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Archive for December 29th, 2008

Warning: The following images show graphic violence, what you will not see in the mainstream U.S. media because they want us to believe that what is happening is deserved, even to the children of Gaza.

As violent as the images are, we need to see them so that we know. So that we don’t just swallow the information being fed to us as to who is being targeted in Gaza. We need to know because the U.S. is complicit in this wave of death and we need to not just feel, but act.

Isn’t colonialism grand?

BubbleShare: Share photosPlay some Online Games.

Gracias a Sabbah blog.

The end of the Janthony train?

1:44 pm By la Macha · Celebrities| Chismes · Comments Off

29 Dec 2008

jlomarchanthony.jpgAccording to Daily Intel, Ms. J Lo may be back on the dating market soon enough:

Well, J.Lo and Marc Anthony will do a bittersweet duet at his Valentine’s Day Madison Square Garden show, then announce their divorce, people say. Does that weirdness distract you from your own grumpiness?

If it’s true, I say–can you pick a weirder way to announce a divorce? Oh, and more power to Ms. Lo–never knew quite what she saw in Marc anyway.

Via / Daily Intel

Hate Crime in Memphis : Transgender Woman of Color Shot

12:42 pm By Maegan La Mala · GLBT| Memphis · Comments Off

29 Dec 2008

The past year has shown us how the anti-immigrant rhetoric read as anti-Latino translates into very real acts of violence against humans like Marcelo Lucero and José Sucuzhañay. Combine the racism with homophobia and transphobia, bolstered by the hateful Proposition 8 measure, and we have cases like Angie Zapata.

Memphis, Tennessee seems to be a center of hate against trans women of color, as according to Pam’s House Blend, in the last six months, at least three trans women have been targeted with Leeneshia Edwards as the latest.

Read more…

The AP is reporting that there was recently a massive coal ash spill in Tennesse. If you are anything like me, the first thing you asked upon hearing the news was, what the hell is coal ash?

The AP has the answers:

More than a billion gallons of coal fly ash, a byproduct of burning coal, spilled Monday when the dike burst on a retention pond at the Kingston Fossil Plant. The spill covered 300 acres with sludge in Harriman, about 35 miles west of Knoxville. It dumped a mix of ash and water in the Emory River, causing residents of nearby Kingston to worry about their drinking water.

TVA has said the water is safe to drink.

Three homes were destroyed and 42 property owners had damage of some kind, according to Roane County emergency management officials.

Crystell Flinn’s home and all her belongings were swept away by the ash slide, only three days before Christmas. Now, she and the rest of her family are living in a hotel paid for by TVA.

Kilgore said TVA is providing for the short-term needs of the three families whose homes were destroyed, but Flinn said there is nothing to return to.

“It looks like a tsunami,” Flinn said. “It’s not like they can scoop it up and scrape it off.”

The BBC News also has this:

Apparently, however, even though this mess supposed is safe and non toxic and peachy fine ok–two activists were arrested for simply attempting to photograph and document the damage. Which makes me think that there’s something more going on–that the damage will be something we’re going to hear about for years to come.

Archeologists Dig Up Remnants of Legendary Tango Cafe

12:07 pm By Maegan La Mala · Argentina| Culture| Music · Comments Off

29 Dec 2008

tango.jpgJust 50 centimeters below the ground in Buenos Aires‘ posh Palermo neighborhood, there was a piece of the city’s musical history just waiting to be discovered — and no one new it. The Cafe Hansen, called by some “the cradle of tango”, had been lost to the world for over a century now. But this cafe which saw tango rise to fame at the end of the 19th century is being uncovered by a group of archeologists who look to make their finding a way of educating citizens about the city’s history:

“The idea is to keep excavating and take advantage of the discovery to install a hall in which neighbors can get to know the way the city was in those years,” the minister of Culture of the Government of Buenos Aires, Hernán Lombardi, told Argentine newspaper Clarín.

The cafe bore the name of its first owner, Juan Hansen, and is mentioned in historical chronicles as one of the places in which tango began.

BBC Mundo reports that the cafe was originally torn down in 1912 to make room for road infrastructure in the neighborhood.

Via / BBC Mundo

Ways to Supporting Healing

11:57 am By la Macha · Women · Comments Off

29 Dec 2008

After Katrina, the thought of finding a new place, a place I could trust, for gynecological care was overwhelming. I just couldn’t bring myself to take that step. When the clinic opened, I knew I could get care in a place that was safe and accommodating of my whole self. It was my first exam in four years. I know there are thousands of women like me in New Orleans.

-Rosana Cruz, Board Member of New Orleans Women’s Health Clinic and
Co-Director of Safe Streets, Strong Communities

December 2008

Dear Friends and Supporters,

With 2009 rapidly approaching, the New Orleans Women’s Health Clinic (NOWHC) and the New Orleans Women’s Health & Justice Initiative (WHJI) would like to wish you and yours a happy and healthy holiday season, and thank you for all of your support this past year. Thank you.

