10:22 am By Maegan La Mala · Immigration|Secure Communities · Comments Off
12 Jul 2011In the last week there have been some developments in the nationwide push against the Obama administration’s mass deportation program, Secure Communities.
Documents obtained through Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) litigation by the National Day Laborer Organizing Network (NDLON), the Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR), and the Cardozo Law School Immigration Justice Clinic show that the controversial Secure Communities deportation program (S-Comm), designed by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to target people for deportation, is also a key component of a little-known FBI project to accumulate a massive store of personal biometric information on citizens and non-citizens alike.
According to the documents, S-Comm is only the first of a number of biometric interoperability systems being brought online by the FBI’s ˜Next Generation Identification (NGI) project. NGI will expand the FBI’s existing fingerprint database to add iris scans, palm prints, and facial recognition information for a wide range of people.
6:59 am By Maegan La Mala · Controversia|Immigration|Phoenix|Sports · Comments Off
12 Jul 2011
Despite over a year of organizing efforts aiming to get it moved, today Phoenix, Arizona hosts the 82nd Annual Major League Baseball All-Star Game. The push, which included protests across the country, to get MLB Commissioner Bud Selig to move the game or at the very least say something about Arizona’s immigrant/racial profiling law SB 1070 and how it could impact players and spectators, was largely a failure. Meanwhile SB 1070 copycat laws have spread across the country and like the Arizona Senate Bill that started it all, most find themselves entangled in some sort of lawsuit.
Today, Unite Arizona (AZ), will be giving out white ribbons as a symbol of opposition to this law. Unite AZ will be outside Chase Field asking fans to don white ribbons in protest of SB 1070 and as a reminder to Commissioner Selig that baseball needs to exhibit leadership. Online, National Council of la Raza is running a twibbon campaign and you can edit your Twitter avatar to include the Unite AZ graphic. Additionally NCLR NCLR has changed its facebook profile for today and tomorrow and is asking friends and supporters to do the same.
12:42 pm By Maegan La Mala · Linking Latinos|literature|Media · Comments Off
7 Jul 2011Note : I’m still figuring out my summer schedule & casa mala has company this week so posting will be slow/sporadic. Apologies in advance and thanks for your understanding. We are planning great things though!
This came in to our email. Not an endorsement but thought it was worth sharing.
Are you a Latino writer who is constantly thinking about the world — about how inspiring it is or how much you’d like to change it? Do your ideas turn into sultry stanzas or slam poems? Or maybe you fictionalize an entire world instead? Perhaps you like to write about your experiences or current events?
If you answered yes to any of these questions, then we’re looking for you!
Bushwick Media and Straight Outta Bushwick Productions are looking submissions for their new online multimedia project, In the Cut. In the Cut wants to publish Latino writers who have a fiery passion, a creative voice, and a distinctive perspective.
If you are interested, please submit your work to Elizabeth at BushwickPA (at) gmail (dot) com!
This is your chance to get your perspective out there and be part of what will be a ground-breaking new online magazine!
DETAILS
Title: In the Cut | See. Hear. Read. Do.
Description: A cross between Charlie Rose and the Village Voice
Components: Digital Magazine + Web Show
Frequency: Quarterly for Issues, Varies for other dynamic content on the website
Sections Searching for Submissions:
ficción (fiction)
poesía (poetry)
entrevistas (interviews)
exposición/exposiciones (exposés)
arte (arts)
opiniones (op-ed)
sátira (political/social satire)
la salud (health)
comida + cocina (food and cooking)
crítica social (social commentary)
la vida cotidiana (life skills)
la feminidad (women’s issues)
música (music)
reseñas (reviews) of:
books or
film/video or
restaurants or
food/cooking or
music or
visual arts or
theater/performing arts
COMPENSATION: No cash because we are struggling writers, too. The joy and satisfaction of practicing your craft and sharing your opinions.
8:50 am By Maegan La Mala · Immigration|New York City|sexuality|Women · 7 Comments
2 Jul 2011If we were to follow the logic of the NYC District Attorney’s office, if you have ever told a lie, even if it is in the face of a system set up to fail you and your family, like say the U.S. immigration system, then your accused rapist deserves to go free. This is the lesson of the recent news surrounding the rape case against former International Monetary Fund head Dominique Strauss-Kahn.
Yesterday, Strauss-Kahn was released from house arrest following an announcement by the prosecutor that called into question the “credibility” of the hotel housekeeper who has said that Strauss-Kahn sexually assaulted her in May. What has made the parties responsible for going after Strauss-Kahn throw the Guinean woman under the bus?
