10:35 am By Maegan La Mala · Education|Puerto Rico · Comments Off
13 Dec 2010This came through the Facebook this morning and I thought it important to hear from some of the students themselves regarding the recent actions at the University of Puerto Rico.
These words are born from times of great tension, times in which we face a specter of terrible acts of sanctioned violence made against any dissent, and of the dangerous aftermath that ensues. The University of Puerto Rico, alongside the project it boldly and proudly embodies, faces a tragic and needless end: one we truly struggle against. Our beloved university is in urgent need of care, of attention that can only be found in an unquestioning labor of love that we all embrace.
Conditional love is not true love and as such, it cannot impose itself upon a broken and battered student body. This is why we denounce all forms of violence, especially those threatening the very nature of a university’s spirit of true dialog-spaces promoting an open exchange of ideas. This exchange, a fundamentally ethical-political element, requires a degree of openness and respect towards differing and dissenting opinions which cannot exist in any coercive environment. In light of this, we condemn the police occupation of the campuses that make up the body of our university.
Our university is currently held hostage by an authoritarian and anti-intellectual faction who has transformed our campus into a battlefield where shells charged with fanatical rhetoric are recklessly fired with gleeful abandonment. We hereby wish to address this faction (embodied by our own administration) and call for an end to its antidemocratic ways. It is our belief that if such an administration were to truly and honestly care for our beloved university, it would openly join in the University’s communal dialogue for the purpose of achieving a fair solution to the current problems we are all facing.
In its open disregard and omission of our student body viewpoints, the administration is in clear violation of the Middle States Commission of Higher Education’s findings. It has refused to share governance, or any part of the decision-making process, with those who make up the university’s community; and has ignored, for example, the community’s clear rejection of administrative appointments, as well as dismissing any open dialogue or negotiation –vital to any democratic society- with these community members. Participation is fixed upon true and honest acts of openness, not through ratifying abstract certifications.
These violations have jeopardized our institution’s accreditation, plunging us into uncertainty and despair. Because of this, it is crucial that all of Puerto Rico understand a single, undeniable fact: this administration is heralding an end to our UPR through its stranglehold policies.
We therefore choose to raise our collective voice and denounce a lack of representation of the university’s community by the administration’s response to no one except the ruling political party; a party that has consistently attacked all institutions in this country. Alongside it’s political bedfellow, this administration has deceived our society and in doing so, has fostered hatred toward the country’s first and most prestigious university and its students.
The University of Puerto Rico, through its students, professors, and workers, forefronts the engine of change and modernization in this country. In the same way that the UPR would fail to exist without the country that birthed and strengthened it, Puerto Rico itself would not presently be what it is without its public university. During this modernization process, the UPR has cradled this country’s first and finest generation of professionals: workers, social workers, scientists, lawyers, engineers, architects, farmers, and countless others.
The UPR has consistently contributed to socio-cultural development through the arts and humanities, has collaborated in the fight against poverty from within classrooms and by community initiatives, and has directly influenced the livelihood of hundreds and thousands of men and women who have charted a course out of poverty through accessible education. For these reasons, and countless others, we are against our University’s shutdown.
There is no room for either strikes or administrative lockouts. It is time to defend our university’s “raison d’ être,” it’s very reason for being. Even in our recognition of the strike as a valuable and democratic tool for advancing just claims and demands, and as a reinforcement of the value of our rights, we also understand that our current political context renders such an exercise null and void, due precisely to this government’s ideological stubbornness alongside its anti-university stance. This current government seeks violence as a means of turning the UPR into a police state and, in so doing, eradicate our university’s undertaking. The administration wants and, indeed, needs the strike in order to ease this institutional closure and its eventual transformation while following a market plan: to educate those who can afford it and who will ultimately keep quiet.
It is impossible to speak of a university without considering its political and institutional aspects. The university does not, of course, exist within a vacuum; it is rather established through different and diverging power relations taking place within and around its social periphery. In some instances, such power relations contribute to the erosion of our university’s undertaking as an enabler of critical thinking and a fundamental pillar of socio-democratic development. In this we must remain adamant: so long as the UPR remains under paramilitary siege, there can be no talk of university.
Because of these facts, and as members of a complex community, we recognize our political role in the development of the University Project. Student knowledge is not gained merely by coming to class, nor can it be deposited into the mind. Whomsoever chooses to call him or herself a student must accept that knowledge depends on one’s own experiences, from testing acquired skills and challenging the lessons received. To contest such learning is, indeed, the basis of true knowledge. In the end, knowledge stems from what is questioned, not from what is blindly followed.
