10:34 am By la Macha · Immigration|U.S.-Mexico Border|Violence · 2 Comments
23 Nov 2009
As a media justice activist, I was thrilled to read about this new GPS application. What it does is basically allow any phone user who has capabilities of downloading applications to download information on safe border crossings between Mexico and the U.S.. It will include information such as where water stations are, where safer crossings are, and it will even give out inspirational poems to let crossers know they aren’t alone on their crossing.
It was ‘how can we tweak this GPS algorithm and develop it for another concern — the question of people dying on the border.’ ”
The tool pairs cheap cell phone technology with a global-positioning system and consistently updated online data to guide individuals who are trying to cross international borders. The GPS system, however, doesn’t contact all three satellites so authorities would not be able to triangulate where the person is, unless he or she used the phone to make a call.
Border Patrol officials said the device won’t stop them from nabbing border-crossers.
“The technology is not new…,” said U.S. Border Patrol spokesman Mark Qualia. He added that he’s seen these sort of tools used before. “That’s the nature of our job. We have to learn to overcome and to adapt.”
Of course, this application has led to all sorts of angry outbursts from the Nativist community. This application (and the creators) are aiding and abetting a crime, the enemy, etc etc etc and should, of course, be arrested and locked up forever.
But Ricardo Dominguez (the lead creator of the application) has a response, “”We’re not trying to resolve the border issues…We’re just trying to create a poetic safety tool. Anyone can agree on safety as a far as a core human right.”
But of course, a decent discussion about human rights can’t be had when it comes to teh illegulz:
Minuteman Britt Craig, who splits his time between the Campo border and his home in Mission Viejo, said he understands Dominguez’ invention on a humanitarian level.
“I’m sure his intentions are good. He doesn’t want people to die in the desert. I don’t want people to die in the desert either,” said Craig, 60.
Still, he said, the device won’t do the border-crosser or the American people any favors.
“As soon as they get over here the problem hasn’t ended, it’s just begun,” he said. “They are in an immediate state between a slave and a legal free man laborer. They are totally at the mercy of the people who hire them and they just begin ruining the economy for the people who are legal to work here.”
Craig said he doesn’t believe the device will keep people from dying in the desert. He said he fears that it may have an opposite affect of emboldening some to make the journey on their own with the device.
“It may give people the confidence to go out and not be able to physically cross it and die,” he said. “He may actually lead someone to their doom with the device… an unintended consequence. If they think a cell phone is going to get them through 80 miles of desert, south of Yuma. They are mistaken.”
To which I say, Thank Gawd we’ve got the man who sits on the border with a gun to look out for teh illegulz! Who knew that the man with a gun aimed at you only wants what’s best for you!
On a more serious note, be sure to check out and support the makers of this application!
8:16 pm By la Macha · honduras · 3 Comments
6 Jul 2009To add more complexity to the various conversations we’ve had here at VL about the media coverage of the coup in Honduras, there is this really important interview on Democracy Now! with John Pilger, a journalist covering Honduras.
But for most people, the primary source of their information is the mainstream. It is mainly television. Even the internet for all its subversiveness has still a very large component of the mainstream. And that means we’re getting still either its this singular message about wars, about the economy, about all those things that touch our lives. All we are getting is what I would call is a contrived silence, a censorship by a mission. I think this is almost the principal issue of today because without information, we cannot possibly begin to influence government. We cannot possibly begin to end the wars.
All of this, it seams to me, has come together in the presidency of Barack Obama who is almost a creation of this media world. He promised some things, although most of them were more for us, and has delivered virtually the opposite. He started his own war in Pakistan. We see the events in Iran and Honduras in quiet subtlety, but very directly influenced in the time-honored way by the Obama administration. And yet the Obama administration is still given this extraordinary benefit of the doubt by people, who in my view are influenced by the mainstream media. It is a time when I think, where either we are going to begin to understand how the media really works, or we’re going to let that opportunity pass. Its almost a historic opportunity the we understand that the perception of our world is utterly distorted, most of the time through what are seen as credible sources of information.
There was also discussion in the interview about comparisons between the election in Iran and the election Honduras. It is a really important interview, if only because it asks all the questions I haven’t been able to think through because I’m not sure of the exact history in Honduras.
9:54 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Blogs|Media|media justice · 2 Comments
9 Jun 2009
The U.S. Census says it is depending on us. Nearly 60 million Americans (I think they mean people in the U.S.) rely on us for information. Who are we? We are ethnic media.
It’s hard to get one definition of what ethnic media is. One article states that it’s media, including TV, radio, newspapers, and Web sites that is often broadcasted or published in another language. Ethnic media can include huge corporate media sources like Univision and small independent sources like um lets say The Sanctuary.
Read more…
12:01 pm By la Macha · media justice · Comments Off
29 May 2009from Flip Flopping Joy comes the link to this SUPER review of the SPEAK CD, of which our lovely Mamita Mala is a part of! A taste of the review:
Most of the pieces rely on minimal sounds – light percussion, synthesizers, background noise – if there’s any sound besides the speaker at all, so E. Rose Sims’ “On Cartography and Dissection” is a jarring change of pace, with an orchestrated score that matches the dark tone of her exploration of monsters. The piece is a brilliant series of connections between colonialism and transphobia and racism, with mapmaking serving as a metaphor for the naming and conquering of the human body. Flags are planted, already-established realities are ignored, and healthy, natural identities are twisted, by colonizers, into “a wrongness, a distortion.” Sims’s voice brims with sadness and anger as thunder crackles behind her and she ponders what Medusa felt the first time she saw her own reflection.
There are delightful moments of humor in the collection, too. BabyBFP, giggling, reads a poem about her cats, and the CD begins to draw to a close with a spirited rendition of “I Feel Pretty.” When I saw the title on the track listing, I was afraid it would be corny, but these ladies pull it off.
So what are you waiting for??? GO BUY THE CD!!
2:28 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · media justice · Comments Off
9 Dec 2008
…GIVING TO THE POOR from ABOVE on Vimeo.
Above is a video of artist Above’s recent work in Portugal. Here’s how he explains it:
“These new stencil works are universally understood and free from language barriers that often get lost in translation. When I was in Lisbon, Portugal 3 months ago I would walk by this homeless lady who was begging for money everyday. I found it sadly ironic that just 6 feet away there was an ATM machine where people were literally lining up to withdraw money. With an obvious visual clash of “Rich” and “Poor” being in such a close proximity evoked me to make this stencil “Stealing from the rich, and giving to the poor.”
Above says in that spirit he is selling prints of piece and donating all the proceeds to homeless shelters. Via Wooster.
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