Advertisement

Archive for November 24th, 2009

I have been trying to write this post for days and every time I get to it there has been some additional speech or statement made on comprehensive immigration reform, but statements, speeches and sound bites don’t policy or practice changes make. Where do the recent statements come from different parts of the U.S. Government intersect and where do they differ and most importantly where do they accurately deal with the reality of the millions of undocumented?

Last week, More than 60,000 people joined a call & held more than 1,000 house parties across 45 states, to listen to 3 members of Congress including the headliner, Congressman Luis Gutierrez. Under the Reform Immigration For America campaign umbrella, tens of thousands people mobilized directly via a new cell phone action network.

Read more…

Post to Twitter

And speaking of the upheaval in the University of California system, Democracy Now! has some really important updates about the protests that happened after the UC board voted to increase tuition rates by over 30%.

Forty students were arrested Friday night after campus police entered Wheeler Hall, which the students had taken over earlier in the day. The students were part of a statewide movement protesting the UC Board of Regents decision to raise tuition by 32 percent. Students at UCLA, UC-Davis, UC Santa Cruz and San Francisco State also took over campus buildings last week.

On Monday, more than 200 students rallied at Wheeler Hall in Berkeley to protest against what they called overtly aggressive tactics by the police. Organizers say officers hit demonstrators with batons and fired rubber bullets.

Post to Twitter

What Happened to Our Movement?

1:36 pm By la Macha · California|Careers|economy|race|Violence|Women · Comments Off

24 Nov 2009

In light of the recent protests in the University of California system, Xicana scholar and activist, Cherrie Moraga, gave a pointed and stirring critique/speech to a graduation class at UC Berkeley. In it, she asks, “What happened to our movement?” in reference to the work done by activists of color in the 60s. What happened to that movement? And how can we start it up again?

What happened to our movement?

The current economic crisis makes its patently evident. It was literally bought off. As graduates, you came of age in a time where for at least a quarter century consumerism had been unequivocally conflated with citizenship. You have gleaned no other message from the mass media, except to maintain your individual freedom by maintaining the ‘free enterprise’ of those who have enslaved you to this new American ethic. What the Declaration of Independence described as an unalienable right – “the pursuit of Happiness” — has been reconfigured within the popular imagination as the ‘pursuit of purchasing power.’ Even the so-called public university system, which cost you considerably to attend, is being sustained by corporate interests and ethics of competitive privatization. So, in many ways you are not to blame, but you are responsible because it will be up to your generation and those that follow to literally stop passing the buck to the rich guys.

What is our response as progressives to these times of economic upheaval? Do we look to Corporate America to protect our rights and our pocketbooks, to define our family life styles and educate our children, even after the ruling class betrayed its own ever-trusting middle-class by robbing it of a lifetime of savings and the homes they were programmed to purchase? Where is the protest?

Read the rest of the speech here!

Post to Twitter

No Words

10:54 am By la Macha · children|GLBT|Violence|youth · 4 Comments

24 Nov 2009

Below is video from the funeral of Jorge Steven Lopez Mercado. My heart is broken.

Video found via facebook

Post to Twitter


Hola!

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.

About | Advertise with us | Contact | Twitter

VivirLatino on Facebook


blog advertising is good for you

blog advertising is good for you
  • Maegan La Mala: Thank you Julio! To be honest I was a little nervous. [...]
  • Ana L. Flores: I was very excited when you decided to join us. I really wanted your voice there as it would add dep [...]
  • Maegan La Mala: Hola Juliana and thanks for commenting. There is a dearth in activist/critical thinking Latino blogg [...]
  • Julio Ricardo Varela: Good for you for asking. I got goose bumps just reading this and yes, yes, yes, to it all. Thank you [...]
  • julianabritto: The sense that I get is that you might feel a little frustrated at the dearth in activist bloggers? [...]

Get our RSS Feed!