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Archive for July 9th, 2009

Are we done with Michael Jackson yet? Not even close.

Like La Macha, I also teared up watching his memorial service. But our friend Bill O’Reilly says we’re blowing his legacy out of proportion and that America needs to stop idealizing the man. Check it out:

What else could he say? O’Reilly pooh poohs all gestures of admiration towards any person of color. While he does make a couple of good arguments, the overall rhetoric is meant to be hateful and that’s just what it is.

But I do agree with at least one Fox News commentator on this issue. Geraldo Rivera criticized celebrities who showed up to salute Jackson at his memorial service, but who were silent when Michael was being skewered with child molestation charges.

What do you think?
Is the glorification of MJ going too far? And what about those silent celebrities?

Via / Examiner

Democracy Now! has an interview up with Honduran president, Manual Zelaya. It’s definitely worth a listen.

An excerpt:

JUAN GONZALEZ: Mr. President, your opponents who engineered the coup claim that you were trying to subvert the constitution of 1982. What were you trying to do with the referendum that you were holding and is it true that as they say, your were trying to illegally extend your term?

MANUAL ZELAYA:[translated] That is completely false. In Honduras we do not have reelections and I never intended to be reelected. That will be a matter for another government, another constitution and another Constituent Assembly. The Popular Consultation is a survey, just like the Gallup one does or other polling groups. It does not create rights. It has no power to impose. It is not obligatory, its an opinion poll. How could this be a motive for a coup d’etat? No one has tried to me. I was expelled by force by the military. This is an argument made up by the coup plotters. Don’t believe them.

AMY GOODMAN: Mr. President, the United States has not cut off aid to Honduras. Do you think they should because of the coup?

MANUAL ZELAYA:[translated] We only have humanitarian aid coming from the United States the U.S. held up military aid, our officials in Washington have been replaced because they left with the coup. They were changed yesterday. And all of the U.S.’s messages have been consistent with the firm condemnation of the coup and supporting democracy in Latin America.

All of us here at VL are very aware of how especially Latin@ immigrants are targeted as the “reason” the economy is so horrible here in the U.S. (all the Mexican mamis are on welfare! And having babies! And not paying for them! *SCREAM!!!*)

Well, what happens when we start looking at “anti-fat” hysteria in combination with anti-immigrant hysteria? You get articles like this–all posted under the excellent headline– “Immigration and overpopulation: you can eat too much and grow too fat”:

That next 100 million will overwhelm our ability to maintain water, energy, food and a balanced environment. It will lift out of reach any chance for a stable and sustainable population within the USA. It will also create horrific water shortages and exacerbate the energy and climate destabilization crises.

Therefore, it boils down to choices. So what logical and rational action can we take? Can we keep adding 2.4 million legal and illegal immigrants annually, (what we’ve been doing for 20 years), from a line that grows by 77 million annually? Do we think we can add another 100 million, and another 100 million after that, without pause? Do we want to be like China or India or Mexico? Mexico City houses a horrid 22 million in an air polluted, water scarce and poverty ridden quagmire of so many problems—no one can solve them so everyone lives degraded lives. What happens when our civilization becomes overwhelmed by sheer hyper-population overshoot? What about quality of life?

Clearly, there is a very clear idea in this article of WHO is eating too much and growing too fat. Clue: it’s not white U.S. citizens. Immigrants are over indulgent, dirty, lazy, lecherous, and ultimately unwilling to do the hard work of “losing weight.”

U.S. citizens are the skinny people forced to sit next to Fatty Mc Fatster on the airplane.

These arguments exhaust me. Besides the fact that they are patently wrong (U.S. citizens use more resources than any other citizen in the world), they also ALWAYS, without FAIL, refuse to acknowledge the role the creation of “nation/states” have in creating overpopulation and immigration problems to begin with.

Borders are not natural. They are not something that have existed for eternity. They were, for the most part, fairly recent inventions with many countries in the Arab and Persian world only being officially created within the past 40-60 years.

If we are so fucking scared of turning into the fat Mexkins–can we at least *question* what role “borders” and “nation/state” has on enforcing a false and unrealistic sense of immobility? Or what role those same things had in creating a type of migration that is based on the movement of capital rather than historic tribal needs?

We don’t even have to think about the role that capitalism has had in furthering globalization (i.e.everybody move to where the companies need them to be!) for now. We can just start with the role of the nation/state.

Immigration is SO much more complicated than far too many people are willing to acknowledge. Fixing immigration is going to require a much more nuanced approach than “encourage countries to take responsibility for themselves.”

It may even require that U.S. citizens do a little internal critiquing on themselves.

Egad.

Caracas Mayor Ends his Hunger Strike

10:09 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Activism| Latin America| Politics| Venezuela · Comments Off

9 Jul 2009

Yesterday we told you about how Caracas’ mayor, Antonio Ledezma, was holding out on the 6th day of a hunger strike in protest of the government of Hugo Chávez. Later in the day, Ledezma — very frail after having not eaten or drank anything in nearly a week — agreed to end his protest after the Secretary General of the Organization of American States said he would be willing to hear the allegations being made against Chávez.

Video showed crowds of people surrounding the mayor, who had a Venezuelan flag draped on his chest, as he was moved on a stretcher to an ambulance.

The secretary general of the OAS, Jose Miguel Insulza, called the mayor on Wednesday urging him to end the hunger strike, the Globovision network reported.

In an earlier conversation, Insulza told Ledezma he was willing to meet with a delegation of Venezuelan mayors and governors to hear their allegations against Chavez

I hate to be skeptical, but I don’t really believe much is going to come out of the OAS Secretary listening to complaints. Like it or not, Chávez has set it up so where he will stay in power no matter what neighbors and allies might think. Habrá Chávez para rato.

Via / CNN

3702085977_ac9705d465_mJennifer already told us that Costa Rica was the happiest place on earth. The second happiest? The Dominican Republic and that is making many Dominicans crack the hell up.

Via Monaco:

Como bien dice El Nacional en su editorial de hoy, la noticia de que República Dominicana es el segundo país más feliz del mundo ha causado hilaridad y hasta escepticismo, pues nadie se explica cómo se puede estar feliz en medio de apagones, basura, y el caos que predomina a nivel general.

My translation: just like it’s written in today’s El Nacional, the news that the Dominican Republic is the second happiest country in the world has caused hilarity and even skepticism, because no one can explain how you can be happy in the middle of blackouts, garbage, and the chaos that dominates at a general level.

Read more…

Charges Against Twitter User in Guatemala Dropped

7:35 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Guatemala| Twitter · Comments Off

9 Jul 2009

jeanferNearly two months age we wrote about the “tweet heard ’round Guatemala” and how that tweet landed Jeanfer, also known as Jean Anleu, in jail facing charges of inciting financial panic. Well it looks like he’s a free man and that all charges have been dropped.

Via / Boing Boing


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VivirLatino is a daily publication published by 2 Mujeres Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse and influential Latino and Latina community in the U.S.

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