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Archive for September, 2008

Chris Rock Talks Moose Hunting and White Ladies

4:11 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · US Presidential Race 2008 · Comments Off

23 Sep 2008

The following video is definitly very funny. I laughed at all of it. At the same time, I was just a bit uncomfortable with the assertion that Hillary Clinton didn’t lose the election because of sexism. Which is odd, because on the whole, although I do feel that Clinton was subjected to sexism and sexism was 100% a part of the coverage of her bid, I also, for the most part, don’t feel like she *lost* because of sexism.

I think the thing that makes me uncomfortable is a man dismissing sexism. It’s offensive–men don’t get to tell women that something did or didn’t happen because of sexism, just like white folks don’t get to tell people of color that something did or didn’t happen because of racism.

But in the end, Rock’s point is really well made: why does slaughter of animals get a black man prison time and a white woman the Vice Presidential nod?

How is whiteness invested in ‘protecting’ animals even as it uses the destruction of animals to define itself?

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Today marks three years since Rican liberation leader Filiberto Ojeda Rios was murdered by the FBI. It was no coincidence that the FBI chose September 23 as the date of his execution. September 23, 1868 the date that Don Emeterio Betances issued the Grito de Lares, the Independence of Puerto Rico.

Today, activists y amantes de la libertad, call for a day of solidarity with Puerto Rico, a colony hidden behind the name of a commonwealth. A country and a people that are pandered to for votes when needed by presidential wannabes when the island’s very status doesn’t allow for the U.S. citizens by birth to vote for the person under whose laws they must live.

Read more…

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The above ad, released late last week by the McCain camp, is supposed to appeal to Latinos.

The McCain campaign said Hispanic voters are particularly open to the message because many of them are immigrants who came to the U.S. seeking to escape the sort of political tactics Mr. Chavez employs.

“They come to American for freedom, and yet Senator Obama seems overly willing to deal with a tin-pot dictator,” McCain spokesman Brian Rogers said.

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mujeres_zapatistas.jpgThe Ejercito Zapatista de Liberacion Nacional aka the EZLN announced via communiqué the First Global Festival of Dignified Rage.

Communiqué from the of the Indigenous Revolutionary Clandestine Committee—General Command, of the Zapatista Army for National Liberation
Sixth Commission—Intergalactic Commission of the EZLN

Mexico

September 15 and 16 of 2008

To the adherents of the Sixth Declaration and the Other Campaign:

To the adherents of the Zezta Interazional:

To the People of Mexico:

To the Peoples of the World:

Compañeras and Compañeros:

Brother and Sisters:

Once again we send you our words.

This is what we see, what we are looking at.

This is what has come to our ears, to our brown heart.

I.

Above they intend to repeat history.

They want to impose on us once again their calendar of death, their geography of destruction.

When they are not trying to strip us of our roots, they are destroying them.

They steal our work, our strength.

They leave our world, our land, our water, and our treasures without people, without life.

The cities pursue and expel us.

The countryside both kills us and dies on us.

Lies become governments and dispossession is the weapon of their armies and police.
We are the illegal, the undocumented, the undesired of the world.

We are pursued.

Women, young people, children, the elderly die in death and die in life.

And there above they preach to us resignation, defeat, surrender, and abandonment.

Here below we are being left with nothing.

Except rage.

And dignity.

There is no ear for our pain, that is not like what we are.

We are no one.

We are alone, alone with our dignity and our rage.

Rage and dignity are our bridges, our languages.

We must listen to each other then, learn to know each other.

So that our courage and rage grows and becomes hope.

So that our dignity takes root again and births another world.

We have seen and heard.

Our voice is small to be the echo of that word, our gaze small for so much dignified rage.

The process of seeing each other, looking at each other, speaking to each other, listening to each other, is still lacking.

We are others, the other.

If this world does not have a place for us, then another world must be made.

With no tool other than our rage, no material other than our dignity.

