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Archive for November, 2009

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!

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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

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via Latina.com comes the latest news of Sheriff Joe Arpaio’s “law enforcement.”

The most recent atrocity committed by the self-proclaimed “America’s Toughest Sheriff” involves a woman who was detained while 9-months pregnant. Alma Minerva Chacon’s case has been receiving media attention due to the brutality with which she was treated. The very same night of her arrest, Chacon went into labor and found herself afraid and alone, being rushed to a local hospital with her hands and legs chained in shackles.

Once she reached the hospital, nurses repeatedly begged the Sheriff’s staff to allow them to unchain the mother, but they refused and Chacon was forced to give birth while still shackled to the bed. At one point, the nurse asked for them to release her so that she could be escorted to the bathroom for a urinalysis, but even that request was denied. But the worst came once Chacon gave birth to her baby girl.

Still chained to the bed, Arpaio’s police staff refused to allow Chacon to hold her newborn baby and then warned her that if no one came to pick up the child within 72 hours, she would be turned over into state custody. Telemundo 52 sat down with Chacon and let her tell her side of the story. Check out the interview below and if you don’t support Sheriff Arpaio’s barbaric practices sign the petition at www.SheriffJoeMustGo.com

Let’s say this woman did commit the most violent of violent offenses. Let’s say she killed five border patrol agents as she illegally crossed into the U.S.. And then spit on their bodies as she crossed past them.

Does she deserve to be shackled while giving birth? Are there no standards of humanity that the U.s. government must hold itself to? When you commit a crime–are you suddenly devoid of humanity? Entitled to no human rights at all?

This horrific practice doesn’t just happen to undocumented workers, either.

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Please please, before we move on, take just a moment to note the ultimate horrible irony of the title of this post.

Done?

Ok. I just got this in an email:

Dear Friends,

Please sign the following urgent petition to Congress and Pres. Obama telling them to allow undocumented immigrants to purchase health care insurance. The newly introduced Senate health care bill DISALLOWS undocumented immigrants from purchasing insurance even with their own money. This is an inhumane, deplorable, and unacceptable policy that we must vehemently oppose.

Please lend your voice to this very important effort.

In Solidarity,

Efrén Paredes, Jr./Tlecoz Huitzil

Petition Link:

http://healthcare.change.org/actions/view/allow_undocumented_immigrants_to_purchase_health_care#

Honestly, this whole health care debate is exhausting me. Over and over and over again, our public “representatives” seem to be deliberately searching for a way fuck me/us over in the most heinous and despicable ways possible. It’s weird how something that is supposed to be about making people safer and healthier requires a good beating before hand.

Needless to say, even if we can defeat this measure, it will be a largely symbolic victory. Undocumented immigrants don’t have the greatest paying jobs in the world–and poor people can always find better things to spend their money on than problems that may or may not happen in the future. Couple this “pay for their own health insurance” crap with the “pay a steep fine” crap that will surely come up again once immigration reform gets put back on the table…and what we have is basically debt peonage run and controlled by the U.S. government.

It’s weird how this clip is the only that can get a smile out of me at the moment.

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gpstoolAs a media justice activist, I was thrilled to read about this new GPS application. What it does is basically allow any phone user who has capabilities of downloading applications to download information on safe border crossings between Mexico and the U.S.. It will include information such as where water stations are, where safer crossings are, and it will even give out inspirational poems to let crossers know they aren’t alone on their crossing.

It was ‘how can we tweak this GPS algorithm and develop it for another concern — the question of people dying on the border.’ ”

The tool pairs cheap cell phone technology with a global-positioning system and consistently updated online data to guide individuals who are trying to cross international borders. The GPS system, however, doesn’t contact all three satellites so authorities would not be able to triangulate where the person is, unless he or she used the phone to make a call.

Border Patrol officials said the device won’t stop them from nabbing border-crossers.

“The technology is not new…,” said U.S. Border Patrol spokesman Mark Qualia. He added that he’s seen these sort of tools used before. “That’s the nature of our job. We have to learn to overcome and to adapt.”

Of course, this application has led to all sorts of angry outbursts from the Nativist community. This application (and the creators) are aiding and abetting a crime, the enemy, etc etc etc and should, of course, be arrested and locked up forever.

But Ricardo Dominguez (the lead creator of the application) has a response, “”We’re not trying to resolve the border issues…We’re just trying to create a poetic safety tool. Anyone can agree on safety as a far as a core human right.”

But of course, a decent discussion about human rights can’t be had when it comes to teh illegulz:

Minuteman Britt Craig, who splits his time between the Campo border and his home in Mission Viejo, said he understands Dominguez’ invention on a humanitarian level.

“I’m sure his intentions are good. He doesn’t want people to die in the desert. I don’t want people to die in the desert either,” said Craig, 60.

Still, he said, the device won’t do the border-crosser or the American people any favors.

“As soon as they get over here the problem hasn’t ended, it’s just begun,” he said. “They are in an immediate state between a slave and a legal free man laborer. They are totally at the mercy of the people who hire them and they just begin ruining the economy for the people who are legal to work here.”

