10:17 am By Maegan La Mala · Immigration|Netroots Nation · 3 Comments
17 Jun 2011I asked and you voted!
Starting in approximately 20 minutes I will be livetweeting at VivirLatino the Immigration and the Power of the Latino Vote Panel.
Here is what it is about so please comment, tweet questions etc.
Immigration and the Power of the Latino Vote: Why Harry Reid Came Back and Alex Sink Sunk
FRI, 06/17/2011 – 10:30AM, L100 FG
Latino voters were critical to 2010 Senate victories and will play an even more central role in the race for the White House in 2012. But with the immigration reform promise still unfulfilled, President Obama under heavy criticism for deporting more immigrants than Bush and a Republican party searching for a Latino marketing strategy to mask their extremist agenda, where will these voters go? This panel will share polling and demographic data to uncover the enormous promise and challenge facing both parties as they develop strategies to court these voters in 2012. We will discuss the role of immigration reform as the key motivator for this growing segment of the American electorate and will discuss how candidates, like Majority Leader Harry Reid, modeled a winning strategy by delivering on their immigration promise.
PANELISTS: Adam Luna, Maribel Hastings, Markos Moulitsas, Eliseo Medina, Rep. Luis Gutierrez
The role of Eliseo Medina will be played by Paco Fabian as apparently Mr. Medina’s flight was cancelled.
1:17 pm By Maegan La Mala · MINNEAPOLIS|Netroots Nation · Comments Off
16 Jun 2011Today I will be travelling to Minneapolis to be at the Netroots Nation conference for the third year!
As I sit and try to figure out the best use of my time, I am requesting your help. What would you like to see/read about tomorrow morning here and via Twitter ( hashtags #nn11 & #MalaDoesNN11)?
All of the above have their potential for eye rolling and snarkiness on my part. I am leaning towards option #2 just based on my work over the past year. The last two – while I will go to if chosen – have the potential for me being dramatic and walking out but I will respect whatever you choose.
Also don’t forget you can sponsor airplane internet access, meal or a drink by making a donation here.
Mil gracias!
2:04 pm By Maegan La Mala · Immigration|Politics · Comments Off
15 Jun 2011Yesterday, Congressman Lamar Smith (R-TX) introduced H.R. 2164, the Legal Workforce Act of 2011, that would dramatically expand and make E-Verify,a government internet-based work authorization system, mandatory for all employers within two years (three for agriculture). It is expected that today, the House Judiciary Subcommittee on Immigration Policy and Enforcement will hold a hearing on the Act.
E-Verify is a web-based technology that allows employers to check federal databases to determine whether their employees—U.S. citizens, lawful permanent residents, and other foreign-born workers—are authorized to work in the U.S.
The problem is that the system has proven itself to be less than accurate; it raises issues of privacy and due process, and would be extremely costly to implement and run.
8:22 am By Maegan La Mala · Casa Blanca Camino 2012|DREAM Act|Immigration|Obama|Police Violence|Politics|Puerto Rico · 4 Comments
14 Jun 2011On Sunday an alleged 2 million people hit the streets of Manhattan for the Puerto Rican Day Parade and later today who knows how many will greet U.S. President Barack Obama as he visits the mainland of Puerto Rico. But between now and then there are a few issues which the President is likely not to address which are critical to the future of a healthy Puerto Rican community on the island and here in the United States.
Police Brutality and Police Inaction
This past weekend, the ACLU restated the fact that the island is facing a pattern of police brutality and governmental suppression.While the issue of the extreme violence faced by the University of Puerto Rico student protesters and supporters was addressed in the U.S. Congress, President Obama has turned a blind eye.
Connected is the spike in violence against queer Puerto Ricans and the impunity that has come with it. In the last year and a half there have been at least 18 killed in anti-queer, anti-transgender, anti-gay violence on the island. I think it is critical to use the words “at least” because these are the murders that the officials have recognized and identified. Chances sadly are that incidents of violence against the queer, transgender, lesbian and gay community on the island are highly underreported.