We still must encounter each other more, know each other better.

What is missing is yet to come…

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Martes Morning Musica : Kinky Barracuda Preview

7:23 am By Maegan La Mala · Internet|mexico|Music · Comments Off

23 Sep 2008

kinky-main-press-photoEarlier this month, we told you about Kinky’s new album, Barracuda, set to be dropped on September 30.

You can get a sneak preview listen over at MTV’s The Leak.

I’ve been bouncing to it all morning and you should join me! Makes me more excited to own the Monterrey musical group’s latest.

Via / Blogamole

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large_flag_of_ecuador.gifAs a born and bred Queens, NYC Latina, I sure don’t need statistics to tell me that the Ecuadorian population is steadily growing. It’s the reason there are more Ecuadorian food trucks and carts from Jackson Heights to Flushing. It’s the reason my own daughter loves guatita y sopa de bola. Markets blast Ecuadorian music and flyers glued to the wood planks outside of new buildings advertise such talent as Caramelo Caliente. the numbers tell me what I have been living.

Census figures show about 102,000 Ecuadorean immigrants, more than from any other Latin American country, live in Queens.

With a population of about 162,900 citywide, Ecuadoreans are New York’s fourth largest Hispanic contingent, behind Puerto Ricans (770,100), Dominicans (587,330) and Mexicans (260,620), according to the census.

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Critically Examining Social Justice Organizing

2:03 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Activism · 6 Comments

22 Sep 2008

In case you weren’t aware, the anti-prison organization, Critical Resistance is currently holding a huge anniversary conference out in Oakland. In reaction to that conference, the following email is making the social justice listserve rounds. It’s a really profound email that calls for all social justice organizations in general and Critical Resistance specifically to reconsider their dependence on 501c3 model of organizing (which basically boils down to, you can’t make social justice movement making a business). It’s a really important analysis, one that all of us (cough cough, NCLR!) should deeply consider.

I think that we are at an important crossroads in how to move forward as a Movement. The Nonprofit Industrial Complex is extremely strong, and organization after organization has experienced the conflict between creating social justice in the world and sustaining a business—i.e. not challenging systems of oppression.

Critical Resistance is no exception. In fact, as a former staff member (Organizer of the Oakland Chapter), I saw how Critical Resistance was part of the Nonprofit Industrial Complex more than any other organization that I have worked with.

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Mexicans Talk About Violence and Drug Trafficking

1:18 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · mexico · Comments Off

22 Sep 2008

mexicandrugs.jpgIn a continuing conversation about the ever increasing levels of violence in Mexico, the BBC News has released a survey showing that Mexicans feel less safe than they did before and 80% of them feel that the government should look for alternatives to using the military to fight drug trafficking.

Some other findings:

The survey suggests significant numbers of Mexicans across the country have personal experience of the violence.

Of those surveyed, 9% had been directly affected by drugs-related violence, and 32% indirectly affected. Another 16% knew someone who had been tempted to join drugs gangs in order to increase their personal income.

Many of the respondents (42%) attributed the boom in the drug cartels to unemployment and the poor state of the economy.

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chavez_180.jpgVenezuelan President Hugo Chavez is going to be in NYC this week for the UN Summit. While we all wait with to see what metaphor for the U.S. empire Chavez will come up with this time, NYC Councilman Charles Barron is extending an invitation for Chavez to stop by City Hall.

Barron has called Chavez:

a shining example of a humanitarian.

This of course has other NYC politicos not too pleased. Peter Vallone Jr.,told the Daily News,

“If he wants to invite despotic dictators, he should invite them to his own house. They don’t belong at the home of democracy in New York City.”

Former Mayor Ed Koch said:

Barron has a right to invite anybody he wants, and everybody else has a right to moon him.

Ed Koch mooning? There’s an image I don’t want.

Via / Gothamist

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Election time means political comedy. Sadly, this Saturday Night Live clip from this past weekend may have more truth to it than people want to admit.

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