Saturday, December 25, 2010

Response: [NetworkAztlan_News] Obama, Immigration and His Legacy

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Response: I agree with the sentiments below but believe they will not change anything in the Obama Regime's policy nor in the mind-set of POTUS Obama. His main selfish policy is for him to get himself re-elected in 2012. He will certainly not allow Latinos or any other potential voting bloc get in his way. We need to break away from the Democratic Party, rely on our own resources, do our own local community work in terms of community education and trust in our unlimited potential to bring about fundamental transformation in society.

We must broaden the 'playing field' and build working alliances with other groups and potential allies, including Black people inside the United States and progressive peoples throughout the world.

Let's quit begging for crumbs from the banquet table!

Ultimately we need to seize state power~revolution is the ultimate solution, not mere reform alone, though major reforms are needed now, especially immigration reform. Yes, this will not happen any time soon but it is sure to never happen if we do not press on for bringing about a major transformation of the present state of power relationships inside the United States, along with freedom-loving peoples throughout the world, especially Mexico and the rest of Latin America.

Chicanos of La Raza and Latinos of all persuasions are hurting now in other critical areas of life, including our repressed internal colonies, in the fascist concentration camps and in the fields of California. We must expand our general agenda, get more aggressive and have a clear vision of where we want to go in the future.

Venceremos! 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/
"Those who make peaceful revolution impossible, make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F.Kennedy ~ c/s


From: "a.beltran@ymail.com" <a.beltran@ymail.com>
Cc: Isn Riseup list <isn@lists.riseup.net>; Border01 Yahoo group <Border01@yahoogroups.com>; immigrantnews yahoogroup <immigrantnews@yahoogroups.com>; latinosineducation yahoogroup <latinosineducation@yahoogroups.com>; Aztlannet News <NetworkAztlan_News@yahoogroups.com>; Fernando Velazquez <copecheuno@yahoo.com>; Dan Kowalski <dan@cenizo.com>; K R Johnson ucdavis.edu <krjohnson@ucdavis.edu>; B Hing <bhing@usfca.edu>
Sent: Sat, December 25, 2010 12:50:11 PM
Subject: [NetworkAztlan_News] Obama, Immigration and His Legacy

Obama, Immigration and His Legacy

By Maria de los Angeles Torres

(December 24, 2010) 

Last weekend the Senate failed to pass the DREAM Act.

It would have provided a path to citizenship for thousands of undocumented, foreign born American youth who have successfully graduated from U.S. high schools and wanted to either go to college or serve in the military. 

The President can wag his finger at the Republicans and a few Democrats who failed to vote for the bill.

However, he should also reflect on his and his advisors' role in fueling the flames of anti-immigration. 

Since taking office a year and half ago, the Administration has vigorously implemented immigration enforcement, without defending the need for immigration reform or using his position to humanize immigrants.

More immigrants --- including young people --- have been deported under this Administration than any other in the history of the United States.

This year alone they are poised to deport over 400,000 immigrants.

Criminalizing immigrants without providing relief has fueled anti- immigrant sentiments, making reform more difficult. 

Using anti-immigrant stances to appeal to conservative voters was a strategy conceived by Democrat Rahm Emanuel who was in charge of his Party's 2006 midterm elections (a fact not lost on Chicago's immigrant communities).

He branded immigration the "third rail" of American politics and instructed candidates in conservative districts to take a hard line against immigrants.

This short-lived strategy failed to produce reliable voting partners in Congress and indeed most of the Blue Dogs ended up losing their elections this last time around.                                                                                   

A different strategy --- indeed supported by 65% of American voters and almost 80% of Latino voters --- would have put the Democrats at the forefront of immigration reform.

This would have positioned them to consolidate a historic realignment of Latino voters --- the fastest growing bloc in the nation --- towards the Democratic Party and simultaneously positioning themselves as world leaders on a critical issue.

After all, immigrant labor is an essential part of global economies and what better country than the United States to lead on this issue. 

Deploying Executive Powers In the face of inaction by Congress, the President has the opportunity, indeed the responsibility, to use his executive powers to alleviate the situation.

He can use his parole powers selectively to include students who would qualify under a DREAM Act as Senators Durbin and Lugar have asked.

