1:26 pm By Maegan La Mala · Chile · 2 Comments
10 Nov 2010This weekend the mainstream media in the U.S. was enamored with Edison Peña, the 12th miner to be rescued after being trapped in a mine in the Atacama Desert of Chile for 69 days. There were stories on how Peña wasn’t all that impressed with the Statue of Liberty or hot dogs in NYC (I have to agree that Chilean completos are better). TMZ attempted to ask Peña about conditions in the mine in broken Spanish and Peña happily belted out his best Elvis impression on Late Night with David Letterman. Parts of my own family braved the NYC cold on Sunday in the hopes of catching Peña finish the NYC marathon in a little over 5 hours.
Hell, as the parents of two ChileRicans, I don’t want to deny a miner his time in the spotlight but I am concerned with how the celeb spotlight blinds how in Chile conditions for the not Edison Peñas continue to be dangerous and deadly.
Via Reuters :
Two men died after an explosion at a small mine in the Chilean desert, local authorities said on Monday, near the site were 33 miners were pulled from the depths in a months-long rescue that attracted world attention.
The National Emergency Office said the men died after an explosion triggered a cave-in at the mine, located about 40 miles east of the city of Copiapo.
Five other men were able to escape the explosion with one of them later hospitalized for injuries.
Looks like Chilean President Sebastián Piñera wasn’t able to keep his promise of never again.
10:38 am By Maegan La Mala · DREAM Act|Immigration|Politics · 18 Comments
10 Nov 2010Organizations and the mass media are still buzzing about the Latino vote in the midterm elections, happy that in some races, Latinos seemingly stepped up and kept the Senate Democrat (even if by a tiny thread). Especially thankful is Nevada Democratic Senator Harry Reid, who promised, during his campaign, that if reelected the DREAM Act would be brought back to the Senate floor.
In September, a vote prevented the DREAM Act (and repeal of Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell) from being attached to a military spending bill.
Next week, the Senate will reconvene and everyone is wondering if Harry Reid will stick to his word and how. DREAM could be attached to the Defense Authorization bill, though that seems like an untenable option based on what happened in September and from scanning the preemptive work being done to keep DADT off that bill. DREAM could be attached to another bill or presented as a stand alone.
What also is not clear, is what is the organizational commitment behind getting DREAM passed this year. When it became clear that there would be no CIR bill, most pro-migrant orgs put their weight behind DREAM as a first step towards wider immigration reform. It’s not clear how much of a game changer the midterms were for the orgs as well.
Meanwhile the DREAMers are prepping to be in D.C. next week and putting pressure on from all over the U.S. to keep the DREAM alive.
8:19 am By Maegan La Mala · Immigration|Media|radio|Sports · Comments Off
10 Nov 2010This past weekend I came across an article on AlterNet about how immigrants in sports are turned into national heroes in the United States, while public policy and public practice immigrants, especially Latino immigrants are vilified.
The article places the dichotomy in the context of the last World Series.
The symbolism of delivering a crushing defeat to the Rangers, with Bush Jr. slumped in the front row with his chin in his fist, inspired legions of San Franciscans. At the ceremony awarding the Giants the key to the city, Republican Governor Schwarzenegger spoke over hundreds of thousands of people booing for the duration of his remarks. When the moderate mayor spoke, the crowd cheered initially, but the booing far outlasted the cheers.
In the midst of all the vocal opposition to the right, there was one thing that almost no one was talking about: how much people categorized as immigrants had contributed to the unprecedented success. The players and coaches we showered with cheers and ticker tape hail from Venezuela, Puerto Rico, Dominican Republic, Colombia, Curaçao, France, Panama. Their families came from the Philippines, Mexico and Japan.
The omission was perhaps most stark when a bouncy television reporter from ABC picked out a fan in the barricaded crowd for a sound bite. The first person she spoke with didn’t want to reply — he said he didn’t speak English. She quickly moved on to another fan, evading the obvious: that San Francisco is immigrants and families of immigrants, just like the rest of the state and much of the nation.
2:53 pm By Maegan La Mala · VivirLatino · 2 Comments
8 Nov 2010We’ve extended our fund drive, seeking donations with the goal of moving to a more reliable hosting service with better customer service so that we can continue to do what we love, that is connect you with some of the best in independent Latino political and cultural commentary from a mujer-centric, progressive to radical perspective.
