Our friend Oprah is the latest in a long line of people who wishes she’d never heard of her state Governor, Rod Blagovich.
“If I had been watching as I normally watch, from the treadmill, I would have probably fallen off the treadmill.”
And then a firm Thanks–but No Thanks.
Good friend to Vivir Latino, brownfemipower, is hosting a collaboration at her blog, Flip Flopping Joy, with fellow amazing media maker, Jess Hoffman (of make/shift fame).
Their collaboration is called (Re)Thinking Walking and centers ways that we can build new worlds through the process of purposeful walking.
Some excerpts:
If we allow Sacagawea the complexity of her humanity, we see that the question about her is not so much, was she a heroine (she was) as the U.S. government and many invested in feminist icons would have us believe, but rather instead– in what way was her movement her own? In what ways had her movement been forced upon her–and if she had the power of a respected and honored choice–what would she have done? Would she have gone on the Lewis and Clark journey? What would she say was *her* relationship to exercise, to health, to the outdoors?
I think the point is not to replace dominant culture’s rigid, hierarchical boundaries (and disciplinarian consequences for broken boundaries) with no boundaries or accountability whatsoever, but rather with flexible, collaboratively developed boundaries. Our commitments to each other do matter, I think, whether they are in the form of a schedule on a collaborative project or a promise not to hold too fiercely to that project’s deadlines if one of the participants gets sick or sinks into depression or has to handle unexpected an family emergency or just needs some more time this week. We do need to be accountable and to hold each other accountable … we just need to do it in ways that are more flexible, collaborative, horizontal, and creative than the ways we’re used to from jobs, school, and the like — community-determined ways, to riff on BFP’s riff on Paula Rojas’s thoughts on creating community-driven structures.
I couldn’t have said that five years ago, when I was convinced that the reason the Left is so weak is people’s “flakiness,” lack of commitment, unwillingness to dig in and do the hard work of movement-making. I’ve gone through a few cycles now of organizing, getting burnt out on organizing, taking some space to heal and rejuvenate, and diving back in. And I’ve learned a few things, and changed in the process of collaboratively working for change. Sticking it out, organizing with lots of different people on lots of different projects, has helped me break out of some of my earlier ways of seeing–rigidities, norms I’d internalized from a lifetime in Type A cultures (at home, at school, etc.).
It’s promising to be an amazing collaboration between the two, and I highly recommend you head over there to read the whole thing.
10:51 am By Maegan La Mala · business|children|Controversia|Marketing|Money|Politics · 3 Comments
26 Jan 2009
How would feel if a toymaker (say, the maker of Beanie Babies) started manufacturing dolls in the image of your two young daughters without asking for consent or even respectfully letting you know in advance? Spittin’ mad, I’d say, especially if you were a woman interested in shielding your children from the massive spotlight that will fall upon them as children of the president. It sounds a bit surreal, but that’s actually what has happened, and Michelle Obama isn’t happy:
First lady Michelle Obama is not pleased about the marketing of a pair of dolls that bear the same names as her daughters.“We believe it is inappropriate to use young private citizens for marketing purposes,” Ms. Obama’s spokeswoman said.
Ty Inc. has released the 12-inch plush dolls as part of the company’s “TyGirlz Collection,” introduced in 2007. The Sasha doll has pigtails and wears a white and pink dress with hearts. The Malia doll has a side ponytail and a long-sleeve shirt with capri pants.
10:24 am By Maegan La Mala · Controversia|Media|race|radio · 1 Comment
26 Jan 2009One of the biggest media scandals of 2008, without a doubt, was radio jockey Don Imus’ racist remarks about a group of African American female college basketball players. Let me refresh your memory with the above video.
Over a year later, these comments are just as shocking to me as the first time I heard them. But it appears that one year later, the author of these statements wants us to know that he has seen the light:
“What happened is what should have happened,” Imus said in an interview. “So much good has come out of what happened. I really do think it’s like an alcoholic, which I am, and a drug addict, which I am. You’re presented with the unique opportunity to be a better person than you had been. I consider this situation to be analogous to that, almost identical to that.”Imus, 68, works now for the ABC Radio Networks and rural RFD-TV after being fired by CBS Radio and MSNBC in spring 2007 for referring to the Rutgers women as “nappy-headed hos.”
President Obama’s pick for the #2 spot at the Department of Defense caught my eye and not in a good way.
President Obama has nominated registered Raytheon lobbyist William J. Lynn III to deputy defense secretary, waiving the rule that employees are prohibited from decision-making related to their employers in the past two years and from taking jobs in agencies they lobbied recently
Raytheon is a huge U.S. defense contractor involved in numerous U.S. wars and are the makers of Tomahawk and Patriot missiles. They have helped such imfamous programs like Operation Condor in Mexico and manufactured the missile that killed 62 civilians in a Baghdad market in 2003.
I became aware of Raytheon over 10 years ago, when I was involved in protesting their plans to build a Relocatable-Over-The-Horizon-Radar (ROTHR)in Puerto Rico.
Via / Pam’s House Blend
Most sources are saying that a referendum in Bolivia on a new constitution has passed. The new constitution would allow President Evo Morales to run for re-election and give greater power to the indigenous majority. Voters also decided on whether there should be a cap on future land ownership.
The count as of last night has the new constitution passing by anywhere from 57% to 62%.
Some voters opposing the measure are crying fraud and not surprisingly bringing up Venezuela. From Inca Kola News:
Branco Marinkovic: “(Bolivians have voted) without the guarantee of a transparent electoral process in the midst of a panorama of fraud; double carnetization and double registration of voters by this government with the financial help of Venezuela means nothing less than that. Be careful with your vote because there will be fraud, and ask eveeryone to be on the alert, as the audit of the lamentable OAS (Organization of American States, official overseers of the vote) is just a show and doesn’t mean anything.”
Via / France 24, Al Jazeera,
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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