12:19 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Books|Controversia|Politics|Venezuela · 1 Comment
25 Sep 2006
While American media is still reeling over Hugo Chavez‘s declaration before the U.N. that George W. Bush is “the devil”, and the rest of the world struggles with the question of which camp to put the Venezuelan president in — hero or loco — celebrated author Noam Chomsky is sitting pretty. He has Chavez to thank for a recent spike in sales of his 2003 book, Hegemony or Survival: America’s Quest for Global Dominance, as the leader plugged it during his appearance at the U.N., calling the work “an excellent book to help us understand what has been happening in the world throughout the 20th century … and the greatest threat looming over our planet.”
According to AFP:
News reports said the book, published in 2003, leapt from 26,000 to number one following Chavez’s headline-making speech in which he railed against US “imperialism,” saying “the hegemonic pretensions of the American empire are placing at risk the very survival of the human species.
And according to Reuters:
By Thursday, the book had risen from backlist obscurity to be the No. 3 bestseller on Amazon.com. Before the speech, the 2004 book reprinted by Owl Books was being outsold by thousands of other titles on the online bookseller’s Web site.
According to AFP, Chomsky himself said he would be “happy to meet” Chavez and that he finds many of his views “quite constructive”.
Via / Yahoo! News and Reuters
11:35 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Events|New York City|Puerto Rico · 1 Comment
25 Sep 2006
Thousands marched in Puerto Rico and hundreds marched in New York City on Saturday, September 23rd to remember and denounce the FBI killing of independence leader Filiberto Ojeda RĂos, who died a year ago to the date. The date also marked the 168th anniversary of El Grito de Lares when Puerto Ricans rebelled to demand independence from Spain in 1868. While hundreds in NYC marched from Times Square to the United Nations singing, dancing and chanting “La lucha sigue, Filiberto Vive” and “Todo boricua machetero”, in Lares, Puerto Rico the chants and message were the same.
“These terrorists, that Yankee empire that wants to instill fear in us, they should know better. We won’t surrender,” Rosa Meneses, president of the Nationalist Party of Puerto Rico, told supporters massed in Revolution Plaza, in the western mountain town of Lares.
9:27 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · children|Controversia|Immigration|Internet|Justice|Newspapers|Women · Comments Off
25 Sep 2006
Understanding that Hispanic/Latino Heritage month is more than about food and dance and jumping off the interest in the Elvira Arellano case, today the Charlotte Observer is kicking off a 6-part immigration series with a look at how one family is torn apart by the mother’s legal status, and the agonizing decisions they must make once she’s deported to Guatemala.
It was March 26, a Sunday evening. Ten-year old Kayla was at her aunt’s house in Monroe, playing video games with her cousins. Her father, Ray, had just stepped in the front door. Her mother, Deysi, wasn’t with him.Less than an hour before, Ray and Deysi — his partner of 10 years — were driving back from a soccer match in Monroe. A state trooper stopped them for an expired tag, and Deysi was jailed for being in the U.S. illegally. Eight years before, a warrant had been issued for her arrest after she failed to follow through on paperwork requesting asylum.
Once again it’s important that these stories be told to put a human dimension to the issue of immigration because if it were left to the right wing pundits and the politicians it’s easy to ignore that these are family values and issues we are dealing with.
Catch the whole series at The Charlotte Observer
VivirLatino is a daily publication published by Mamita Mala Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse Latin@ diaspora.
About | Advertise with us | Contact | Twitter