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Archive for April, 2009

Miercoles Morning Musica : Omar Sosa Light the Sky

7:15 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Events|Music|New York City · Comments Off

8 Apr 2009

sosascheinmanOver the next few evenings, until 12th, the Omar Sosa Quintet will be performing at the legendary Blue Note. There are two shows a nights and they will feature Jenny Scheinman. For more information visit the Blue Note’s website.

For those that aren’t in the NYC area or can’t attend here is Omar Sosa with “Light In The Sky” From the CD: Afreecanos. Featuring Guest Artists: Graça Onasile and Ramiro Musotto. Can’t you almost hear the water calling you?

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Shoe thrower gets sentence reduced

1:18 pm By la Macha · Iraq War · Comments Off

7 Apr 2009

shoe-throwerIt was good to read that the man who threw the shoe at George Bush in Iraq got his sentence reduced from three years to one.

Iraq’s highest court reduced the prison sentence Tuesday for an Iraqi journalist who hurled his shoes at former President George W. Bush from three years to one, a court spokesman said.

Abdul-Sattar Bayrkdar, the spokesman, said the decision was taken because the journalist had no prior criminal history. The Federal Appeals Court ruled on the defense’s appeal, which cited an Iraqi law stipulating a maximum sentence of two years for publicly insulting a visiting foreign leader.

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Gay Marriage Passes in Vermont!

11:22 am By la Macha · GLBT · Comments Off

7 Apr 2009

Breaking news from Reuters is that Vermont has weathered a showdown between its Congress and it’s governor; and gay marriage is now legal in the state of Vermont!

Vermont lawmakers on Tuesday overrode a veto from the governor in passing a bill that would allow same-sex marriage, clearing the way for the state to become the fourth in the nation where gay marriage is legal.

The Vermont House of Representatives passed the bill by a 100-49 vote after it cleared the state Senate 23-5 earlier in the day. In Vermont, a bill needs two-thirds support in each chamber to override a veto.

Vermont’s vote comes just four days after Iowa’s Supreme Court struck down a decade-old law that barred gays from marrying to make that state the first in the U.S. heartland to allow same-sex marriages.

Vermont’s gay marriage legislation looked in peril after a vote Thursday in the Democrat-controlled House of Representatives that failed to garner enough support clear a veto threat from Republican Governor Jim Douglas.

Congratulations to the LGBTQ community in Vermont!!!

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Breaking news: justice has once again caught up with ex-president of Perú Alberto Fujimori. And this time he’s paying the price for his infamous human rights violations. The video above is of the judge declaring Fujimori “guilty beyond a reasonable doubt” of charges related to the deaths of 25 people during his administration.

According to the prosecutor, Fujimori backed the massacre of nine students and a professor from the state university La Cantuta in 1992 and the death of 15 people, among them a child, during a party in the Barrios Altos area in 1991.

In addition he is accused of the kidnapping of a businessman and an opposition journalist, the latter one day after Fujimori closed the Congress and the judicial branch after a self-coup with the help of the army in 1992.

Read more…

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Colorado Fails to Support DREAMers

8:17 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Colorado|Education|Immigration|Politics|youth · Comments Off

7 Apr 2009

xhzxyuzfvuijpaz-3251Last Week I wrote about how some states were pushing DREAM Act like measures through their legislatures. One of those states was Colorado. However yesterday, the dreams of undocumented students in The Centennial State were squashed thanks to Democrats in the state senate joining with Republicans to vote against the Immigrant Tuition Equity Bill.

Sen. Bill Cadman, R-Colorado Springs, said that granting students who are illegal immigrants in-state tuition was like saying “if their parents robbed a bank, their kids could keep the money.”

Though the bill would require students who get the in-state tuition rate to sign an affidavit stating they would seek legal residency, Sen. Mike Kopp, R-Littleton, said the affidavit “is worth probably less than the paper it’s printed on.”

In hopes of attracting more Democratic votes, proponents added an amendment that said the bill would only become effective upon passage of the federal DREAM Act. That measure being considered in Congress would provide a path to citizenship to illegal immigrants who serve in the military or attend college in the United States.

It wasn’t enough. Democratic Sens. Morgan Carroll of Aurora, Jim Isgar of Hesperus, Moe Keller of Wheat Ridge, Linda Newell of Littleton and Lois Tochtrop of Thornton voted against the bill.

Carroll, after the debate, referred reporters to a statement on her website that said she could not support the bill “in a climate where the state is cutting or eliminating over $1 billion of benefits to the people and is facing a $300 million cut to higher education, which virtually ends higher education as we know it in the state of Colorado.”

Isgar and Tochtrop made similar comments about cuts to colleges, while Keller declined comment on her vote.

Newell, who was elected in November by a razor-thin margin, simply said “I listened to my constituents” when asked about her vote.

Read more…

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Martes Morning Musica : Un Ritmo Que Pesa

7:08 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Music|Puerto Rico · Comments Off

7 Apr 2009

This morning’s musical inspiration comes from Puerto Rican reggae group Cultura Profetica, who will be in NYC at S.O.B.’s next Tuesday.

