9:07 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · chicago|Health|Immigration · Comments Off
6 Mar 2009
Yesterday La Macha wrote about President Obama’s Healthcare Summit and how he said what so many of us already know, that the healthcare system needs to be built anew and fast. Pero what do we do in the meantime especially in immigrant neighborhoods where so many of the undocumented are uninsured? I know my neighborhood is full of storefront clinics and if those clinics were to close? That’s exactly what one immigrant community in Chicago is facing.
The University of Illinois at Chicago says it’s closing a medical clinic geared for low-income women in a mostly Mexican neighborhood. But a community group is fighting to keep the facility open. We report from our West Side bureau.
UIC says it runs 10 community clinics in the city. In Pilsen, the Center for Women and Families last year handled some 6,400 patient visits.
The university says the clinic runs an annual deficit of $200,000. A spokesman says Illinois’s budget crunch leaves no choice but to close the facility by June 30.
The decision isn’t going over well with campus unions or a neighborhood group called the Pilsen Alliance.
PAREDES: This clinic is really important for our community.
The alliance’s Rodrigo Paredes spoke to pickets in front of the clinic last night.
PAREDES: All the women come here. All the pregnant women want to come here. So it’s our time to fight. The community of Pilsen is going to fight to the end.
Paredes says a petition drive will begin this weekend.
The university, meanwhile, is referring the patients to another clinic about four miles south
Four miles may seem like nothing if you have a car or access to public transportation and access means more that having a train or bus nearby. It means being able to afford that transportation. So I was wondering if the right to health care includes having good local healthcare?
Via / Chicago Public Radio
3:23 pm By la Macha · Events · 4 Comments
5 Mar 2009In front of a bunch of screaming fans, Michael Jackson preened and shied his way through a few sentences.
The singer will perform at the O2 arena in south east London, his first live performance for more than two years.
He said the This Is It shows would be his “curtain call”.
Jackson is one of the best-selling artists of all time, and with a brimming back catalogue of huge hits, there is bound to be a huge demand for the concerts.
The singer has kept a low profile since his 2005 acquittal on child molestation charges and has spent time living outside the United States.
His last studio album was in 2001 and concerns for his health as well as a tarnished reputation from his erratic behaviour will raise questions over whether the 50-year-old can still be a thriller.
His last live performance in Britain was at the 2006 World Music Awards, where he performed some lines from We Are the World.
The current Michael Jackson sort of makes me feel really sad every time I look at him. I grew up with a much different dude. And I can’t even begin to explain to you how freaking OLD it makes me feel to know that Michael is FIFTY. Time, where have you gone???
2:09 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Celebrities|Controversia|society|Women · 4 Comments
5 Mar 2009People.com reported last week that pop superstar Rihanna has reunited with boyfriend Chris Brown, accused of leaving the singer bruised and bloodied after a brutal domestic violence incident. While this in and of itself might not be shocking to some of us — battered women often return to their victimizers for a variety of reasons — what is shocking is the reaction online. Take this one for instance:
“Their relationship is not worth losing just because he physically abused her“…What? Did you see those photos?
According to this guy, “the devil” is behind the abuse, which represents “a boost to Rihanna’s career”. Do you really believe that?
I decided to post the video above because the gentlemen speaking in it, sadly, seems to reflect the opinions of thousands of Internet users, as there are thousands of comments found all over YouTube on videos related to the incident justifying the abuse. They range from on the “light” side from “she must have done something to provoke him” to the unthinkable “dumb bitch deserved it”.
What is wrong with people? I find this to be an outrage (actually I feel much more than that but am self-censoring) and unfortunately the reconciliation is only going to bring on more disgusting comments such as these. Think “if she was so abused, why did she go back?” People really need to get schooled on domestic violence and simple respect for other human beings before commenting online.
1:13 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Activism|GLBT|Health|San Francisco|society|TV · 9 Comments
5 Mar 2009Some of you might be a tad too young to remember, but back in 1994, MTV’s The Real World actually retained some element of real, and was actually a pretty engaging show (note: there were actually people with brains in the house). The San Francisco edition was one of its highest points, mainly due to the groundbreaking things that were going on on the show: 21 year old Cubano Pedro Zamora emerged as the first openly gay HIV-positive man to appear on American television, and in following Pedro’s life and death, U.S. TV viewers finally got to know someone living with HIV.
Alex Loynaz stars as earnest Real World cast-member Pedro Zamora in this intimate biopic tracing the HIV-positive immigrant’s rise from humble roots to becoming one of the most instantly recognizable HIV/AIDS activists in the United States as a result of his high profile role on MTV’s pioneering reality… television series. In 1992, The Real World made it’s debut on MTV, forever altering the definition of the term “celebrity,” and providing a sympathetic face to the growing AIDS crisis for the millions of Americans who had yet to meet someone suffering from the devastating autoimmune disorder.
