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Archive for August, 2009

Unless you’ve had your head in the sand for the past couple of days, you’ve heard about the controversy that’s been swirling around our good friend Hispanic journalist Lou Dobbs. It seems after all these years of hate and bigotry, and after years of activist groups like Media Matters going after Dobbs for racist rhetoric, it’s only caught on now that Lou appears to be bought into the whole “birther” movement. Media Matters made the following PSA to warn weaker minds of Dobbs’ agenda:

Tons of mail to CNN demanding Dobbs get pulled from the lineup and suddenly they are nervous…amazing! Hadn’t CNN president John Klein said Dobb’s claims were “legitimate”? It appears he’s since taken that back; in fact, he never believed it, as in a private memo, Klein urged Dobbs to drop the whole thing two weeks ago.
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Prince William County, Virginia has never been in danger of becoming a pro-immigrant sanctuary city. But it never really hits home exactly how violently anti-immigrant a city truly is until you understand that people who “fit” what an “immigrant” should look like (think: latino, speaks with an accent, etc), are often brutally violated in their own fucking homes simply for fitting that profile.

I know a lot of our libertarian friends will scream right now about how this family shouldn’t have been playing their music so loudly and if the woman didn’t want to be deported she shouldn’t have come here illegally and the cops were just doing their jobs and a whole bunch of other justifications.

But I have to ask those libertarians. Does it not terrify them that you can be sitting at a party with your family and have the police show up and tase you? That your pregnant wife could lean over to help you, and she could be tased too? Sure, yeah, it’s great, yay, we caught us a few more illegals, hooray for us. Now, what rights, what protections, did U.S. citizens just give up so that it could be totally legal and justified to tase a grandfather and a pregnant “illegal” in their own home because they played their music too loudly?

I am not thanking my fellow citizens for allowing their hatred to trample on my rights. Just as I am sure people like Henry Louis Gates is also not doing any thanking.

via bfp on twitter and womanist musings

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Legislators for sale

9:53 am By la Macha · Celebrities|Controversia · Comments Off

4 Aug 2009

Keith Olberman can often be over the top to me, although he is regularly amusing. For example, his constant airing of the Palin turkey video was really amusing even as I had a hard time considering it news and was, frankly, rather grossed out and horrified by the whole thing.

But having said that, I think he hit one out of the ballpark with last night’s special comment.

Visit msnbc.com for Breaking News, World News, and News about the Economy

To see a partial transcript, click here.

Of course, with Olberman comes problems. His use of the innocent white woman to tug at our heart strings and his casual references to the evils of prostitution are par for the course with Olberman. But…his overall point? That corporations run this country? Right on.

Maybe he’ll become a good old flaming red socialist soon, and join la Macha out on the protest line soon.

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jail-thumb-250x166When your cuerpo is used as fodder to feed the prison industrial complex, how do you transform that body into a weapon of protest? For immigrants caught up in detention, using their bodies to protest the horrible and inhumane conditions inside is nothing new. What is new is the context that the current administration has made it clear that prison “reform” is not a priority, much less if the prisons we are talking about “reforming” are for those labeled alien/foreign/unwanted/brown.

Now, another group of immigrants inside a detention center are on hunger strike, their fifth one, in protest of the deplorable conditions at the South Louisiana Correctional Facility in Basile. This detention center is run by the private contractor LCS Corrections Services Inc. and the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

According to the New Orleans Workers’ Center for Racial Justice, more than 100 detainees acted as human rights monitors inside the jail throughout July. “Over the course of a month, detainee human rights monitors recorded complaints, attempted to lodge hundreds of grievances, and communicated with advocates about jail conditions,” said NOWCRJ, which released a report of their findings and the accounts of the several detainees.

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I was so happy to hear the news that Michael Jackson’s children will not become fodder for the celebrity mags–at least not yet. Jackson’s mother (Kathryn Jackson) and his ex-wife (Debbie Rowe) have settled (largely out of court) visitation and custody issues with the kids.

The battle for his estate will not be going so smoothly. And it makes me wonder, if Jackson had left all his money to his kids, would the custody battle have gone so smoothly?

Maybe Michael was a lot smarter than any of us ever figured.

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Regular followers of VL know that the drug wars in Mexico have been a problem for a while. Violence has increased tremendously in the past few years–according the to the following article, over 10,000 people have lost their lives in Mexico due to drug related violence since December of 2006.

A new crop of arrests just happened in Mexico–34 men were apprehended while at a family gathering in a church.

