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Archive for October 9th, 2006

thumb_Mexican%20Flag.jpgIn my hometown of Houston, a group of high school students have been slapped with a fine for attempting to fly the Mexican flag on the school’s flagpole in honor of Fiestas Patrias, Mexico’s independence day:

On September 15, a group of students say they just wanted to display their cultural pride. But school administrators say they broke the rules.

Who knew the flagpole at Austin High could produce legal questions and cultural concerns all at once? Last month, five students tried to hoist a Mexican flag during school hours on the eve of a Mexican holiday. Campus police promptly ticketed the boys for disrupting an outdoor class, which they say was assembled nearby.

HISD spokesperson Terry Abbott said, “It could have been for any kind of classroom disruption. We issue those types of tickets all the time. They’re very common.”

The students’ attorney disagrees, and says this is more about the fact that Austin High School, which is located in a heavily Latino neighborhood, was the site of protests of the immigration bill months back:

Castenada says HISD is going overboard. Instead of respecting free speech, using the kids as examples. He said the same type of justice would not have been likely if they had been trying to raise the Canadian flag.

Via / KTRK TV Houston

Fidel terminally ill?

12:45 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Cuba| Politics · 1 Comment

9 Oct 2006

_38690197_030113cuba150b.jpgTime magazine is reporting that Cuban leader Fidel Castro could have terminal cancer, according to sources within the U.S. government:

U.S. officials tell TIME that many in the U.S. government are now convinced that Castro, 80, has terminal cancer and will never return to power. “Certainly we have heard this, that this guy has terminal cancer,” said one U.S. official.

Of course, such intelligence reports could be wrong, and one official cautioned that definitive proof is nearly impossible for the U.S. to come by. Yet the fact that the Cuban government removed Castro from the public stage before his death could suggest that Castro and his would-be successors were aware of a terminal condition and wanted to gauge public reaction to his absence. “They got to see how people would react,” says one U.S. official. “They have had a chance to see how things might work without out him functioning day-to-day.”

The Cuban government is denying allegations that Castro is in his last days, stating one official, “The United States Intelligence Services have been wrong for more than 47 years in their predictions not only in relation to the health of the Cuban President but also in all aspects regarding our country.”

Via / Time

Indigenous Teachers on the Oaxaca Front Lines

11:10 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · mexico · Comments Off

9 Oct 2006

Oaxacamujer.jpgWhat began in May in Oaxaca, Mexico as a simple teachers’ strike demanding better wages and basic supplies has grown into a firestorm of civil disobedience and state violence. After refusing to negotiate with the teachers union, Gov. Ulises Ruiz sent the state police into Oaxaca City’s central plaza on June 14 to remove the teachers´ protest camp with tear gas and police batons.The protests and reactionary violence have led to a drop in the area’s tourist industry impacting even those outside the teachers’ struggle.

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Columbus Day : Thanks but No Thanks

8:20 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · history · 3 Comments

9 Oct 2006

christopher-columbus.jpgSome United States residents today have the day off from work and school in observance of Columbus Day. You all have heard the elementary school poem: In 1492 Columbus sailed the ocean blue and…..well he actually didn’t discover a thing (lands inhabitated by indigenous peoples don’t need to be “discovered”) and he didn’t even actually set foot on North America proper. What he did set off was a cycle of violence that violated the land and human rights of Indigenous, Native and First Nation people across the Americas.

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