7:09 am By Maegan La Mala · Bizarro|Dominican Republic|Women · Comments Off
20 Nov 2008Last week we wrote about the large number of women being killed in domestic violence situations in the Dominican Republic. One man is making a statement with his body and cow’s blood to denounce the femicide.
3:46 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Politics · Comments Off
19 Nov 2008
Regardless of what you think of undocumented immigration, I think we can all admit that there’s some serious problems surrounding the issue of ‘immigration’ here in the U.S.. But what may be more difficult to admit to is the problems with incarceration in the U.S. that immigration exposes. Take, for example, the following gut-wrenching story of a little boy who was separated from his mother after an ICE raid:
Lopez, who immigrated illegally from Mexico with his family when he was 3, said it has been torturous waiting to know what would happen to his mother, Consuelo Vega Nava.
After her arrest officials transferred her to a federal prison in Leavenworth, Kan., and then later to a Florida facility before her deportation to Mexico.
Lopez, who has not seen his mother since May 12, said he will be reunited with her when he returns to Mexico next month.
“I’ve missed those days when me and my mom would just walk or go get an ice cream,” he said. “I don’t want this to be forgotten.”
The practice of moving imprisoned people away from their families is not a new or unusual practice. It, in my opinion, is an illegal and immoral practice, one that the U.S. should be ashamed of participating in. Punishing through incarceration is one thing, punishing through denial of family is something else all together. The denial of access to family is what the dictatorships we abhor so much do.
If we can’t agree on immigration as a whole, let’s agree on the treatment of imprisoned people. Family integrity should be respected as much as possible for ALL imprisoned people. Period.
In the kind of gross news for the day, the Belfast Telegraph is reporting that Spanish citizen, Claudia Castillo, has become the first person to get a transplant that was grown specifically for her.
Claudia Castillo, who lives in Barcelona, underwent the operation to replace her windpipe after tuberculosis had left her with a collapsed lung and unable to breathe.
The bioengineered organ was transplanted into her chest last June at the Hospital Clinic in Barcelona.
Four months later she was able to climb two flights of stairs, go dancing and look after her children – activities that had been impossible before the surgery. Ms Castillo has also crossed a second medical frontier by becoming the first person to receive a whole organ transplant without the need for powerful immunosuppressant drugs.
I guess this is a good thing. Well, what the hell am I saying, of *course* it’s a good thing–a young woman has regained something she probably thought she lost forever. That’s always good. But I dunno. I think I’ve read too much sci-fi. I find the idea of growing new limbs and body parts kinda scary at best and terrifying at worst. What nefarious purposes can such a ‘skill’ be put to in the future? Because you know science always starts out with the ‘best of intentions’–and then the atomic bomb is dropped on unsuspecting brown people.
Call me cynical and suspicious, yes. But please, while you do that, explain to me how growing new body parts is not semi-Frankensteinish. And then I’ll try to explain to you how it’s not hypocritical to be against something that I would submit myself to completely and eagerly should the occasion arise that I would need it.
1:30 pm By Maegan La Mala · Activism|Events|Justice|New York City|Puerto Rico · Comments Off
19 Nov 2008
The National Congress for Puerto Rican Rights (NCPRR) is one of the reasons why Maegan la Mala exists today. So please show them some love and you’ll not only get mad knowledge, pero thanks to the venue, you’ll get your groove on as well.
The National Congress for Puerto Rican Rights
And Event Co-Chairs : David Galarza * Juan Ramos * Carlos “Charlie” Ramos, Jr.* Martha
Laureano,*Julissa SantiagoInvite you To a Social Meet-and-Greet Entre Familia.
For An Evening of Music, Poetry and a Historical Reflection of the
NCPRR’s 27 Years of Community Activism and its Role Today.Featuring NuyoRican Poet Mariposa and Julisa Vale, Prisionera, Andy Torres and
Other great performers.Wednesday, November 19, 2008
Latin Quarter’s Nightclub
511 Lexington Avenue, New York City
Doors Open at 6:30pm
2 for 1 Drink special and Buffet
Admission:
$25 gets you Free Admission and a One Year Membership;
$15 Non-Members
Must be 21 or older to attend.
RSVP today and/or for more information, please contact
Juan Ramos at juan4thepeople@gmail.com
11:30 am By Maegan La Mala · Immigration|Texas · 1 Comment
19 Nov 2008
Texas already has strict guidelines in place to make sure that undocumented immigrants can’t access driver’s licenses (apparently it’s safer for people to drive unlicensed). Since Oct. 1, Texas made the guidelines even more strict by requiring foreign nationals to prove they are lawfully here before they can get an original, renewal or duplicate driver’s license or ID card. Additionally:
noncitizens with legal permission to live in the country will now get special, vertical-shaped driver’s licenses bearing temporary visitor designations. The licenses will be valid only until the person’s legal status expires. Immigrants whose legal status is scheduled to expire less than six months from the time they apply cannot get a license or ID card at all.
