How come American schools are teaching from material authored by La Raza called Raza Studies?
The name of the nation’s most visible, self-defined Latino civil-rights organization, the National Council of La Raza, translates as the National Council of The Race. The official website denies it, of course, but we have dictionaries. That controversial term - La Raza - is gaining currency: Some K-12 public schools now teach something called “Raza Studies.”
Like those in Tucson, for example. The Tucson Unified School District (TUSD) has, in fact, welcomed Raza Studies in its classrooms for about a decade, but it’s been mighty secretive about the association.
What, exactly, is Raza Studies? Arizona Superintendent of Public Instruction Tom Horne asked that question in November 2007 when he inquired if it wouldn’t be too much trouble for TUSD to send to him the Raza curricula it was teaching and the textbooks from which it taught them. Actually, TUSD replied to Horne, meeting his request would be a heckuva lot of trouble.
Then the local papers piled on Arizona’s superintendent. The first sentence of a November 26th editorial in the Tucson Citizen read, “Memo to Tom Horne: Butt out.” Another editorial, titled “Horne meddling in TUSD’s ethnic studies efforts,” this one in Tucson’s Arizona Daily Star, noted that “Students enroll in these classes because they cover information that is not offered in other classes. While U.S. history classes and textbooks do a better job than those of the past of including more about our shared history, much is left out.”
What is left out of traditional syllabi, of course, is the grievance and distortion. When Horne finally acquired the program materials he requested, they included texts with titles such as Occupied America and The Pedagogy of Oppression. And according to John Ward, a Tucson teacher who saw his U.S. history course coopted by the Raza Studies department, the Raza curriculum’s focus is “that Mexican-Americans were and continue to be victims of a racist American society driven by the interests of middle and upper-class whites.”
When Ward raised concerns about Raza Studies (which is part of TUSD’s larger Ethnic Studies department) he was, despite being Hispanic himself, called a racist and eventually reassigned to another course. Ward told a reporter from the Arizona Republic that by the time he left the Raza Studies class, he had observed a definite change in the students: “An angry tone. They taught them not to trust their teachers, not to trust the system. They taught them the system wasn’t worth trusting.”
A persuasive case can and should be made that teaching students history and literature (not to mention science and math) through some concocted ethnic perspective that the pupils supposedly possess is balderdash. It does Hispanic youngsters a profound disservice to predicate their educations on ethnic identity, to have them skip the great works of literature and read only tracts by, say, Mexican authors, and to teach them only the history that involves Latin America(ns).
But when an ethnically based education, which is bad enough, transmogrifies into an ethnically based education of grievance and oppression that vilifies the United States and anyone with white skin - well, this is simply untenable. And yet this product is exactly that which goes by the name Raza Studies and that Tucson blithely pushes.
Moreover, the city is intransigent about the whole thing. To valid concerns about its Raza Studies department, the school board responded last month, according to the Arizona Republic, “by announcing plans to hugely expand the [entire Ethnic Studies] program, making it a required course of studies for freshmen. And, eventually, expanding it into elementary schools.” Within a year, it seems, all of Tucson’s children will be taught based on their ethnicities distinctive curricula that will share no common denominator as strong as the condemnation of whites and of the United States.
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2008/07/02/opinion/main4227721.shtml
The justification for these studies—The students claim that can learn better if taught by someone of their own race. It gives them "hope" seeing someone of their race as a teacher, lawyer etc, before they didn’t know they reach that goal. Bunch of racist BS!
Pima Community College, in Tucson, is paying Hispanic males to attend classes. They get a small amt when they enroll and the balance at completion of courses.
Tucson Medical Center, in Tucson, advertised exclusively to Mexican citizens to come to their hospital to give birth and acquire US citizenship for their newborns

Americans don’t give a sh*t about their society, that’s why they are in decline. Only Mexicans can provide a future for this country.
VIVA LA RAZA!!!!
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America’s schools have become breeding grounds for degenerate liberals.
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If "La Raza" wants to start a race war against all non-Hispanics it will end VERY badly for the Hispanic population that attempts an insurrection in our country. Such an action against all non-Hispanics in the U.S. would unite ALL Blacks, Whites, Asians, ect. AGAINST the Hispanic people in north America. All of Mexico and probably central America would be invaded, conquered, and permanently occupied by the U.S. to make sure it NEVER happened again.
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iunno cuz they want to? its not illegal
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LMFAO!!!! funny how "opinion" articles or "Blogs" are the only ones that say that La Raza is behind this. This was brought up in May, and you are just now soooo concerned about it? LOL!
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Here’s a little about La Raza:
The Translation of Our Name: National Council of La Raza
Many people incorrectly translate our name, “La Raza,” as “the race.” While it is true that one meaning of “raza” in Spanish is indeed “race,” in Spanish, as in English and any other language, words can and do have multiple meanings. As noted in several online dictionaries, “La Raza” means “the people” or “the community.” Translating our name as “the race” is not only inaccurate, it is factually incorrect. “Hispanic” is an ethnicity, not a race. As anyone who has ever met a Dominican American, Mexican American, or Spanish American can attest, Hispanics can be and are members of any and all races.
http://www.nclr.org/section/translation/
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Funny! But I don’t see anything about LA RAZA here:
http://instech.tusd.k12.az.us/Raza/index.asp
Mexican American Studies (Tucsion Unified School District)
Sean Arce
Director
(520) 225-6229
Martin.Arce@tusd1.org
Our Vision
The Mexican American Studies Department is dedicated to the empowerment and strengthening of our community of learners.
Students will attain an understanding and appreciation of historic and contemporary Mexican American contributions.
Students will be prepared for dynamic, confident leadership in the 21st Century.
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And this seems to be the originator of that little article you posted. A website called "armed citizens". No! I don’t see any right-wingers behind this…..LOL!
http://armedandunited.blogspot.com/2009/03/la-raza-studies-racist-indoctrination.html
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The justification for these studies—The students claim that can learn better if taught by someone of their own race. It gives them "hope" seeing someone of their race as a teacher, lawyer etc, before they didn’t know they reach that goal. Bunch of racist BS!
Pima Community College, in Tucson, is paying Hispanic males to attend classes. They get a small amt when they enroll and the balance at completion of courses.
Tucson Medical Center, in Tucson, advertised exclusively to Mexican citizens to come to their hospital to give birth and acquire US citizenship for their newborns
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