9:42 pm By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Allied Media Conference|Detriot|Media|media justice|VivirLatino|Women · 1 Comment
22 Jul 2009Peeps may have noticed my absence over the last week. While I wasn’t blogging, I was hard at work meeting with other radical media makers, including our own la Macha in Detroit which housed the Allied Media Conference and the Women’s Equity Media Summit.
This was my second year attending the AMC and I consciously entered the experience with the intent of using it as an opportunity to examine my work here and in other spaces as a radical woman of color media maker. I was blessed with amazing experiences and sharing space with other radical women of color media makers who inspire me and teach me. I also left with a head full of ideas and projects that will be sustained with the help of some of the same women who busted ass making sure that I was housed, fed, and loved.
I will resume regular posting, some which will include deconstructing some of the experiences I have had over the last week so stay tuned and gracias for reading and supporting the important work we do here at VivirLatino.
6:17 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Controversia|GLBT|Latin America|mexico|Politics|society · 1 Comment
22 Jul 2009
Planning a vacation to the beautiful Yucatan Peninsula this summer? You might want to know a couple of things before you go: 1) it’s hotter than all hell in the summer and 2) Yucatan’s Congress just overwhelmingly approved a ban on gay marriage in the Mexican state. And while they were at it, they managed to ban gay adoption and ensure that abortion be illegal in almost all cases:
With the vote of 24 of the 25 local deputies, the Yucatan Congress raised heterosexual marriage and families to the constitutional level via the approval of amendments to the state’s Civil Code. With this, marriage between people of the is same sex will be penalized as will abortion “unless it is totally justified”.14 legislators from the PRI, 9 from the PAN and the representative for the Todos Somos Yucatán coalition (comprised of the Convergencia party and local political groups) voted in favor of the grassroots initiative promoted by the Pro Yucatán Network, made up of conservative groups, to reject all efforts by people of the same sex to form a family and adopt children.
In other words, if you aren’t looking a whole lot like the couple in the photo above and you want to get married or just adopt a kid, you’d better not “estar en Yucatán”.
And about that abortion issue: what exactly is a “totally justified” abortion? According to Mexico’s Anodis.com, the only circumstances under which abortion will be “justifiable” in Yucatán are “poverty, having more than 4 children, a terminal illness or risk of death for the mother”. If you have an abortion and don’t fall into any of these categories, you are facing a year in prison.
Meanwhile, PAN politicians attempted to disguise the ban as something other than hateful and discriminatory by alleging that “there still aren’t adequate conditions within Yucatán society to allow for unions between people of the same sex.”
4:11 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Controversia|Ohio|race|society|Violence · 1 Comment
22 Jul 2009An Ohio Latino teen, Robert Cantú (seen in the video above) was allegedly the victim of an unspeakable hate crime: last year, he was reportedly tied by his neck with a noose and dragged by a pickup truck in his hometown of Mount Vernon.
According to Cantu the incident occurred on or about May 30, 2008. Cantu said he was with a friend when Klein and three others jumped him, and tied a rope with a noose around his neck. The other end of the rope was tied to a truck and Cantu said he was dragged for several feet. After stopping the truck, the attackers, allegedly including Klein, exited the truck and began to attack Cantu. According to Cantu, a passer-by, Ezzy Thompson, who was known to Cantu, intervened, chasing off the attackers and removing the noose from Cantu’s neck.“[Thompson] was with his girlfriend,” said Cantu. “He saw me on the ground and ran over and pushed the guys off me. He got the noose off me. I’ve known Ezzy for about eight years. He was just in the area.”
Cantú’s mother said it took police 10 months to make an arrest, and that only happened after the Anti-Defamation League applied pressure to authorities.
But that’s not all. A second victimization of Robert has also just happened, as his harasser, also a teenager, has been sentenced to a mere 10 days in jail after a plea deal.
LULAC Ohio is hosting a “Vigil for Justice” this Friday in Mount Vernon. Details after the jump.
5:17 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Celebrities|Controversia|society|Violence|Women · 1 Comment
21 Jul 2009Embattled R&B star and woman beater Chris Brown has something to say: he’s sorry.
Damn right he’s sorry. One sorry excuse for a human being. But that’s just my opinion.
What do you think? Are you convinced by Brown’s apology? Should the world just let him get on with his life as Rihanna has? Let us know your thoughts in the comments.
Via / YouTube
2:38 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · children|Justice|Politics|society|youth · Comments Off
21 Jul 2009To all you worried guys in the video above, fear not. Gun control is, as of today, still dead in this country. Just look at this:
A five-year-old boy died from self-inflicted gunshot wounds in Hamilton, Ohio, the Journal News newspaper reported online.The death was from an “accidental, self-inflicted gunshot”, Debbie Lacey, the coroner’s investigator, was quoted as saying late Monday.
