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Posts Tagged ‘Women

It reads like a bad novela if it weren’t the real nightmare that so many families are living in the United States. First, Maria Gurrola is violently attacked and her newborn, Yair Anthony Carillo, is abducted by a woman claiming to be an ICE agent. Then, once reunited with her baby, Maria lost Yair and her other three children, this time to State authorities who cited vague “safety issues”.

Yesterday, the petition to remove the children from the home was withdrawn and Gurrola has been reunited with all of her children.

Tuesday’s hearing was planned at Juvenile Court to discuss allegations that the family may have known of a plot to sell the baby for $25,000. Court documents did not detail who made the allegations.

Metro police spokesman Don Aaron released a press release saying that Metro police agree that the children should be returned to the parents after extensive interviews by Metro, TBI and the FBI over the last day. All the agencies are in agreement, he said.

“At this time, (authorities) do not believe the parents, Maria Gurrola and Jose Carrillo, are involved,” Aaron said. “Significant unanswered questions remain, however, including why Gurrola and her newborn son were chosen by alleged kidnapper, Tammy Renee Silas. Statements made to law enforcement by Silas are part of the continuing investigation.”

Now if only all the babies can be reunited with their mothers, like Cirila and Angeline.

Via / USA Today

56957448Continuing thinking about labor on labor day, I would like to turn your attention to the struggles of mujeres, primarily immigrants, who work inside the homes of other women.

Immigrant women workers today form a pillar of the middle-class family. As nannies, housekeepers and other domestic workers, their status is defined by the strangely intimate nature of their work combined with structural discrimination. A new study presents at their hidden plight in a new light: as a driver of the advancement of the mothers they serve.

There is much talk still in mainstream feminist circles on the work at home vs stay at home mommy divide. Within these discussions however there is little if any analysis of how some women get to make this very decision and who takes the role of housekeeper and child care provider. It certainly isn’t the men of the household, assuming there is even a man in the picture. Rather it is immigrant women who often have never had the luxury of making a choice to stay home or to work outside the home.

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PLEASE FOREWARD WIDELY.

On March 3rd, 2009, Aniysah was taken from her mother’s arms by New York’s Family Court System and placed in the care of Aniysah’s father who has a history of domestic violence offenses. Furthermore, there were no records verifying that she would be taken to a safe living environment or that she was enrolled in school. Questions about her health and well-being went unanswered. That was over 150 days ago. To date, Aniysah remains lost in the family court system. A system where black and brown children go missing every day. A system where black mothers like Aniysah’s are often left to fend for themselves in a brutal, dogged battle just to make sure their children are safe. On the surface, this case appears to be a simple custody dispute, however, if one digs deeper it is a story about the injustices of New York’s Family Court System and how it fails brown women and children daily and how it can be used to further terrorize and re-victimize survivors of domestic violence.

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barack-obama2President Obama spent Sunday giving the commencement address at Notre Dame. A little context: Arizona State University recently refused to give Obama an honorary doctorate when they asked him to give the commencement at their school. There seemed to be no reason or rhym behind the decision–which lead to this excellent report by the team at the John Stewart show.

Notre Dame students (who actually have a legitimate beef with Obama) saw this and wondered why on earth their school, which is Catholic and thus as an institution, anti-abortion, would 1. invite an openly pro-choice supporter to speak in the first place, and 2. reward that pro-choice speaker with an honorary doctorate. Students have protested regularly leading up to the speech, and got in some moments of protest at the actual event.

Obama seemed to hold his own, however, earning a standing ovation and reluctant respect from news outlets. The following is from Fox News:

He said the views of the two sides of the debate are “irreconcilable” but can be honored.

“I do not suggest that the debate surrounding abortion can or should go away. Because no matter how much we may want to fudge it — indeed, while we know that the views of most Americans on the subject are complex and even contradictory — the fact is that at some level, the views of the two camps are irreconcilable,” Obama said.

“Each side will continue to make its case to the public with passion and conviction. But surely we can do so without reducing those with differing views to caricature,” he said.

On the specific issue of abortion, Obama urged the public to at least agree that it is a “heart-wrenching” decision for any woman, and that the country should work to reduce the number of women seeking abortions by reducing unwanted pregnancies and making adoption more available.

So, looking past the obvious irony that a man is deciding how a conversation about women should be discussed (and many of the protesters were men), I think it was a good speech in so much that for once, when there were protests going on, a public figure actually talked about those protests instead of barreling through some bullshit speech as if half the audience wasn’t standing with it’s back to the person.

But I do have one nitpicky issue: why does choosing an abortion always have to be a gut wrenching heartbreaking horrible decision? Why is it that the only way pro-choicers can frame the debate in a way that isn’t offensive is if they frame it around a woman who is inherently tragic rather than assertive and active?

It’s simply yet another version of the virgin/whore dichotomy (good tragic wonderful woman sacrificing her desired child just to survive in evil world versus evil whore that uses abortions as birth control)–and it’s frustrating. Why are women so easily reduced to simple caricatures ? (Oooh, the irony)

While some people downplay the brutal beating suffered by pop star Rihanna at the hands of her boyfriend Chris Brown, one organization is looking to make an example of it.

Non-profit organization DoSomething has taken the transcript of Rihanna’s declaration to police after the beating and used it, word by word, to re-enact the incident in a PSA in an effort to warn teens about the dangers of dating abuse. Check out the video above and let us know what you think.

