2:43 pm By Maegan La Mala · DREAM Act|Immigration|Justice|Obama|Politics|Secure Communities · 9 Comments
21 Apr 2011Publisher’s Note : There have been many posts here and in other spaces regarding President Obama’s failure to push immigration reform effectively at the legislative level and more recently, his continued dismissal of executive actions he can take. With the 2012 presidential campaign season officially kicking off, the question that is often presented to those of us offering the critiques is : who to vote for then? a Republican? No one at all? The always provocative Roberto Lovato offers the following commentary and options for what the Latino community can and should be doing. And for the record, I agree.
- Mala
Local media is abuzz with news of President Obama’s visit to San Francisco. Unfortunately for immigration policy and for the noble cause of immigrant rights, the media coverage reflects the editorial filters built up by the multimillion-dollar media apparatus set up by Obama’s immigrant rights allies in Washington, D.C., who are still seen by the press as the official voice of immigrants in the United States.
Consciously or not, these D.C. groups, their leaders, and their – until very recently – ominous silence about Obama’s radical immigration policies have so conditioned the ears of journalists and editors to the faux-applause and the JumboTron sound of support, to the sickly “Sí Se Puede” legalization of it all, that anyone talking about Obama’s repressive and devastating immigration policies sounds and looks like what SF Weekly wrote about activist Prerna Lal, who is currently in deportation proceedings: marginal and out of the mainstream.
Dangerous stuff. I’ve been traveling around the country a lot lately and am sickened of stories like what’s happening to Prerna, countless cases of immigrant children forced to watch in terror as their parents are treated like criminals and taken away forever by ICE – the agency Obama has the power to tell, “Stop it, stop it immediately.”
Failure to bring the Obama administration to some reasonable, concrete relief for DREAMers, or around cooperation agreements between local police and federal immigration authorities, like 287(g) and Secure Communities, will bring the bar of immigrant and Latino respect to even more dangerous lows. Democratic and Republican politicians and their allies will see that they can get away with continued repression without paying a political price. Such perception will, I fear, result in even more unprecedented terror and devastation of a community perceived to know no lower limits to its self-disrespect when its says “Sí Se Puede” in support of the administration that is breaking records as the most violent and repressive in the history of the immigrant United States.
Fortunately, we – not they – are the ones we have been waiting for.
I know many of you who will not allow Obama to glide through Latino communities as if he has not been the commander in chief of the war on immigrants. If things don’t change soon, any and all Obama Latino events should be subject to non-violent actions that defend both immigrants and our self-respect and dignity. Even his closest allies have communicated the need to take action on urgent matters like the deportation of DREAMers and the 287(g) and Secure Communities programs. If he doesn’t heed them, then he is clearly committed to moving beyond being a “frenemy” of immigrants, one deserving of having his electoral campaign aspirations dropped and devastated in Latino communities with the same zeal with which he and his administration prosecute the war on immigrants in Latino communities.
We cannot allow people to humiliate, attack and terrorize Latinos and still have Latinos singing their praises. Without relief for immigrants, we should make support for Obama’s re-election – and for the election of violent Republicans – synonymous with being what we used to call “vendidos” or “sellouts” in a previous political era. The moral reality is there to do so as is the urgent necessity.
Thankfully, I think the will and courage are there too. I am very proud of those who are teaching Obama and his allies what living hope and heart-driven change look like. Please enlist me in your heroic effort as I find great edification and inspiration in your actions.
For his own dignity and for ours, I hope President Obama does the right thing and stops the terror and devastation against immigrants.
Respectfully,
R
Roberto Lovato is co-founder of Presente.org.
7:33 am By Maegan La Mala · Activism|Arts|Culture|Health|history|Justice|Los Angeles|Media|media justice · 1 Comment
19 Apr 2011
I am so excited to write about this because the Southern Cali portion of the tour includes so many people I love…yes myself included. So blessed that this will be my West Coast debut in such an amazingly well curated space.
