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Archive for May 10th, 2010

I’ve been finding out about this latest protest through different social media groups (facebook, twitter, etc). Here is the latest update!

For Immediate Release:

May 10, 2010

Press Contacts:

Byron Jose

323.371.2194

byron@mactivism.com

Irina Contreras

619.307.2444

colaconcontra@gmail.com

All 14 Participants Freed From Jail After Non-Violent
Civil Disobedience to Protest Arizona’s SB 1070

Protestors Hail Action As A Victory and Call For Ongoing Resistance To Unjust Laws and criminalization of immigrant communities

LOS ANGELES – On Friday night, after more than 24 hours in jail, all 14 activists and community members who engaged in non-violent civil disobedience in protest of Arizona’s recently enacted SB1070 and other federal, state, and local immigration enforcement laws, were freed on their own recognizance. The activists face at least one misdemeanor charge of failing to disperse and possibly other misdemeanor charges including resisting arrest. Their court date is scheduled for June 4, 2010. After being taken into custody, the 14 protestors refused to provide identification documents or their names as an act of resistance to Arizona’s SB 1070’s requirement that the police verify immigration status of anyone they “reasonably suspect” to be undocumented.

Activists say Thursday’s action was successful in calling attention to the criminalization of immigrants in the U.S., and that there will be other local and national protests in coming weeks. “Being released from jail does not signify an end to this movement rooted in non violent civil disobedience, but signifies its birth,” said Paulina Gonzalez., one of the participants in Thursday’s action. “As Dr. King said, it is our moral responsibility to disobey unjust laws. By not providing our name or answering questions about our immigration status we did just that,” added Gonzalez.

On Thursday more than a dozen activists were chained to each other, encircling the entrance to the facility where immigrants are processed for detainment and deportation. Those engaged in supporting the disobedience were joined by hundreds of community members and activists who protested for over five hours on Alameda Street, shutting down the Federal Detention Center, which included blocking incoming Department of Homeland Security detention buses from entering the building and three lanes of Downtown LA traffic with their bodies.

The activists sought to highlight the racist nature of immigration enforcement measures that terrorize

immigrant communities through a for-profit regime being carried out through Arizona’s SB1070, raids

by the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency, and collaboration between ICE and local

police and sheriffs in San Bernardino and Riverside counties, Costa Mesa, and in LA County jails.

The action includes a call for an immediate and unconditional regularization (legalization) of the millions of undocumented immigrants living in the U.S., the immediate repeal of SB 1070, an end to ICE and police collaboration, immigration raids, detentions and deportations and the criminalization of communities of color.

Some facts about the U.S. Detention and Deportation system from the Detention Watch Network:

* Immigrants in detention include families, both undocumented and documented immigrants, many who have been in the US for years and are now facing exile; survivors of torture; asylum seekers; and other vulnerable groups including pregnant women, children, and individuals who are seriously ill without proper medication or care.
* Being in violation of immigration laws is not a crime. It is a civil violation for which immigrants go through a process to determine whether they have a right to stay in the United States. Immigrants detained during this process are in non-criminal custody. The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is the agency responsible for detaining immigrants.
* Although DHS owns and operates its own detention centers, it also “buys” bed space from over 312 county and city prisons nationwide to hold the majority of those who are detained (over 67%). Immigrants detained in these local jails are intermixed with the local prison population .
* As a result of this surge in detention and deportation, immigrants are suffering poor conditions and abuse in detention facilities across the country and families are being separated—often for life—while the private prison industry and county jailers are reaping huge profits.

The protesters cited Martin Luther King’s Letter from Birmingham Jail as their inspiration. In the letter the great Civil Rights leader said:

“It is our moral responsibility to disobey unjust laws.”

For more information: Facebook.com/WeAreAllArizona

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Vivir Latino has long covered the story of Sandra Cantu–the little girl brutally raped and murdered by a Sunday school teacher who happens to be white.

Well, I just found out that the woman who killed Sandra has made a plea.

A Sunday school teacher accused of kidnapping, raping and killing 8-year-old Sandra Cantu entered a surprise guilty plea to first-degree murder on Monday, sparing her the death penalty.

Melissa Huckaby of Tracy is expected to be sentenced to life in prison. As part of her plea in a Stockton court, all other charges – including rape, lewd acts with a child and poisoning another child and a man – have been dropped.

This made me sick to read. Because the sexual violence Sandra experienced–sexual violence directed at her by a white woman, was not considered important in the plea. The charges were dropped.

Which, in essence, says sexual violence against little baby Latinas, is ok. Not that bad.

Sure, Huckaby got life–but that doesn’t mean anything. Usually in 20 years, lifer’s come eligible for parole. And that parole board will no look at her record of sexual assault and pedophilia when making the decision to let her go or not.

They will only see a white woman who was a Sunday School teacher who killed a little girl nobody wanted any damn way.

And that makes me sick.

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SACNAS, a society of scientists dedicated to fostering the success of Hispanic/Chicano and Native American scientists, formally withdrew Phoenix from consideration as a conference location. In a letter to Governor Brewer, the organization stated that SB1070 would guarantee attendees would be subject to harassment. SACNAS estimates that this represents a loss of in revenue to the local economy of $3 million.

From the organization’s press release:

The leadership of SACNAS strongly believes the immigration law SB1070 will make the state inhospitable to people of color, especially Hispanics,” says society president, Jose Dolores Garcia, PhD. “We have been seriously considering Phoenix as a site for our conference in 2012. However, we feel the passage of this law and the policies of Maricopa County Sheriff Arpaio will lead to racial profiling of our students and faculty.

Read more…

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VivirLatino reader, Gilbert Velasquez, went into his local Kohl’s when he came across a section with shirts that had the names of different countries across them. As he looked through them he saw a shirt for Spain that had the text “ESPANA” written across the front. They had incorrectly spelled “ESPANA” with an N.

Is this laziness on the part of the manufacturer? Did they think that people outside of Spain or that Spanish speakers wouldn’t notice? Could they not find the ñ?

What’s particularly funny to me is that it’s being marketed as a way to show pride- with a typo. On the Kohl’s website, where you can also buy the product (see here), in the product description it says:

“Espana” graphic offers national pride.

If there were such a country as “Espana”, maybe.

I reached out to Kohl’s customer service and Public Relations departments and will let you know what they say.

The difference between an n and an ñ is the difference between a year and an asshole (Spanish speakers/writers should figure that one out).

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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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