The boy, Zachariah Nesbitt, shot himself Saturday night at his home with a 9mm Glock handgun. The bullet went through his lung, Lacey said.
The boy died later Saturday night.
Police were investigating. In the call to emergency services, a man believed to be Zachariah’s father, David Nesbitt, was quoted as saying: “Oh, my God, no. He got my (expletive) gun out of the closet.”
Fear not, arms bearers! This “activist judge” has vowed to simply interpret the law as it is written (video after the jump). So relax, you still might have to put a padlock on your gun cabinet so Junior doesn’t get in there.
5:27 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Controversia|Immigration|Labor|society|Texas · Comments Off
20 Jul 2009
Language barriers, non-affiliation with unions and the exploitation of undocumented immigrants appear to be the contributing causes for the rising number of Latinos who die while performing their jobs every year. Even more disturbing is the fact that the number is rising as stats for workers in general is falling. People’s Weekly World reports
The number of Latino workers who die on the job has risen 76 percent since 1992, even as the total number of workplace deaths has declined, federal statistics show.In 1992 the number of reported Latino deaths on the job was 533. In a 2007 tally, the latest available from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, 937 Latino workers died while working.
Overall fatalities throughout the U.S. fell from 6,217 to 5,657 within the same period.
Dangerous jobs are spelling death for Latino immigrants in Texas. PWW reports that workers there are dying falling off roofs and being crushed by heavy machinery, among other heinous accidents…which reminds me of this unspeakable incident.
As ICE raids continue across the country and more workers are forced into hiding (if you don’t exist, you have no advocate), expect more of these deaths, not less, and this won’t change until President Obama does something about this terrible situation.
Via / People’s Weekly World
4:19 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Canada|GLBT|Immigration|mexico|World · 1 Comment
20 Jul 2009
When we look with nostalgia and cultural pride at Mexico and other Latin American countries, it’s often easy to forget that the Latino motherlands are also home to discrimination in various forms, with a particular emphasis on race and sexual orientation. It was because of such persecution that a lesbian couple from Mexico traveled to Canada and have decided to stay and seek sanctuary from abuse. The Toronto Sun reports:
Norma Angelica Gomez, 33, and Alina Gallegos Lee, 34, say their dream is to get married in Toronto and be happy. The couple fled to Canada a year ago but claimed asylum last March after going public with their love in Mexico. They claimed they were harassed, followed and beaten by Mexican police officers for expressing that love.“Canada is a good country and we feel free,” Lee said yesterday. “At home we were constantly persecuted for being lesbians.” The couple claim the attacks against them escalated after they were detained and beaten by police last year in Mexico.
According to Amnesty International, gays and lesbians in Mexico are routinely beaten, sexually assaulted, raped or tortured by police and soldiers.
Since the couple entered the country, Canada has since (as a matter of fact, just last week) imposed a visa requirement on Mexican and Czech nationals due to the number of refugee applicants coming from the two countries. The couple is represented by an attorney and is fighting for their right to marry and remain in Canada permanently.
Via / CNews
Maegan is not the only one at the AMC right now! I, la macha, am also here, and I’m sitting in an auditorium getting ready for the Zapatista press conference. I’ll be live blogging it once the conference gets started!
2:52: woman saying hello introduces the Zapatista campaign: commitment to all in their community including queers, children, etc.
Next speaker calls the Zapatistas a national mexican movement to fight against neo-liberalism. Says that it is a movement with no centralized leaders, one that encourages new members: explains what you should “believe in” to be a Zapatista, including anti-neo liberalist, pro-indigenous, etc.
Speaker talks about using different types of media to transmit their message.
New Speaker: talking about Atenco now, explaining how commercial media has been hiding the truth of Atenco–which is why the documentary we’re now going to watch was made.
Video we are seeing is highlighting the fight between flower vendors in Atenco and the local/national government.
Now showing a scene of Indigenous peoples attacking the police, with the media encouraging government intervention–i.e. the indigenous peoples attack one police officer, so mass violent government crackdown on entire community is now justified.
Next scene: independent reporters that tried to cover the violence police were committing against protestors were attacked, arrested, beaten, had their equipment stolen.
Next scene: shows women getting harassed while a woman testifies about violence committed against her, including: fingers stuck in her mouth and vagina, breasts grabbed, arrest just for being on the street (for “being an idiot”).
Next scene: on May 4th 2006 after the media had relentlessly aired images of one group of men beating a police officer, the government stepped up the violence against Atenco.
