12:15 pm By Maegan La Mala · DREAM Act|GLBT|Immigration|Obama|Politics|Secure Communities · 7 Comments
31 Mar 2011Earlier this week, President Obama appeared on an Univision hosted television forum on Latinos and Education. While education is an important key in the future of the growing Latino population in the US, now estimated at 50 million, immigration is tied into this future as well. During the forum, Obama said that he still had hope for comprehensive immigration reform including the DREAM Act. All the hope in the world however, cannot obscure the ugly reality of current policy and this week has proven chock full of examples of the double speak the administration is engaging in, especially to the Latino community in all it’s intersections.
False Hope for Immigrant LGB Couples
For 24 hours, immigrant gay and lesbian married couples believed that their struggle to have their marriages recognized and having that recognition work in their favor to access the same right to permanent residency green cards as straight married couples was over.
For 24 hours U.S. Citizenship & Immigration Services initiated a temporary hold on on green card applications from married same-sex couples based on President Obama’s declaration that the Defense of Marriage Act is unconstitutional. This meant a hold on deportations of foreign nationals in legally recognized same-sex marriages. Quickly though, USCIS declared it’s intention to return to business as usual as per Obama’s deportation first immigration policy.
Christopher Bentley, a spokesperson for U.S. Citizenship & Immigration Services, confirmed on Wednesday that the temporary hold on green card applications from married same-sex couples has been lifted after the agency received the anticipated legal instructions on issues that emerged after President Obama declared the Defense of Marriage Act unconstitutional.
“USCIS has not implemented any change in policy and intends to follow the president’s directive to continue enforcing the law,” Bentley said.
Steve Ralls, spokesperson for Immigration Equality, expressed disappointment that the Obama administration resumed its authority to deport foreign nationals in legally recognized same-sex marriages.
“Our government should be in the business of keeping families together, not tearing them apart,” Ralls said. “The Department of Justice has said it believes DOMA is unconstitutional. Immigration Equality agrees, and we believe it is inappropriate to use that unconstitutional law to separate American citizens from their loved ones.”
US citizenship does not equal safety from being separated from your loved ones, even if you are a U.S. citizen child. Just ask four year old Emily Ruiz.
Read more…
9:43 am By Maegan La Mala · Immigration|New York City · Comments Off
30 Mar 2011Today is the actual date, 20 years later, that 19 year old Manny Mayi was chased 14 blocks and beaten to death the whole way, by a group of racist young men in Corona, Queens.
Today, Manny Mayi’s mother, Altagracia, will go to where her son lost consciousness, never to wake up, and lay flowers on the corner that now bears his name, 108th Street and 36th Avenue.
The hate motivated crime that occurred in 1991 has stood as placeholder of injustice for the Latino community in Queens and NYC as a whole. As hate crimes against Latinos rise again across the country, it is way too easy to fall into a sort of collective forgetting, a thinking that this growing fear and violent response to the changing face of neighborhoods across the U.S. happens only once in a while. But our collective community history, knows better.
Here is a video from the rally held last Sunday in front of One Police Plaza in NYC featuring Martha Laureano Perez from the Justice Committee, the organization that has been working with the Mayi family since the crime happened (and full disclosure – I once led the JC).
Martha Laureano Perez of the Justice Committee, NYC on the 20th Anniversary of Hate Crime Killing of Manny Mayi Jr. from VivirLatino on Vimeo.
Martha Laureano Perez, of the Justice Committee NYC, speaks in front of 1 Police Plaza NYC on the relevance of the Manny Mayi Jr. hate crime case 20 years later and the commitment required to support the struggle for justice.
From : World Music News Wire:
Shifting mix is Ferrer’s specialty. Ferrer, once a major figure in Cuba’s nueva trova of the 1960s, has created his own distinctive and dynamic palette of Cuban sounds, which he has dubbed changüisa, a feminine word playing on changüí and a pithy challenge to Latin musical machismo. It became a vehicle to engage tradition without slavishly following what Ferrer dismisses as “the old formula” in Cuban music.
