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Archive for May, 2009

Call me cynical and evil, but I don’t believe Ms. Pelosi–me thinks she does stumble over her way too many protests too much.

Pelosi called for the CIA to release detailed notes from her own September 2002 briefing about interrogation techniques.She said today that, at that 2002 briefing, she was told the CIA was not waterboarding detainees despite later government reports showing that a high value al Qaeda detainee had been subjected to waterboarding 83 times in the weeks leading up to Pelosi’s briefing.

“At every step of the way, the administration was misleading the Congress. And that is the issue,” Pelosi said in a heated news conference, linking the alleged misinformation on waterboarding to now discredited intelligence reports in fall 2002 about weapons of mass destruction in Iraq.

I think she knew all about the “enhanced” interrogations (AKA TORTURE), as did everybody else, INCLUDING President Obama. How could you not? Were these people just miraculously unaware of all the reports being put out by the ACLU, the lawyers of people being detained, the doctors, the interrogaters, the media that was oh so reluctantly reporting on this shit (CBS was not the first time accusations of prisoner abuse surfaced, it was just the first time pictures were made available!)…I don’t believe any of them. The good thing is that Obama seems to be willing to hold people in the higher up positions accountable–which is making all those involved stumble and growl and send daughters to the media in panic.

We’ll see how this all shakes down as the year progresses…but I’m not holding my breath for a Pelosi exoneration.

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police-kick-headThe notorious L.A. police are embroiled in yet another case of caught-on-video act of police brutality. From the BBC News (which also has video):

The incident came at the end of a car chase through Los Angeles suburbs.

The footage shows the suspect, Richard Rodriguez, 23, trying to escape on foot, then lying down to surrender when he sees there is no escape.

One pursuing police officer kicks him, and another punches his side. The local police department is investigating.

The incident, in the suburb of Pico Rivera, was recorded by news helicopters and broadcast on local TV stations

Already people are justifying this by saying that the man who was kicked was a criminal and deserved it or otherwise asked for it. In reply to that, I just have to ask, have these people never watched or read any Super Hero comics? It’s not up to the police to decide what punishments people deserve for their crimes. The police are not judge, jury and executioner. We supposedly *separate* each of these entities so that even the worst of the worst criminal out there gets a fair trail and sentence that is appropriate to the crime. That’s what a *democracy* is right? That system that we are bombing others into accepting because it rocks so hard?

Good GOD, I’m glad I don’t live out in L.A.

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littleprinceWhile conservatives here in the U.S. sling the word “socialism” around like an insult, in Venezuela, President Hugo Chavez is leading a crusade for children to learn all about it via books. Chavez’s “Plan Revolucionario de Lectura” (“Revolutionary Reading Plan”) is getting off the ground now, with the goal, according to Chavez, of “constructing the new man”.

Chavez says he’ll be doing this by encouraging the reading of “revolutionary books”, while at the same time ridding libraries of classics such as “The Little Prince” by Antoine de Saint-Exupery and Cervantes’ classic Don Quijote for “ideological reasons”. I wonder what ideology he is referring to. No, I mean really…I don’t get what ideology is espoused in either of those books that he might disagree with. Maybe I need to read them again?

Chavez’s critics say he’s trashing lots of other books as well, citing that they must be thrown out because they are infested with mold or moths. According to La Tercera, among them are Hitchcock’s The Mummy, another one I don’t get. The books were allegedly sold to a recycling company for pennies on the kilo.

First it was RCTV, now it’s library books? Is this a harder push towards a cultural revolution in Venezuela? What do you think of what Chavez is doing? Let us know in the comments.

Via / La Tercera

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Ni con lluvia, ni con balas, esta lucha no se paraOne of the biggest lines fed by the anti-immigrant movement is that there are already so many of “us”, that the U.S. can’t afford to school any more of “our” children, and give “us” anymore of “their” jobs. And today I have come across a flurry of stats being released that seem to be all over the place in terms of just how many of “us” there are.

