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Archive for November 29th, 2005

Googling for Hate

6:30 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Internet| Marketing · 2 Comments

29 Nov 2005

adsense.jpgA few of us have heard the anecdote about the news site that reported a story about some poor person who had been hacked apart, body packed into a suitcase, only to have Google AdSense serve a distasteful ad for Samsonite luggage next to the article. AdSense works in mysterious ways. And if not mysterious, unpredictable. Sometimes its technology associates keywords placed by advertisers and keywords placed by AdSense participants, like VL, correctly. When that happens, I think it’s just luck. In our case, we are not getting very lucky.

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Justice for the Braceros

4:15 pm By Maegan La Mala · Activism · Comments Off

29 Nov 2005

bracero.jpg

A labor agreement between Mexico and the United States allowed nearly 2.5 million Mexican workers to come to this country beginning in 1942 to alleviate the severe labor shortages caused by World War II. Under the agreement, the workers were to contribute 10 percent of their paychecks to a pension fund, but the money, estimated in the millions of dollars, disappeared in bureaucratic mazes.

It seems that there will never be justice for the braceros. It seems that the guilty parties are simply waiting for this generation to pass away in order to wipe their hands clean of the thievery that was committed against these former farmworkers. Who kept the money that was due to the braceros? Was it the Mexican government? Was it the U.S. government? Was it the farming companies that exploited this source of cheap labor? Most likely it was a combination of all three.

Last month, the Mexican government finally issued rules on how it would distribute a newly created fund designated to compensate workers for a pension fund that never materialized: in payments of 38,000 pesos (about $3,600 U.S.) to each former bracero.

Understandably many braceros have refused this payment from the Mexican government stating that what they are owed is much more. It’s disgraceful how these workers continue to be treated.

Via / Monterey Herald

A Bush no le va a gustar

3:00 pm By Maegan La Mala · Latin America| Music| Politics · Comments Off

29 Nov 2005

ABushNo-tapa.jpg The Cumbre de las Americas may have come and gone in Mar de Plata , Argentina but thanks to a group of 18 musicians from around the world that came together, President Bush and others can have a musical souvenir of the event. A Bush no le va a gustar is a compilation cd featuring popular artists like Manu Chau, Ojos de Brujo and others who criticize the neo-liberal “free-trade” policies of the U.S. president. The album was released by La Tribu FM and the company Doble F at La Cumbre de los Pueblos, a simultaneous popular summit held in protest of the Summit of the Americas.

I just have one question. How do I get a copy?

Via / VOY Music

Immigration, Money and a CEO’s demise

12:52 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Immigration| business · Comments Off

29 Nov 2005

wester3.jpgMost of you have probably never heard of First Data Corporation, a Denver-based company specializing in transaction services. But the brand name Western Union should ring a bell. Western Union, a company that makes billions of dollars yearly on the backs of Latino immigrants who send money to their home countries has long been criticized for exploiting customer with high fees for wiring funds. Now, a Colorado publication is speculating that the involvement of First Data CEO Charles Fote’s in the immigration debate is the issue that proved to be his demise:

Over the last two years Fote had become a champion of enlightened debate over immigration reform, and First Data has sponsored a series of public forums to discuss and explore the issue. In March 2004, First Data created a $10 million “Empowerment Fund” to support Hispanic immigrants and counter anti-immigration movements across the country. The Fund, whose advisory panel includes Raul Yzaguirre, CEO of the National Council of La Raza (“The Race”), had allocated $800,000 for a Denver pilot program to increase the number of Latino business owners via the local Hispanic Chamber.

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It’s very depressing. We’ve fought for years to have a voice, only to have this kind of result. I think if we have 4,000 who actually vote, it’ll be a lot.’
- Francisco Javier Moreno, president of a Southern California federation of Michoacan state hometown clubs

The same apathy that plagues American voters is starting to rub off on Mexicans living abroad, particularly here in the United States. After a long political struggle to allow Mexican citizens abroad the opportunity to vote in their home country’s election it seems that the turnout will be dismal.

“…only 2,100 out of an estimated 4 million Mexicans eligible to vote in the United States have mailed in requests for absentee ballots, as the voter registration drive approaches its halfway mark.”

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NYU Doesn’t Want to Give the World a Coke

9:34 am By Maegan La Mala · Colombia| New York City| Politics · Comments Off

29 Nov 2005

float_sticker_span.gif New York University may be better known for scandals with students selling coke than for drinking it, but the private university located in the heart of Greenwich Village is looking to ban the soda and all its products. The carbonated company has until December 8 to agree to an independent investigation of its Colombian bottling operations. Coke has been battling accusations of abusive and possibly criminal labor practices in Latin America including kidnapping and murder of labor leaders. The ironly of all ironies is that NYU is currently involved in their own labor dispute with grad student teachers.

Via / Gothamist


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VivirLatino is a daily publication published by 2 Mujeres Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse and influential Latino and Latina community in the U.S.

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