Just earlier today, I wrote how it’s those big bucks business model media makers who are given the attention and get all the credit. I know from my years at working here at VivirLatino, that being true to who you are, what your values are, and the communities you represent is what earns respect, and more importantly helps to create the space for growth.
Please consider a small donation to make our server migration possible so that we can continue to grow help to build towards a more just and love centered mundo for us all.
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11:51 am By Maegan La Mala · Immigration|Iowa|Politics · 1 Comment
8 Nov 2010You would think that given how much lip service is being paid to the issues of the economy and employment by the right, that the the GOP run Congress, fresh from victory, would be anxious to get their hands busy around those themes. But no. Instead, Republican Congressman from Iowa, Steve King is getting ready to attack the root of all these issues……Anchor babies!
Yes they are back, those deceptively cute children on the undocumented who want nothing more than to fuck up your life.
In all seriousness, Steve King, using real colonial, border heavy language that dehumanizes not just the children of immigrants, but by default immigrant mothers, has come out of the gate making ending birthright citizenship at the very least a talking point, at the very worst, a legislative priority.
From The Hill :
“I think we are at least in the House,” King told the conservative website Newsmax when asked if the new Congress would pass legislation to address so-called “anchor babies.”
“I think it’s time to put a marker down,” King said, acknowledging the difficulty of passing such legislation in the Senate, and getting President Obama to sign it. “And I think we will have the votes in the House to put an end to the anchor babies in this country.”
Newsweek, a corporate media giant, decides in it’s latest issue to go the route of the expected and link money with media power with it’s The Power 50 list, a listing of the most influential, meaning wealthy, players in the mainstream media today.
As if having Rush Limbaugh as number one and on the cover weren’t scary and problematic enough, the lack of people of color overall, and women of color specifically points to how little value “the news” places on our realities and our ability to relate them. If we don’t have the cash, in the eyes of the power that be, we don’t have a voice. I was especially thinking about this in terms of so-called independent media, organizations with non-profit status, and how many of them do (or don’t) prominently feature the work and words of women of color.
The Latinos that were mentioned on the Power 50 list were both males. From Hispanically Speaking News :
With a whooping $4 million of approximate earnings last year, leading newsman at Univision Jorge Ramos, who reaches more than 45 million Hispanic Americans daily, tied at position nineteen with talk show host Bill Maher, and—wait for it—The president of the nation, Barack Obama! Ramos, likely earns six figures for his syndicated weekly column (published by more than 30 newspapers), has published 10 books in 10 years, and officially, has become the most influential Latino.
The other Latino on the list, is rumored to have made one million dollars last year. He hosts the most listened to radio show in the United States “Piolín por la Mañana,” and it’s quite likely that if Eduardo Sotelo doesn’t ring a bell, it’s because he does all his influencing through his pseudonym, “Piolín.” A Univision representative suggested Eduardo Sotelo “uses this platform to ensure Hispanics are well informed and empowered to have their voices heard through their civic participation.”
7:29 am By Maegan La Mala · Immigration · 2 Comments
8 Nov 2010
It was two years ago today, November 8th, 2008 when Ecuadorian immigrant Marcelo Lucero was murdered because of who he was and what that represented. Marcelo Lucero, a son, a brother was what many of us are, what many of our vecinos are, regular people trying to get by in this world. But for some young men of Patchogue, Long Island, Marcelo represented that promise that the new President-elect Obama spoke about. Marcelo represented the shifting demographic of their town, their state, and in essence the whole country.
Two years later what has changed?
The seven teenagers who attacked Lucero have all been sentenced. The Lucero familia tries to move on without their hermano, working on anti-hate projects. There will be a scholarship fund in Marcelo’s name.
Two years later, there has been backwards progress on immigration reform. Instead of a president and his party keeping their promises, they have increased the deportation and detention of the undocumented. It is doubtful if any undocumented youth would be able to take advantage of that scholarship fund set up in Marcelo Lucero’s name as the DREAM Act did not pass and it’s future is uncertain. Hate crimes against Latinos, immigrant or not, continue to rise as we do not and should not be required to carry our papers on our foreheads or on our bodies as SB1070 in Arizona in full effect demands.
With everyone praising the power of the Latino vote in the aftermath/afterglow of the midterm elections, there is increased noise about anchor babies and amnesty.
In el nombre de Marcelo what have you done?
What will you commit to do?
