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Archive for October 16th, 2009

We all remember the horrific video of the school kids in Chicago literally beating a fellow student to death. It was played over and over for us on national television and talk shows cashed in the main question: How can this be happening in our schools?

Or, more specifically, how can this be happening in *those* schools. Because we all know that there are certain kids who have to put up with this violent shit every single day of their lives, and there are certain kids that simply don’t.

But my question was never brought up, much less answered. Why do we assume that the kids that are brutalizing other human beings in the most horrific ways haven’t learned that behaviors from others? I.e., adults?

From Truth Out comes a video that is almost as horrible as the beating video. A teen age boy with a learning disability was walking down a hall way when the school cop noticed that the boy’s shirt wasn’t tucked in.

Within seconds, the police officer pushed him into the lockers, repeatedly punched him and then slammed him to the ground and pushed his face to the floor. The officer then applied a face down, take-down hold to the child, a maneuver that has resulted in over 20 deaths nationwide and is banned in eight states.

Now, many activists and bloggers have rightfully noted that just because there’s been an overtly racist reaction to the beating death of the teenager, that doesn’t mean that there isn’t something going horribly wrong in youth culture today. I agree with those people. Kids don’t just beat others to death without having gotten the idea somewhere that reactions like that are ok.

I would argue that the police man’s reaction to a boy walking down the hallway with his shirt untucked is one of the reasons why so many youths today react the way that they do to perceived insults. How many children are treated in similar ways by adults–whether it be the police, teachers, fathers or store managers?

And why do we think that our kids aren’t noticing that “power” comes in the form of violence?

I know many people will try to say that kids have a choice to make the bad choices that they do, and it’s not society’s fault and when oh when are we ever going to stop turning our kids into pansy Sesame Street “love everybody” queers?

I have to wonder, however, how many of those people who would say something like that have spent time mentoring youth? Grown ups want youth to take responsibility for their choices–but how many times have grown ups taken responsibility for their choices? The choices we are making right now are causing children to beat other children to death, leaving the most vulnerable kids open to violent attack by adults, and taking away opportunities from youths before they even realize they had the opportunity to begin with.

And yet, even though it is OUR choices that are harming kids, we are blaming everything on others. Seems kids are learning more than what we give them credit for.

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America’s Voice successfully raised enough money to produce and purchase on-air time for their Drop Dobbs television ad.

The plan was to pay the $16,000 it cost to place the ad during CNN’s Latino in America Series next week. Claro the show will be surrounded by Spanglish ads urging you to buy from Walmart with it’s horrible treatment of workers and eat McDonald’s with it’s horrible treatment of animals and your body. But air an ad that has something to say and is trying to sell a message of truth? Not CNN. They rejected America’s Voice money and ad.

I don’t have cable so I don’t watch CNN and I had no intention of watching the series, Latino in America. Given the criticisms I heard and read about the CNN series Black in America, I already had made up my mind that the show likely wouldn’t represent with any accuracy what the Latino experience was for me, my familia, my friends, and vecinos. The hypocrisy of a network that poses itself as a fair and balanced news leader,airing a series on Latinidad while paying the salary of a the hateful Dobbs, whose rhetoric gives both the government and individuals justification for hate crimes against Latinos, especially Latino immigrants, grows. As Nezua wrote, CNN doesn’t really care about what it really means to be Latino in America. Maybe it’s time not just to drop Dobbs but to drop CNN.

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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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