Vodka ad shows 'Absolut world' in which California, Arizona, others
secede
A new ad for Absolut vodka reconfigures North America according to the
aspirations of many Mexicans, who believe the U.S. Southwest was stolen
and should be returned.
Over a redrawn map of the U.S., the ad by the Swedish Absolut Spirits
Co. declares, "In an Absolut World," noted columnist and blogger
Michelle Malkin.
Major Hispanic civil rights groups in the U.S., such as the National
Council of La Raza, are tied to movements advocating a "reconquista,"
or reconquest, of territory lost when Mexico signed the 1848 Treaty of
Guadalupe-Hidalgo at the end of the Mexican-American War.
Malkin points out the Mexico City-based firm that created the ad,
Teran, says its philosophy is advocating "disruption" as a "tool for
change" and "agent of growth." The firm encourages "overturning
assumptions and prejudices that get in the way of imagining new
possibilities and visionary ideas that help create a larger share of
the future."
As WND reported in 2006, Rep. Charles Norwood, R-Ga., called on La Raza
to renounce its support of the Movimiento Estudiantil Chicano de Aztlan
– which sees "The Race" as part of an ethnic group that one day will
reclaim Aztlan, the mythical birthplace of the Aztecs. In Chicano
folklore, Aztlan includes California, Arizona, Nevada, New Mexico and
parts of Colorado and Texas.
In 2002, a prominent Chicano activist and University of California at
Riverside professor, Armando Navarro, told WND he believed secession is
inevitable if demographic and social trends continue.
"If in 50 years most of our people are subordinated, powerless,
exploited and impoverished, then I will say to you that there are all
kinds of possibilities for movements to develop like the ones that
we've witnessed in the last few years all over the world, from
Yugoslavia to Chechnya," Navarro said.
"A secessionist movement is not something that you can put away and say
it is never going to happen in the United States," he contended. "Time
and history change."
Navarro said one could argue "that while Mexico lost the war in 1848,
it will probably win it in the 21st century, in terms of the numbers,"
"But that is not a reality based on what Mexico does, it's based on
what this country does," he insisted.
In a 1995 speech to Chicano activists, Navarro said demographic trends
are leading to "a transfer of power" to the ethnic Mexican community in
the Southwest. He notes that most studies show that within the next 20
to 30 years Latinos will comprise more than 50 percent of the
population of California. This fact, and other cultural and social
developments, are opening the door for "self-determination" and even
"the idea of an Aztlan," he said in his speech.
Original
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