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Archive for July 7th, 2009

Sweet Memories

4:33 pm By la Macha · Entertainment · Comments Off

7 Jul 2009

I’m sure I’m not the only mujer out there that spent the early 90′s with this duo cranked up on the boom box (and eyeballing Mariah’s marvelous tetas).

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Feeling melancholy right now.

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I’ve had a lot of conflicting emotions about the death of Michael Jackson. I think he totally acted improperly (at the very least) with young children. I think he was beaten (viciously) by his father. I think he had some really complicated problems with being black. I think he also identified strongly as black. He made music that brought communities together (we are the world, anybody?) and he made it ok for little kids of color to be proud of who they were (for real, the number of times I’ve seen little Latino kids dressed up as Michael Jackson impersonators??? Countless).

Here’s MSNBC’s entire coverage of the memorial:

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But even with all these complicated issues I have with the man–I found myself teary eyed watching the memorial. So many of my life memories are connected to his songs.

It’s good to see Michael’s family can have some peace and dignity and love at this time. No matter what their son/brother means to me or any of the rest of the public, to them–he is a son, a father, a brother. And for their sakes, I wouldn’t want him remembered in any other way.

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lamc2009lamc2009The Latin Alternative Music Conference kicks off with a series of events all over NYC featuring some of the best well known and not so well known acts in the crazy mixed up genre that is Latin alternative music.

Tonite, the LAMC and iTunes present Los Amigos Invisibles from 7:00pm – 9:00pm at the Apple Store in SoHo.

Hopefully I can make it out there. So far everytime los Amigos are in town something happens preventing me from going. A ver if tonite’s the nite.

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The Mennonites are a religious group akin to the Amish that was driven out of Europe by persecution over centuries, eventually landing in North and South America, mostly in the U.S., Canada and Latin America. There are thousands of Mennonites all over the Americas, with large communities in Mexico and Bolivia. And it is from Bolivia that comes a strange story that has shocked the country and rocked its Mennonite community to its core. A mass rape of the community’s women, with up to 100 victims. Spain’s El Periódico reports:

The first accounts, which are pending investigation, indicate that at nightfall some men sprinkled a sleep inducing [susbtance] around the homes of the residents and when they were sure that everyone was sleeping, they came in through the windows and raped women and girls. There are suspicions that this had been going on for 9 years, which would make the initial victim count fall short. But what is more terrifying and shameful for the Mennonites is that the rapists are people from their own community. Blood of their blood.

The Mennonites have kept the names and surnames of their ancestors. Their names are Ham Neostater and Cornelio Wal and Abraham Blats and Daniel Martens. Their native language is German and they speak Spanish with an accent. “Here people are afraid, because they say that it was our own friends who committed the sin,” Wal, a farm worker (like almost everyone in Manitoba) told a Bolivian newspaper. 8 community residents were arrested this week, which means that in a community of around 2000 people, most of them are related to the suspects: cousins, nephews, son-in-laws. Ultraconservative Christians, the Mennonites see the suspects as more sinners than criminals. Because to them, sin is much more serious.

The Mennonite community is calling the rapes “an act of the devil” and is ordering the medical examination of teenage girls to confirm which ones are victims. El Periódico reports that the results of these exams could have sinister implications, as the Mennonite community requires that its women remain virgins until marriage in order to retain the respect of their peers.

Via / El Periódico and VideoBolivia

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Contrary to what the writers of South Park would have you think, Costa Rica is a paradise on earth. At least that’s that’s what a new poll by a UK environmental institute has shown: Costa Rica ranks as not only one of the most environmentally friendly countries, but also as the world’s happiest:

The New Economics Foundation looked at 143 countries that are home to 99 percent of the world’s population and devised an equation that weighed life expectancy and people’s happiness against their environmental impact.

By that formula, Costa Rica is the happiest, greenest country in the world, just ahead of the Dominican Republic.

85% of Costa Ricans say they are happy with their lives.

In contrast, the United States came in at 114, and Britain at 74. Speaking of the UK, the BBC’s Mark Easton says he has an idea as to why the richest countries come out last. Quite interesting.

What is it about Latin America and happiness anyway?

Via / AFP

Image via mikebaird on Flickr

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In parts of Latin America, calling someone negrito(a) can be a term of endearment however, I doubt that was the intention of Chancellor of Honduras, Enrique Ortez, in this interview. Although, I don’t know if the subtitled translation is exactly accurate either. Given how Ortez is playing up President Obama’s ignorance on Latin America in general, and specifically his knowledge of Honduras, I would be more likely to translate the use of “negrito” as the N word.

Via / Inca Kola News

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With the digital age fostering short term memory and not connecting any dots, it’s easy to focus only on Honduras and forget the recent violence in other parts of Latin America.

Hardly a month since 30 plus Indigenous people from Peru were killed by police for protesting the exploitation and violation of their homes (we’re not talking about some mythical rainforest land, people live there), Peru has approved an oil drilling project in the Amazon for an Anglo-French company.

The project, located on land inhabited by two tribes of uncontacted Indians, is believed to be Peru’s biggest oil discovery in thirty years. The company, Perenco, a major gas supplier to the UK, has in the past denied any uncontacted Indians live there.

Until recently, Perenco had been blocked from entering the area by local indigenous protesters. With help from Peru’s armed forces, the company managed to break through the blockade on at least one occasion.

High-ranking figures in Peru’s government hope that Perenco’s project will transform the Peruvian economy. While protests against the company were taking place, Perenco’s chairman, Francois Perrodo, an Oxford University polo blue and scion of one of the wealthiest families in France, met Peru’s President Garcia in Lima and pledged to invest $2bn in the project.

Perenco intends to build new platforms and wells involving airlifting in, amongst other things, 42,000 sacks of cement. It admits that ‘contamination of soil’, ‘contamination of water’ and the flight of game and birds are possible consequences of its work

Via / Survival

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