As NOWHC and WHJI continue to work together to equip marginalized and underserved women with the means to control and care for their own bodies, sexuality, reproduction, and health, while developing community-based strategies to improve the social and economic health and well-being of women of color and low-income women, we ask you to support the ongoing efforts of our organizations by making a donation this holiday season. This appeal presents accomplishments of both of our organizations for your giving consideration.

New Orleans Women’s Health Clinic
The women we serve at NOWHC are the women we stand with, the women we are – women of color and low-income women most affected by disasters (natural and economic), women whose bodies are blamed and used as decoys for systemic injustices. We recognize that the New Orleans Women’s Health Clinic cannot simply end at addressing immediate needs through services delivery. NOWHC works to integrate reproductive justice organizing and health education advocacy into our clinic to address root causes of health disparities and sexual and reproductive oppression. Our programming acknowledges intersectionality and addresses the social and economic determinants of health disparities, while challenging punitive policies around social welfare, housing, and reproductive health.

With the support of hundreds of donors like you, in just 19 months, NOWHC provided safe and affordable comprehensive sexual and reproductive health care services and information to 3,040 women from throughout the Greater New Orleans Metropolitan area as follows:

* 618 unduplicated women accessed direct medical services, 432 of which had repeat visits
* 820 additional women accessed health information and counseling services.
* Approximately 1600 referrals for service were provided over the last 5 months.
* Subsidized the cost of direct medical services for hundreds of women through the Women’s Health Access Fund
* Partnered with the B.W. Cooper Housing Development Resident Management Corporation, enabling NOWHC to advocate and organize directly in the communities where many of our constituents live.
* Launched a Sexual Health Youth Advocacy program, focusing on comprehensive sex education, sexual violence prevention, sexuality and gender identity, sexually transmitted infections (STIs) education including HIV prevention justice advocacy

The women accessing and utilizing services at the clinic and the need for safe and holistic sexual and reproductive health services and resources, paint a portrait of the unique vulnerabilities that women of color, low income, and uninsured women face in accessing health care. Take for example, the demographics of our clinic patients:

* 65% of our patients who access care at the Clinic lacked health insurance. Without our support, most of these women would have gone months or even years without receiving safe, affordable, and unbiased care.
* 72% reported annual incomes of less than $24,999 –nearly 40% earned less than $10,000 a year
* 60% identifies as Black/African-American, and nearly 20% identifies as Latina/Hispanic – many of whom are undocumented. The Clinic provides a safe space to alleviate this fear of deportation for many undocumented women.
* 70% identified their housing status as ‘renting’ and
* 84% were between the ages of 18 to 40 years of age

With your continual support, NOWHC can expand our integrated approach by improving the sexual and reproductive health of low-income and underserved women and their families.

Women’s Health & Justice Initiative
Much of the work of the clinic is done in concert with our sister collective, WHJI. WHJI impacts the reproductive and sexual health lives of women of color and low-income women, by mobilizing our communities to engage in racial, gender, and reproductive justice activism that challenges the legislation and criminalization of women of color and poor women’s bodies, sexuality, fertility, and motherhood. As a predominately all volunteer collective, WHJI has:

Read more…

299.jpgIt hasn’t been a very happy holiday for Laura Elena Zuniga Huizar, the reigning Reina Hispanoamericana and 2008 winner of one of Mexico’s most renowned beauty pageants, Nuestra Belleza. Laura Elena wasn’t celebrating Christmas Eve with family in Culiacán but rather in a jail cell with her narco buddies. TIME reports:

In October, Laura Zuniga, athletic and 5′ 7″ tall, posed sleekly for the paparazzi. She wore an alluring pink dress and, more importantly, the coveted crown of Miss Hispanic America. Just before Christmas, she again stood before a scrum of Mexican photographers, but this time holding her head low and wearing a pair of handcuffs while police showed off the 9 mm pistols, semi-automatic rifles and $53,000 in cash she had allegedly been caught with. Her problems only deepened on Friday, when a judge ordered her and a man described as her boyfriend, along with six others found with the stash, to be further detained for 40 days pending charges on racketeering, drug trafficking, guns and money laundering.

Read more…

More on Israeli Attack on Gaza

9:30 am By Maegan La Mala · Gaza| israel · Comments Off

29 Dec 2008

The news, images and stories coming out of Gaza gets more and more disturbing and angering. I know here in the NYC there was a rally yesterday, one planned for today and another one tomorrow. I will try to make my way to one, weather and children permitting.

The death toll has almost reached 300, with Israel saying this is just the beginning and congratulating itself on it’s restraint.

This is what restraint looks like apparently.
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Read more…

The offensive, racist song above comes to you thanks to the Republican Party off a gift cd from one Republican National Committee members to others. The cd includes other such gems like Barack the Magic Negro.

Via/ The Moderate Voice, NYT


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