1. 16:43 1st Jun 2012

    Notes: 19

    Reblogged from keepyourbsoutofmyuterus

    From Miriam Perez at RH Reality Check:

    Two weeks ago the news from the Census Bureau that non-white children make up the majority of those under the age of one year created a firestorm of media headlines across the nation. These demographic shifts have many implications for our nation, but my first thought was this: The majority of the babies being born in the US are now at serious risk for a whole host of maternal, fetal, and infant health problems.

    Why? Because women of color have significantly higher rates of pre-term birth, low-infant birth weight, maternal, and fetal mortality.

    Race-based maternal health disparities are no longer a concern of the minority — they are a concern of the majority. And they should be a top priority.

    I encourage you to read the entire thing.

    [NB: more people than just cis women need pre-natal, labor and delivery, and post-partum care.]

     
  2. 14:07

    Notes: 22

    Reblogged from nbclatino

    New documentary reveals complex glimpse of LGBT Latinos in United States

    It’s a film about love, life and leadership among lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) Latinos in the United States, and yet, “Orgullo Latino,” aims to capture so much more about the complexity of this community.

    “It’s an amazing gift and an honor to take on this project,” says multimedia journalist and film co-producer Carlos Mayorga, of his very first full-length documentary. “I wanted to counter the stereotype that Latinos are very homophobic – instead, I felt it was my responsibility to show the leadership spearheading the Latino LGBT movement in the United States.”

    Read More

     
  3. 14:05

    Notes: 4

    image: Download

    
Woman posed as agent, preyed on immigrants
A woman was arrested Thursday on suspicion of posing as a federal agent and taking tens of thousands of dollars from illegal immigrants to supposedly win them legal resident status.
Fourteen victims told investigators they paid between $4,000 and $8,000 each to Araceli Martinez, 47, who posed as an immigration and customs enforcement agent, according to the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department.
Deputies went to Martinez’s home Thursday morning but found she had left within the hour to catch a flight to Mexico from Los Angeles International Airport, the department said.
Department authorities alerted LAX police, who detained Martinez and turned her over to deputies. She was being held at the Central Regional Detention Facility in Lynwood on $335,000 bail.

I recognize that this is complete assumption on my part but I ESPECIALLY detest it when fellow Latino/as take advantage of each other and/or discriminate against one another. We’re all in the same struggle together. GAbhasgbahg This is just so despicable.

    Woman posed as agent, preyed on immigrants

    A woman was arrested Thursday on suspicion of posing as a federal agent and taking tens of thousands of dollars from illegal immigrants to supposedly win them legal resident status.

    Fourteen victims told investigators they paid between $4,000 and $8,000 each to Araceli Martinez, 47, who posed as an immigration and customs enforcement agent, according to the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department.

    Deputies went to Martinez’s home Thursday morning but found she had left within the hour to catch a flight to Mexico from Los Angeles International Airport, the department said.

    Department authorities alerted LAX police, who detained Martinez and turned her over to deputies. She was being held at the Central Regional Detention Facility in Lynwood on $335,000 bail.

    I recognize that this is complete assumption on my part but I ESPECIALLY detest it when fellow Latino/as take advantage of each other and/or discriminate against one another. We’re all in the same struggle together. GAbhasgbahg This is just so despicable.

     
  4. 23:00 31st May 2012

    Notes: 10

    Reblogged from mata-la-musica

    image: Download

    An African-American gentleman drinking from a “Colored” drinking fountain in a streetcar terminal, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.

    An African-American gentleman drinking from a “Colored” drinking fountain in a streetcar terminal, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.

     
  5. 22:54

    Notes: 1535

    Reblogged from mata-la-musica

    1. While people of color make up about 30 percent of the United States’ population, they account for 60 percent of those imprisoned. The prison population grew by 700 percent from 1970 to 2005, a rate that is outpacing crime and population rates. The incarceration rates disproportionately impact men of color: 1 in every 15 African American men and 1 in every 36 Hispanic men are incarcerated in comparison to 1 in every 106 white men.

