10:30 am By Maegan La Mala · chicago|DREAM Act|Immigration|youth · 12 Comments
7 Dec 2010
As expected, yesterday Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid filed cloture on the DREAM Act, moving things along for a vote tomorrow.
Today across the country there are actions in support of the DREAM Act. In Chicago, today’s action focuses on the psychological impact that being undocumented often has on young people following the suicide of a young DREAMer.
A DREAM DEFERRED A LIFE DENIED
Undocumented youth talk about suicide, mental health and the DREAM Act, in memory of those who took their lives because their dreams and futures were denied.Tuesday, December 07, 2010
12:00 PM, Federal PlazaFrom Reyna Wences, Immigrant Youth Justice League
“I graduated in June of 2009, a day after my graduation I attempted suicide because I was tired, because I did not want to tell my mom we’d have to pay for my education out of our own pocket. And when schools gave me scholarships I didn’t want to put her through the pain of telling me that we still couldn’t afford it. That’s when a funeral started to look less expensive than 4-years of education at the school of my choice. I’ve decided to come out about this because every day that passes by without addressing this is another day another student is probably thinking the same and I don’t want that anymore.
“I know that for the past months we’ve worked under an unpredictable legislative schedule and it has come down to this: a vote in the House and Senate as early as next week. I know that this is something that some of us have experienced, or thought about, and I can only imagine how many other undocumented people there are just like us, who need hope and inspiration. And others need to realize that this is what fighting for DREAM is about, fighting for our lives.”
Reyna Wences,
Immigrant Youth Justice LeagueIf you are undocumented and someone who has thought about, or attempted suicide, or even if you know of someone who has, will you work with us to write and tell your story? Please contact iyjleague@gmail.com.
More Events after the Jump
Read more…
8:31 am By Maegan La Mala · Argentina|Brazil|Chile|israel|Palestine|Uruguay · 4 Comments
7 Dec 2010Yesterday, both Argentina and Uruguay announced that they recognized Palestine as an independent state, following Brazil’s lead, who recognized Palestine on Friday. The countries recognize Palestine as it was in 1967 , before the so-called “Six-day War” between Israel and Palestine when Israel took Gaza and the West Bank.
“The Argentine government recognizes Palestine as a free and independent state within the borders defined in 1967,” Argentine Foreign Minister Hector Timerman said, adding that this decision was made after a general agreement between the South American and Mercosur trade blocs.
Uruguay went a step forward as its Deputy Foreign Minister Roberto Conde vowed to open a diplomatic representation in Palestinians’ Ramallah region after announcing to recognize it as a state next year.
10:49 am By Maegan La Mala · honduras|Latin America|Politics|Women · 2 Comments
6 Dec 2010
While the focus of the latest round of WikiLeaks release of secret cables has focused on the impact of U.S. national security, WikiLeaks also clarifies what happened in Honduras last year. In what now has been spun as “not a coup” as President Porfirio Lobo is set to mark his one year anniversary as President, a released cable from the U.S. Embassy shows that when Manual Zelaya was ousted it was indeed considered an illegal act.
From the cable :
..The Embassy perspective is that there is no doubt that the military, Supreme Court and National Congress conspired on June 28 in what constituted an illegal and unconstitutional coup against the Executive Branch…
…There is equally no doubt from our perspective that Roberto Micheletti’s assumption of power was illegitimate…
The cable also called the resignation letter that Zelaya presented as a “fabrication”.
Read more…
8:19 am By Maegan La Mala · DREAM Act|Immigration|Politics · Comments Off
6 Dec 2010
It is being reported that the DREAM Act will be voted on in both houses of Congress next week, with the likely day being Wednesday.
Washington D.C. sources say that a DREAM House vote is 75 percent likely on Wednesday. The Representatives that have been identified as targets for calls at +18665873023 according to DREAM Activist are :
Representatives:
Cooper, Jim TN-05, Tanner, John TN-8, Bishop, Sanford GA-02, Boccieri, John OH-16, Boucher, Rick VA-09, Dahlkemper, Kathy PA-03, Hall, John NY-19, Herseth-Sandlin, Stephanie SD-AL, Holden, Tim PA-17, Kirkpatrick, Ann AZ-01, Kissell, Larry NC-08, Marshall, Jim GA-08, Michaud, Michael ME-02, Mollohan, Alan WV-01, Nye, Glenn VA-02, Peters, Gary MI-09, Ross, Mike AR-04, Shuler, Heath NC-11, Spratt, John SC-05, Visclosky, Peter IN-01, Wilson, Charlie OH-06, Barrow, John GA-12, Peterson, Colin MN-07, Murphy, Scott NY-20, Arcuri, Michael NY-24, Baird, Brian WA-3, Boyd, Allen FL-02, Deutch, Ted FL-19, Ellsworth, Brad IN-08, Higgins, Brian NY-27, Matheson, Jim UT-02, Miller, Brad NC-13, Owens, Bill NY-23, Ryan, Tim OH-17, Schrader, Kurt OR-05, Scott, David GA-13, Stupak, Bart MI-01, Chandler, Ben KY-06, Adler, John NJ-03, Space, Zach OH-18, Halvorson, Deborah IL-11, Pomeroy, Earl ND AL
Last Friday, Majority Whip Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) also said that a vote was coming in the Senate. Again, people are predicting Wednesday.
Senate targets, as of late last week, can be seen here.