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Salma’s husband bossnapped

1:48 pm By la Macha · salma · 1 Comment

6 Apr 2009

salma-hayek-cleavage-3000x0400x532When the news gets too depressing for me, I always feel like I can cruise stories about my Salmita to feel better.

Sigh.

Turns out Salma’s life is pretty darn depressing as well.

Mexican actress Salma Hayek’s billionaire husband Francois-Henri Pinault was held hostage in his car Wednesday by his staff who were angered over 1,200 job cuts at two of his stores.

Mirror online reports, Pinault, 46, the boss of retail empire PPR which owns Gucci shops, was held for an hour by 50 staff members after a meeting in Paris until freed by riot police.

Pinault, who married Hayek, 42, six weeks ago, was the fifth “boss-napping” victim in a month. The union said: “We wanted talks to save jobs.”

Now, as a firm lover of the unions, I have to say, I’m sorta snickering at this. And it, honestly, sorta cheered me up.

As a Salma lover, however, I know that this probably frightened her, and as such, I must tell the unions to cool it.

Union solidarity rocks, just don’t get in the way of my fantasizing.

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Just got the news today through CNN that the military has finally started to allow the media to be present when fallen soldiers arrive back in the U.S. t1homeiraqcoffin09gi

His name was Phillip A. Myers. A staff sergeant in the U.S. Air Force, he was killed in a roadside bombing in Afghanistan on Saturday.The return of his body to the United States aboard a charter aircraft Sunday marked a solemn moment that has been repeated more than 5,000 times at Dover Air Force Base in Delaware since the start of the war in Afghanistan in late 2001.

This night, however, was not like the other nights. Watching all of this were about 40 journalists allowed to cover the return of Myers’ remains. It was the first time in almost 20 years the return of a fallen U.S. service member was able to be recorded by the media.

I feel sort of mixed by this. It looks like the proceedings really keep the needs of the family in mind–reporters have rules they have to follow (like not speaking, not making “undo movements” etc), and it appears that the family has the final say over whether or not the media will be allowed. Which is all good.

But at the same time, it did make me a little uncomfortable to see that the military asked the wife of Myers if she wanted the press there–seems to me that in a world where the government is more than aware of the power of a picture–families can be “asked” in mighty forceful/pressuring ways.

Of course on a grander scale, I am *always* pleased to know that the government is trying to be transparent with the realities of what it gets us citizens into. And it think it’s *vitally* important for citizens to know what military families must deal with.

But I think, in the end, I am capable of imagining what military families and the reality of war is like without turning the families of dead soldiers into propaganda either. I think the needs of the families must come first.

What do you think?

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Chris Brown may be getting support from some camps, but from others he’s getting dissed for being a domestic abuser. A hip-hop group called Jump Smokers is serving up some musical justice on Brown in the form of a song called “My Flow So Tight Anti-Breezy (Chris Brown should get his ass kicked)”. The lyrics are scarce, but have a distinct message:

“Boy hits girl/Boy should be taken down/No matter who’s around…All the money in the world but that’s no excuse/Career suicide, yo, here’s the noose.”

EOnline reports that Jump Smokers has vowed that “a portion of the proceeds from the single will go to various organizations for battered women.”

Check out the song above and let us know what you think. Is this just a way to capitalize on a tragic incident or an important message for listeners?

Via / Yahoo Entertainment

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2830612461_5924b6eba9Last week we told you about an initiative among several U.S. Senators to lift the ban on U.S. tourism to Cuba. While some — both on the Cuban side and the U.S. side — might see this as a good thing for the island, Spain’s El País reports (and editorializes) that the Cuban government is proceeding with caution:

Authorities in Havana are looking anxiously at the possibility that the U.S. might lift the travel ban that impedes American tourists from visiting Cuba “too soon”. On the one hand this is desired and seen as a salvation in these times of crisis, but on the other, the end of the banning of U.S. tourism is perceived as a challenge, with a high potential for destabilizing the political and idealogical landscape, according to observers and diplomats.

To provide perspective on what this major change in U.S.-Cuba relations could mean to prolongation of Cuba as we know it today, El País points to statements made by Cuban politician Armando Hart, who warned against the effects of a lifting of the embargo on Cuban society:

If he [Obama] keeps his promise [of lifting the embargo], a new age of idealogical combat between the Cuban revolution and imperialism will be born. Within it, the design of a new theoretical and propagandistic concept around our ideas and their origin will be needed…a broad migration towards distinct objectives could come upon us and we need to culturally prepare ourselves for that.”

I think this pretty much sums up the overall point: this isn’t just about welcoming dollars into the Cuban economy via American tourism, but rather what that will actually mean to Cuba: an influx of everything the revolution has been trying to combat all these years. American tourism is a demonstration of rampant consumerism which is capitalism at its maximum expression, and that flies in the face of the Cuban way of life. Sure, it’s been filtering through for years now via European tourism, but this sudden aperture is bound to push communist leaders on the island to reconsider the way the reconcile the ideals they wish their people to live by and the fact that the enemy is coming in and leaving a piece of their culture of consumption on the island.

What do you think? Will U.S. tourism to Cuba radically change Cuban society? How will leaders deal with this? What will Cuba look like after, say, 20 years of U.S. tourism to the island? Share your thoughts in the comments below.

Via / El País

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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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