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Archive for April, 2009

visit-cuba-print-c100197302While President Obama might not be ready to end the Cuban embargo, a bi-partisan group of U.S. Senators are on a crusade to lift the ban on U.S. travelers to the island.

“I think there’s sufficient votes in both the House (of Representatives) and the Senate to finally get it passed,” Democratic Senator Byron Dorgan said at a news conference.

Dorgan, whose home state of North Dakota could benefit from increased agricultural sales to Cuba, introduced the bill along with fellow Democratic Senator Christopher Dodd and Republican Senators Richard Lugar and Mike Enzi. Seventeen other senators also are sponsoring the measure. A companion bill introduced in the House earlier this year has 121 co-sponsors.

On Senate Republican in particular, Cuban American Senator Mel Martinez, says this is all wrong, as it will provide the Castro regime with a “resource windfall”.

Personally, I am not buying that. Years of isolation has made the Castro regime stronger, and tourism isn’t going to make a difference either way. Cuba is already overloaded with tourists from all over the world, and a few more coming by way of Miami International Airport isn’t going to drastically change anything.

Anyway, Americans have been traveling to Cuba illegally for ages. I’m more concerned about the U.S. making some kind of colonial move on the island, though that was more of a threat during our plumb loco previous administration.

At least one Republican Representative is for ending the travel ban; Representative Jeff Flake of Arizona makes his case for an end to the embargo in a video after the jump. Read more…

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xhzxyuzfvuijpaz-325I’ve written extensively on the DREAM Act, to the point of getting linked to by right wing locos, I mean pundits, ok I mean locos (yes I’m waving at you Michelle Malkin). Today other pro-migrant bloggers will also be writing about the DREAM Act, a piece of bipartisan legislation that would permit undocumented students brought to the country as children conditional legal status and eventual citizenship.

Movement on the DREAM Act has been strong, with state officials across the country supporting local measures that pretty much do the same thing as the Federal DREAM Act, allow undocumented students access to in-state tuition rates and a path to citizenship in a country they have grown up in and consider home. Take Colorado for example.

In the Senate and House of Representatives the DREAM Act continues to gain new sponsors which I am sure has to do with grassroots efforts that you can be a part of.

Want to do just one thing for the DREAM Act Today?

1. CALL Pick up the phone and call your Senator or Representative today. Dial 202-224-3121 or use the NCLR guide to be connected to your member of Congress and speak out in favor of the DREAM Act.

Sample message – “Hi, I am calling in support of the DREAM Act (S.729 / H.R. 1751). The DREAM Act lays the groundwork for immigration reform and allows immigrant youth of good moral character to make crucial economic contributions to the United States. To not pass the act at a time when this country needs an economic stimulus and a more educated workforce would be great folly. I urge _________ to become a cosponsor of the DREAM Act.”

Please report back on how your call went.
NILC Factsheet on how DREAM benefits the economy
DREAM Act 2009 Talking Points

Need 9 more things to do?

Mas aqui :
Dreams Deferred: Criminalizing Immigrant Youth

Daily Dream: 22 New Cosponsors, 10 Ways to Act

Via / Change.org, My Latino News.com

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Did you Watch Pedro Last Night?

6:19 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Activism|GLBT|Health|TV|youth · Comments Off

2 Apr 2009

I skipped my usual Wednesday night Lost so that I could watch the MTV biopic, Pedro, about Cuban HIV educator and activist Pedro Zamora, turned MTV reality star via the Real World.

I had already seen a few clips and was less than impressed with the acting on display pero I have to admit that Pedro was kind of engaging. You have to understand that I am not the audience. 30 somethings who remember the Real World San Francisco and who have grown up with a greater awareness of HIV and AIDS not to mention the struggle for gay equality may feel like the film Pedro is a little scattered, which is probably good for younger audiences who are used to their info in small pieces.
The film after all isn’t meant to be just a tribute pero also a message to young people to talk about their sexual health including using condoms and getting tested for sexually transmitted diseases.

