10:29 am By Maegan La Mala · DREAM Act|Immigration|New York City|Texas · 1 Comment
30 Nov 2010
It is still not clear when the DREAM Act will actually come to a vote on the Congressional/Senate floor but what is clear is that student and young activists across the country are on their game in terms of keeping the pressure on.
Some of the Texas DREAMers on hunger strike moved their protest inside the office of Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison, conducting a sit in that ended with 15 protesters getting arrested. Reports say that Hutchison did not want the protesters arrested but that the owner of the building where her office is did.
Hutchinson has said that she does not support the DREAM Act because she claims it goes beyond children who were brought to the U.S. as children.
8:26 am By Maegan La Mala · Media|media justice|radio|VivirLatino · 1 Comment
30 Nov 2010There is so much going on, between the DREAM Act, Wikileaks and well everything else in day to day life that I am going to try my best to catch everyone up. I will be stepping away from the computer today and onto the airwaves at about 11:30 am. EST
As part of the buildup for the Digital Diversity Summit I will be participating in this weekend, I will be on Kansas’s NPR affiliate KCUR’s Central Standard with the organizer of the summit, Simran Sethi, Associate Professor of Journalism at the University of Kansas.
Part of the discussion will be on the use of twitter and its applications in communities of color and the upcoming digital diversity summit developed by Prof. Sethi’s KU students and co-sponsored by UNITY.
I hope you can tune in. You can also follow discussions on Twitter by following the #digitaldiversity hashtag.
1:21 pm By Maegan La Mala · Blogs|I Am This Land|Linking Latinos|Media|media justice|VivirLatino · Comments Off
29 Nov 2010Cross-Posted with gracious permission with Breakthrough’s b-Listed site.
Breakthrough’s I AM LAND contest, now calling on people to make a video on diversity to celebrate our differences and win prizes, also wants to share the important work our partners are doing to uplift diversity. Read our first in the I AM THIS LAND interview series with Maegan la Mala Ortiz, Managing Editor and Co-Publisher of Vivirlatino, a daily publication, featuring news, analysis and opinions about Latino politics and culture created for the diverse and influential Latino and Latina community in the U.S. by Latinas.
b-listed: Why did you feel the need to start VivirLatino?
Maegan: Actually VivirLatino was started in 2005 by a company in Spain who wanted to break into the Latino market. The writers who were brought in as editors had already been writing on and off line about Latino issues. The editors became the owners a few years ago and we made a more concerted effort to represent who we represented: Latinas born and raised in the U.S. with strong ties to our home countries with a commitment to justice/love centered human rights who also participate/consume pop culture.
b-listed: How has the response been to your blog from within the Latino community?
Maegan: Pretty awesome. We have always received lots of support and love for keeping it real and honest and true. We also get props for being really independent. We aren’t funded by any organizations and our editors work from home while balancing paying jobs, kids, activism. Our growth and popularity has come from connecting the online work to on the ground work we are all involved in and supporting other such efforts. Criticisms and critiques include doing more stuff in Spanish/bilingually. Conservative Latinos aren’t likely to be fans of us as we are shamelessly progressive/radical.
b-listed: How can online media activism (through blogs, social networking sites and other forms of new media) improve relations between the different communities living in the country?
Maegan: The only way that online media activism can improve relations is if it is connected to real on the ground work. This isn’t a popular position to take, but VivirLatino has never existed to educate or organize people outside the Latino community. If non-Latinos get something out of it, beautiful and we welcome non-Latinos to read and engage but the Latino community is so huge, so diverse that we have so much work to do amongst ourselves (in terms of educating and organizing) and I think it is ok to say that. Where the interconnectivity comes in is that Latinos are more than just Latinos. We are parents, we are queer, we are women, we are workers, we are transgender, we are immigrants, we artists, we are undocumented, we are youth etc etc etc, so we need to support justice driven work for all those intersections and vice-versa. Coalitions, collaborations are beautiful and important things that must be used strategically.
b-listed: How do you think your work in the last five years has uplifted diversity?
Maegan: Just by being real. We have taken alot of heat for not following certain messaging but we have always been honest about who we are, what we experience in our communities and what people are telling us. Diversity has become such a buzzword almost to the point of meaninglessness. Diversity is not about holding hands to cover up difference. It is about acknowledging how difference works, good and bad and how we can build across not through or over difference.
b-listed: What has surprised you most since launching VivirLatino? Good or bad.
Maegan: Besides how much work it is? ja ja. I mean it is so much work. It’s not just writing blog posts or linking to other people. We try to collaborate with what activists are doing and really lend a critical perspective to the idea of “Latinidad.” Being independent is really really hard. It costs money and time and not wanting to compromise means turning away orgs, ads, and opportunities and it means we are really broke. But on the good side, there is a constant amazement of how many people read us and look to us and who we work and collaborate with. VivirLatino really is a few gatos doing this out of a huge sense of love and responsibility. In many ways it is an extension of selves and it sounds corny but when just one person sends us a letter or tells us in person how one post impacted them or made them think, that makes it all worth it.
b-listed: What do you hope for the future as we head into 2011.