He can order a moratorium on deportations that divide families.

He can emphasize deportations of those convicted of violent crimes not just minor offenses.

He can protect those who are contributing to our economy. He can stop sucking up local enforcement resources that instead should be used to fight local crimes.

He can certainly humanize conditions in detention centers. 

In the past, he has dismissed this approach by claiming that he took an oath to uphold the law and that the will of Congress is to deport those here without legal documents since they appropriate monies to do so.

With this textbook interpretation of Congressional mandate, he has inadvertently created a quota system resulting in a record number of deportations, which has had the effect of poisoning public debate about this issue and has not delivered Republican support. 

Even as he dismisses arguments based on human rights concerns, he should understand that there are also compelling economic and political reasons to use executive power.

Why deport students in whom we have invested years of public monies to educate and who are about to begin contributing to its economy, one in desperate need of a young labor force?

Why divide families that are an integral part of our communities?

Why not provide leadership in the face of a fear and hatred that is destroying important elements of our democracy? 

There is no denying that this is a very complicated issue.

The United States does have a long history of rejecting, particularly in economic hard times, but also accepting into our political community immigrants (as well as others) who have been excluded on the basis of their nationality, race, gender and age.

Congress has not always led the difficult fight to be tolerant and more inclusive. 

Presidents have had to step in, Lincoln is one example, so are Presidents Kennedy and Johnson who in the early 1960s paroled over 300,000 Cubans, including me, who were in the United States without proper documentation.

This was done in the midst of public outcry about security concerns and fears that Cubans would change "the complexion of the city of Miami and that someday they would demand the right to vote."

Only much later did Congress pass the Cuban Adjustment Act that provided a quick path to citizenship. 

The President is absolutely right in pointing out that comprehensive immigration reform is the answer and that Republicans are the main obstacle, but in the meantime he needs to own up to his own Party's shameful opportunism on this issue and exert leadership.

Prior to his election, President Obama made promises he could only keep if elected.

He is now in the White House, and he will be judged by whether or not he uses his powers to begin fixing a broken immigration system he so deplored during his campaign.

A first step would be to place a moratorium on the deportation of "Dreamers," an act that would contribute positively to his presidential legacy, a legacy that will be tarnished if he fails to address this civil rights issue of the day. 

Maria de los Angeles Torres is a professor and director of Latin American and Latino Studies at the University of Illinois in Chicago.

She is the author of The Lost Apple: Operation Pedro Pan, Cuban Children and the Promise of a Better Future (2004), and In the Land of Mirrors: Cuban Exile Politics in the United States (2001).

As a Cuban refugee, she was a "parolee" from 1961-1965.

Dr. de los Angeles Torres  can be reached at torresma@uic.edu.     

***

info@latinopolicy.org
  National Institute for Latino Policy (NiLP) | 101 Avenue of the Americas | New York | NY | 10013-1933   




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On the Meaning of Christmas to Me via Peta de Aztlan ~Christmas Day 2010

Peta_de_Aztlan

On the Meaning of Christmas to Me via Peta de Aztlan ~Christmas Day 2010

http://bit.ly/go63dj


To me, Christmas time is all about the birth of Jesus Christ of Nazareth and that is the primary reason for the whole Holiday Season. I say 'to me' because I cannot speak for everyone else, but I can speak for me as an entity. In fact, I am the only one that I am an expert on and can authoritatively speak for me now, not any other mortal.

I believe in the Creator of the Cosmos, a great divine beingness who brought about all of Creation as we know it. I am not here to debate about it all because I still do not even have a complete definition of the Creator. Nor can the mortal mind fully comprehend what Creator is in the ordinary language of words. Creator is something I feel in my being rather than know as a direct experience in my brain. Creator is what I sense inside and comes close to me when I feel the Holy Spirit within my eternal soul.

I am not a fanatical Christian, though I identify with the one called Jesus Christ, the Prince of Peace, who I believe was the son of God.

Jesus said to them, Is it not written in your Law, I said, you are gods?
~ John 10:34 ~Ancient Eastern Text

All of us should be sons or daughters of God or Goddess, depending upon your own free will. Nobody is forcing anyone here. All true believers in Creator have a sacred belief in the Creator no matter the great religion one may believe in or not. Let us not be divided based upon any religious belief system or divisive denomination.

