9:20 am By Maegan La Mala · arizona|Immigration|Puerto Rico · 11 Comments
3 Aug 2010The last time I wrote about U.S. citizenship, I got beat down pretty hard by some peeps I admire for viewing it through the lens of “privilege”, that is how citizenship, held up as the end all and be all of life in the United States affords certain privileges that non-citizenship does not, mainly voting rights and a certain level of security that I will not/cannot expelled from the country (save a seditious conspiracy charge or something I guess). Even the “privileges” of U.S. citizenship are conditional however. You must actually live in the United States, not in one of it’s colonies in order to vote for President and have actual representation in Congress. Your right to vote can be and will be taken away if you are convicted of a felony. Thinking of who are the colonial U.S. citizens and who are the overwhelming number of felons (thanks in no small part to disparities in drug sentencing laws and racial profiling) U.S. citizenship as a carrot to prove loyalty and as a stick to beat communities of color with, isn’t a new concept. So now, with renewed threats of taking away the citizenship status of the U.S. born children of undocumented immigrants, I am reflecting again on the idea of “citizenship” and how that has been used specifically against people of color, immigrants mujeres, and our children.
12:08 pm By Maegan la Mamita Mala · economy|Labor|Puerto Rico · Comments Off
14 Oct 2009Puerto Rico has been feeling the effects of the global recession and its impact hits harder thanks to it’s colonial status. Record unemployment has been boosted thanks to pro-statehood governor Luis Fortuño laying off around 17,000 earlier this month, bringing the total number of people fired on the island close to 25,000. This has led to massive popular action in the streets of the isla del encanto and there is a general strike called for tomorrow, October 15th.
There are a number of solidarity events, especially here in NYC so stay tuned for updates.
Via / Global Voices
10:25 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · economy|Labor|Money|Puerto Rico · 15 Comments
26 Aug 2009
For as long as I have believed in self-determination for Puerto Rico, I have thought that talk about the island becoming the 51st state was just that, talk. This is partially because of issues of race and identity. Despite the post-racial times the U.S. finds itself in (allegedly), the U.S. will not accept a brown, Spanish speaking nation as a state. I also think though, that annexation isn’t attractive because economically, Puerto Rico isn’t attractive. Claro, the island has been exploited economically, pero statehood would require the U.S. to invest more than it would get back from the island. Just take a look at the unemployment numbers coming out of la isla del encanto:
The unemployment rate in Puerto Rico stands at 16.5 percent, the highest of all U.S. jurisdictions, and the government is announcing even more layoffs of public employees.
7:24 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Puerto Rico · 1 Comment
25 Jul 2009
Ah the politics of colonization. I shouldn’t be surprised that The Natural Resources Committee of Congress, a committee that deals with fisheries, wildlife, Native Americans and possessions of the U.S. (aka colonies), approved a proposal Wednesday that would let Puerto Ricans decide their island’s political status. What are Puerto Ricans and Indigenous people if not dehumanized things that need protecting and caretaking?
Voters would choose between keeping the island’s commonwealth status, adopted in 1952, or to opt for something different. In the latter case, a second plebiscite would let them decide whether they wanted statehood, independence or independence with a loose association to the United States.
7:30 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Politics|Puerto Rico · 1 Comment
17 Jun 2009
On Monday afternoon, The Special Committee on Decolonization approved a draft resolution calling upon the Government of the United States to expedite a process that would allow the Puerto Rican people to exercise fully their inalienable right to self-determination and independence.
The above news that came into my inbox (gracias Jo Boriken) comes from Puerto Rico’s pro-independence party (PIP). A few thing right away caught my attention. One, the fact that this happened in a Committee on Decolonization, formally known as the Special Committee on the Situation with Regard to the Implementation of the Declaration on the Granting of Independence to Colonial Countries and Peoples, reasserts what many have refused to say or covered up through semantics. Puerto Rico is a colony.
Second, I can’t be the only one who finds in strange that one country needs to request action from another in order to determine it’s own future. Pero maybe that’s just the radical in me.
