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Archive for March, 2012

• What is “El Gasoducto” also known as Via Verde?

• Who is going to be affected by it?
• Why is it a threat to the environment?
• Who benefits from it?

• Presentation about Puerto Rico’s Via Verde project also known as the
Gasoducto gas pipeline
• Invited speakers
• Short video  presentation about  fracking (a method for extracting
oil and natural gas)
• Question and answers about Gasoducto gas pipeline and fracking

 

Friday, March 30, 2012 at 7:00pm
at Betances Community Center –
465 St. Anns Ave., Bronx, NY 10455
(Entrance at 146th St.)
Tel: 718-585-5040
FREE ADMISSION

Co-sponsored by: Muevete Youth Movement
More info at virtualboricua.org and on our FaceBook group:
facebook.com/groups/nycontraelgasoducto/

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VL At Tribeca Film Festival

8:54 pm By BiancaLaureano · Movies · 4 Comments

26 Mar 2012

The Tribeca Film Festival is coming and we have press passes to cover the festival! There are only a handful of films that really catch my eye and have me excited, so I’m interested in hearing what our readers would like for us to check out. Of course my first goal was to check out the films that feature and are created by Latin@s. The submissions are not as vast/diverse/complicated or feature-length as in the past so lots of options, many of them “shorts.”

Check out the full list of films for this year and let us know in the comments which film(s) you’d like for us to feature and share our impression and perspectives on!

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Miercoles Musica : Ana Tijoux Shock (on Reclamation)

7:20 am By Maegan La Mala · Activism|Chile|Justice|Music · Comments Off

21 Mar 2012

I haven’t posted anything since last week, since before Romney won the Puerto Rican primary, as if that means anything. I’m planning my next big show happening next week so y head is in that and not in political analysis. But I did want to share this video by French Chilena Ana Tijoux which seems especially fitting given the recent reboot Occupy Wall Street has gotten (with the same problems that originally kept me away), the push for the NY State DREAM Act, Undocumented Coming Out actions across the country, the killing of
Trayvon Martin and this statement from Decolonize Oakland.

As I prepare for my participation on the next stop of the make/shift recLAmation tour, I am reflecting on reclaiming, the words of the Communiqué from Decolonize Oakland are resonating with me. The “occupations” we are seeing are not like the tomas that have been happening in Chilean schools for decades. I think the part about people of color autonomy and self-determination is critical and we can’t have that in spaces where it’s ok for white mean to don Native headdress as ironic statements (as I saw recently at OWS).

The shock is not at the fact that people are stepping up and speaking out, the shock is that people are only now starting to notice the resistance that has been happening for over 500 years.

Special Thanks to Nacional Records

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FREE Training for LA Trans & Queer Youth of Color

6:07 pm By BiancaLaureano · GLBT|Los Angeles · Comments Off

19 Mar 2012

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There seems to be much confusion out there about who Puerto Ricans are politically speaking, what their immigration status is in the United States, and what language they speak. It’s very easy to blame Republican hate speech and ignorance and fail to look at the bigger picture of the big c word most people don’t want to mention when talking about la isla del encanto : colonialism.

So as a Rican, not claiming to speak for all of Ricankind, I wanted to clarify a few points.

Puerto Ricans are U.S. citizens

Members of the Southern Mississippi University band chanted, “Where’s your green card?” at a Puerto Rican Kansas State player during their NCAA Tournament game against Kansas State University (source)

Puerto Ricans are citizens of the United States no matter if they are born within the 50 states or on the island of Puerto Rico. In 1917 the Jones–Shafroth Act collectively made Puerto Ricans citizens as well as giving us a very useful (sarcasm) Resident Commissioner who is a non-voting member of the U.S. House of Representatives. We do not need green cards. We have social security numbers and US passports. If we live within the 50 states we can vote for president. If we live in Puerto Rico we cannot. This make our immigrant experience unique in a number if ways, but it clearly does not protect us from racism or xenophobia. My own grandparents’ apartment in New York was raided by la migra in search of papers and our community has been impacted by the criminalization of Latino immigrants as demonstrated by the deportation of a Puerto Rican in 2008.

(Most) Puerto Ricans Speak English
As the GOP presidential candidates campaign in Puerto Rico, where residents can vote in primaries but not in the general election, recently Rick Santorum made a statement regarding the island’s political future.

