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Archive for May, 2009

Meet Ida, Your Oldest Ancestor

1:55 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Celebrities|science|society · 1 Comment

20 May 2009

626_fossil…and media darling! This fossil, formerly referred to as Darwinius masillae, emerged yesterday in a media storm as what is believed by her discoverers to be human’s oldest known ancestor, and proof of our evolution from apes. Take that creationists!

But really, with all the fuss about Ida today and yesterday, one would think she had a new film premiering or a hit show on Broadway. Flash bulbs went wild as she was unveiled yesterday at New York’s Museum of Natural History, with the celeb mayor Michael Bloomberg in attendance.

Dozens of reporters swarmed to the museum for Tuesday’s announcement at the museum, where even New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg was on hand to extol the discovery. The fossilized creature lay on its side, suspended in a block of amber-colored material sitting in a brightly lit specimen case.

Before Tuesday’s event, the fossil was shrouded in secrecy, and its unveiling unfolded more like a Hollywood production than a scientific discovery. When asked if the publicity was overdone, Hurum said he didn’t think so.

“That’s part of getting science out to the public to get attention,” he said. “I don’t think that’s so wrong.”

Ida apparently lived some 20 times earlier — 47 million years ago, when the Himalayas were just forming – than the last known fossil of this type, making her super old…and super cool! Ida makes Lucy look like chopped liver. So 1974!

Via / MSNBC

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arthazelcnnWhat is it like to be young and in school while trying to negotiate violence at home and border crossings? This article posted by CNN gives really good insight:

When she gets to the school each morning, Diaz changes out of her jogging pants and into her uniform skirt.

“Because of the people over there, I don’t feel comfortable with the men and stuff, so I wear pants,”
she explains. “You definitely see a difference here. The streets, they are more clean here than they are in Juarez, and I think the people respect you a little more. You don’t have to worry about people giving you trouble.”

El Paso, population 734,000, has long enjoyed the benefits of strong community ties with its industrial sister city of approximately 1.5 million. But the violence and insecurity created by the war between the Mexican government and the drug cartels has strained that relationship.

For students at Lydia Patterson, who live in Juarez and cross the bridge each weekday, the small, United Methodist preparatory school has become a safe haven in the months since drug-related violence in Juarez has intensified.

“My school is a home for me because I have teachers and they treat me like parents,” says Hazel Barrera, 18. “Here, they take care of us and they make us feel comfortable and safe.”

For Hazel Barrera at least, the violence of her homeland means sexualized violence–sexualized violence that she can name and has active strategies in preventing. But what effect could a single kid possibly have on militarized state endorsed violence–violence that is being committed in the name of protecting its citizens from violence? Violence that the U.S. has a hand in creating but refuses to have a hand in ending?

It makes me think of the following response by a New American Media representative to a post Mamita did about how immigrant women are represented.

In addition, I hope you didn’t miss the 73% of women polled who responded saying they had become more assertive since entering the United States, or the 33% of women who reported themselves as heads of household (up from 18% in their home countries). Or the 71% of women who report that they share financial decisions with their husbands, or the 78% who report that they participate actively in family planning decisions. Finally, I was struck by the 43% of women who agreed with the statement “Many of my responsibilities in the U.S. are handled by men in my home country.” All of these facts serve to complicate the idealized, stereotyped mother-martyr you seek to destabilize–a goal we share with you.

I was uncomfortable reading this section of Ms. Goode’s response to Mamita because while it may really serve to nuance how immigrant women are understood in the U.S. (they are NOT submissive docile creatures waiting to be beat up by their man), it recreates harmful stereotypes about the U.S. being the ultimate liberator to non-U.S. women. A discourse that has been used to justify violence against the homelands of other women of color throughout the world (think: hyper violent Arab man and how his relationship to the submissive Arab woman was used to help justify the wars against Iraq and Afghanistan).

The horrific violence and sexism in non-U.S. countries most certainly does exist. The experience of Hazel Barrera proves that. I am not denying that Mexico (or any other country) is more violent, more sexist, more whatever than the U.S. What I am questioning is how the hell could they *not* be when those countries exist as chronically unstable due to economic wars (and actual physical wars) being waged against them by the U.S. and other first world nations?

Maybe it’s not that the U.S. is less sexist or gives women more freedoms, but that the U.S. is more stable, and thus has more resources for women to fight sexism and violence within their communities?

And if this is true, what is the proper response to “immigration and women” by those of us in the U.S.? What would be most helpful to young women like Hazel Berrera?

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Shooting Hoops With HP : Contest

9:54 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Marketing|Sports|Tech · 2 Comments

20 May 2009

hp-pavilion-dv2-portatil1HP has a new laptop out, the HP Pavilion dv2. As part of their promotion of the ultralight and portable new model, HP has teamed up with the NBA to send one person selected at random to see Kevin Garnett and the Celtics play a home game in Boston and an away game in a West Coast city. The package will include VIP tickets, airfare, hotel and great HP gear. You can enter for that contest here. Pero hurry because the contest runs only until the end of the month.