There should be no expectation that a police force which so willingly and with impunity enacts violence against their own, would protect segments of the community when under clear attack from others.
The Puerto Rican Colony and Political Prisoners
It is expected that among those “greeting” Obama will be those demanding the release of political prisoners like Oscar López Rivera and others, as well as independence for the island which has been under U.S. control since 1898. Already there have been acts of civil disobedience on the island that are expected to continue.
President Obama, to date has refused to identify Puerto Rico by it’s true status, that of colony, and so long as there is a denial of that, there can be no real expectation of change in terms of how the status issue is handled.
Using Puerto Ricans to Cover Up Failure on Immigration
It has been widely reported that Obama is hoping that his visit to Puerto Rico will help gain the Puerto Rican vote in the United States for his 2012 reelection campaign. Puerto Rico allegedly played a similar role during the President’s initial run for the White House. What Obama and his camp probably did not count on was the linking of his Puerto Rican visit with the issue of immigration, specifically the DREAM Act. After all, immigration is seen a virtual non-issue for Puerto Ricans today since Puerto Ricans are U.S. citizens and can travel freely between the island and the 50 states. There is a denial however as Puerto Rico as an immigration hub especially for many Dominicans, which has raised tensions both on and off the island as divide and conquer politics among Latinos has us fighting each other over scarce economic opportunities instead of unifying against the conditions that have created that situation. In a conference call yesterday, a young Dominican immigrant student, who would be DREAM Act eligible spoke out about her experiences in Puerto Rico.
“I arrived in Puerto Rico when I was 9 years old in a small fishing boat from Dominican Republic. I graduated a few weeks ago from high school with honors, but because I’m undocumented, I’m stuck with the impossibility of reaching my dream of becoming a doctor,” expressed Esmeralda Hidalgo, one of hundreds of undocumented students who graduate from schools in Puerto Rico. “I need President Obama to pass an executive order to stop deportations of DREAM Act students like me until we have the DREAM Act.”
DREAM Act student are left very vulnerable for the lack of immigration reform. Jose Rodríguez, spokesperson for the Dominican Human Rights Center in Puerto Rico, also joined today’s call and expressed that at least 3 immigrants from the island have been recently killed due to their immigration status. “There are hundreds of thousands of immigrants living in Puerto Rico who live in constant fear. We urge President Obama to at the very least stop deporting our youth right away until there is a legislative solution to our human rights crisis.”
I think it’s still very hard for many to conceptualize immigration as a Puerto Rican issue. The truth of the matter is that as long as the colonial status of the island remains intact, how the issues of violence, identity, access, and self-determination are dealt with will continue to happen in a lopsided and incomplete manner. Brutality is much more than the outright use of physical violence in order to control and create submission. In terms of Puerto Rico, brutality looks like over a hundred years of the United States manipulating the lives of our people. Basta ya!
5:53 am By Maegan La Mala · Allied Media Conference|Detriot · 1 Comment
14 Jun 2011
NOTE: I’m a proud member of INCITE! as part of their media working group. Over the past few years they have been supportive of my life/work as a radical media maker/mami of color and the life/work of other women of color, transgender women of color and non-gender conforming activists & media makers. Your support helps me and other amazing people further build their skills and relationships with each other.
Hello INCITE Supporters!
The Allied Media Conference is around the corner, and the INCITE Track is presenting an incredible bunch of workshops this year. Our work grows stronger each year through this time spent in Detroit, sharing skills, deepening relationships, and developing strategy for year-round media-based organizing. But we need your help to get there! Can you donate to help INCITE Track participants get to the conference?
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Who are we?
We are women, trans* and genderqueer people of color. We are bloggers, mamas, media makers, teachers, healers, artists, sex workers, organizers, dancers, among many other things. And we need support in order to make it to Detroit for the 4th Annual INCITE! Track at the Allied Media Conference.
What will your donation help us do?
Your donation will help some of our amazing presenters get to the conference to continue building a network of media-makers and organizers through the INCITE Track at the AMC. For the past four years, the INCITE Track has been a crucial space where women and trans* people of color from all over can come together to share skills and experience for participatory media-based organizing strategies.
