Becoming the system charts the rise and fall of bilingual education in the US from the race radical activism of the 1960s up to the 2010s and the neoliberalisation of multilingualism into a global skill for the middle classes. Flores documents in meticulous detail the consequences of community-led challenges to legislation over languageeducation policies and practices impacting diverse Latinx communities. The power of the book is in the genealogical method that educates readers on the consequences of migration, poverty, ghettoisation, deindustrialisation, and 'white flight'. It offers a panoptic analysis of specific communities, their schools and children, enabling Flores to argue persuasively that raciolinguistic ideologies are central to the new political order.