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Archive for September, 2008

Barack Obama isn’t suspending his campaign. In fact, he’s amping it up via his Vote for Change website, that provides all the necessary information for a voter to register, check whether they are registered to vote or not, or request an absentee ballot. Oh and it’s bilingual (English/Spanish).

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small_labruzzo.JPGA friend sent me the news that a Louisiana state Representative (John LaBruzzo) wants to “pay poor women $1000 to have their tubes tide” while at the same time give “tax incentives for college-educated, higher-income people to have more children.”

Of course, Mr. LaBruzzo has emphasized that his little idea has nothing to do with race, and it is actually the moral alternative to paying women to have abortions:

LaBruzzo said he opposes abortion and paying people to have abortions. He described a sterilization program as providing poor people with better opportunities to avoid welfare, because they would have fewer children to feed and clothe.

Because, you know, god forbid any politician demand that the minimum wage be increased or fund scholarship programs so that women can go to college and enter into the upper-income strata. I mean, why couldn’t he have said, I will pay any woman who enters into a college degree driven program a thousand dollars? Why is that not considered a viable ‘solution’ to the ‘problem’ of poor people having kids?

I think that if he did something like that, he (along with the rest of the ‘capitalism rawks’ cronies) would have to admit that it’s not the individual that has a problem and it’s not the reproductive capabilities of poor/women of color that is the problem–it’s the system. It’d be admitting that sometimes, the system sucks so desperatly that whole swaths of people need more than just a bootstrap, but actual *help* to succeed in it.

La Macha has spoken.

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I’m not a David Letterman fan (I just don’t think he’s that funny) pero I love how he sets up John McCain and Sarah Palin and then proceeds to cut em down.

Via / Culture Kitchen

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Unless you’ve been living under a rock for the past few hours, you know that the political world is abuzz about McCain’s plans to “suspend” his campaign so that he can ‘concentrate’ on the financial crisis.

John McCain is making another big gamble, announcing today that he will suspend his campaign and return to Washington to work on a solution to the financial crisis.

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latino%20kids.jpgMore Latinas and black women are having abortions than white women, says the latest survey conducted by the Guttmacher Institute. According to the survey:

Statistically one in three U.S. women will have an abortion in her lifetime, the study found, but that risk does not apply to all women equally. Women who choose abortion are more likely to be in their 20s or 30s than in their teens or 40s; they’re more likely to have children already; and they’re also more likely to be black or Hispanic than white. The abortion rates in 2004 were 50 abortions per 1,000 black women and 28 abortions per 1,000 Hispanic women, compared with 11 out of every 1,000 white women.

I noticed two interesting things about this passage. First, since when was getting an abortion considered something that women were “at risk of”? And similarly, if having an abortion is ‘risky’ then why isn’t what causes so many abortions (poverty, abuse at home, lack of resources, etc) considered ‘risky’? Why isn’t it considered a national health crisis that so many women in the U.S. are suffering through conditions that make ‘risky’ behaviors like abortion a necessity?

Second, the ‘experts’ quoted in the article just couldn’t seem to figure out why it is that there is such a racial disparity between black/Latina women and white women. Maybe, say the experts, it’s lack of education on family planning?

I personally wonder if it has anything to do with the fact that black/Latina women make less money that white women do (on average) and are always hit first during economic crisis (like the one we’re in now) and may actually desperately want the the pregnancies that they experience, but can’t afford to carry it through?

Could having a baby, in these cases, be privilege that black and Latina and all women of color, simply aren’t entitled to because of draconian back to work laws and the racism that puts them on the lowest rung of the economic ladder?

via/TIME

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download.jpgToday Calle 13 and Cafe Tacuba’s tag team cancion Nadie Como Tu hits the radio airwaves. The single is the first official release from Calle 13’s highly anticipated third album: Los de Atrás Vienen Conmigo.

You can listen to the single here.

I love Calle 13 and Cafe Tacuba pero I’m not sold on this joint effort. No se. What do you all think?