A study released by the University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center hits close to home.
The study showed that Latina women who prefer speaking Spanish are more likely than other ethnic groups to express regret or dissatisfaction with their breast cancer treatment, despite receiving similar treatment and reporting similar levels of involvement with their doctor in deciding the treatment plan compared to white women.
Nearly half of the women surveyed were Latina, with a quarter preferring to speak Spanish. These women were 3.5 times more likely than English-speaking Latinas to have difficulty understanding written information about breast cancer.
“Even though they received similar amounts of information as whites, Latinas who prefer speaking Spanish reported a strong desire for more information. Doctors may need to make additional effort to ensure this information is understandable and culturally appropriate for all ethnic groups to improve the decision making process for breast cancer patients,” says lead study author Sarah T. Hawley, Ph.D., assistant professor of internal medicine at the U-M Medical School and a research investigator at the VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System.
It looks like 57 year old DC attorney Eric Holder will is Obama’s Attorney General pick. Holder would be the first African-American to head the Justice Department. Holder was deputy attorney general during the Clinton administration.
Via / Crooks and Liars
Earlier this week, we wrote on how starting on December 1st, Mexico City is starting an HPV vaccine push on girls between 11-13. Lest Mexican viejos feel left behind, el D.F. is beginning an initiative for older men that day as well.
Beginning December 1, Mexico City plans to hand out free medicine to elderly men with erectile dysfunction, the local government said.“Everyone has the right to be happy,” said Marcelo Ebrard Casaubon, governor of the federal district that encompasses the Mexican capital.
“We have to protect people — senior citizens above all,” he said in a statement Thursday. “Many of them are abandoned and lack money. They don’t have medical services, and a society that doesn’t care for its senior citizens has no dignity.”
7:03 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · VivirLatino · Comments Off
18 Nov 2008Due to my trigger happy finger, I have accidentally deleted a whole page of comments that the lovely VLatin@ crowd have left here at VL recently. I think I got all the comments recovered except two–if you don’t see your comment posted and you have left one with the past three or four hours, please feel free to leave your comment again, and accept my apologies for deleting your original comment!
Much love,
La Macha
2:12 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Health · Comments Off
18 Nov 2008
Pointing to at least one reason why Latin@s are inclined to head in the direction of non-Western medicine, the Kaiser Foundation released a study detailing an extreme shortage of physicians in the Texas and Florida areas:
Access to care is a particularly “dire” issue for Hispanics, who have limited access to physicians because they are mostly employed by small businesses and are uninsured, the Express-News reports. Hispanics make up the largest group of uninsured people in Texas border cities. About 66% of Hispanic workers are employed by companies that provide employer-sponsored health insurance, Roland Angel, professor of sociology at the University of Texas-Austin, said. In comparison, more than 80% of blacks and whites have employer-sponsored health insurance (Poling, San Antonio Express-News, 11/14).
I wondered two things while reading this report. First, why are there scare quotes around “dire”? Is the situation not really “dire”? Is “dire” really just code word for “rolling eyes at stupid panicky brown people” (ala John McCain’s scare quotes around “health” when referencing women’s health exceptions for abortion)?
The second thing I wondered is why does the solution that many hospitals have found to this shortage problem seem to be a sort of scary “oh nos!” sort of scenario?
As Central Florida faces a physician shortage, some hospitals are recruiting physicians directly from Puerto Rico “because Puerto Rican doctors know Spanish” and “they are a good cultural fit for Metro Orlando,” which has a large Hispanic population, the Orlando Sentinel reports. According to the U.S. Census Bureau’s American Community Survey, an estimated 455,592 Hispanics live in the area.
Jorge Lopez — president of Florida Emergency Physicians, who recruits physicians for the Florida Hospital System — has traveled many times to Puerto Rico to recruit physicians. He said, “What we try to do is identify those who have already decided to leave. And when we go, we’re lucky if we can recruit one or two because there are so many other hospitals competing for them.” He added, “They are very competent doctors with fantastic hands-on experience. They are American citizens and bilingual. It’s one of our favorite places to recruit”
After I finished reading this, I felt like screaming “oh nos, the ricans are stealing all our jobs!” Not sure why–there’s nothing implicitly anti-Latin@ in this passage. Maybe it’s just the way “dire” in quotes framed how I read the rest of the article.
What do you think? Are we all supposed to be scared to death of Latin@s stealing all the good jobs? Or does this article really care?
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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