I see Creator in the naturalness of nature, in the heavens above and in the poppies of the fields in Afghanisnam. I see Creator in the clear eyes of an innocent child.

Let us take what good wisdom we can from the Holy Bible, from the Koran or from any great book written by inspired mortals. Let the Holiday Season bring remembrances of what is good, what is beauty, what is truth and what brings us together as one family of humanity.

Be united within your own inner self as a humane being who has care, concern and compassion for others. Seek to be united with other loving beings in your world. The sun shines down on us and the rain comes upon us alike. We are all of Mother Earth. All living beings are of my family. Sometimes we have great family feuds we know of us wars. Sometimes there are battles within our own personal blood families. Peace is a worthy great goal and all I want for Christmas is Peace on Earth.

c/s

Tags: Christ, Jesus

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Venceremos! 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/
"Those who make peaceful revolution impossible, make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F.Kennedy ~ c/s


Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Re: [NetworkAztlan_News] Press Conference: LAPD Christmas Checkpoints/Neighborhood Council Resolution [1 Attachment]

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Gracias Hermano Ron~
Wish I could be there for the Press Conference but I am up here in Sacramento without a job or a vehicle. I pray we are all safe and sober during these Holidays.

Fascism becomes more and more bold on a global level, regional level and on the local level, esp. with the apathy of many so-called American people who only think that Americans are U.S. citizens inside the United States. Repression breeds resistance!

Venceremos! 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/
"Those who make peaceful revolution impossible, make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F.Kennedy ~ c/s



From: Ron <mexicanoatucla@aol.com>
Sent: Wed, December 22, 2010 8:37:31 AM
Subject: [NetworkAztlan_News] Press Conference: LAPD Christmas Checkpoints/Neighborhood Council Resolution [1 Attachment]

 
[Attachment(s) from Ron included below]

Please spread the word! Hope to see you at the Press Conference! Let's stop these cops! Help us spread the resolution that we passed at the South Central Neighborhood Council meeting last night! Thanks to all of the community members who came to the meeting last night to back us up! Venceremos!

Ron Gochez
Social Justice Educator/Community Organizer
=========================

F O R  I MM E D I A T E  R E L E A S E

PRESS CONFERENCE: Neighborhood Council and Southern California Immigration Coalition to denounce the Los Angeles Police Department and Mayor Villaraigosa for stealing cars from Immigrants; especially during Christmas
 
December 23, 2010
  
The Southern California Immigration Coalition and the South Central Neighborhood Council will denounce the increasing wave of LAPD and Sherriff's "Sobriety" Checkpoints which continue to be strategically used to legally steal thousands of cars from undocumented immigrants. Stealing cars from Immigrants has become a multimillion dollar industry that is now being used to alleviate the city's budget deficit. In 2009, the state of California shamefully profited $40 million from these checkpoints. This is being done at the expense of the undocumented community and is particularly shameful during this holiday season.  
 
Under the pretext of looking for drunk drivers, the LAPD and Sherriff's Departments are specifically racially profiling Latinos by strategically placing "Sobriety" checkpoints in predominantly Latino communities. These include "Sobriety" checkpoints on Tuesday mornings in strictly residential neighborhoods. These are obviously traps to catch unlicensed drivers. Both of those departments acknowledge that the GREAT majority of the cars impounded are NOT from drunk drivers but from unlicensed drivers; most of whom are undocumented.
 
Because Mayor Villaraigosa has publicly stated his opposition to the racial profiling that is taking place in Arizona, we call on him and the City Council to end this same type of racial profiling and attacks on immigrants here in Los Angeles. Elected representatives of the South Central Neighborhood Council will present a resolution (attached) which they are spreading to other Neighborhood Councils and eventually to the LA City Council that calls for the end to the confiscation of vehicles at Sobriety Checkpoints for drivers who are simply unlicensed.
 
The central objectives will be:
1)         To call for an IMMEDIATE halt to the impounding of vehicles at sobriety checkpoints for people who are NOT under the influence
2)         To make a call for our communities to defend themselves from the Police and Sherriff's Departments by resisting the Checkpoints  
3)         To publicly present the resolution that was approved by the South Central Neighborhood Council that calls for an end to the confiscation of cars of unlicensed drivers and the campaign to bring this to the City Council.
 
