6:27 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Education|New York City · 4 Comments
11 Jun 2010With the ever looming threat of higher fares, working class and poor familias are left wondering how will their children go to school if the free Metrocard program in New York City is cut, as has been suggested, as a way to deal with the NY state and city budget crisis.
Today, students themselves demonstrate what will happen if their means to get to school was cut. They won’t be in school. Thousands will engage in school walk-outs to save student metro-cards. The city-wide action is being organized by the Urban Youth Collaborative, representing thousands of students across the city who have been at the forefront of the campaign to save student MetroCards.
Shoshi Doza of DRUM says,
” If student metro-cards are cut, many of Queen’s mostly immigrant and low-income families will suffer greatly. Many of our constituents as South Asian immigrant families simply cannot afford $1200 per child in additional expenses each year while they are already getting laid off and cannot find work. This means many low-income immigrant students will be pushed out of education and a good future.”
11:44 am By la Macha · youth · 2 Comments
10 Jun 2010I already posted this below, but I wanted to put it in it’s own post, up top, so that people are sure to see it. The following is a Democracy Now! show that has video of Sergio Guereca’s mother speaking about his murder. Remember, Guereca is the 15 year-old that was shot and killed on the border.
I, for one, am so achy and tired of posting the latest video of a tearful mami, her heart breaking for all the world to see. How many times do we have to see the pain, the horror, that uncritical violence perpetrates against human beings before we begin to question–do things have to be this way?
11:02 am By la Macha · Immigration · 1 Comment
10 Jun 2010More information is leaking out about the murder of the teenager at the border. From Yahoo News:
But two witnesses to the incident told the Wall Street Journal’s Nicholas Casey that Hernandez was standing on the Mexican side of the border with his hands up and had not thrown rocks at the agent.
U.S. national Bobbie McDow said she was in the middle of the Santa Fe Bridge — which spans the border and has security checkpoints at either side; and saw a group of teens who had no weapons or backpacks. They were playing a kind of “cat-and-mouse game,” trying to make it to the U.S. side and back to Mexico without being caught, she told the Journal.
McDow said two Border Patrol agents saw the group and chased them — and that one agent, riding a bicycle, caught and pinned down a suspect. She said the same agent then fired shots into Mexico, where the other boys had run. McDow said that one teen had thrown rocks at the agent but that Hernandez hadn’t.
McDow’s husband, Raul Flores, told the Journal he’d seen Hernandez emerge from behind a pillar on the Mexican side of the border with his hands up before the agent shot him in the shoulder and then in the head.
Hernandez was found 20 feet (six meters) into Mexico, and an autopsy revealed that the fatal shot was fired at a relatively close range, according to Arturo Sandoval, a spokesman for the Chihuahua state attorney general’s office. Mexican authorities said a .40 caliber shell casing was found near the body, suggesting that the Border Patrol agent might have crossed into Mexico to shoot the boy.
That would violate the rules for Border Patrol agents, who are supposed to stay on the U.S. side — and could open the agent to a Mexican homicide prosecution.
And from Democracy Now:
US authorities have said fifteen-year-old Sergio Adrian Hernandez Güereca was part of a group of boys throwing rocks at Border Patrol agents who were trying to detain two people at the border crossing. But a cell-phone video obtained by the Spanish language network Univision shows otherwise. The grainy footage shows the Border Patrol agent detaining one man at gunpoint. While he has the man on the ground, he points his gun toward a second person on the Mexican side of the border. The video shows that person running away as the agent fires several shots. The video then shows a body next to a column under the bridge. We speak to Fernando Garcia, the director of the Border Network for Human Rights.
I have to wonder, given the vehemence in which so many have argued that we must follow every single solitary law down the last drop–that we must punish those who break even those obtuse of laws–are we, as US citizens, going to hand over the border agent to be tried and convicted if it turns out he broke the law?
2:27 pm By la Macha · salma · 3 Comments
9 Jun 2010I had no idea that my baby was afreed of a little snake. Ok, big snake. During an interview for Extra, Salma (who is apparently in the middle of jungle land somewhere) had a major freak out over a snake sighting. Video below.
At first I thought she was being all cute and femme, like my girl is want to do, but towards the end, you can see she’s near hysterical and sounds like she’s either in tears or close to it. Sigh–even Superman had his Kryptonite.