10:12 am By Maegan La Mala · DREAM Act|Immigration|Politics · 2 Comments
2 Dec 2010
I promise that I will get into what are the changes in the latest version of the DREAM Act, but those details, while important, may be irrelevant given the actions of the Republicans in the Senate who seem hellbent on not supporting any piece of legislation that doesn’t aid the haves. And lest people think I am only looking at the Republicans, there are a handful of Democratic Senators who have remained mum regarding their support (or lack thereof) and two Democrats who have revealed opposition to the DREAM Act.
The following Senators have not indicated where they are in terms of the DREAM Act and should be offices that people who are calling (866-587-3023) should focus on:
| State | First Name | Last Name | Party |
| AK | Lisa | Murkowski | R |
| KS | Sam | Brownback | R |
| LA | Mary | Landrieu | D |
| MA | Scott | Brown | R |
| ME | Susan | Collins | R |
| ME | Olympia | Snowe | R |
| MO | Claire | McCaskill | D |
| NV | John | Ensign | R |
| NC | Kay | Hagan | D |
| ND | Kent | Conrad | D |
| ND | Byron | Dorgan | D |
| OH | George | Voinovich | R |
Peeps would be wise to lean heavy on the Dems who have been holding out like Conrad, Dorgan, Hagan, Landrieu, and McCaskill.
Today is World AIDS Day, a day dedicated to drawing attention to AIDS, it’s prevention, treatment, and how it impacts all of our daily lives and how it impacts globally. For Latino communities inside the U.S., AIDS presents its owns challenges. Here are some stats from the Latino Commission on AIDS:
Latinos in the United States and HIV/AIDS
As the largest minority group in the U.S., Hispanics are disproportionately affected by HIV/AIDS. In 2006, Hispanics comprised 15% of the U.S. population or 44.3 million people, yet represented 18% of the HIV/AIDS cases that same year, among 33 states with a name-based reporting, excluding Puerto Rico. Among Hispanics/Latinos, males had a higher AIDS rate (per 100,000) of 31.3, than females, 9.5.Latina Women and HIV/AIDS
For Hispanic/Latina women living with HIV/AIDS, the most common methods of HIV transmission are: 1) high-risk heterosexual contact and 2) injection drug use (IDU).[4]In 2005, the majority of Latinas living with HIV/AIDS were infected through heterosexual contact-approximately 70% of Latinas.Latino Men who have sex with men (MSM)
For Latino men living with HIV, the most common mode of transmission is sexual contact with another man. At the end of 2005, 57% of all Hispanics living with HIV/AIDS in the U.S reported male-to-male sexual contact as the transmission category, compared to 49% among Blacks and 77% among non-Hispanic Whites.Latinos, Drug Use, and HIV/AIDS
Communities of Color in the U.S. are most heavily affected by AIDS associated with substance use. At the end of 2006 in 33 states with confidential name-based reporting, 14,427 male adult or adolescent Hispanics living with HIV/AIDS became infected through injecting drugs with HIV contaminated needles, representing 23% of Hispanic males living with HIV/AIDS.Latino Youth and HIV/AIDS
Hispanic/Latino adolescents in the U.S. face unique obstacles that help account for their disproportionately high rate of HIV infection. Hispanic/Latino teens aged 13-19 accounted for 19% of AIDS cases among U.S. teens in 2006 although they represented 17% of the U.S. teen population that same year.
Do you know your HIV status? How do you stay healthy?
I know my status and get tested regularly, not just for my sexual partners (or potential partners), not just for my family, but for myself. I discuss sexual health with my kids (yes even the younger one) so they don’t grow up thinking that talking about and acting on behalf of a healthy whole self is taboo.
Y Tu?
Please share resources, information, and knowledge.
10:56 am By Maegan La Mala · Politics · 10 Comments
1 Dec 2010People know that I have nothing against tequila, but this so-called “new party movement” named after the alcoholic beverage and allegedly modeled after the Tea Party but with “new Latino flavor” is a distraction at best, a disgusting attempt to gain attention while using the community.
Let’s remember that a few weeks ago we were warned that we had no leaders and were wandering aimlessly in the political power desert. Now Latinos are expected to believe that these same non-existent Latino leaders want us to start a new party and call it TEQUILA! Among the alleged “leaders” being credited with this brilliant idea? None other than Robert de Posada, the former GOP member who urged Latinos not to vote in the last midterms because Dems have no love.
I like, the fine peeps over at Latino Politics, am not that I am against third, fourth, or even fifth party movements. Hell, in the midterm elections that just past I voted third party. What I am against is the taking of a narrative of activism, twisting it and plugging it into the current political system and calling it a “movement”.
Read more…
8:27 am By Maegan La Mala · DREAM Act|Immigration · 2 Comments
1 Dec 2010
According to the DREAMActivist web site, a new version of the DREAM Act was introduced yesterday by Illinois Senator Durbin in an effort to lure more Republican support.
I have not yet read the new version, as it has not yet been been made public, but reading the summary given by DREAMActivist, the changes would keep DREAM Act beneficiaries in limbo for longer and actually lowers the amount of people who would be DREAM Act beneficiaries.
– 10 years of temporary status vs. the previous 6 years
– Specifically barring DREAMers from access to health care subsidies etc.
– Age cap is 30 vs. the previous of 35
– Removal of the language that would have not punished states for providing in-state tuition
Additionally, the new bill panders to the “good immigrant/bad immigrant narrative” by including background checks to eliminate the excuse for non-support by Republicans (and others) that DREAM would legalize criminals.
I am worried about this pandering to the right in an effort to “get something immigration related passed”. I think that given the short Congressional frame, the sense of desperation this brings will bring too many compromises will be may turn out to be more hurtful than helpful.
All we can do is wait and see.
P.S. Have I ever mentioned how much I hate the way this system makes us compromise our values for votes?
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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