 Organizers will be available for interviews
 
Contacts: Ron Gochez (English/Spanish)  mexicanoatucla@aol.com
Julia Wallace (English)  oolia17@gmail.com
 
What:              Community organizations to denounce Villaraigosa, the LAPD and the Sherriff Department for stealing cars from Immigrants, especially during Christmas
 
Where:            LA City Hall, 200 North Spring St. Los Angeles, CA 90012
 

When:             Thursday, December 23, 2010 

Time: 4:30 P.M  


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Attachment(s) from Ron

1 of 1 File(s)

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Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Response: [narconews] Giordano: Seasons Greetings & the Gifts that Keep on Giving

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Thank you. I will share with others. There are many here ~seen and unseen.
Do you have a Twitter Account? If not you need to consider getting one.
Venceremos! 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/
"Those who make peaceful revolution impossible, make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F.Kennedy ~ c/s



From: Erin Rosa <rosa.erin@gmail.com>
To: narconews@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Mon, December 20, 2010 10:14:14 AM
Subject: [narconews] Giordano: Seasons Greetings & the Gifts that Keep on Giving

 

December 20, 2010
Please Distribute Widely

Dear Narco News reader,

Normally when you read "seasons greetings" in a media publication, it probably means the writer has his bags packed and is on his way out the door to a ski lodge or beach cottage, leaving the junior associates behind to cover any news that might happen over the holidays, a season when so many of the "news makers" have also disappeared from the public stage.

But whether it's a New Year's Eve indigenous rebellion or an early summer coup d'etat, time and experience have taught us that "vacation seasons" are sometimes when hard news breaks wide open and has to be reported quickly and accurately. We never know, for example, when one of our journalists might be illegally arrested and we have to work fast to get him out, as occurred on Friday with Gianni Proiettis in Chiapas, Mexico. This sort of thing has happened regularly over the years and when one of our journalists is at risk, the world stops for us and we focus all our "firepower" on getting him or her out of harm's way. Speed and sunlight are what has rescued our journalists time and time again.

This holiday season, I'll be staffing the news desk and continuing with the extensive planning for the 2011 School of Authentic Journalism, the development of its curriculum with our 36-plus professors, and the scouting and recruitment of scholarship applicants.

If you haven't yet read the announcement of next May's Narco News J-School, it's worth a read, because you or someone you know could be an ideal candidate to attend this free ten-day intensive training session in investigative journalism, online reporting, viral video production and movement strategies for journalists. In letter after letter after letter (and after letter after letter after letter after letter, and those are just some of 'em), graduates of the Narco News School of Authentic Journalist have referred to their time here as a life changing experience, and have urged you to contribute to make it possible for more journalists to benefit from this training. We think that's great, especially since we've watched so many who have been through its doors go on to publish so many vital reports of immense international importance, again and again and again.

The end of each year is also a time to reflect, to assess what we've learned and done, to resolve to always improve, and to appreciate everybody who has helped, in ways large and small, to produce an impressive body of work in 2010. Let's count 'em: 193 original reports, about as many original translations, 22 video newsreels, the training of 73 graduates of the School of Authentic Journalism, and the good works that so many of them have continued to do since last February in every corner of the planet.

This was only made possible because so many of you (and you know who you are) contributed a few bucks here and there, distributed our alerts widely, Twittered and Facebooked our reports, and spread the word among friends and family that there is this thing called Narco News, called the Narcosphere, called The Field, called the School of Authentic Journalism, named Bill Conroy, named Erin Rosa, named Fernando León, named Al, and with so many other names that have brought their truth to our truth here, where, together, we continue constructing a bigger truth.

So if I haven't said thanks loudly or often enough, let me sing it from the mountaintop: THANK YOU.

We love doing this, our life's work, it doesn't matter at all that after ten years we're still not getting rich doing it. That wasn't why we started in the first place. We began because, in the year 2000, journalism was dying and there was no place to practice authentic journalism, so we had to invent a home for it.

It's a humble home, and we still live close to the land, with low overhead, and probably always will. The only safety net we have is each other, the international network and alliance in which you are part of that "we."

