6:42 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Allied Media Conference|Events|media justice|New York City · Comments Off
13 May 2009
Yesterday, I told you that all I wanted for my birthday was support for the SPEAK! cd, helping to get single mami media makers and others of limited means to the Allied Media Conference, which is such a unique space for independent, justice centered media.
Well for peeps in Brooklyn, I have another request: that you represent at the SPEAK! Listening Party this Saturday, May 16th at 7 pm.
I will read, as well as Black Amazon.
Space is limited for the fiesta so please see the link to get the super secret location info or email katie@alliedmediaconference.org.
Hope to see some Brooklyn VL’ers represent.
12:59 pm By la Macha · crime|race · 5 Comments
12 May 2009I’m coming to this post a little late (it was posted April 23rd) but I think it’s important to recognize and talk about. Entitled “Why the Jury Had No Trouble Convicting Angie Zapata’s Murderer,” the post asserts that many are worried that Allen Andrade, the man convicted of murderering trans Latina, Angie Zapata, might have his conviction over turned on appeal. The author then goes through a step-by-step legal analysis of why that won’t happen :
The Weld County District Attorney’s Office charged Andrade with first degree murder and a bias-motivated (i.e., “hate”) crime for bludgeoning Angie to death with a fire extinguisher that he found in her apartment. Before the trial began, however, his attorneys asked the judge to tell the jurors that they had the option of convicting Andrade of second degree murder, manslaughter or criminally negligent homicide, instead of first degree murder. Much to my surprise, the judge agreed and instructed the jury on all four types of homicide as “lesser included offenses.” (A “lesser included offense” is a crime that contains some, but not all, of the elements of the greater charge, such that it’s impossible to commit the greater offense without also committing the lesser. As long as the evidence supports a conviction on the lesser offense, the Constitution requires that the jury be given the option to consider both the greater and the lesser offenses.)
It’s a good read, one that I recommend. I do have one problem with the essay however. The essay could’ve been much shorter–it could’ve boiled down to one word, actually.
Race.
Allen Andrade was Latino.
Now, before I go on, I have two things to say:
1. Andrade has no sympathy from me.
2. Two white men who kicked and beat a Latino man to death recently were cleared of all charges, even though they too, admitted to the crime.
And as Mamita shows us, killers of Latinos have a *history* of being let go, set free, not charged, openly congratulated.
At the same time however–Latinos also have a history of being targeted, often violently, by the police and court system.
So what do you get when there is no value of Latino life AND there is an active systematic structure of inequality and racism controlling the lives of Latinos?
You get a justice system that congratulates itself for imprisoning a Latino for a hate crime for killing a Latino while letting white men off for killing Latinos.
Nothing complicated about it, no need to go into detailed explanations about the legal system. Every day experiences leave us all knowing that there could be no other result. Not now, at least.
Which leaves those of us looking for meaningful change, radical change, asking what on earth can we do with this Catch 22 of irony we live in? And how on earth do we rejoice in “justice” when we know the racism that went into creating that “justice?”
Like I said, Andrade gets no sympathy from me. I hope he rots in hell. But I can not rest on the naive belief that the reason Andrade is going to rot in hell is because the case against him was so iron clad. There is a reason he is spending the rest of his life in prison and the men who killed Luis Ramierez aren’t.
And we can’t rest until that reason is resolved.
9:17 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Activism|Allied Media Conference|Detriot|Events|media justice · Comments Off
12 May 2009Come see the art and learn more about the AMC. All are invited!
Host: Allied Media Conference
Date: Tuesday, May 12, 2009
Time: 8:00pm – 11:00pm
Location: Motor City Brewing Works
Street: 470 W. Canfield
City: Detroit, MI
Email: info@alliedmediaconference.org
Auction bidding: 8PM – 1030PM. Winners announced at 11PM. Come see the art and learn more about the AMC. All are invited!
The show will be held May 12 at Motor City Brewing Works.
The 11th annual AMC will be held July 16-19, 2009 in Detroit. More info at www.alliedmediaconference.org
Via / Nadia Abou-Karr
8:07 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Allied Media Conference|Detriot|media justice|Women · 1 Comment
12 May 2009
Today is my cumpleaños. Sunday was Dia de las Madres. Two days where mujeres like me are supposed to be a little selfish and focused on the self and I have to admit, there hasn’t been much of that around here lately.
So what does a Mamita Mala want?
You could always either donate or purchase a Speak! Cd, zine & curriculum (zine and curriculum are in the final stages). Yours truly and other mamis and mujeres are on this cd speaking on our experiences through musica, poetry and prose. And you just don’t get a cd pero you will be helping single mami media makers (like me!) and their hijos get to the Allied Media Conference.
You can help other mamis, like the ever amazing Noemi. Buy some buttons or zines. If you’re part of a university, library or other organization, please purchase the Speak! cd at the institution price.
The Speak media collective can be found here.
