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,
11:16 am By Maegan La Mala · Health|Politics|Women · Comments Off
25 Jan 2009On Friday, President Obama signed an executive order ending the Global Gag Rule also known as the “Mexico City policy,”. Put in place originally by President Ronald Reagan and reinstated by George W. Bush, the policy prohibited U.S. money from funding international family planning groups offered abortions or even offered information about abortions because heaven forbid women have information about all the options available to them over their own bodies.
Via / CNN
12:15 pm By Maegan La Mala · Immigration|New York|Politics · 1 Comment
24 Jan 2009
New York Governor David Paterson picked Hillary Clinton’s Senate replacement, and it’s not Nydia Velasquez.
Visit msnbc.com for Breaking News, World News, and News about the Economy
So yay, Gillibrand a mujer, except, in her speech above, she didn’t mention immigrants. So while women’s rights may be human rights, this may not apply if you’re an immigrant woman. Why do I say that? Let me count the ways.
Thanks to Google (and seriously, these days Google is in everything), we can visit some of the master works of art held in the Prado Museum of Madrid, Spain without leaving your seat.
The Prado Museum has become the first art gallery in the world to provide access to and navigation of its collection in Google Earth. Using the advanced features of Google Earth art historians, students and tourists everywhere can zoom in on and explore the finer details of the artist’s brushwork that can be easily missed at first glance.
I love Spanish art and was lucky enough to visit the Prado once upon a time years ago. It’s nice to see some of my favorite works like Las Meninas and El Jardin de las Delicias
My only complaint is that you can only really look at 14 works of art and there are plenty more worth looking at pero it’s a good start. Let’s see if more museums go virtual.
So, MLK day just passed, a historic inauguration just passed–people are shouting from the hilltops that MLK has finally seen his dream come true…and then this news came across my google reader:
According the report although large progress was made during the civil rights era, it is slipping away year by year. Since the Supreme Court reversed course in 1991 and authorized return to segregated neighborhood schools, there has been an increase in segregation every year, particularly for black and Latino students — 40% of Latinos and 39% of blacks now attend intensely segregated schools. The average black and Latino student is now in a school that has nearly 60% of students from families who are near or below the poverty line.
Residential segregation continues to play a large role and increasingly determines the racial composition in schools in the absence of measures by education authorities to create and maintain integrated schools. And more than 40 years after passage of the Fair Housing Act, there continues to be almost no serious enforcement against widespread housing discrimination which is making it difficult to maintain integration in suburbia.
Seeing as school integration was an intervention site specifically chosen by the Civil Rights community–it makes me wonder why those who are interested in declaring that MLK’s dreams have been achieved aren’t more aware of this shocking news. School integration is a goal the Civil Rights movement worked *specifically* on–the fought for it, trained for it, planned rallies around it, prepared children for it, held massive community discussions about it–it was *central* to their fight for equality and justice.
How on earth did we all decide that electing one black man as a president was *really* the dream MLK had? Are we that distanced from our own history?
11:26 am By la Macha · media justice · 2 Comments
23 Jan 2009
I’ve spent the last day or two completly immersed in Qzap–the Queer Zine Archive Project. According to the website, the mission of QZAP is as follows:
“The mission of the Queer Zine Archive Project (QZAP) is to establish a “living history” archive of past and present queer zines and to encourage current and emerging zine publishers to continue to create. In curating such a unique aspect of culture, we value a collectivist approach that respects the diversity of experiences that fall under the heading “queer.”
The primary function of QZAP is to provide a free on-line searchable database of the collection with links allowing users to download electronic copies of zines. By providing access to the historical canon of queer zines we hope to make them more accessible to diverse communities and reach wider audiences.”
I’ve already found an amazing number of zines that are thought provoking, challenging, interesting, funny, and just plain good reads. Right now, I am reading Ungrateful Black-White Girl, the testimony of a biracial queer girl who is trying to figure out how to deal with her ‘mixed’ self. Check it out!
EDITED TO ADD: Noemi just informed me in comments that this website may have published author’s zines without their permission. I think that it’s important to note this if only to point to how the work that is not protected by a publishing company is *still work* and needs to be honored as such. Zines should not be reproduced without the consent of the author!!!!
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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