5:01 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Justice|Obama|Politics · 1 Comment
26 May 2009This just in via email from the Obama camp: the official statement about the Sotomayor nomination:
As La Macha mentioned in her previous post about the Sotomayor appointment, the romanticism around the parents who worked around the clock to get the judge where she is today is a big part of the rhetoric, and echoed in the Obama statement.
Either way, this appointment is, to me, the only (albeit ineffective) salve for my disgust over the Prop 8 ruling.
Via / BarackObama.com
4:19 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · California|Controversia|GLBT|society · 2 Comments
26 May 2009Guess who’s not proud to be a Californian again?
Even in the worst of times, it is important to remember: the fight is not over.
Please sign the pledge to keep the campaign for marriage equality in California going. This can’t end this way.
Via / Courage Campaign
12:20 pm By la Macha · GLBT · 3 Comments
26 May 2009
And as I was writing this post, the decision came out: Prop 8 is upheld (which makes same sex marriages are illegal), but the 18,000 couples that got married when same sex marriage was legal are still considered “real.”
More as news breaks.
Edited: Here is the Supreme Court decision in PDF format
EDITED: Here is live CBS coverage the protests going on in San Fran right now.
11:57 am By la Macha · Immigration|Obama|Puerto Rico|race|youth · 2 Comments
26 May 2009As Maegan told us all earlier today, Obama has nominated Latina Sonia Sotomayor to replace outgoing Supreme Court justice, David Souter.
Sotomayor just gave her acceptance speech (shown below), and the beginning is filled with teary love for the family:
It’s very sweet, and it got me teary eyed too. But to give some small commentary that has absolutely nothing to do with Sotomayor’s nomination, it made me really sad to see the “love through work” discourse recreated by Sotomayor’s family. Latin@s know what I’m talking about here–the idea that parents working three, four, ten jobs in horrible conditions that often take that parent away from the family is an appropriate way for Latin@s to demonstrate their love for their children.
Just look at Obama’s family story for an example of what I’m talking about here. Both Barack and Michelle have spoken very eloquently about how their parents helped them with homework, building self esteem, and later in life, helping to raise grandkids, etc.
This is something you hear from SO many U.S. families. But when it comes to Latin@ families, the biggest most oft mentioned demonstration of love is “working three jobs so that I could do XXX.” Never mind the guilt that “working so that I can do XXX,” often provokes, this idea of love expressed through chronic work (that often, coiincidently, winds up killing our parents at very early ages) is just plain sad. What a luxury it is to sit with your kids and help them with their homework. What a luxury it is to help your child build self-esteem.
I’m so thrilled that Sotomayor’s mami is there to share this moment with her, and that she’s getting a moment to revel in her daughter’s accomplishments. It’s a huge honor that the both of them deserve.
And here’s to hoping that children of immigrants will eventually be loved through a hug, a long conversation, a fun trip, rather than the three jobs their parents work.
8:11 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Obama|Politics · 4 Comments
26 May 2009
In about an hour, President Obama will announce his nominee for the spot retiring Supreme Court Justice David Souter will leave open and numerous sources point to Puerto Rican from the Bronx, federal Judge Sonia Sotomayor. Speculation was that Obama would be picking a mujer and a Latina.
I don’t know much about Sotomayor’s record to make a statement of support for the nomination, pero this is a historic moment as she would be the first Latina to serve on the Supreme Court.
As Liza over at Culture Kitchen has pointed out, expect the right to attack Sotomayor’s gender and ethnicity using all the stereotypes they can pull out of their asses.
6:56 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Internet|Venezuela · Comments Off
26 May 2009
So is access to the internet a right or a luxury? Decree No. 6649 coming out of Venezuela seems to side with it as luxury.
The decree seeks to eliminate “luxuries” or “superfluous expenses” among the public expenditure, among which includes the Internet.
This seems to go against an earlier decree No. 825 from 2000 that said that internet access and use were a priority.
A campaign, Internet Prioritaria, has launched in response to the latest decree, with a goal of keeping the internet as a government priority.
