12:52 pm By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Justice|race · 3 Comments
7 Dec 2009Marcelo Lucero, Angie Zapata, Jorge Steven Mercado, Brisenia Flores, Jose Sucuzhañay, Luis Ramirez. These are just a handful of names of some hate crimes that got some coverage over the last year. Pero what makes a hate crime a hate crime? Who decides and what “standards” have to met? Will a national hate crimes bill, with harsher sentencing guidelines solve the root causes? How do we as radicals or even as “progressives” rationalize a desire to enforce longer sentences in prison, especially when a member of one of our communities is killed by another member of our communities (because we fit into multiple communities built around concepts of gender identity, race, ability, nationality, class, sexual identity, etc)?
According to the FBI’s recently released statistics on hate crimes in the United States, 64% of the hate crimes based on perceived ethnicity or national origin targeted Latinos. This is out of 7,783 hate crime incidents involving 9,168 offenses reported by 13,690 law enforcement agencies in 2008. Here are some more stats since people seem to like stats.
Single-bias incidents
Of the 7,780 single-bias incidents reported in 2008:
* 51.3 percent were racially motivated.
* 19.5 percent were motivated by religious bias.
* 16.7 percent stemmed from sexual-orientation bias.
* 11.5 percent resulted from ethnicity/national origin bias.
* 1.0 percent were motivated by disability bias.Offenses by bias motivation within incidents
There were 9,160 single-bias hate crime offenses reported in the above incidents. Of these:
* 51.4 percent stemmed from racial bias.
* 17.7 percent were motivated by sexual-orientation bias.
* 17.5 percent resulted from religious bias.
* 12.5 percent were motivated by ethnicity/national origin bias.
* 0.9 percent resulted from biases against disabilities.
10:55 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Cuba|Latin America|Peru|race · 8 Comments
4 Dec 2009Every few months the debate starts up again about racism in Latin America. Is it worse than in the United States or just different because of the very specific way colonialism played itself out and continues to play out in the region? Many Latin Americans and Latinos will swear up and down that there is no racism in their countries of origin and in their families, which often times are multi-racial. But what passes for “non-racism” actually includes thinly veiled language and action that reveals centuries old internalized issues around genetic purity and colorism.
Last week Peru’s government apologized to it’s Afro-Peruvian community for centuries of “abuse, exclusion and discrimination”.
The government said racially-motivated harassment still hindered the social and professional development of many African-Peruvians.
A public ceremony will be held to apologise to African-Peruvians, who make up 5-10% of the population.
And earlier this week, at least 60 prominent African-Americans, including Cornel West, actress Ruby Dee Davis, film director Melvin Van Peebles, former South Florida congresswoman Carrie Meek, Dr. Jeremiah Wright, former pastor of President Barack Obama’s church in Chicago, and Susan Taylor, former editor in chief of Essence magazine, released a statement condemning racism in Cuba.
1:36 pm By la Macha · California|Careers|economy|race|Violence|Women · Comments Off
24 Nov 2009In light of the recent protests in the University of California system, Xicana scholar and activist, Cherrie Moraga, gave a pointed and stirring critique/speech to a graduation class at UC Berkeley. In it, she asks, “What happened to our movement?” in reference to the work done by activists of color in the 60s. What happened to that movement? And how can we start it up again?
What happened to our movement?
The current economic crisis makes its patently evident. It was literally bought off. As graduates, you came of age in a time where for at least a quarter century consumerism had been unequivocally conflated with citizenship. You have gleaned no other message from the mass media, except to maintain your individual freedom by maintaining the ‘free enterprise’ of those who have enslaved you to this new American ethic. What the Declaration of Independence described as an unalienable right – “the pursuit of Happiness” — has been reconfigured within the popular imagination as the ‘pursuit of purchasing power.’ Even the so-called public university system, which cost you considerably to attend, is being sustained by corporate interests and ethics of competitive privatization. So, in many ways you are not to blame, but you are responsible because it will be up to your generation and those that follow to literally stop passing the buck to the rich guys.
What is our response as progressives to these times of economic upheaval? Do we look to Corporate America to protect our rights and our pocketbooks, to define our family life styles and educate our children, even after the ruling class betrayed its own ever-trusting middle-class by robbing it of a lifetime of savings and the homes they were programmed to purchase? Where is the protest?