10:30 am By Maegan La Mala · Immigration|Secure Communities · 11 Comments
5 Nov 2010One of the most dangerous immigration enforcement programs in the United States is the Secure Communities program. It is dangerous because of its rapid spreading across the country like a virus. It is dangerous because it was expanded under an administration that promised Latino voters change and keeps promising while increasing detentions and deportations. It is dangerous because the master plan is to implement it throughout the country. It is dangerous because the U.S is hiding information and spreading disinformation.
Because of this, late last month, the National Day Laborer Organization Network (NDLON), the Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR) and the Kathryn O. Greenberg Immigration Justice Clinic of Cardozo Law filed an injunction in federal court to require the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency to turn over critical documents on the ability for communities to opt-out of the “Secure Communities”.
From the press release announcing the legal action :
So far, at least, San Francisco and Santa Clara, California, and Arlington, Virginia, have formally requested to opt-out of S-Comm. The emergency injunction is being filed before those municipalities who have voted to opt-out are scheduled to meet with ICE in early November. The lack of information and mixed messages from the agency, however, is causing confusion, leaving local law enforcement frustrated about an issue that groups say is undermining community safety. The injunction specifically seeks to prevent ICE from withholding documents on the “opt-out” policy to allow local communities to have the information necessary to make determination regarding the S-Comm program. The documents requested should have already been turned over Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) law suit filed last April, which ICE has only partially complied with.
According to advocates who have reviewed the initial S-Comm documents from the FOIA case, they reveal a pattern of dishonesty. Information about the nascent program has been scarce, and the development of operational details has been shrouded in secrecy. S-Comm, which currently operates in approximately 600 jurisdictions across the country, functions like the controversial 287(g) program and Arizona’s SB1070, making state and local police central to the enforcement of federal immigration law. The program automatically runs fingerprints through immigration databases for all people arrested and targets them for detention and deportation even if their criminal charges are minor, eventually dismissed, or the result of an unlawful arrest.
11:47 am By Maegan La Mala · economy|Education|Immigration|New York City|youth · 16 Comments
4 Nov 2010According to a report (PDF) by the Community Service Society of NY (full disclosure, I once worked for CSS), the future of NYC is Latino. Hispanics are the second-largest racial/ethnic group in New York City. With 2,290,007 individuals, they make up 27.6 percent of the entire city population, second behind whites, who are the largest racial group at 35.6 percent. Most of the young Latinos in the Big Apple speak English well or very well. however for some of those Latinos, the future looks bleak.
* A greater percentage of Latino youth live in poor and near-poor households than any other racial group. Fifty-six percent of Latino young people live in households with incomes less than 200 percent of the Federal Poverty Level (FPL).
Interestingly enough, according to the report, it is not the immigrant Latinos that are struggling the most. It is Puerto Rican young people.
Roughly 17 percent of young Puerto Rican men were not in school, employed or looking for work, compared with 9 percent of Dominicans and 8 percent of Mexicans. Of those Latinos born in the United States, only 55 percent of Puerto Rican youth were enrolled in school, compared with 68 percent of Dominicans and 67 percent of Mexicans. Regardless of birthplace, about 33 percent of Puerto Rican families lived below the poverty line, compared with 29 percent of Dominicans and 27 percent of Mexicans
9:30 am By Maegan La Mala · arizona|Con la Vista al Voto|Immigration|Midterm Elections 2010|Politics · 8 Comments
4 Nov 2010Continuing our look at the results of the midterm election, we would be remiss if we didn’t look at Arizona, especially as the media runs wild with the story about the Latino electorate saving the West (mainly Harry Reid). Nowhere was Democratic failure more apparent than in the Show Me Your Papers State, where anti-migrant candidates cleaned up at the polls. But before you blame the Latino vote or lack thereof, Latinos did indeed represent at the polls.
According to a poll done by Latino Decisions and co-sponsored by National Council of La Raza, SEIU, and America’s Voice, the issue of immigration was incredibly important to the Latino voters of Arizona, no doubt because they are being threatened with the anti-Latino/anti-migrant policies of the state.
In Arizona, immigration (45%) polled ahead of jobs and the economy together (41%) in terms of issues that voters want policymakers to address. In Arizona, 40% said immigration was the single most important issue in their voting decisions.
Jan Brewer turned from the Governor select to the Governor elect but not because Latinos bought her cries of “I’m not a racist”.
85 percent of Latino voters chose Terry Goddard over Brewer, with Latinos making up 14% of the voters.
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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