6:13 am By Maegan La Mala · GLBT| Movies · 3 Comments
30 Mar 2009Cuz Mala is a single mami, I never get to see movies when they come out in the theaters. I have to wait for them to come out on DVD and then wait for the kids to go to sleep. This past weekend, my Netflix finally sent me the next Oscar winning film on my queue, Gus Van Sant’s, Milk starring Sean Penn.
Now there will be some spoilers so please if you haven’t seen the movie or don’t know anything about Harvey Milk then you may want to stop reading now.
That said, I knew about Harvey Milk before I saw the film. So the story wasn’t a surprise. What was a surprise was in this story about the GLBT movement or at least Milk’s role in it, was how white it was. I don’t know San Fran or The Castro District pero there had to be more people of color involved in the struggle. Claro this assumption comes from my own knowledge and experience in dealing with the GLBT movement here on the east coast, a la Sylvia Rivera.
I was also surprised that Diego Luna was in the film. Then I was disappointed. Luna plays Jack Lira, Milk’s lover aka the tragic gay Latino. Don’t get me wrong. Some of my favorite lines in the film are related to Jack like, “The Latino has locked himself in the closet” when well Luna’s character during what can only be described as a temper tantrum , locks himself in a closet. Another line that made me giggle was when a drunk Dan White, played by Josh Brolin, says ” I don’t even know who you are, you just showed up out of nowhere, Latino man.”
The fact is that we, the viewers never really know who Jack Lira is. Now I know the movie is Milk not Lira, pero I felt that Lira’s character was a caricature, a childish alcoholic who was seen as a problem to Milk’s political aspirations and was prone to be jealous and mentally unstable to the point of killing himself in a dramatic fashion almost worthy of a novela. Even in interviews with Luna about playing Lira , Luna describes Lira as “simple”.
Pero all in all, Milk is an enjoyable film. Penn does a good job, I thought, especially in examining the issues of power and personal politics pero it does a poor job of looking at the bigger picture, especially in how the POC queer community played a role in the struggles of the 70’s beyond cooking, dancing, drinking and offing themselves.
What do others who have seen the film think?
8:14 pm By la Macha · Environment| Politics · Comments Off
27 Mar 2009As somebody who has friends who lived through both NOLA flooding and the recent flooding in Iowa, it’s been pretty heartbreaking to see the flooding in North Dakota.
Visit msnbc.com for Breaking News, World News, and News about the Economy
I pray for the people of North Dakota–and reiterate, now is the time to insist that our government get on board with global warming initiatives.
7:54 pm By la Macha · Celebrities| Family| children| society · 3 Comments
27 Mar 2009
No, I’m not the biggest fan in the world of white celebrities adopting brown babies from across the world. I think it’s shady on so many levels–and what the hell is wrong with foster care? They are some of the few people who actually have the resources and time to make it all the way through a foster adoption, it doesn’t make sense to me why they feel they need to go outside of their own countries to adopt.
Having said that, I read about Madonna’s attempts to adopt again with interest. Apparently, her newly single status is causing problems for her:
Madonna’s trying to adopt another baby, a little girl named Mercy, from Malawi, but may have a tougher time without Guy Ritchie at her side. “Our official policy is that we do not encourage our children to be sent into broken homes,” a senior official from Malawi’s Ministry of Women and Child Welfare Development said. “Her relationships may negatively affect the adoption of Mercy.”
And of course the LA Times blurb follows up with a swipe at single mother Nadya Suleman.
What about going after one of Nadya Suleman’s little ones?
It’s interesting how this small blurb juxtaposes so much of U.S. cultures biases against single mothers. Single mothers are always suspect and wrong, but some single mothers invoke sympathy in their “wrongness” and others don’t. It’s interesting how the single mother’s that invoke sympathy are invariably well-off and white.
11:53 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Media| Obama| Politics| TV · 4 Comments
27 Mar 2009I didn’t watch Premio lo Nuestro last night. Really, how much silicone and fajas can a mujer watch? Pero apparently the highlight was President Obama making a video appearance on the show.