Today, the U.S. Census Bureau reported that: The minority population reached an estimated 104.6 million — or 34 percent of the nation’s total population — on July 1, 2008, compared to 31 percent when the Census was taken in 2000. Nearly one in six residents, or 46.9 million people, are Hispanic, the agency reported.

Even more telling for the future: 44 percent of children younger than 18 and 47 percent of children younger than the age of five are now from minority families.

The quickly expanding Latino population is having a healthy impact on the economy, according to Ken Gronbach, author of “The Age Curve: How to Profit from the Growing Demographic Trend.”

“Latinos have saved our country,” he said. “They represent 14 percent of the population but 25 percent of the live births. The United States is the only western industrialized nation with a fertility rate above the 2.2 percent replacement rate.”

So people should be thanking us no? Well let’s look at some of the areas that are experiencing growth and the reception that growth is getting.
Read more…

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Well, folks, it turns out that gay marriage opponent and Miss America loser Miss California, Carrie Prejean, isn’t getting her just desserts. The Miss America pageant’s owner and worst hairstyle-haver in the world, Donald Trump, did what was not done for Vanessa Williams: he let her keep her role as Miss America, saying the images weren’t racy enough to warrant her dethroning.

Nice hypocrisy there, Donald. Shanna Moakler, reality TV star, former Miss USA and the head of the pageant isn’t happy with that decision and has stepped down as a result of it:

“I cannot with a clear conscience move forward supporting and promoting the Miss Universe Organization when I no longer believe in it, or the contracts I signed committing myself as a youth,” Moakler said.

“I want to be a role model for young women with high hopes of pageantry, but now feel it more important to be a role model for my children. I am sorry and hope I have not let any young supporters down but wish them the best of luck in fulfilling their dreams,” she said.

CNN reports that Carrie Prejean claims that the last of the photos, published just before the decision, were

made without her knowledge during a modeling photo shoot. She said wind must have accidentally blown her unbuttoned top open.

Carrie must think all Americans are as dumb as she is if she believes we’ll buy that.

Anyway…can this story die yet? Apparently not:

Carrie Prejean uses Obama to defend her stance

Sarah Palin comes to Prejean’s aid

Keith Olbermann asks Carrie: WTF?

Miss Rhode Island
also posed topless, FOX News cries “double standard”.

Oh, and check out the argument on MSNBC in the video above. Real passion around this topic!

Via / CNN

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Just received this from the Colorado chapter Incite! Women of Color Against Violence.

This month has seen two first-time events in the history of hate crime law. In Greeley, Colorado on April 22, Allen Andrade was convicted of first degree murder and bias-motivated crime in the killing of Angie Zapata, a transgender woman of color. The verdict marked the first time the murder of a trans person has been legally designated as a “hate crime.” Earlier this month, HR 1913, the first federal hate crime law that includes sexual orientation and gender identity, passed the House on its way through Congress.

During the trial, we as members of the local trans and queer communities and allies were asked to support Angie’s family. Solidarity meant attending the trial and bearing witness to the guilty verdict. We responded to the call for solidarity by sitting in that courtroom and hearing the details of Angie’s murder. We heard the way she and all trans folks were disparaged by the language of the legal system and the hate speech of a murderer. We then watched Andrade get sentenced to a life behind bars.

We understand the joy that many trans people and allies may feel in this verdict. This is one of the first times that a court in the United States has recognized a trans person’s life as valuable and fully human. While this could be considered a small victory, in many ways it actually underscores to what extent the “justice” system is profoundly and fundamentally violent and unjust in its treatment of trans people.

Local organizations did an amazing job supporting the family, calling the queer and trans community together for healing, and taking on the daunting task of educating the media on trans issues. And it is important to note that the amount of attention given to this case by mainstream LGBT organizations has made violence against trans people of color a national issue.

However, we take issue with the way that LGBT organizations and progressive groups utilized Angie’s case in order to campaign for the swift passage of the HR 1913 hate crime law. This politicization has been most present in the rhetoric of the Human Rights Campaign (HRC) and the Light a Candle for Angie advertising campaign. The ad campaign and AngieZapata.com website were launched by a coalition of 50 political organizations who advocate for the passing of HR 1913. These campaigns describe hate crime laws as “protections” and “justice,” but given the nature of violence against trans people, we believe there is good reason to examine that rhetoric critically.