By the terms of that text, which the Special Committee approved by consensus, the decolonization body… requested that the President of the United States release all Puerto Rican political prisoners serving sentences for cases relating to the Non-Self-Governing Territory’s struggle for independence -– including two who had been imprisoned for more than 28 years. It expressed serious concern about actions carried out against Puerto Rican independence fighters and encouraged rigorous investigations of those actions, in cooperation with relevant authorities.
The Special Committee, also known as the “Committee of 24”, urged the United States Government to complete the return of occupied land and installations on Vieques island and in Ceiba to the Puerto Rican people; respect their inhabitants’ fundamental human rights to health and economic development; and expedite and cover the costs of decontaminating the areas previously used for military exercises.
Introducing the draft resolution, Cuba’s representative said Puerto Rico was a Latin American and Caribbean country with its own national identity, and its long struggle for independence was deeply rooted in a sense of identity. Notwithstanding 27 resolutions and decisions approved by the Special Committee and the General Assembly, the people of the Commonwealth were still unable to exercise their legitimate right to genuine self-determination and independence due to continuing economic, political and social domination by the United States, the colonial Power.
8:32 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Activism|Events|Puerto Rico · 28 Comments
22 May 2009
This was in my inbox this morning, about how to support the Ricans that were arrested earlier this month for their civil disobedience in Congress and how their personal struggle is linked to the issue of the colonial status of Puerto Rico.
“Puerto Rico has been a colony of the United States for 111 years: a disgraceful colonial condition in the 21st century. It is time to resolve this crime against our people.” This is the demand of the six pro-independence protesters who interrupted the U.S. Congress and who hope their actions will produce more acts of civil disobedience regarding the colonial status of the island.
The protesters, who have been summoned to court on May 26, are the artists Luis Enrique Romero, María “Chabela” Rodríguez y José Rivera (Tony Mapeyé), mechanic designer Luis Suárez, nurse Eugenia Pérez-Martijo, and retired laborer Ramón Díaz.
The six interrupted a U.S. Congress session by singing “Oubao Moin” and carrying Puerto Rican flags and signs that read “111 years of colonization is a disgrace.” The protesters could face sentences of up to six months in jail and fines.
The struggle for Puerto Rican independence is the result of many battles that have not ceased. In 1954, five Puerto Rican conducted a shooting attack against member of the U.S. Congress to demand the independence of the island. The 1954 attackers have served more than 25 years in U.S. federal prisons. To date, thousands of pro-independence activists have been persecuted and incarcerated by the U.S. government for their actions. Now is time to decolonize Puerto Rico and put an end to the lies and deceit used by the U.S. government for the past 111 years.
Freedom for Puerto Rico and its political prisoners.
NYC PROTEST IN SUPPORT OF THE 6 PRO-INDEPENDENCE ACTIVISTS
Where: 26 Federal Plaza, Manhattan
When: May 26 at 5:30 pm
Directions: 4, 6, R, W to City HallSupport by making a monetary contribution for the activists at any Banco Popular and make a deposit to bank account #760060177 to María I. Rodríguez and specify that it is for a Banco Popular (BPPR) account in Puerto Rico.
GO TO WASHINGTON DC AND SUPPORT
Solidarity groups will go to Washington DC on the day of the hearing. For more information contact decolonizeprnow@gmail.com¡Free Puerto Rico! ¡Freedom for our political prisoners!
10:04 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Activism|Justice|Media|media justice|mexico|New York City|Newspapers|Politics|Washington DC · Comments Off
7 May 2009
The past few days have been busy for activists around the issues of Puerto Rico’s colonial status and Mexican political prisoners.And yet, I can’t seem to find much information about either act of civil disobedience in the mainstream news media.
From Narco News:
Today, May 4, 2009, the Other Campaign New York took over the Mexican Consulate in New York to demand the liberation of the 12 political prisoners who have been brutally repressed for resisting neoliberal urbanization projects that are destructive to human life and culture, specifically the construction of an airport in Atenco, and for protecting displaced flower vendors in Texcoco.