Close up scene of police beating person (one of SEVERAL scenes) and you can hear clunking sounds–sound of batons hitting human body…
Police forced a corridor of local/indi media, so that media couldn’t get into the city where the raids were happening.
Police made indiscriminate raids on homes of citizens, arresting and throwing tear gas into homes of people without any disregard to if the citizen had participated in protests or not.
Citizens were trying to get in contact w/red cross and police weren’t letting them….
Movie ends
Next Speaker: Introduces next movie: was created as a way to begin dialogue with people in mexico and outside of mexico about Zapatistas and Chiapas.
Speaker in movie explains why Mexican immigrants in the U.S. are Zapatistas–why so many indigenous peoples are moving to U.s. because of neo-liberal u.s. practices.
From across the border: movement for justice
members of this movement call themselves “displaced”–implying that there was not a *choice* move–that capitalism has displaced them forcibly from their home lands/communities.
((side note: this is a REALLY interesting intervention this org is making into the traditional immigrant narrative))
Multiple immigrants are describing problems with housing…high rents with “inhumane and illegal living conditions”
“we can’t pay high rents because our pay is so low”
“We are displaced from our own countries–and now it’s happening here too”
“we are living through double displacement”
gentrification is a part of immigrant/migration displacement
“we are fighting for dignified housing”
“community has last word about what the fight will be about–a single person will never decide for the entire community”
“we don’t work with politicians because they don’t work with us–we declare ourselves autonomous”
El Barrio is not for sale!
Fight was against Steve kassner–the landlord that was named one of 10 worst landlords in the NY area–his central offices were in London.
campaign decided to evict landlord rather than be evicted.
***
campaign decided to expand their campaign from centralizing on gentrification alone to other forms of struggles as well–reached out to the Zapatistas.
Held a gathering where tenants of the building introduced themselves o the Zapatistas and vise versa.
flashes to Zapatistas fighting military off their land: connecting displacement in two different regions of the world together.
***
now we are watching a video from Atenco made in response to the message created by the camapign in N.Y.C
Marcos: speaking to crowd in Mexico ( i think Atenco) telling crowd that “we will support world wide action against injustice”
People of Atenco are now speaking–holding their machetes with “atenco vive” on them–they say “we will go on in our struggle against injustice because of strength given to them from brothers and sisters across the world”
Now a voice is explaining what happened in atenco in 2006 again. 30 women were raped–or at least as being on record as being raped. Still 13 people in prison right now, all with 112 year sentences.
WHole fight began as a fight keep control of land that govt/corporations were attempting to steal for an airport project. Indigenous peoples are still living off of that land–off of corn, beans, etc created and supported by that land.
Several actions involved blocking the highways, blocking access to land
Current situation of political prisoners: launching a campaign to help them and bring attention to plight: (information from philly IMC website)
“Their crime was to defend their land”
7:35 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Celebrities|Media|society · Comments Off
17 Jul 2009It’s the end of an era, folks. I’m not old enough to have experienced Walter Cronkite as a young journalist, but in his last years in the profession he was a staple in the early lives of our generation, who grew up with Cronkite as a pre-cable news icon of TV journalism trustworthiness. Before CNN, there was network news, and at CBS, Cronkite was king.
Walter Cronkite, an iconic CBS News journalist who defined the role of anchorman for a generation of television viewers, died Friday at the age of 92, his family said.Mr. Cronkite anchored the “CBS Evening News” from 1962 to 1981, at a time when television became the dominant medium of the United States. He figuratively held the hand of the American public during the civil rights movement, the space race, the Vietnam war, and the impeachment of Richard Nixon. During his tenure, network newscasts were expanded to 30 minutes from 15.
“It is impossible to imagine CBS News, journalism or indeed America without Walter Cronkite,” Sean McManus, the president of CBS News, said in a statement. “More than just the best and most trusted anchor in history, he guided America through our crises, tragedies and also our victories and greatest moments.”
Mr. McManus added: “No matter what the news event was, Walter was always the consummate professional with an un-paralleled sense of compassion, integrity, humanity, warmth, and occasionally even humor. There will never be another figure in American history who will hold the position Walter held in our minds, our hearts and on the television. We were blessed to have this man in our lives and words cannot describe how much he will be missed by those of us at CBS News and by all of America.”
R.I.P. Walter. A real reporter.
Via / NYT
As relieved as we are that the weekend is near, sometimes it’s hard to shift into chill mode after a hard work week. I give you this classic (shoutout to all the VL readers who tell me they love 90s R&B and New Jack Swing) to help ease into the weekend. It always works for me.
(“Real” video here.)
Disfruta el weekend!
Via / YouTube
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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