Denver On Fire and the Denver chapter of INCITE! acknowledge that we too have a particular lens we are using to respond to Angie’s murder and the trial. Our aims are to spark a deeper and more nuanced conversation and analysis of systematic violence, and to eventually bring an end to the prison system. As prison abolitionists, we know the legal and prison systems to be racist, homophobic, and transphobic institutions that exist to control our communities. A majority of incarcerated populations are there due to a deep-seeded system of institutionalized oppressions. Most of them should not be in prison at all and the prison system does nothing to help them or society at large. It only tends to perpetuate vicious cycles upon poor communities of color. When it comes to the most violent offenders like Allen Andrade, however, how should we proceed?

We also ask whether this trial served the causes of “justice” and liberation. Will putting Andrade in prison end transphobia or transbashings? Given the nature of violence against trans people, will hate crime laws really protect us? Will police, judges, and legislators be the ones that create the worlds we’d want to live in?

Violence Against Trans People

To look for solutions from the government, legal system, and police is to ask for protection from our main oppressor. The State is the central organizer and perpetrator of violence against trans people and especially trans people of color. The most obvious and most violent form of State violence is police brutality—harassment, verbal abuse, excessive force, negligence, sexual assault, and murder. Police officers, border patrol agents, and prison guards daily brutalize folks for the “crimes” of appearing gender non-conforming, being trans, living in poverty, and/or being a person of color. Law enforcement agents specifically target transwomen of color and with great frequency, transwomen who do street-based sex work.

Police brutality is often framed as officers “overstepping” the law, but their actions are rooted in the law itself. Beginning with the designation of every infant as “F” or “M,” federal and local governments actively designate, track, and manage our sex and gender on paperwork and forms of identification. State violence against trans and gender non-conforming people can be seen as the extension of State power into policing our sexes, genders, and intimate relationships—as the enforcement of legal sex designations. The stories of trans people who have experienced police brutality reflect this policing—especially after arrest, police officers actively “examine” trans people’s genders, often in violent ways, trying to determine the person’s “real” gender.

The legal system extends this impulse to constantly “examine” our genders into the courts. No example would serve better than Andrade’s trial for the murder of Angie Zapata. During the hearing, it was Angie’s gender that both attorneys put on trial, as if Andrade’s innocence or guilt could be determined by examining the details of her gender. The defense attorney relied entirely on a “trans panic” defense—she consistently referred to Angie by the wrong name and pronouns, charging her as deceitful, as “really” male, and hoping to find the jury sympathetic. The DA, in turn, played the gender card by arguing that Angie was easily perceived as biologically male—whether or not Angie could “pass” was turned from a personal issue into a legal strategy.

Meanwhile, something that was never put on trial was the network of systems and institutions that create and perpetuate transphobia. Andrade’s violence and rage did not exist in a vacuum. It was learned and affirmed by living in a culture where courts and police, doctors and priests, teachers and television tell us that transpeople and people of color do not deserve to live.

Hate Crime Law

Andrade was found guilty by the legal system and will be incarcerated most likely for the remainder of his life. He will never serve the extra one-year sentence for the “hate crime” punishment, but many trans people and allies have hailed the hate crime verdict as sending a message that anti-trans violence is not to be tolerated. It is sadly ironic that endemic incarceration of trans people and violent prison conditions are tolerated, and often uncriticized.

In prison, Andrade may share quarters with a transwoman at some time, since the prison system incarcerates trans people at disproportionate rates. The rampant incarceration of trans people stems from social and economic injustice that pushes many into illegal forms of work, after which, gender profiling, sex/gender policing, sex work policing, and discrimination in the legal system land many trans people in prison. Once incarcerated, trans people are housed by assigned sex and are often denied access to gender-confirming clothing, hormones, surgeries, binding, etc. Social and institutional transphobia in prison can lead to harassment as well as physical and sexual violence.

