t own their own homes and they\u2019re more comfortable in  a big, quiet car than where they live, in some crowded, noisy, urban  neighborhood.&#8221; (Wall Street Journal, December 2, 1966) <\/p>\n<p>* Violent criminals:  This stereotype has some truth to it only with regard to one  segment of the Black American population\u2014young, Black, poor  urban males. This is confirmed by almost every study of violent  crime in the United States. Even allowing for the fact that  Blacks are discriminated against by law enforcement authorities,  the figures are quite high. According to The Presidents Commission on Law Enforcement and Administration of Justice, the  Black arrest rate for murder in 1965 was 24.1, while the white  rate was only 2.5 per 100,000 persons. Similarly, FBI statistics  from the late seventies indicate that Blacks have much higher  arrest rates for homicide, assault, rape, and robbery, though it  should be noted that those who commit such crimes represent a  small minority of the ghetto population. <\/p>\n<p>In his book Criminal Violence, Criminal Justice  writer Charles Silberman cites figures showing that in the period  1970-72, relative to population, Blacks in New York were  arrested for violent crimes more than three times as often as  were Hispanics. The disparities were equally great between Blacks and Hispanics in other parts of the country. <\/p>\n<p>Silberman also notes  that the homicide rate in Black Africa is not much different from  that of Western Europe and is considerably lower than that of  the United States.  <\/p>\n<p>In recent times the violence stereotype has gained greater credibility because of the over four hundred riots that occurred  in Black communities between 1964 and 1968. In addition to its  actual occurrence, Black leaders discovered that threats of violence (e.g., \u201cYou better give us jobs or it\u2019s going to be a long,  hot summer\u201d) and the popularization of slogans such as \u201cBum,  baby, bum\u201d were very useful in intimidating whites. As they  were used more frequently in this fashion, the stereotype became more prevalent. When one considers that just thirty years  ago the stereotype of the \u201cdocile, obedient nigra\u201d was very prevalent, this turnabout is truly remarkable.  <\/p>\n<p>Among the chief causes of the riots cited by the Commission on Civil Disorders were the rising expectations created by the  passage of the 1964 Civil Rights Act and other laws barring discrimination. The idea that frustration leads to aggression was  first developed by John Dollard and has definite applicability to  the question of why violence occurs in the Black community. Though it is difficult to directly connect the two, Blacks interviewed in the wake of the riots cited frustration as a cause, while also indicating that violence was justified to redress legitimate wrongs. <\/p>\n<p>JAPANESE<\/p>\n<p>* The sense  of foreignness with which every new group was viewed by those  already established here was heightened by physical differences.  Their skin color, the shape of their eyes, and their short stature  made them stand out.  The 1920-45 period in Japan was characterized by extreme  nationalism, and even though emigration from Japan to the  United States had slowed to a trickle, those living here were  seen as sharing such views with their mother country. <\/p>\n<p>Even before Pearl Harbor was actually attacked, publisher William Randolph Hearst wrote in the Los Angeles Examiner:  &#8220;Come out to California and see the myriads of little Japs peacefully  raising fruits and flowers and vegetables on California sunshine, and  saying hopefully and wistfully: \u201cSomeday I come with Japanese  army and take all this. Yes, sir, thank you.\u201d Then the Colonel [Colonel Knox] should see the fleets of peaceful little Japanese fishing  boats, plying up and down the California coast, catching fish and  taking photographs.&#8221; (Los Angeles Examiner, February 21, 1940)  <\/p>\n<p>The chief impetus for the chauvinistic stereotype was Pearl  Harbor and the entry of Japan into World War II as America\u2019s  enemy. While it is clear that the stereotype existed long before  then, the war greatly reinforced and confirmed earlier apprehensions. Even liberal leaders and spokesmen began to depict  Japanese-Americans in this fashion. For example, Earl Warren,  famous as head of \u201cthe liberal Warren Court,\u201d who was then the  California state attorney general, stated that \u201cthere is more potential danger among the group of Japanese who are born in this  country than from the alien Japanese who were bom in Japan.\u201d  He went on to say that the country was threatened by \u201can invisible deadline of sabotage.\u201d In a similar vein the great liberal columnist Walter Lippmann, the originator of the concept of stereotypes and a man who believed that they were inaccurate and undesirable, wrote in support of mass evacuation of JapaneseAmerieans from the West Coast: \u201cNobody\u2019s constitutional rights  include the right to reside and do business on a battlefield. And  nobody ought to be on a battlefield who has no good reason for  being there.\u201d The \u201cbattlefield,\u201d of course, was California.  <\/p>\n<p>Japanese conduct during the war fortified the chauvinistic  image. They acquired a not undeserved reputation as fanatical  fighters who were not afraid to die. <\/p>\n<p>Asian historians seem to feel that Japan has always  been a highly chauvinistic society. Although influenced by  Korean and Chinese culture, Japan has, as an island nation, always been relatively self-contained. Until the nineteenth century  Japanese society was not especially prone to outside influences.  Its people were a rather homogeneous grouping both racially  and culturally. As a result they developed a strong sense of national identity. In historical accounts, for instance, Japan was  often described by its chroniclers as a special land, located in  the center of the universe, whose sun goddess was the ruler of  the world. <\/p>\n<p>What was perhaps most interesting was the reaction of the Japanese themselves [in the USA during WWII]. Most co-operated with the authorities, hoping in this manner to prove their loyalty to America. Slightly  more than 2 percent asked to be returned to Japan\u2014a very low  figure for a people stereotyped as extremely nationalistic. Moreover, those Japanese-Americans who were eventually cleared by  the authorities and entered the Army compiled an exemplary  record of service. A total of 33,000 (half from Hawaii) served,  including two segregated units that fought in Europe and whose  fame for bravery in battle reached epic proportions. One of  these, the 442nd regiment, suffered 9,486 casualties, and individual members won 18,143 decorations. No other unit\u2014white, yellow, or Black\u2014did as well. <\/p>\n<p>In the aftermath of the war stereotypes of Japanese-Americans  underwent a radical change. They came to be viewed as exemplary American citizens participating actively in a variety of  organizations, ranging from Christian churches to Rotary Clubs  to Little League baseball. Although many maintained social ties  with other Japanese, an equal number felt comfortable among  Caucasians. With the passage of time, the stereotype of chauvinism has faded and has been replaced by other, more positive, attributes. <\/p>\n<p>* Hardworking, ambitious, and competitive:  Some years ago Dr. Giovanni Agnelli, chairman of Fiat, was  asked what he intended to do about Japanese competition. \u201cI\u2019m  sorry to admit it,\u201d he said somewhat ruefully, \u201cbut they work  harder than we do. It\u2019s quite a problem.