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Legendary Lalo Guerrero opens first Chicano Film Festival in Mexico City

by Antonio Mejías-Rentas

MEXICAN-AMERICAN MOVI ES: A TV documentary about the late singer-songwriter Lalo Guerrero opened last week’s fi rst Chicano Film Festival in Mexico City.

The event, organized by the Filmoteca (Cinematheque) at the national university (UNAM), opened Nov. 27 with a screening of Lalo Guerrero: The Original Chicano. The fi lm was directed by Lalo’s son, Dan Guerrero, who attended the festival.

Also at the opening was actor-director Edward James Olmos, whose fi lms Walkout and Alambrista were on the festival’s schedule through Dec. 2.

At a press conference for the festival, Olmos told Mexican media that after a seven-year process, he had recently claimed his Mexican citizenship.

The Los Angeles-born actor, son of a Mexican immigrant, said he is the great grandson of Enrique Flores Magón, an anarchist and social reform activist revered in Mexico.

DUELING DRAMAS: Two highly-anticipated telenovelas, shot in Colombia, premiere this week in the U.S.

Both Telemundo’s Victoria and Univision’s Pasión premiere Dec. 4 and will air Monday through Friday at 9:00 p.m. – the most watched time period in Spanish-language television, according to Nielsen.

Produced by Mexico’s Televisa and shot on locations in Cartagena, Pasión is a historic epic about Caribbean pirates that stars Susana Gonzalez and Fernando Colunga. It replaces Destilando amor, which consistently tops the weekly Nielsen ratings.

Victoria is produced by Telemundo with its Colombian partner RTI. It is a remake of a Colombian telenovela, Seriora Isabel, which was already remade in Mexico as Mirada de mujer. It takes the name of its star, Victoria Ruffo, a top Mexican actress Telemundo lured from Televisa.

IN OTHER TV NEWS: At last week’s ninth Family Television Awards, given by the Family Friendly Programming Forum, América Ferrera was named best actress for ABC’s Ugy Betty.

  • A day after being named the champion on ABC’s Dancing With the Stars, Brazilian race car driver Helio Castroneves announced he was breaking off his engagement to Miami businesswoman Aliette Vázquez.
    ­Hispanic Link.

A film you can’t miss

Matt Damon (left), who stars as Jason Bourne, converse with Paul Greengrass, director of The Bourne Ultimatum.Matt Damon (left), who stars as Jason Bourne, converse with Paul Greengrass, director of The Bourne Ultimatum.

Arrives in stores Dec. 11, 2007 just in time for the holidays.

Get ready for non-stop action with The Jason Bourne Collection! This explosive collection includes all three blockbuster fi lms starring Matt Damon as Jason Bourne: The Bourne Identity, The Bourne Supremacy and the newest installment, The Bourne Ultimatum. This four-disc set is loaded with hours of bonus materials including deleted scenes, interviews, behind-the-scenes featurettes, commentaries and much more!

Featuring collectible safe deposit box packaging with an exclusive Jason Bourne passport, The Jason Bourne Collection is the ultimate Bourne experience capturing all of the action and excitement of one of the most popular film series of all time!­

An action series that refl ects what happens when the government has excessive control of our lives.

SF implements largest biodiesel vehicle fleet in U.S.

by Juliana Birnbaum Fox

Mayor Gavin Newsom announced this week that 100% of the City’s approximately 1,500 diesel vehicles have been converted to run on biodiesel. The City’s diesel fleet includes MUNI buses, several fire engines, ambulances and street sweepers.

“Every city bears responsibility for taking local action to address our global climate crisis,” said Mayor Newsom.

“When it comes to the use of alternative fuels, renewable energy sources and greening our City fleet, San Francisco is demonstrating leadership and commitment on every front.”

Use of biodiesel will enable the City to achieve significant reductions indiesel exhaust, a toxic air contaminant linked to an array of serious health problems.

The San Francisco Bay Area is second only to Los Angeles in the health impacts from diesel pollution.

