12:32 pm By Maegan La Mala · Immigration|Justice|Latina Week of Action for Reproductive Justice|Women · 1 Comment
9 Aug 2010
It wouldn’t be a week of action if all we did was blog and ask you to read.
One of the actions that the National Latina Institute for Reproductive Health is asking peeps to participate in is signing onto a petition demanding affordable and accessible birth control for Latinas.
Often the issue of reproductive rights is seen strictly as an abortion access issue, when for so many mujeres in our comunidades, the issue comes way before there is a pregnancy. Choice needs to be framed into real options over how Latinas prevent pregnancy. This means dealing with economic barriers as well as barriers put into place because it is assumed that Latinas are not smart enough to make decisions about their own bodies. Just think about the current debate regarding immigrant women. Latina fertility is seen as dangerous and threatening, so it makes sense that the next step would be control Latina fertility.
All women need affordable access to birth control services, supplies and visits. However, barriers to low-cost or no-cost contraception are still an unjust reality. This results in many Latinas having to struggle to afford birth control or expensive insurance copayments for birth control.
Urge your representative to ask the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to support comprehensive family planning services that include contraception as a key women’s health service under the Women’s Health Amendment.
6:59 am By Maegan La Mala · children|Family|GLBT|Health|Immigration|Justice|Latin America|Latina Week of Action for Reproductive Justice|sex|sexuality|Women · 3 Comments
9 Aug 2010
We are proud and honored to participate in the National Latina Institute for Reproductive Health‘s first annual Latina Week of Action for Reproductive Justice. Everyday this week, we will feature a post relating to Latinas and reproductive justice and invite you to discuss with us and with each other what reproductive justice looks like for nuestra comunidad.
All of our posts and the posts of others will be linked to the Latina Institute’s blog, Nuestra Vida, Nuestra Voice> (Our Life, Our Voice). We invite our readers to visit that site as well to further the conversation.
8:37 am By la Macha · Immigration · 1 Comment
8 Aug 2010This link is making its way around facebook and twitter–it’s so good, I don’t want to excerpt anything but the opening paragraph here. Click over and read the whole thing, you’ll be so inspired!
21 immigrant youth are holding sit-ins in congressional offices on Capitol Hill, risking arrest and deportation in order to draw attention to the DREAM Act, which would grant them a path to citizenship. These are their dreams- dreams that to them are well worth the risk.
6:58 am By Maegan La Mala · Events|Immigration|Netroots Nation · Comments Off
6 Aug 2010It’s easy to follow the news cycle and react and move and critique and move from conference to conference without a breath. Throw in taking care of two kids and work that pays and there is even less a chance that you will stop, step back and rest.
Consider this post my breathing room.
1: First, good news for Marlen Moreno and her familia. It looks like her deportation has been temporarily put off. Thanks to all who sent faxes and emails and made calls to help a mami stay stay with her familia.
2: Remember Netroots Nation? I won the 2010 Credo Mobile Blogger Award thanks to people texting. This means I won a smart phone and a year’s service. This is a huge deal to me, who was running round with a prepaid that I had to watch every minute on and that got text messages 24 hours after they were sent. Now I can livetweet, take more pictures etc for the site. And I have to say that the peeps at Credo Mobile were so nice and sweet in helping me set up my phone today. One of the best customer service experiences ever!
3: From one conference to another. Mil gracias to the Latinos in Social Media crew for hooking Mala up with a scholarship so that I can attend the BlogHer 2010 conference. I was invited to speak last year at BlogHer but had no way of affording the travel expense. This year the conference is just a metrocard swipe away. I have my apprehensions. I’m not gonna front. Pero at the very least I will meet some people and check the scene out for myself. So stay tuned here and on the VivirLatino twitter account for updates today and tomorrow.
Feliz viernes and don’t forget to take a deep breath.