    2. According to the Bureau of Justice Statistics, one in three black men can expect to go to prison in their lifetime. Individuals of color have a disproportionate number of encounters with law enforcement, indicating that racial profiling continues to be a problem. A report by the Department of Justice found that blacks and Hispanics were approximately three times more likely to be searchedduring a traffic stop than white motorists. African Americans were twice as likely to be arrested and almost four times as likely to experience the use of force during encounters with the police.

    3. Students of color face harsher punishments in school than their white peers, leading to a higher number of youth of color incarcerated. Black and Hispanic students represent more than 70 percent of those involved in school-related arrests or referrals to law enforcement. Currently, African Americans make uptwo-fifths and Hispanics one-fifth of confined youth today.

    4. According to recent data by the Department of Education, African American students are arrested far more often than their white classmates. The data showed that 96,000 students were arrested and 242,000 referred to law enforcement by schools during the 2009-10 school year. Of those students, black and Hispanic students made up more than 70 percent of arrested or referred students. Harsh school punishments, from suspensions to arrests, have led to high numbers of youth of color coming into contact with the juvenile-justice system and at an earlier age.

    5. African American youth have higher rates of juvenile incarceration and are more likely to be sentenced to adult prison. According to the Sentencing Project, even though African American juvenile youth are about 16 percent of the youth population, 37 percent of their cases are moved to criminal court and 58 percent of African American youth are sent to adult prisons.

    6. As the number of women incarcerated has increased by 800 percentover the last three decades, women of color have been disproportionately represented. While the number of women incarcerated is relatively low, the racial and ethnic disparities are startling. African American women are three times more likely than white women to be incarcerated, while Hispanic women are 69 percent more likely than white women to be incarcerated.

    7. The war on drugs has been waged primarily in communities of color where people of color are more likely to receive higher offenses.According to the Human Rights Watch, people of color are no more likely to use or sell illegal drugs than whites, but they have higher rate of arrests. African Americans comprise 14 percent of regular drug users but are 37 percent of those arrested for drug offenses. From 1980 to 2007 about one in three of the 25.4 million adults arrested for drugs was African American.

    8. Once convicted, black offenders receive longer sentences compared to white offenders. The U.S. Sentencing Commission stated that in the federal system black offenders receive sentences that are 10 percent longer than white offenders for the same crimes. The Sentencing Project reports that African Americans are 21 percent more likely to receive mandatory-minimum sentences than white defendants and are 20 percent more like to be sentenced to prison.

    9. Voter laws that prohibit people with felony convictions to vote disproportionately impact men of color. An estimated 5.3 million Americans are denied the right to vote based on a past felony conviction. Felony disenfranchisement is exaggerated by racial disparities in the criminal-justice system, ultimately denying 13 percent of African American men the right to vote. Felony-disenfranchisement policies have led to 11 states denying the right to vote to more than 10 percent of their African American population.

    10. Studies have shown that people of color face disparities in wage trajectory following release from prison. Evidence shows that spending time in prison affects wage trajectories with a disproportionate impact on black men and women. The results show no evidence of racial divergence in wages prior to incarceration; however, following release from prison, wages grow at a 21 percent slower rate for black former inmates compared to white ex-convicts. A number of states have bans on people with certain convictions working in domestic health-service industries such as nursing, child care, and home health care—areas in which many poor women and women of color are disproportionately concentrated.

    (Source: anticapitalist)

     
  6. 22:53

    Notes: 10

    Reblogged from mata-la-musica

    image: Download

    lenguarmada:

Mexican people have been eating Nutella for generations. It’s called Duvalin.

YES!

    lenguarmada:

    Mexican people have been eating Nutella for generations. It’s called Duvalin.

    YES!