Trafficking law amendments may restrict internet sex industry

California Representative Tom Lantos has introduced amendments to the Trafficking Victims Protection Revocation Act that may include all internet and commercial sexual activity that crosses state lines, including internet dialogue. Under current law the Mann Act prohibits kidnapping, coercion and trafficking in persons over state lines.

“The Lantos amendment is carefully disguised in an innocuous language” says Robyn Few, Sex Workers Outreach Project USA, “yet it could potentially implicate respected business men like Craigslist’s, Craig Newmark as somebody who “affected’ the communication of consenting adults across state lines.”

National Lawyers Guild condemns action taken against Berkeley tree-sitters

On December 2, the one year anniversary of the Berkeley Memorial Grove protest, the National Lawyers Guild San Francisco Bay Area Chapter (NLGSF) condemned the actions of UC Berkeley and campus police against the tree-sitters as “irresponsible and dangerous.”

The University has been trying to build an athletic center which would destroy a grove of 38 native oak trees near Memorial Stadium, adjacent to Piedmont Avenue. The grove is part of a sacred Ohlone burial site and, along with the stadium, serves as a memorial to Californians who died in World War I.

In October, Alameda County Superior Court Judge Richard Keller ruled that the tree-sitters and “all other persons acting in concert” must come down or face fines and jail time. NLGSF members representing some of those arrested at the Memorial Grove report that police are taking an overbroad reading of Judge Keller’s order.

“The methods used by the University, law enforcement and private security are putting these activists at great risk of injury and are completely unnecessary,” said San Francisco Attorney Dennis Cunningham.

­San Francisco Public High School ranked among nation’s top 100

Lowell High School was ranked 69 out of the top 100 high schools by U.S. News & World Report, which analyzed 18,790 public high schools in 40 states using data from the 2005-2006 school year. The list is based on two principles: that the school must serve all its students well, and that it produce measurable academic outcomes.

The magazine analyzed high schools in three ways: Student Performance on state tests, how well the schools socio-economically disadvantaged students performed, and the amount of college-level coursework completed. This year, seven SFUSD high schools earned a spot: Lowell, School of the Arts, Galileo, Washington, Mission, Balboa, and Wallenberg.

A stink bomb lands in teh presidencial campaign

by José de la Isla

HOUSTON – During his presidency, Ronald Reagan was known to be forgetful and even to snooze during Cabinet meetings.

That condition, at least the forgetfulness part, seems to be a common condition among some Republican candidates seeking their party’s presidential nomination.

Will the public vote in favor of forgetfulness when they themselves remember? And will the public support presidential candidates who deliberately forget? Isn’t that a form of deception, or at least an immature way to avoid reality? Here’s what happened.

At the CNN YouTube Republican presidential debate late last month, Rudy Giuliani was asked by Ernie Nardi of Brooklyn, N.Y., whether he would “aid and abet the flight of illegal aliens?”

Giuliani made it clear New York was not a “sanctuary city.” But some exceptions were made to provide child education and emergency care.

Mitt Romney piped in that New York City was indeed a sanctuary city. “They didn’t report everybody they found that was here illegally,” he said.

Then he added, as if talking to an unauthorized immigrant, “We’re not going to give you benefits, other than those required by the law, like health care and education, and that’s the course we’re going to have to pursue.” That’s what Giuliani had just stated.

As a rejoinder, Giuliani accused Romney of a far worse offense. As governor, Romney had permitted six sanctuary cities in Massachusetts.

The governor, said Giuliani, had even lived in a sanctuary mansion. A landscape contractor had allegedly subcontracted illegal immigrant workers.

Now, folks, in retelling the details of that evening, I just want you to keep an eye on the shell game. The real underlying issues are global trade and terrorism, the worldwide hunt for Osama bin Laden, wars in two countries, the enmity of many world citizens, and finding the Anthrax terrorist who tried to murder some of our congressional leaders and an NBC news anchor.

It’s as if Larry, Curley and Moe now want to be president. Moe in this case is Tom Tancredo, one of the main leaders in Congress on stances). And those who use fake, or other people’s, or made up Social Security numbers may never claim the money they and employers contributed.

