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Archive for the ‘Controversia’ Category

The farce of a task force, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Advisory Council Task Force, that attempted to tour the United States to instill confidence in a process that didn’t really exist, released a final report last week that included recommended tweaks to the mass deportation program.

The report contained no bombshell revelations. It confirmed what many advocates and activists have been saying since the program was expanded under President Obama (let us not forget that back then many advocates also said the program was ok since it targeted “criminals”). In fact many of the findings echo those in a report released last month by a coalition of organizations : its adverse impact on community policing; inaccurate and incomplete information about the program provided by ICE to state and local officials; and the lack of clarity on whether the program is in fact legally mandated.

Five of the task force’s 19 members, including all three who represented labor unions, and the former police chief of Sacramento Arturo Venegas, resigned, citing objections to the recommendations contained in the committee’s final report.

While the resignations are noteworthy, they are as much of a show as the task force itself. The resignations, happening after task force tour meetings were met with protest after protest, carry no weight, no consequence. A far stronger and more principled stance would have been to not participate in this toothless process from jump. Additionally, while across the board, the non-profit responses have been in support of the resignations and non-surprise at the findings and recommendations of the task force, with the additional demand of shutting down the program completely, there is still a centering on how S-Comm comes between police and community and/or negatively impacts “community policing”. While #altopolimigra is the most favored hashtag of the moment, I have yet to see a defining of “community policing” or any real acknowledgement of how even without enforcement programs, local police tend to terrorize immigrant people of color communities.

Sources : NY Immigration Coalition Press Release, National Immigration Law Center Press Release

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A spokesmodel is a spokesperson whose physical appearance contributes to brand equity.
When I think of Latina spokesmodels, I think of the women of Sabado Gigante : leggy, tetona, culona bottle blonde white women smiling holding up the next product we just have to have. They are stereotypical examples of what Latinidad should be and in general mass audiences comsume that image, internalize that identity, as much as whatever dishwashing soap the jingle is asking us to purchase.

Cecilia Muñoz, the Director of Intergovernmental Affairs at the White House, plays an equivalent role well in Latino politics. She has proven to be the Latina spokesmodel for Obama’s immigration policy, prioritizing deportations over any executive action that could be taken and attempting to sell this destructive product to us in English and Spanish.

In response to the coordinated protests across the country happening against the expansion of the Secure Communities deportation policy, the White House officially responded through a post, with Muñoz’s name, on the official White House Blog.

The title of the post, In the Debate Over Immigration and Deportations, the Facts Matter, implies that the protesters, organizations and community members are lying about the impact of Secure Communities. In other words : potential Latino voters – the White House doesn’t believe you.

Their is a call growing for Cecilia Muñoz to resign from her position. Many feel that she is incapable of stepping back and actually listening to criticisms. Some may say she is simply doing her job and that Latinos should be happy to have someone in the White House. We are told to wait until November of 2012 and let the election sort it out, not to personalize the issue. That this S-Comm is part of a larger immigration policy strategy and that Muñoz is a genius and has done much in terms of immigration.
I counter that asking how many deportations past the one million mark will we be at in 2012. Is this level of deception acceptable because it is coming from the Democratic Party and not the GOP? I am pretty certain that those whose loved ones are being deported take the issue very personally.

This is not about quitate tu pa’ponerme yo. This is not about careerism. Certainly this is about a policy that is destroying families under the cover of taking care of the “bad guys”. Cecilia Muñoz can keep selling with a smile, a service that is harmful to our communities, or she can keep it real and resign.

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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.

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Gracias 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.

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Full disclosure : I am a resident of Corona, Queens and partially grew up in this neighborhood. So perhaps my critique, concern, and commentary comes from a personal place. I also acknowledge that I am not an immigrant. My parents came to the U.S. from Puerto Rico so their immigrant experience is different than that of the immigrants that live in Corona, Queens. I own that as well.

I was supposed to participate in a poetry event today at Immigrant Movement International, just a few blocks from where I live.
I wondered what was this organization that I was being invited to share space with? I have lived at my current address in Corona for a number of years and had never seen or heard of it. Also many years of being involved in the Latino social justice movement here in NYC had me thinking I was pretty aware of the different organizations doing work.

