Monday, November 22, 2010

Power and the Tiny Acts of Rebellion By Chris Hedges

http://bit.ly/dvUXwI

Truthdig
Power and the Tiny Acts of Rebellion
http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/power_and_the_tiny_acts_of_rebellion_20101122/

Posted on Nov 22, 2010



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Comment: Rise up and seize your destiny. Your fate and the fate or your families is in your hands! Rebel! Get Radical! Live life with courage!
Unidos Venceremos! United We Will Win!

PETER S. LOPEZ AKA: Peta-de-Aztlan
Sacramento, California
Email: peter.lopez51@yahoo.com
http://twitter.com/Peta_de_Aztlan
http://www.facebook.com/Peta51
http://help-matrix.ning.com/
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/THIRD-WORLD-NEWS/
"An invasion of armies can be resisted, but not an idea whose time has come." ~ Victor Hugo c/s


Saturday, November 20, 2010

Mexico 100 years after revolutionaries Villa and Zapata - Monsters and Critics


 
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Unidos Venceremos! United We Will Win!

Peta-de-Aztlan
Sacramento, California
Email: peter.lopez51@yahoo.com
http://twitter.com/Peta_de_Aztlan
http://www.facebook.com/Peta51
http://help-matrix.ning.com/
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/THIRD-WORLD-NEWS/
"An invasion of armies can be resisted, but not an idea whose time has come." ~ Victor Hugo c/s

----- Forwarded Message ----
From: Peta_de_Aztlan <peta.aztlan@gmail.com>
To: peter.lopez51@yahoo.com
Sent: Sat, November 20, 2010 6:00:11 PM
Subject: [Third-World-News Blog] Mexico 100 years after revolutionaries Villa and Zapa...

Mexico 100 years after revolutionaries Villa and Zapata - Monsters and Critics
Short Link to Source> http://bit.ly/a9kkBQ
By Nelson Keiman Nov 20, 2010, 6:02 GMT

http://www.lonelyplanet.com/maps/north-america/mexico/map_of_mexico.jpg

Mexico City - Exactly a century after its hard-won independence from Spain, Mexico launched a second upheaval - this time a revolution aimed at achieving democracy and social justice.

On Saturday, Mexico will celebrate the 100th anniversary of the revolution that crystallized around an upper class politician but found its deeper social roots for land redistribution and social justice in the leadership of the iconic Pancho Villa in the north and Emiliano Zapata in the south.

http://www.sergiozurita.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/06/zapata-villa.jpg

Both men were later murdered, sacrificed to the internal and many- faceted discord that followed the official start of the Mexican Revolution in 1910.

Within a year, by 1911, dictator Porfirio Diaz had been brought down, ending 34 years of tyrannical rule. Francisco Ignacio Madero, the upper class politician around whom the initial revolt solidified, served as the first president of the new republic.

But he was assassinated in 1913 by Diaz supporters within the military, unleashing a violent and chaotic period that tapered off by 1917, when the country adopted the constitution that is still in force to this day. It was a heyday for socialists, anarchists, agrarian reformers and populists.

The 1910 uprising led by Madero against Diaz sprung from the disconnect between the immense poverty of the masses contrasted to the opulence displayed by the dominant class, historians say. Many observers and activists today say Mexico's democratization process is still incomplete, as witnessed by the movement of the Zapatista Army of National Liberation (EZLN) since the 1990s, and by other groups.

Such movements continue to demand greater social justice, a more transparent democracy and less discrimination against Mexico's indigenous people.

Villa (1878-1923), whose real name was Jose Doroteo Arango Arambula, had humble origins but formed a large army that expropriated land from the large landowners of his native northern Mexico. He became famous for his attacks on trains.

http://www.emersonkent.com/images/pancho_villa_horseback.jpg

Other revolutionary leaders slammed Villa's ideals, and he was killed in 1923 on the order of then-Mexican president Alvaro Orozco, his former comrade-in-arms.

Emiliano Zapata (1879-1919) was a smallholder in the southern state of Morelos, the descendant of mixed indigenous and Spanish ancestry. He insisted on redistributing the land among those who worked it, and launched an uprising against Madero in 1912 for his failure to start an agrarian reform programme.

http://www.freeinfosociety.com/media/images/1630.jpg

Zapata was assassinated in an ambush under order of the Mexican government.