We fully support the efforts put forth by our Student Representative Committee, as well as those made by other members of the student body while serving as the university’s legislature. We call upon the remaining community and the country to uphold all genuine forms of dialogue aimed at keeping our University Project in motion. Likewise, and as active members of our university’s community, we support any and all initiatives to bring about the open debate of responsible fiscal solutions, such as the Adding Up We All Win’s proposal (Sumando ganamos todos)
We understand that the fiscal problems haunting the UPR are the byproduct of a poor administration. In order to dig the university out from the quicksand of economic deficit, it is vital that the government reassigns the funds that were taken out of the UPR’s budget, and that all sectors, in recognition of this labor of love and in lieu of its worth, contribute something extra to the institution’s reservoir. Students can, for example, agree to a substantially reduced quota while seeking out additional sources of funding as an aid to those unable to pay for themselves.
The UPR is wracked by a difficult fiscal and academic crisis, brought on by the current administration’s anti-intellectual behavior. It is up to us, through civil disobedience and in a declaration of what is just, to transform the political act of confrontation. Our actions must serve to unmask those lawless injustices and abuses perpetrated by the State, by university regulations, and by the impending fiscal and police-driven lock-down. We are committed to uphold this civic responsibility. We will use disobedience whenever the need to achieve our aims arises.
We are driven by our declaration of love. It is what unites us in an undying commitment to challenge injustice.
Download the original document in .pdf format here:http://www.scribd.com/doc/45173816/Proclamation-by-a-Group-of-Students-UPR
8:17 am By Maegan La Mala · Education|New York City|Puerto Rico · Comments Off
13 Dec 2010
Last week, we told you about the student strike in Puerto Rico. Things have gotten more tense with the police taking over campuses in the name of “order”.
Across the United States, Puerto Ricans have expressed their concern over the treatment of the students and over the lack of English language coverage. In Puerto Rico, this past weekend, there was a march in rally in support of the UPR, demanding that talks over the increase in fees, between the University Administration and the students, resume.
Tomorrow, Tuesday, there will be a rally in NYC in support of the people of the island and against the actions of the Puerto Rican colonial government.
The people of Puerto Rico are under siege by the Colonial Administration headed by governor Luis Fortuno. Join us in supporting the people as they struggle to safeguard the right of our youth to education in the University of Puerto Rico, protect public sector jobs and the services they provide. Join us in supporting those on the island who are standing up to defend their democratic and human rights and our culture. Join the National Congress for Puerto Rican Rights (NCPRR) N.Y.C. Chapter and support the people in struggle in Puerto Rico.
Support the People of Puerto Rico: Rally
Tuesday, December 14, 2010 – 5:30pm
Location:
Office of Puerto Rican Affairs, 135 W 50th St New York City
Contact:
panama.alba@gmail.com [2], 917 626 5847
TUESDAY DEC. 14th 5:30 p.m.
RALLY AT THE OFFICE OF PUERTO RICAN AFFAIRS
135 W 50th St New York City
#1 train to 50 St. (at Broadway); B, D, F, M to 47-50 St./Rockefeller Ctr.; N, R, Q to 49 St. (at 7th Av.); B, D, E to 7 Ave. (at 53rd St.); C (not A) to 50 St.(at 8th Av.);
map http://is.gd/iCV6M-/
9:50 am By Maegan La Mala · GLBT|military|Politics · Comments Off
10 Dec 2010In contrast to what happened in the Senate yesterday morning with the DREAM Act, the Senate failed to move to even discuss the repeal of the Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell (DADT) policy, which forces lgbtq members of the armed forces to serve in the closet or risk losing their position.
Via the Detroit News:
It failed in a 57-40 test vote, falling three votes short of the 60 needed to advance.
GOP senators mostly united in defeating the measure on procedural grounds, insisting that the Senate vote on tax cuts first. Maine Sen. Susan Collins was the only Republican to support moving to debate the bill.
11:53 am By Maegan La Mala · DREAM Act|Education|Immigration|military · 23 Comments
9 Dec 2010The procedures behind what went down in the Senate today around the DREAM Act is complicated and confusing. So I will try my best to explain what went down.
Senator Reid twice asked to vitiate the vote on cloture which means to set it aside. This was objected to, twice. So then Reid moved to table the vote, which means means killing the Senate version of the DREAM Act so that the House version, which passed last night, CAN be voted on later. This motion to table passed, 59-40. We are not sure when vote on the House version of DREAM in the Senate will happen. Most likely it will be next week.
All in all this gives DREAM a better chance in passing, especially when considering that there are Senators on the fence who do not want to be targeted and be in the spotlight twice. And obviously this gives advocates, activists, and you more time to call and ask that DREAM be supported.
10:50 am By Maegan La Mala · Immigration|New York|Secure Communities · 3 Comments
9 Dec 2010
While D.C. is focused on the DREAM, in NY today, eyes shift to a different but equally important immigration matter : the criminalization of migrants and the merging of local police with Federal enforcement efforts.
This morning, at the same time that a cloture vote on DREAM is expected in the Senate, there is going to be a rally in front of Governor Paterson’s Manhattan office today to demand rescission of New York’s agreement with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to bring a deportation program called “Secure Communities” to New York State.