Turns out Immigrant Movement International isn’t so much of a movement but rather the art project of one Cubana, Tania Bruguera.

From her website on the project :

Tania Bruguera’s Immigrant Movement International, presented by Creative Time and the Queens Museum of Art, is a long-term art project in the form of an artist-initiated socio-political movement. Bruguera will spend a year operating a flexible community space in the multinational and transnational neighborhood of Corona, Queens, which will serve as the movement’s headquarters. Engaging both local and international communities, as well as working with social service organizations, elected officials, and artists focused on immigration reform, Bruguera will examine growing concerns about the political representation and conditions facing immigrants.

As one of those artists, I decided not to engage Immigrant Movement International, in fact this blog post will be the extent of my engagement save when I pass the building when I am walking with my children to the park. I have to worry about the mobile police unit on my corner, how to pay for my own unfunded art space/home, and if a crime against a Latino family friend 20 years ago- an immigrant on immigrant crime if you will- well ever see justice.

Just as adventure tourism that claims to give a “border crossing experience” is problematic, so is an art project that claims to be movement.

By engaging the local community through public workshops, events, actions, and partnerships with immigrant and social service organizations, Immigrant Movement International will explore who is defined as an immigrant and the values they share, focusing on the larger question of what it means to be a citizen of the world. Bruguera will also delve into the implementation of art in society, examining what it means to create “Useful Art”, and addressing the disparity of engagement between informed audiences and the general public, as well as the historical gap between the language used in what is considered avant-garde and the language of urgent politics.

Since when is a funded art project coming into a neighborhood a movement?
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Earlier this week, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo announced that the state would be temporarily opting out of the Secure Communities immigration enforcement program, following much campaigning by local and national advocates and activists. In the meantime the program ill be investigated for “not meeting its stated goal and serious consequences for witnesses, victims of crime and law enforcement.”

The announcement has garnered strong support from various organizations and individuals including the former Manhattan District Attorney Robert Morgenthau, faith leaders, and local politicians. Even a poll via the local NYC newspaper, The NY Daily News, shows a majority feeling like the S-Comm program discriminates against immigrants.

Pero the celebrating may be premature. Remember that when Illinois announced that they were opting out of S-Comm, ICE head John Morton paid a special visit to say that they couldn’t. An equally problematic situation would be the adoption of a law on the statewide level, like the Smart Act, that states that enforcement programs must meet certain criteria, like only really going after the “bad” or criminal immigrants. This would be problematic because looking at the bigger national picture, the federal government has yet to really look at immigration reform in a real way beyond more enforcement.

This is a suspension – not a complete opt-out. A ver what will happen next.

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It seems more than strange on the 4th of July to write about accused spy Vicky Peláez, a reporter/writer for the NYC based Spanish language daily El Diario/la Prensa. ,

In case you have not been following the story,Peláez, a U.S. citizen Peruana, was arrested and is being accused of being a spy for Russia along with her husband, Juan Lazaro.

It us unclear what proof exists that Peláez, her husband, and others are spies and to what end they would be spying for Russia. Peláez and her husband’s home in Yonkers has been bugged by the Feds and upon their arrest, documents and computers were taken from the home.

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I’m usually the first one in line when it comes to challenging the iconic God-like status so many of the “leaders” of people of color movements have had. I admire MLK, but he was a womanizing bastard. I identify with the personal and political travels of Malcom X, but he was a patronizing bastard on many levels. I dig the AIM movement and the brown power movement of the 60′s, but did brothas have to be such sexist assholes?

It’s not that I am looking to destroy the legacies of leaders of various leaders–but rather, in creating many legacies, the voices of the people I love, namely (queer) women, are written out, written over, and even destroyed (see Ana Mae Aquash)–and many times details of the men’s lives that are not shameful in the least, are written out to hide the very real intolerance of a community fighting for freedom.

In short, there are important stories to tell about the dark and hidden corners that we try to ignore so hard. Important stories that could help us today to make more complicated, interesting–and more liberating choices for our communities.

In the case of Cesear Chavez–we get an amazing man who dreamed when so many in our communidad simply couldn’t. He organized and inspired and created actual change that affected real human beings.

But he was also a man. Which means he undoubtedly made very human and real mistakes, just as other leaders of the 60s did.

