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Do you speak Black or White or 21st century?

by José de la Isla

José de la IslaJosé de la Isla

WASHINGTON, D.C. – You have to feel sorry for the panelists at Howard University on April 18. The group, moderated by NBC News anchor Brian Williams, discussed the documentary, “Meeting David Wilson.”

It is about a young black man, David A. Wilson, journeying from New Jersey to North Carolina, looking for answers to his questions and issues about his ancestral slave past. He meets up with David B. Wilson at the plantation where A’s antecedents had been slaves.

The responses to challenging questions may not reconcile the burden of an ancestral slavery past, but it’s at least direct talk. Their post-traumatic stress has persisted after seven generations. They represent why each new black-and-white chaffing reminds us about hate, anger and hurt in everyday life.

Because of the recent dust up over Pastor Jeremiah Wright, Barack Obama’s former minister, black rage-white guilt was called up again to the public eye. To many this was the call for another public discussion about race. But for most people there is little if anything new to say about it. The discussion continues stuck where it was.

What continues undiscussed is important. Isn’t Barack Obama, as the first black president, intended to signify the end of a level of race prejudice? But did he not run away from race until the Wright episode forced his hand? And doesn’t he really represent mixed race, black-and-white, and not of a slave ancestry? Why could he not become the fi rst mixed-race president? Is there a constituency for that? What about Hillary as the first woman president?

Where is the women’s perspective on society and governance in the post-birth control world. By extension, what is the women’s perspective on the future of children and families? Does it all just boil down to a few liberal programs that don’t take a woman to advocate?

And what about John McCain? Isn’t the idea that this white man of war knows the road to peace and security better than others? But instead we get somebody who proposes endless war with no peace in sight? Is this Dr. Strangelove coming to haunt us?

Are they big symbols and small substance? Or, to put it as a political cliché, “Where’s the beef?” The public was set up for a paradigm shift and there was none.

That’s why the panel discussion following the Wilson documentary was so disappointing. If the presidential candidates are behind the times, at least the public discussion didn’t have to be. But it was.

The group included columnist Mike Barnicle, entrepreneur Malaak Compton-Rock, author Michael Eric Dyson, radio host Tom Joyner, writer Kevin Powell, Rev. Buster Soaries, screenwriter Kriss Turner and Tim Wise, director of the Association for White Anti-Racist Education.

There were no black Latinos in that discussion, nor white Latinos, nor mestizo Latinos (Latinos are of all races), no Asians, no Native Americans nor people of the many other variations of humankind — representing an alternative to the black-white conundrum. So it wasn’t a “conversation about race,” certainly not one for the United States of the 21st century. To her credit, audience member 33-year-old Lisa Rawlings, a graduating Ph.D. student at Howard — herself originating from St. Kit in the West Indies —could see through it.

About the documentary itself she volunteered, “it wasn’t really substantial” because the two David Wilsons “didn’t challenge each other enough.”

There was a moment in the documentary when some Latinos were working in the tobacco fields “probably in pretty similar conditions to the ones the slaves were in,” she said. While the two Wilsons engaged in their own dialogue about their races, they “acted as if they (the Latinos) were invisible,” she said. “It seemed to be like the next wave, like the system of exploitation, was reinvented with a new group of people.”

That’s how even a panel conversation becomes an inward-turned monologue. All this talk and such little depth about what we should learn from the slave past.

[José de la Isla, author of “The Rise of Hispanic Political Power” (Archer Books, 2003) writes a weekly commentary for Hispanic Link News Service. E-mail joseisla3@yahoo.com]. ©2008

Why you should vote no on Prop. 98

by Marvin J. Ramirez

Marvin J. RamirezMarvin J. Ramirez

San Francisco could become a city of strangers if you voters allow on June 3, that Prop. 98 passes.

The measure that would ­eliminate renter protections and rent control, threatens the environment and hurt communities, all under the guise of eminent domain reform.

Newsom also announced his support for a real eminent domain reform measure on the ballot, Proposition 98.

Thousands of San Francisco renters, which comprise about half of a million, could be kicked out of their homes by greedy landlords ready to make an extra buck, if Prop. 98 passes.

It is a direct attack to seniors living on fix income, as well as entire families. It will attract renters from abroad who are willing to pay more just to live in the City by the Bay. No more you might see the same friendly faces in your neighborhood once this Proposition becomes law, if you vote for it. San Francisco is going to become a place nobody can live in but the upper-middle class.

Prop. 98 is sponsored by a handful of wealthy landlords and mobile home park owners who are using the issue of eminent domain to eliminate laws that protect renters and rent control. The measure would also have a devastating impact on environmental laws, and vital community protections.

