I can’t be the only one who grew up having to cross out the “father” or the “papa” in the cards for today to write in the word “Papi.” For years I’ve been talking about how triflin’ the ideology of “machismo” is only assigned to Latino men, as if we have a monopoly on this idea of masculinity which is often focused only on the negative. I have yet to experience those negative characteristics that researchers (and now our community) claim make up the masculinity Latino men embody.
My Papi was nothing like what research would want me to believe. For this Papi’s Day I wrote a piece on what my machismo is and what it looks like. I know many of us have experienced forms of machismo that are filled with love, compassion, trust, and joy yet rarely have our narratives featured or shared. Here’s a bit of my testimonio. Felicidades to all the Papi’s today!
My machsimo is a pretty big deal. It looks like a six foot tall and three inch man who is in one word: huge. It is the kind of huge that we have been socialized to be scared of when we encounter, especially if we are alone, or it is dark. What my machismo knows is that my father speaks multiple languages, English being his third. He learned to speak English by listening to the Beatles and the Rolling Stones. He is an artist in every sense of the word and values paint, instruments, architecture, and the like. I grew up hearing music from all over the world and having every instrument available to me so that I could interact with and play it whenever I chose. There was art and music all around me growing up. Almost all of the art and music around me was created or produced by my father, his covers of songs, his attempts to learn the English language while still raising my sister and I with a sense of cultural pride for our community, language, and heritage. Read more…
6:42 am By Maegan La Mala · Allied Media Conference|Detriot|Immigration · 1 Comment
18 Jun 2010Mala and her three year old assistant, arrived in Detroit safe and sound. Late, but safe and sound. Today will be the first day of coverage and participation of the Allied Media Conference, a gathering of global independent media makers who tend to consider themselves on the more “radical” side of the spectrum, so yes I kind of feel at home.
So far I’ve run into amazing mujer/hermanas in the struggle. I’m looking at you Anjeli, TK and part of the Make/Shift crew.
So far my plan is to get some breakfast and then go to this workshop which sounds right up VivirLatino’s alley:
10:27 am By BiancaLaureano · Activism|Puerto Rico · 3 Comments
17 Jun 2010Two months of protesting and demonstration by students attending various campuses of the University of Puerto Rico seem to be close to finding a resolution with University administration.
Democracy Now reports:
Students at the University of Puerto Rico have declared victory in their two-month strike against massive budget cuts at their school. The students and the university’s Board of Regents have signed an agreement that includes an extension of tuition waivers, the cancellation of a fee that would have drastically raised education costs, and a commitment not to arbitrarily punish strike participants. The students also say the University of Puerto Rico has agreed to reject a series of initiatives that would have increased privatization of the school. The students will hold a general assembly on Monday to seek campus-wide approval for the agreement.
Students also created and celebrated a communal commencement at the Rio Piedras campus. Berta Joubert-Ceci at Workers World reports:
On the 52nd day of a strike against privatization and tuition increases, the students of the University of Puerto Rico celebrated a symbolic yet very genuine act of commencement right on Ponce de León Avenue, in front of the Río Piedras campus. Accentuating one of the strike’s main slogans — “Eleven campuses, one UPR” — it was the first time a graduation was held of all 11 campuses and the UPR High School together. This was a graduation that rewarded the most essential education — the commitment to a just society shown by these students, who are aware of their historic role and loyal to their people, particularly the poorest on the island. Dressed in a variety of ways, from graduation gowns to jeans, the students wore ribbons that read, “UPR 2010 Dignity.”
7:40 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Allied Media Conference · 1 Comment
17 Jun 2010I’m really excited to be heading to Detroit today for the Allied Media Conference and participate in presenting a workshop. I will be posting updates here and maybe even liveblogging some sessions. I was also playing with the idea of doing a video log of my time at the AMC. We’ll see how it plays out.
Here’s the workshop I am helping to present:
M/others, Mamaz and Community Care-Givers Unite Through Truth-Telling!
Saturday,
June 19, 2:10-5:30 pm (w/ break)
…
Presenters: Gia Hamilton, Gris
Gris Lab; WelfareQUEENS;
Rachel Caballero, La Semilla Childcare
Collective; China Martens;
Future Generation & Don’t Leave Your
Friends Behind; Kidz Space;
Katina Parker, New Orleans Labor of Love;
Noemi Martinez, Hermana,
Resist; Maegan “la Mamita Mala” Ortiz,
Vivir Latino/Dos Mujeres Media
Facilitator: tk karakashian tunchez,
To tell You the Truth/New Mythos Project TRACK: INCITE! / To Tell You the TruthM/others (self-identified single, teen and welfare mamaz),
mamaz and community caregivers around the country are telling their
truths through zines, blogs, printed media, performance work etc, and
using this process oftruth-telling to create stronger selves, families
and communities. In this 3-part, interactive workshop, we will share
practical skills and organizing models, then strategize on how we can
support each other year-round through a national network of mamaz and community caregivers. Come share your questions and your knowledge with us!This session will take place in three one hour parts. Part one is
a knowledge fair, showcasing the many incredible projects in the room.
