Friday, May 22, 2009

You are White and Want to do the Right Thing?

One of the things I have found in my classes over the years is that people generally don't want to be hateful or discriminatory or (!) racist.  Often there seems to be a problem with lack of information.

Another problem is that white people have a really hard time talking about being racist (well, maybe all of us do).  

Here is an interesting essay on being a white person in an imperfect (or excuse me, racist) society.  It focuses on people working as college professors, but we can all learn from it. Click the title for the link.

A few days of silence

It has been a few days since I have posted anything.  My co-blogger asked me what was going on, since I usually keep pretty busy with dreamacttexas.  

The thing is, my brother is really sick.  He is one of your millions of Latinos with diabetes.  I am really worried about him and don't know what will happen from one day to the next.  I tell myself it probably isn't bothering me but it really is.  There are only two of us.   I am eight years older than he is.  I was in third grade when he was born.  

He is on dialysis now.  He had to retire from his job as a fireman.  He can barely walk around, and one doctor has recommended amputation.  

Between that and working really hard to finish a book, the hour I had been spending on dreamacttexas has somehow gotten lost.  Even when I have the time, the enthusiasm I had for the writing slipped away.  I am hoping that in a few days I will get it back.  

I apologize for not writing more, but you know how it is...


Thursday, May 21, 2009

Harvard's President Supports DREAM

Now that Harvard's president has supported DREAM, what will it take for southwestern states to get on the bandwagon?

Harvard's Faust backs path to legal residency
Illegal immigrant bill called 'lifeline'

By Maria Sacchetti, Globe Staff | May 21, 2009

Harvard President Drew Gilpin Faust yesterday backed federal legislation that would clear the way for illegal immigrant students to apply for legal residency, an endorsement that stunned students and drew criticism for a president who has largely steered clear of fierce debates.

In a letter this week to federal lawmakers, Faust expressed "strong support" for legislation known as the Dream Act, which would allow students who have been in this country since they were 15 to apply for legal residency under certain conditions. She acknowledged that students with "immigration status issues" attend Harvard, and said the bill would be a "lifeline" to such students.

"I believe it is in our best interest to educate all students to their full potential - it vastly improves their lives and grows our communities and economy," she wrote in a letter to Senators Edward M. Kennedy and John F. Kerry and Representative Michael E. Capuano, thanking them for their support for the legislation. "This bill will help move us closer to this goal."

Faust, who declined to be interviewed, is not the first leader to endorse the Dream Act. But her action adds a powerful new voice to the debate over a bill that has languished in Congress since 2001.

The Dream Act often surfaces in the debate in individual states over whether illegal immigrant students should pay resident tuition at public colleges and universities.

But the latest version of the Dream Act focuses largely on allowing illegal immigrant students to apply for legal residency, which is an issue that affects public and private colleges such as Harvard because its graduates cannot legally work in this country. (The act would make it easier for states to charge resident tuition, but does not require it).

Private colleges do not rely on government funding and can decide to finance those students on their own.

Harvard students said they have been lobbying Faust for months on the issue. They held a rally and submitted a petition with 120 signatures, said Harvard junior Kyle de Beausset, one of the organizers.

In recent months, two Harvard students who are in the United States illegally met with Faust in her office to seek her support. Yesterday, one of those students, an 18-year-old former high school valedictorian who has been in the United States since he was 9, said he was thrilled.

"We realized that what we were asking her to do wasn't an easy thing. The issue of immigration is politically charged," said the student, who spoke on the condition that his name not be used. "I am and will forever be indebted to this institution."

But Bob Dane, spokesman for the Federation for American Immigration Reform, said Harvard should not admit illegal immigrants because they displace students here legally.

"Maybe the elites at Harvard should come down from their ivory tower and get some ground perspective on what kind of cost and competition that legal US residents are actually incurring these days," said Dane.

Maria Sacchetti can be reached at msacchetti@globe.com.

Saturday, May 16, 2009

An Imam in Detention in Houston


Sheikh Zoubir Bouchikhi was placed in immigrant detention just before Bush left office.  News reports have not been clear as to exactly what he did that caused him to be detained so long.  