Craig said he doesn’t believe the device will keep people from dying in the desert. He said he fears that it may have an opposite affect of emboldening some to make the journey on their own with the device.

“It may give people the confidence to go out and not be able to physically cross it and die,” he said. “He may actually lead someone to their doom with the device… an unintended consequence. If they think a cell phone is going to get them through 80 miles of desert, south of Yuma. They are mistaken.”

To which I say, Thank Gawd we’ve got the man who sits on the border with a gun to look out for teh illegulz! Who knew that the man with a gun aimed at you only wants what’s best for you!

On a more serious note, be sure to check out and support the makers of this application!

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Yesterday evening there were vigils across the country to remember and demand justice for Jorge Steven Lopez Mercado. Jorge’s mom, Miriam Mercado, sent a message to all who have supported her and her family at this horrific time and as a mother watching this just broke my heart and made me incredibly proud at the same time. Que triste that we have to lose beloved ones and yet we find new strength as community.

Via / Blabbeando

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Puerto Rico and Puerto Ricans have been in the news and all over the internet this week in some opposing ways. In fact, one could say that this year, the rise of one particular Puerto Rican woman, Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor, has put Ricans in the U.S. media’s eye. Despite being a U.S. colony since 1898 (with varying statuses), despite there being a huge Puerto Rican population here inside the continental U.S., many people, including other Latinos have dealt the Rican community a sort of neglect/ignorance, carrying age old stereotypes that are anything but benign.

First there was a report about Puerto Rican poverty which some media outlets expressed their surprise at. “How could this be?” everyone asks. “They” have been here for a long time. “They” are U.S. citizens (even if it is against “our” will). “They” speak English.

In New York City, 31.2 percent of Puerto Ricans live in poverty, compared with 27.8 percent of Latinos more broadly and 18.9 percent of the New York City population overall. Nationally, 22 percent of Puerto Ricans are in poverty, versus 19 percent of Latinos overall (from the American Community Survey via the Pew Hispanic Center).

Read more…

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Pedro Julio Serrano on the Murder of Lopez Mercado

8:46 pm By la Macha · Uncategorized · Comments Off

20 Nov 2009

The following vigil information comes from LGBT activist in Puerto Rico, Pedro Julio Serranom, who also takes the time remind the world of all the other unanswered LGBT murders in Puerto Rico:

Por otro lado, el portavoz de Puerto Rico Para Tod@s exigió que se continúe la investigación del brutal asesinato de Michael Galino hace dos semanas cuando su cuerpo fue hallado en una playa del Condado. De encontrarse que fue motivado por prejuicio a la orientación sexual de la víctima, que también se procese como un crimen de odio. También exigió que se investiguen los asesinatos de Lonrry Lemus, Sandro Díaz Maysonet, Víctor Rodríguez, Jammal Torres, Ramses Flores, Leonardo Gamallo y de toda aquella víctima que aún su crimen no se haya esclarecido y que pudo haber sido un crimen de odio.

If you are in PR:

Vigilia contra los Crímenes de Odio – miercoles 25 noviembre

ASISTE, DIVULGA, TODAS/OS A LA VIGILIA.

NO CABEN LAS EXCUSAS.

ESTA SERA UNA DE LAS MANERAS DE REPUDIO ANTE LA BARBARIE COMETIDA

Amigos y amigas:

El próximo miércoles, 25 de noviembre de 2009 a partir de las 6:00 p.m. se llevará a cabo una actividad de marcha y vigilia en memoria del joven Jorge Steven López y en denuncia contra los crímenes de odio. Todo el País está convocado a este acto. Les esperamos y agradeceremos que pasen este mensaje a sus contactos.

Fecha: 25 de noviembre de 2009
Hora: 6:00 p.m.
Lugar: Salida desde el Departamento de Justicia en Miramar y Llegada al
Parque Luis Muñoz Rivera en Puerta de Tierra

Exijamos justicia y detengamos los crímenes de odio…

Evento en Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=180095818897

Grupo Justice for Jorge Steven Lopez – End Hate crimes: http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=320548070102

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PRESS RELEASE

TIME: Sunday, November 22, 3:30pm
LOCATION: Mac Arthur and Grand Ave. at Lake Merritt

CONTACT: Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha, Liz Latty
PHONE: (510) 282-5223
EMAIL: morethanavigil@gmail.com

BAY AREA COMMUNITY MEMBERS TO HOLD VIGIL FOR QUEER/TRANS TEENS MURDERED IN MARYLAND AND PUERTO RICO

OAKLAND, CA – Outraged at the murders of two queer and trans teenagers last week, Bay Area queers and allies will gather at Lake Merritt this Sunday for a candlelight vigil and open mic to mourn and brainstorm ways to keep their community safer from violence.

Last Friday, 19-year-old Jorge Steven López-Mercado got into a car with Juan Martinez-Matos, 26, who later said he had been “searching for a prostitute.” Martinez-Matos murdered, beheaded and dismembered López-Mercado after, he said, he discovered that López-Mercado had male genitalia and was wearing feminine clothing. Martinez-Matos then set fire to Lopez-Mercado’s remains and left them on the side of a road. Martinez -Matos is now in custody and has confessed to the murder. His bail is set at $4 million.