Pero we have something special for VivirLatino readers.

VL has been chosen, along with two dozen other sites, to be eligible for extra prizes. What are the prizes?

10 regulation basketballs, each signed by an active player of the winner’s choosing

2 trips to the 2010 NBA All-Star Game in Dallas: includes travel, accommodations and tickets for two – one winner and one site owner (yup so someone from the VL team gets a prize too!)

and there’s more. VL is getting one $50 gift card for use at The NBA Store, which will go one lucky VL reader who enters.

So how can you get in the game?

Enter the HP/NBA Contest Aqui

Come back here and comment with a valid email that you entered the contest.

Vl will choose who gets the $50 NBA Store gift card and all the entries will go into the random drawing with the entrants from the other two dozen blogs for the other prizes.

Please enter by 11:59:59 p.m. PT on May 31, 2009 to be eligible and sorry, this contest is only for peeps in the U.S. (quizas one day we’ll get an international futbol contest going or something).

Good Luck!

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Texas National Border

9:31 am By la Macha · Bizarro|U.S.-Mexico Border · Comments Off

20 May 2009

texas-wall-map-redo Found via facebook, this link to the Onion provides insight on the plans by Texas to secede from the Union.

The final section of the barricade, a reinforced concrete enclosure containing the city of Austin, will be finished by August 2009.

“These Americans are destroying the moral and social fabric of our state,” said Rep. Chris Turner, who added that he worries when he looks around Texas and sees people from places like Pennsylvania, Iowa, and Vermont. “The man who used to repair my truck was replaced by some mechanic who moved in here from Kansas. Lately I can’t go to the store or the bank without running into all kinds of these foreigners. This wall is the only hope we have of keeping Texas safe.”

“The truth is, Americans are just different from us,” Turner added. “We don’t even speak the same language.”

According to Texas Army National Guard Brig. Gen. Tom Alford, Americans will only be permitted to cross the border if they have immediate family living in Texas, in which case they can apply for a 90-minute monitored visitation to be held inside a checkpoint detention facility.

Yes, this is a joke, it’s from the Onion, folks. But it is interesting to think about, no? The idea that it could be U.S. citizens that were repellent and worth keeping out?

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noahs-arc…apparently because being gay “is a choice”:

“We know what we have gone through as an ethnic group. We feel the terminology, the definition itself, has really been hijacked,” he said. “Unfortunately, it’s just another ploy to garner more support from people who may not understand what the civil rights struggle was all about.”

Bishop Michael A. Badger, pastor of Bethesda World Harvest International Church on Main Street, said that he doesn’t doubt there is discrimination against gay people but that it is hardly on the order of what African-Americans have encountered and still face.

“As an African-American, I don’t have a choice in the color of my skin. I have a choice in whether I’m abstinent or not,” Badger said. “I don’t think you can compare the two.”

Actually he said because “abstinence” is “a choice”. Well, that makes even less sense.

Just because the two issues aren’t exactly the same doesn’t mean they aren’t both about civil rights. And sorry, I think we can draw more parallels between the civil rights movement and the fight for gay rights than with the fight against gay marriage. To quote journalist Earl Ofari Hutchison: “Homophobia and racism are frequently two sides of the same coin.”

Let’s be honest. I’d rather get schooled on said parallels and what the civil rights movement was about by Coretta Scott King than from this guy.

Oh, and for those of you who wonder why this issue is even important, read this story from today’s NYT.

What do you think?

Via / Buffalo News

Image via LogoOnline(Noah’s Arc)

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Pedro Almodovar’s Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown is considered a comedic masterpiece and is a personal favorite of mine. One might think I’d be excited about the premise of bringing it to television, but more than enthusiastic, I am feeling a bit tortured. This will be either the best or worst show ever:

Oscar-winning Spanish filmmaker Pedro Almodovar is venturing into television with a series adaptation of his first international hit, the Oscar-nominated 1988 feature “Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown.”

Fox TV Studios is developing the English-language hourlong project and has tapped Mimi Schmir to pen the pilot script. Almodovar and Schmir are exec producing [...]

The “Women” series “will be a suburban drama about a group of women who have known each other for a long time, perhaps from college, who are in the middle of their lives and looking at the second half of their lives,” Schmir said.

Like the movie, the series will feature a fair amount of humor. Schmir also is planning to pay homage to the movie by keeping some elements, like the film’s ongoing gag of unsuspecting visitors to the actress’ apartment being knocked out by sleeping pill-laden gazpacho she had intended for her philandering lover.

That sounds…boring. I am not going to judge too much before seeing it, but I think a lot about what makes Mujeres al borde special has to do with the when, where and who of the film. When? The 80s. Where? Downtown Madrid. Who? Some of the best comedic actors Spanish-speaking film as ever seen — and at their prime at that. How do you pull this off in a U.S. suburb? And furthermore, how do you make the premise worthy of an on-going series? I’m just not seeing it.

Have a look at the clip from the original classic and let us know if you think this show has any chance in hell of being good.