Read the rest of the speech here!
9:05 am By la Macha · Blogs|Quicklinks|race · Comments Off
2 Nov 2009Maia is asking all the right questions in her essay, “anti racism…what went wrong?”
the problem is that when he [tim wise] does anti racism work. he explains that he ‘opens the door’ for other poc to be considered leaders and experts in anti racism. why the fuck in the anti racism movement to we still need white gatekeepers? this is what gets me. it’s the anti racism movement! we dont have a bunch of men leading and speaking as the voice of feminism. we dont have a bunch of skinny chicas being the (body) of fat acceptance. we dont have a bunch of straight folks being the voice of lbgtqia ness. but in the anti racism movement. it is white folks who speak. so that white audiences with money are not required to listen and take seriously the voice of color.
1:26 pm By la Macha · Celebrities|children|Immigration|race|society · 3 Comments
29 Sep 2009
Anybody who follows the immigration debate knows the tired old explanation as to why undocumented immigrants are really “illegals” or “aliens.” They committed a crime! They are here illegally! They deserve the label!
Well, as I am sure many of you have heard, director Roman Polanski is currently in the news because 30 years after committing the crime of raping a 13-year-old girl, he was arrested in Switzerland and is awaiting extradition to the U.S. He has continued his life since his arrest and admission of guilt in a pretty unadulterated way. He works. He lives in multiple houses. He won a prestigious award. He has friends and supporters. And he lives (and has lived) quite openly as a man who likes to fuck young girls.
In short, if the U.S. really wanted him, the U.S. could’ve gotten him. And yet…it didn’t. And as I mentioned, after committing a crime, Polanski received no small level of support from others, up to and including “liberal” presses like NPR calling his crime “sex with a thirteen-year-old” rather than “rape.”
So, you have the case of families coming to the U.S. to get a job and help support families here and in other countries–and those people are no longer people. They are illegals. They are aliens. They deserve what they get.
You have the case of a man who *admits* to drugging and raping a thirteen-year-old child, and you have a “troubled genius” who, well, maybe isn’t that bad. I mean, not a rapist rapist. Just a regular rapist. A not bad rapist.
What is up with this difference? Why isn’t Glen Beck going after this scumbag? Why isn’t Lou Dobbs? Why isn’t the U.S. mobilizing an entire department to go after all the rapists? The illegal rapists? Why don’t we have an entire system of detention centers set up exclusively for all the rapists and their families to sit in until we can figure out what to do with them? If the rapists didn’t want their children locked up, they shouldn’t have raped, right?
I am not the only one who notices the differences in standards here. What I am wondering is will any of the “they are illegals” troupe be brave enough to account for the differences? And lest men think they are not the problem here, will any men be brave enough to account for why crimes against women and girls are so easy to forgive?
6:18 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Immigration|Philly|race · 5 Comments
26 Aug 2009When an immigrant, or two in this case, don’t fit into the the “good” immigrant narrative because of a criminal (in)justice system based, since its inception, on oppression, does the community turn it’s back? That is the question that the pro-migrant movement needs to ask itself in the face of the case of cousins Denis Calderon & Julio Maldonado who were victims of a hate crime yet find themselves behind bars, awaiting deportation.
Read more…
8:17 pm By la Macha · Arts|Entertainment|Health|race · 1 Comment
24 Aug 2009
In truly sad news, it is looking like Michael Jackson’s death didn’t have to happen. The L.A. corner has released preliminary findings which say the cause of death was an overdose of overdose of propofol, a powerful sedative Jackson was using to sleep.
The 32-page warrant said Dr. Conrad Murray, Jackson’s personal physician, told a detective that he had been treating Jackson for insomnia for six weeks. Murray said each night he gave Jackson 50 mg of propofol, also known as Diprivan, diluted with the anesthetic lidocaine via an intravenous drip.
Worried that Jackson may have been becoming addicted to the drug, the Houston cardiologist said he attempted to wean him from it, putting together combinations of other drugs that succeeded in helping Jackson sleep during the two nights prior to his death.