We’re excited about this year’s AMC! Check out some of the INCITE Track sessions:
Shawty Got Skillz Skillshare
Spread Magazine: Creating a Race Issue
The Black Girl Project: Film & Discussion
Delivering Justice Through Birthing Rights: Mamas of Color Bring it Home
Street Youth Rise Up! Collective Media-Making for Healing and Action
INCITE Media Working Group Convening
Your support will help us with food, transportation, lodging, registration, and childcare costs for presenters and participants.
Donate Now!
Please give what you can to help us get one step closer the AMC! Anything you give will go directly towards childcare, food, housing or registration for a track presenter! Via PayPal, please send to incite.natl@gmail.com and write AMC in the notes. For check donations, mail to INCITE!, 2416 W Victory Blvd #108 , Burbank, CA 91506-1229.
More on the INCITE! Track:
The INCITE! Track at the AMC is a place to build a shared approach to ending violence against women, trans*, and genderqueer people of color through diverse media – from blogging and graphic design to zine-making. We will continue to highlight the transformative media strategies that will help broaden the understanding of racial & gender justice and integrating this politic into our work. We will continue to build solidarity between movements, organizations and individuals that are headed by and supported by women, gender non-conforming, and transpeople of color and will initiate collaborative projects that use different forms of media to help build community and provide tools to build sustainable ways of organizing and healing.
More on the Allied Media Conference:
The Allied Media Conference cultivates strategies for a more just and creative world. We come together to share tools and tactics for transforming our communities through media-based organizing.
Learn more and register for the Allied Media Conference:
9:38 am By Maegan La Mala · Immigration|Minnesota|Netroots Nation|VivirLatino · 6 Comments
9 Jun 2011
Thanks to some of your votes, Democracy for America, and America’s Voice, I will be in Minneapolis, Minnesota next week – from June 16th to the 19th – attending the Netroots Nation conference.
This will be my third year attending and those who have followed my participation before know that my coverage is complicated and controversial but also interesting and informative (and fun!).
I will be blogging here, tweeting on both the VivirLatino twitter and my own personal twitter account, as well as posting pictures, probably on our Facebook page. The hashtag is #NN11 and I will also be personally using #MalaDoesNN.
I haven’t had a chance to really plan my time there – I do know I will live-tweet/comment on the Taking Back Your State: Responding to Restrictive Immigration Legislation scheduled for Saturday, June 18th 1:30 PM – 2:45 PM (Minneapolis time).
While the DFA and America’s Voice Scholarship cover airfare, hotel, and registration, I am requesting support for , childcare, ground transport and food costs. So if you appreciate the work that VivirLatino does, consider making a small donation or if you are gonna be at the conference – I accept drinks and food
.
Gracias!
7:47 am By Maegan La Mala · Environment|New York City|Puerto Rico · Comments Off
9 Jun 2011
Here’s your chance NYC Ricans and those that love us. Today there will be a rally in front of 26 Federal Plaza, Downtown Manhattan, where the Army Corps of Engineers has an office. The rally will be a show of solidarity and unity against the way the proposed Gasoducto is being pushed on the people of Puerto Rico.
Thursday, June 9 · 12:00pm – 1:30pm
26 Federal Plaza (on Broadway between Worth and Duane Streets)
From the organizers:
On Thursday, June 9, 2011 at 12 pm in front of 26 Federal Plaza, local Puerto Rican leaders, activists and supporters of the Puerto Rican people and the environment, including the National Congress for Puerto Rican Rights-NYC Chapter, Labor Council for Latin American Advancement, Union Theological Seminary, Greater NY Labor-Religion Coalition, East Harlem Preservation, and Lafayette Presbyterian Church, will rally and demand that the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers deny the permit requested by the PR Electric Power Authority (PREPA) in which they propose to construct a dangerous natural gas pipeline over 92 miles long.