I know I would’a done a better job at protecting her than the whimpy dude who carried her away. I would’ve even let her cry on my shoulder. I can be very sympathetic and loving when I want to be.
9:20 am By la Macha · Immigration · 30 Comments
9 Jun 2010Calling for increased militarization at the border has a charm about it in the political world. It seems to be the thing that we can all “agree” on. Standing on the wrong side of immigration may cause major meltdowns for a political career, but “defending the border”–increasing the military presence at the border–seems to be something that helps a politician to navigate his way out of immigration related conundrums. That is, if a politician can’t get reform pushed through or faces extreme opposition to reform–he can just call for increased militarization at the border, and he’s in good territory again.
The thing is, though, that increased militarization has consequences:
The Border Patrol agent who shot a 15-year-old boy near the Paso del Norte bridge Monday fired his gun several times, FBI officials said.
Earlier reports stated that the boy was 14 years old, but Chihuahua state police corrected his age Tuesday afternoon.
The agent shot at a group of Mexican nationals who had illegally crossed into the U.S. about 6:30 p.m. after they surrounded him and threw rocks at him, said Special Agent Andrea Simmons, spokeswoman for the FBI in El Paso.
Things still remain confusing as to exactly what happened–but there is this report from CNN:
Simmons told CNN earlier that she did not know whether the person who was shot was on the Mexican or U.S. side of the border, but that the agent never left U.S. territory.
The body was found on the Mexican side of the border, Simmons said.
Leaving aside the point that it seems like the US is perfectly content to kill and imprison people who cross into our territory, but expect leniency when we cross into others, the question must be asked-what are rocks compared to a bullet? And if rock throwing is a regular occurance at the border, why aren’t the officers trained to deal with rock throwing in ways that don’t involve bullets?
Why is increased militarization considered a viable good option in the immigration debate–when the people we are “protecting” ourselves from are rock throwing kids?
What would do if Canada killed a kid from the US that was doing something minor, like, say, bringing a bag of weed back into the US? Would we say the kid shouldn’t have been bringing weed across the border? That he got what he deserved?
9:02 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · children|Immigration|mexico|U.S.-Mexico Border|Violence · 9 Comments
9 Jun 2010Yesterday I wrote how the homicide of Antonio Hernandez Rojas at the hands of U.S. Border Patrol agents was just the beginning based on how the Obama administration has chosen to go about immigration reform, that is by further militarizing the border with Mexico. I didn’t expect for my prediction to come true so quickly, especially not with the life of a teenager.
Yesterday U.S. Border Patrol shot and killed Sergio Adrian Hernandez Guereca (some reports say he was 14, some say 15) in Texas. U.S. Border Patrol is defending it’s actions, saying that the boy was part of a group that was trying to cross the border into the U.S. without papers. Border Patrol is also saying the group that the boy was with was throwing rocks at their men. Naturally, the proper response to someone throwing rocks at you is to shoot and kill them, especially if they are Mexican.
There have been reports that Sergio was just playing near the border when he was shot, another report I read said that he was visiting a relative who lived in el Norte. Regardless of why Sergio was on the border, regardless of if he had rocks in his hands or not, there is not justification for this. Where is Obama now? Now that he has ordered sending National Guard troops to the border when already this year, which is not even half way over, the number of injuries and deaths on the border at the hands of Border Patrol is higher than it has been in the previous two years. Where are his promises of reform and change? Seems like they are being buried along with the bodies of our children.
12:04 pm By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Immigration|mexico|U.S.-Mexico Border|Violence · 80 Comments
8 Jun 2010Immigration reform, or the lack thereof, has many faces now. One is the faces of the students starving in front of Senator Charles Schumer’s office . Another face is that of Anastasio Hernandez Rojas, a Mexican who was killed by U.S. Border Patrol using a baton and a Taser, last week.
Hernandez Roja was killed while being deported. Officers claim that he had become combative and were required to use force against him (hmmmm where have we heard that claim before). The San Diego Medical Examiner’s report listed the cause of death as heart attack, with methamphetamine abuse and high blood pressure listed as contributing factors. Border Patrol abuse is not apparently a contributing factor.
8:16 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Colombia|Energy|Environment|Labor · 2 Comments
8 Jun 2010The eyes of the world are rightfully on the U.S. Gulf Coast and the massive damage being done by the BP oil spill and according to some, the U.S. government’s handling of it. BP, like so many multi-national organizations, has spread it’s oily tentacles across the globe and as people and wildlife struggle in the Gulf Coast region, in Colombia, workers have been fighting BP as well for at least five months. According to reports, workers at the Tauramena Central Processing Facility in Casanare have been fighting to have a recognized union with collective bargaining power, something BP is resisting.