Despite the unfinished tasks, the Mexican Revolution remains 'one of the great founding events of the nation,' historian Felipe Avila Espinosa said. 'It meant a turning point' in an agrarian economic and social model, to pave the way for more advanced forms of national organization, the historian noted.

The 100th anniversary of the revolution has provoked debate about the origins of the blood bath now raging in Mexico over organized crime and illegal drugs. At least 10,000 lives were snuffed out this year alone, including many public officials and police officers. 'Might the excess lead to another refounding movement like that of 100 years ago?' some have asked.

'I do not foresee a new popular uprising as in 1910. Circumstances are different, although like 100 years ago there is great inequality in the country,' Avila Espinosa said.

'Organized crime is not the independent variable. It is a dependent variable, it is the result of the lack of opportunities in the country,' said historian Lorenzo Meyer.

Various events across Mexico - including a military parade and a multimedia show on Saturday in Mexico City - are to mark the anniversary of the revolution that started November 20, 1910.

http://www.monstersandcritics.com/news/americas/news/article_1600332.php/Mexico-100-years-after-revolutionaries-Villa-and-Zapata

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http://aztlannet-news-blog.blogspot.com/

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Posted By Peta_de_Aztlan to Third-World-News Blog at 11/20/2010 06:00:00 PM

Sunday, November 14, 2010

The Missing Immigration Debate by: Esther J. Cepeda, Op-Ed

http://www.truth-out.org/the-missing-immigration-debate65040
The Missing Immigration Debate

by: Esther J. Cepeda, Op-Ed

photo
Koreatown Immigrant Workers Alliance at an immigration rally in Los Angeles on May 1, 2010. (Photo: Ray_from_LA)

Chicago - If I were a member of the third largest minority group in the United States, I'd be really frustrated that the immigration issue continues to be discussed almost exclusively with Latin Americans in mind.

As immigrants' rights advocacy groups across the country wonder whether there's even a slim chance Congress will take up debate about comprehensive reform anytime soon, recent national conversations have been set exclusively in the context of the Latino vote and Republican Hispanics.

Despite President Obama's failure so far to deliver on his campaign promise to shepherd through meaningful reforms, Latinos turned out to help Democrats hold a few hotly contested seats. Paradoxically, Hispanics also boosted the Republican Party by helping elect several high-profile Latinos who had few ideas for solving our current illegal immigration woes and instead campaigned on tighter border controls and stepped-up enforcement.

This Latino-centric immigration narrative, while reflective of the population and a key to Hispanic political empowerment, excludes many who also have a stake in this debate.

"It is really frustrating to be mostly left out of the conversation," said Karen Narasaki, president and executive director of the Asian American Justice Center, which advocates for the rights and interests of the Asian-American and Pacific Islander communities. "Mostly it's because the Asian-American vote is missing -- the media do not sample the Asian vote to tell what we're really voting on."

Compared to the 9 percent of eligible voters who are Latino, Narasaki estimated the Asian vote represents about 5 percent of eligible voters.

"That '5 percent nationally' gets lost because we're heavily concentrated on the West Coast, New York, and in California, which has the largest Asian population," Narasaki told me. "We believe we contributed probably 6 to 7 percent of the vote in Sen. (Barbara) Boxer's race. In Las Vegas, where we're one of the nation's fastest growing populations, (Senate Majority Leader Harry) Reid courted the Asian vote and got it. These are working-class Asians who got together for him but we get lumped into the category of 'other immigrant voters.'"

Census and other studies have put the number of all illegal immigrants in the U.S. at approximately 12 million. About 1.5 million are Asians -- representing 12 percent of the total Asian population -- with 23 percent estimated to be Chinese, 17 percent Filipino, 14 percent Indian, 11 percent Koreans and the balance from a variety of smaller countries, all with different issues.

For instance, huge backlogs exist in families where immigrant citizens or legal permanent residents can bring spouses, parents and minor children from overseas. Their wait times are heartbreaking. The longest is for Filipinos, Narasaki said -- they currently must wait about 19 years to reunite with family members. Chinese and Indians face up to nine-year waits.

Then there are the concerns of refugees from Southeast Asian countries such as Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos and Burma who are wary about strict filing deadlines for asylum claims and crackdowns on deportations for minor criminal offenses.

Indians -- a highly skilled subgroup of Asians who tend to come into the U.S. on H1B visas -- are, according to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, the fastest-growing group of illegal immigrants. But if they lose a job, they have a limited window, sometimes only days, in which to find another before losing their legal status. In such a difficult housing market, homeowning Indians and their U.S.-born children are choosing to stay illegally.