\u201d Most foreigners who  do business with Japan would agree with this assessment, but  one distinction should be made before going any further: The  Japanese concept of hard work is not the stereotypical American  one of the rugged, driving individualist whose success story is  frequently couched in Horatio Alger terms. Rather, it is one subordinated to the group. The typical Japanese employee is a company man first and an individual second. For instance, workers  at the giant Matsushita Electric Corporation, which makes millions of TVs, radios, and other electronic products, begin each  morning by singing the company song. <\/p>\n<p>As opposed to the feudal period, Japanese immigrants to the  United States were no longer locked into the position of farmer,  military man, or merchant. They could, more or less, pursue the  American dream. Yet they were still, because of their history,  very status conscious. Writing in National Geographic, Bart  McDowell observed that when strangers are introduced, they  study each others professional affiliation, as indicated on their  business cards, and then decide how to treat one another. Those  on the boards of directors get the deepest bows and department  heads the shallowest. In a society where status is so important, it  is not surprising that people will work hard to attain it.  <\/p>\n<p>Another factor is the tolerance in Japan toward the coexistence of different religions. Dr. Kitano relates how he saw a pilgrim on his way to a Shinto shrine in Japan carrying a Protestant  Bible and wearing a crucifix. In fact, the average Japanese will  probably be blessed by a Shinto priest shortly after birth and  buried in a Buddhist cemetery. When St. Francis Xavier sought  to proselytize in Japan four hundred years ago, he had no problems gaining permission to do so. The generally open attitude toward different faiths\u2014many Japanese will admit that they \u201clike  to touch all bases\u201d\u2014has led some to refer to Japan as a  \u201cmuseum  of religions.\u201d  <\/p>\n<p>* Japan\u2019s tremendous economic growth in itself supports the  truth of this overachiever stereotype, for it is only through hard  work and ambition that such a relatively small country could  have become one of the industrial giants of the world. Yet even  among Japanese-Americans there is ample evidence that these  patterns have been maintained in the United States. Most studies indicate that the Japanese are not only ambitious but are  very highly thought of by their employers. One such survey of  seventy-nine firms by sociologists Lee Rainwater and Alan Jacobson revealed that more than two thirds rated their Japanese-American employees very favorably\u2014this despite the fact that  the study took place in the early 1950s, a time when antiJapanese feelings were still quite common.<\/p>\n<p>* &#8220;among persons aged 14 years or over in 1960, the median  years of schooling completed by Japanese were 12.2 compared with  11.1 years by Chinese, 11.0 by whites, 9.2 by Filipinos, 8.6 by  Negroes and 8.4 by Indians.&#8221; (The New York Times Magazine, January 9, 1966)  <\/p>\n<p>* by 1925 Japan was probably the most literate nation in the world. Ninety-nine percent of its children attended school and in 1927 all but 7 percent of the population  could read.  <\/p>\n<p>* After World War II the treatment of women in Japan improved considerably. They were allowed to vote and even  elected a good number of representatives to the national Diet.  They attended college in greater numbers and the media paid  more attention to them and their concerns as time went on. Nevertheless, as Jack Seward wrote in 1972 in The Japanese, most  husbands today do not feel obligated to let their wives know if  they are coming home late and, according to one study, almost  two thirds of them stop off \u201csomewhere\u201d before getting there.  Seward told a fascinating story about former Prime Minister Eisaku Sato that would seem to indicate that though Japanese  women may have certain inalienable rights, their status is still  very unequal by Western standards. In an interview with a national magazine, Mrs. Sato remarked, in response to a reporters  query, that her husband had run around in his younger days,  never sought her advice, and that he beat her. The Premier  confirmed these assertions, observing, however, that he had  stopped inflicting corporal punishment on her because \u201ctimes  have changed.\u201d He then asked the reporters whether they still  beat their wives and half of them admitted\u2014somewhat embarrassedly, that they did. <\/p>\n<p>* Japanese-Americans did very  well in this country, quickly establishing themselves as efficient,  reliable, ambitious, and hardworking. In his work The Economics and Politics of Racial Accommodation Dr. John Modell  observes that Japanese fruit stands and floral businesses proliferated in Los Angeles because many whites believed that the  produce and flowers of the Japanese were superior to those of  their white competitors. The problem for prejudiced whites was  how to explain the general success of this group of relatively  new immigrants. Since their own bigotry prevented them from  thinking of the Japanese as equal, whites were compelled to  resort to other rationalizations, among them the idea that the  Japanese had, by guile and deceit, managed to outwit their  white counterparts. Americans, of course, would never stoop to  such low levels. In addition, such charges often played into the  hands of unscrupulous politicians, many of whom built entire careers by stirring up anti-Japanese (as well as anti-Chinese) sentiments on the West Coast.  Differences in culture also contribute to suspicions and apprehensions of this sort. This is no one\u2019s fault, yet it must be taken  into account. For example, the Japanese smile not only when  pleased or amused but also when they wish to indicate that a  line of inquiry should not be pursued any further. The same smile can also be used to hide shame or anger. <\/p>\n<p>* the Japanese are not the only out-group to have  been perceived as two-faced and deceitful. Yet because of a  need to explain their success\u2014and the usefulness of the accusation for opportunistic politicians\u2014as well as certain historical  developments, the stereotype has long been associated with  them. <\/p>\n<p>* Like the Chinese, with  whom they share many cultural similarities, the Japanese have  one of the lowest divorce rates of any American subgroup. <\/p>\n<p>* The Japanese-American family system is characterized by mutual obligations and responsibilities between parents and children, with the parents sacrificing for the children\u2019s sake while at  the same time expecting unquestioned obedience from their  offspring. <\/p>\n<p>* &#8230; an Issei would say: \u201cHere are your eggs; eat them.\u2019 in contrast  to the more typical American motivational question: \u201cJohnny, do  you want eggs? How do you want them? Oh, please, you know eggs  are good for you. If you love me you\u2019ll eat eggs.\u201d <\/p>\n<p>* In addition to unswerving familial loyalty and respect for parents, children are taught that they represent the family name in  everything they do. If they fail in school or at work, the entire  family is shamed. Upon marriage, children are expected to take  up residence near their families. This is part of a feeling of mutual dependence that is fostered by the Sunday outings, family  dinners, and other activities centered around the family unit.  The closeness of the family is due to several factors. First,  both Buddhism and Confucianism emphasized the importance  of family life, influencing, in turn, Shintoism, the religion native  to Japan. Drawing upon religious values, the political system  within Japan was founded on the concept that all Japanese  belonged to one large family, the head or \u201cfather\u201d of which was  the emperor. By intertwining family with politics and religion,  the importance of the familial unit increased to the point where  it was seen as embodying such basic values of the society as discipline, self-sacrifice, loyalty, and unity.  <\/p>\n<p>* As we saw in our discussion of the Black family, extreme poverty often has disastrous effects on the family structure. The Japanese were able to avoid this situation in part because of a system that provided help for the indigent. A poverty-stricken  individual was expected to ask members of his extended family  for assistance. If this failed he could approach friends. When all informal appeals had been exhausted, he could appeal to the  kenjinkai. These were associations whose members came from  the same province in Japan, similar to the Jewish Landsmanschaften (immigrant societies). Their desire to help  stemmed largely from the fact that it was considered a disgrace  for a community to be unable to provide help for its own  members. Such help, which usually consisted of either money or  job assistance, enabled the Japanese to attain a near-perfect record of family stability and a corresponding lack of deviant behavior in the community.  <\/p>\n<p>* in 1948 12 percent of Japanese marriages in Los Angeles  were to non-Japanese. By 1959 the figure had risen to 23 percent, and by 1972 it was 49 percent. Information from other  cities with large Japanese-American populations confirms this  trend. Clearly, any community where almost half or more than  half of its members marry outside the group will have difficulty  maintaining its cultural uniqueness.  <\/p>\n<p>* The Japanese themselves are not likely to be offended by  charges of imitativeness, for such an approach was a matter of  historical necessity as well as policy. <\/p>\n<p>* Statistically the chances of being mugged, robbed, raped, or  murdered by someone who is a Japanese-American are very  small. According to FBI figures, Japanese-American arrest rates are lower than those of any group surveyed. Statistics in cities  around the country confirm this pattern; in i960 arrest rates for  non-Japanese-Americans in Los Angeles were more than thirteen  times higher than for Japanese-Americans. Moreover, those  crimes for which Japanese are charged tend to be minor  offenses, usually drunkenness or gambling, both of which are  viewed more tolerantly in Japanese society than in American society.  <\/p>\n<p>* Most of the standard theories put forth by criminologists to  explain why members of certain groups commit crimes more  often than those of others do not seem to apply to JapaneseAmericans. They certainly experienced a great deal of discrimination and were often frustrated in their efforts to get ahead. In  the early period of their arrival here, the Japanese often lived in  high-crime ghettoes, yet they were rarely involved in criminal  behavior. In Seattle, for instance, only 3 out of 710 boys in a reformatory there between 1919 and 1930 were Japanese, and they  came from families that had little contact with the JapaneseAmerican community as a whole. In a similar vein, sociologists  have observed that the conflict between the immigrants and  their children often leads to a general rejection of authority by  children who are ashamed of their parents\u2019 \u201cstrange\u201d ways. The  gap in the Japanese-American community between Issei and  Nisei was a wide one, especially since the parents could not become citizens. Despite this and the other factors, the Japanese  are, in fact, among the most law-abiding nationalities in the  United States. <\/p>\n<p>* &#8220;I knew these two brothers who were pretty wild. They would get  drunk&#8230; were always fighting, always in trouble and were uncontrollable. Finally their father came to talk to my father and other  Japanese families in the neighborhood&#8230; all agreed that these  boys would hurt the reputation of the other Japanese and provide  poor models for the younger boys&#8230; so even though the brothers  were already young adults and out of high school, they were sent  back to Japan in 1937. As far as I know, they never came back to  the United States.&#8221; (Japanese Americans, p. 73)  <\/p>\n<p>CHINESE<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;A Chinaman is cold, cunning and distrustful; always ready to take  advantage of those he has to deal with; extremely covetous and deceitful.&#8221; (\u201cChina,\u201d Encyclopaedia Britannica, 7th ed., vol. 6 [1842])  <\/p>\n<p>There is no scientific evidence that the Chinese are any more  cunning, sly, or dishonest than the rest of us. Moreover, this stereotype appears to be dying out. <\/p>\n<p>* The New York Times ran an article in its April 30, 1905,  edition about the efforts of female missionaries to rescue white  slave girls held in captivity by Chinese \u201copium fiends.\u201d The title  was \u201cRescuing Angel of the Little Slaves of Chinatown.\u201d Such  articles routinely appeared in hundreds of newspapers throughout the country, with reporters occasionally admitting to exaggeration simply to get \u201csome good copy\u201d about \u201cthe yellow peril\u201d  into their editors\u2019 hands.  <\/p>\n<p>Chinatown was depicted as a place of sin, with brothels  and opium dens on every comer and sinister figures lurking in  every shadow, waiting to corrupt the morals of the innocent and  unwary.  <\/p>\n<p>* While there  are many Chinese-owned laundries, they do not possess any innate abilities in this area; nor is it an especially popular occupation in China. <\/p>\n<p>* Forbidden to own land by California law  and denied entry into the unions, many became laundrymen,  having discovered that the high ratio of men to women made  this a relatively lucrative field. <\/p>\n<p>* INSCRUTABLE: The answer to whether or not this stereotype (usually  directed at Orientals in general) has some basis in fact would  have to be a qualified yes. Among the Chinese there seem to be  certain cultural restraints vis-\u00e0-vis emotional expression&#8230;<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;You see, my parents were here illegally. Many Chinese came here illegally because the Chinese Exclusion Acts limited our numbers  greatly, and as a practical matter we couldn\u2019t afford to let the whites know about that. So I always heard in my home, \u201cDon\u2019t trust the  white devils.\u201d&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>* Among the Chinese, opening one\u2019s eyes wide is often a sign of anger, while among Westerners it is more apt to reflect astonishment. <\/p>\n<p>* This resulted in a good  deal of concern about not losing face. As a result of their efforts  to avoid embarrassing others, the Chinese developed an aversion  to bluntness. Kenneth Latourette, the Yale historian and an authority on Chinese history, gives numerous examples of how this  was achieved in Chinese society. One example he presents is  that of the Chinese guest at a dinner who deliberately spoke in  halting Chinese to his dinner companion so as not to embarrass  him. Another is of the head of a household who told his servant  \u201cthat the sugar under his charge was disappearing more rapidly  than it ought.\u201d The servant, realizing he was being indirectly accused, suggested a method of safeguarding it against theft by  strangers even though both men knew that, under the circumstances, only the servant could have taken the sugar.  <\/p>\n<p>* Finally, there is even some evidence that this stereotype may  have emerged because of some physical characteristics possessed  by Orientals. Anatomical experts have noted that one of the facial muscles, the quadratus labii superioris, is pretty much fused  together in the Oriental face, whereas among whites it is divided into three distinct parts, each of which can, to a large degree, be  independently controlled. What this means is that whites are  probably capable of a wider range of emotional expression than  Orientals. <\/p>\n<p>* The 1960 U. S. Census showed that Chinese-Americans were more  than twice as likely to have completed college than whites. In  the 1970 U. S. Census more Chinese males had completed four  or more years of college than any other ethnic group. <\/p>\n<p>Part of the education stereotype is the notion that ChineseAmericans gravitate toward professions in the sciences and related areas. This is true. In i960 more than half of all ChineseAmerican professionals were employed in the following fields:  drafting, engineering, accounting, the natural sciences, and college teaching. Moreover, less than one quarter of those teaching  at the college level were in the humanities or social sciences&#8230; There are several possible reasons for this. First, Chinese-American professionals chose these fields in the early  1940s and thereby established a pattern to be followed by others  in the community. Second, these areas did not require as much  proficiency in English as, say, law or management. Third, Chinese-Americans felt that skills in these areas were more easily  measured by objective standards, thus enabling them to avoid  discrimination.  <\/p>\n<p>* In terms of occupations, most Chinese immigrants went into service occupations such as laborers, laundrymen, busboys, and waiters. Such jobs almost demand politeness  and encourage obsequiousness. On the other hand, no one has  ever accused French waiters or Hispanic busboys of excessive  politeness.  <\/p>\n<p>* Travelers to the Orient have frequently noted the good grace and courteousness with which  they have been received by their hosts in China, as well as in  Japan, Korea, and elsewhere. This is traceable to the Confucian  tradition that urged people to show respect for one another by  putting oneself in the others position and stated that selfimprovement required the practice of virtue. <\/p>\n<p>IRISH<\/p>\n<p>* The visitor to Ireland today can easily see for himself that alcoholic consumption, especially in the convivial atmosphere of  the public house, is a favorite pastime. True, the Irish drink less,  per capita, than the British or Germans and are less likely to  suffer from cirrhosis of the liver than the French. Moreover, almost one sixth of the population has pledged not to drink alcohol, often joining the Pioneers, an organization devoted to abstinence. And there are, no doubt, millions of Irish in Ireland  and in the United States who either do not drink or who drink  socially without any difficulties. Still, the zeal of the abstainers  and their high degree of organization exist because there is a  problem. And there are, after all, an estimated 14,000 pubs in  Ireland. That works out to 1 for every 320 people.  <\/p>\n<p>* [The Irish] gained full control of the Democratic party in  urban America, which they proclaimed as \u201cthe party of all the  people.\u201d They used their skills in this area to win over the loyalty of the masses of East Europeans and southerners who had  followed them to the new land. As cities continued to expand,  the need for municipal services increased tremendously, making  control of patronage a crucial variable in city power politics.  <\/p>\n<p>* Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan has observed in Beyond the  Melting Pot (with Nathan Glazer) that \u201cinstead of letting politics  transform them, the Irish transformed politics, establishing a  political system that, from a distance, seems like the social system  of an Irish village writ large.\u201d Chief among its values was the  idea of stability. The Irish village, as Moynihan notes, was a  place where \u201calmost everyone had a role to play\u201d and where  one\u2019s \u201cposition was likely to improve with the passage of time.\u201d  This became the leitmotif of the political system that was fashioned in this country. Patience and waiting one\u2019s turn was rewarded with a job, a lucrative contract, money, or, at the very  least, a favor of some sort.  There were other parallels too between rural Irish values and  those that became part of the political infrastructure here. Irish  politicians were characterized by a gift for words as well as a  highly personal approach to politics. They were more interested  in people as individuals than in larger issues.  <\/p>\n<p>* Today the Irish, though still prominent in politics, are no  longer nearly as dominant as they were in the past. If they are, it  is as national figures a la Moynihan that they have made it, not  as party machine politicians, and their status has far more to do  with individual capabilities than with ethnic background. This is  in sharp contrast to Ireland, where politics is still a very serious  business, with voter turnout one of the highest among all democratic nations. Choices are often based on ancestral cleavages,  particularly what one\u2019s daddy did in 1916. Moynihan attributes  much of the loss of influence to the fact that as the Irish have  moved up the socioeconomic ladder they have left the cities and  become dispersed throughout the suburbs, where they no longer  vote in blocs but as individuals. To this can be added the fact  that as government has grown in complexity it has become less  responsive to the personal approach, and that technological advances have caused many of the patronage jobs on which the little fellow, the backbone of the party, depended to disappear.  <\/p>\n<p>* Late marriage, combined with a father who was, in many  cases, a heavy drinker, chronically underemployed, and chauvinistic in his attitudes toward his wife, probably had much to  do with the attention and affection lavished by Irish mothers on  their sons. Some writers believe that the Irish male so treated  tries to marry a substitute mother, a wife who, according to one  marriage counselor, \u201cis a king size water bottle.\u201d The problem is:  How do you have sex with your mother? Moreover, the guilt that  the mother may inspire in her son for \u201cdeserting her on account  of some scheming girl\u201d can cause him to develop a highly ambivalent attitude toward his wife in many areas, including sexual  relations. <\/p>\n<p>* Most of the Irish immigrants during the nineteenth century  were very attached to the old country. In addition to the normal  yearnings and homesickness that typified the experience of most  newcomers, there was the intensity of feeling against British oppression. Combined with anti-Catholic feeling in the United  States, the net effect was to increase the sense of loyalty to Ireland. Thus the immigrants supported the Catholic Emancipation  struggle, the Young Irelanders, and the Irish Republican Brotherhood (the original name of the Fenians) through rallies, political pressure, and money. Sizeable numbers of Irishmen fought  on both sides during the Civil War in the United States and  many saw it as an opportunity to gain experience to be used  later in freeing Ireland. Bringing attention to the struggle in Ireland was seen as valuable not only in terms of attracting support  but also in explaining to Americans why the Irish who came  here were so poverty-stricken and uneducated. <\/p>\n<p>* Football fans might perhaps think that Notre Dame University coined the term \u201cfighting Irish,\u201d but its origin probably lies  in the medieval English view of the Irish as wild barbarians. <\/p>\n<p>* Working as dockhands, railroad workers, and general  day laborers, often forced to go on the road to feed their  families, they lived rough-and-tumble lives often marked by violence. Having arrived here with no skills and no time in which  to learn them, they were particularly threatened by other groups  that followed them here, such as the Chinese and Italians, and  frequently fought violent battles with them. The fights that  erupted when they had a bit too much to drink are probably the  source of the quick-tempered stereotype. There were also Irish  gangs that fought constantly, the most famous of which was  probably Chicago\u2019s Regan Colts. Arrest records show that when  the Irish were apprehended, it was usually for such crimes as  disturbing the peace, disorderly conduct, and assault. <\/p>\n<p>POLES<\/p>\n<p>* Whites in America were confronted by angry Blacks during  the sixties. Many felt both guilty about their own prejudices and  hostile at having to face up to them. Unable to openly express  their racism, they returned to more acceptable forms of prejudice. The seemingly innocuous Poles (the term \u201cwhite ethnics\u201d  didnt even exist in those days) seemed a perfect group on  which to focus. In fact, writer Don Kovalic has suggested that  Poles became the butt of such humor in part because they did  not have a JD L or NAACP that could intimidate people. Thus,  the Polish parachute that \u201copened on impact\u201d replaced the Amos  and Andy caricatures of the fifties. <\/p>\n<p>Making Polack jokes is the racism of the middle class, especially liberals. <\/p>\n<p>* If the Polish immigrants did not have a monopoly on dirt,  then why are there so many jokes about this subject? One possibility is that as working-class people they frequently engaged in  what others might call \u201cdirty work.\u201d One could not stay clean in  a coal mine or steel mill or in any one of two dozen blue-collar  occupations. In associating them with such work, it is conceivable that the stereotype of dirty work became synonymous with  a dirty life.  <\/p>\n<p>* The idea that people transferred their stereotypes from Blacks  to Poles seems to be even more plausible here than in the case of  other traits because, as we saw in the discussion of Blacks, many  whites associate filth with blackness. At the same time, it should  be emphasized that dirt is a widely used stereotype whenever  attempts are made by members of one ethnic group to put down  those of another. In his classic work The Nature of Prejudice,  Dr. Gordon Allport pointed out that in Europe, where there is  no significant Black population, it is the Jew who is called dirty.  In Israel it is the Arab, in Yugoslavia the Turk, and so forth. In  short, calling members of a group against which one is already  prejudiced dirty becomes a way of further dehumanizing them  and justifying ones biases.  <\/p>\n<p>* In a national study of white American Catholics done in 1964,  Dr. Andrew Greeley reported that Poles are more likely to have  racist attitudes than any other group. <\/p>\n<p>* Michael Novak: &#8220;Ethnic Americans agree they would not like to be block in America  &#8230; They don\u2019t begrudge the black\u2019s gains; but they smell something very unfair. On television blacks are wealthier and smoother  than the ones workers meet every day. \u201cPropaganda, lies!\u201d they  think.&#8221; (p. 295)<\/p>\n<p>* In addition to economic competition, there is the problem of  violence, which disproportionately affects those living in the  inner cities. Many older Poles live in ethnic enclaves in large  cities like Philadelphia, New York, and Chicago. As Blacks move  into these areas, there is conflict that includes but goes beyond  crime. The cultural values of these groups frequently clash. For  instance, East Europeans look down on the conspicuous consumption patterns that often characterize Black ghetto culture.  Their attitudes differ on clothing, saving money, child rearing,  leisure-time activities, and the importance of property ownership. As a result, East Europeans are sometimes pressured into  panic selling, thus increasing the resentment. A Polish-American  eighth-grader in Philadelphia expressed the situation as follows:  &#8220;Negro people want the same rights as the white people but they  don\u2019t want the responsibility that goes with it&#8230; They wreck their  houses and then move to other ones. They try to integrate white people\u2019s neighborhoods and they don\u2019t want to pay for their own children. They start riots because they want equal rights. They break  windows into stores. They cheat&#8230; Negro people have new cars  but they don\u2019t want to pay for the rent of their houses. Their children  go around half-starved. They go around stealing because they don\u2019t  have any food. They don\u2019t do anything together&#8230; to the  Negroes, life is easy come, easy go&#8230; Nowadays the Negro people are asking too much. Not all the Negro people are bad, but most  of them are.&#8221; (Binzen, Whitefown, U.S.A., pp. 261 \u201462)  <\/p>\n<p>* The history of relations between Polonia [a name for the PolishAmerican community] and the Jewish community is one of mutual  dislike and attempts at cooperation are relatively infrequent. In recent years Polonia&#8217;s members have been increasingly angry over  what they define as a deliberate attempt by Jews in the mass communications media to prejudice the rest of society against them, and  the relations between these two communities tend not to be very cordial, especially in recent years.<\/p>\n<p>* Michael Novak: &#8220;Most of us who are children of Eastern European Christian immigrants know we are the children of peasants. We do not have in our family experience many models of learning, status and public grace.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>* The sum total of all these arguments is that Poles have not yet  produced an intelligentsia in this country. <\/p>\n<p>WASP:<\/p>\n<p>* WASPs are  the standard by which groups in American society judge themselves as well as others. <\/p>\n<p>* a WASP is a white Protestant whose background is Anglo-Saxon. Yet it does not seem to have worked out  that way. True, the founding fathers were from the British Isles,  and it was they who shaped many of the values and character  traits that came to be considered \u201cAmerican.\u201d Yet there were  other groups that, by virtue of their willingness to adapt to these  values and their Protestant faith, plus their North European origins, were able to blend in and win acceptance by the AngloSaxons. I am speaking, of course, of the Scandinavian, Dutch,  and German Protestants. Perhaps, in certain instances, they were  treated as not quite equal, but in American society being a  second-class WASP is better than being considered no WASP at  all, and many have made their peace with their ambiguous status.  <\/p>\n<p>HONORABLE: Generally stated, honor in this community has  to do with a sense of fair play, courage, honesty, forthrightness,  and doing \u201cthe right thing.\u201d It is also part of the larger concept  of being a gentleman or a person who is well bred.  <\/p>\n<p>* In his  book American Boarding Schools Dr. James McLachlan quotes  the views of Henry Coit, rector of the famous St. Paul&#8217;s School: &#8220;Honour, boys&#8230; honour, boys, is not a Chameleon, with one phase  for gentlemen in society, and another for men pursuing their ordinary business, and another for boys at school. The honour which you  ought to show to one another is just the same which you ought to  show when you are full grown to your fellow men&#8230; Honour is real  manliness, which is able to look everyone full in the face; not from  the possession of vulgar brass, but from a free conscience that has  nothing to fear because there is nothing to hide. Honour is real  manliness which scorns to do or say anything in a corner, or behind  the bush&#8230; it has the courage to do as its better knowledge dictates, and the steadiness, when it has started on the right track, not  to fall back because of a sneering tongue, nor to turn aside to listen  and be trapped by a lying one.&#8221; (p. 167) <\/p>\n<p>* Looking at Protestant theology, we see an emphasis on individualism. Protestantism argues that each person must be the  judge of his or her religious convictions. In other words, they  must accept responsibility for their actions. Moreover, Protestant  theology supports the freedom of individual inquiry. A religion  that forces a person to stand on his own two feet and has a thisworldly, action-oriented approach would appear to be fertile soil  for individuals who value honor, conviction, and moral responsibility. There is, in fact, evidence from empirical studies that  white Protestants stress such responsibility. According to Dr.  Gerhard Lenski, who studied independence training among  members of different religious groups, white Protestant mothers  expected their children to assume responsibilities at an earlier  age than Catholic mothers.  Certainly WASPs think of this concept as one belonging to  them. In WASP, Where Is Thy Sting?, Florence King writes,  &#8220;The WASP mother\u2019s fondest dream is being undercharged eleven  cents in the middle of a snowstorm, for it gives her a golden opportunity to teach a moral lesson. That very minute, she can send  Johnny back to the store with a dime and a penny clutched in his little mittened hand.&#8221; (p. 183)  <\/p>\n<p>&#8220;Obligation haunts the WASP. Like all women, I was told by my  mother that a man\u2019s payment is \u201cthe pleasure of your company,\u201d but  I never believed it. None of my friends did either. To the money-obsessed WASP, if a man spends a lot on you, you really ought to  go to bed with him. After all, it\u2019s the only way to keep from getting involved with him.&#8221; (p. 184) <\/p>\n<p>* \u201cWe strive for the little honesty that shines like the morning star through a cesspool of malfeasance.\u201d <\/p>\n<p>* Hardworking, industrious, and thrifty: Protestants  believed that worldly success was a sign that God favored them.  <\/p>\n<p>* It seems clear from all this that the stereotype of WASPs as  hardworking, industrious, and thrifty was certainly true in the  past. Both the religion and the opportunities present in colonial  America supported it. Have these attitudes survived into the  present? In a tongue-in-cheek description of her WASP family,  Florence King writes,  &#8220;The best time to see Protestantism in full flower is not in church but  on report-card day in a W asp home. W hen Gail Parent\u2019s hero David  Meyer brought home all A \u2019s, he was praised as \u201ca regular Einstein.\u201d  When the W asp child brings home all A \u2019s, he is paid off in cold  cash, so much for each A. The Jewish parent cares about what his  child has actually learned. The W asp parent is concerned with how  hard his child worked. Therefore, report-card day is really payday. Comparing our loot was standard practice for my classmates and  me on day-after-report-card day. I got a dollar for every B and  three dollars for every A, and considered myself gainfully employed;  school was my \u201cjob.&#8221;&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Cold and insensitive: &#8220;We are simply not \u201cpeople people.\u201d Close emotional contact with  our own species presents too many threats. Charming and exquisitely polite we may be, and fair-minded to an extreme, but we are not  warm.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>* Dr. Paul L. Adams, professor of psychiatry at the University of Louisville, in a chapter called \u201cThe  WASP Child\u201d that appeared in the Basic Handbook of Child  Psychiatry, has written, \u201cPrivatism, a pattern that holds one  uninvolved until oneself or one\u2019s immediate world are touched,  or encroached on, also lurks wherever the spirit of Protestantism  reigns.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>* In his book Religion and  Career Greeley summarizes his findings, including one that  claimed that Protestants score lower on emotionalism than either  Catholics (who place second) or Jews (who rank highest).  <\/p>\n<p>* Closely associated with the stereotypes of cold and insensitive  are those of stoicism and reserve. While they are not precisely  the same, all four imply a reluctance to show emotion. <\/p>\n<p>* In a fascinating book entitled  People in Pain, Dr. Mark Zborowski conducted 242 in-depth interviews in an effort to determine how persons from different  cultures reacted to pain. The four ethnic groups he focused on  were Irish, Jews, Italians, and \u201cOld Americans.\u201d This last group  was defined by Zborowski as persons of \u201cAnglo-Saxon origin,  usually of Protestant creed, whose ancestors have dwelt in the  United States more than three generations.\u201d The results demonstrated that Old Americans and Irish subjects bore their pain  with far less emotionality and were much more uncomplaining  than either Jews or Italians. Moreover, in a finding that bears on  the stereotype in question, Old Americans were most likely to  withdraw from other people when in pain. <\/p>\n<p>* WASPs are probably aware that in many situations they need not accommodate  themselves to those of lower status, and that this may lead them  to act in a callous manner that leads to accusations of coldness,  lack of concern for others, and so forth. <\/p>\n<p>* Well-mannered, polite, genteel: novels about life in England often included characters of the working class who were well-mannered and polite to  a fault. In Somerset Maugham\u2019s classic Of Human Bondage the  main character speaks depreeatingly of Mildred Rogers, a waitress, describing her as common and vulgar. But he also notes her  efforts at courteousness: \u201c&#8230; and he remembered the little finger carefully extended when she held her glass to her mouth;  her manners, like her conversation, were odiously genteel.\u201d  <\/p>\n<p>* In I Can Get It for You Wholesale novelist Jerome  Weidman has his Jewish protagonist observe, \u201cI had to laugh at  these goyim and their politeness.\u201d  <\/p>\n<p>* Financier J. P. Morgan was reported to have  said, on one occasion, \u201cYou can do business with anyone, but  only sail with a gentleman.\u201d  <\/p>\n<p>Morgans comment is of more than passing interest because it  tells us something about an important function served by the  emphasis on a code of personal conduct: It enabled members of  the establishment to preserve their power and influence. Proper  breeding became associated with certain schools, resorts, summer camps, parties, and so forth, run by WASP society. The  manners learned in these places could be employed at will by  those who had attended them to identify themselves as members  of a certain class. The importance of this ability was underscored by Woodrow Wilson, who explained his criteria for  choosing preceptors at Princeton as follows: \u201cIf their qualities as  gentlemen and scholars conflict, the former will win them the  place.\u201d Child psychologist Robert Coles describes this process  very well in volume five of Children of Crisis, where he analyzes  the children of the privileged.  These children are brought up not only to \u201chave\u201d manners, but to  use them as a means of distinguishing themselves in several senses of  the word&#8230;  Politeness, however, becomes politesse\u2014 a code of behavior that  excludes as well as includes. It is not \u201c polite\u201d to speak with people  one does not \u201c know,\u201d one has not formally \u201c met.\u201d It is not \u201cpolite\u201d  to ask questions of so-and-so, or talk with someone else in any but a  prescribed, almost ritualized fashion. Even within the home, it is not  \u201c polite\u201d to get \u201ctoo friendly\u201d with a maid or a cook or a gardener  or a handyman&#8230; When good manners are found lacking in  others, they become a \u201cthem.\u201d <\/p>\n<p>* SNOBBISH: snobbishness exists when people  are looked down upon because of their social or economic class, while prejudice is directed against members of certain ethnic, religious, or racial groups.<\/p>\n<p>* Since WASPs are the highest status group in our society, they  are most likely to be sought after. Therefore, they have the most  chances to rebuff others. As for other groups, it\u2019s hard to be  snobbish if no one cares. If Poles, Puerto Ricans, Italians, or  other low-status groups display snobbishness, people are not  likely to pay much attention because they do not think that  highly of them. Thus Jews will be referred to as \u201cclannish\u201d and  Blacks as \u201cuppity\u201d rather than as \u201csnobs.\u201d  <\/p>\n<p>* WEALTHY AND POWERFUL: The major proportion of wealth and power in the United  States still resides among WASPs.<\/p>\n<p>A 1968 article in Look magazine shed further light on this question. According to the author, Fletcher  Knebel, the overwhelming majority of directors in the fifty largest American corporations were WASPs. Protestants in general  were also significantly overrepresented in banking, insurance,  and other major industries. Knebel also noted that almost all of  the presidents of the nation s colleges and universities at that  time were white Protestants, as were the vast majority of trustees among the country\u2019s ten largest universities.  <\/p>\n<p>* Guilt-ridden do-gooders: &#8220;Whatever is moral, that WASP S thirst to be. Seeing that others are less morally concerned, they cannot hold back too long an irrepressible condescension&#8230; Of no other group, perhaps, is such self-criticism and plasticity to be expected; there seems to be no limit to  their willingness to \u201cupdate\u201d their moral sensibilities.&#8221; (Michael Novak) <\/p>\n<p>The origins of this stereotype, often a code word for liberalism, may be traced back to the Social Gospel Movement of  the 1890s, which attempted to shift the focus of religion from  the salvation of the individual to concern over social issues. Led  by theologians such as Washington Gladden and Horace Bushnell, its proponents, mostly Protestants, believed that Christianity remained unfulfilled unless it became actively involved  with the larger problems facing society. The movement, however, was opposed by the salvation-oriented fundamentalists,  such as Billy Sunday and Dwight L. Moody, who argued that religion&#8217;s prime focus should be on the individual. <\/p>\n<p>The liberal  wing of the Church established orphanages, schools for the  handicapped, and hospitals in the early part of the century, but  it really came into its own during the 1950s and 1960s, taking up  the fight against poverty, racial discrimination, capital punishment, the Vietnam War, and pollution. The heavy commitment  of the churches to these causes helped popularize the notion that  WASPs were \u201cdo-gooders.