Mexican federal police say they arrested 34 men suspected of belonging to a ruthless drug cartel blamed for a rash of violence that left at least 18 federal agents and two soldiers dead since July 11.

Officials said the suspects belong to La Familia Michoacana drug gang, which drew national attention when it was accused of torturing and killing 12 off-duty federal agents three weeks ago. The bodies of the 11 men and one woman were found dumped on a road.

Some of the 34 suspects were arrested at a family celebration Sunday at a church in the city of Apatzingan in Michoacan state, said the federal secretariat for public safety. Another was arrested in the city of Lazaro Cardenas, also in Michoacan.

Two of the men were put on display for the media Monday in Mexico City.

Call me silly, but I don’t think that capturing 34 drug lords will end the drug trade in Mexico. I come from a city with a HUGE drug problem, and if the police captured 34 people–or 340 people–the problems wouldn’t end. Which brings me to the observation that many of the tools used by the Mexican police to capture these drugs lords were supplied by the U.S. government (i.e. Black Hawk helicopters, etc).

And this just makes me think: it is the U.S. that is creating the *demand* for these drugs that drug lords are selling. And at the *same* time, it is the U.S. that is supplying weapons and money to capture, kill, and imprison the same drug lords.

Something doesn’t add up here. If it were the U.S. that was selling drugs to Mexico–would drugs still be illegal? That is, if it were the U.S. that was making huge amounts of money off of the drug addiction of Mexicans, would the U.S. still be supplying weapons and money to Mexico?

In other words, how much of U.S. dominance over Mexico specifically and Latin America in general, is dependent upon the drug trade never becoming legalized specifically so that Mexico/Latin America never becomes an economic force to be reckoned with?

How much money would Mexico and Latin America stand to gain if the trade of “illegal” drugs became legal?

And how much of the subsequent violence in Mexico (and U.S. cities I might add), would be eliminated because underground trafficking was brought into the light?

Something to think about, no?

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“Freedom of expression must be limited.”

That’s what Venezuela’s Attorney General Luisa Ortega said late last week when defending tough new legislation which would restrict what can be said on radio and television in Hugo Chavez’s Venezuela. No sooner had this statement been made did Venezuela announce the closing of some 34 radio stations:

More than a dozen of 34 radio stations ordered shut by the Venezuelan government went off the air on Saturday, part of President Hugo Chavez’s drive to extend his socialist revolution to the media.

The association of radio broadcasters said 13 stations had stopped transmitting, following an announcement Friday night by government broadcasting watchdog Conatel that 34 radio outlets would be closed because they failed to comply with regulations.

While I was shocked at the Chavez-ordered takeover of RCTV in 2007, I am not shocked by this massive squashing of freedom of speech and freedom of the press in these radio station closings. I’m just disgusted.

And so are lots of others. Protests have spontaneously broken out around Venezuela but I fear there is nothing to do now. How do you fight against this ideology?

We haven’t closed any radio stations, we’ve applied the law,” Chavez said on state television. “We’ve recovered a bunch of stations that were outside the law, that now belong to the people and not the bourgeoisie.”

Translation: “We’re closing down a bunch of stations that have criticized me because we can.”

A sad, sad time for Venezuela and I think it’s only going to get worse. One ray of light: activists are using Twitter to get the word out to the rest of the world on what’s going on in Venezuela. For updates, check out hashtag #FreeMediaVe on Twitter.com.

Via / Reuters

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Where’s Aniysah?

5:56 pm By Maegan la Mamita Mala · children|Family|Women · 11 Comments

2 Aug 2009

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Women of color are not paranoid when we say that we fear our children being taken away. It happens all too often.

It happens again and again:

On March 3rd, 2009 six year old Aniysah was taken from her mother’s arms and thrown into a legal shuffle of unaccountability, instability and discrimination. There were no records verifying that she would be taken to a safe living environment or that she was enrolled in school. Questions about her health and well-being went unanswered. That was 150 days ago. To date, Aniysah remains lost in the legal system. A system where black and brown children go missing everyday. A system where black mothers like Aniysah’s are often left to fend for themselves in a brutal, dogged battle just to make sure their children are safe.

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Rainy Summer Day Musica : Dead Prez Summertime

12:01 pm By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Music · 4 Comments

2 Aug 2009

Mala was supposed to be at the playa today, pero the weather had other plans. Quizas if I listen to this joint/watch this video enough the bright sunshine colores and vibes the rain will stop.

Via / UltravioletUnderground

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I got this from Blabbeando and thought it too funny not to share. This video is an actual Chicago police department’s “sensitivity” training video.

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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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