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Archive for August 26th, 2009

Remember how I said that I didn’t think that Edward Kennedy has as deep of a connection to migrant workers as his brother? Turns out I was wrong. Via the UFW blog:

Since Sen. Edward M. Kennedy championed the cause of Cesar Chavez and the Farm Worker Movement after picking up the mantle from Sen. Robert F. Kennedy following his assassination in 1968, no national political leader has more effectively and selflessly embraced the farm workers’ cause.

Year after year, Sen. Kennedy stood shoulder to shoulder with the farm workers in good times and bad during marches and rallies, political campaigns and legislative battles from the halls of the United States Senate to the dusty farm fields of California.

As United Farm Workers co-founder Dolores Huerta once said, Robert and Ted Kennedy “didn’t come to us and tell us what was good for us. All they said was, ‘What do you want? And how can I help?’ That’s why we love them.”

And from Huffington Post comes this somewhat sappy by ultimately informative essay about Kennedy’s history with immigration:

With his impressive record on healthcare reform, it’s easy to forget that Kennedy cut his teeth first on immigration. He began his first race for the Senate with a call for immigration reform in 1962 and has been fighting for a more inclusive America ever since. Senator Kennedy fashioned our modern-day legal system of immigration. He created humane refugee and asylum policies. And he set the stage for a 21st century solution to the problem of illegal immigration. These are no small feats.

With his 1965 immigration legislation, Senator Kennedy made sure families were reunited without regard to race, religion, or national origin. With his 1980 Refugee Act, he made sure refugees were protected– whether stranded in overseas camps, or seeking asylum on our shores. In recent years, Sen. Kennedy has fought tirelessly for the kind of comprehensive immigration reform that would extend rights and responsibilities to the 12 million immigrant workers and family members living in our nation without legal protection.

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Immigration Act of 1965

12:46 pm By la Macha · Immigration · Comments Off

26 Aug 2009

As I’ve been doing research on Edward Kennedy, I’ve discovered that he was one of the driving forces around the Immigration Act of 1965. What this act did was remove the racial quotas that privileged immigration from European countries over other (i.e. brown) countries.

It abolished the national origins system set up in the Immigration Act of 1924 and modified by the Immigration Act of 1952. While seeming to maintain the principle of numerical restriction, it so increased the categories of persons who could enter “without numerical limitation” as to make its putative numerical caps—170,000 annually for the Eastern Hemisphere with a maximum of 20,000 per nation plus 120,000 annually for the Western Hemisphere with no national limitations—virtually meaningless within a few years.

It was pretty difficult to find even this fairly simple explanation of the act on the internet–for some reason, there is website after website of nativist rhetoric explaining exactly how this legislation was one of the worst pieces of legislation ever created in all of history.

Whatever could the reason for these websites be? Read more…

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Joe Biden has a reputation of being a bit of bumbling jackass when it comes to talking (remember the panic button he hit with his commentary on airplanes and swine flu?), but with his remarks on Edward Kennedy passing away, he even had me teary eyed.

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puerto_ricoFor as long as I have believed in self-determination for Puerto Rico, I have thought that talk about the island becoming the 51st state was just that, talk. This is partially because of issues of race and identity. Despite the post-racial times the U.S. finds itself in (allegedly), the U.S. will not accept a brown, Spanish speaking nation as a state. I also think though, that annexation isn’t attractive because economically, Puerto Rico isn’t attractive. Claro, the island has been exploited economically, pero statehood would require the U.S. to invest more than it would get back from the island. Just take a look at the unemployment numbers coming out of la isla del encanto:

The unemployment rate in Puerto Rico stands at 16.5 percent, the highest of all U.S. jurisdictions, and the government is announcing even more layoffs of public employees.

Via / Latin American Herald Tribune

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Edward Kennedy: A life in photos

10:05 am By la Macha · Massachusetts · Comments Off

26 Aug 2009

The AP put out this really nice montage of photos of Edward Kennedy. Very touching in that it shows both the tragedy and triumphs of his life.

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Edward Kennedy RIP

9:57 am By la Macha · Careers|DNC|Massachusetts · Comments Off

26 Aug 2009

(note from la Macha–oops, looks like Mamita and I both posted about Kennedy passing away at about the same time! We’ll keep both posts up, as each post carries different links and represents a different understanding of Kennedy!)

health_care_0226Although I don’t think Edward has the same reputation in the Latino community that his brother, Robert, has, Edward Kennedy was still a tireless advocate for the issues that concerned so many of us, including immigration. And yes, I know at least two Mexican American men who are proud bearers of the name Edward.

He had a long troubled and triumphant life–he was always the one who pointed to the cracks in Camelot. Not quite as good looking, not quiet as athletic, not quite as eloquent, but definitely always there, solid and dependable, the shoulder his family and fellow citizens needed.

He died after a long bought with brain cancer and just a few weeks after his sister Eunice also passed away.

May he rest in peace.

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Rest in Paz Senador Kennedy

9:28 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Politics · 2 Comments

26 Aug 2009

story
Last night Senator Edward Kennedy passed away after a battle with brain cancer. He was 77 years old.

He was known as the “liberal lion of the Senate”

From the Kennedy Family:

“We’ve lost the irreplaceable center of our family and joyous light in our lives, but the inspiration of his faith, optimism, and perseverance will live on in our hearts forever,” it said. “We thank everyone who gave him care and support over this last year, and everyone who stood with him for so many years in his tireless march for progress toward justice, fairness and opportunity for all.”

I am not a fan of the electoral political game in general or of most of the players in that game, however, Kennedy is being remembered as a progressive who pushed policy in the areas of health care and social justice (including immigration).

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victor_toroVictor Toro is like familia to me. Whenever I am at a rally/event, I see him and he kisses me and my children warmly. His life exemplifies the ways in which U.S. foreign policy in Latin America is connected with current immigration policy, and how the two work together at attempting to destroy community.

Victor Toro is a citizen and national of Chile who was jailed and tortured there because of his opposition to the illegitimate Pinochet government (1973-1990). For more than 23 years, Victor and his wife Nieves Ayress (also a survivor of torture by the Pinochet regime) have been living in New York City and engaging in activism in the South Bronx, where they founded Vamos a La Peña, a nonprofit community organization that has served as a space for free expression and people’s power for undocumented workers and other disenfranchised community members. On July 6, 2007,Victor Toro was arrested by US Border Patrol, an agency of the US Department of Homeland Security, while on board an Amtrak train in Rochester, New York. He was released on bond on July 9 and is now seeking political asylum with the help of his legal team. His wife Nieves is a US citizen; their daughter, Rosita Toro, is a legal permanent resident.

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 26, 2009

12PM-3PM

26 Federal Plaza

Corner of Worth & Lafayette

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When an immigrant, or two in this case, don’t fit into the the “good” immigrant narrative because of a criminal (in)justice system based, since its inception, on oppression, does the community turn it’s back? That is the question that the pro-migrant movement needs to ask itself in the face of the case of cousins Denis Calderon & Julio Maldonado who were victims of a hate crime yet find themselves behind bars, awaiting deportation.
Read more…

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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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