Maegan: That we have enough money and time to keep doing what we love. That we see some movement towards justice for our communities including immigrants, queer people, women, mamis, parents…, that we can all find safety in our chosen communities/families and to paraphrase the Young Lords, that each generation keep moving the struggle(s) forward.
b-listed: Complete the sentence: I AM THIS LAND because…
Maegan: I AM THIS LAND because la historia me trajo aqui a traves de de genes, sangre, y lucha /history brought me here through genes, blood, and struggle.
Enter your video on diversity to win at I AM THIS LAND.
8:45 am By Maegan La Mala · DREAM Act|Immigration · 3 Comments
29 Nov 2010This week something will happen with the DREAM Act and hopefully that something will be passage. It is expected that the DREAM Act, which would help many undocumented young people access legal status in he U.S., will come up for a vote as a stand-alone bill this week. VivirLatino will try and do it’s best to cover events in DC and around the country as they happen.
In the meantime, have you called your senator and congressperson?
How to call congress:
1. Dial the switchboard 1-866-967-6018
2. Ask operator for a member from the target list:
Senate Democrats:
Conrad (ND)
Dorgan (ND)
McCaskill (MO)
Webb (VA)
Warner (VA)
Landrieu (LA)
Pryor (AR)
Tester (MT)
Murkowski (AK)
Hagan (NC)
Senate Republicans:
Hutchison (TX)
Brownback (KS)
Kirk (IL)
Bennett (UT)
Voinovich (OH)
Snowe (ME)
Collins (ME)
Lemieux (FL)
Lugar (IN)
Bunning (KY)
Representatives:
Kirkpatrick (AZ) or Berry (AR) or Ross (AR) or Cardoza (CA) or Dreier (CA) or Costa (CA) or Klein (FL) or Kosmas (FL) or Putnam (FL) or Barrow (GA) or Marshall (GA) or Bishop (GA) or Scott (GA) or Bean (IL) or Halvorson (IL) or Hill (IN) or Visclosky (IN) or Chandler (KY) or Michaud (ME) or Kratovil (MD) or Dingell (MI) or Schauer (MI) or Kildee (MI) or Peters (MI) or McCollum (MN) or Oberstar (MN) or Peterson (MN) or Walz (MN) or Adler (NJ) or Murphy (NY) or Slaughter (NY) or Arcuri (NY) or Higgins (NY) or Hall (NY) or Lee (NY) or Owens (NY) or Kissell (NC) or Boccieri (OH) or Wilson (OH) or Holden (PA) or Dahlkemper (PA) or Gordon (TN) or Tanner (TN) or Cooper (TN) or Boucher (VA) or Nye (VA)3. When receptionist picks up leave a message urging the member to vote yes on DREAM.
Via / DREAMActivist
Video Via / Cuéntame
1:20 pm By Maegan La Mala · holidays · 4 Comments
26 Nov 2010I have never participated the ritual of Black Friday, standing on line in the middle of the night after Thanksgiving so I could snag a bargain at 4 am (now midnight in the mall close to Casa Mala). Before it was about anti-consumerism, it was about the fact that my mom, a single mother and a retail worker, had to be the one opening the store pre-dawn, and ringing people up. She did that today.
Do you have alternatives to Black Friday? There is Buy Nothing Day and now Storycorp wants to initiate another alternative.
Storycorps is encouraging switching Black Friday with National Day of Listening. This can mean sitting down with a family member or other loved one to find out about family and personal histories. You can even document it and make it part of legacy.
For some today is a day of rest, a time to gather together and pause to recognize the blessings. For others, today is a day to remember, mourn, and recognize that the path to justice is a long one.
For some it’s just about eating and football.
Some have to work to serve others today.
Regardless of how you are spending today, VivirLatino wants to send all positive wishes and gratitude for reading and sharing your ideas.
2:56 pm By Maegan La Mala · DREAM Act|Immigration|New York City|Politics|Secure Communities · 11 Comments
24 Nov 2010
Declaimer/Disclosure : I know organizers from NYSYLC and from MRNY. This is not personal. I am not representing either org nor endorsing or denouncing either org but rather stating my opinion on what I witnessed and based on my own years as a grassroots organizer outside of the non-profit realm.
This past Sunday NYC Council Woman Melissa Mark-Viverito, Rep. Luis Gutierrez, Rep. Nydia Velázquez and other New York City area politicians and heads of non-profit organizations including Make the Road NY and the NY Immigration Coalition, held a townhall meeting in the basement of St. Brigid’s Church in Brooklyn on the next decisive steps the pro-migrant community needs to take. Yours truly was there. The message was meant to be a threefold one.
1: Work on getting the DREAM Act passed
2: Stop the Deportations and Push Obama on signing a moratorium
3: Stop the criminalization of immigrants by getting ICE out of Riker’s Island (NYC’s main municipal detention facility) and getting NYC out of Secure Communities.
