I think as journalists, we have to keep our distance from power.
From Jorge Ramos
I will go to a nice restaurant in Miami, and no one sitting at the tables will notice me or even know who I am. Then everyone in the kitchen comes out and wants to take a picture.
We in the Hispanic community are truly tired of both the Democrats and the Republicans promising all of these things during the campaigns and then forgetting about it after the campaigns are over.
The most important responsibility we have as journalists is to question those who are in power. I honestly believe that.
I don't think we've asked the right questions, the tough questions, at the right time, in Washington.
As journalists, we cannot swallow the official line without question. We should challenge almost everything that dictators, presidents and officials say.
When journalists forget that our job is to question and annoy those in power, there can be huge consequences.
You have to go through a mental and emotional process to recognize who you really are. I finally recognized that I cannot be defined by one country.
Mexico will never accept U.S. military intervention. Mexicans always remember 1848.
It's a privilege to work as an anchor for Univision, but more important, I am amazed by how Latinos are transforming America.
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