Prop. 98 is opposed by a broad coalition including the AARP, League of Women Voters of California, National Wildlife Federation, California Professional Firefighters, California Teachers Association, California League of Conservation Voters, the California Chamber of Commerce, Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger and U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein.

Prop. 99 provides voters real eminent domain reform. It protects homes from being taken through eminent domain and given to a private developer. It does not contain the hidden provisions and devastating consequences of Prop. 98, said Mayor Gavin Newsom.

San Francisco is one of the most desirable cities to live in in the world now days by out-of-the-city developers and land speculators.

Don’t hand our city over to the rich and real estate investors, vote No on Prop. 98.

City College worries about lost of important classes with budget cuts

by Christina Hernández

City College of San Francisco Mission CampusCity College of San Francisco Mission Campus

In a briefing on the impact of state budget cuts at City College, Interim Chancellor Don Q. Griffin explained Friday, May 9, that the budget deficit cannot be solved by cuts alone.

Interim Chancellor Griffin, Vice Chancellor of Finance and Administration Peter Goldstein, Associate Vice Chancellor of Governmental Relations Leslie Smith, and Board of Trustees member Rodel E. Rodis were present at the briefing. It took place at 10 a.m. in the new Community Health and Wellness Center at the Phelan Avenue campus.

Griffin said “The thing that was most traumatic for us was that there was a $3 million deficit from last year.”

“Any reduction in classes is really problematic,” he said. However, some classes must be cut as part of the plan to bring to deal with lack of funds. The school must also dip into its emergency reserves, taking out about $1-2 million over the next year. With the natural annual increase in expense, this cannot solve the problem on its own either. There is only about $6 million in the account.

According to Griffin, the plan includes the following: not to hire new faculty to replace faculty members who retire, to eliminate unnecessary consultants; and lastly, the school will take out money from the reserve.

These will not be able to close the gap entirely, and may cause problems for students.

The remaining instructors will need to take over what they can. Class sizes would become larger and can have “demoralizing affects” on students, who may not be able to have the individual contact they may need with teachers. Griffin said this can depend on which classes. As an example, he said it might be more difficult for a student to excel in a larger English class than a larger history class.

There will be a slight cut in classes for this summer semester, predominantly non-credit courses. This fall semester will be very similar to last fall, though there will be more cuts in the spring. Summer 2009 will have a significant amount of classes cut.

However, Griffin said the new college facilities will not feel the effects of the budget crisis as harshly as others.

According to a fact sheet given at the briefing, Prop. A funded the construction of the Student Health Center, Health and Wellness Center, Orfalea Family Center, and new Mission Campus, along with the new site for the Chinatown/Northbeach Campus. The staffing for such projects is planned out about 2 years in advance.

Rodis pointed out that these facilities are an essential part of the college’s future.

Griffin also noted that donations are received graciously, though the majority of people making donations do so in the form of scholarships.

This directly affects individual students but not the school as a whole, so to rely heavily on donations would not be sufficient either.

Next fiscal year, City College of San Francisco is expected to be $8-9 million short. It has been projected that the recession may last 2 years or more.

Carnaval begins at San Francisco City Hall

by Rómulo Hernández

Let's Carnaval in SF: Carnaval's King Everett and Queen Kelllita, and below, an unidentified event's belly dancer, dance at SF City Hall. (Photos by Marvin J. Ramirez)Let’s Carnaval in SF Carnaval’s King Everett and Queen Kelllita, and below, an unidentified event’s belly dancer, dance at SF City Hall. (Photos by Marvin J. Ramirez)

A colorful preview of Carnaval San Francisco was staged last Friday, the 9th in the imposing stairs of the San Francisco City Hall to announce the initiation of the celebration of its 30th anniversary, to be in the mere heart of the Mission District over Memorial Day weekend, May 24 and 25.

With the sights and sounds of samba, salsa and soca, 2008’s Carnaval’s King Everett and Queen Kellita appeared with part of the dancers that will cheer up the attractive Carnaval parade.

Unlike other parts in the American continent, Carnaval San Francisco takes place at a different date, usually at the end of May. The special guests that attended the City Hall event shared the enthusiasm and celebrated the motto of the holiday “Many Cultures-One Spirit.”

On Saturday, the 24th the annual festival will offer food, crafts, live music, dance and other fun activities and events on several stages. Spanning MISIONeight blocks, the Carnaval SF will take place on Harrison St. between 16th and 24th from 10 a.m. to 6 ­p.m.