As the end of this year approaches – and, to repeat, we're not going anywhere; we'll be reporting the news just as alertly during this holiday season as we do every other time of year – and you reflect upon your own 2010, we hope you'll share in our pride and good cheer over what we've accomplished, with your collaboration, and what we will continue to do into 2011 and beyond.

As our 2010 graduate (returning as a professor in 2011) Milena Velis wrote last week:

"When I applied for the School of Authentic Journalism, I was a stressed out, confused, and newly minted reporter trying to understand what the hell was going on in the journalism 'industry' I had so recently joined. With little experience or training, I had found myself covering the entire city of Philadelphia as part of a staff of two reporters for a local Spanish language weekly...

"I felt like no one knew how to answer the questions I was struggling to answer each day. What's the relationship between journalism and organizing? Should journalism be objective? How do you communicate when you don't own a newspaper or a TV station? And who gets to call themselves a journalist anyway?

"When I got off a plane in Cancun, and traveled to the campus at a nearby undisclosed location, I got a once in a lifetime opportunity to meet and learn from the very people who could help answer my questions, and more…"

And so, kind reader, I have an assignment for you as the year turns: Go out there and find us our next Milena, our next Fernando, our next Erin, your next correspondent, and encourage him and her to apply for the 2011 School of Authentic Journalism, because the work they do won't just be ours, but it will belong to you, too, and to everyone else on this earth.

You probably already know somebody who is like that: someone with immense dedication, social conscience and talent, with communications skills, and with a desire to improve those skills to be able to do something meaningful with his or her life and who will not settle for anything less. Is that you who we're talking about? Then request an application for the May 2011 School of Authentic Journalism by sending an email to app11@narconews.com (for Spanish language applications, write sol11@narconews.com ). Completed applications are due January 23, 2011.

And if that person isn't you, chances are you know – or know of – somebody who is like that. Maybe it's a family member or a friend. Maybe it's somebody whose work you read or viewed on the Internet or in other media. It might be that person who always seems to show up with a camera in hand or who chronicles human events on her or his blog or social networking pages. Every community has somebody like that. But here's a little secret they don't always let show: People who do this work often feel quite alone in it, and they may not know yet that this world is filled with so many others just like them, each in their own communities, and that the chance is coming up in May 2011 to meet many of the best of them, share with them, learn from them, and never walk alone in this work again.

And if this is a gift-giving season for you, we hope you'll remember our friends at The Fund for Authentic Journalism, founded and managed by readers of Narco News, all who whom are volunteers, who use every penny and peso of your contributions to support these projects in authentic journalism.

Likewise, if you're in the position to benefit from tax-deductible contributions for the year 2010, The Fund is a 501c3 organization and will be happy to provide you, on request, with a receipt for your records.

At the end of any year, we're all besieged by appeals for donations from many worthwhile ventures. We want to support them all, but we can't. One of the questions many of us ask ourselves when considering which project to support is this: Which is going to provide the greater return on our investment? Narco News' School of Authentic Journalism – the only project like it on earth, one which confronts and solves the problem of media in our times like no other project does – guarantees that your gift will multiply and grow, through the works of our graduates for years, even decades, to come. You can be 100 percent certain that you'll be proud to have donated. What other project can make you such an ironclad guarantee?

Additionally, your contribution along with those of others, up to $20,000, will be matched. Your investment will be doubled immediately, and then continue to work, and work hard, for truth-telling investigative journalism, freedom of speech, human rights, authentic democracy, justice and freedom. A donation to The Fund for Authentic Journalism? Priceless!

You probably know the drill already. You can donate online at this link:


Or you can send a check to:

The Fund for Authentic Journalism
PO Box 1446
Easthampton, MA 01027 USA

I sincerely hope this and all seasons are good ones for you, if you're with friends or family or both (or if you're a grunt like me remaining at your post because "somebody has to do it"), I, and the entire Narco News Team, wish you the best and an even better year to come.

You, our readers, are the only "Santa" we've ever had. This year we leave cookies and milk by the fireplace – aw, we'll leave something a little stronger than that, too - and a hand-written note requesting not just material gifts, but human ones: candidates for the next graduating class, the next generation of authentic journalists… the gifts that keep on giving.

From somewhere in a country called América,

Al Giordano

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