     
  7. 22:46

    Notes: 8

    Reblogged from mata-la-musica

    CONGRATULATIONS! Now let’s go out and support good literature and our history if you haven’t already.

    lenguarmada:

    The book I co-authored is still #1 on the new best selling Latino books on Amazon.com and is #32 overall for Latino books. That’s pretty cool.

    P.S., I don’t get any royalties from the book. All the money goes to CSU San Bernardino’s special collection on Latino Baseball.

     
  8. 22:44

    Notes: 73

    Reblogged from mata-la-musica

    image: Download

    Dolores Huerta Speaks on Marriage Quality!
“A better country for immigrants is a better country for all. A better country for gays and lesbians is a better country for all. We’re all in this together.”

    Dolores Huerta Speaks on Marriage Quality!

    “A better country for immigrants is a better country for all. A better country for gays and lesbians is a better country for all. We’re all in this together.”

     
  9. 22:43

    Notes: 2

    Reblogged from mata-la-musica

    lenguarmada:

    City sponsorship of event causes heated Claremont council debate

    Claremont City Council doesn’t want to sponsor an event within the former barrio that is celebrating “Mexican American Baseball in the Inland Empire” and the history of the community because it supposedly is a religious gathering. I think the event being a Latino history-related event has more to do with it. That’s just my opinion.

    “The Mass isn’t there just for the sake of being Catholic, it’s part of the history,” said Councilmember Sam Pedroza of the celebration and its historical significance for the Arbol Verde neighborhood. “The first Catholic church in Claremont is a rich part of the history of that area.”

    Under the establishment clause, the government cannot engage in activities that promote or affiliate itself with a specific religious doctrine or religious organization. However, City Attorney Sonia Carvalho clarified the city can “provide benefits” without violating the law by determining if the city’s action has a nonreligious purpose, if it advances religion as its primary effect, or whether it actually fosters excessive government entanglement with religion.

    Ms. Carvalho believed none of these were the case in Claremont’s sponsorship of the El Barrio Park celebration. “The overriding purpose of the event is to celebrate the history of the park and to celebrate Mexican American baseball in the Inland Empire,” she said. “That is the primary, overreaching purpose.”

     
  10. 22:41

    Notes: 3445

    Reblogged from mata-la-musica

    (Source: artesany)

     
  11. 22:39

    Notes: 775

    Reblogged from mata-la-musica

    image: Download

    ¿Disculpe señor, pero tiene paleta de…?

    ¿Disculpe señor, pero tiene paleta de…?

     
  12. 22:27

    Notes: 5

    Reblogged from mata-la-musica

    lenguarmada:

    The depth of institutionalized discrimination that is embedded within the UC system is frustrating on so many levels yet it has come to the point where I am not even surprised anymore. Today was one of the most heart-breaking seminars I’ve ever had to sit through.

    I get out of my seminar and open one of my emails to this (a very appropriate and powerful message given today’s events and the climate I am currently entrenched in):

    Diversity
    The Illusion of Inclusion
    By
    Rodolfo F. Acuña
     
    A presentation I gave at California State University East Bay on May 16, 2012 at its Third Annual Diversity Day.
     
    It is only the second time I have been to California State University East Bay, formerly California State University Hayward. I am not going to be so presumptuous as to assumed that I will speak about “diversity” on this campus, knowing that I am speaking to the choir and that the people on this campus that believe in diversity are in this room.
     
    Diversity from my experience is an ideal of equal justice that was defined by the 14th Amendment to the Constitution that has been perverted by the Supreme Court Justices and society. In my presentation, I use the title of a book by Rudy Rosales, a San Antonio colleague called aptly, the “Illusion of Inclusion.”
     
    We all buy into the numbers game and assume that because we can go to the school of our choice, go to college and become a Greek by joining a fraternity that we are being included.  Numbers have become an obsession and everyone looks to numbers as a justification for that inclusion.
     