“Changüisa is always changing,” Ferrer explains. “The concept of changüisa presupposes transformation. I created the term to describe the free intention to tackle tradition, the transformative intention. It assumes both closeness to the changui and to creativity, a concept that both unites and reconstructs traditions.”
Perfect meditation con this morning’s cafecito.
9:08 am By Maegan La Mala · El Salvador|Latin America|military interventions|Obama|Politics · Comments Off
29 Mar 2011I wanted to share this article via New America Media and by Roberto Lovato because I feel like Obama’s Latin American trip was overshadowed by the decision to engage in a military intervention in Libya. In the mainstream media at large, I think there has been a failure to make the connection between the U.S’s past and current interventions in Latin America, their impact and what is happening now.
New America Media, Roberto Lovato
SAN SALVADOR — Hours before President Obama was set to land in their country, Salvadorans were listening and reading — and weighing — each statement he made before his historic arrival. From the crowded, tin-roofed shantytowns of Soyapango — one of the most densely populated areas in the hemisphere — to the gigantic gated mansions of the Escalon district in San Salvador, Obama’s words seemed to gain weight with each minute leading up to the arrival of Air Force One.
Expectations were almost as varied as the many rumors and questions filling the smoggy air in this very political country where, according to the Catholic University, one of every three people organized against the U.S.-backed government during the bloody 12-year civil war. Nearly 20 years after the end of that war, one would be hard pressed to find someone in this country of 6.5 million whose conversation did not eventually turn to a story about a friend, family member or acquaintance who was among the 75,000 who lost their lives in the conflict. To date, few have been brought to justice for these deaths, and many here wonder if Obama will apologize for or even acknowledge the U.S. government’s support for the Salvadoran regime that according to a report by the United Nations Truth Commission was responsible for 95 percent of the deaths. Salvadoran President Mauricio Funes has already acknowledged and apologized on behalf of previous Salvadoran governments.
“What did he mean when he said that we should not be trapped by our history?” asked Alonso Flores in Cuzcatlan Park, not far from the cathedral where Obama will visit the tomb of the most famous Salvadoran in history, slain Archbishop Oscar Romero. Flores was referring to statements the U.S. president made in response to a Chilean journalist who asked whether the United States should apologize for its role in the military coup that led to the death of then-President Salvador Allende. “Is it true that Obama is going to visit the tomb of Roberto D’Abuisson?” Flores wondered. Rumors of a possible Obama visit to the tomb of the notorious founder of the ARENA party (and, according to the UN Truth Commission, the paramilitary death squads that killed Romero) were sparked by recent statements made by ARENA party legislator Mario Valiente, who suggested that the president should also lay a wreath on the tomb of D’Abuisson.
Obama’s statements about history have a special resonance for Katya Martinez and Douglas Magana, two students born three years after the civil war.
“I hope Obama says something about what happened to my uncle and other family members,” said Martinez, who was staring into the 1980 section of the “Massacres in El Salvador” part of the Monumento a la Memoria y la Verdad (Monument to Memory and Truth). The black granite memorial in Cuzcatlan Park to 30,000 (cases documented by the Truth Commission) of the 75,000 men, women and children killed during the war.
“Obama should know how important it is not to forget,” added Magana, who said he thought homicides in El Salvador, which have now surpassed levels seen during the war, will not end unless “we have someone like General Martinez again. He was strict.” Magana’s was referring to Maximiliano Hernandez Martinez, the dictator who initiated El Salvador’s long line of military dictatorships with the massacre of more than 30,000 mostly indigenous people in 1932, and an accompanying myth that what historians call “La Matanza” (The Great Killing) was necessary to cure the crime problem that took place during the only economic downturn worse than the one El Salvador is now experiencing.
After saying goodbye, they walked along the rest of the football field-long monument built as “a space for hope, for dreaming and building a more just, humane and equal society.”
11:04 am By Maegan La Mala · Immigration|New York City · 1 Comment
28 Mar 2011Normally around the anniversary of her son’s death, Altagracia Mayi marches from where he lost his life in Corona, Queens and retraces the multiple blocks 19 year old Manny was chased while being beaten with bats in 1991. This year she will visit the corner named after him, 108th Street and 36th Avenue but first this past Sunday, she made a stop in front of One Police Plaza in NYC. She had a few things to say to Police Commissioner Ray Kelly.