The gathering will take place just days before the National Puerto Rican Parade which has been dedicated to the natural environment of Puerto Rico. Ironically, it’s a natural environment that is threatened by this costly, unnecessary and destructive project.
Public opposition to the project is strong. Polls indicate that 70% of the citizens of Puerto Rico oppose the construction of the pipeline (El Nuevo Día – March 2011). On May 1, 2011, over 30,000 people marched together to protest the ‘Vía Verde’ gas pipeline. Different sectors of Puerto Rican society have manifested their opposition to this project, including Casa Pueblo in Adjuntas (which has been invited to participate in the parade), church groups, cultural organizations, academics, labor unions, community groups, and Puerto Rican citizens in the U.S. mainland
Recently all documentation pertinent to the evaluation of the natural gas pipeline project was transferred to US Army Corps of Engineers Offices in Florida. This disingenuous act represents yet another step to hide from public scrutiny and avoid an open and transparent public discussion of the projects merits and costs.
The Puerto Rico Electric and Power Authority (PREPA) proposes to construct and install a 24-inch diameter steel gas pipeline approximately 92 miles long with a construction right-of way of 150 feet wide. The pipeline will transverse Puerto Rico from the EcoEléctrica Liquid Natural Gas Terminal to the northern thermoelectric power plants that only produces 20% of the total electric energy of the island.
To avoid compliance with basic regulatory standards and ignore procedural safeguards for the construction of such a high-risk project, the governor of Puerto Rico, Luis Fortuño, declared a state of energy emergency designed to maintain secrecy, fast-track the permit process and thwart full public participation in the discussion of the project. The implications of this proposal for the future of Puerto Rico are too detrimental to accept. We need to break the dependency on fossil fuels while promoting economic development of the island with self-sustaining resources.
6:14 am By Maegan La Mala · Controversia|Health|Immigration|Los Angeles|Politics|Women · 1 Comment
9 Jun 2011Gracias to Andres, my ‘hood vecino of Blabbeando, for tweeting last night information about the latest assault on Latinidad using the wombs of some Latin@s (not all Latinas have wombs not all wombs belong to women). Following in the footsteps of ads targeting African-American and black communities that claimed that abortion access amounted to eugenics, now the Latino Partnership for Conservative Values is getting in on the game, sponsoring a billboard with the above image saying “The Most Dangerous Place for a Latino is in the womb.” in English and Spanish.
The ads, which allegedly are slated to go up around Los Angeles, are part of a wider anti-access campaign claiming that Latin@s get more abortions than others and that this is the big problem because it seeks to erase us On the Board of the org behind the ads are novela actors Eduardo Verastegui and Karyme Lozano, as well as Puerto Rico’s governor Luis Fortuño.
6:53 am By Maegan La Mala · Alabama|Georgia|Immigration · 2 Comments
6 Jun 2011As more states legalize the already de facto anti-immigrant and anti-Latino practices that exemplify racial/ethnic profiling and a federal immigration policy focused on enforcement only, organizations are attempting to use the court system to push back.
Last week the American Civil Liberties Union and the National Immigration Law Center (NILC) filed a lawsuit against HB 87, the Georgia anti-immigrant law that authorizes police to demand “papers” demonstrating citizenship or immigration status during traffic stops, criminalizes Georgians who interact daily with undocumented individuals and makes it unjustifiably difficult for individuals without specific identification documents to access state facilities and services.
From the ACLU Press Release announcing the lawsuit:
The lawsuit charges that Georgia’s law, HB 87, is unconstitutional because it unlawfully interferes with federal power and authority over immigration matters in violation of the Supremacy Clause of the U.S. Constitution; authorizes and requires unreasonable seizures and arrests in violation of the Fourth Amendment; restricts the constitutional right to travel freely throughout the United States; and violates the Equal Protection and Due Process Clauses of the U.S. Constitution by unlawfully discriminating against people who hold certain kinds of identity documents.
The orgs behind the lawsuit hope that, like in Arizona, where portions of the the anti-immigrant SB 1070 law were blocked, courtroom attention combined with activism will push back and prevent other states from passing such laws.
Read more…
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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