For those that don’t know:
Makeshift Reclamation: New Feminist Art and Activism
A multimedia event showcasing how contemporary feminists are resisting and creating alternatives to not only gender-based oppression but also a collapsing economic system, climate crisis, and more. Featuring live readings, performances, and video works by artists and activists including Jessica Hoffmann, coeditor/copublisher of the independent, transnational, antiracist feminist magazine make/shift; Hilary Goldberg, whose new project, recLAmation, is a Super 8 experimental documentary/narrative film in which queer superheroes navigate a future beyond capitalism; and others.Upcoming Southern California Tour Dates 2011
Friday, 4/22, 8 p.m.: Echo Park Film Center
1200 N Alvarado St. (@ Sunset Blvd.) Los Angeles, CA
Feminist Media Night with imMEDIAte Justice
Live performances by Hilary Goldberg, Jessica Hoffmann, tk karakashian tunchez; Film/Video/Audio works by Alexis Pauline Gumbs, imMEDIAte Justice, POOR MagazineSaturday, 4/23, Time TBD: Cal State Long Beach
Chicana Feminisms Conference, USU Beach Auditorium,
1250 Bellflower Blvd., Long Beach, CA
Live performances by Irina Contreras, Fabiola Sandoval, tk karakashian tunchez, Hilary Goldberg, Jessica Hoffmann; Film/Video/Audio works by Alexis Pauline Gumbs, imMEDIAte justice, POOR MagazineMonday, 4/25, 3:15 pm, Cal State Los Angeles
U-SU Theater, Student Union, 5151 State University Drive, LA, CA
Live performances by Hilary Goldberg, Jessica Hoffmann, Maegan “la Mala” Ortiz, Fabiola Sandoval, tk karakashian tunchez; Film/Video/Audio: Alexis Pauline Gumbs, imMEDIAte Justice, POOR MagazineTuesday, 4/26, 7:30 pm, UC Santa Barbara
Multicultural Center Theater, 1504 Santa Barbara, CA
Live performances by Irina Contreras, Hilary Goldberg, Jessica Hoffmann, tk karakashian tunchez; Film/Video/Audio: Alexis Pauline Gumbs, imMEDIAte Justice, POOR Magazine
8:00 am By Maegan La Mala · Activism|chicago|DREAM Act|Education|Immigration|Justice|Media|Politics|Videos|youth · Comments Off
4 Apr 2011This past, March 10th, young people, many whom would be eligible for the DREAM Act (if politicians would just get it passed already), came out of the shadows and declared their immigration status, without fear and without apologies.
The following is a video from the “Coming Out of the Shadows” rally in Chicago, organized by the Youth Justice League.
The film moved me to tears, and I was really appreciative of how it showed the diversity of the young people involved in the struggle for the DREAM Act.
If you want to support these youth or want to learn how to get involved. Visit the Youth Justice League online or email them at info@iyjl.org.
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
8:22 am By Maegan La Mala · Justice|New York City · Comments Off
10 Mar 20119:19 am By Maegan La Mala · Justice|Puerto Rico · 7 Comments
22 Feb 2011Last night I attended an educational meeting at the Julia de Burgos Cultural Center in el Barrio NYC that featured William Ramirez, Executive Director of the American Civil Liberties Union in Puerto Rico. The meeting was to update those in solidarity with the students and other protesters in Puerto Rico as to what is happening on the ground and what are some possible next steps, in terms of fighting back against the brutality that has been unleashed upon students exercising their constitutional rights.
Ramirez lamented the lack of U.S. media coverage of the goings on and expressed how Al Jazeera and the BBC have both been on the ground in Puerto Rico demonstrating that the international media seems more interested than U.S. media (a complaint VivirLatino shares). Ramirez urged the audience that grew to about 75 people, to compare how police in Wisconsin are treating protesters and the media coverage given to those actions to how police are treating protesters in Puerto Rico and media coverage (or lack thereof).
In response to the U.S. media ignoring the situation and various gag rules that have been put on students by the University of Puerto Rico, the students have rallied behind the slogan “Callar Jamas” – Never Silenced. Certainly the videos, images and first hand accounts circulating via social media and independent media networks is proof of this slogan in action.
Read more…
12:55 pm By Maegan La Mala · arizona|Immigration|Justice · 1 Comment
21 Feb 2011VivirLatino is a proud endorser of the statement below.
The guilty verdict in the case against Shawna Forde is not justice, as it doesn’t bring little Brisenia Flores or her father, Raul, back from the dead. The verdict will not stop hate crimes, it will not stop the waves of anti-Latino and anti-immigrant laws being presented across the country. But yes we are watching, we are taking note and taking action(s).