Altagracia Mayi on the 20th Anniversary of the Hate Crime that Killed her Son, Manny from VivirLatino on Vimeo.
Dominican immigrant Altagracia Mayi speaks out in front of One Police Plaza, NYPD HQ in New York City on the 20th anniversary of the the hate crime that killed her son. Altagracia and the Justice Committee are demanding a meeting with NYC Police Commissioner Kelly and a special prosecutor, given how the current Queens’ DA, Richard Brown, was complicit in not properly prosecuting the case.
Kelly sent a letter to the Dept. of Justice requesting that they intervene and open a case against some of the accused for violating Manny Mayi Jr.’s civil rights. The Feds told Altagracia that they couldn’t because the statute of limitations has expired. Altagracia is now seeking a meeting with Kelly so that the case be reopened locally. Additionally she is seeking a meeting with NY Governor Andrew Cuomo.
10:55 am By Maegan La Mala · Activism|Immigration|Justice|New York City|race · Comments Off
27 Mar 2011
On the night of March 29, 1991, Manny Mayi, an 19 year-old Dominican college student was chased and beaten to death by upon crossing over to the Italian-American section of Corona, Queens.
Following his murder, the Queen’s District Attorney’s Office [DA] struggled to produce an effective case against the alleged defendants as the Italian-American community became reclusive and shielded by police investigators. A young Italian-American woman admitted to police investigators that she heard one of the defendants confess to the crime. Nevertheless, her family relocated her to Italy one week prior to the start of the trial in 1993. She was never subpoenaed, thus her testimony was never heard.
The trial jury was selected from a pool of residents from Northern Queens and yielded a sole person of color. And while the crime was committed on a populous street during a warm spring evening, the DA’s office and the NYPD produced only two material witnesses. Compounded by the absence of hate crime legislation at the State or Federal levels, the criminal proceedings resulted in the swift acquittal of a lone defendant.
For years, rumors and accusations of police negligence lingered over the verdict. Most recently an investigation by the NYPD Cold Case Squad, —the results of which have not been shared with the family nor, to their knowledge, the Queens DA—have yielded no movement in the case.
It has been 20 years and this family continues to call for justice for the brutal murder of Manny Mayi. Join them to demand justice.
COME OUT TO THIS EVENT AS YOUR PRESENCE IS NEEDED AND SHARE THE INFO WITH OTHERS!
Today, Sunday March 27
1 pm to 4 pm
One Police Plaza (NYPD Headquarters)
Park Row (entrance is near the corner of Chambers and Centre Street)
New York City
7:36 am By Maegan La Mala · Cities|Immigration|Secure Communities · 34 Comments
25 Mar 2011Yesterday, a coalition of organizations, including the National Day Laborer Organizing Network, Center for Constitutional Rights and the Kathryn O. Greenberg Immigration Justice Clinic of the Benjamin Cardozo School of Law, who have been pressing Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to be real and transparent as to how Secure Communities actually works, released some new numbers and analysis of those numbers. The specific focus of the analysis is ICE’s claim that Secure Communities (S-Comm) focuses on “dangerous criminal immigrants”. The new analysis shows that claim to be completely false.
“Nationally, 1 in 4 people deported under S-Comm haven’t been convicted of any crime. That ratio jumps to over 50% in Boston, certain areas of California, and in multiple examples across the country..” Explained Bridget Kessler of Benjamin Cardozo School of Law
25 percent overall non-criminal deportations and in an urban area like Boston as jump to over half shows that the focus of ICE and of immigration policy under Obama overall, is deport as many as you can so you can claim success in “the war against illegals“.
When questioned during a recent House Appropriations Committee Hearing on March 11th, Director of ICE John Morton admitted,, “we do in fact remove non-criminals through Secure Communities.”
In other words it’s a shell game with words and lives. You can take a peek at some of the numbers below and they are disturbing, especially when looking at larger urban areas with large Latino immigrant populations. With the focus on rapid expansion of Secure Communities, it becomes clear whose security is being prioritized and it is not that of the families whose lives are torn apart.