The Houston Muslim community has rallied around him and he has now been released, but he may still face deportation.

"Now a free man, Houston imam clings to hope," Houston Chronicle, May 16, 2009

Our cows are killing our earth



This morning I opened up the web page of the London Guardian and found this startling information:

"the livestock industry is responsible for a staggering 18% of all anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions."

I knew something was strange when I drove by a cattle feed lot in the San Joaquin Valley and couldn't breathe easily for miles.  The smell was so horrible I wanted to throw up.  I couldn't imagine how people could live nearby.  The smell was even worse than the one emitted by the horse meat factory near Monterrey, Nuevo Leon that I used to go by when I lived in Mexico.

It is interesting that this information (and about the village in Belgium that is not eating meat once a week) doesn't make it to the U.S. newspapers.


"Can vegetarians save the world?" London Guardian, May 16, 2009

Friday, May 15, 2009

Death in War, Death at Home

The stress of military service in Iraq and Afghanistan is reported in an article published by the London Guardian.  

A Young Man Dead, One of Many


We don't know his name, but his sister found him dead in the back of a pick-up truck yesterday.  He was coming to Houston from Guatemala.  He was undocumented.  She was told he was dehydrated.

There are thousands others who have died this way - in the desert, in box cars, in the river.  How much sadness are they leaving to take such a chance?

Today's NYT announces that immigration has dropped significantly.  I guess some people are happy.  But the whole immigration debacle is not a happy situation.  You either have to leave your family and your home, or you leave and then die, like this 15 year old did as he arrived in Houston.

"Teen Being Smuggled Found Dead in Truck,"  Houston Chronicle, May 14, 2009

"Mexican Data Say Immigration to U.S. Has Plummeted,"  New York Times, May 15, 2009

A Pandora's Box Named Rove

Today Karl Rove is going to be questioned by a prosecutor regarding the U.S. Attorney firings.  It is a criminal investigation that has been going on quietly.  

Rove knows a lot.  It will be interesting to see what comes out of this.  It could be the beginning of the end for the Bush monarchy.

see "Prosecutor to Interview Karl Rove Today, Sources Say,"  Washington Post, May 15, 2009

Thursday, May 14, 2009

Local Immigration Enforcement: A Fresh Perspective from the Houston Chronicle

The Houston Chronicle Opinion page let us know that the paper is not completely out of the loop.  In an impressive move, the Chronicle made a statement against local police randomly asking for proof of residency status without probable cause.  This is in response to the Houston Police Officers Union requesting a change.

It is 6:30 am in the morning.  There are 10 comments to the editorial, and they are all anti-immigrant.  Why can't someone send in something supporting the Chronicle's position?  Do only people full of hate know how to write?

Or could it be --- those who are not so hateful are concerned about any consequences related to going against the ones who want to blast all undocumented people out of the country.  Hatred often misfires and hurts more than just a few.


just to let you know, if Houston were to change it's position regarding this policy acc. to the Chronicle:  "would make Houston the only major city police force in Texas to allow police questioning of non-suspects about their citizenship status."


status won’t make neighborhoods safer," Houston Chronicle, May 14, 2009



LA, Ventura, and San Diego County get closer to xenophobia

LA Times:  "Los Angeles, Ventura and San Diego will become the first counties in California to begin checking the immigration status of all inmates booked into jail"  - 

our state (California)  that is generally ahead of the curve is regressing.  Maybe its related to all the budget pressure.  People get stressed and start looking for someone else to blame.




Eat a Veggie - Save the Planet


How can eating veggies save the planet?  Because to produce meat and fish takes MUCH more energy and earth resources than it takes to make your ear of corn or your sweet potato.

A city in Belgium has decided to avoid meat once a week.  I wish Houston would do the same, but it would take a lot to get the meat eaters to give up a little of their beef.



also see:  "Why eating less meat could cut global warming," London Guardian, November 11, 2007

Monday, May 11, 2009

Houston's Cops and Immigration Enforcement

Another right-wing anti-immigration article by the Chronicle.  Please - send in your comments - help the Chronicle move away from the right...