Via / Yahoo News

Over at Viva La Feminista, fellow Chicana blogger, Veronica, has an interesting post up about how today is the National Day of Appreciation for Abortion Providers.

Today we would be more correct to call Gunn’s assassination as an act of terrorism. One that was repeated six more times in the United States. Terrorism that occurred in homes and at work places. Terrorism that are committed by fellow Americans. Dr. Gunn was a simple man providing health care to women.

As the bumper sticker says, don’t believe in abortion? Don’t have one.

In light of how the Catholic church is treating a fellow Latina and survivor for her decision (and her mothers!) to protect her own health and life, I think it’s a small thing to take a moment from our day and offer profound thanks to abortion providers, and also to remember all those women who are currently denied the right to abortion access, whether it be because of imprisonment, immigration status, youth, or inability to afford the proceedure.

Call for stories regarding the new HPV vaccination mandate

12:11 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Health| Immigration · Comments Off

7 Nov 2008

Please pass the word around, this is incredibly important!

Do you know a young woman or family member that has been affected?

In July 2008, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) added five new vaccinations to the list of required immunizations for immigrants seeking legal permanent residency in the U.S. or people applying for immigrant visas. The list included a vaccination against the human papillomavirus (HPV), a viral infection that is transmitted by direct skin-to-skin contact and is the leading cause of cervical cancer. Following a recommendation by the CDC’s Advisory Committee for Immunization Practices to administer Gardasil, the only HPV vaccine currently approved for the U.S. market to females ages 11 to 26 in the U.S., the recommendation became an automatic requirement for prospective immigrants and applicants seeking to adjust their status when the government updated its list of vaccines in July.

The policy went into effect on August 1, and advocates in the immigrant rights and public health movements are calling for a reversal with respect to the HPV vaccine. The mandate creates additional cost barriers for young immigrant women and immigrant families seeking adjustment of status or entry to the U.S., and unfairly forces immigrant women to subject their bodies to a vaccine that is new to the market and has unknown long-term efficacy rates.

Please consider sharing your story if you know someone who has been directly impacted by the new mandate for the HPV vaccine or any of the other vaccines involved. Contact Priscilla at phuang@napawf.org with your story.

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Two nights ago, a group of woman gathered in LaGuardia Community College in Queens, NYC to address the presidential wannabes and voters themselves to say what they wanted. Part of the nationwide This is What Women Want speak out, Latina voices were loud and clear and presente.

Luz Rodriguez, of SisterSong, Women of Color Health Care Collective, speaks of human rights.

See more Latina women, including Kety Esquivel and VL Editor Maegan la Mala, speak what they want after the jump.

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small_labruzzo.JPGA friend sent me the news that a Louisiana state Representative (John LaBruzzo) wants to “pay poor women $1000 to have their tubes tide” while at the same time give “tax incentives for college-educated, higher-income people to have more children.”

Of course, Mr. LaBruzzo has emphasized that his little idea has nothing to do with race, and it is actually the moral alternative to paying women to have abortions:

LaBruzzo said he opposes abortion and paying people to have abortions. He described a sterilization program as providing poor people with better opportunities to avoid welfare, because they would have fewer children to feed and clothe.

Because, you know, god forbid any politician demand that the minimum wage be increased or fund scholarship programs so that women can go to college and enter into the upper-income strata. I mean, why couldn’t he have said, I will pay any woman who enters into a college degree driven program a thousand dollars? Why is that not considered a viable ’solution’ to the ‘problem’ of poor people having kids?

I think that if he did something like that, he (along with the rest of the ‘capitalism rawks’ cronies) would have to admit that it’s not the individual that has a problem and it’s not the reproductive capabilities of poor/women of color that is the problem–it’s the system. It’d be admitting that sometimes, the system sucks so desperatly that whole swaths of people need more than just a bootstrap, but actual *help* to succeed in it.

La Macha has spoken.

latino%20kids.jpgMore Latinas and black women are having abortions than white women, says the latest survey conducted by the Guttmacher Institute. According to the survey:

Statistically one in three U.S. women will have an abortion in her lifetime, the study found, but that risk does not apply to all women equally. Women who choose abortion are more likely to be in their 20s or 30s than in their teens or 40s; they’re more likely to have children already; and they’re also more likely to be black or Hispanic than white. The abortion rates in 2004 were 50 abortions per 1,000 black women and 28 abortions per 1,000 Hispanic women, compared with 11 out of every 1,000 white women.

I noticed two interesting things about this passage. First, since when was getting an abortion considered something that women were “at risk of”? And similarly, if having an abortion is ‘risky’ then why isn’t what causes so many abortions (poverty, abuse at home, lack of resources, etc) considered ‘risky’? Why isn’t it considered a national health crisis that so many women in the U.S. are suffering through conditions that make ‘risky’ behaviors like abortion a necessity?

Second, the ‘experts’ quoted in the article just couldn’t seem to figure out why it is that there is such a racial disparity between black/Latina women and white women. Maybe, say the experts, it’s lack of education on family planning?

I personally wonder if it has anything to do with the fact that black/Latina women make less money that white women do (on average) and are always hit first during economic crisis (like the one we’re in now) and may actually desperately want the the pregnancies that they experience, but can’t afford to carry it through?

Could having a baby, in these cases, be privilege that black and Latina and all women of color, simply aren’t entitled to because of draconian back to work laws and the racism that puts them on the lowest rung of the economic ladder?

via/TIME


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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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