Via / Hermana Resist
1:06 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · business|California|Controversia|crime|Money|race · Comments Off
11 May 2009
With all of the corruption and dirtiness and in finance-related industries of late, it should perhaps come as no surprise that beyond just “legally” taking advantage of unsavvy consumers by lending them money they could never pay back, at least one of these institutions made it a policy to charge Latinos more for borrowed money. A federal investigation has been opened on California lender Golden Empire Mortgage, Inc., of Bakersfield, which allegedly cannot explain the drastic differences in prices between white customers and Latinos. ConsumerAffairs.com reports:
According to the FTC’s complaint, Golden Empire violated the Equal Credit Opportunity Act (ECOA) in pricing mortgage loans. They allegedly gave loan officers and branch managers wide discretion to charge, in addition to the risk-based price, “overages” through higher interest rates and higher up-front charges. The defendants allegedly paid loan officers a percentage of the overages as a commission and failed to monitor whether Hispanic consumers were paying higher overages than non-Hispanic white borrowers.
The complaint alleged that the company’s policy and practice of allowing loan officers to charge discretionary overages resulted in Hispanics being charged higher prices because of their national origin – price disparities that are “substantial, statistically significant, and cannot be explained by factors related to underwriting risk or credit characteristics of the applicants.”
I don’t know why I am surprised by this. It seems that when it comes to the finance sector, the news just gets more and appalling as the days go by. Is it any wonder why we are in the situation we are in now, with so many dirty banks in control of our money and our homes?
Via / ConsumerAffairs
From Democracy Now! comes this amazing story about the Pullman’s Porters.
Saturday was National Train Day. This year, Philadelphia’s 30th Street Station hosted an event honoring the Pullman porters, the African-American men who worked long hours as attendants on the luxurious sleeper trains operated by the Pullman company from 1868 to 1969.
The first porters George Pullman hired after the Civil War were former slaves. In the 1920s, over 20,000 African-Americans worked for the Pullman company, making it one of the largest employers of African-American men.
Today, there are only about 40 surviving Pullman porters, four of whom were at the event in Philadelphia this Saturday.
The Pullman porters played an important but unsung role in the history of this country. In 1925 they formed the first Black labor union under the stewardship of A. Philip Randolph called the “brotherhood of sleeping car porters.” They helped pave the way for the Civil Rights movement and are also credited with building the Black middle class in this country.
Of course, things are not perfect for black workers–black lesbian women and black trans people in particular are chronically and systematically underpaid/underemployed/unemployed. But it’s always amazing to me to see how unions could actually improve things–actually made a difference.
I think it’s wonderful that the current white house supports and protects labor–but now labor needs to work on unionizing the people who need it most: women, youths, non-U.S. citizens.
10:16 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Activism|Puerto Rico · Comments Off
11 May 2009From my amigos at Pro-Libertad:
Puerto Rican political prisoner Carlos Alberto Torres is scheduled for a parole hearing in May.
He was initially scheduled for a January hearing, which he postponed after being falsely charged with a disciplinary violation the week before that hearing. The prison disciplinary committee proceeded to find him guilty of possession of knives hidden in a light fixture in the cell he shared with nine other prisoners, in spite of a sworn confession by the person responsible. Carlos’ administrative appeal is still pending.
The Parole Commission has not yet set a specific date, but it will likely be the week of May 25. There is still time to collect letters supporting his parole, and get them to the address below… deadline for receipt: May 15.
Jan Susler
People’s Law Office
1180 N. Milwaukee
Chicago, IL 60622

7:14 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Blogs|children|Colombia|holidays|mexico|Women · 3 Comments
11 May 2009A belated Happy Mother’s Day to all who observed yesterday. The VL team has lots of mami power and yesterday as I spent the day cleaning, working, and yes visiting my own Mami and Titi, I was thinking about Latina mami’hood, the trabajo of raising our children and the lessons in love, struggle, and justice that we learn and impart on our young ones.
In Chile, for example, three Mexican mothers recently testified about the deaths of their daughters. These deaths represent just a tiny fraction of the hundreds of deaths and disappearances of mujeres in Ciudad Juarez.
Between 1993 and 2008 there were 447 registered cases of femicides in and around Juárez that are marked by signs of rape and extreme torture. Apart from the 447 registered cases, there are an estimated 70 young women still missing.
The State of México is accused for failing to confront the femicide phenomenon and in so doing, violating the right to life of its victims. Although only three mothers of the victims came to testify in Santiago, the court signaled that the three cases represent all of the femicides that have taken place in México to date.
The three mothers of the murdered women who testified were Irma Monreal, mother of Esmeralda Herrera, 14, Josefina González, mother of Claudia Ivette Conzález Banda, 20, and Benita Monárrez, mother of Laura Berenice Remos Monárrez, 17. On Tuesday, April 28, the mother’s gave their stories.
Their daughters were found dead in October 2001 along with the bodies of five other women and girls in a zone known as “Campo Algondonero” in Juarez.
The women had been tortured, raped and mutilated.
“I have faith and trust in the judges of this court,” said Monárrez. “I have faith that we will find justice.”
Instead of receiving flowers on Mother’s Day, these mothers are putting flowers on their daughter’s graves.
Speaking of flowers…….
Read more…
9:32 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Florida|Media|media justice|radio · Comments Off
9 May 2009Will I ever shut the hell up? Not likely gente. Today, the day before mother’s day, I will be on Yo Soy Latino on 810AM WEUS (Orlando, Florida area). You can listen live at the Yo Soy Latino site and even call in with questions!
I hope some will listen in.
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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