Here’s what he said:
Buenas noches (Good evening). I want to thank the millions of you who voted for tonight’s winners, and I also want to thank all of you who voted in that other election back in November – even if it wasn’t for me. With the challenges we face right now, it is absolutely critical that you stay involved and make your voices heard. I want you to know that I will always be listening, and my Administration is working hard so that we can expand opportunity for all Americans and reach that better day. Now I know you tuned in for “Premio Lo Nuestro,” so let me get right to it. I don’t know who’ll get married tonight or who’ll get Video of the Year, but I know you’re in for some great performances that celebrate the rich diversity of Latin music, and that’s good news. So enjoy the show, y para los nominados que se preguntan si esta será su noche, les digo, ¡si se puede! (and for all those nominees wondering if tonight is their night, let me just say, ¡yes you can!)
Yesterday, La Macha and Jen were talking about the causal tone that many official presidential events have taken. Pero when is too casual too casual and perhaps downright offensive? Has he and everyone taken the whole Si Se Puede chant/rallying cry out of context so much rendering it meaningless? No mention of important issues like immigration. It’s as if he wants Latino support using buzzwords and catch phrases.
Maybe I’m just too damn cynical/sensitive.
9:54 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Education| Immigration| youth · 14 Comments
27 Mar 2009
Yesterday the DREAM Act was reintroduced.
Congressmen Howard Berman (D-CA) and Lincoln Diaz-Balart (R-FL), announced the reintroduction today of the DREAM Act in the U.S. House of Representatives. This legislation will restore the States’ rights to determine residency requirements for higher education benefits – giving states the option to provide in-state tuition. The American DREAM Act seeks to facilitate access to postsecondary educational opportunities for immigrant students in the United States who currently face barriers in pursuing a college education. It also provides a path to U.S. legal residency for students, and military personnel.
Pero I have also been critical of the legislation for it’s inclusion of a military path to citizenship which encourages young people of color to join the military when already, documented or not, young people of color are targeted as the canon fodder of the U.S. military industrial complex.
Perhaps even more disturbing is how laws such as the DREAM Act promote a narrative of good vs bad immigrants, the deserving vs. the undeserving.
That said I am in a privileged position to even be able to look at it from that perspective. I am a born U.S. citizen and I need to acknowledge how that position colors how I view the DREAM Act and other such legislation.
There are ways that we can support the DREAM Act, so that por lo menos some movement is made on the immigration rights front and who knows, quizas pave the way for even greater changes in the current immigration system.
Kyle over at Citizen Orange tells us Five Ways we can support the DREAM Act and the dreams of many undocumented students.
2. FAX – America’s Voice has a page to help you fax your congressional representatives in support of the DREAM Act.
3. EMAIL – Change.org has a page to help you email your congressional representatives in support of the DREAM Act.
4. PETITION – Dreamactivist.org has the official petition in support of the DREAM Act.
5. TEXT – Text “Justice” (”Justicia” for Spanish) to 69866 to be the first to know when the DREAM Act is introduced. FIRM’s Mobile Action Network is an excellent way to stay connected and have maximum impact at just the right moment.
Via / Citizen Orange
7:48 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Immigration| Media| TV · 2 Comments
27 Mar 2009Visit msnbc.com for Breaking News, World News, and News about the Economy
It’s been talked about for years. It’s been documented for years pero suddenly when it’s a huge mainstream human rights organization or the mainstream media saying it, it’s real.
I guess we should be happy that the issue of human rights violations in immigrant jails (detention facilities as they say in fancy speak) are getting any play at all. The real important point though is if all the attention leads to some real action on the part of the U.S. government. This means an end to raids that help fill up these jails until the current immigration system is overhauled.
No, I’m not holding my breath.
Via / Citizen Orange
4:55 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Bizarro| Celebrities| Chismes| Controversia| Miami| Music| sex · 5 Comments
26 Mar 2009The headline says it all, and it really can’t get much better than this, folks. AP reports on the “little” incident:
Merengue star Elvis Crespo is being investigated after a woman said she saw him masturbating on an airplane en route from Houston to Miami.