Basically, after the Treasury collects the money, it allows the SSA to carry the amount as a receivable for bookkeeping purposes. And Treasury uses the funds to pay other government expenses.

The biggest one is the war in Iraq. Right now it is running coincidentally about $500 billion, according to the National Priorities Project.

If no one claims this SSA windfall, it’s free money to pay for the war.

Some may claim the funds do not automatically go to cover war expenses. True. So let’s say it goes to Medicare and Medicaid and we launder it that way. That means undocumented migrants are actually huge contributors to the U.S. fiscal well-being.

Since Mexicans and “illegal immigrants” cannot be heroes in this scenario, would there have been an Iraq war unless they caused it? You know we would not pay for it in our right minds. Forget about the alleged falsified CIA-intelligence information, the invented “weapons of mass destruction” and the later argument about punishing Saddam for torturing his own people.

Couldn’t U.S. foreign-policy leaders now claim the Iraq War was really an immigration sweep to prevent “no-match” dollars from causing inflationary pressures inside the government.

The war in Iraq was the fastest way to spend the money.

This has a perverse logic to it. By more tightly regulating our fluid borders immediately after 9/11, we forced millions of undocumented visitors from Mexico to stay here in order to pay for what they started.

So it makes sense then to have them pay. As a suspicious class of people, their illicit activities — like renting, seeking work, driving, having families, going to college, getting sick — is just like what terrorists would do. So it’s not demented to say these immigrants are not unlike terrorists. And it is not shameful for this nation to apply the unclaimed money to fight terrorism.

Some have argued low-skill immigration is needed because immigrants will do the jobs most of our citizens won’t. Now, with this new understanding, we can have immigrants who do our other dirty work pay for our war, too.

We don’t want to foot it ourselves with new taxes, nor do we want our grandchildren stuck with the bill. We want to go shopping at the mall, remember? Well, here it is. The “Illegal” part of immigration is necessary because that way our millions of undocumented workers will never have the right to claim their money. Let’s keep vilifying them, so we won’t feel bad about taking the dough.

Now tell me again, what is it about “illegal” you don’t understand?

­[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]. ©2007

Bush’s mortgage plan is a laugh at the people

by Marvin J Ramire­z

Marvin RamirezMarvin Ramirez

Even though this is his last term, President Bush continues playing games with the people.

He works for the bankers who own this nation. Don’t forget that they print the money, not the government, since the Federal Reserve is a private corporation and which keeps a two-party system form of government that allows only a few allied to own the airwaves (CBS, ABC, Univision, Telemundo, etc) to tell us ­the story they wants us to hear.

With his speech showing that he is trying to help homeowners on the verge of foreclosure, he is now coming up with a solution, after he said, talked to the bankers, his real bosses.

President Bush outlined a plan which will help strapped homeowners save their homes, right!

But minutes after he launch his plan in the media, callers were told to wait until a counselor could answer their questions, according to an Associated Press news report.

“Only a fraction of the homeowners who face huge jumps in their mortgage payments appear likely to be helped by the plan, negotiated by the Bush administration, to freeze the low introductory rates on their subprime loans for five years. After that, they could be in the same position again,” says the article.

But what people don’t know is that they – the home owners – really don’t owe anything in their homes, because at the time they signed the promissory note, the house was paid off with it. All this is part of the banking fraud perpetrated on the people.

As an anonymous person online asks: What did my local bank lend me?

Answer: The real fact of the matter is that the banker deposited your loan papers (as money) into the bank, and then lent you the same value of your asset (credit application, promissory note, mortgage note) by simply depositing your asset and then lend you the same value of your loan papers. But only banks are allowed to do that. Is what  some call, creating instant money.

Mr. Bush knows that, and he knows that the housing prices you see escalating so fast, to the point that make people to invest the last penny  in their piggy bank, with hopes of making a fortune after refinancing it two years later, it was infl ated by the ­appraisers, according to recent news reports. So, the price is not real.