Now put aside for a moment the English only nativist subtext and acknowledge that Puerto Ricans on the island are taught English. Do most Puerto Ricans on the island speak Spanish? Yes and they are well within their right to do so. As of 2007, the American Community Survey states that 95.1% of island residents speak Spanish and 81.5% of Puerto Ricans speak English less than “very well”. 4.7% of people on the island speak English only. It should be noted that there has been previous backlash in Puerto Rico against the idea of an English language requirement for statehood or an English language requirement in general. Puerto Ricans are extremely proud of their culture including their unique version of Spanish just as a NYRican I am very proud of my official language of Spanglish.

While it has been wonderful to see people in the media correcting the misconceptions about Puerto Ricans. I have yet to see anyone put these misconceptions within a colonial context. It needs to be acknowledged that the reason so many candidates stump on the island is not out of interest in changing the political status of the island, a commonwealth aka colony and recognized as such globally including by the United Nations, but rather as a way to earn Puerto Rican voters inside of the United States. Many are pointing to the upcoming plebiscite or non-binding vote on the island’s status that will occur while the U.S. presidential elections are happening. It’s hard not to choke on the irony of the exercise of democracy, however flawed, inside the 50 states while a farcical glorified opinion poll happens inside a country occupied by the U.S. for over 100 years.

I understand the confusion. When Puerto Rico is taught about in U.S. schools, it is not called a colony and it is not explained how the relationship between the U.S. and the island actually works in terms of political representation, voting rights, taxes, language, and culture. It isn’t explained how Puerto Rican migration happens nor how Rican bodies served as guinea pigs for the birth control so many women in the US are fighting to maintain access to.

One cannot look at the high unemployment numbers inside Puerto Rico, the poverty, the drug trade, police brutality and corruption without looking at how the local economy was decimated during Operation Bootstrap to give U.S. companies tax breaks on the backs of Rican men and woman, many who were forced to migrate to the United States. That is how my family arrived in NY.

But let’s keep ignoring the fact that the US has a colony and let’s engage in the joke of the GOP campaign, egged on by Tea Party island Governor Luis Fortuño. That’s a punchline that requires no papers and no translation.

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Mangos With Chili: Behind the Music
A 5 Year Retrospective
Friday, April 6, 2012
8:00pm until 10:00pm
$8-$20, no one turned away for lack of funds
La Pena
3105 Shattuck Avenue
Berkeley, CA 94705

Buy advance tickets here: http://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/235689
Facebook event: https://www.facebook.com/events/118977968226694/

Like Behind the Music but so much better, this evening offers a first hand glimpse into the making, growth and evolution of Mangos With Chili, North America’s floating cabaret of queer and trans people of color performance artists. Featuring Co-Directors Cherry Galette and Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha and artists from our first 5 years, this event will be part celebration, part birthday party, and part talk show featuring facilitated Q&A, video diaries from former Mangos artists, and teasers from our upcoming 2012 season, including our upcoming National Queer Arts Festival production, “Reclaiming the Rites,” in June 2012, and our 5 year anniversary “Resurrection” tour. More artist info TBC, but save the date!

And as always, come for the interactive community femmeifest/manifest altar, lovenotes, and cupcakes!

Oh yeah- it’s $8-20, no one turned away for lack of funds! We are also going to show vintage Mangos t shirts, and show our old photos, posters and memorabilia!

Access is love: La Pena is fully wheelchair accessible including bathrooms. In order so that beloved community members with chemical injury can attend, please don’t use fragranced products. (For more info about becoming fragrance free, check out http://yogamaya.wordpress.com/about/classes/fragrance-free/ or http://www.brownstargirl.org/1/post/2012/03/fragrance-free-femme-of-colour-realness-draft-15.html for awesome POC specific, affordable fragrance free POC product info.) Fragrance free seating available. ASL interpretation info TBC. This is an all ages event. La Pena is two blocks from Ashby BART.

Have you experienced the Mango at any point in the last five years? Ask us an anonymous question on our Tumblr and we will answer it on stage! mangoswithchili.tumblr.com

for more information or press inquiries:
mangoswithchili.wordpress.com
or email mangos.with.chili@gmail.com

Co-sponsored by the Queer Cultural Center with a grant from the NEA Presenting Program and with the generous cooperation of La Pena Cultural Center.

Mangos With Chili is a fiscally sponsored project of CounterPULSE and is supported by funding from the Horizons Foundation.