On June 2, last week, a branch of the Colombian Army attacked the striking workers, who have escalated their strike to include blocking roads and other acts of civil disobedience.
9:03 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · arizona|Immigration|Justice · 5 Comments
7 Jun 2010On Friday, a coalition of civil rights and civil liberties organizations filed for an injunction so that Arizona’s SB1070 will not be active pending a final court ruling on its constitutionality. The organizations named in the suit include the American Civil Liberties Union, Mexican American Legal Defense Fund (MALDEF), the National Immigration Law Center (NILC), Asian Pacific American Legal Center (APALC) – a member of the Asian American Center for Advancing Justice, ACLU of Arizona, National Day Laborer Organizing Network (NDLON) and the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP).
The request for an injunction comes after last month’s filing of a lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of SB1070.
Pablo Alvarado, Executive Director of National Day Laborer Organizing Network said: ”
Arizona can’t pick and choose which portions of the United States Constitution to uphold. Federal law is very clear: Arizona can’t subordinate the rights of Mexican-Americans or those with Latino appearance and it certainly cannot rewrite federal immigration laws. Throughout history, when states have gone rogue and when they have unjustly and unlawfully scapegoated their residents, the court has had to intervene to be the ultimate defender of bedrock constitutional protections.”
I am not a legal expert and don’t know if there is a legal precedent for such and injunction to be granted pero it sounds like good idea to suspend the exercising of a law that legalizes racial while it’s legality is being challenged.
7:03 am By la Macha · arizona · 4 Comments
7 Jun 2010Over the weekend, there was a small uproar in Arizona. As if things could get any worse.
Apparently, a mural was the site of intense “scrutiny” on the part of various far right protestors, including a city official. The problem? The mural depicted children who had dark skin. The depiction was deemed racist or “too politically correct.” And after the intense scrutiny mounted, the principal of the school that authorized the mural caved to pressure and asked the artist to whiten lighten the dark skinned children.
Mirroring patterns seen statewide, one can sense the backlash from people attempting to maintain the “old guard” status quo of well-defined power and race relations in the face of rapid change, as reflected in this comment from Prescott City Councilman and local radio host Steve Blair about the disputed mural:
“I’m not a racist by any stretch of the imagination, but whenever people start talking about diversity, it’s a word I can’t stand…. The focus doesn’t need to be on what’s different; the focus doesn’t need to be on the minority all the time…. Art is in the eye of the beholder, but I say (the Miller Valley mural) looks like graffiti in L.A….. I don’t see anything that ties the community into that mural.”
Before we rightly condemn such notions, it should be noted that Blair was giving voice to a point of view that has dominated the political discourse here for generations. Indeed, R.E. Wall, director of the Prescott Downtown Mural Project, reported that he and the other artists experienced weeks of “tense working conditions” at the site, including regular racial slurs shouted from vehicles and passersby such as: “You’re desecrating our school,” “Get the ni–ers off the wall,” and “Get the sp-c off the wall.” The original article detailing the mural’s completion drew a spate of vitriolic and racially-charged online comments that mirrored these verbal assaults. In an interview with the local newspaper, Wall observed that “the pressure stayed up consistently. We had two months of cars shouting at us.” Eventually, he said, the demands reached such a level that his group was asked by school officials to lighten the faces of the mural’s main subject, as well as the other children in the mural.
What message does this send to the school children (one of whom, in fact, was the model for the primary image that sparked the mural controversy) and others in the area with darker skin pigmentation?
Because of pressure (i.e. outrage) from various groups and media outlets over the weekend, it was announced that the mural would not be lightened after all.
Did you get that? The picture actually reflected a real child. A living and breathing child. A child whose image has been called sp*c and n*gger for the past two months. What does that child do now? Now that he knows what his fellow community members and neighbors think about him?
Thank heavens the picture wasn’t lightened. But–what does a child who can never lighten himself enough to not “look ghetto” do?
What other violence will this child face because he is recognized as the N*ggerSp*c on the wall? Is being called a N*ggerSp*c the only form of violence there is? Is being intimidated by school official and community members a type of violence?
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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