On Sunday, May 25 the Carnaval Grand Parade starts at 9:30 a.m. at the corner of 24th and Bryant streets, where it will proceed west to Mission Street. From there, the parade heads north on Mission down to 17th Street, where it will turn east and flow into the festival area.

Carnaval SF is produced by the Mission Neighborhood Centers, Inc. (MNC) and is supported by San Francisco Grants for the Arts. Since 1959, the MNC has provided quality programs that promote self-sufficiency and community growth for the Mission District’s children, youth, families and seniors.

Ortega leads anti-U.S. critique at Latin American food summit

by the El Reportero’s news services

Daniel Ortega S.Daniel Ortega S.

Strictly speaking, influence is exerted ‘unseen, except in its effects’. The extent to which the US has been resorting to overt entreating, cajoling and pressing in its dealings with Latin America is a sign that its influence, in this sense, has been waning.

Even in the broader sense of getting others to do one’s will, the last decade has shown it becoming far less effective. Only a few governments in the region have become openly hostile to the US, but political trends across the region show that goodwill towards Washington has dwindled far beyond that small group.

Chávez raises stakes over regional elections after Santa Cruz referendum in Bolivia

The Bolivian department of Santa Cruz voted for autonomy on 4 May. It is not yet entirely clear what this means in practice but the government of President Evo Morales insists that the referendum lacks legitimacy (see page 3). What is clear is that the regional repercussions of the referendum are already being felt. Venezuela’s President Hugo Chávez responded by seriously upping the ante ahead of regional and municipal elections in November. He accused the opposition of nurturing secessionist tendencies for the country’s western states, including Zulia. Ecuador’s President Rafael Correa, meanwhile, accused Guayaquil of forging a “separatist autonomy-seeking confederation” with Santa Cruz and Zulia.

U.S. influence in Latin America: waxing or waning?

Strictly speaking, influence is exerted ‘unseen, except in its effects’. The extent to which the US has been resorting to overt entreating, cajoling and pressing in its dealings with Latin America is a sign that its influence, in this sense, has been waning.

Even in the broader sense of getting others to do one’s will, the last decade has shown it becoming far less effective. Only a few governments in the region have become openly hostile to the US, but political trends across the region show that goodwill towards Washington has dwindled far beyond that small group.

Ortega leads anti-U.S. critique at Latin American food summit

Managua, Nicaragua – In a region beset by runaway food costs, the socialist government of Hugo Chávez’s Venezuela and its leftist allies appear to have found fertile ground to plant the seeds of revolutionary discourse.

At an emergency food-security summit held Wednesday in Managua, Nicaragua, 14 Latin American and Caribbean nations convened under the umbrella of the Bolivarian Alternative for the Americas (ALBA), the leftist trade bloc founded in 2004 by Cuba and Venezuela as an alternative to United States free-trade agreements.

The summit was supposed to focus on how the countries can prevent food shortages and unrest as the global food crisis hits the region, but it morphed into a series of complaints about US policy led by the summit’s host, Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega.

Mr. Ortega called the food crisis an ‘epic problem’ – one that he blames on the ‘tyranny of global capitalism.

How Rubén salazar became a postage stamp

by Emily C. Ruíz

The 42-cent postage stamp honoring Mexican-American journalist Rubén Salazar, who was killed by a Los Angeles County deputy sheriff while covering a Chicano anti-Vietnam War protest on Aug. 29, 1970, is now on sale.

The stamp is part of an American Journalists commemorative set where four other distinguished reporters are saluted as well. The unveiling took place in dual ceremonies April 22  – in Washington D.C at the National Press Club for all five and in California at the Los Angeles Times building in a special tribute to Salazar.

The Los Angeles City Council proclaimed April 22 as Rubén Salazar Day.

Olga Briseño, director of the Media Policy Initiative at the University of Arizona, ignited the Salazar stamp campaign three years ago, gathering 1,300 signatures and submitting a ten-pound package of compelling evidence to the Citizens Stamp Advisory Committee as to why Salazar deserved the national recognition and why the public should care. She made it happen.

The committee reviews 50,000 submissions each year. Thirty are approved.  The last Latino to be so honored was the late farm labor leader César Chávez in 2002.

Salazar’s career began at the El Paso Times across from his Mexican birthplace in the border city of Juárez. In 1959 he joined the Los Angeles Times, where he covered the Vietnam War, civil disobedience in the Dominican Republic and, based in Mexico City, served as the Times’ Latin American correspondent.

Later he found himself in the midst of turbulent times in Los Angeles, where the Mexican-American population had begun to speak out against the neglect and injustice it had to confront at home.