And the plan drafted by the Bush administration will work only for those privilege who have been able to keep their mortgage payments on time, not the ones who stopped their payments. And this started to happened when the banks refused to refinance at the beginning of the current real estate, subprime loan crisis.­

Foreclosure solutions forum to address crisis

by Juliana Birnbaum Fox

Marilyn Reynolds (en el micrófono), miembra de ACORN, anuncia la crisis hipotecaria en el Este de Oakland durante un conferencia: de prensa. (photo by Jennifer Salgado)Marilyn Reynolds (speaker), a member of ACORN, announces the foreclosure crisis in East Oakland at a press conference. (photo by Jennifer Salgado)

Oakland members of the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now (ACORN) held a press conference this Thursday to announce plans to address the local effects of the nationwide mortgage meltdown. They called on homeowners and tenants to attend a December 8th Foreclosure Crisis and Solutions Forum, which will discuss possibilities for providing relief to victims of predatory lending and others affected by the growing problem. The forum will be attended by Senator Don Perata and other elected officials and representatives of financial institutions, along with local residents.

“There are communities falling into devastation because of these foreclosures,” said Marilyn Reynolds, a local ACORN member who announced the group’s plan to address the problem. “We ask that banks restructure loans, working with existing borrowers and those in foreclosure.”

Other proposed actions include a temporary stay on foreclosures by lenders and long term, fixed-rate loan modifications that would replace the adjustable rate mortgages linked to the crisis. ACORN is also calling for continued support and resources for targeted outreach in order to educate borrowers and prevent the disaster from worsening.

“Banks could save someone’s credit, livelihood and self esteem by doing something as simple as a stroke of the pen,” Reynolds said. “I’m hoping they will have a heart and restructure these unscrupulous loans.” She expressed frustration at the misconception that the crisis was the fault of uneducated borrowers.

“I know a lot of collegeeducated young people whose credit is ruined and who are going to be without a place to live, or have to go back to live with parents,” she said. “The small print in their loans would be hard for the average lawyer to sort out.”

Dorothy Hicks, a victim of the crisis who is also organizing with ACORN, pointed out that tenants are also feeling the negative impacts of foreclosures. When lenders have foreclosed on the owners of rental units, utilities have been turned off and in some cases tenants have been evicted in violation of the law.

Californians of color are particularly vulnerable to foreclosures. A report released by RealtyTrak showed that five of the top ten cities for foreclosures in the third quarter of 2007 are in California. A previous ACORN study showed that minorities are disproportionately affected by the crisis; for example, higher-income Latino homebuyers were more likely to receive a high-cost loan than low-income whites.

“We must continue to make comprehensive reforms to the sub-prime industry now,” said Leslie Marks, a foreclosure victim and single mother living in Oakland who is among the organizers of the forum.

“We’re calling on people who have been affected by this crisis or know someone who has, and the community as a whole, to attend the December 8 meeting,” Hicks stated. The event will be held from 9:30 a.m. to noon at the East Oakland Senior Center at 9255 Edes Avenue. For more information, contact Oakland ACORN at 510-434-3110, ext.235, or at ­caacornoaro@acorn.org.

Chávez loses referendum in Venezuela

by the El Reportero news services

Hugo Chávez­Hugo Chávez

President Hugo Chávez narrowly lost both parts of the referendum to reform the constitution on 2 December.

The result does not mean that Chávez’s grip on the country’s institutions has been weakened.

No opposition leader called on Chávez to make good on his threat “to go” if he was defeated in the referendum.

Paradoxically, Chávez’s influence in Latin America may even have been strengthened because his ready admission of his defeat (before all the ballots had been counted) underlines his democratic credentials and demolishes the rightwing claim that free elections are not possible in Venezuela.

Calderón rethinks relations with Gordillo

MEXICO – President Felipe Calderón’s private secretary, César Nava, said on 24 November that the government is rethinking its relations with Elba Esther Gordillo, the hugely influential leader of the teachers’ union and leader of the Partido Nueva Alianza.

Felipe CalderónFelipe Calderón

The statement, by one  of Calderón’s chief advisers, has huge implications. Gordillo sees herself as one of the country’s power brokers: she claimed that she tilted the 2006 election Calderón’s way. This year, however, her importance in elections has been less meaningful.