From Presente.org
Thursday, February 17th, 2011, Tucson, Arizona – As Latinos and immigrant rights advocates from all over the United States applaud the guilty verdict in the trial of Shawna Forde – a leader of the hate-group Minuteman American Defense (MAD) convicted of murdering 9 year-old Brisenia Flores and her father Raul Flores – a strong message resonates throughout the nation: We Are Watching. We are watching those who provide a platform to promote hate-crimes and call on the media to be socially responsible by reporting the linkages between Forde’s proven extremism and that of extremist groups she represents.On May 2009, Forde and two accomplices – MAD Operations Director Jason Bush and local MAD member Albert Gaxiola – broke into the Flores’ home in the border town of Arivaca, Arizona. Without compunction, they shot Raul Flores, his wife Gina Gonzalez and their daughter Brisenia who screamed, “Please don’t shoot me!” before being shot twice in the head; Gonzalez survived the incident.Brisenia’s murder has galvanized the entire Latino community. This gruesome act reflects in the starkest terms the anti-immigrant, anti-Latino hatred promoted by extremist groups. Latinos – the fastest-growing and largest ethnic minority group in the U.S. – understand and experience the hatred gripping the United States. In response, Latinos and immigrant advocates are closely watching media outlets that provide a platform for hatred promoted by extremist groups like MAD and the Federation for American Immigration Reform – a group Forde represented on a PBS show, for instance.
The details revealed in the murder trial have touched us all in a deep and unique way; indeed, no one will forget Brisenia. These important details-the organized hatred, the dehumanization of Latinos, the utter disregard of a child’s innocence- reflect the deepening and mainstreaming of the most noxious and dangerous strands of hatred in the United States. The growth and expansion of this hatred moves us to continue efforts to make sure there are no more hate-crimes and to take action condemning those media outlets that help disseminate hatred.
We call on the all media to be socially responsible by, for example, reporting the intimate link between Forde’s proven extremism and that of extremist groups she represents, so that the intellectual authors of the anti-Latino, anti-immigrant industry that has been growing in the nation -and the violence they perpetrate- may be known, discussed and confronted with greater urgency.
Endorsed by:
America Para Todos, Houston, TX
America’s Voice Educational Fund, Washington, DC
American Association of Jews from the Former USSR, National
Brazilian Total Assistance, Inc., Massachusetts
CARECEN, Los Angeles, CA
CASA de Maryland, Maryland
Center for Media Justice, Nationwide
Central American Resource Center (CRECEN), Houston, TX
Chicano Consortium de Sacramento, Sacramento, CA
Coalición de Derechos Humanos, Tucson AZ
Cuentame, Nationwide
El Centro del Inmigrante, New York
FIEL Houston, Inc, Houston, TX
Florida Immigration Coalition, Miami, FL
Fresno Unit of the Brown Beret National Organization (FresnoBBNO), Fresno, CA
Georgia Latino Alliance for Human Rights, Atlanta, GA
Latino Leadership, Inc, Orlando, FL
LatinoPolitico.net, Nationwide
MinKwon Center for Community Action, New York
New Immigrant Community Empowerment, New York
New Mexico Media Literacy Project, Albuquerque, NM
New York Immigration Coalition, New York
OurNewAnahuac.net, Houston, TX
Ohio Action Circle, Ohio
Presente.org, Nationwide
Rockland County Immigration Coalition, New York
Salvadoran American National Network SANN, Nationwide
The Hispanic Community Dialogue of Virginia, Virginia
Virginia Coalition of Latino Organizations, Virginia
Vivir Latino, Nationwide
Voces de la Frontera, Milwaukee, WI
Westchester Hispanic Coalition, New York
William C. Velasquez Institute, Nationwide
9:29 am By Maegan La Mala · Justice · 5 Comments
14 Feb 2011The jury in the case against Shawna Forde, founder of Minutemen American Defense, for brutally murdering 9 year old Brisenia Flores and her father Raul Flores, is still out.
Real justice would be not having to witness your partner and child killed in front of you because, as I wrote when little Brisenia and her father were taken, this is a casa of violence used against a family viewed as expendable to help further their cause of using violence against those viewed as expendable.