    Things are not as clear as in the Sixties when our numbers could be ignored and we were openly greasers to many. The need to include blacks and Latinos was clear to groups such as the Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) and the inclusion became part of the Civil Rights Movement. Youth picked up on the injustice of being underrepresented and there were school walkouts in California, Texas and other parts of the country.
     
    Because of the enormity of the problem, diversity became associated with “access” – the numbers game. In order to understand the reasons one must look at the times. When I arrived at San Fernando Valley State College (now Cal State Northridge) there were only 50 students of Mexican extraction on campus. Today there are about 11,000 Latinos.
     
    Today, based on numbers there is the illusion that we have attained a diverse campus.
     
    CSUN has the largest Chicana/o Studies Department in the nation. We offer some 166 sections of Chicana/o Studies per semester; employ 27 tenure track professors (18 are female) and 42 part timers. It could be argued that this has made CSUN diverse.
     
    Visibly it is. Visitors always remark that it looks like a Latino campus. However, let’s look below the surface.
     
    The ratio of Latinas to Latinos is approaching 70/30 which has implications for the future. The administration does not give us a breakdown of the various nationalities within the Latino category so we cannot ascertain the percentage f Mexican Americans and Central Americans. These are very important statistics because Los Angeles is a segregated the degree of which follows the lines of educational opportunity. Fifty percent of LA is Latino but go to the upscale malls and this reality is not reflected in the colorrace of the shoppers.  For that matter, look at the CSUN Website and you develop colorblindness—it snow white.
     
    You can also look at the hiring patterns and most of the professors are white and the grounds men and janitors are brown. Over 75 percent of the academic departments do not employ a single professor of Mexican origin and 90 percent do not have a course drawing from that corpus of knowledge. Curricular changes have been superficial if they exist.
     
    Worse of all let’s look at the interaction of students. Integration is supposed to be part of diversity.  When I was growing up the highest rate of interaction and intermarriage occurred as a consequence of parochial schools. I guess we all thought that we would have to deal with each other in the afterlife. 
     
    I like to go out into the quads and see the students interact.  What I see is that most groups hang with their own.
     
    The Armenians eat with Armenians, the Asians with Asians, Mexican Americans and Latinos with their own. Like in the case of the web site the administration does little to promote real diversity. It employs two full time coordinators to work with the Greeks to promote their interests but expend almost no resources to integrate students.
     
    For this reason, the Chicana/o Studies Department has raised funds to send students to Arizona. We have taken three trips to Phoenix, Tucson and Nogales. In the last two trips we have included students from Asian American Studies and students have held joint fundraisers. On June 2 they will be sponsoring a run.
     
    As CSUN follows a “one fits all” model, we should ask, is CSUN an aberration? I don’t think so!
     
    Our inclusion is an illusion because no substantive changes have been made in terms of power relations.  At CSUN we are just more visible.
     
    What is going to happen?
     
    Change will come slower in the future. Real diversity only comes about when people are discontent or offended and upset by a lack of justice. Truth be told, the Occupy Wall Street Movement would have been dead in the water if the occupiers had been able to get jobs in the one or even the 25 percent and had been able to pay for their tuition.
     
    Similarly it is difficult to motivate alumni from minority community when they achieve middle-class status, and have access to better housing and schools for their children.
     
    The issue of diversity may become mute in the future, however. In 2006, “Nearly 10,000 African-American students graduated from high school last month in Los Angeles County. This fall, only 96 of them will attend one of the state’s most prestigious universities, the University of California, Los Angeles…The number of black students at UCLA has been falling for years, partly due to a ballot measure that ended racial preferences in admissions.”
     
    Looking at who has been included is an eye opener. A glimpse at the Greek societies tells us that those admitted generally come from the ranks of come from the ranks of the upper third of the Latino community.
     
    This will become the rule as we all become Arizona and universities screen out barrio applicants. Today, the EOP (Education Opportunity Program) admits applicants whose parents earn $100,000 annually, an adjustment that was partially initiated to recruit more whites and “better prepared” or “the better type” minorities.
     
