2:40 pm By Maegan La Mala · Immigration| mexico · 4 Comments
11 Apr 2006
So what if that wall along the Mexico/U.S. border got built, and undocumented migration amd residency wes criminalized and the U.S. government sent all the undocumented living here back where they came from? Everything would be great no? The immigration “problem” would be solved no? Well, um not really. At least not according to an article posted over at TomPaine.com.
Some 40 percent of the over 100 million people still living in Mexico say they would come to the United States if they had the opportunity.
While Mexico is obviously not the only place immigrants come from, it is the at the center of the debate. Whatever happened to that miracle plan that was going to improve the quality of life in Mexico, raise the standard of living and therefore decrease the numbers of immigrants coming from ther?
1:57 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Celebrities| Chismes · 2 Comments
11 Apr 2006
Which one is it? Page Six tells us who:
Bronx bombshell Jennifer Lopez filed a lawsuit in L.A. yesterday to stop a salacious tell-all by her hunky first hubby – claiming Cuban stud Ojani Noa broke a no-tell pact and tried to shake her down for $5 million. J.Lo claims he’s using the racy manuscript to make a buck off their brief 1997 marriage. Among other tidbits, Noa claims J.Lo cheated on Sean “P. Diddy” Combs in 1999 with her current husband – but then-married-to-someone-else – Marc Anthony.
“Bronx bombshell”…”Cuban stud” — you gotta love the New York Post.
And on another note, not that P Diddy’s all that, but why would she cheat on him with Marc Anthony? Does not compute.
We picked this piece of chisme up first on Us Weekly’s blog. I didn’t even know they had one, but I’m loving the snarky tone of it.
Related: LA Daily News coverage of this gossip
Via / New York Post and Us Weekly Blog
12:40 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Activism| Books| California| Immigration · 1 Comment
11 Apr 2006
The almost mythical “paleta man” — the guy who strolls down the streets and highways with a little cart full of popsicles, ringing a bell — has become a fixture in this country. His image, I think, puts a face on the struggle of new immigrants to the U.S. Start with nothing, do some very hard work and barely scrape by.
In the age of the internet it seems that most of the conversations about immigration are happening online. The timeliness is great, but at times the discourse lacks depth. Luckily, there are still people taking the time to research and write books that tell stories. BeyondChron.org reviews a book that tells the story of the paleta man and other immigrant workers in California’s Silicon Valley:’
Turns out that in 1993, the Delicias de Jalisco corporation had a sweet thing going it selling its products through largely undocumented Mexican immigrants throughout Northern California. The worker had to pay $2.00 a day for the pushcart and ice, and kept only 33 cents of every 75 cent popsicle sold. After working for eight hours in the hot sun, and pushing the cart for five miles, the street peddler on a good day would make $40.00. Arturo, the immigrant whose daily activities are described in the book, could make $200 a week, as much as he was making working for a non-union janitorial company.
9:10 am By Maegan La Mala · Education| Immigration · Comments Off
11 Apr 2006
Among the current House and Senate Bills that were being debated before Congress went on vacation , one was written all the way back in 2003 and promises undocumented students to work towards their dreams of higher education. The Development, Relief and Education for Alien Minors Act aka the DREAM Act would instate a provision allowing the children of undocumented immigrants to apply for “conditional” legal status upon graduation from high school. The “conditional” status could then be changed to permanent residency if the students either pursue higher education or serve in the military. One way ticket to Iraq anyone?
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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