While the show was great, what MTV has got up its sleeve now doesn’t look like it’s going to do it much justice. “Pedro: The Movie” actually looks pretty terrible if the trailers are to be believed (check them out here). MTV movies are infamously bad, so I guess you can’t expect much more, but I would have preferred Pedro’s story be told by a good filmmaker with…a budget. When you check out the trailer, you’ll know what I mean. But before that, check out the clip above of The Real World San Francisco to get a sense of who Pedro was.
Pedro: The Movie is set to air on MTV on April 1st.
Via / SF Citizen
12:22 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Activism|California|Cities|GLBT|Justice|Politics|San Francisco|society|States · 1 Comment
5 Mar 2009
“When all else fails, pray!” is what comes to mind upon reading about the multiple candlelight vigils that were held throughout my state on the eve of the hearing that will make or break California’s most discriminatory law against LGBT citizens. Last night San Franciscans, like Californians in other cities big and small, held vigils and marched. What else can you do at this point? The San Francisco Chronicle reports:
The crowd, bundled against the chill, carried signs reading, “We All Deserve the Freedom To Marry,” and “Down with Prop. 8!” as they marched along Market Street. The peaceful protest stretched for two city blocks past stopped Muni street cars while police held back traffic at the intersections.The group made their way to City Hall, where a pianist and singer entertained the crowd with love songs. Some of the participants planned to camp out in the Civic Center Plaza to be there for the hearing.
It will be shown on a JumboTron for those who don’t have access to viewing rooms set up in the San Francisco Public Library.
Will the great State of California overturn what has been called “the will of the people”? Or will it let thousands of gay families remain together? I am pessimistic, but we’ll just have to wait and see. In the meantime, San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom is reportedly all booked up…the media is just clamoring to get his take. Check out an interview with Mayor Newsom and hear his thoughts after the jump.
Read more…
11:09 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Immigration · Comments Off
5 Mar 2009The targeting of undocumented people for quality of life offenses and other minor things is giving the children of the undocumented nightmares and is becoming the monster in the closet of their heads, always there, a possibility, a constant fear. I see it in the writing of students of mine who read the headlines and wonder what would happen to them, children born in the U.S., citizens, if their undocumented parent(s) were pulled over for a broken taillight.
Yesterday it was reported that the fears of children are not unfounded, that there is indeed a monster in their closets.
287(g) programs allow local law enforcement agents to enforce Federal immigration laws and they also allow for racial profiling among other abuses.
The report, to be released Wednesday by the Government Accountability Office, the investigative arm of Congress, says the government has failed to determine how many of the thousands of people deported under the program were the kind of violent felons it was devised to root out.
Some law enforcement agencies had used the program to deport immigrants “who have committed minor crimes, such as carrying an open container of alcohol,” the report said, and at least four agencies referred minor traffic offenders for deportation.
Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano has already ordered a review of the program. A top official at the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency is set to testify at a Congressional hearing on Wednesday.
Here’s the official press release as posted by Nezua:
For Immediate Release
RECIPE FOR FAILURE: LOCAL COPS AS IMMIGRATION AGENTS
GAO Report Adds To Bevy of Analysis Revealing Deficiencies of 287(g) Program
March 4, 2009Washington D.C. – Today the Government Accountability Office (GAO) released its congressionally commissioned report on the 287(g) program. The Government’s review of this program, which deputizes local law-enforcement officers to act as immigration enforcement agents, confirms what community members and criminal-justice experts have been saying for some time: the program is not being used to target dangerous criminals, and there has not been adequate federal oversight of the local police departments participating in the program.
Findings of GAO Report:
The GAO report found that U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) has not clearly articulated the objectives of the 287(g) program or the guidelines that participating police departments must follow, thereby creating confusion and mismanagement. Furthermore, ICE has not demonstrated effective oversight of the 67 partnership agreements and 950 officers who have been trained, potentially resulting in “misuse of authority.” Finally, participating police agencies have not consistently documented their activities, making it impossible to measure the success or failure of the program, or to justify the high costs associated with it.
Statement by Angela Kelley, Director of the Immigration Policy Center:
“The GAO report is sounding an alarm we’re confident the Homeland Security Secretary will hear. The report echoes the conclusions reached by others who have studied local law enforcement of immigration laws. The costs of these policies are enormous to communities’ safety, civil rights, and pocketbooks. As Secretary Napolitano and her staff begin their review of immigration enforcement tactics, we urge them to consider the totality of evidence coming from the community and acknowledge the full scope of the problems presented by 287(g). We are confident that this administration will find a new way forward and advance policies that restore the rule of law and respect civil rights.”
