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Archive for March 23rd, 2009

Not on my Shopping List: Justin Timberlake Tequila

11:57 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Celebrities|Marketing · Comments Off

23 Mar 2009

Justin Timberlake might be OK for bringing sexy back, but for making tequila? Ehh…

Looks like Justin wants to play rap star and hawk his own liquor. I think I’ll stick to my Herradura Reposado.

Via / ITN

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iceSo the institution of the Catholic Church hasn’t been winning points with people, well with me anyway. I mean really? Thankfully Cardinal Francis George has given me a little hope that not all is lost. He told a crowd of hundreds in Our Lady of Mercy Church in Albany Park, Chicago, that Obama should stop the immigration raids to show that the new administration really is about change.

George sought to cast the issue in moral terms, calling it “a matter of conscience” and an important step to creating a more peaceful society.

“We cannot strengthen families when people live in fear from day to day,” he said.

“May this be the year that raids and separation of families stop,” George said. “May this be the year that our legislators pass comprehensive immigration reform.”

Can I get an Amen?

Via / The Chicago Tribune

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JLo is Anita in Vanity Fair’s West Side Story

11:25 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Celebrities|Fashion|Magazines|Movies · Comments Off

23 Mar 2009

gallery_enlarged-vanityfair-west-side-story-photos-03172009-04

JLo participated in Vanity Fair’s photo homage to classic Broadway musical made Hollywood classic movie West Side Story. Who was she? Well, Anita no less!

Posing for a glossy, starlet-studded photoshoot with Vanity Fair, Lopez admits, “I never wanted to be that wimpy Maria, who sits around pining for her guy. I wanted to be Anita, who danced her way to the top.” That’s because it’s almost how J.Lo’s career happened, except with more spray-tan and highlights.

Well put! I wonder what Rita Moreno would think. More importantly, what do you think?

Check out the whole series (featuring a ton of B-list actors) at Vanity Fair.

Via / Socialite Life

Photo: Mark Seliger for Vanity Fair

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Celebrating the Latina Mujer This Friday in NYC

9:23 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · New York|Women · Comments Off

23 Mar 2009

There is a saying que la patria es una mujer : that homeland is a woman and given the strong leadership role that Latina women have taken up in various struggles, it’s time that people step back to give some of these mujeres some props.

This Womyn’s History Month, join The ProLibertad Freedom Campaign as we honor the contributions of Boricua/Latina Women to the Puerto Rican INDEPENDENCE Movement ¡QUE VIVA LA MUJER!

Recipients of the Doña Adelfa Vera Award for 2009:
Yasmin Hernandez, Artist/Activist/ Educator
Teresita “Lah Tere” Ayala, Poet/Activist/ Rebel Diaz
Claudia de la Cruz, Pastor of La Iglesia San Romero de Las Americas/UCC

Mistress of Ceremony:
Haydee Morales, Casa Atabex Ache Co-Founder

Keynote Speaker:
Prisionera, Poet/Activist/ Partido Nacionalista de Puerto Rico

Sample Work Presentation:
Our Women, Our Struggle (working title) is a 70-minute long documentary that chronicles the life of Puerto Rican revolutionary – Isabel Rosado, — who dedicated her life to the Puerto Rican Independence movement and has become a symbol of the island’s patriotism. Other women such as Lolita Lebron and Dylcia Pagan will also be highlighted. All three women were subjected to FBI surveillance and each spent many years in prison as a consequence of their radical political actions or as some might refer “terrorist activities”.
Melissa Montero is a Latina filmmaker living in Queens, New York of Puerto Rican and Ecuadorian heritage. She has co-produced and directed a non-broadcast ten-minute promotional video/documentary on Casa Atabex Ache, a non-profit organization that does healing and transformation work for women of color.

Poetry by:
Mariposa and Prisionera

Hand crafts and Natural Products:
OLGA AYALA HANDICRAFTS (HECHO A MANO)
Botanicafe (Lourdes Garcia)

FRIDAY MARCH 27, 2009 AT 7PM!
St. Mary’s Episcopal Church 521 W126th St.
Between Amsterdam Avenue and Broadway Take the 1 train W125th St.
Suggested donation: $5 (no one will be turned away)
LIGHT REFRESHMENTS WILL BE SERVED!
For more information contact ProLibertad: 718-601-4751 * www.ProLibertadWeb. com

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viequesFull disclosure : Yours truely was involved in some NYC organizing for Vieques before all the celebs started doing it.