\u201d <\/p>\n<p>* Those who have carefully examined the role of Protestants in  civic causes have observed that it is far more likely to be related  to status than anything else. Higher-status Protestants are more  liberal and more involved in social issues. This is probably due  not only to their philosophical orientation but to the simple fact  that the better off you are, the more time you have for the problems of others. A dirt farmer in Arkansas cannot think about solving the world\u2019s problems when his immediate dilemma is how to  put food on the table for his family.  Many writers have dwelt on the seeming capacity of liberal  Protestants to feel guilty about those less fortunate than themselves. To the extent that Protestants have always had the  benefit of being considered the most socially desirable group in  American society, one can see a basis for this view. <\/p>\n<p>* There is a tradition of caring about others within Protestantism, a sort of noblesse oblige. It appears, however, to be led  by religious leaders whose congregants often do not share their  views. Numerically, those denominations that rank low on social  issues would seem to outnumber those that rank high. <\/p>\n<p>HISPANICS<\/p>\n<p>* Big on machismo: Juan was riding on a burro while his wife was walking behind him.  \u201cWhy isn\u2019t your wife riding?\u201d asked his Anglo friend. &#8220;Because she doesn\u2019t have a donkey,\u201d responded Juan. <\/p>\n<p>* males, or machos, in the community often  avoid frank discussion of issues for fear that they will feel compelled to literally fight to preserve their honor if a disagreement  develops. With the exception of sporting events, men will go to  considerable lengths to avoid disagreeing with each other. Also  related to the concern with dignity&#8230; is the tendency toward stubbornness that often  forces men into positions from which there is no retreat. <\/p>\n<p>* Stevens observes that  the purported sexual aggressiveness of Latin American males is  \u201cthe behavioral trait that has given machismo its bad press at  home and abroad.\u201d Basically, it is the identification of potency  and fertility with manliness. Worried that others may not believe  his claims, the male often seeks proof of his virility in extramarital conquests. It is also expected that he will show \u201ccallousness\u201d toward other women. Machismo of this sort is not  confined to any particular class, though it may be more overt  among the poor.<\/p>\n<p>* &#8220;Insecure in his masculinity and the right to be master of his own  nation. The only thing left to call his own becomes his woman. With  her he can take out all his frustrations. She becomes the only property left to him, so he holds on as tight as possible. He starts making demands on her he can\u2019t make on his oppressor&#8230;&#8221; <\/p>\n<p>* While it is true that in Puerto Rico women occupy important  posts in academic and political life, this is not the case in most  Latin nations. Moreover, we are speaking more of an attitude, a  way of relating, that goes beyond the granting of formal rights  or jobs. One professional who works closely with male Hispanics  told me that generally they will not accept counseling from a  woman. He noted that even those who speak little English are  more likely to confide in an English-speaking male counselor  than a Spanish-speaking female counselor.  <\/p>\n<p>* LAZY: &#8220;&#8230; the Anglo books, movies, television, advertising, and the press  all work to reduce the Mexicano to a certain stereotype image: stupid, lazy, dirty, ignorant, sneaky, violent, unreliable, sinister&#8230;  Most of the time, the Mexicano is asleep under a big sombrero. He  wakes up \u00a1ust long enough to say a few words in broken Engleesh  before going back to his endless siesta. So much for the children of  Cuauhtemoc, Hidalgo, Morelos, Ju\u00e1rez, and Zapata. They have been  washed away.&#8221; (Elizabeth Sutherland Martinez and Enriqueta Longeaux y V\u00e1squez, Viva La Raza, p. 141)  <\/p>\n<p>* Interestingly, a study of attitudes among native-born MexieanAmericans by Dr. Anthony Dworkin revealed that 78 percent of  them believed that Chicanos were \u201clazy, indifferent, and unambitious.\u201d According to Dworkin, the respondents had successfully internalized the stereotypes held b y the Anglo majority in  the United States. Further evidence of this came from the fact  that only 28 percent of the foreign-born Mexican-Americans agreed with this stereotype. In Dworkin&#8217;s view they had simply  not been here long enough to adopt this negative image.<\/p>\n<p>* Refuse to learn English: &#8220;The language of a people expresses the soul of that people, their  whole culture. Imposing the Anglo\u2019s language\u2014 English\u2014 is a way of  destroying our soul. This is what we call cultural genocide.&#8221;  (Elizabeth Sutherland Martinez and  Enriqueta Longeaux y Vasquez, Viva La Raza, p. 142)  <\/p>\n<p>* One of the most important reasons for the survival of Spanish was and is geography. Both Puerto Rico and Mexico are within easy traveling distance of the United States. The Italian, Greek,  Chinese, or Jewish immigrant had a much more difficult time  getting back to the old country. He certainly was not able to  visit it very often. Chicanos and Puerto Ricans take advantage of the easy access to their homelands by visiting them often, and  this quite naturally reinforces both the native language and  other aspects of the culture. There is also the need to communicate with relatives, and this provides yet another reason for remaining well versed in the language. Those who stay in the  United States for long periods of time and lose their facility in Spanish are often looked down upon and are sometimes ridiculed by those in the homeland.  <\/p>\n<p>* Don\u2019t care if they\u2019re on welfare: &#8220;How, you look at the Puerto Ricans. I can\u2019t believe these people.  They come here from P.R. and the first thing you know they\u2019re on  welfare. They don\u2019t give a damn because they have no pride.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>  These remarks were made by a Black woman in a class of  mine at City College held in February of 1981.<\/p>\n<p>* While there is no real evidence to support the idea that  Hispanics don\u2019t care about being on the dole, it is a fact that they are probably more likely to receive public assistance than  any other group, including Blacks. They are also worse off than  any other group. <\/p>\n<p>* Don\u2019t value education: &#8220;The Mexicans, as a group, lack ambition. The peon of Mexico has  spent so many generations in a condition of servitude that a lazy acceptance of his lot has become a general characteristic.&#8221; (Lillian  Graeber, \u201cA Study of Attendance at Thomas Jefferson High School,  Los Angeles, California,\u201d Master\u2019s thesis, University of Southern California, 1938) <\/p>\n<p>* Chicano and Puerto Rican students are left back in classes far more often than other ethnic groups, drop out more frequently and at an earlier age than their Anglo counterparts, and do quite badly on achievement tests. In 1978 only 32 percent of Puerto Ricans in the United  States were high school graduates. The national rate for Hispanics was 40 percent, which was lower than that of Blacks and far lower than that of Anglos.  <\/p>\n<p>* WARM, EXPRESSIVE &#038; EMOTIONAL: Puerto Ricans are in unanimous agreement that the americano has a  \u201ccolder\u201d personality, because of his penchant for mechanical communication and for \u201cgoing by the book.