    Even this is becoming mute and the budget is wiping out or consolidating equity programs. Exorbitant tuition fees are wiping out many of our most needy students The administration presses for salaries commensurate with those in private industry and just recently we hired a new president. The system promptly spent $345,000 to renovate her home.
     
    The union is pressing for higher salaries when already 50/60 percent of this sum comes from student fees.
     
    In the end, diversity today has nothing to do with equal treatment or justice. Just so we can keep up the numbers and we can create a caste system similar to that under the Spanish Crown in Mexico.
     
    The irony is that white students are crying reverse discrimination when they should be demanding power. Like all of us they are under the illusion of inclusion.    

     
  13. 22:27

    Notes: 498

    Reblogged from fyqueerlatinxs

    fyqueerlatinxs:

    insertsongreference:

    Women of Color Who Play Lesbian & Bisexual Characters

    Damn, TV. Thank you for that. For me personally, this is nice to see.

    We love what these women of color do. They are talented actors and actually portray queer women of color in a manner that is socially competent. But I think it’s about time queer women of color are played by, oh we don’t know, queer women of color!

    ¿No creen?

    (Source: drdoccubustorres-greysloanmh)

     
  14. 22:25

    Notes: 494

    Reblogged from abokononist-deactivated20120714

    image: Download

    occupyallstreets:

Anti-Black Race Riot Erupts In Tel Aviv, Israel
Violent race riots that shook south Tel Aviv sparked shock in Israel last Thursday, but also prompted top-level calls for the immediate arrest and expulsion of tens of thousands of African migrants.
The latest unrest to sweep the impoverished neighbourhoods around Tel Aviv’s central bus station erupted when a demonstration of around 1,000 people who were protesting against the rising number of Africans moving into the area, turned violent.
“Shock, violence and hatred of foreigners in Tel Aviv” was the headline in the Maariv daily, which described scenes of chaos as demonstrators went on the rampage with sticks and stones, attacking African-run shops and smashing up a car driven by two African men.
“Blacks out!” shouted demonstrators in the crowd, while others yelled: “Send the Sudanese back to Sudan,” several news reports said, as other protesters derided the “bleeding-heart leftists” working to help them.
Read More

Sigh. Why do we forget repeatedly all around the world that we are people.

    occupyallstreets:

    Anti-Black Race Riot Erupts In Tel Aviv, Israel

    Violent race riots that shook south Tel Aviv sparked shock in Israel last Thursday, but also prompted top-level calls for the immediate arrest and expulsion of tens of thousands of African migrants.

    The latest unrest to sweep the impoverished neighbourhoods around Tel Aviv’s central bus station erupted when a demonstration of around 1,000 people who were protesting against the rising number of Africans moving into the area, turned violent.

    Shock, violence and hatred of foreigners in Tel Aviv” was the headline in the Maariv daily, which described scenes of chaos as demonstrators went on the rampage with sticks and stones, attacking African-run shops and smashing up a car driven by two African men.

    Blacks out!” shouted demonstrators in the crowd, while others yelled: “Send the Sudanese back to Sudan,” several news reports said, as other protesters derided the “bleeding-heart leftists” working to help them.

    Read More

    Sigh. Why do we forget repeatedly all around the world that we are people.

     
  15. 22:11

    Notes: 4

    image: Download

    Last week, American Apparel published an ad that perplexed many and offended just as many. 
The response among many DREAMers has been one of outrage, and rightly so. One DREAMer, the artivist Julio Salgado, has created his own line of fashion, called “Undocumented Apparel.” All images here are Salgado’s and if you are interested in learning more, you follow him on his Tumblr.

    Last week, American Apparel published an ad that perplexed many and offended just as many. 

    The response among many DREAMers has been one of outrage, and rightly so. One DREAMer, the artivist Julio Salgado, has created his own line of fashion, called “Undocumented Apparel.” All images here are Salgado’s and if you are interested in learning more, you follow him on his Tumblr.