11:14 am By Maegan La Mala · Immigration|Women · 11 Comments
5 Aug 2010I touched upon some of my own personal issues with birthright citizenship, and how from a colonial perspective it’s complicated but today I wanted to post this clip and look at how so many white men are discussing the GOP calls to take back the 14th amendment and how women of color, women like me and so many of my hermanas and vecinas, are being talked about instead of talked with or listened to. How our wombs are worded as weapons of mass destruction and our beautiful babies as objects stuck into the earth to keep us here. This dehumanization of some Latina mujeres cuerpos (because let’s keep it real, not all mujer Latina cuerpos can/will have babies pero they still are mujer Latina bodies) and the life that comes from those bodies is what allows hate crimes to go unpunished, what allows the separation of mother from child to be ok, and what allows violence against immigrant mujeres to be ignored.
Even in this space, haters have come and sought information about my and my children, calling them anchor babies. And the point is not what their status is or what my status is (although I have been clear about that) but that this comes down to where ethnicity and gender meet. That now Latina mujer = anchor baby factory.
What I worry about, as this rhetoric keeps building, is what about the babies, the children. How can we guarantee their safety? We have already seen that they don’t care about our hijos.
| The Daily Show With Jon Stewart | Mon – Thurs 11p / 10c | |||
| Born in the U.S.A. | ||||
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7:30 am By Maegan La Mala · GLBT|Immigration|Justice|New York City|Violence · Comments Off
5 Aug 2010Today in Brooklyn Criminal Court, the family of Jose Sucuzhanay awaits the sentencing of the two men convicted of killing the Ecuadorian businessman, brother, and son in a hateful attack.
I wanted to highlight this this morning and bring all of your thoughts to the Sucuzhanay for two reasons apart from the horrible injustice that no court will ever be able to fix. First, the sentencing is happening while New York City finds itself smack in the middle of another wave of anti-Latino/anti-Mexican hate crimes. Certainly, people will be looking to this verdict as a sign of what the NY justice system values the lives of Latinos at. However this is also dangerous, as the NY justice system is the same that incarcerates both Latinos and African-Americans at record numbers. Having working with families who have lost their children to hate crimes and racial violence, I understand the desire and want for the loss of life to come at some cost, for equal protection under the law to really work for once. But I also know that no time behind bars will bring back the Jose’s of the world.
2:04 pm By la Macha · Arts|Music · 11 Comments
4 Aug 2010As most of you know by now there’s been boycotts of Arizona in the works ever since SB 1070 was signed into law. Artists in particular have led the way calling for an enforcement of the boycott from other artists.
Well thank The LORD Lady Gaga had something to say about calls for boycotts:
If you can’t see the video, she basically does some sorta mumbly thing about how she won’t endorse the boycott, that she will not cancel her show because she’s going to protest instead. Um. Yeah. Cuz, yano, canceling your show isn’t *protesting* when it’s a part of a movement by artists to boycott the state. It’s….Hm. What is it?
Anyway. I guess it’s good that she felt the need to explain herself. Which means that there was a significant amount of pressure put on her. I wonder if I should be keeping a look out for her louder screaming, though? What do you think? Will this be last we hear of Ms. Gaga on immigration?
10:21 am By Maegan La Mala · children|Immigration|israel|Labor|language · 1 Comment
4 Aug 2010The relationship between the U.S. and Israel is now extending to immigrant policy. Last weekend, Israel moved to deport the children of migrant workers, children born and Israel and children who do not know their parents’ country of origin. Peep the rhetoric coming from the Prime Minister and see if you can make the connection.
“Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the move was made because the country faced increasing illegal migration, which was a threat to its Jewish character,” the BBC reported. Netanyahu also implied that the children were a drain on state-funded education and health care benefits, according to the Los Angeles Times. For years, the country encouraged foreign workers to cross its borders and take the low-paying jobs that Israelis wouldn’t do. Now that the government is looking to reduce its dependence on foreign labor, Israel is kicking out those workers who came to the country legally—and the families they’ve been raising. “It’s unfair and unjust,” said one parent of the deportation plan. “These children are born here and speak the language. Israel should recognize their birthright.”
