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Archive for January, 2010

NYC : Hispanic Panic Tonite

9:54 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Culture|Events|GLBT|literature|New York City · Comments Off

27 Jan 2010

Without a doubt, this is one of the best reading series that I have ever been a part of. If I weren’t hosting the live blog of President Obama’s State of the Union Address tonite, I would be at Nowhere, with a glass of vino and occasionally dancing bomba y plena by the bar.

If you are in the NYC are and aren’t chatting it up with us here tonite, support VivirLatino amigo Charlie Vasquez who works magic by bringing together the most amazing writers.

Charlie Vázquez and NOWHERE are happy to announce the resuming of the monthly LGBT reading series PANIC! after having taken December off. HISPANIC PANIC! kicks into the new year with a fantastic lineup of renegade Latino warriors of the word. Join me and Rob “Simply Rob” Vassilarakis, Yazmin Peña, Rigoberto Gonzalez, Roberto Santiago, Claudia Narvaez-Meza and Carlos Manuel Rivera for an evening of words, laughs, and more. Boogaloo tunes after we’re done. Free, 21+ only. Future readers find me!

Date: Wednesday, January 27, 2010
Time: 8:00pm – 9:30pm
Location: Nowhere, NYC, 322 E 14th St (1st/2nd)

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It’s been a minute since we’ve done a liveblogging of an event here at VivirLatino. Since We have covered in depth the Obama presidency from the campaign promises to their fulfullment (or not), I figured that hosting a live chat here would be fun.

So come and join us here tonite at 8:45 EST. The actual State of the Union Address is at 9 pm EST pero we’ll start serving drinks a little earlier to get warmed up.

Invite your friends, please note however that la Mala enforces a strict door policy.

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Official Press Release

Obama Can Act Now and Must

(Washington, DC) – At a protest outside the national headquarters of the Department of Homeland Security today, dozens blocked streets and hundreds more participated in a protest to call attention to the suffering of immigrant families across the country. The willingness of people, which included representatives of major immigrant organizations and faith leaders to get arrested, underscored the growing disenchantment with the administration’s inaction on immigration reform.

The protest was held to call for an immediate suspension of deportations of immigrants with U.S. citizen family members and action on passage of comprehensive immigration reform. Held on the eve of the President’s State of the Union address, it highlights the growing frustration of immigrants and their families regarding the administration’s failure to deliver on basic commitments made during the 2008 presidential race.

Dozens Risk Arrest demanding Immigration Reform from VivirLatino on Vimeo.

“Last year on January 21st, we stood in front of DHS with faith leaders and 800 allies to urge a moratorium on the raids and press for immigration reform. We stand here again with our partners a year later to again make the case that in the absence of federal action to fix the broken immigration system, this nation will continue to see the devastation of thousands of families and neighborhoods,” stated EunSook Lee, executive director of NAKASEC.

Tuesday’s action was held to draw attention to The Trail of DREAMs-a journey through the U.S. south, from Florida to Washington, to demand immediate relief for suffering immigrant communities. Drawing inspiration from the civil rights movement, four students are walking to bring public attention to a failed immigration system that tears families apart and halts the progress of students studying to contribute to their communities. The Trail of DREAMs, together with several other actions across the country, including the 17-day Fast for Our Families in South Florida, and a march of tens of thousands in Phoenix, Arizona to protest local enforcement of immigration law, have focused on the capacity – and the moral obligation – of the Obama
Administration to use its executive power to stop separating families and criminalizing immigrant communities. While local in nature, these actions have received nationwide support from activists frustrated by federal inaction.

“The administration’s missteps in conceding advantage to a wildly
unrepresentative far-right fringe is producing real anger among many people that heralded the 2008 election,” said Gustavo Torres, Executive Director of CASA de Maryland. “We are here to mark one year of inaction and remind the administration that immigrants and people who love them are suffering every day that it refuses to take action,” said Mr. Torres.

Participating in today’s actions were representatives of a broad group of organizations including CASA de Maryland, the Florida Immigrant Coalition (FLIC), Jobs With Justice, the Miami Worker Center, the National Day Laborer Organizing Network (NDLON), the National Korean American Service & Education Consortium (NAKASEC), the South Florida Interfaith Worker Justice Center, and We Count!.Community Worker Center as well as hundreds of immigrant workers, faith leaders, labor activists, and community leaders.