All this makes Asians a mystery to the political parties in which they must gain a foothold to influence immigration reform and other priorities. "The parties have under-invested in us," Narasaki said. "The Republicans think that because Asians are a minority they must be Democrats and the Democrats think that because Asians are business people, they must be Republicans." Though a 2006 exit poll showed 79 percent of Asian-Americans voted Democratic, she added: "In the Asian-American community a lot of the vote is up for grabs -- depending on the region there's a lot of independence."

We need diverse Asian and other viewpoints in the national conversation about voting blocs and how to deal with immigration law reform. Their experiences are exactly what voters and elected officials need in order to get past their preconceived notions of who would benefit from an overhaul of our current system.

Esther Cepeda's e-mail address is estherjcepeda(at)washpost.com.

(c) 2010, Washington Post Writers Group

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Unidos Venceremos! United We Will Win!

PETER S. LOPEZ AKA: Peta-de-Aztlan
Sacramento, California
Email: peter.lopez51@yahoo.com
http://twitter.com/Peta_de_Aztlan
http://www.facebook.com/Peta51
http://help-matrix.ning.com/
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/THIRD-WORLD-NEWS/
"An invasion of armies can be resisted, but not an idea whose time has come."
~ Victor Hugo
c/s


Thursday, November 04, 2010

Gente~ No Manchen-Don't Bust Our Balls Re "LEGALIZATION OR NO RE-ELECTION."+Comment

From: javier rodriguez  bajolamiradejavier@yahoo.com  

To: A.beltran Ymail email a.beltran@ymail.com ; NetworkAztlan_News@yahoogroups.com ; networkaztlan_action@yahoogroups.com ; nair_cc@googlegroups.com ; dorinda moreno fuerzamundial@gmail.com  

Sent: Thu, November 4, 2010 1:27:46 PM

Subject: [NetworkAztlan_News] No Manchen-Don't Bust Our Balls Re "LEGALIZATION OR NO RE-ELECTION."

To all

With all due respect to all of you who are pretending that "Legalization or No Reelection" was the most popular theme or chant. The claim would be credible if it's accompanied by a sort of objective scientific poll or study. Otherwise "no manchen" or as our Eastern region folks say "don't bust our balls". I followed the elections since some time ago and for Latinos and immigrants -with labor, church, national and regional Latino organizations, immigrant rights NGOs, Democratic Party and most Latino elected leaders leading the way- in comparative relative numbers, with probably some exceptions like the hard line Cubans in Florida, I observed they voted significantly for those that are closest to their issues and their potential resolution.  Grijalva, Arizona, Nevada, California are but a few examples and in the next few days we shall see the national polls, including, SVREP's, NALEO's, NCLR's, La Opinion and more,  confirming this assertion. A better presumption is "no jobs, no fixing the economy, still giving the country away to the corporate global monster, continuing the wars, etc. = no reelection". And the latter battle cry was probably most absorved by the center and the independents. The problem is the path they took. It is still overwhelmingly a "blue and red electoral game"

Respectfully,

Javier Rodriguez

--- On Thu, 11/4/10, a.beltran@ymail.com ~ a.beltran@ymail.com wrote:

From: a.beltran@ymail.com <a.beltran@ymail.com>

Subject: [NetworkAztlan_News] "LEGALIZATION OR NO RE-ELECTION."

To: "A.beltran Ymail email" <a.beltran@ymail.com>

    Date: Thursday, November 4, 2010, 6:12 AM

    October 29, 2010

    Greetings!

    LEGALIZATION OR NO RE-ELECTION:

    We Really Meant It!

    Voto de Castigo

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    The slogan that gained great popularity during the mass MAY DAY marches of 2010 nationally was "LEGALIZATION OR NO RE-ELECTION." The real question before the many organizations and individuals that adopted this slogan as a declaratory refrain directed at the political party in power, the Democratic Party, is did they really mean it?

    Traditionally most organizations tied to or close to the Democratic Party are politically challenged when it comes to addressing issues of non-compliance by the elected officials of their party of preference. Did they comply with their promises made prior to the election? And, if they did not, what are the consequences?