Spoilers ahead:
No one is going to get an Emmy for their acting in the film. The scenes showing life on the San Francisco Real World set were especially painful to watch pero how do you film the filming of a reality show. The film does a better job at showing us what wasn’t seen on the Real World. Pedro’s family history, how he came from Cuba on the Mariel boatlift with his parents and some of his siblings for example. Some of the actual cultural details about Afro-Cuban religion were not done very well though.

The lines between Orishas and Santos were crossed, as they often are in real life, pero to someone not educated the whole scene of Pedro seeing a Santero on a beach with dancers could seem a little too no se, superstitious and confusing, as was Pedro’s mothers explanation of la Caridad del Cobre, her santo and patrona de Cuba, when really it seemed like she was talking about Oshun.

I did enjoy seeing how the film dealt with the struggles of a young man coming out to his family and later confronting his family and others with not just his illness pero also his choices on how he wanted to live as an HIV positive gay man. Something that struck me as I watched the film, something I had always taken for granted before, was how the wedding between Pedro and Sean back in 1994 must have been shocking or por lo menos cutting edge to some and yet seen through the lens of the current same sex marriage struggle, so sweet and innocent.

I would like to rewatch Pedro with my older daughter to see the kind of message it speaks to her porque I am clearly not the MTV generation anymore. The message the film, and numerous public service ads throughout the film, was trying to make was that anyone can get HIV if they don’t take care of themselves, meaning if they don’t use condoms and get tested. Pedro tried to paint Pedro Zamora less as an activist and more as someone who could be you or your friend and no one likes to think of themselves or their friend dying.

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As expected, protests at the G20 have gotten violent. Tonight it is being reported by several news sources that a man is dead as a result of the protests. I haven’t been able to find out yet if it was accidental, police induced, or stupid protestor induced–usually when there is little or no information, it is accidental (as in had a heart attack or got too dehydrated or something). But we’ll have to wait and see, I guess.

Here is what MSNBC is saying about the protests:

Visit msnbc.com for Breaking News, World News, and News about the Economy

I tend to be very conflicted by protests. On the one had, I am your basic scary frightening anti-capitalist and support the right of any human being (including conservatives!) to protest the government that they live under. On the other hand, I’ve tended to notice through the years of going to protests and/or documenting them, that a very large portion of the violence starts with young men. Which, to me, speaks volumes about how protests become gendered and disconnected from anti-violence movements.

What do these protests hope to achieve (outside of the death of capitalism?)? And has a protest ever led to the down fall of a structure of living? Or has building a new structure to replace the old had to happen first?

Although I am critical–I hope that everybody is ok–and that the man who is dead was not murdered. I also hope that somewhere there is a world leader that is paying attention to what *the people* are saying is important to them.

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I don’t know about you all, but I’m ready to celebrate me some 10.31. Thank god for the Colbert/Stewart team.

The Colbert Report Mon – Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c
The 10/31 Project
comedycentral.com
Colbert Report Full Episodes Political Humor NASA Name Contest

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Miercoles Movie : The Sleep Dealer

12:14 pm By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Movies · 4 Comments

1 Apr 2009

Imagining a border wall or a mechanized workforce doesn’t seem so science fiction anymore. It feels just a breath away. Pero the film the Sleep Dealer imagines that world in full force and with Latinos at the center of the story.

The film opens in theaters the 17th of this month.

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300_78911On Monday, New Jersey Governor Jon Corzine’s state panel on immigrant policy revealed a decidedly progressive set of recommendations.

For example, Corzine supports undocumented students being able to pay in-state tuition at the state’s public colleges much like the DREAM Act.

Corzine said most of New Jersey’s immigrants are in the state legally, and that the children of the state’s estimated 400,000 illegal immigrants; “are not here because they chose to be, but because of their families, and they should not be discriminated against.”

Corzine wants to reexamine the immigration directive from the New Jersey’s Attorney General ordering police to notify immigration authorities when they arrest someone suspected of being an illegal immigrant and backs a moratorium on federal immigration raids in the state.

Howevere, Corzine is against is undocumented immigrants having driver’s licenses, which the Blue Ribbon Advisory Panel on Immigrant Policy came out in support of.

More than 20 percent of the Garden State’s population is made up of immigrants, the fifth highest immigrant population in the nation.

Via / Newsday

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