The immigrant mother allegedly knows people who are criminals and details regarding her application for immigration asylum are being called into question, specifically details regarding past sexual assault and genital mutilation.
The take-aways from this are pretty clear and serve as reminders to women and people of color who dare to come forward expecting the criminal justice system to protect/serve them.
1: If you are going to call anyone after you are sexually assaulted because you need support, make sure that person has never done anything remotely criminal or been accused of doing anything remotely criminal. Forget that fact that within the United States, people of color communities are policed hard and prosecuted hard over minor violations and that racial profiling means that walking down your street means handing over your papers at a moment’s notice.
2: Don’t be an immigrant, especially an immigrant woman of color. The fact that the accuser has an immigration record has served to hurt her more than help her. It has created an area of access to further violate her life. The questions that are reopened include why did she come here and does she deserve to be here. She is the one that must prove her worthiness to first even exist in the United States before it’s criminal justice system will grant her the honor of considering her valuable enough to defend.
What if she were a citizen? What if she were a White French tourist? Certainly women in general do not fare well under the current criminal justice system, but to be an immigrant woman of color – well she might as well deserved it.
At a time when one of the main arguments being used by “advocates” against immigration enforcement programs like Secure Communities is the fact that it threatens the safety of immigrant women in terms of how they relate to the police aka community policing (ha) – the treatment of the accuser/survivor is an example that the entire criminal justice system places no value in the reality/lives of working, immigrant, women of color and has no respect for their sexual dignity.
What would justice look like here?
1:22 pm By Maegan La Mala · Georgia|Immigration · Comments Off
1 Jul 2011
Today marks the first day of parts of Georgia’s anti-immigrant law, HB 87, going into effect. Despite parts of the law being put on hold thanks to a court decision, there are still portions which threaten the ability of immigrant communities to live without fear, including mandatory E-Verify. For this reason, the Georgia Latino Alliance for Human Rights and others have organized a day of non-compliance in which Georgians against HB 87 and in support of immigrant rights are not going to work or shop, and business owners will be closing their doors.
Additionally, On Saturday, GLAHR and others have called for a March for Justice at the Capitol in Atlanta starting at 10:00am. Marchers will be coming from all over the state of Georgia as well as North Carolina, Louisiana, Tennessee, DC, New York and more.
10:36 am By Maegan La Mala · Immigration · 13 Comments
1 Jul 2011
What’s happening to 24 year old Andy Mathe and his family is really disturbing and a sign of the lengths that Immigration and Customs Enforcement will go through in order to keep up with it’s record breaking deportation numbers.
Here since he was 19, Andy has been in detention for the last month waiting to be deported to South Africa. His family’s story is complicated and exemplifies the problems not just with the deportation system but with the asylum system.
Andy’s step-father fled Rwanda during the genocide, in 2001 he would marry Andy’s mother, Hope, and have a child. The family was enjoying their life in South Africa until they began receiving death threats in the form of personalized letters, phone calls and at one point an attempt to kidnap the youngest daughter. The family appealed to the United Nations, the local police, pretty much anyone who would listen.
After having her pleas for help rejected the family took things into their own hands with Andy’s stepfather disassociating himself from the family and his mother applying for visas to the United States. Once in Georgia they immediately filed for Asylum, a case which would take four years and end in Andy’s detention. To this day the family has not heard or seen their father.
Last week, Andy was extremely close to being deported. An ICE agent frustrated by the fact that so far Andy has been successful in avoiding deportation told Andy, ” ‘next time we will drug you and deport you.”
You can sign the petition asking that Andy not be deported here.
You can also call DHS – Janet Napolitano (202-282-8495) and ICE – John Morton (202.732.3000)
Sample Script: “I am calling to ask that Andy Mathe (A#88-488-386) and his family be allowed to stay. I don’t understand why ICE would threaten to drug Andy so he couldn’t fight his deportation. Please grant deferred action for the Mathe Family.”
6:41 am By Maegan La Mala · California · 2 Comments
1 Jul 2011Today, prisoners at Pelican Bay State Prison in Crescent City, CA have started an indefinite hunger strike to protest inhumane and torturous conditions inside the Security Housing Unit (SHU). SHU prisoners are kept in windowless, 6 by 10 foot cells, 23½ hours a day, for years at a time. The California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (CDCR) operates four Security Housing Units in its system.
Among the prisoners’ demands are an end to long-term solitary confinement, collective punishment, and forced interrogation on gang affiliation.
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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