Via / The Hollywood Reporter

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45606280-150x150President Obama has promised over and over again how immigration reform is a priority for his administration. Pero there have also been signs that Obama, who out of political necessity is playing cautious, is willing to follow in the enforcement first policy footsteps of his predecessors.

According to the Washington Post:

The Obama administration is expanding a program initiated by President George W. Bush aimed at checking the immigration status of virtually every person booked into local jails. In four years, the measure could result in a tenfold increase in illegal immigrants who have been convicted of crimes and identified for deportation, current and former U.S. officials said.

The fact that President Obama has moved forward on this first and not a moratorium on ICE raids that break up families, is very telling.

Read more…

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Andrés Duque from Blabbeando has some great video and pictures from two very different rallies that took place this past Sunday here in NYC. Both rallies dealt with the lives of GLBT people and both had Latinos speaking on the issues.

First here’s Ugly Betty‘s Ana Ortiz (no relation), speaking at a rally organized by Broadway Impact and co-sponsored by the Human Rights Campaign, the Empire State Pride Agenda, Marriage Equality New York, the Civil Rights Front and Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS

Read more…

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seenodeadAs a person of very mixed faith I read the following article with sort of a sick feeling in my stomach. Apparently, Rumsfeld (remember him?) used to send daily updates to President Bush that were plastered with quotes from the bible:

One showed US troops trudging through the desert under a passage from Isaiah: “Their arrows are sharp, all their bows are strung; their horses’ hoofs seem like flint, their chariot wheels are like a whirlwind.”

Another showed Saddam delivering a speech to camera with these words from the First Epistle of Peter: “It is God’s will that by doing good you should silence the ignorant talk of foolish men.”

Draper noted that unlike Bush, Rumsfeld did not wear his faith on his sleeve. And he said the use of the biblical passages was the brainchild of a director for intelligence working under the Pentagon chief.

“Still, the sheer cunning of pairing unsentimental intelligence with religious righteousness bore the signature of one man: Donald Rumsfeld,” Draper’s report said.

“At least one Muslim analyst in the (Pentagon) building had been greatly offended,” it said.

“Others privately worried that if these covers were leaked during a war conducted in an Islamic nation, the fallout — as one Pentagon staffer would later say — ‘would be as bad as Abu Ghraib’.”

Now, really–I don’t think that Rumsfeld technically did anything wrong, at least not compared to the other shit he did (advocating torture, starting wars with little rhyme or reason, etc). But on a purely emotional level, I find this news to be reprehensible. It demonstrates to me on the most base level that the wars the U.S. are in right now were not based on what is best for U.S. citizens–but rather instead were based on and justified on the religious beliefs of a few powerful white men that remain completely disconnected from the people they claim to represent.

Does that sound like anybody else to you?
It does to me.

You can see the images of the folders here at GQ

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barack-obama2President Obama spent Sunday giving the commencement address at Notre Dame. A little context: Arizona State University recently refused to give Obama an honorary doctorate when they asked him to give the commencement at their school. There seemed to be no reason or rhym behind the decision–which lead to this excellent report by the team at the John Stewart show.

Notre Dame students (who actually have a legitimate beef with Obama) saw this and wondered why on earth their school, which is Catholic and thus as an institution, anti-abortion, would 1. invite an openly pro-choice supporter to speak in the first place, and 2. reward that pro-choice speaker with an honorary doctorate. Students have protested regularly leading up to the speech, and got in some moments of protest at the actual event.

Obama seemed to hold his own, however, earning a standing ovation and reluctant respect from news outlets. The following is from Fox News:

He said the views of the two sides of the debate are “irreconcilable” but can be honored.

“I do not suggest that the debate surrounding abortion can or should go away. Because no matter how much we may want to fudge it — indeed, while we know that the views of most Americans on the subject are complex and even contradictory — the fact is that at some level, the views of the two camps are irreconcilable,” Obama said.

“Each side will continue to make its case to the public with passion and conviction. But surely we can do so without reducing those with differing views to caricature,” he said.

On the specific issue of abortion, Obama urged the public to at least agree that it is a “heart-wrenching” decision for any woman, and that the country should work to reduce the number of women seeking abortions by reducing unwanted pregnancies and making adoption more available.

So, looking past the obvious irony that a man is deciding how a conversation about women should be discussed (and many of the protesters were men), I think it was a good speech in so much that for once, when there were protests going on, a public figure actually talked about those protests instead of barreling through some bullshit speech as if half the audience wasn’t standing with it’s back to the person.

But I do have one nitpicky issue: why does choosing an abortion always have to be a gut wrenching heartbreaking horrible decision? Why is it that the only way pro-choicers can frame the debate in a way that isn’t offensive is if they frame it around a woman who is inherently tragic rather than assertive and active?

It’s simply yet another version of the virgin/whore dichotomy (good tragic wonderful woman sacrificing her desired child just to survive in evil world versus evil whore that uses abortions as birth control)–and it’s frustrating. Why are women so easily reduced to simple caricatures ? (Oooh, the irony)

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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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