"Officer Union Calls for Change in Immigration Rule," Houston Chronicle, May 11, 2009

The Pope can tell the Isrealis what he really thinks

Official Flag of Vatican City




Pope Benedict is not my favorite of Vatican leaders.  I may be nostalgic, but I have always thought Pope John XXIII was the best (and most open minded).  This week, however, Benedict's worth has gone up a notch in saying openly that the Palestinians need their own homeland. 

Now, without going overboard in praise, I need to add that it may be easier for Benedict to say this because he was in the the Hitler Youth and you can't tell me that all those ideologies just get erased when you grow up.

Even so.  A Pope can speak more openly about something like this than a U.S. Congressman.  The Isreali Lobby can't have the Pope defeated in re-election.

see "Pope Backs a Palestinian Homeland," New York Times, May 11, 2009

Sunday, May 10, 2009

A Day for My Mom




My Mom, Maria de la Luz Hernandez, 1943, Laredo, TX

In a few minutes I am getting in the car to drive 35 miles to go see my Mom.  I just went to Walgreens to get her a card.  The place was full of flower bouquets and people buying cards.  It has been so long since I lived in a regular upscale neighborhood I can't remember if people were just as crazy about buying things for their mothers as we are here in East End.

Today I want to write about my Mom.  This is not an idealized treatise on her.  She is not perfect, but boy did she help me become who I am.

In the picture above she was only 15, and had just finished high school.  For a time after that she worked at the front desk at The Plaza Hotel in Laredo, TX.  She met some fancy people there -- John Wayne and Betty Davis.  She also met a Canadian baseball player who wanted to marry her.  But she was committed to my Dad who was a soldier in the Pacific.

After my parents married in 1947, and moved to San Antonio, she worked as a PBX operator at Santa Rosa Hospital.  Then they went to a small town near Houston  named Rosenberg.  There she helped my Dad start a funeral home business.  Everyone in the family admits that she was the business brain behind my Dad.  He had a great outgoing personality, but she really made things happen.  When I was six she decided to get a Funeral Directors license, which was extremely unusual for women those days.  She drove (by herself!!!) 30 miles from Rosenberg to downtown Houston every weekday for six months - and finished the program.  That doesn't seem like much now, but in 1958 those kinds of things just didn't happen.


Me, my grandmother (Petra Paredes Hernandez), and my Mom, 
Maria de la Luz Hernandez, 1956


Even though her father offered to pay for her college (before or after marriage) she declined.  She said she regretted it later.  But she helped her brother go to graduate school.... and helped me all the way through - even when I was 43 getting a PhD - a single Mom with 2 kids.

One of the most important things she did for me was buy me a set of suitcases.  When I was 11, she put the first one on lay-away.  It was a small white one called "Tiara" by American Tourister.  She bought two more over the next few years until I had a nice set.  It sent a message to me - that I would be ready to go anywhere or do anything.  I have passed the suitcase on to my daughter.  Its an heirloom now.




She taught me:

1.  About having good social skills, to be "educada" - to be able to talk to anyone, if they were important or not.  To show respect, and to listen to people.

2.  About being pretty yet competent.  She always looked great - but was a really shrewd businesswoman.

3.  Not to give all of myself (and my money) to a man.  Always keep your own money she would say.

4.  Not to put too many miles on my car.... remember that when it wears out you might have to get another one (I didn't listen to her until much later).

5.  Get an education, no one can take it away from you.

6.  Get an education so that if something happens in your life you can always support yourself. (in other words, if you are married, don't think that is enough) 

7.  Travel as much as you can.  You can't always do it because you need 3 things, money, time, and health - and it is difficult to have all three.

8.  You can get what you want so much easier with honey than with vinegar.

9.  Shop carefully.  Check out the expensive stores but buy at outlets.

10.  When you are at party and there is lots of drinking, restrain yourself. Then you can watch everyone else get silly.

11.  Have kids when you can, because sometimes you can't if you wait too long.

12.  Learn Spanish - its the most practical foreign language to know (this was in the 60s when everyone was pressured to only speak English).


Maria de la Luz Hernandez, 2005


By the way, her nickname is "Chickie." She has the prettiest hair of anyone I've ever known.

