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<p class="article_title">Miss USA's Fall Echoes in Spanish-language Blogosphere</p>
<p class="article_biline">New America Media, News Feature, Elena Shore, Posted: Jun 10, 2007</p>
<p><i>Editor's Note: Miss USA's tumble at the Miss Universe pageant in Mexico has taken on a life of its own in Spanish-language blogs triggering discussion of hot-button issues like immigration, the wall and regional politics, writes Elena Shore. Shore monitors Spanish-language media for New America Media.
</i>When Miss USA slipped and fell at the Miss Universe pageant in Mexico last week, some members of the mostly Mexican audience booed her and began to chant, "Mexico! Mexico! Mexico!" The reaction prompted Donald Trump to call the incident a reflection of Mexicans' sentiment toward
U.S. immigration policy. <img height="165" alt="Miss USA" hspace="10" src="http://news.ncmonline.com/directory/getdata.asp?about_id=f828d8e5e9faead09cb3be5bd08cc066-2" width="275" align="right" vspace="10" border="1"><br>
<br>Long after the story made headlines in the international press, it took on a life of its own in Spanish-language blogs. As the video clip of Miss USA's fall made the rounds in blogs this week, it went from being a source of entertainment to a subject of debate, as viewers voiced their opinions on the incident and its political ramifications. In her syndicated column, Univision anchor Maria Elena Salinas wonders why members of the crowd booed the young American. Perhaps they felt that Miss Mexico should have been one of the finalists instead of Miss USA, she writes. Some say the motive was political. She quotes one Mexican analyst as saying, "Her presence reminded them of the absurd wall being built along the border. This was a demonstration of their rejection of the foreign policy of the United States."
<br><br>Whatever the reason, Salinas writes, the incident sent a message about Mexicans' lack of respect and tolerance to an audience of 600 million people in 180 countries. The political consequences of the incident did not escape the attention of Spanish-language bloggers. "Now the people who are going to suffer that xenophobic act are Mexican immigrants in the United States," writes Gazoo Star on the Puerto Rican blog
<a href="http://www.letrina.net/" target="blank">Letrina </a>(The Latrine), whose motto is "because the world is s**t". "It will perpetuate hatred and Americans will get even with them in their own country." On the blog <a href="http://www.inadecuado.com/" target="blank">
Ocio Inadecuado </a>(Not Enough Free Time), whose tagline is "people who don't have anything to do," Marc writes, "Maybe Bush will use this as an excuse to bomb Mexico for laughing at his little white girl."<br><br>Keidy, from Honduras, writes, "I don't think everyone in the USA is to blame for what the president is like. We all deserve respect…The truth is she didn't deserve that." While numerous bloggers on
<a href="http://cachacero.blogspot.com/" target="blank">Cachacero</a> (whose motto is "a little of everything") laughed at Miss USA's fall, others from Venezuela, the Dominican Republic, Guatemala, Ecuador, Chile and Mexico expressed their support for the contestant, condemning the reaction of the crowd and congratulating her on her quick recovery and the dignified way she handled the situation. On the Spanish-language blog site
<a href="http://espanol.answers.yahoo.com/" target="blank">Yahoo Telemundo</a>, the conversation turned to the complicated relationship between Mexico and the United States.<br><br>"How is it possible to treat someone from that nation well in Mexico?" one blogger asks. "They have treated us like garbage, they have stolen our land, and now they even built a damned wall. They deserve this and more." But beneath this
anti-U.S. sentiment lies ambivalence and even hypocrisy among Mexicans, other bloggers argue. One Mexican blogger, calling himself Tu Madre (Your Mother), noted Mexicans' conflicting sentiments toward the United States: "People booed because in Mexico we keep believing that the
U.S. is the cause of our problems," he writes, "but we all buy Nike, McDonald's, Gap and all the rest."<br><br>Another blogger adds that the root of this hatred is the economic disparity between the two countries. Members of the crowd booed Miss USA, he writes, "because Mexicans hate Americans, because just north of them is a world power while they are dying of hunger." At the same time, he adds, "all Mexicans want to be American." According to blogger Lyn, the crowd's behavior shows that Mexicans are just as prejudiced as they think Americans are: "They shouldn't have treated her that way, because we'd be just as racist as the USA."
<br><br>Meanwhile, several bloggers commented on the irony that, according to them, Miss USA looks Latina. This led one observer to note that, with so many Latinos living in the United States, anti-U.S. sentiment in Mexico isn't as clear-cut. Writing from the United States, blogger Cety71 writes that when Mexicans boo the United States, they are booing a nation of immigrants. "As much as they hate the
U.S., Mexicans are the ones who have immigrated there the most… There are many Mexican families that receive money from a relative they have here in the U.S… There are few people who don't have Hispanic blood, who in some generation haven't had a Latino relative."
<br><br>More than any other country in Latin America, another blogger writes, Mexicans have a history of identifying with their indigenous roots. "Some people still have this mentality of victims and victimizers, of xenophobia ('everything outside is bad'), and, above all, of hatred for Americans and Spaniards." But, he adds, "this group is not representative of the modern Mexico. The majority of Mexicans felt very ashamed of the booing and a forum like this is proof of that."
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