Every single politician mentioned the DREAM Act: NYC Councilwoman Christine Quinn, NYC comptroller John Liu, Congress people Nydia Velasquez and Luis Gutierrez. The organizational representatives mentioned it. But to be completely honest with you, the importance of passing it in this session of Congress was not the main focus. It seemed like an add-on that was important as a talking point but I sure wasn’t convinced of it’s centering.
11:27 am By Maegan La Mala · Food|Immigration|Violence|Women · 2 Comments
24 Nov 2010I don’t really celebrate Thanksgiving but many families across the United States will take advantage of deserved days off from work and gather together around tables to give thanks and to break bread. But that turkey (or pernil), how did it get to your kitchen and your table?
A report released by the Southern Poverty Law Center attempts to answer that question.
Farmworkers
* There are an estimated 3 million migrant and seasonal farmworkers employed in the United States.4 The federal government estimates that 60 percent of farmworkers are undocumented immigrants; farmworker advocates say the percentage is far higher.
* The National Agricultural Workers Survey (NAWS) published by the Department of Labor reports that about 22% of the farmworker population is female. Thus, there are an estimated 630,000 women engaged in farm work in the United States.5
* The average personal income of female crop workers is $11,250, compared to $16,250 for male crop workers.6
* A mere 8 percent of farmworkers report being covered by employer-provided health insurance, a rate that dropped to 5 percent for farmworkers who are employed seasonally and not year-round.7
* According to the U.S. Department of Labor, farmworkers suffer from higher rates of toxic chemical injuries and skin disorders than any other workers in the country.8 The children of migrant farmworkers, also, have higher rates of pesticide exposure than the general public.9
* Each year, there are an estimated 10,000 to 20,000 cases of physician-diagnosed pesticide poisoning among U.S. farmworkers, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.10
* Farmworkers are not covered by workers’ compensation laws in many states. They are not entitled to overtime pay under federal law. On smaller farms and in short harvest seasons, they are not entitled to the federal minimum wage.11 They are excluded from many state health and safety laws.12
* Because of special exemptions for agriculture, children as young as 10 may work in the fields. Also, many states exempt farmworker children from compulsory education laws.Poultry Workers
* Almost a quarter of the workers who butcher and process meat, poultry and fish are undocumented.13
* At least half of the 250,00014 laborers in 174 of the major U.S. chicken factories are Latino and more than half are women.15
* Working in a chicken factory is one of the most dangerous occupations in America. Line workers endure a frigid and wet work environment, without adequate bathroom breaks, while being exposed to numerous hazards handling chicken on hangers that whiz by a rate of hundreds per minute. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration has not enacted any regulation to limit the speed at which poultry and meat processing lines operate — despite the appallingly high rates of injury directly attributable to the line speed. In the decade ending in 2008, 100 poultry workers died in the U.S., and 300,000 were injured, many suffering the loss of a limb or debilitating repetitive motion injuries.16
* The U.S. Department of Labor surveyed 51 poultry processing plants and found 100% had violated labor laws by not paying employees for all hours worked. Also, one-third took impermissible deductions from workers’ pay.17
9:10 am By Maegan La Mala · Immigration|Violence|Women · 21 Comments
24 Nov 2010Earlier this month, la Macha brought to our attention Maria Bolaños and how her reaching out for police assistance in a domestic violence situation resulted in having the “justice” system turning against her.
Last Christmas Eve, Maria Bolaños made a decision she would later regret: During a fight with her partner, she called the Prince George’s County police and sought their protection.
The call for help had disastrous consequences for Bolaños, a 28-year-old undocumented immigrant from El Salvador. Within months, she found herself ensnared in an increasingly controversial immigration enforcement program designed to deport undocumented criminals.
Bolaños now faces deportation and possible separation from her 21-month-old daughter, who was born here and is a U.S. citizen
This double injustice aroused bravery in Bolaños when she confronted David Venturella, director of the immigration enforcement program, “Secure Communities, at a forum last week.
11:10 am By Maegan La Mala · Music · 7 Comments
23 Nov 2010
Calle 13 has done it again, with the release of their 4th album, ‘Entren Los Que Quieran’, their last album with Sony as they remind us in the variety show themed intro, the dangerous duo bring their tongue in cheek , raw rhymes.
From the Intro:
“Directly from Puerto Rico, the most important colony in the word and the only place where the people pay more attention to Miss Universe than to education…”
At this point, most fans and others have already heard and seen “Calma Pueblo” but if you haven’t, it’s a loud strong reassurance that Residente and Visitante haven’t sold out but that they are the lyricists of the barrios.
If anyone thinks that (slightly) politicized lyrics aren’t worthy of culo shaking then I invite you to listen to El Baile de los Pobres which talks about some of differences between the rich and poor, needing to dance not among them. Here is where some of my criticisms of Calle 13 do come out though as the boys rely on many machista mentions of nalgas pero that said I had to crack up at the dirtiness/hillariousness of some of the lyrics (yes even with sexism). Check this line :
” I heard you were the Queen of all the Rosales but today I am going to lower you four social classes”
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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