\u201d  (Kal Wagenheim, Puerto Rico: A Profile, p. 213)  <\/p>\n<p>Although it is difficult to prove, there seems to be almost universal agreement among both professionals and lay people as to  the validity of this stereotype. W ithin the community of Latins it  is called personalismo, or personalism. What it means is a belief  in the inner worth and uniqueness of the individual in all areas.  For example, Latin American politics is known for its focus on  personal relationships and guarantees and is based on mutual  trust rather than written agreements. It plays a role in business  relationships as well, as described by anthropologist John Gillin:  &#8220;&#8230; the impersonal confidence which, say, a buyer has toward a  salesman of a large established corporation in the United States is  not yet part of the pattern in Latin America. There you have to know  him as an individual and to understand his \u201csoul\u201d really to have  confidence in him.&#8221; (Contemporary Cultures and Societies of Latin  America, p. 510)  <\/p>\n<p>* Traits such as the above find their clearest expression in the  Hispanic family. In the introduction to his classic work Five  Families, Oscar Lew is notes that all the families he studied were  characterized b y warm emotional ties, especially between the  mother and child. In a May 12, 1980, New York Times article, a  Dominican man summed it up as follow s: \u201cA Hispanic will greet  you by inquiring into your family in detail out of sincerity. An  American will find this an intrusion.\u201d  The sensitivity mentioned earlier has also been noted by many  observers. An excellent description of it appears in Dr. Joseph  Fitzpatrick\u2019s book Puerto Rican Americans. &#8220;Puerto Ricans are much more sensitive than Americans to anything  that appears to be personal insult or disdain; they do not take to  practical jokes which are likely to embarrass, or to party games in  which people \u201c make fools of themselves.\u201d They do not \u201c horse  around,\u201d as Americans would say, in an offhand, informal manner;  they are unusually responsive to manifestations of personal respect&#8230;&#8221; (p. 90)  <\/p>\n<p>* Chicano mothers provide \u2018more cuddling and kissing of the infant than would be true with Anglo parents.&#8217; They are intensely involved with their children in general throughout their lives. <\/p>\n<p>* &#8220;The Mexican-American is affectionate and uses terms of endearment very readily as an adult; he  talks not only with his voice but readily embraces people he likes  and is spontaneous in the exchange of physical affection.  The Mexican-American thinks that the Anglo-Saxon is stuffy and  unfriendly. The Anglo-Saxon perceives the Mexican-American as  mushy and overfriendly.  The Anglo-Saxon cannot understand why, if the Mexican-American  is poor, he \u201cwastes\u201d his money on great amounts of food for friends  and relatives. The Mexican-American, on the other hand, cannot understand why, if the Anglo-Saxon has money, he only gives his  guests what is perceived as too little to eat.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>* Violent and hot-tempered: there is considerable evidence to support the notion that Hispanics are more likely than m any other ethnic groups to engage  in crimes involving violent acts. <\/p>\n<p>* Research on Hispanics points to a definite tendency toward violent crime. Homicide was the most frequent cause of death among Puerto Ricans between the ages of 15 and 44 according  to a study conducted in the early 1970s by Fordham University\u2019s Hispanic Research Center. Of those arrested, Chicanos are far more likely than Anglos to be charged with assault and battery. Evidence of this comes from police reports in cities such as Los  Angeles, San Antonio, and El Paso, all of which have high proportions of Mexican-Americans. While most Americans are familiar with the Italian-dominated Cosa Nostra, not as m any have  heard of the Nuestra Familia or the Mexican Mafia, both of which are reputed to be quite violent. Of greater interest, perhaps, are figures that com pare violence in Latin America with  that in other parts of the world. In 1973 six Latin American nations were among the ten countries with the highest rates of violent death. This trend has been going on for some time. Colombia, with a population of about 10 million people, had about  300,000 homicides between 1948 and 1965. In Mexico the figures  have also been very high, prompting a popular saying there that  the chances of dying a violent death in Mexico City are greater  than was the case during the London Blitz of World War II.  <\/p>\n<p>* Sometimes the violence is not directed at people but at property. In a recent article in the New York Times Magazine about  graffiti in New York City\u2019s subways, writers Caryl Stem and Robert Stock observed that \u201cthere has been a rising incidence of  graffiti-related vandalism \u2014India ink spread over seats, windows  cracked&#8230; attacks by graffitists against car cleaners.\u201d In the  authors\u2019 view these incidents are most often caused by youths,  many of them Hispanic and Black, who have a confused selfimage, a strong sense of territoriality, and a need to attack authority. In another article on the subject, urban expert Carl  Horowitz argues that the crowning achievement of individuals  who act in this manner \u201cmay yet be their contribution to the  decay of public facilities and urban neighborhoods.\u201d <\/p>\n<p>* Violence is also related to machismo. Anthropologist Julian  Pitt-Rivers has observed, \u201cThe ultimate vindication of honour lies in physical violence.\u201d Moreover, \u201cWhen challenged to fight it is not honourable to demand police protection.\u201d <\/p>\n<p>* Nowhere is this tendency more prevalent than among the impoverished classes, where culture and economic desperation provide mutual reinforcement. Take, for example, the following excerpt from Oscar Lew is\u2019 The Children of Sanchez. The speaker  is Manuel, the oldest of the Sanchez children. &#8220;Mexicans, and I think everyone in the world, admire the person  \u201cwith balls,\u201d as we say. The character who throws punches and  kicks, without stopping to think, is the one who comes out on top.  The one who has guts enough to stand up against an older, stronger  guy, is more respected. If someone shouts, you\u2019ve got to shout  louder. If any so-and-so comes to me and says, \u201cFuck your mother,\u201d  I answer, \u201cFuck your mother a thousand times.\u201d And if he gives one  step forward and I take one step back, I lose prestige, (p. 38)  <\/p>\n<p>There is no question that the use of physical force is an essential element of Hispanic culture. There are, in addition to m any  accounts and literary descriptions, scientific studies pointing to its existence. <\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>The Washington Post published in 1982: In the section on blacks, Helmreich writes, &#8220;No group in American society has suffered as much from discrimination as Afro-Americans. The fact is reflected in the paucity of positive stereotypes about them.&#8221; In that &hellip; <a href=\"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/?p=132337\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"om_disable_all_campaigns":false,"_monsterinsights_skip_tracking":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_active":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_note":"","_monsterinsights_sitenote_category":0,"footnotes":""},"categories":[34,29,36],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-132337","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-blacks","category-jews","category-race"],"aioseo_notices":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/132337","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=132337"}],"version-history":[{"count":103,"href":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/132337\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":132598,"href":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/132337\/revisions\/132598"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=132337"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=132337"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=132337"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}