According to a Miami-Dade County police report, the Grammy winner was doing it in view of other passengers on a flight last week. That prompted the plane’s captain to radio Miami International Airport.
Officers interviewed the Puerto Rican singer upon his arrival but did not arrest him. No charges have been filed, but an investigation continues.
When asked by police about the incident, Crespo said: “I don’t recall doing that.”
His publicist did not immediately return a message left Wednesday by The Associated Press.
You can’t blame Elvis. Pobrecito can’t get press to save his life, so he had no other choice than to resort to touching himself on a plane. And getting interrogated by the FBI? Priceless.
Via / AP
12:26 pm By la Macha · Immigration · Comments Off
26 Mar 2009From CNN comes the news that
U.S. citizens are stealing the babies of undocumented immigrants
According to police, a woman claiming to be an immigration official spoke to migrant worker Rosa Sirilo-Francisco at the Hillsborough County Health Department and told her she had to turn over her 2-month-old daughter Sandra Cruz-Francisco or face deportation. The baby’s parents are from Mexico and had taken the child to the clinic for a routine check-up, according to Wilson.
After giving up the child, the mother was told by a relative in Georgia that federal immigration officials would not follow such a procedure, so the parents reported their daughter missing.
Ten hours later, Pereira surrendered the child to Manatee County sheriff’s deputies, according to authorities.
There are so many sad things going on here–I betcha million dollars that the woman specifically went after an immigrant child because she was going to try to pass it off as her own. Which makes me sad because I wonder what has this woman gone through mentally in her attempts to have a child? But even more than my sympathy for her, I feel for the family and for an entire community that knows it’s a legitimate practice of the U.S. government to take their children away for no damn reason (please see ICE raids). They have no recourse when somebody says “give me your child.” Even rapists have to be proven to be rapists in a court of law where they have the right to defend themselves before they lose their children.
Is citizenship really the only protection parents have when it comes to keeping their children safe?
11:37 am By la Macha · Internet| Obama| Politics · 5 Comments
26 Mar 2009
Obama’s live cast is on right now–you can watch it here!
A highlight for me: Obama is talking about what it was like when Obama was in the hospital for the birth of his daughters!
Other great highlights: Obama is taking questions directly from people and from online participants (would the legalization of pot resurrect the U.S. economy?)–something I don’t think I’ve ever seen.
Many of the questions, I think Obama is glossing over–but I do think that he is showing a certain amount of accountability to us citizens that I don’t think I’ve ever seen before.
Are you listening/watching? What do you think?
10:47 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Immigration| Spain| World · 1 Comment
26 Mar 2009
For a change from the posts about raids and militarized borders, an immigration story with a very happy ending.
It happened in Spain, a country with an “immigration problem” like the U.S., but where people as a whole tend to be a lot more likely to look at immigrants as people rather than “problems”. Hassane Moctar, at 21 years old, arrived by night on a makeshift raft to Spain from Mauritania, taking his life into his own hands to try to find a better life in Europe. He ended up in Galicia, where a family from Cangas do Morrazo, a town near Pontevedra “adopted” him. Hassane has been living with the Veiga family for 6 months, and the family who were once strangers now consider him part of their family.
But things weren’t so rosy with Hassane’s legal situation. Two weeks ago, Hassane, now 24, went to court to answer to a deportation order which would send him back immediately if something wasn’t done. His attorney demonstrated that the people of Cangas supported him, that he spoke Spanish, and that he even had job offers. The Veiga family began a signature campaign and managed to collect 5,000 names from townspeople in support of Hassane staying in Spain. His Galician “sister” testified on the stand to the fact that he was now part of the Veiga family:
“Ever since he started living with us, he’s been just like any member of the family. He’s never had any problems and we all love him. My 95 year old grandmother asks where Hassane is as soon as she gets up, and he spends a lot of time with her. If he gets deported, my grandmother will die.”
But initially much of this was considered irrelevant to his case by the judge. Now he had to wait for the verdict.
Read more…
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