As a reporter and then a columnist, Salazar documented every aspect of the charges and the changes. His coverage and commentaries put him in on police radar as he uncovered the repressive tactics employed by law enforcement. He expanded his aggressive reporting after becoming news director at Spanish-language KMEX-TV.

More than 50,000 residents of East Los Angeles paraded in the National Chicano Moratorium March Against the Vietnam War, where Salazar became the first of three fatalities when police charged the protesters.

He and his news crew were taking a lunch break at the Silver Dollar Café several blocks away from the demonstrations when the deputy fired an armor-piercing tear gas missile into the café. It struck Salazar in the head, instantly killing him. The official explanation failed to satisfy many of those familiar with the circumstances.

Approval of the stamp was announced in 2007. It was originally a 41-cent denomination, but was raised with the first-class postage rate to 42 cents.

Salazar’s daughter, Lisa Salazar Johnson, said the 42 on the postage stamp will remind her forever of her father’s love and his accomplishments during his 42 years of life.

Former Times reporter Frank Sotomayor spoke about Salazar’s legacy at the Washington ceremony. “I see his work in a broader context as advocating for the best in journalism and the best values of American democracy, fairness, justice and equality.”

Iván Román, executive director of the National Association of Hispanic Journalists, praised Salazar for his “trailblazing,” stressing that he shifted from mainstream to Spanish-language media to include the Hispanic community more fully in this nation’s information loop.

(Emily C. Ruíz is a reporter with Hispanic Link News Service, based in Washington, D.C. Email: e.cruiz@hotmail.com). © 2008

Singer-author and businessman celebrates birthday

Eddy MartínezEddy Martínez

Singer-author and businessman Eddy A. Martínez is celebrating his birthday. Martínez, of Nicaraguan origin, who has just finished recording his CD of romantic music, has worked in the field of real estate for more than 25 years in the city of San Francisco, where his regarded as a good friend of many and very much liked by all. The personnel of The Reporter sends him very warm congratulations on this so special day.

Building Oakland for everyone at large candidates forum

by Margine Quintanilla R.

Group deSol one of the band to perform during SF Carnaval (May 24-25) in SFGroup deSol one of the band to perform during SF Carnaval (May 24-25) in SF

This June all Oaklanders vote for candidates for the At Large City Council seat. Come hear these candidates’ positions on issues important to working families.

All At Large candidates have been invited to participate. Join us in continuing this effort to Build Oakland for Everyone!

Sponsored by Oakland NetWork for Responsible Development (ONWRD), Oakland People’s Housing Coalition, and the League of Women Voters. Held at the East Bay Community Foundation. These organizations are nonpartisan organizations that neither support nor oppose any political party or candidate for office. Wednesday, May 14, 2008, at 6:30 p.m., at the East Bay Community Foundation, 200 Frank H. Ogawa Plaza, Oakland.

Intergenerational meeting of salsa music and poetry

If you are a salsa music lover prepare for an unforgettable night where a group of salseros of recognized international trajectory, will have an artistic meeting seldom seen with so many new styles.

The experience of salseros of the category of Benito Cereno and Manny Martínez will join the energy of new values during a musical evening, which you will be able to enjoy big time.

Also a group of poets will put a romantic touch to this event which will take place on Wednesday, May 21, from 8:00 p.m at the la Peña Cultural Center, located at 3105 Shattuck Ave., Berkeley. $10 cover charge per person and $8 for students. For more info call 415.642.4784 or visit http://lapena.org.

Beyond asylum and jail: Protecting and treating people disabled by mental illness

The media frenzy that recently surrounded the involuntary psychiatric commitment of a certain celebrity singer at the UCLA Resnick Neuropsychiatric Hospital brought to the American consciousness the concept of a 72-hour hold–a legal requirement of the Lanterman-PetrisShort Act (LPS) for “mentally disordered persons.”

On May 27, mental health experts and legal scholars will discuss how to fix a law that has backfi red, as countless individuals suffering from mental illness have ended up as criminals in our legal system without justice or treatment.

Tuesday, May 27, 2008, 9 a.m. – 5 p.m., sponsored by the Commonwealth Club. UC Berkeley’s Wheeler Auditorium or UCLA’s Semel Institute Auditorium. For more info call 415/597-6734.

Presentation of Cristina Maura ballerina and choreographer

In the celebration of her V anniversary, the International Festival of Arts of San Francisco will present once more the famous Brazilian ballerina and choreographer Cristina Maura.

