64 |^5280 |^ MAY 20^18
CULTURE
the past 35 years. he anti-immigrant fear-
mongers will tell you this is an ominous
trend. he fearmongers, I am here to tell
you, are wrong. Growing minority popu-
lations have helped communities
expand and have slowed popu-
lation decline in counties that
otherwise might have lost resi-
dents. Since incoming minorities
tend to be younger, the Headwa-
ters study says, those new arrivals
are an “economic bellwether”
of growth creation in some places, and in
others, they’re keeping schools and local
businesses alive.
It’s no accident that my wife and I chose
to raise our children in a region full of immi-
grants from around the world. During our
many years in Southern California, we
encountered countless languages, dialects,
and cultures—and our family is the richer
for it. Soccer thrives in places that are espe-
cially diverse, because unlike American
football, soccer is a world sport. Select a spot
on the globe, set up makeshift goals, and
within minutes you’ll have a game going.
he players may not speak the same lan-
guage or have anything in common. hey
teams, an adult rec league, and anyone
else who wanted to reserve the field.
I showed up for a pickup game that fall.
he matches are organized and overseen
by Elliot Lauber, the town’s assis-
tant recreation director, and are
designed to bring out locals who
might be interested in joining
one of the league’s six organized
teams. I was recruited onto the
Real Fraser team, not because of
my dazzling ield play—I had not
yet touched the ield—but because I hap-
pened to park next to the team’s manager.
Turns out, Real Fraser is known in the
league as the “gringo team.” Everyone
speaks English, so I fit right in—if you
ignore my white hair and the 30-year age
diference between my teammates and me.
But one look around the dome that night
made it clear that this is where you can ind
many of Grand County’s mostly invisible
Latinos, who often work on ranches and in
hotels and restaurant kitchens. Last fall the
league’s other ive teams were captained
by men named Rios, Perez, Rivas, Garcia,
and Jacobo. Opposing players swore almost
entirely in Spanish, which made Lauber’s
might be roofers or ranchers or bankers or
mothers. hey might drive everything from
battered trucks to expensive SUVs. None
of that matters. Soccer players are simply
looking to play, and I’ve yet to ind a better
petri dish for meaningful cultural exchange.
If it were up to me, I’d suggest the U.N.
General Assembly convene in short pants on
a grass pitch—with a keg on the sidelines.
DURING MY YEARS AS a visitor to Grand
County, I often wondered about the
giant white tent on the hill. Once I
became a full-time resident in May 2016,
I drove up, parked outside, and peeked
through a window at what seemed like
a mirage: a pristine turf field with a
goal at each end. In the rafters above,
lights and heaters promised nighttime
and year-round play for local school
For the estimated $22 billion price
of building that wall on our country’s
southern border, we could create nearly
37,000 soccer domes across the nation
in an effort to bring people together.
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