Today, on this third anniversary of the repression, the arrests, the violations, the torture, and the breaking and entering made by the military police in Atenco, a delegation of members of Movement for Justice in El Barrio succeeded in entering the offices of the Consulate of Mexico in New York despite the fact that these offices have been under strict and tightened security since precisely 3 years ago when Mexicans of The Other Campaign New York with real heart and memory, demanded the liberation of the political prisoners of Atenco. We succeeded in entering the offices to hold a non-violent protest demanding the immediate release of the prisoners of Atenco.
Once inside, the compañer@s of the Other Campaign New York, amongst the clamor of: “Freedom for political prisoners (Presos politicos, libertad)!, Liberty, liberty, to those prisoners for fighting (Libertad, libertad, a los presos por luchar)!, We are all Atenco (Todos Somos Atenco)!”, along with other chants, and with our signs, some with prison bars to look like a cell, and also with bandanas, gave out to our fellow country men and women at the Consulate DVD’s of the video “Breaking the Siege”, about the repression in Atenco, and informational flyers where we explain our main demands.
Later, we demanded to speak with the consul Ruben Beltran in order to give him a letter of demands. First, they told us that he was not there because he was in Mexico, but we knew that this was a lie, since the day before the consul was in El Barrio at an event proselytizing for PAN during the imposed Cinco de Mayo celebration.
After a while, the authorities of the Consulate told us that the Consul was in New York but that he could not be found in the Consulate, and they closed consular services to the public, asking all of their clients to abandon the offices. By the end of our action, the consul arrived. We gave him a giant size letter on a poster-board with the following
demands:1. Liberty for the political prisoners in Atenco.
2. Cancel the arrest warrants for those 2 who are being persecuted.
3. Revoke and appeal the sentences.
4. Complete respect for the human rights of the detained and the persecuted.
5. Punishment for those responsible for the violations of human rights.
The consul, Rubén Beltrán, first told us that he was open to engage in dialogue with all Mexican people in New York and listen to all opinions, but then blamed us – and our cause, the liberation of the prisoners in Atenco – for having closed the services of the Consulate and for having left so many people unattended.
7:27 am By Maegan La Mala · Latin America|Politics|Puerto Rico · 2 Comments
23 Mar 2009
Full disclosure : Yours truely was involved in some NYC organizing for Vieques before all the celebs started doing it.
It has been six years since grassroots struggles on and off the island of Puerto Rico led to the end of Vieques being used as a U.S. Navy bombing test sight. In the years of struggle that included many non-celebs being arrested and a whole community of the fishing island being negatively impacted in terms of health and livelihood, Vieques was a symbol of one face of U.S. colonialism in Puerto Rico. And now it seems, the U.S. Navy wants to reestablish Vieques as a military test site all in the name of the war on drugs.
As reported by the Associated Press, Puerto Rico’s Resident Commissioner Pedro Pierluisi stated that he was open to re-establishing a “low-intensity” military presence in Vieques. The move would be a part of Puerto Rico’s moral obligation, as Pierluisi put it, to national defense.
The AP also reported that U.S. military leaders and Republican Senator Jim Inhofe, of Oklahoma, have said that Vieques could serve a strategic purpose for the Armed Forces.
Even though the bombing has ended on Vieques, the land and environment is still contaminated, with both Federal and island forces arguing over who is responsible for the clean up of a land that claims high cancer rates and birth defects due in part no doubt to the use of bombs with depleted uranium among other things.
The idea that Puerto Rico is a strategic locale for the U.S. military is nothing new. Ever since the U.S. invaded (yes, invaded) Puerto Rico in 1898, the island has offered the U.S. a gateway into Latin America at the expense of the Puerto Rican people.
It is also not the first time that the war on drugs has been invoked as a “good” reason for the U.S. military presence on Puerto Rico and specifically in Vieques. I already pointed out that the Obama administration has a former Raytheon man in the Defense Department. Raytheon wanted to establish radar sites on Puerto Rico in the name of the war on drugs. Mass protest stopped the sites from being developed but obviously not the desire to come up with some other excuse to increase military presence on the island.
