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Posts Tagged ‘protests

Images speak louder

11:00 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Activism| Immigration| San Francisco · 1 Comment

13 Apr 2006

The rhetoric, punditry and backbiting stirred up in the media and swirling around the immigrant rights movement is getting to be a bit much. Sometimes images are more eloquent than words, so I’m posting this one.

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My Flickr friend Franciscophile snapped this one at our local SF protest. It gave me a peaceful feeling in the midst of all of this hostility.

Got a picture of the protests that you consider different from what the media is showing us? Send it to us at press@vivirlatino.com

Via / Flickr

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White Americans, and black Americans too, are going to have to get used to sharing this country — sharing it fully — with brown Americans. Things are going to be different. Deal with it.

At least Washington Post op-ed columnist Eugene Robinson wasn’t afraid to tell it like it is yesterday. Now while all Latinos/Hispanics (pick a box and move on) are not brown, we sure as hell ain’t white, at least not according to the United States race system which makes as much sense as the Homeland Security color coded warning system. The current immigration debate isn’t being so hotly debated because people are worried about those Canadians coming over the border. While people want to say its just about U.S. citizens losing jobs or wages being driven down, or safety, or U.S. services being overextended, its also about race. Why else the calls for protesters to carry U.S. flags and wear white? We, as Latinos, are expected to make ourselves more palatable to the mainstream, make ourselves less scary so we’ll be embraced.

Read more…

Wave of protests nationwide: birth of a movement?

11:26 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Activism| Immigration · Comments Off

10 Apr 2006

06325193042_demonstrators.jpgLarge-scale “immigration justice” protests are slated for today in numerous cities across the country. CNN reports:

On what is dubbed a “national day of action for immigration justice,” Atlanta’s was one of 30 marches in the South alone as focus on the immigration issue turned from Congress to the streets.

Other large protests are planned in New York, Philadelphia, Indianapolis, Seattle, Washington, D.C., and Los Angeles.

According to CNN, protesters in New York will cross the Brooklyn Bridge into Manhattan and march on City Hall. The Nation’s blog reports:

…even more massive pro-immigration demonstrations are scheduled for 140 more American cities in a national day of protest. Once again Los Angeles is predicted to be the epicenter of the day’s activities. As many as a quarter million of a people are expected there as well as an equal number in New York and Washington DC– perhaps a total of two million or more nationwide.

Half a million people took to the streets in Dallas yesterday in solidarity with immigrant workers. From The Nation:

The Dallas demonstration –- which mushroomed to ten times the size anticipated by authorities — rivaled the scope of the so-called “Gran Marcha” in Los Angeles two weeks ago – an event that to many observers marked the birth of a new civil rights movement.

Do these protests indicate the birth of a new civil rights movement or a knee jerk reaction which will likely die down? Leave your comments and debate.

Via / CNN.com and The Nation

Photo: AP


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VivirLatino is a daily publication published by 2 Mujeres Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse and influential Latino and Latina community in the U.S.

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