But on June 25, other drugs failed to do the job, as he recounted to detectives in an hour-by-hour account that was detailed by detective Orlando Martinez of the Los Angeles Police Department:
This is just so sad. The irony in the fact that Jackson “made it” after starting off in desperate poverty–and he still wound up meeting the fate so many of us in the ghetto do–a drug related death. His drugs may have cost more than anything you or I have ever gotten, but they’re still drugs. And presumably, Jackson was taking those drugs for the same reason so many of us are: over work, isolation, depression, and past abuse.
Jackson’s death either shows that you can’t outrun your past–or that racism is a lot more pervasive than we think. And that it is our *culture* and *physical surroundings* that are as sick as we are. That we are living in an unsustainable world.
Or maybe it’s a little of all of it.
4:54 pm By la Macha · crime|Labor|Media|media justice|Netroots Nation|race|sex|Violence|Women · 6 Comments
14 Aug 2009
Remember the Craig’s List Killer? The one who was hiring women to perform sex acts, and then killing them? Remember what big news that was?
Today I read the news of a small town in North Carolina where at least 9 women who were sex workers have been murdered and/or are missing.
Since 2005, nine women who lived at the edges of the poor community in this small North Carolina city have disappeared. Six bodies were found along rural roads just a few miles outside town, most so decomposed that investigators could not tell how they died. At least one of the women was strangled, and all the deaths have been classified as homicides. Three women are still missing.
Police will not say whether they suspect a serial killer, but people in the community about 60 miles northeast of Raleigh do, and they’re impatient with law enforcement efforts to investigate the slayings.
This is a small town, so nine women gone is something that is noticed by a lot of people. As one of the women who used to work with the missing women said:
“I used to walk these streets and jump in and out of cars. But then when that first girl Melody got killed I stopped that because I knew he would kill another,” said Johnson, 41. “I hate for that to happen to her, but it probably saved my life. I have five babies.”
Counting the names on one hand, she added, “There’s probably five or six girls left around here that will jump in and out of cars. He really did kill the whole neighborhood.“
I knew without being told several aspects of the story: namely, the police didn’t really investigate what was going on until more women wound up dead. And even then, the families are frustrated because police don’t seem to really care. And the media isn’t really covering it all that much. And national pressure is non-existent, and money for body recovery is hard to come by.
And from what I can see, every single one of the women who are missing are black.
Now, don’t get me wrong, I don’t think that sex work is any safer for white women then it is for women of color–but I DO think that people *care more* when the women who are killed or missing is beautiful, young and white rather than old or older, a mother of multiple kids and black. How the media has covered these separate crimes is evidence of that. When the Craig’s List murder happened, the media was stalking the court rooms, running police images of the suspect, talking to the murder victim’s families, contemplating over and over again–what would make such a beautiful woman *do this* (i.e. sex work)? She had her whole life ahead of her! She could’ve done anything! Oh, the tragedy of women being forced to sell sexual acts so they can survive!
Compared to nine women black women now missing or dead–and ONE article about in the national news.
Whose lives does the media find important? Whose PUSSIES does the media find important? Whose neighborhood’s does the media find important?
While I’m not a fan of the netroots nation conference–the one thing I am really glad of is that la Mala is repping. We must ALL feel the emptiness of a table with women not there because of violence and erasure. And for some reason, I don’t see many people at the “nation” caring much about these women, unless somebody is there to “remind” the nation about who isn’t there.
8:54 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · chicago|Funny|race · 1 Comment
2 Aug 2009I got this from Blabbeando and thought it too funny not to share. This video is an actual Chicago police department’s “sensitivity” training video.
8:41 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Justice|Labor|New York City|race · 1 Comment
23 Jul 2009A Federal Judge in Brooklyn ruled that the New York City Fire Department has been discriminating against blacks and Latinos in it’s hiring exams.
Judge Nicholas Garaufis wrote, “These unlawful practices barred over a thousand additional black and Hispanic applicants from consideration for appointment as FDNY firefighters, and unfairly delayed the appointment of hundreds of black and Hispanic firefighters.”
Approximately 3 percent of NYC firefighters are black and 4 percent are Latino.
Via / Gothamist
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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