8:21 am By Maegan La Mala · arizona|Immigration · 1 Comment
4 Aug 2010A favorite line of many anti-immigrant peeps : “if you don’t like it, just pack up and leave” may have to be revisited, because it seems like the U.S government isn’t even about to let immigrants return home easily.
Bonnie Arellano, a spokeswoman for U.S. Customs and Border Protection, said that when illegal immigrants are detected trying to leave the country, they are not just ushered across the line. Instead, they are processed and formally removed.
The consequences of an arrest can be harsh: Those deported for unauthorized presence in the U.S. may be barred for 10 years from seeking legal immigrant papers. In addition, a later arrest for illegal entry may be prosecuted criminally.
6:44 pm By la Macha · Immigration · 13 Comments
3 Aug 2010From truthout comes this really important article about immigration, detention and who is profiting from the business of anti-immigration:
Pedro’s mother arrived in the United States from Guatemala with her young son in tow in 1988, seeking asylum she was never granted from the turbulent political situation following the overthrow of the country’s president in 1982.
According to Emily, Pedro’s mother’s “memory is not great,” which proved to be a serious problem when she was called into immigration services for a permanent residency interview. Her responses led to the denial of her request for permanent residence. Because he entered the country with her, Pedro’s immigration status was connected with hers, and he was sent a notice to appear in court.
However, as Emily and Pedro’s attorney, Glenn Fogle, confirmed, the letter was sent to the wrong address. Yet, Pedro’s failure to appear at the court date resulted in the issuance of an order of deportation. The order came to the correct address, and on Monday, September 28, 2009, two black SUVs pulled up to the couple’s home in Durham, North Carolina.
Two men handcuffed Pedro and, after allowing Logan to kiss his father goodbye, took Pedro to the first of three jails or detention centers in which he has lived over the past ten months. Immigration authorities have since admitted their initial mistake in sending information to the wrong address and stayed his deportation. Due to entering the detention center with two marijuana convictions, Pedro was not eligible for bail, but after one misdemeanor charge was dropped, the BIA recommended that Pedro be released on bail.
Meanwhile, his immigration judge, a notoriously tough one with an asylum case denial rate of 87 percent, has rejected Pedro’s pleas for bond and residency under an asylum program known as the Nicaraguan Adjustment and Central American Relief Act (NACARA), under which two of Pedro’s siblings have gained residency. Pedro is now appealing with the BIA for both these issues, continuing to fight his case from the inside.
You should definitely read the whole thing–but I wanted to highlight this particular section of the post because it brings up something that’s been coming up in comments quite a bit lately. The idea of human rights and the role human rights–or, basic human compassion for another human being–has in working through immigration as a violent systematic structure that controls the flow of workers throughout the world.
Is there a place for human compassion and human right in the immigration debate? Is there a place to say–I feel for Pedro as a human being and I don’t want him or his family to suffer in this manner over an unjust law? I think the way the debate is run today, the answer would be no. Fox news, Michelle Malkin, Lou Dobbs–all of the people of that ilk, have made it a sign of weakness, of shame, something to mock, for caring about other human beings who are hurting. And of course, all of the reasoning on why we shouldn’t care about other human beings carry very strong undertones of anti-gay hysteria and nationalism (Oh, wah wah, bleeding heart pussy liberal! Love your country before any human! Weak response! We don’t want to be weak! We want to be manly strong men!).
The response to “being weak” from those on the left has been to get very logical. The law says XYZ! Let’s talk about Title 208 first paragraph from the end! etc. But I have to wonder why pointing to stories like the one MLK told in his final speech about the injured man–the one that Jesus said, “it’s not a question of what will happen to me if I stop to help him–but what will happen to him if I *don’t*?”–are not considered adequate responses any more.
Why is operating from a place of compassion (in many cases based on the very word of the very Bible that hardliners like to thump at us) considered taboo, and a bad thing? An unproductive way of dealing with the question of immigration?
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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