This article touches on some of the existing critiques of Cesar Chavez. But…as I read the article I had a really hard time taking any of the critiques the author mentions seriously. For example, it is mentioned that many organizers today which they had stood up to Chavez for unions rather than going along with him on the dream of a poor people’s movement:

Chief among the lessons we should take from his life is that heroes are human, with real flaws. You follow them blindly at your own risk. The biggest regret that many who worked closely with Chavez now express is that they did not speak up for what they believed in when it might have mattered. They failed to fight to keep building a labor union when Chavez veered determinedly toward his vision of a communal movement for poor people, based on an ideology of sacrifice.

This reeks to me of arm chair game playing. Of the “*WE* didn’t want that, we were only following directions!!” hiding from accountability that runs rampant throughout so much of Latin@ centered organizing. There’s been plenty of time in the past decade or so to restructure and move towards something different. But instead, Latin@ organizers, especially in the UFW community, have been dealing with inner squabbling and rumors of corruption.

Another critique the author mentions is that Chavez was a control freak–to the detriment of his community:

His insistence on absolute control demonstrates a third lesson: When you empower people, they may not choose to wield their power toward the goals you believe they should. Chavez was a risk-taker, and he taught others to take risks. But trusting workers to run their own union was one risk he adamantly refused to take. That cost farmworkers the best chance they ever had at building an effective and lasting union.

The insistence on a centralized charismatic leader is not a new idea or something isolated to the Chicano community of the 60s. The Civil Rights movement also faced similar battles on the place of MLK in the movement–to the point that SNCC leader, Ella Baker, wound up leaving the MLK led faction of the movement. She felt that the “leaders’ of the movement should be the people.

But while the reasons that the black movement disagreed over the place of charismatic leaders in the movement has been discussed and analyzed and adjusted for by historians and organizers alike–the Chicano community in particular has been frozen by a refusal to self-reflect. A lot of this has to do with the very real threats we all still exist under–it is a stated mission of many nativists, for example, to “destroy” the legacy of Chavez (just as racists have tried to do to MLK’s legacy) and thereby destroy any legitimacy that Chicano organizers and activists have within our communities and with white liberals who love a good inspirational figure to latch onto to better demonstrate their “diversity creds.”

But I also think a large part of it is that there simply is no clear “Chicano movement.” It hints towards what several of our discussions here at VL talk about–where is solidarity in the Latino community? Is there solidarity? Is there unity? What is a Latino? What is a Chicano? Do we care about immigration or Labor–or something else all together? What do we do with all the borders that are all over our bodies, our citizenship, our organizing? How do we organize a Chicano identity based movement when so many of our fellow workers are Guatemalans, Cambodians and black?

The politics of our organizing are so complicated–so layered and in many places, completely unanswerable even after all this time–that it’s often times just easier to defend a hero–a name we all know.

I want to know Chavez on a more intimate level. Not as a villain, not as a hero–but as a man who had dreams. But even more importantly, I want his history to be used as a starting point to discuss how on earth we can organize a more focused, necessary and fundamental movement. What didn’t work for Chavez? What did? Why don’t we want to know about a particular fault of Chavez’s? What does this reflect on our movement making possibilities today (for example, do we want to keep queers out because they disrupt our notion of familia? etc)? In embracing a more real and complicated Chavez–we’d be embracing a more real and complicated us.

And what could be wrong with that?

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loudobbsAfter a successful day of events across the country yesterday that coincided with the airing of Latino in America, seems like CNN’s Lou Dobbs realizes that it’s gonna take more than calling Latinos who call him out “fleas” to get rid of us. The producers of Lou Dobbs’ show emailed Roberto Lovato of BastaDobbs to be on the show. Roberto, never one to shy away from a good opportunity, said claro pero on one condition…

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We have written about the various campaigns against CNN’s resident racist, Lou Dobbs. With Latino Heritage Month having one day left and CNN claiming to display our experience with their “Latino in America” special, Basta Dobbs released a new video, by Arturo Perez, a Mexican-American immigrant who was named best Internet documentary filmmaker by the Pulitzer Center and YouTube for 2009.

I don’t know if I buy Soldedad O’Brian being the voice of Latinidad in the media pero so far Basta Dobbs is claiming 50,000 signatures on their petition asking for Dobbs to be fired from CNN.

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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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