@Mazetism @ChocoLacaTaco @MsMelChen @coldxman The H1N1 epidemic was called Mexican flu in large parts of the media. Subsequent analysis showed this did lead to discrimination against Latin people. https://t.co/XaixguVmql
@MefistoLouis Y sabe que país fue el que más los discrimino??? https://t.co/62ui5F6Xb7
@hmoarq Los mexicanos y otros latinos que viven en los Estados Unidos fueron rápidamente estigmatizados por los no latinos como portadores del virus, en parte debido a los informes de noticias sobre el supuesto origen del brote en granjas porcinas mexicana
3/ And this isn't idle speculation - we have plenty of studies (not to mention hundreds of years of history) to illustrate this. To wit: https://t.co/XC7y8XUJdU https://t.co/dhX94BIi3P https://t.co/OdBvUdWzIu https://t.co/xlJjdFS1Zg htt
RT @catherineillian: @johncardillo John the media was not silent on H1N1? I was pregnant during that time and very scared. A quick search…
@johncardillo John the media was not silent on H1N1? I was pregnant during that time and very scared. A quick search reveals multiple articles about the media response to H1N1 https://t.co/6FcVIiELmB
Americans became xenophobic against Mexicans and other Latinos https://t.co/kkAzGltY6s
The H1N1 pandemic: media frames, stigmatization and coping. http://t.co/PiVeNN4e5B #hcsm
Race, ethnicity and stigma in the wake of the 2009 H1N1 #flu outbreak http://t.co/gpGe6xXAAa