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We all know the argument–the “I don’t want my tax dollars spent on killing babies (aka abortions)” argument. Well, a group that is working to counter the Hyde Amendment (which effectively eliminated abortions for poor women by withdrawing funding of abortions through public health options) and subsequent legislation that reinforces and even creates stricter anti-abortion rules, asked for people to counter the “I don’t want my tax dollars…” argument with their own versions.

The following video shows some of the responses:

I don’t want my tax dollars spent on murdering and covering up the murder of women.

What about you?

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Haiti : Race, Colonialism, and Univision

11:55 pm By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Haiti|Media · 16 Comments

25 Jan 2010

I watched pedazos of the Unidos Por Haiti telethon on Univision on Saturday night. According to Don Francisco, who hosted the event as part of his usual Sabado Gigante time slot, the event raised $50 million. While stars like Thalia, Alejandro Sanz, and Ricky Martin sang their hearts out, images of the aftermath of the earthquake played on a screen behind them. That screen was where most of the black faces were seen as Univision couldn’t find one Afro-Latino to perform. While a lack of black faces is nothing new for Univision or for Spanish language television in general, the use of Haiti’s faces and “races” if you will, demonstrates the huge issues that Latin America and Latinos still have with race.

Black and Latino are seen as mutually exclusive and are presented in one of two ways. If you watch the faux news shows like Primer Impacto and even the real news shows, Haiti is shown as violent and out of control with little historical or actual context. My mother, saturated herself with the coverage asked me why there wasn’t more military intervention/control. Our own la Macha explored some of the issues with this, and I would add that the perception of the media, English and Spanish language is that Haiti wasn’t colonized enough, meaning it wasn’t made “white” enough. All people need to do, according to the Spanish language coverage is look to the other side of Hispaniola, to the Dominican Republic, where even Sammy Sosa has learned that whiter is righter and great pains are taken to separate the Dominican from the Haitian, the “white” from the “black”, even though as I told my friend the other night, there is only one letter difference between “rara” and “gaga”, an Afro-Caribbean musical and religious tradition.
Read more…

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Tell UCSD to return the remains!!!

11:28 am By la Macha · Violence · Comments Off

25 Jan 2010

The practice many universities and museums have of destroying and pilfering native peoples burial grounds in the name of “knowledge” is a long, disgusting and obscene practice. It is one that stems from the belief that Native bodies are extinct and “of the world.” That is, Native peoples are a rare species that never polluted, used every part of the buffalo, and cried at all the garbage the rest of us left all over their land. Not quite human. A morally superior species, yes–the Nobel Savage. But still a savage.

And when you combine the nobel savage mythology with the idea that “Indians are all dead,” you get a whole bunch of anthropologists, archeologists, and every other “ist” out there thinking that they’d better study these odd beings before they all disappear. By any means necessary.

Native peoples have demanded the practice of removing bodies from burial grounds be ended–to little avail. Now, they are working on getting the stolen family members and loved ones back. Please, if you’re in the Cali area, support this protest in any way you can!

COME JOIN US AND TELL THEM THAT ENOUGH IS ENOUGH!!!
35 YEARS IS TOO LONG TO BE PLAYING WITH THE REMAINS OF OUR FAMILY!!

The university knows that keeping these remains prevents the local native tribes from sending their students here, as a result native students are lined itemed as 0% of the school population
This is disrespectful and an outrage!!
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Did you know?
The University property west of North Torrey Pines Road is well known to local Indians as a gravesite to be left undisturbed forever. The Kumeyaay today continue to recognize this area as an ancestral burial ground.

The Kumeyaay Cultural Repatriation Committee (KCRC) was formed to communicate with anyone that is in possession of human remains or as otherwise necessary to deal with these issues.
Over the past 80 years, countless Kumeyaay remains have been removed from the site, remaining under the authority of UCSD and, from a Kumeyaay perspective, inappropriately shipped across the country.

The KCRC has made many attempts to enter dialogue with UCSD regarding these collections. In the past, UCSD took no action on the issue and was not forthcoming about the existence of its collection of human remains.

Recently UCSD formed an ad hoc committee to determine the cultural affiliation of two sets of human remains removed from UCSD property. Beyond that, the University has made no noticeable effort to resolve the rights of the KCRC in the case of any other remains removed in the past.