12:45 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · crime|New York City|society · 4 Comments
25 May 2009
It might have been a small one, but it was indeed a bomb that shattered windows at a Starbucks on New York’s Upper East Side today. And some are linking the explosion to some recent consulate blasts we are all familiar with:
A “low-order improvised explosive device” exploded after being left on a wooden bench in front of the coffeehouse, Kelly said. The blast could be heard many blocks away, according to CNN affiliate WABC-TV of New York.Seven people were briefly evacuated from the building above the Starbucks, Kelly said, but no one was injured. The interior of the Starbucks sustained no damage.
It’s too early to tell whether Monday’s incident is connected to other minor explosions in New York City in recent years, including ones at the British and Mexican consulates and another in Times Square, Kelly said
I wonder what’s going on here. Earlier this month, a Starbucks in California was evacuated when a suspicious device was found there. That one turned out not to be a bomb, though what it was was never ascertained.
Via / CNN
Image via Boston.com
9:49 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Internet|race · 3 Comments
25 May 2009
The term digital divide traditionally is used to talk about the haves versus the have nots when it comes to internet access. The digital divide has been analyzed from a race/ethnicity perspective and an age perspective. Pero the digital divide is more than just an access issue, it’s about keeping up with the leaps in technology. It’s not enough to have internet access, it has to be broadband access. It’s not enough to have a cell phone, it has to be a smart phone.
According to the Census Bureau, more than 40 percent of all homes are not connected to the Internet or use antiquated “dial-up” technology. Communities of color are disproportionately affected by the digital divide. According to a 2008 report by Free Press, a national media reform organization, only 40 percent of households of color subscribe to broadband, while 55 percent of white households are connected. The nation’s Latino population in particular fares among the worst, with only 35 percent having a broadband connection.
As high-speed Internet becomes increasingly expensive, middle- and low-income families are less able to afford it. According to the same Free Press report, only 35 percent of homes with less than $50,000 in annual income have broadband, while 76 percent of households earning more than $50,000 per year are connected in that manner. For many Latino communities living on the margins in Los Angeles, paying for pricey broadband service isn’t even a possibility.
Via / Colorlines
2:33 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Bizarro|Health|holidays · Comments Off
24 May 2009
As many of you are out are probably out in the sun, enjoying the weather this Memorial Day weekend, you might be anticipating taking a dip in your neighborhood pool. That’s great, but just try not to pee in it. I know, I know, most of us — if we are honest — would admit that we’ve had the occasion to relieve ourselves of a little chis in a swimming pool once or twice in our lives. I mean, what’s the harm, right? What fellow swimmers don’t know won’t hurt them, correct? That’s not what the CDC says:
When swimmers sweat or urinate in the pool water, the bodily fluids combine with the chlorine. It creates chloramines, which causes the strange odor and the eye and respiratory irritations for swimmers, according to the CDC.No matter how discreet the act may be, “you’re contaminating the pool. Let’s face it,” said Linda Golodner, the vice chairwoman of the Water Quality and Health Council.
The survey released by Golodner’s group, which advises the American Chemistry Council, found that 11 percent of the surveyed adults said they have swum with a runny nose, 7 percent with an exposed rash or cut and 1 percent when ill with diarrhea. The margin of error was plus or minus 3.1 percentage points.
But if you think pee in your pool is bad enough, think again. When it comes to people very getting sick from swimming, the real culprit is that last thing they mentioned: diarrhea. Yes, diarrhea in the pool.
The most common recreational water illness is spread through diarrhea. One of the most persistent problems is Cryptosporidium, a parasite that causes diarrhea and can be found in infected stools.“With Crypto, if you have diarrhea, it’s very watery,” Hlavsa said. “It’s not a formed stool sitting in the pool or floating on top. It could be very watery, and no one [in a pool] would know.”
So this Memorial Day weekend, eat, drink, be merry and swim! But don’t count on me joining you.
Via / CNN
Image via t_a_i_s on Flickr
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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