Part two is a skill share, giving you a chance to learn some specific
truth-telling and organizing techniques, including: zine-making, social
media, on-the-go-video-how-to, blogging 101, and building a radical
childcare collective. Part three is a strategy session for all us
m/other, mamaz & community cargegivers in theroom to think, dream,
strategize, and envision specific ways we can work together over the
next year. We will explore questions like; What do we bringto the tables
as mamaz? What support do we need? How can we fortify our national
community and our families? How can alternative media-making further our movements and transformations?This session prioritizes the participation of mothers and community care-givers of color, but is open to all.
1:57 pm By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Seattle|Violence · 16 Comments
16 Jun 2010Trigger warning: the video below contains violence against an unarmed civilian teenager of color. There is also nsfw language.
It was only a month ago that video emerged showing a Seattle police officer brutally beating a Latino and using anti-Mexican slurs.
Now another video showing a Seattle Police Officer punching an unarmed teenager in the face during an attempt to restrain a group of young women for jaywalking. You know that horribly violent crime of jaywalking that ruins lives?
Take a look at the video:
Read more…
10:25 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Activism|Immigration|Justice|Politics · 6 Comments
16 Jun 2010The Non-Profit Industrial Complex is like the Prison Industrial Complex in that despite the name, it is a capitalist model based in struggling for money. While private prisons fight amongst themselves for contracts with the Federal government and cut corners that usually equal abuses against those housed behind concrete and barbed wire, non-profits fight amongst themselves for money given out by corporate tax shelters and cut corners by watering down what should be revolution for reform and the end result is abuse against those whom orgs claim to represent and help in their mission statements. And just like private prisons would rather have rival gangs attack each other and distract from the bigger picture, non-profit organizations, whether on purpose or by default, also engage in divide and conquer politics that serve to dilute struggles rather than strengthen them. Need an example? Just look at the latest beef between some orgs in the Comprehensive Immigration Reform movement and the DREAM Act students.
8:57 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Immigration|Justice · 4 Comments
16 Jun 2010If there was any more proof needed at the ridiculous and disgusting racist, stereotypical premise behind laws like SB1070 in Arizona and how they encourage racial and ethnic profiling against ALL Latinos, enter stage right Republican Congressman Steve King. He revives the idea that the undocumented can be identified by their shoes, grooming habits and an innate “sixth sense”.
Mala sees racist people.
6:31 am By Maegan La Mala · Justice|New York City · Comments Off
16 Jun 2010Have you been stopped by the NYPD?
The Center for Constitutional Rights is interested in speaking to Black and Latino New Yorkers who feel that they have been improperly stopped, questioned and frisked by members of the NYPD in the last two years, and to learn more about their experiences.
If you or anyone you know fits this description and would be interested in speaking to us,
please ask them to contact: Sunita Patel at spatel@ccrjustice.org, Ian Head at ihead@ccrjustice.org, or call 212-614-6470.
Please note: The Center for Constitutional Rights is not able to take individual cases or give legal advice at this time.
2:56 pm By la Macha · Immigration · 7 Comments
15 Jun 2010There are currently a whole slew of comments in trash right now that are really dependent on the “yeah, you complain about the US, but look at what Mexico is/does!” thought process. In other words, people in the US have no right to complain about immigration policy because if they lived in Mexico, things would be way worse.
We at VL get these comments all the time. Usually in relation to the border (i.e. I vote America starts treating illegals like Mexico does, shoot them!) but lately we’ve been getting them in relation to the border shooting of Sergio Adrian Hernandez-Huereca.
This is a meme used by everybody from the liberals to the far right conservatives. But the thing is, as a meme, this logic simply doesn’t cut it.
First of all, there is no pro-immigration advocate of any sort (that I’ve heard of) who has ever said that their problem with immigration in the US is that we are “not like other countries.” That we want to be like other countries. That we should model ourselves on other countries immigration policies. The reason? 99% of other countries’ immigration policies suck just as bad or worse than the US’s–and that includes more “civilized” European countries. I’ve posted how in Canada, women living at shelters have been hunted down by immigration police, for example.
If you are a part of the immigration debate for any amount of time, you know that “looking towards other countries” for indication on how to create understandable and human immigration policy simply isn’t a viable method for creating policy here in the US. As such, only very very rarely will you find a legitimate pro-immigration advocate/organization calling for the implementation of another countries’ policies. Thus, if it isn’t an argument, it can’t be used as a *counter* argument. Simple rules of debate. If somebody doesn’t bring it up in the original argument, you can’t make a counter argument introducting new idea.
Also, 99% of of the “But Mexico sux worse!” arguments center *Mexico* as a site of “bad immigration policy.” As if 99% of immigrants in the US come from Mexico. But what does Mexico’s horrible immigration policy mean for the Irish immigrant in the US illegally? Or the Britians or the Indians etc? In other words, all immigrants in the US are from pretty much every country in the world, and it solves next to nothing to assume that if we just close the border, immigration problems will end. Immigration is a global problem that every country in the world is struggling to deal with–to be so US centric in the face of a global international problem is to be narrow minded at best and self-defeating at worst.