The same week, in Baltimore, Maryland, queer fifteen-year-old Jason Mattison, Jr., was raped and stabbed to death in his aunt’s home by an adult male, a family friend with whom, according to a Baltimore police spokesperson, Mattison allegedly had a “forced sexual relationship.”

Queer activists say they worry that López-Mercado’s murderer will successfully invoke the defense of “gay or trans-panic” to justify the brutal killing. “The fact that Martinez -Matos is saying that López-Mercado was ‘wearing women’s clothing’ indicates that he might try to say he was ‘fooled’ and therefore ‘forced’ to kill López-Mercado for their gender identity,” Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha, one of the organizers of the Oakland vigil said.

“This is completely inexcusable,” Liz Latty, another organizer of the rally this Sunday, said. “It’s blaming the victim. We unequivocally denounce the way that the lives of queer and transgendered people, sex workers, people of color, women and low-income people are devalued and seen as disposable. We especially denounce the ways in which femme-presenting sex workers of color are incredibly targetted for violence.”

Referring to López-Mercado’s murder, police investigator Ángel Rodríguez Colón told Univisión, “These types of people, when they enter this lifestyle and go out into the streets, know that this could happen.”

“We are outraged at the murders of López-Mercado and Mattison,” Oakland vigil organizer Latty said. “We, queer and transgendered people in Oakland, are mourning these senseless deaths. Yet we are also a resilient community. We wish to stand in solidarity with those in Puerto Rico and Baltimore who are surviving despite this invisibility and injustice.”

Bay Area organizers of the vigil have been in contact with friends of López-Mercado and are hoping to coordinate memorial events and future actions with the Puerto Rican and Baltimore queer communities.

Harry Rodriguez, a spokesperson for the FBI in Puetro Rico, said that the agency will monitor the investigation since federal statutes regarding hate crimes are implicated. Puerto Rican lawmaker, Charlie Hernandez, who authored the Hate Crimes Act of 2002, has been asking officials to consider charging Matos under that law. It would be the first time in Puerto Rico that a murder would be classified as a hate crime. According to the National Lesbian and Gay Task Force, López-Mercado is the tenth murder victim of a hate crime in Puerto Rico in the last seven years.

But Oakland vigil organizers say they want a different kind of justice that doesn’t rely on increased policing or punishment. They say that the prison system has not made life safer for victims of violence, especially those who are queer and transgendered people of color. Organizers say that violence against queer youth of color is only exacerbated by increased police enforcement, which disproportionally targets and locks up low-income people, people of color, sex workers, and gender non-conforming people.

“Hate crimes legislation and more police patrols would not make our communities safer. It would not have prevented the murders, and no punishment will bring these two men back,” organizer Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha said. “Systemic homophobia and transphobia killed López-Mercado and Mattison, who like other queer or gender non-comforming youth of color, faced barriers like street harassment and discrimination in every facet of life. What could’ve actually saved the two young men are things like free or affordable public transportation, an end to housing and employment discrimination against people of color, queer and trans folks, and the decriminalization of sex work.”

“We don’t know how Lopez-Mercado identified, gender-wise, right now,” added Piepzna-Samarasinha. ” What we do know is that transphobia is a huge part of why they were murdered. As we continue to receive information from Lopez-Mercado’s friends and family members about how Lopez-Mercado saw their gender, we will change their pronouns to the ones they preferred. We want to work to create a world where all people are free to live in safety with any gender expression they desire.”

Vigils mourning López-Mercado and Mattison will also take place this Sunday in New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Boston, Chicago, Philadelphia, New Orleans, Amherst, MA, Tara Haute, Abilene, TX, Atlanta, and Durham.

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Transgender Day of Remembrance and Latin@s

12:48 pm By Maegan la Mamita Mala · GLBT|Latin America · Comments Off

20 Nov 2009

There are a number of posts and tweets I have seen today about today being Transgender Day of Remembrance, a day where those whose lives were lost in transphobic hate crimes. Peep the video below and pay special attention to just how violent life is for trans people in Latin America.

Pero before we as Latinos in the U.S. think of this as happening as a problem “over there”, as in Latin America still painted as more transphobic than the good old U.S. of A, all we need to do is look at the life of Esmeralda who came to the U.S. in search of the “American dream”, the life of Angie Zapata, and Jorge Steven Lopez Mercado, porque like it or not Puerto Rico is part of the U.S.

I am sadly surprised that more “Latino” centric sites don’t cover the lives of translatin@s. It’s easy enough to write on immigration cuz that is what is expected to us. Pero to exclude and ignore the reality, the lives of our hermanos y hermanas just perpetuates stereotypes, hate and violence. As I wrote in another post, do Latinos not think that issues of immigration, health care, and marriage equity impact the lives of transgente in our comunidad?

There are events all over today commemorating Transgender Day of Remembrance.

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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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