She just came back from being in Argentina for 10 days for my son's wedding.  Her doctor told her to learn the tango while she was there, but she didn't get a chance.

Berlusconi wants to keep Italy Italian

link to image


No surprise that Italian Prime Minister Berlusconi has put his foot in his mouth again.  He is not the nicest guy; he insults his wife, and now he is saying openly that Italy shouldn't be multicultural - in other words, there should be no immigrants.  Some people in his country think that is a great idea, but the reality is that Italy has always been multicultural ---  maybe he hasn't read any history books.

see "Berlusconi's anti-immigrant comments spur outcry," Washington Post/Reuters, May 10, 2009

Comments ARE Necessary




Your newspaper NEEDS commentary on its articles concerning immigration.  A reporter working for a large newspaper told me last week that they get tons of anti-immigrant hate commentary - and they respond by moving their articles to the right (in other words they push up the hate so they can look like they agree with their hate-mongering readers).

A while back citizenorange.com organized a group of activists to send pro-immigration - anti-hate commentaries to newspapers.  Apparently the Houston Chronicle REALLY needs this now.  The last few months the immigration articles in the paper have been sounding like something out of an ethnic cleansing magazine.

please - respond when you see hate -  your newspapers are like your lawmakers.  They like getting  responses and if its all negative they move that way like a wave --  so send some positive ideas and lets hope its a strong enough wave to keep immigration news in a positive spin.

If the article you read does not have a space for comments, send an email to the paper.  Believe me, they read it...

You can start by making comments on this article:


"We need open debate on border security," Houston Chronicle, May 10, 2009

Please send your newspaper something today...

Newspapers: How much death is self inflicted?

link to image

---
After reading an article in The Nation that states George W. Bush was "arguably our worse president ever." I move over to the NYT and see something by Frank Rich (disclosure - I love the way the man writes) - titled "The American Press on Suicide Watch," - that describes how one major aspect of the current newspaper death spin is how journalists acted like patsy's while W. was bringing us down.

Yet, I can't help but think about all those dumb articles that mimicked Karl Rove without blinking -- remembering how I went "oh well - another one of those" and skipped on to the next article or the next newspaper....  Our beloved Houston paper was not the only one to do this.  The NYT so stupidly bowed to the unethical Judith Miller when she said WMDs really did exist in Iraq.  Just think of all the millions (Americans and Iraqis) who have died as a result of this chicanery.

For those newspapers that are left.  Try being more ethical, don't get so swayed by the big boy corporations, or the way out wacko Minute Men types - and more people will support you.

***
It is however, only fair to say that newspapers were also done in by the proliferation of blogs (like dreamacttexas) - who clip articles and in essence "take business away"  - and the global economic disaster of 2008-2009. 

As for helping out newspapers in an hour of need, dreamacttexas will make a concerted effort to provide only links to newspapers, and not copy articles.

We are worried however.  If newspapers start charging for reading - we are in trouble.  As it stands, we subscribe to the NYT, the Houston Chronicle, The Nation, The New Yorker, and the Texas Observer.  We have access to many others through the university library.  But if we can get sued for publishing a paragraph from an AP article, we won't have the money for legal representation (NO PLEASE!  this doesn't mean to send us money).  

A NYT article today said that we were in a crisis like the time when the world encountered the Gutenberg Press, the distribution of information is in a global transformation.  Maybe so...  it will be very interesting to see what happens next.  Lets hope dreamacttexas can stay alive and non-monetary, when most of the blogs get totally sucked in by capitalism.

Friday, May 8, 2009

U.S. History - The meaning of a noose

A Houston Fire Chief is in trouble because he had a noose in his locker at work.  I read the article and see the commentaries about how many people think that was OK.  They must not realize what the hanging noose symbolizes.  It reflects a horrible aspect of U.S. History, that we need to be ashamed of.  For more information on this see Bill Moyers Journal - PBS


article on Houston Fire Chief and his noose:
"HFD rebukes captain for noose," Houston Chronicle, May 7, 2009
 
Little Pieces of Rope - 1888

When William Caldwell, from Richmond, TX was hanged on charges of murder, men from Fort Bend County attended the hanging.  For souvenirs, they cut little pieces of rope from the hanging noose and pinned them to their lapels.  