The event will take place on Thursday, may 29 from 7:00 p.m; on Saturday, May 31 at 9:30 p.m; and Sunday, June 1, from 4:30 p.m. at the Mission Theater Dance, located at 3316 24th and Mission streets. $20, and $15 for groups or studentes. For more info call 415-292-1850 or 800-838-3006.­

Great expectations on two Oscar winning Latino actos

by Antonio Mejías-Rentas

COMPETING IN CANNES: Two fi lms starring Latino Oscar-winning actors are among the most expected at this year’s most important international film festival.

Director Steven Soderbergh’s Che and Woody Allen’s Vicky Cristina Barcelona are among the 20 competing films announced last week for the 61st annual International Film Festival at Cannes, France, to be held May 14-25. Soderbergh’s four-hour fi lm about the Argentinean hero of the Cuban Revolution stars Benicio del Toro, a 2000 Oscar winner for Traffic, from the same director.

The production had previously been announced as two separate fi lms. El argentino and Guerrillero. It was shot last year in Mexico, Spain and Puerto Rico at a reported cost of $70 million. The film also stars Oscar nominee Catalina Sandino Moreno.

Allen’s film was shot in the title city and stars this year’s supporting actor Oscar Winner Javier Bardem (No Country For Old Men), as well as Penelópe Cruz and Scarlett Johansson.

This year’s festival includes films by two Latin American directors, including a debut by Argentina’s Lucrecia Martel, who competes with La mujer sin cabeza. Brazil’s Walter Selles, whose own film about Ernesto “Che” Guevara, Diarios de motocicleta premiered in Cannes in 2004, this time competes with Linha de passe.

Opening and closing films were not announced, but an expected contender for the first slot is the latest one by another Brazilian director, Fernando Meirelles. The English-language film is Blindness, based on the novel by Portuguese Nobel Prize-winning author José Saramago.

In a related film item, Mexican director Guillermo del Toro, whose own El laberinto del fauno competed in Cannes in 2006, will spend the next four years in New Zealand working with producer Peter Jackson on The Hobbit and its sequel.

Del Toro will direct both films based on the J.R. Tolkien book. Jackson directed the Oscar-winning trilogy based on another Tolkien series of books, The Lord of the Rings. Del Toro has a sequel of his own coming soon to theaters: Hellboy II: The Golden Ammy.

ONE LINERS: Jennifer López will charge $1.5 million to appear next June in a Russian awards ceremony by the MUZ TV channel… The nuyorican star will appear in a yet-untitled reality series for TLC, which will offer a behind-the-scenes into her life as actress, recording artist, businesswoman and new mother. While it was unclear if husband Marc Anthony will appear in the show, the cable channel also announced a production deal with the husband-and-wife team of Kelly Ripa and Mark Consuelos. For the second year in a row, the ABC sitcom Ugly Betty has won the outstanding comedy series honor at the 19th annual Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (GLAAD) Media Awards in Los Angeles last week. Hispanic Link.

California legislators honor Felix Elizalde

Felix  ElizaldeFelix Elizalde

The Hispanic Caucus of the State Assembly recently honored Felix Elizalde with a resolution, for his arduous work and promotion in pro of the health and well-being of Latinos ones and in the occasion to have finished the Program of Leadership in Health of California.

The Program of Leadership in Health of California is a one-year intensive initiative, and in it participate elected Latino leaders to governmental positions by the voters. The Program created by NALEO, the National Association Latino Elected Offi cials does emphasis on the struggle against the obesity and other chronic illnesses.

Added to it, Elizalde received recognition on behalf of Assemblywoman Mary Hayashi (District 18,) and state Sen. Ellen Corbett (District 20.) “His passion and commitment in improving the lives of others is incomparable. Felix has put countless hours of his time to the service of the community by means of his participation in boards and commissions. Felix has demonstrated a big effort to contribute in everything possible to assure that Latinos should have a better standard of living, as well as the rest of all the residents in the East of the Bay,” Corbett said.

In response, Elizalte exalted the work of the organization. “ I congratulate NALEO for their excellent quality of experts and resources they put at the disposal of those who participate to really make us understand about the key rolls that we have on the decisions in laws and policies that govern the health of the people, in the schools, and in the community,” said Elizalde.

And he added that “ the students and families of the County of Avenue are lucky to be provided with the unconditional support of Superintendent Sheila Jordan, and that of director of Programs of health Christine Boynton, both leaders from the Office of Education of the County of Alameda.”

NALEO created the Program of Leadership of Health in California in response to the growth of the Latino population and the increase in chronic illnesses.

The program has the specifi c intention of contributing to the advance of the health and wellbeing of the population, including that of Latinos. The participants met four times a year; the presentations and discussions in group included: educational well-being, design of communities, safety in the local communities, transport, housing, recreation, and access to fresh food within reach of the budget of the families.