    At this stage, no one can question the role of the Latino vote in the 2006 and 2008 primary and general elections nationally. The Democratic Party made no bones about promoting their slogan of "today we march, tomorrow we vote" immediately after the "Great American Economic Boycott" of May 1st, 2006, which mobilized millions to the streets in favor of progressive immigration reform. The 2008 elections were a repeat of the former if not on a grander scale led by the co-opted slogan and campaign of "Si Se Puede - Yes We Can." The Democratic Party majorities of both houses of the U.S. Congress can be directly attributed to the Latino vote in both mainstay and swing-states and districts, nationally.

    Today, Latinos are experiencing a higher rate of unemployment than the national norm, cascading foreclosures in all barrios and decreased home-ownership rates, exclusion from the president's healthcare reform, higher incarceration rates, and a disproportionate death rate to our population figures in the never-ending imperial wars against the peoples of Iraq and Afghanistan.

    We have nothing to be happy about and everything to feel disdain and disillusionment with the political power-brokers in Washington, D.C. and the White House.

    Well, yes, we meant it! NO re-election for the elected officials and their party in power until we secure LEGALIZATION for our families. We will not be talked down to by President Obama or held hostage to his dismissive declaration that things will be worst with the opposition party, the Republican. We too participated in the historic civil rights movement alongside our African American brothers and sisters in every barrio of consequence in the U.S. during the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s.

    Detentions and deportations of our families are up 30 percent above the previous administration; the border wall has expanded; national guard troops are stationed along the southern border with Mexico; the Secured Communities Program - collaboration between Homeland Security and local police - has been expanded to historic levels; fees for immigration processing are on the rise; no-match social security investigations have been expanded nationally as never before. Every immigration enforcement indicator directed against immigrant workers and their families has increased under this administration, with absolutely no relief in sight.

    Their must be consequences for bad policies and even worst actions, Mr. President. Contrariwise, no one can speak with any seriousness or authority about political accountability. LEGALIZATION or NO RE-ELECTION is most appropriate at this election juncture of November 2010.
http://lafronteratimes.com/votodecastigo/

http://www.lafronteratimes.com/votodecastigo/

    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    Join us in this prolonged campaign for driver's  licenses  and visas for our families. The first step in making  change is to join an organization that pursues the  change we desire. We welcome you to our ranks.

    Other organizations leading this movement include:

    Hermandad Mexicana Latinoamericana, Mexican

    American Political Association (MAPA), MAPA

    Youth Leadership, Southern California Immigration

    Coalition, Liberty and Justice for Immigrants

    Movement, National Alliance for Immigrant's Rights,

    and immigrant's rights coalitions throughout the U.S..

    CONTACT:

    Nativo V. Lopez, National President of MAPA (323) 269-1575

Join the Mexican American Political Association mailing list

 

From: Rosalio Munoz < chalio.munoz@yahoo.com   

To:      Joelle Fishman joelle.fishman@pobox.com ; Dorinda Moreno  fuerzamundial@gmail.com      

 

Here is the web address for their power point

http://latinodecisions.files.wordpress.com/2010/11/press-briefing-pptx.pdf

 

Jerry Brown and Barbara Boxer got 86% of the Latino vote!


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Comment: Each of us must come to our own conclusions and follow the dictates of our consciousness. I did not ever believe that POTUS Obama would come out with any kind of Legalization before the Mid-Term Elections. He has been playing La Raza and progressives with more false promises as he did to get Elected. He is a pawn for the fascist-corporate ruling class and has been easily co-opted. Gates should of given us a clue.

I am NOT ever going to Vote for POTUS Obama no matter what happens in regards to 'the Mexican immigrant issue'. I am not going to propose to any Mexican in Aztlan to go back to Mexico and go to the back of any line! I quit the Democratic Party when POTUS Obama escalated the War in AghanisNAM in the graveyard of empires.

Let us strive for a Peaceful Revolution, while keeping our options open. Mere immigration reform will never be enough. Plus there are other core issues we need to work on: urban poverty, matrix building with natural allies, literacy, prisons etc.

+"Children of the Exodus:" Surge of Deportations Endangers
Migrant Youth Abandoned in Mexico >
http://ning.it/9Fj2ff

P.S. I reformatted previous Emails for better readability. 
Unidos Venceremos! United We Will Win!

PETER S. LOPEZ AKA: Peta-de-Aztlan
Barrio Cinco, Sacramento, California
Email: peter.lopez51@yahoo.com
http://twitter.com/Peta_de_Aztlan
http://www.facebook.com/Peta51
http://help-matrix.ning.com/
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/THIRD-WORLD-NEWS/
"An invasion of armies can be resisted, but not an idea whose time has come." ~ Victor Hugo
c/s

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