Read more…
7:24 am By Maegan La Mala · New York City|Puerto Rico · Comments Off
24 Mar 2011For those of you who have asked for images from last night’s NYC rally against Puerto Rican Governor Luis Fortuño, Shameel Arafin has a set of images taken last night here on Flickr (thanks Shameel!).
Gracias as well to David Galarza Santa who has a great set of images over on Facebook, Check them out here.
10:14 am By Maegan La Mala · Politics|Puerto Rico|U.S. House of Representatives · Comments Off
23 Mar 2011Last month, Puerto Rican Resident Commissioner Pedro Pierluisi made the news for his criticisms against fellow Puerto Rican, Congressman Luis Gutierrez, and the Congressman’s comments about the situation on the ground in Puerto Rico. A Sunlight Foundation report shows that the Resident Commissioner’s mouth is matched by his spending habits.
According to the analysis, Pierluisi spent more than $2.1 million to run his congressional offices in Washington and Puerto Rico. Most of it — $1.2 million — went to personnel costs. He spent about $174,000 on printing and about $60,000 on travel, according to the reports on the Sunlight Foundation’s database.
Alot of this was explained by the travel that Pierluisi has to do between Puerto Rico and Washington D.C. and the large number of mailings to constituents. Pero the anti-colonialist in me wonders if all of this is worth the expense, especially given how Pierluisi has no vote in Congress. I also wonder how that money could be better used say to help with the decolonization process of the island or with the economic crisis there.
7:12 am By Maegan La Mala · New York City|Puerto Rico · 4 Comments
23 Mar 2011While students and others in Puerto Rico are being assaulted in Puerto Rico over $800 and really much more, Puerto Rico’s Gov. thought a feast in NYC would be a great idea. Except the large Rican population here has other plans.
This came in my various inboxes and via Facebook:
Time Wednesday, March 23 · 4:30pm – 7:00pm
——————————————————————
Location THE NEW YORK ATHLETIC CLUB
180 CENTRAL PARK SOUTH (59th St. & 7th Ave. – R train to 57th St)
——————————————————————Long before Wisconsin’s right-wing republican governor, Scott Walker,
there was Luis Fortuño, the right-wing, conservative, republican
governor of the U.S. colony of Puerto Rico where over 50% of its 4
million people live below the poverty line.
Under his reign of terror, Fortuño and his party-controlled
legislature and courts have/are:• Systematically eliminated collective bargaining rights for workers
• Fired up to 30,000 public sector workers
• Privatized or attempted to privatize numerous public agencies and
services
• Attempted to privatize public education including the University
of Puerto Rico and have outlawed the independent teacher’s union
• Imposed a financial hardship on thousands of students struggling
to gain a higher education
• Militarized public college campuses and have used police and shock
troops to violently end peaceful demonstrations while also sexually
assaulting female students
• Been condemned by the ACLU and amnesty international for
repeatedly violating the human, civil and constitutional rights of
thousands of workers, students and journalists and their supporters
• Privatized huge swaths of valuable and ecologically sensitive
public lands and sold them off to private developers
• In the wake of the Japanese nuclear disaster, are attempting to
build an expensive, unnecessary, and extremely hazardous gas pipeline
through the heart of the island which will destroy thousands of acres
of sensitive woodland and imperil the lives of untold numbers of
residents along the pipelineGov. Fortuño has the complete and unequivocal support of the tea
party, the conservative PAC (where he spoke recently) and the racist
John Birch society (where he also spoke). The Wall Street Journal in
an op-ed headlined “Puerto Rico’s governor channels Ronald Reagan:
Move Over, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie. You’ve got a tax-cutting,
pro-growth competitor who may be even bolder than you. His name is
Luis Fortuño and he is the governor of Puerto Rico, a place that, if
you can believe it, is in worse shape than the garden state.”Let’s show Fortuño that we all condemn his administration’s attack on
the good people of Puerto Rico and we stand in solidarity with those
fighting for justice in all its forms!
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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