1:40 pm By Maegan La Mala · Controversia| Immigration| Politics · Comments Off
6 Nov 2008
If timing is everything, as the dicho goes, then the timing of the announcement of the resignation of ICE’s Assistant Secretary Julie Myers raised some questions.
According to the press release, Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff claims that Myers told him about her resignation in September. In fact, he wants everyone to know that she told him in September:
Assistant Secretary Julie Myers has announced that she will depart the department on Nov. 15. Julie has been an extraordinary Assistant Secretary for Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), and when she approached me in mid-September to discuss her departure, I knew this would be a loss for the department. Julie has been a major force in transforming ICE into a 21st century law enforcement agency.
11:40 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · US Presidential Race 2008 · 6 Comments
6 Nov 2008
So, now that the election is over, it’s time to remember what got the world excited about Obama to begin with. As somebody who supports third party candidates, I personally do not think Obama will change the world, but I do have a few hopes for his administration. Namely:
1. I hope he will have a change of heart and confront immigration issues with an eye on human rights and respect.
2. I hope he really will end the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and withdraw troops.
3. I hope he commits to the U.N. Millennium Goals.
4. I hope he changes his mind and embraces full marriage equality across the board.
What about you? What hopes do you have for this new administration?
11:09 am By la Macha · GLBT · 2 Comments
6 Nov 2008
The Mercury News ran another article about how it’s all the Blacks/Latin@s fault that Proposition 8 passed.
Even as African-American and Latino voters were a powerful force in boosting America’s first black president to victory, in California they also were crucial to passing Proposition 8, a ballot measure labeled, “Eliminates right of same-sex couples to marry.”
Exit polls showed that 70 percent of black voters, and a majority of Latino voters, voted yes on Proposition 8, one likely reason why the measure won a slim majority in Los Angeles County, where pre-election polls had suggested it would lose, even though it lost by a huge margin in the Bay Area.
But like I mentioned yesterday, while I don’t deny that the Black and Latin@ communities have some big time issues with queer hate, I also think gay organizations have to confront their very real racism within their organizing strategies. For example:
Gloria Nieto had a sense of those demographic forces, too. When Nieto, a lead organizer for the No on Proposition 8 campaign in San Jose, wanted to distribute campaign signs in Spanish and Vietnamese this fall, she had to get them made herself because the statewide campaign only had signs in English.
What this suggests to me is that communities of color have their problems–but largely white organizations seem to not value those communities until the time comes when they need them for their own agendas, and even then not so much.
Will gay organizers do anything to confront this problem? Or will they hide their racism behind “They’re just conservative” excuses? The answer remains to be seen.
9:54 am By Maegan La Mala · Immigration| US Presidential Race 2008 · Comments Off
6 Nov 2008
I don’t think any voting bloc or assumed voting bloc was more hyped up than the Latino vote. Maybe it’s the fact that I am and have been surrounded by politically engaged Latinos that leaves me a little skeptical. When I say politically engaged, I am not just talking about voting, as many, including myself are skeptical of the power of electoral politics to bring on the change that everyone is so excited about happening.
Let’s look at some of the numbers and how people are reading them.
7:53 am By Maegan La Mala · US Presidential Race 2008| Women · 1 Comment
6 Nov 2008With the election results now signed, sealed and delivered, now comes the finger pointing from the losing side and not surprisingly McCain’s crooked old finger is pointing at Sarah Palin.
Instead of doing what they should have done during the campaign, now the McCain camp and Republicans throw Palin to the political lions, revealing or making up that they themselves didn’t believe Palin was a winning choice.
Fox News Channel political correspondent Carl Cameron today disclosed the first of what he predicts will be an “avalanche” of unflattering stories about the Republican vice presidential nominee: Off-the-record tips from McCain aides that Palin did not know Africa was a continent or the constituent countries in the NAFTA treaty. He later told Bill O’Reilly Palin also didn’t know the constituent nations of North America, either.
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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