American Moses

Chicago Congressmen Luis Gutierrez


Congressman Luis Gutierrez has been going around the country, talking to people about immigration reform.  It has become his personal quest.  The Spanish language TV networks call him:


Reform a Personal Cause," Washington Post, May 8, 2009

Thursday, May 7, 2009

U.S. History - 1970 - The Bloody Story of Kent State


New York Times
Tuesday, May 5, 1970
News Summary and Index

Major News of the Day

The Senate Foreign Relations Committee accused the Nixon Administration of usurping the war-making powers of Congress by sending American troops into without Congressional consent.  The charge came as the committee urged approval of a move to repeal the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution.  [1:7l

President Nixon has been urged by the presidents of many colleges and universities to "demonstrate unequivocally your determination" to end promptly the United States military involvement in Southeast Asia.  Strikes of indefinite duration at many of the nation's colleges are scheduled to begin today to protest the war and to mobilize public opinion for a withdrawal of United States forces in Indochina.  [1:6]

A blast of gunfire from the National Guard killed four students, two of them women, at Kent State University.  Eight other students were wounded.  The shooting came shortly after the guardsmen broke up a noon rally of about 1,000 students by lobbing tear gas at the crowd.  Robert I. White, the univeristy president, ordered the closing of the college for an indefinite time.  [1:2-5]... 



..
Ohio by Crosby Stills Nash and Young

Lyrics to Ohio

Tin soldiers and Nixon's comin'.
We're finally on our own.
This summer I hear the drummin'.
Four dead in Ohio.

Gotta get down to it.
Soldiers are gunning us down.
Should have been done long ago.
What if you knew her and
Found her dead on the ground?
How can you run when you know?

Na, na, na, na, na.....

Gotta get down to it.
Soldiers are cutting us down.
Should have been done long ago.
What if you knew her and
Found her dead on the ground?
How can you run when you know?

Tin soldiers and Nixon's comin'.
We're finally on our own.
This summer I hear the drummin'.
Four dead in Ohio.
Four dead in Ohio.
Four dead in Ohio.
-------
By John Kifner
Special to The New York Times
May 5, 1970

Kent, Ohio, May 4 -- Four students at Kent State University, two of them women, were shot to death this afternoon by a volley of National Guard gunfire. At least 8 other students were wounded.

The burst of gunfire came about 20 minutes after the guardsmen broke up a noon rally on the Commons, a grassy campus gathering spot, by lobbing tear gas at a crowd of about 1,000 young people.

In Washington, President Nixon deplored the deaths of the four students in the following statement:

"This should remind us all once again that when dissent turns to violence it invites tragedy. It is my hope that this tragic and unfortunate incident will strengthen the determination of all the nation's campuses, administrators, faculty and students alike to stand firmly for the right which exists in this country of peaceful dissent and just as strong against the resort to violence as a means of such expression."

In Columbus, Sylvester Del Corso, Adjutant General of the Ohio National Guard, said in a statement that the guardsmen had been forced to shoot after a sniper opened fire against the troops from a nearby rooftop and the crowd began to move to encircle the guardsmen.

Frederick P. Wenger, the Assistant Adjutant General, said the troops had opened fire after they were shot at by a sniper.

"They were understanding orders to take cover and return any fire," he said.

This reporter, who was with the group of students, did not see any indication of sniper fire, nor was the sound of any gunfire audible before the Guard volley. Students, conceding that rocks had been thrown, heatedly denied that there was any sniper.

Gov. James A. Rhodes called on J. Edgar Hoover, director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, to aid in looking into the campus violence. A Justice Department spokesman said no decision had been made to investigate. At 2:10 this afternoon, after the shootings, the university president, Robert I. White, ordered the university closed for an indefinite time, and officials were making plans to evacuate the dormitories and bus out-of-state students to nearby cities.