The State creates hate crime laws as a response to calls for protection. However, by putting this protection in the hands of the State, hate crime laws reinforce the legal system and prison system which in turn legitimizes violence carried out by the State. Hate crime laws prosecute individual acts of violence, thus sanctioning the violence that society, institutions, and the State perpetrate against trans people. Additionally, hate crime laws legitimize the legal system as the best response to violence against trans people. This completely ignores community-based responses which are significantly more accountable and respectful. Finally, hate crime law sets up the State as protector, intending to deflect our attention from the violence it perpetrates, deploys, and sanctions. The government, its agents, and their institutions perpetuate systemic violence and set themselves up as the only avenue in which justice can be allocated; they will never be charged with hate crimes.

The rhetoric from LGBT and progressive groups in support of hate crime laws attempts to paint a perpetrator as a “protector,” and speak of “justice” coming from a thoroughly unjust system. We urge broadening the analysis to recognize the systemically violent society trans people live in, and the need to respond independently from the State in order to fully transform society.

Community-Based Alternatives

Although we clearly see the flaws with the criminal justice system, it has been difficult for us to know how to respond to Angie Zapata’s murder. Our communities currently do not have structures in place to transform and hold accountable those who cause harm to us. For us, this trial brings to the fore the necessity to envision and build alternative ways of dealing with the violence our communities face without relying on a system that perpetuates violence against us. To even know where to begin, we need to intentionally create space for visioning processes that allow us to imagine our world without police and prisons.

Community response to violence is a powerful and growing alternative to the false “protections” of the legal system and hate crime laws. In many communities of color and queer and trans communities, people are organizing community-based alternatives to policing. Because these organizations are community-based and independent of State power, they are able to define violence holistically. In other words, violence is both interpersonal and systemic, and it is perpetrated by the State, institutions, and individuals.

We need to build upon the work of community groups that have already begun this visioning and organizing process. One current example of a gender-liberationist organization working on responding to violence is the Safe OUTside the System (SOS) Collective in Brooklyn, New York. SOS is a collective of lesbian, gay, bisexual, Two-Spirit, transgender, and gender non-conforming (LGBTSTGNC) people of color. “The SOS Collective works to challenge violence that affects LGBTSTGNC people of color. We are guided by the belief that strategies that increase the police presence and the criminalization of our communities do not create safety. Therefore we utilize strategies of community accountability to challenge violence.” (www.alp.org/whatwedo/organizing/sos)

As members the Denver chapter of INCITE! (Women and Transfolks of Color Against Violence) and of Denver On Fire (confronting sexual assault through community accountability), we believe this is truly a historic moment. And we believe that now is the right time for a major shift—away from the legal and prison systems of the State and toward a vision of community accountability and a world without prisons.

Signed,

INCITE! – Denver chapter

Denver On Fire

The Denver Chapter of INCITE! and Denver On Fire Respond to Verdict in Angie Zapata Case http://incitenetwork.wordpress.com/

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Fidel Castro Accuses Mexico of Lying About Swine Flu

4:26 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Controversia|Cuba|Health|Latin America|mexico · Comments Off

13 May 2009

We don’t hear a lot from good old Fidel Castro, but when we do, it’s always something interesting. Take this piece of new: the Mexican government is angry because the Cuban leader is accusing them of keeping the 411 about the swine flu epidemic under wraps so as not to mess up Obama’s visit to Mexico. In a piece published in Cuba’s Granma newspaper, Fidel says that because of this deception, Cubans are now paying the price as citizens there were infected:

Today the presence of the H1N1 flu virus was detected in Cuba. The carrier is a young Mexican citizen who studies medicine in our country. The only thing that can be confirmed is that it didn’t come from the CIA, it came from Mexico [...]

The Mexican authorities did not inform the world of the presence of the virus while awaiting Obama’s visit, and now they are threatening us with suspending that of President Calderón, previously suspended for other, understandable reasons unconnected to the epidemic.

Mexico is emphatically denying this accusation, and Mexican president Felipe Calderon shot back yesterday that he “acted with determination, with promptness and with one single priority, which is and will always be to protect the health and the life of Mexicans.”