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un_brazil_luiz_inacio_lula_da_silvalula_175_23Sep08.jpgThe UN General Assembly is bringing Latin American leaders and has them speaking on a diverse range of topics of interest to their country people and the world at large. Evo Morales of Bolivia criticized the United States and it’s hypocritical stance on terrorism. Others, like Argentina’s Cristina Fernandez de Kircher, took the opportunity to strengthen their colonial claims.

GOP vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin is also at the UN General Assembly and yet she’s only meeting one Latin American leader. Can you guess which one?

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04spanish.xlarge1.jpgNYC Mayor Michael Bloomberg is taking Spanish classes, with a Colombian tutor. Does this mean he speaks with a Colombian accent?

The men sat at opposite ends of a coffee table speckled with a half-dozen books — on the history of New York’s municipal lawyers, on the subway system’s rich architecture. Their legs stretched out, left foot resting on the right, they were mirror images of disparate worlds: the tutor, an immigrant from Colombia, with his student, the mayor of New York, face to face for 90 minutes in an elegant chamber at City Hall.

In an interview in Vanity Fair magazine, el alcalde says he wishes his Español was better

If you could change one thing about yourself, what would it be?
My Spanish. I’ve been studying for seven years and I still speak como un novato.

In New York City, it should be a requirement to speak Spanish and I mean that in the best way.

Via / Mi Blog es tu Blog, NYT, Vanity Fair

Image Via / NYT

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money1.jpgeconomic downward spiral. I do know that anyone asking for a $700 billion blank check isn’t a good thing, and it’s even worse when it’s the government that wants it. Gracias a Liza over at Culture Kitchen, we have a little better explanation as to what is so wrong about what my former boss, Paulson, wants.

* Would allow up to $700 billion in mortgage assets to be held by Treasury at any one time.
* Allows the Treasury to buy any mortgage-related assets, both residential and commercial, for a two-year period. The plan does not detail the types of mortgage assets this could cover and or how long the government could hold them, and does not establish how they would be valued. However, if deemed needed to promote financial market stability, any type of financial instrument could be bought.
* Assets must have been originated or issued before September 17, 2008, by a financial institution having “significant operations” in the United States. This provision could also be waived if deemed needed to promote financial stability.
* Assets could be bought from any financial institution, including but not limited to banks, thrifts, credit unions, broker-dealers and insurance companies. If deemed need(sic) to promote financial stability, however, assets could be purchased from non-financial companies.
* Grants the Treasury broad authority to decide how to purchase, manage and dispose of the assets, including setting up a special fund and naming financial institutions to work for the Treasury Department.
* The Treasury secretary would be given these powers to ensure stability or prevent disruption of financial markets and to protect the taxpayer.
* No court or government agency could review the secretary’s decisions. The secretary would report to Congress within the first three months and then twice yearly.
* The U.S. debt limit would be increased by $700 billion to fund the plan, to $11.315 trillion from $10.615 trillion.

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The “Soybean Wars” is Highlighted on Speaking Tour

5:02 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Paraguay · Comments Off

23 Sep 2008

soybean%20wars.jpgJust read on the Rainforest Action Network blog that they are sponsering a U.S. speaking tour featuring Leticia Galeano, a campesina youth leader from Paraguay. According to RAN:

Leticia Galeano is an inspiring youth leader from the Movimiento Agrario y Popular (a peasant organization in the department of Caaguazú) and student at the Universidad Catolica in Asuncion, Paraguay. Leticia will speak about militarization in Paraguay, and about the role of U.S. agribusiness giants like ADM, Bunge and Cargill in fueling the soybean wars.

Her community, Tekojoja, is an example of organized resistance to agribusiness exploitation. In 2005, the police violently and illegally displaced families from the community, resulting in the deaths of two individuals. There is now an attempt to bring this case before the Inter-American Court of Human Rights.

The tour kicks off Tuesday evening, September 23 at Loyola University in Chicago. They will also visit Minneapolis, Washington D.C., New York City, Burlington and Philadelphia, among others. If you go to one of the lectures, drop us a line and let us know how it goes!

Also, for more information on what the Soybean Wars were, see here.

via/RAN

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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.

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