With no public input, New York’s Division of Criminal Justice Services signed an agreement with ICE in May this year to bring Secure Communities to New York. Under the program, law enforcement agencies in the state are required to automatically forward to federal immigration databases the fingerprints of every arrested person. Undocumented immigrants, US citizens, and lawful permanent residents alike are subject to these database checks. Based on often unreliable and incomplete information, ICE then transfers people suspected of being deportable directly into the detention and deportation system, separating them from their families and communities.
Read more…
8:49 am By Maegan La Mala · DREAM Act|Education|Immigration|military|Politics · Comments Off
9 Dec 2010Last night’s House win on DREAM was only half the battle. Today the DREAM makes it to the Senate. According to D.C. sources, at around 11 am EST a motion to invoke cloture on the DREAM Act will be presented.
If you are making pro-DREAM calls this morning, you can call these lines to randomly route to key Senate targets:
English: 866-587-6101
Spanish: 866-956-3902some key targets to keep in mind are :
Senator McCaskill
Senator Landrieu
Senator Hagan
Senator Lugar
Senator Bennett
Senator Murkowski
Senator Voinovich
Senator Collins
Senator Snowe
Senator LeMieux
Senator Hutchison
General Senate lines you can also use:
English: 866-996-5161
Spanish: 866-961-4293
9:32 pm By Maegan La Mala · DREAM Act|Education|Immigration|military · 2 Comments
8 Dec 2010No really. The House of Representatives just passed the DREAM Act, Development, Relief, and Education for Alien Minors Act of 2010 (DREAM Act, H.R. 6497) with a 216 to 198 vote.
I caught the last few minutes of the C-Span live stream and my heart was racing watching the number slowly get to 210, the number needed to pass, then reach 216. And I won’t front. Mala cried. I cried holding close to my heart all the DREAM Activists that I have met, broken bread with, spoken with, shared wine with and become friends with. I think of the DREAMers who are no longer here and those to come.
But now pa’lante. Tomorrow the DREAM is up for a vote in the Senate.
Who ya gonna call? Check under the jump to find out
Read more…
9:45 am By Maegan La Mala · DREAM Act|Education|Immigration|military · Comments Off
8 Dec 2010I know many people, myself included, are watching closely to see what happens today with the DREAM Act. I have the privilege of watching as an observer, as someone who has legal status in the U.S., while many people I know are watching because their lives depend on it.
Just like when I covered the Townhall in Brooklyn earlier this fall, to some there seem to be splits/divisions within the DREAM movement. These lines are drawn around tactics, targets, and to some extent even the content of the DREAM Act itself.
I wanted to share this video that came way, showing a rally that took place in Oakland on December 3rd. The rally here clearly has undocumented youth supporting the DREAM Act but rejecting the military service portion. This has been one of the more controversial portions of the bill , especially for anti-war, anti-imperialist activists. Just like challenging politicians instead of playing nice does not mean non-support of the DREAM Act, challenging the military aspect, does not mean non-support of the DREAM Act.
Students rally for Dream Act from k9sound on Vimeo.
May all our DREAMs come true today.
Video Via : A Dream Deployed
7:44 am By Maegan La Mala · DREAM Act|Education|Immigration|military · 2 Comments
8 Dec 2010It is expected that today, both the House of Representatives and the Senate will vote on the DREAM Act. Most likely the vote will happen sometime in the early afternoon in the House first, followed by a vote in the Senate. But, of course, all is subject to change so please stay tuned.
It looks like every single vote is going to count, meaning calls to 1-866-587-3023 need to keep happening. Key Democrats in the house, whose votes on DREAM are not clear are :
Bean
Bright
Cooper
Costa
Dahlkemper
Davis (AL07)
DeFazio
Doggett
Donnelly
Higgins
Kirkpatrick
Lynch
Michaud
Perriello
Boucher
Marshall
Boccieri
Boyd
Chandler
Dingell
Ellsworth
Herseth Sandlin
Kaptur
Matheson
Mollohan
Peterson
3:36 pm By Maegan La Mala · Education|Puerto Rico · 3 Comments
7 Dec 2010I’ve been seeing from the statuses of some of my friends on Facebook, that the students of the University of Puerto Rico in Rio Piedras (UPR) have called a 48 hour strike which began approximately at midnight. The strike is over an increase in the amount per semester students have to pay back their loans.
As far as I can tell, there is no English language news coverage of what is happening including student barricades and what has been described as aggressive UPR security, private security brought likely hired by the University, and police. At least four students have been injured.
According to reports on Primera Hora, there are two factions of students : students who are against the fee and are for the strike, and students who are against the fee but want for the UPR to stay open.
The students of the Aguadilla Campus have approved a 48 hour strike and in Cayay, a 36 hour strike was approved in support and solidarity with the students in Rio Piedras.
Both Primera Hora and You Tube has videos that media and students themselves are taking.
You will remember that over the summer, strikes in Puerto Rico unleashed violence against the students by police.
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.
About | Advertise with us | Contact | Twitter