In keeping with the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA) of 1990, the committee’s responsibility is to determine the cultural affiliation of the two sets of human remains in question. The committee has no Native representation on the ad hoc committee to assist with this process.
Kumeyaay cultural perspective locates their people in the San Diego County area from time immemorial and suggest there is no scientific reason to believe that a cultural die off or burn out occurred based off of cultural and anthropological data- this evidence supports that the human remains located on UCSD property are indeed Kumeyaay.
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Dear Chancellor Marye Anne Fox,

As a representative of the UCSD community, I want UCSD to deal fairly, compassionately, and within the spirit of the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act. I recognize the significance of the views of the Kumeyaay Cultural Repatriation Committee and feel that the valid claim of Native people takes precedence over the claim of researchers. All human remains should be afforded dignity and respect. UCSD has a responsibility to the greater San Diego community and to the tribes that have been forced off the lands the university now occupies.

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Monday Morning Musica: Back to the Grind Stone

11:13 am By la Macha · Music · Comments Off

25 Jan 2010

Hello, VLatin@s! Well, it’s Monday morning again, which means, time to get back to work. Here’s an oldy but goody from my permanent lovers, Los Lobos!

Set Me Free (Rosa Lee)

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The subject of the film Yo Soy Andina, Cynthia Paniagua, leads an Afro-Peruvian dance workshop with live music by an all-star lineup of Peruvian drummers and musicians.
“Peruvian musicians and dance teachers are coming together to
share our culture for Haiti” said Paniagua. “The movements are earthy, groovy,
undulating prepare to work it out!”
The workshop — for all levels, including beginners — will cost $20, and all proceeds will go to to Oxfam for Haiti.
WHEN: Sunday, Jan 24, 3-5 pm
WHERE: 30-01 Northern Blvd, Long Island City
One subway stop from Manhattan!
R/V/G to Queens Plaza (walk 1 block east to 40th St)
Google map directions here

Reserve: cholitaperu25@yahoo.com or 917-378-4965

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37th Anniversary of Roe v. Wade

11:00 am By BiancaLaureano · Health|Women · Comments Off

22 Jan 2010

Today is the 37th Anniversary of Roe v. Wade being decided in the US. In recognizing this day, many organizations have events and special features, one such space is RH Reality Check, “an online community and publication serving individuals and organizations committed to advancing sexual and reproductive health and rights.” RH Reality Check has a series of writing by various people in the reproductive and sexual health field writing under the feature: What does choice mean to you.

You’ll find writing by several Latinas including:
*Aimée Thorne-Thomsen Executive Director of The Pro-Choice Public Education Project writes about growing up with Roe and how that has impacted her life to do the work she does today in Growing Up With Roe.

*Silvia Henriquez the Executive Director of the National Latina Institute for Reproductive Health shares her desire to see an expansion of seeing a “holistic vision for reproductive freedom” in her piece Securing Real Choices Means Going Beyond “Choice”.

*Bianca M. Velez, Program Assistant for The Pro-Choice Public Education Project writes about being a young woman of Color in NYC and her examination into the terminology of choice and reproductive justice in Will I Ever Have A Choice?

*And yours truly reflects on the sacrifices of Rosie Jimenez, the first victim of the Hyde Amendment and how I see choice as survival and self-determination. Read my contribution The Hyde Amendment Killed Rosie Jimenez…Because of Roe and Rosie, I Exist.

Additional articles I’d like to highlight (there are 17 in total) focus on international work around reproductive justice and access to care, how “choice” also means choices in birth options, a 37-year retrospect on Roe v. Wade, and one man shares why choice is important to him.

What does choice mean to you?

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The bad news just keeps coming and coming. In a fairly predictable but shocking nonetheless, decision, the Supreme Court ruled yesterday that corporations were allowed unrestricted spending and donations for political campaigns. The reasoning? If spending was restricted, corporations (that’s right, *corporations*) free speech would be infringed upon.

What this ruling means is that for the 2010 election, at least, corporations will rule. Most analysts agree that we can’t forecast the entirety of what elections will look like–but most are agreeing that there will be an unprecedented amount of money spent, the commercials and other media outreach will be overwhelming, and there will be no way at all for citizens to make their voices heard, except through their membership to organizations like Unions.

Now, of course, I am really happy that Unions are suddenly relevant again. But the idea that a corporation that is owned by shareholders (who are NOT all U.S. citizens) will have this unprecedented ability to influence elections is stunning to me.

After we all go to such extremes to insure that “Teh Illegalz” not have any influence at all in the U.S.–we’re just going to hand over our basic fundamental rights so easily? Without a fight even? With clapping and cheering from big portions of the U.S. citizenry?

Here is a group attempting to organize against this ruling. Now is the time to truly consider what the constitution means to us. And what “U.S. Citizen” means to us. Do we intend to cut off our nose to spite our face?

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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.

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