It has been six years since grassroots struggles on and off the island of Puerto Rico led to the end of Vieques being used as a U.S. Navy bombing test sight. In the years of struggle that included many non-celebs being arrested and a whole community of the fishing island being negatively impacted in terms of health and livelihood, Vieques was a symbol of one face of U.S. colonialism in Puerto Rico. And now it seems, the U.S. Navy wants to reestablish Vieques as a military test site all in the name of the war on drugs.

As reported by the Associated Press, Puerto Rico’s Resident Commissioner Pedro Pierluisi stated that he was open to re-establishing a “low-intensity” military presence in Vieques. The move would be a part of Puerto Rico’s moral obligation, as Pierluisi put it, to national defense.

The AP also reported that U.S. military leaders and Republican Senator Jim Inhofe, of Oklahoma, have said that Vieques could serve a strategic purpose for the Armed Forces.

Even though the bombing has ended on Vieques, the land and environment is still contaminated, with both Federal and island forces arguing over who is responsible for the clean up of a land that claims high cancer rates and birth defects due in part no doubt to the use of bombs with depleted uranium among other things.

The idea that Puerto Rico is a strategic locale for the U.S. military is nothing new. Ever since the U.S. invaded (yes, invaded) Puerto Rico in 1898, the island has offered the U.S. a gateway into Latin America at the expense of the Puerto Rican people.

It is also not the first time that the war on drugs has been invoked as a “good” reason for the U.S. military presence on Puerto Rico and specifically in Vieques. I already pointed out that the Obama administration has a former Raytheon man in the Defense Department. Raytheon wanted to establish radar sites on Puerto Rico in the name of the war on drugs. Mass protest stopped the sites from being developed but obviously not the desire to come up with some other excuse to increase military presence on the island.

And I blame Mexico. Well not Mexico the people there, pero rather the increased media and U.S. government focus on the country due to the growing drug related violence. The narco crimes, which in many ways have been exacerbated by the Mexican’s government militarization, have prompted the U.S. to use Mexico as it’s new drug war baby. Violence? Blame Mexico. Drugs? Blame Mexico. Plans to militarize the U.S./Mexico frontera are are the agenda again and this time it’s not just cuz of scary undocumented immigrants. It’s now also the drugs and violence that those scary immigrants force on the U.S. (Please ignore lopsided U.S. drug policy). Puerto Rico is the new old frontera.

Since the U.S. will lose Guantanamo Bay in Cuba, Puerto Rico, a colony with a fancy commonwealth name, is even more important to the U.S. as a force in Latin America. Also we cannot ignore the choice that people in Latin America, most recently El Salvador, in moving left on the political spectrum as an attempt to exorcise the ghosts of Reagan era imperialism. Puerto Rico as a place to monitor Cuba, Venezuela, Bolivia and other Latin American nations who despite the rhetoric of change coming from Washington D.C., are still seen as the enemy of U.S. interests.

The solution goes beyond just resisting the U.S. Navy reestablishing themselves on Vieques. The solution lies in allowing Puerto Rico to be in charge of it’s own political destiny. Puerto Rico’s colonial status allows the U.S. to use the island at will. And don’t bring me that tired old story of how Puerto Ricans have voted for the current Commonwealth status in referendums that really are nothing more than glorified opinion polls. Until decolonization happens, as recommended time and time again via the United Nations, Puerto Rico will continue to be used as pawn against herself and her sisters in Latin America.

Via / El Diario la Prensa

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A couple months after saying that he “stinks like Bush”, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez is once again striking out against U.S. President Barack Obama. He’s spittin’ mad for comments allegedly made by the U.S. leader and calls Obama “pobre ignorante” (“poor ignoramous”) on his TV show Aló Presidente (video above):

Venezuela’s President Hugo Chavez said on Sunday his U.S. counterpart Barack Obama was at best an “ignoramus” for saying the socialist leader exported terrorism and obstructed progress in Latin America.

“He goes and accuses me of exporting terrorism: the least I can say is that he’s a poor ignoramus; he should read and study a little to understand reality,” said Chavez, who heads a group of left-wing Latin American leaders opposed to the U.S. influence in the region.

Did Obama really say this? I can’t seem to find the citation anywhere, and it seems strange to me that someone who said he would sit down with Castro and Chavez and is reaching out to Iran would dare rock the boat with Venezuela, a country with which the U.S. already has a tenuous relationship. Does anyone know if this statement was actually made?

If it is true, it has absolutely zero basis in my eyes. Venezuela export terrorism? You can love or hate Chavez, but that statement is just not factual and wreaks of exaggeration and Republican scare tactics.

Via / Reuters

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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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