But there is no stereotype against Hispanics, that's just it. If, and this is a big stretch I can see you making, there is a stereotype it is that illegal aliens are being stereotyped as gang members. But, as I said, that is a stretch. What the ads are stating is that Sanctuary Cities protect Illegal Immigrants and that some illegal immigrants have been found to be horrendously violent and criminal. Ergo, Sanctuary Cities protect gang members and violent criminals. You're being misleading. Unlawful Presence is a civil offense. Illegal Immigration is almost always (in the case of the discussion on Sanctuary Cities) accompanied by Improper Entry, which is most certainly a crime punishable by 6 months in prison. Regardless, even in the case of Unlawful Presence, the penalty is deportation - which the Federal Government is being frustrated in by Sanctuary Cities.
Again we are going in circles. I have made my point that you cannot distinguish between someone in America legally vs illegally and the ads depict Hispanics as being in America illegally. There is no way to distinguish. This is why you never answered my question of how can you tell who is here legally vs illegally. That is where the stereotype crosses over - but you have totally ignored this.
Here is a great example of how stereotypes cross over https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...ftermath-of-trump-win/?utm_term=.c13885210eb0
No, they don't. That's the point. The ads do not depict Hispanics as being in America illegally. The ads depict gang members being protected by Sanctuary Cities, and calling out one - in particular - as being an illegal alien. No where else does it say or indicate "Hispanics are in America illegally" as a general concept. I haven't ignored it at all. You can easily tell who is here legally by looking at their documentation. But that has nothing to do with the fact that none of the ads you provided have anything whatsoever to do with this concept.
So a number of students chanted "Build the Wall" for a few seconds. What stereotype was being "crossed over" here??
Nowhere does it say in the ad Trumps voters run over immigrant and minority children either. So, what’s your problem?
That chant was done to harass Hispanic students in the cafeteria regardless of immigration status. You will argue anything.
I never claimed it did. You claimed it did and I followed your argument for reasoning, calling it "The Trump Ad" or referring to the Trump voter angle in post one.
You will imagine anything if it supports your argument. Who knows exactly why those students decided to chant it. You assume to know, I do not. They could have been celebrating Trump's win. They could believe in enforcing immigration law. They could have done it for a whole host of reasons. You pick the reason that best suits your narrative, without any proof whatsoever. I simply do not know.
So then does the confederate flag ad stereotype, or do you only have an opinion on ads that stereotype Hispanics?