Robinson Memorial Hospital identified the dead students as Allison Krause, 19 years old, of Pittsburgh; Sandra Lee Scheuer, 20, of Youngstown, Ohio, both coeds; Jeffrey Glenn Miller, 20, of 22 Diamond Drive, Plainsview, L.I., and William K. Schroeder, 19, of Lorain, Ohio.

At 10:30 P.M. the hospital said that six students had been treated for gunshot wounds. Three were reported in critical condition and three in fair condition. Two others with superficial wounds were treated and released.

Students here, angered by the expansion of the war into Cambodia, have held demonstrations for the last three nights. On Saturday night, the Army Reserve Officers Training Corps building was burned to the ground and the Guard was called in and martial law was declared.

Today's rally, called after a night in which the police and guardsmen drove students into their dormitories and made 69 arrests, began as students rang the iron Victory bell on the commons, normally used to herald football victories.

A National Guard jeep drove onto the Commons and an officer ordered the crowd to disperse. Then several canisters of tear gas were fired, and the students straggled up a hill that borders the area and retreated into buildings.

A platoon of guardsmen, armed- as they have been since they arrived here with loaded M-1 rifles and gas equipment - moved across the green and over the crest of the hill, chasing the main body of protesters.

The youths split into two groups, one heading farther downhill toward a dormitory complex, the other eddying around a parking lot and girls' dormitory just below Taylor Hall, the architecture building.

The guardsmen moved into a grassy area just below the parking lot and fired several canisters of tear gas from their short, stubby launchers.

Three or four youths ran to the smoking canisters and hurled them back. Most fell far short, but one landed near the troops and a cheer went up from the crowd, which was chanting "Pigs off campus" and cursing the war.

A few youths in the front of the crowd ran into the parking lot and hurled stones or small chunks of pavement in the direction of the guardsmen. Then the troops began moving back up the hill in the direction of the college.

Students Cheer

The students in the parking lot area, numbering about 500, began to move toward the rear of the troops, cheering. Again, a few in front picked up stones from the edge of the parking lot and threw them at the guardsmen. Another group of several hundred students had gathered around the sides of Taylor Hall watching.

As the guardsmen, moving up the hill in single file, reached the crest, they suddenly turned, forming a skirmish line and opening fire.

The crackle of the rifle volley cut the suddenly still air. It appeared to go on, as a solid volley, for perhaps a full minute or a little longer.

Some of the students dived to the ground, crawling on the grass in terror. Others stood shocked or half crouched, apparently believing the troops were firing into the air. Some of the rifle barrels were pointed upward.

Near the top of the hill at the corner of Taylor Hall, a student crumpled over, spun sideways and fell to the ground, shot in the head.

When the firing stopped, a slim girl, wearing a cowboy shirt and faded jeans, was lying face down on the road at the edge of the parking lot, blood pouring out onto the macadam, about 10 feet from this reporter.

Too Shocked to React

The youth stood stunned, many of them clustered in small groups staring at the bodies. A young man cradled one of the bleeding forms in his arms. Several girls began to cry. But many of the students who rushed from the scene seemed almost too shocked to react. Several gathered around an abstract steel sculpture in front of the building and looked at the .30-caliber bullet hole drilled through one of the plates.

The hospital said that six young people were being treated for gunshot wounds, some in the intensive care unit. Three of the students who were killed were dead on arrival at the hospital.

One guardsman was treated and released at the hospital and another was admitted with heat prostration.

In early afternoon, students attempted to gather at various areas of the Commons but were ordered away by guardsmen and the Ohio Highway Patrol, which moved in as reinforcements.

There were no further clashes, as faculty members, graduate assistants and student leaders urged the crowd to go back to dormitories.

But a bizarre atmosphere hung over the campus as a Guard helicopter hovered overhead, grim-faced officers maneuvered their men to safeguard the normally pastoral campus and students, dazed, fearful and angry, struggled to comprehend what had happened and to find something to do about it.

Students carrying suitcases and duffel bags began leaving the campus this afternoon. Early tonight the entire campus was sealed off and a court injunction was issued ordering all students to leave.

A 5 P.M. curfew was declared in Kent, and road blocks were set up around the town to prevent anyone from entering. A state of emergency was also declared in the nearby towns of Stow and Ravenna. link