On the other hand, the Mexican Secretary for Foreign Relations (SRE) says that Castro’s accusations are making things a bit, well, weird for the relations between the two countries. Patricia Espinosa Cantellano, SRE, says that the declarations “make bilateral relations awkward”.

Via / Granma and Times of India

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The Pope Supports Palestinian State

1:15 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Gaza|israel|Politics|Religion · Comments Off

13 May 2009

My posts regarding the Pope normally criticize whatever brand of hate, divisiveness and false morality he happens to be brewing up for us at the moment. But this one won’t, simply because I don’t know what to make of his stance on the Israel-Palestine conflict. While the previous Pope spoke about importance of peace in the region, this one is outright supporting Palestine’s right to exist, which seems crazy coming from such a conservative figure. This week on a trip to Israel, Pope Benedict addressed the Palestinian people in Bethlehem:

“In a special way, my heart goes out to the pilgrims from war-torn Gaza. I ask you to bring back to your families and your communities my warm embrace, and my sorrow for the loss, the hardship, and the hardship, and the suffering you have had to endure,” he said.

Israel granted permits to about 100 Christians to leave the Gaza Strip and attend the Mass in Bethlehem.

The enclave is under tight restrictions imposed by Israel and Egypt on the movement of people and goods, by land, air, and sea. The embargo, which Israel says is due to security reasons, has resulted in shortages of supplies, including construction materials needed to rebuild from the recent war.

In his homily, the pope said he is praying for an end to the closure.

“Please be assured of my solidarity with you in the immense work of rebuilding which now lies ahead, and my prayers that the embargo will soon be lifted,” he said.

Read more…

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Miercoles Musica : Quetzal Sabe el Camino

12:06 pm By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Activism|chicago|media justice · Comments Off

13 May 2009

I’ve liked the L.A. group Quetzal for awhile now pero now I may love them a little mas.

To Whom It May Concern:

Quetzal will not be performing at the Fiesta Shalom on May 17th. When first presented with this performance, it was presented as “an opportunity to improve Jewish and Chicano relations”, which we are certainly in accordance with. When we received the contract, we noticed it was sponsored by the Israeli Consulate. For Quetzal to perform for the Israeli Consulate would mean that we ignore the following:

• Decades of zionist occupation of Palestinian lands and the historically ironic holocaustic genocide of the Palestinian people

• The Israeli/US relationship that has permitted the creation of “permanent” war against people throughout the world.

• Decades of Chican@ solidarity with the Palestinian people and their struggle for Self-determination.

• Decades of solidarity with the non-zionist, non-imperialist peace-loving Jewish community.

• Over 500 years of genocide, enslavement, and abandonment of all people of color as well as poor whites including all the victims of the Jewish holocaust.

Quetzal is but a small part of a massive community of artists that is committed to using art as a tool to redefine and reconstruct our neighborhoods. We hope that elected officials (barrio pimps) such as Jose Huizar begin to see the light of accountability.

Read more…

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banner165newSeems like every org and their mother want to take the recent injustice in the Luis Ramirez murder case and use it for toned down cries for justice separated from the multiple places that breed the kind of hate and disrespect that led to the crossroads we as a community find ourselves at now. This is why The Sanctuary (of which I am a proud member) hoy draws a line in the sand.

The process of defining a subhuman class and institutionalizing discrimination and violence against that group is not new. How quickly and conveniently some of us allow our collective memory to cover its own tracks. Parasite, diseased, leeching, dangerous, over-breeding, vermin. These terms and this imagery have been deployed for ages, on various groups of people, on various pieces of land, in the service of various endeavors; and always to bring about the same ends. To demonize and dehumanize a group of people so that other people come to understand that the social compact with the demonized group is broken; that discrimination and violence against the dehumanized class now carries no moral consequence. That is the meaning of this latest ruling by an all-white jury in Shenandoah, Pennsylvania. Racial murder of a Mexican carries the same consequence as walking up to a white person and punching them in the belly: simple assault.

Are you down to make the commitment to radical cambio for our lives? Then read the entire post here.

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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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