Archive for racial politics

Lots (and lots) of link love

Yeah, so…I kind of forgot to do the link love thing last week?  As a result, my link love listing is hella long, so I’ll post the other half tomorrow.

The Nation: A Brief History of American Racism

Sociological Images: Minorities: Be Grateful for the Majority Giving You Rights

Flip Flopping Joy: Violence and Meaning

Feministe: This Is Where White Guilt Comes From

Jezebel: Don’t You Just Love Your [Insert Ethnicity] Nanny?

Bitch PhD: Hot/Hate for Teacher

Feministing: Young woman rejects HPV vaccine and loses path to citizenship

Feministe: Hey Baby

Zero at the Bone: Next on the list of things that really annoy me

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And so begins Hispanic Heritage Month

So. Today marks day one of Hispanic Heritage Month. While I do plan to post “Hispanic” heritage-y things over the course of the next 30 days, I’m also kind of loathe to even acknowledge the “month.” I mean, come on. We get half of two different months as our “month.” That’s such a freaking ripoff.  I don’t care if 5 Latin countries gained their independence on September 15.  It’s still not a proper month.

Anyway, I’ll start with this:

TIME has an article up about the history of black Mexicans—and the subsequent racism they experience to this day.

The first town of freed African slaves in the Americas is not exactly where you would expect to find it — and it isn’t exactly what you’d expect to find either. First, it’s not in the United States. Yanga, on Mexico’s Gulf Coast, is a sleepy pueblito founded by its namesake, Gaspar Yanga, an African slave who led a rebellion against his Spanish colonial masters in the late 16th century and fought off attempts to retake the settlement. The second thing that is immediately evident to vistors who reach the town’s rustic central plaza: there are virtually no blacks among the few hundred residents milling around the center of town.

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Weekend Link Love

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Weekend Link Love

Feministe: It’s Not About Me

Alienated Conclusions: If Black Women Were White Women

Bitch Magazine: I Blame Porn

Flip Flopping Joy: Of Tea Parties and Patriots

Racialicious: Writing characters of color

The Angry Black Woman: Mindblowing SF Lists

Paste Magazine: Ten fantastic songs brought to you by books

Feministe: Notes on Gore

Feministing: Feminist vs. Humanist

Multiculticlassics: Post-racial Prez

Transitionland: Sexism at home, sexism abroad

This Recording: Summer Reading

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Wednesday Link Roundup

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It’s International Blog Against Racism Week

Just found out about this today:

For 2009, IBARW will take place between July 27 to August 2.

How to participate:

  1. Announce the week in your blog.
  2. Post about race and/or racism: in media, in life, in the news, personal experiences, writing characters of color, portrayals of race in fiction, review a book on the subject, etc. (Linking back here is highly appreciated!) The optional theme this year is “global.”
  3. Let us know by bookmarking your post on Delicious with “for:ibarw,” or comment with a link to your post in one of the link collecting posts.

For inspiration, here are the previous years’ IBARW posts and last year’s POC in SF Carnival IBARW edition. You can also check out this post or delicioused recommended reading for further resources.

We’ll be compiling links for IBARW4 as well, both in the IBARW Delicious account and with daily round-ups on this journal. The daily round-up post for Monday, July 27 is here.

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Link roundup

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A great op-ed on immigration by SLC’s police chief

I really wish Arizona’s Sheriff Arpaio would take a cue from Salt Lake City police chief Chris Burbank:

The Salt Lake Tribune via ImmigrationProf Blog

The essential duty of modern law enforcement is to protect the civil rights of individuals while providing for the safety of all members of the communities we serve, equally, without bias. Asking local police agencies to enforce federal immigration laws, as Utah’s new law does, is contrary to our mission, marginalizes significant segments of the population, and complicates and ultimately harms effective community policing. We function best when we are part of, not apart from, the community.

Police officers should not engage in civil immigration enforcement. However, local law enforcement should diligently continue to arrest serious criminal offenders and, as appropriate, refer dangerous criminals to federal authorities. Civil immigration enforcement is a federal responsibility, and it is paramount to the well-being of our neighborhoods that the federal government maintains accountability. [...]

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To live in the borderlands means you

To live in the borderlands means you

are neither hispana india negra espanola
ni gabacha, eres mestiza, mulata
, half-breed
caught in the crossfire between camps
while carrying all five races on your back
not knowing which side to turn to, run from;

To live in the Borderlands means
knowing that the india in you, betrayed for 500 years,
is no longer speaking to you,
that mexicanas call you rajetas,
that denying the Anglo inside you
is as bad as having denied the Indian or Black;

Cuando vives en la frontera

people walk through you, the wind steals your voice,
you’re a burra, buey, scapegoat,
forerunner of a new race,
half and half–both woman and man, neither–
a new gender;

To live in the Borderlands means to
put chile in the borscht,
eat whole wheat tortillas,
speak Tex-Mex with a Brooklyn accent;
be stopped by la migra at the border checkpoints;

Living in the Borderlands means you fight hard to
resist the gold elixir beckoning from the bottle,
the pull of the gun barrel,
the rope crushing the hollow of your throat;

In the Borderlands
you are the battleground
where enemies are kin to each other;
you are at home, a stranger,
the border disputes have been settled
the volley of shots have shattered the truce
you are wounded, lost in action
dead, fighting back;

To live in the Borderlands means
the mill with the razor white teeth wants to shred off
your olive-red skin, crush out the kernel, your heart
pound you pinch you roll you out
smelling like white bread but dead;

To survive the Borderlands
you must live sin fronteras
be a crossroads.

© Gloria Anzaldúa, Frontiers Publishing, Inc. 1996

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White men can’t cope

Sonia Sotomayor’s nomination to the Supreme Court = the crazies coming out in droves.  We’re less than a day into this, and the “Hispanic Chick Lady” is already facing a frenzy that sounds eerily similar to the “Obama is black!” / “Hillary has a vagina!” panic.

via Time and CNN Politics

Let’s start with our good friend, Rush Limbaugh:

[H]ere you have a racist. You might want to soften that and you might wanna say a reverse racist. And the libs, of course, say that minorities cannot be racists because they don’t have the power to implement their racism. Well, those days are gone because reverse racists certainly do have the power to implement their power. Obama is the greatest living example of a reverse racist and now he’s appointed one — getting this, AP? — Sonia Sotomayor to the U.S. Supreme Court.

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