And I blame Mexico. Well not Mexico the people there, pero rather the increased media and U.S. government focus on the country due to the growing drug related violence. The narco crimes, which in many ways have been exacerbated by the Mexican’s government militarization, have prompted the U.S. to use Mexico as it’s new drug war baby. Violence? Blame Mexico. Drugs? Blame Mexico. Plans to militarize the U.S./Mexico frontera are are the agenda again and this time it’s not just cuz of scary undocumented immigrants. It’s now also the drugs and violence that those scary immigrants force on the U.S. (Please ignore lopsided U.S. drug policy). Puerto Rico is the new old frontera.
Since the U.S. will lose Guantanamo Bay in Cuba, Puerto Rico, a colony with a fancy commonwealth name, is even more important to the U.S. as a force in Latin America. Also we cannot ignore the choice that people in Latin America, most recently El Salvador, in moving left on the political spectrum as an attempt to exorcise the ghosts of Reagan era imperialism. Puerto Rico as a place to monitor Cuba, Venezuela, Bolivia and other Latin American nations who despite the rhetoric of change coming from Washington D.C., are still seen as the enemy of U.S. interests.
The solution goes beyond just resisting the U.S. Navy reestablishing themselves on Vieques. The solution lies in allowing Puerto Rico to be in charge of it’s own political destiny. Puerto Rico’s colonial status allows the U.S. to use the island at will. And don’t bring me that tired old story of how Puerto Ricans have voted for the current Commonwealth status in referendums that really are nothing more than glorified opinion polls. Until decolonization happens, as recommended time and time again via the United Nations, Puerto Rico will continue to be used as pawn against herself and her sisters in Latin America.
Via / El Diario la Prensa
12:08 pm By la Macha · military interventions · 1 Comment
16 Mar 2009Seeing as there’s so many smaller South American nations that this could happen to and then Mexico is going to get increase military aid to fight drug cartels (why is it never increased money to fight drug addiction?) I think that the following is important to post.

Dear Friends:
Please visit : http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/JunkVFAnow/
In this new era of the Obama administration, I would like to direct your
attention to the deployment of US troops in the Philippines, under the
auspices of the Visiting Forces Agreement (VFA), a joint military agreement
between the US and Philippine governments signed in 1998. The Bush
administration abused the VFA in 2001 after launching the Global War on
Terror after the 9/11 attacks to justify the so-called anti-terrorism
exercises between US and Philippine troops known as the Balikatan (in
Filipino “shoulder-to-shoulder”) exercises. The Bush administration also
tagged the Philippines as the so-called “Second Front” to the War on Terror. Read more…
11:22 am By Maegan La Mala · Palestine|Puerto Rico · Comments Off
16 Jan 2009
The island of Vieques, part of Puerto Rico, is no stranger to being used as a colonial target. For almost 60 years, the island, whose economy is based on fishing, was used as a bombing range for live ammunition, shelling, strafing, and illegal chemicals such as napalm and depleted uranium, contributing to deaths, injuries and a cancer rate among Viequenses which is 26.9% higher than the rest of Puerto Rico, all thanks to the U.S. Navy.
Thanks to a huge grassroots movement, Vieques is no longer used for U.S. military experiments (although it’s future is still uncertain)and it from that history of struggle linked to a wider anti-colonial struggle that Vieques has expressed it’s solidarity with Palestine.
“Viequenses join the call for peace in Palestine”.
On Saturday, petitions were sent from Vieques to President Bush, President-Elect Obama and to Puerto Rico Governor Fortuño urging them to join the world-wide outcry for a cease fire in the Gaza Strip. The petitions were signed by almost 400 residents of Vieques in only 24 hours and express the solidarity of the people of Vie ques with the people of Palestine who are suffering a huge humanitarian crisis. During the last two weeks, more than 900 people have be en killed in Gaza, including more than 200 children; more than 4000 have been injured. More than 10 Israelis have died; some were soldiers killed by “friendly” fire.
Read the official statement, in Spanish after the jump.
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.
About | Advertise with us | Contact | Twitter