Which brings us to another point: many many many times, other countries have horrible immigration policies *specifically* because of US interference/interventions. For example–look at the Phillipines. It is a country similar to Mexico, in that vast money comes into the country from immigrants living outside of it. It has a colonial history, like Mexico and until recently, was living under a dictator, like far too many countries in South America.
And yet, by virtue of land/water geographies, most who come *into* the US are documented (but they may not stay that way–most undocumented workers become undocumented *after* they get here). So we have us a good legal population of workers that we all love because they are like, totes legal, right?
Only…what is the US government doing to help reduce the level of immigration–of *necessary* economic immigration–from the Philippines? Except, oh, congratulating the Philippines for being the “first democractic nation” in Asia as the regime controlling the country murders labor unionizers and thinks 1 out of every 4 workers being unemployed is not so bad?
In other words, the tired “But X country sucks worse than the US” does next to nothing to address the actual reasons why people are forced to immigrate, and erases US culpability in creating the *need* to immigrate to begin with. That is, the problem with immigration is NOT enforcement or “protection” or “defense” etc. The problem is vastly horrifically bigger. It is a problem that exists on a world-wide scale and has everything to do with the World Bank, capitalism, free trade agreements and corporate power. And just because we are able to document some immigrants living under horrific circumstances we created does not erase the fact that those immigrants, like immigrants from countries that we *aren’t* able to majority document–don’t want to immigrate. Who in the hell wants to leave home?
Fighting for hours and hours in blogland about who is worse, Mexico or the US, does next to nothing to interrogate the real issues wrapped around immigration: Who is entitled to a homeland? Who is entitled to protections by a nation/state from corporations? Are corporations human beings? Why is immigration/migration so necessary under current global economic structures? How do The People hold corporations accountable and responsible across borders when The People are not allowed to migrate those same borders? When are we going to make the lives of human beings more important than the life of a Corporation? Which laws are we going to listen to, community laws made by the community for the community, nation/state laws that are increasingly privileging corporations, or corporate laws? And why are the immigration problems in almost every single first world country almost exactly like they are here in the US (i.e. unfixable and unending)? Are Mexicans really the problem? Or is it a system that depends on the movement of labor and capital to exist?
I am the first to say that Mexico as a nation/state sucks. I have no loyalty to Mexico and have many problems with Chicano nationalism/organizing because Chicanos base so much of their organizing on the 1848 Treaty of Hildago thereby assuming that *Mexico* had a legitimate right to contested borderland (I would argue that no nation/state has the right to indigenous land.).
But there is a reason that this is the first time I have ever posted this critique of Chicano Mexico centered organizing at VL in the three plus years I’ve been writing here. Who is better or worse is not the problem for me, and it has almost never been the problem for any immigrant or immigrant rights advocate that I’ve ever known. And I promise you, it is absolutely NOT what any nation/state or corporation is worried about either.
If all of us who are interested in immigration–and yes, that includes you, hateful right wingers–could start talking about the problems that those in government and corporations are talking about, I think we’d actually find some answers worth implementing.
Until then, however, please be forwarned–there’s a reason 99% of the “Mexico Sux Worse Than US” comments are deleted.
Thanks.
1:03 pm By la Macha · U.S.-Mexico Border|Violence|youth · 3 Comments
15 Jun 2010
I’m still waiting for the day when all the “obey every single law at any cost” people demand that the as yet unnamed agent be handed over to the Mexican police so that he may receive his just punishment. It doesn’t matter how angry it makes him that he can’t shoot people on the other side of the border (even if they are drug smugglers!) it is the law. And he apparently broke it.
An official story soon came out. The Border Patrol claimed that reports of the incident indicated U.S. officers on bicycle patrol “were assaulted with rocks by an unknown number of people.” Border Patrol and other government officials claimed that their agent was surrounded by a rock-throwing mob and that the agent was attacked and stoned before he fired his weapon.
A video taken with a cell phone proved this account to be full of lies. CNN reported on its web-site that “a video obtained by CNN casts doubt on the Border Patrol agent’s claim that he was surrounded by rock-throwing suspected illegal immigrants when he fatally shot the boy on the border at Ciudad Juarez. … The video contradicts [FBI spokeswoman Andrea] Simmons’ account. She had said: ‘This agent, who had the second subject detained on the ground, gave verbal commands to the remaining subjects to stop and retreat. However, the subjects surrounded the agent and continued to throw rocks at him. The agent then fired his service weapon several times, striking one subject who later died.’”
The video clearly shows that no one is “surrounding” the cop. He is clearly seen pointing his weapon at a group of people who are on the Mexican side of the river, which at this time of year in Juarez/El Paso is mainly dry, and 10 feet wide. Three cracks from his gun are heard.
Several vendors on a bridge overlooking the carnage also disputed the official story. Estelle Gonzalez, who sells hats on the Paso del Norte Bridge, said, “The kid wasn’t throwing rocks. He was only watching.” Another vendor, Luis Rodriguez, said, “The kid wasn’t throwing anything. Then he [the Border Patrol agent] started shooting like crazy. He fired three shots.”
All laws enforced all the time folks. Right? This man broke the law. He should be in jail awaiting justice.
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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