Namely immigrants, Latinos and those perceived as such.
Since Brisenia and her father were taken, things have not gotten better for immigrants, their children, our community. The dehumanization continues, with laws being presented that refer to children as anchors, with laws proposed that want to make it illegal to exist. In the absence of real laws and more importantly, the absence of a real shift that views the humanity of all people, especially women and children, the answer has become more violence. When that violence isn’t coming from someone like Shawna Forde, it comes from the policies itself, that detain, deport, and seek to disenfranchise whole communities by disappearing, one community member at a time.
Justice is a beautiful thing, it resembles the innocence of a 9 year old’s smile, and is worth fighting for in memory of that smile.
9:31 am By Maegan La Mala · DREAM Act|Immigration|Justice|Politics · 9 Comments
21 Dec 2010The Deets
This past Saturday The DREAM Act failed to pass a procedural cloture vote 55-41. While most of the votes against moving forward to actually debate and vote on DREAM were Republicans, there were Democrats who also voted against the DREAM Act including Montana Sen. Jon Tester, who called DREAM, “amnesty”. Other Democrats who helped the DREAM Act die in this Senate session are Ben Nelson, NE; Max Baucus, MT; Mark Pryor, AK and Kay Hagan, SC. There were, on the upside, some Republicans who voted for the DREAM Act. Those were Bennett (UT), Lugar (IN), and Murkowski (Alaska).
Let the Finger-Pointing Begin
As mentioned above, Democratic senators blamed the Republican Senators, especially ones who supported DREAM in the past, senators like Sen. Orrin G. Hatch. President Obama blames the GOP. Most pro-immigrant orgs have released statements blaming the Republicans. A handful of bloggers have noted that had the 5 Democrats mentioned above voted yes, the 60 votes mark would have been reached. There is discussion about if the White House pushed hard enough and if progressive organizations outside the immigration and Latinosphere did enough.
What’s Next
Let’s be real, there were/are some who declared the DREAM dead even before this last Senate cloture vote. There were some who felt that the vote was a useless show. The DREAMers are heartbroken and angry and the big question for them is where they go from here as individuals and in the wider movement(s). Even before this last failed vote, Congressman Luis Gutierrez announced pressing Obama to sign a moratorium on detentions and deportations. There is some indication that some DREAMers may push for something like this as well with a focus on those like them, those brought hto the U.S. as children. There are some calls for the renewal of movement towards Comprehensive Immigration Reform.
Legislatively speaking, DREAM and anything remotely looking like CIR doesn’t seem likely. The CIR plans that came out over the last few years, pushed by Democrats were laden with pre-enforcement efforts. Imagine what CIR proposals with a Republican Congress would look like?
Some have set there eyes into the future, 2012, promising to vote out those who didn’t vote for them but in the meantime what?
I am not an undocumented immigrant. I am not an immigrant. My stake and my decision making power is not important here. What is important is working in the streets and in our communities to make sure that the lives of immigrants are protected. I fully expect things to get harder before they get easier. So the challenge I put out there for myself and for others, is what will people do to make sure that immigrant communities and the families within then are protected, educated and healthy? I am not talking policy. Policy will not, can not, and does not save our lives. We will, we can, and we have to.
10:46 am By Maegan La Mala · Immigration|Justice|pennsylvania · 11 Comments
18 Oct 2010
Last week, a jury in a Federal Court in Pennsylvania convicted Derrick Donchak and Brandon Piekarsky of violating the civil rights of Luis Ramirez, when the two former high school football players from Shenandoah, PA beat and kicked the Mexican immigrant to death in July 2008.
From the Cypress Times:
The jury found the defendants guilty of violating the criminal component of the federal Fair Housing Act, which makes it a crime to use a person’s race, national origin or ethnicity as a basis to interfere, with violence or threats of violence, with a person’s right to live where he chooses to live. In addition, the jury found that Donchak conspired to, and did in fact, obstruct justice.
The Feds stepped in with Hate Crime charges after the state court allowed Donchak and Piekarsky to get away with murder. Now the two face life in prison. Sentencing will be Jan. 24, 2011.
Is this the road to justice though?
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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