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Last week a number of immigration advocacy organizations in Washington D.C. filed a lawsuit against the Department of Homeland Security seeking information regarding their Criminal Alien Program (CAP).

According to Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the CAP program provides ICE-wide direction and support in the identification and arrest of those immigrants who are incarcerated within federal, state and local prisons and jails, as well as at-large immigrants with criminal records. This is done through ICE presence in jails and prisons and initiating deportation proceedings against people convicted of criminal offenses. It’s important to note that CAP does not just look at undocumented immigrants but also green-card holders, short-term temporary workers and visitors with proper authorization,

The lawsuit filed by the American Immigration Council (AIC) and the Connecticut chapter of the American Immigration Lawyers Association (AILA) alleges that ICE also sweeps up individuals who have been arrested but never convicted of any crime, a violation of due process.
Specifically the two organizations are seeking responsive, non-exempt records regarding CAP under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA).

While the federal government continues to expand another deportation program, Secure Communities, over the past five years alone, CAP has led to the arrest of more than a million people, and the program was implicated in approximately half of all removal proceedings in FY 2009.

From a press release announcing the lawsuit:

“Although CAP supposedly targets the worst criminal offenders, the limited information we have shows that this is not always the case,” according to Melissa Crow, Director of AIC’s Legal Action Center. “Like Secure Communities, this insidious program seems to target individuals with little or no criminal history for deportation and to incentivize pretextual stops and racial profiling.”

ICE claims that the CAP program saves money and resources but from fiscal years 2005 to 2009 the largest as well as the fastest growing segment of appropriated dollars went to ICE’s Detention and Removal Operations (DRO) office whose budget more than doubled (increasing 104%). While ICE has stated that the focus of the program is high risk violent offenders it wouldn’t be surprising to learn that this investment in criminalizing immigrant communities has increased under Obama as deportation numbers have increased across the board.

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Join the Hostos Community College Student Government

Association for a night of speakers and culture as we welcome former political prisoner Carlos Alberto Torres to NYC!

Keynote Speaker:

Carlos Alberto Torres

Special messages:

Michael Cruz, Vice President of Academic Affairs and Chair of the SGA Senate
State Assemblyman Jose Rivera

Councilwoman Melissa MarkViverito

Cultural Presentations:

The Welfare Poets,

Prof. Thelma Ithier Sterling-

Humanities/VPA, soprano singing La Borinqueña and Verde Luz
Bomba Yo
Paula Santiago (Prisionera)

Thursday March 15, 2012 at 6:30pm

Hostos Community College 3rd fl. Cafeteria

450 Grand Concourse

(Take the 4, 5, or 2 trains to W149th St.-Grand Concourse. )

Hostos students and staff are free. All others Students (with ID) and senior suggested donations $5.00 and adults $15.00 (no one will be turned away) For more information: (646) 229-5133

 

Sponsored by: HCC Student Government Association

Endorsers: Humanities Department, El Partido Nacionalista Puertorriqueña-Junta de NYC, The National Boricua Human Rights Network and The ProLibertad Freedom Campaign.

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Super Martes is over with few surprises. Mitt Romney won most of the primaries and caucuses. Rick Santorum managed some small victories that allow him to remain a viable candidate. Newt Gingrich won one state, Georgia and rumors are that the other candidates will push him to drop out. Perpetual outsider Ron Paul didn’t win anything but remained ever optimistic.

Read my op-ed over at El Diario la Prensa NY on why the results hold little weight for the Latino electorate and share your thoughts.

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NY Contra El Gasoducto presents

NO AL GASODUCTO Educational fórum

· What is “El Gasoducto” also known as Via Verde?

· Who is going to be affected by it?

· Why is it a threat to the environment?

· Who benefits from it?

· Presentation about Puerto Rico’s Via Verde project also known as the Gasoducto gas pipeline

· Invited speakers

· Short video presentation about fracking (a method for extracting oil and natural gas)

· Question and answers about Gasoducto gas pipeline and fracking

Friday, March 2, 2012 at 7:00pm
at UPROSE – 166A 22nd Street, Brooklyn, NY
(22nd St between 3rd and 4th Ave. – R train to 25th St. in Sunset Park)

Tel: (718) 492-9307 Email: Info@UPROSE.org
FREE ADMISSION

Co-sponsored by: UPROSE and Muevete Youth Movement
More info at virtualboricua.org and on our FaceBook group: facebook.com/groups/nycontraelgasoducto/

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Hola!

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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