Other 287(g) Research and Information:
Two other recently released reports examine the community impact of these ICE-local partnerships and provide detailed analyses of the mistakes, racial profiling, and fear resulting from inept implementation of a program which was designed to target criminals, but has instead been used to target the Latino community as a whole:
* Local Democracy on ICE: Why State and Local Governments Have No Business in Federal Immigration Law Enforcement by Justice Strategies.
*
The Policies and Politics of Local Immigration Enforcement Laws: 287(g) Program in North Carolina, by the ACLU of North Carolina Legal Foundation and the Immigration and Human Rights Policy Clinic at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.IPC’s latest publication demonstrates that many law-enforcement officials have opposed taking on the role of immigration agent because doing so destroys their relationship with the communities they are supposed to serve and protect.
*
Debunking the Myth of “Sanctuary Cities”: Community Policing Policies Protect American Communities.Additionally, the Chatham County North Carolina Board of Commissioners recently issued a statement, reported by the Chatham Journal, opposing county participation in the 287(g) program because it is ineffective in crime prevention, increases the risk of racial profiling, and is unnecessary because local law enforcement already has the authority to fight crime. The Board concluded that “the federal government’s immigration policy has been a failure and is dysfunctional. We believe that it is wrong to pass that failure on to local governments, which are not equipped to handle federal immigration laws.”
Via / The Sanctuary
9:08 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · children|Controversia|Women · 2 Comments
5 Mar 2009
March is Women’s History Month. In a few days International Working Women’s Day will be celebrated and yet this morning what do I see in my news feed? More demonization of Nadya Suleman, this time painting her as the stereotype criminal/negligent mother.
As a mother of two children, I have had moments of lost children and kids locking themselves in rooms (in fact this just happened to me the other night). I know the frantic desperation these moments can invoke in moms and yet every single moment of Nadya Suleman’s life in the mami’hood is under a microscope. I write mami’hood instead of mommyhood because Suleman isn’t being afforded the benefit of the doubt, the idea that mothering is hard work, especially if you are the mother of multiple children, are poor, and/or are a mother of color. Our experiences are ghettoized, othered, seen as aberrations of what “real motherhood” should look/be like.
Octuplet mother Nadya Suleman became unhinged with fear last year when she thought she had lost one of her children, repeatedly telling an emergency dispatcher, “Oh God, I’m going to kill myself,” according to a recording of her 911 call released Wednesday by police.
Police and the Los Angeles County Department of Child and Family Services visited Suleman’s home in July in response to a complaint that the children appeared poorly cared for, but both agencies determined the complaint was unfounded.
Suleman, in an interview with RadarOnline.com, said the neighbor who alerted police was unhappy because her family was loud and she allowed her children to play in the mud.
Police also once visited the home to let a child out of a locked bedroom.
The mass media with their hysteria making (beware of the single poor mami!!!) fails to make any analysis of how law enforcement and social service agencies have historically been used against families of color, have taken children away without real reason.
Oh no, she let her children play in the mud!!!
Yeah let’s worry about that instead of how she and so many other mothers will feed their children, clothe their children, get healthcare for their children, house their children. These are things I, a single mami of two worry about and millions of other mami’s worry about. Pero look, over there, it’s Angelina Jolie. Move along, nothing to see here.
Via / HuffPo
1:00 pm By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Music · 2 Comments
4 Mar 200912:49 pm By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Activism|New York City · Comments Off
4 Mar 2009
If it weren’t for Richie Perez there would be no Maegan la Mala. Not only did he actually give me the name , he was the driving force behind my political and activist awakening when I was just a teenager.
My Dear Friends,
Several months ago Councilwoman Rosie Mendez, a close personal friend and a beloved mentee of Richie’s called to say that she wanted to secure a street named for him during her tenure. As many of you know Richie spent the last 23 years of his life working as Director of Community Development for the Community Service Society of New York. That office became the political home from which most of our movement stemmed over the years and in fact still houses the Richie Perez Community Office for Social Justice and headquarters for the Justice Committee. To that end we have decided to request that Park Avenue South at 22nd Street be co named Richie Perez Way
The street is in Rosie Mendez’s district and she will submit the proposal to Community Board 5 at a public meeting on March 5th. Although we don’t expect much opposition to this we do know that this Community Board has been resistant to street renaming in the past and that we need to prepare for it by arming Rosie with letters of support, petitions and a strong presence at the meeting.
Only you know how much this means to our community. To have the ability to look up and have someone ask, “Who was that guy” and to be able to say, “let me tell you about Richie, let me tell you about us”. It is certainly a fitting tribute but I know Richie would rather we call it a testament to our history.
Richie, was a longtime activist and leader in the struggle for global human rights, Richie Pérez was a leading exponent for social justice and political participation. A former Young Lord and National Congress for Puerto Rican Rights co-founder, Richie brought his unique mix of integrity, zeal and unity to the diverse ethnic and racial communities of New York City and beyond.
Please help make Richie Perez Way a reality by signing the petition via the url below. Share with all.
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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