3:45 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Celebrities · 4 Comments
10 Nov 2008
“I’m like an alcoholic. It is like, I don’t care if I cry, I don’t care if I am fat, I am just going to do it for one more week, one more month, and then when I see how much good it is doing her and I can’t stop. It is a very powerful thing, you know.”
Ok, you pervs. The above is not an example of Salma’s desire for your resident Macha. Or for you either. It is an example of mi Salmita’s dedication to motherhood.
I wonder if Salma would mind if I would take care of her tetas when they are achy or sore?
2:54 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Immigration · Comments Off
10 Nov 2008
Building on Mala’s point about not falling into complacency during this time of post-election happiness, comes the word that there were massive ICE raids in Florida recently:
Two days after immigrant rights groups in southern Florida sent a letter asking president-elect Barack Obama to intervene and curb immigration raids, ICE announced the arrest of 111 undocumented immigrants in a new Florida raid, Univision reports. The five-day operation was carried out in Miami, Broward, Palm Beach, Orlando, Tampa and surrounding areas. Those arrested in Florida are from Argentina, Brazil, China, Colombia, Cuba, Dominica, Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Guatemala, Guyana, Haiti, Honduras, Jamaica, Mexico, Nicaragua, Peru, Philippines, Tunisia, Romania and Venezuela. Of the 111 arrested, 69 remain in ICE custody of ICE and 42 were released on parole.
1:37 pm By Maegan La Mala · Immigration| US Presidential Race 2008 · Comments Off
10 Nov 2008
The current presidential administration in power isn’t going to allow immigrant communities to get all caught up in slogans and chants about change post the Obama win. They are not going to allow them to hope. Rather, they hope that instilling fear and terrorizing people will be a more powerful message.
Right now, it is being reported, ICE, Immigration and Customs Enforcement is knocking on doors in the town of Breese, Illinois.
Churches are reportedly opening their doors and offer sanctuary.
More information to follow.
We cannot let the illusion of change blind us from the reality of la gente.
1:30 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Politics · Comments Off
10 Nov 2008So, in case you didn’t know, there are several things you’re supposed to be outraged over at the moment. First and foremost, is that Obama’s gonna raise your taxes. ::SCREAM::
Second, is that Obama compared himself to a mutt. A what? Yes, Obama made a lame joke about how he wants the dog his children adopt to be a ‘mutt’ like him.
Oh, yes, I forgot, you’re also supposed to be outraged that Obama made a joke about Nancy Reagan holding seances in the White House. Because, you know, nobody else in the world has ever made fun of Nancy Reagan’s seances. That’s right, La Macha didn’t grow up on jokes about Nancy Reagan her seances and her ‘dominate’ personality. Nope.
I guess it’s just really bad, really horrible, when a ‘mutt’ pokes fun at dominate white ladies. It’s an act that’s not allowed in our post racial world.
There. Are you properly outraged?
12:30 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Controversia| Politics| race · Comments Off
10 Nov 2008It’s interesting to see the Republicans struggle through the reasoning behind their losses. It seems to be the common wisdom among Republicans that they simply weren’t “Republican” enough–that they weren’t conservative enough–and thus we have the ass smacking the Democrats gave to them at the polls. I tend to disagree–there’s been nothing ‘liberal’ about the past eight years, after all.
But it’s even more interesting to me to see how hating on Latin@s becomes a strategy of recruitment of Latin@s:
I don’t know about you, but I’ve been paying taxes for decades and I still don’t vote for Republican. And honestly, of all the ‘hispanics’ I know, this little quip would be the one thing that would drive most of them away from the Republican party rather than to it–if there’s one thing those who identify as hispanics are proud of, it’s being law-abiding and paying their taxes.
11:27 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Lifestyle · Comments Off
10 Nov 2008
Of the multiple ways out there that Latin@s sit on the brunt end of the economy, this one has probably got to be the worst. Many Latin@s want to send their loved ones back home after they die, and of course, funeral homes are more than willing to help; for a price:
Sending a body from Florida to Puerto Rico, for example, costs about $1,000 — a price that includes picking up the body, embalming, preparing legal documents and transporting the body to the airport, said Aracely Carmona, manager of Funeraria San Juan, a Hispanic-owned funeral home in Kissimmee.
The price of the casket is separate, as is the cost of the flight, she added.
Sending a body to Mexico from Orlando costs an average of $500, said an agent for Aeromexico.
At Robert Bryant Funeral & Cremation Chapel in Orlando, more Mexicans send their dead to their native homeland than any other ethnic group, said manager Mariela del Valle. Nationwide, an average 8,000 bodies are repatriated to Mexico from the United States each year, according to a 2006 estimate by the Mexican Congress.
What this means is that many Latin@a are starting to choose cremation rather than traditional embalming/burials because they simply can’t afford otherwise. I’m no fan of traditional embalming/burials (I want to be eaten by worms, not admired!) but I do think that it’s beyond wrong that any person doesn’t have the choice to take care of her dead loved ones in a way that respects and honors her dead loved one’s wishes. I’m not sure what makes me angrier, this or the outrageous long distance telephone charges that target Latin@ populations.
When I lived in Chile more than a decade ago, I was struck by the how still fresh and raw the Pinochet dictatorship felt. I went there to study Chile’s rise post Pinochet and the discourse was based on the Southern Cone nation’s economic success. This success was of course based on capitalism and the growth of business meanwhile in one Santiago’s ritziest areas, Providencia, children begged for food outside U.S. chain fast food joints. Once I moved south to Temuco and surrounding areas, I witnessed the discrimination against the Mapuche population and the colorism against anyone who looked “indio”, including the Mapuche father of my first child. Now with a socialist, female president, Chile still has a long way to go according to the head of Amnesty International.
Concluding a one-week visit to Chile on Friday, Amnesty International’s Secretary General Irene Khan issued an assessment of the human rights situation in the country and a set of recommendations addressed to the Chilean government.
“Despite some positive steps taken by successive democratic governments in the last 18 years, Chile’s record on human rights leaves much room for improvement,” said Ms. Khan.
“We call on President Bachelet to use the remaining 17 months of her time in office to create a decisive and lasting legacy of human rights reform.”
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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