Draft constitution “approved” in Bolivia amid bloodshed

Against a backdrop of violence which saw at least four dead and 130 injured, on November 24, delegates from the ruling Movimiento al Socialismo (MAS) pushed a draft of the new constitution through the constituent assembly.

Jurisdiction ruling in Nicaragua-Colombia will be Dec 13

Whether it has jurisdiction  to decide a border dispute between Nicaragua and Colombia over a tiny group of Caribbean islands, will be decided on Dec. 13. The U.N.’s International Court of Justice (ICJ) will rule on December 13.

Nicaragua petitioned the ICJ, the United Nations’ highest tribunal based in The Hague, to grant it sovereignty over the archipelago and end the row that Colombia says started nearly 200 years ago and was settled nearly 80 years ago.

“The judgment will deal solely with the preliminary objections raised by Colombia regarding the jurisdiction of the court,” the ICJ said in a statement.

The two nations, separated by Panama and Costa Rica, lay claim to the isolated Caribbean Islands San Andres and Providencia off Nicaragua’s Atlantic Coast, as well as several keys and some 50,000 sq km of fishing waters.

According to a Reuter’s repor­t, Colombia told the court in June border disputes were inevitable after the fall of the Spanish Empire in the Americas and the one in question was “definitively settled” in 1928, when Nicaragua and Colombia signed a treaty granting Colombia sovereignty over the islands.

But Nicaragua’s Sandinista government in the 1980s annulled the accord and argued it was signed while Nicaragua was under U.S. military occupation.

Many Nicaraguans consider the treaty a U.S. payoff to Colombia for arranging the independence of Panama from Colombia in order to build the Panama Canal.­

Study: juveniles of color are sentenced disproportionately to life without parole

by Adolfo Flores

Antonio Núñez, a 14-year-old youth from California, paid a high price for his actions during a night out with older friends. He participated in kidnapping, 7and was behind the wheel of a subsequent high-speed chase by police. Núñez received the state’s most severe sentence after the death penalty, life without parole (LWOP).

Children of color, in particular, are disproportionately ­sentenced to LWOP in the United States, according to a study by the University of San Francisco School of Law.

California has the highest racial disparity in the nation, with Latino youth being five times more likely to receive life without parole than white children.

Núnez is one of 94 Latino youth out of a total of 227 sentenced to LWOP in that state, according to the study, Sentencing Our Children to Die in Prison.

The report attempts to raise awareness on the issue.

Plans are for it to be used as a lobbying tool to pass S.B. 999, a California bill that seeks to abolish the practice.

“There is severe racial profiling that goes well throughout the system,” said study co-author Michelle Leighton, director for human rights programs at the Center for Law and Global Justice. “This disparity continues across the country.”

In North Dakota, for example, Latino children are 16 times more likely to receive LWOP than white children. In Pennsylvania Latino children are three times more likely.

“Youth of color have a disadvantage at every stage of the criminal justice system,” Leighton said.

Children of color, for example, are held in custody, prosecuted as adults in criminal courts, given adult sentences and are more likely to do their time in adult prisons than whites.

The study claims the U.S. government is aware of the problem but has done little to address these disparities. It adds the government does not even collect data on racial disparity among juveniles receiving LWOP.

Experts argue these sentences have an adverse effect on their development.

“They’re subjected to violence and sexual violence at the hands of other prisoners and in some cases correctional officers,” said Alison Parker, senior researcher in the U.S. program of Human Rights Watch.

Parker, who has conducted past research on the issue, said the number of youths receiving LWOP in California alone has increased by 47 since 2005.

During her research she has spoken with authorities on these disparities. Their answer is that children of color commit more crimes than white youth.

“We can’t say conclusively that the fact that more kids of color are sentenced to life without parole is due to racism,” Parker said.

Through out the world there are 2,388 youth sentenced to die in prisons. Of those, all were sentenced in the United States except for seven in Israel. They are the only two countries that have youth serving LWOP.

The report claims the United States directly violates the International Civil and Political Rights Covenant, which states that juveniles can be tried in adult courts in “exceptional circumstances.”

Connie de la Vega, coauthor of the study, argued the thousands of juveniles sentenced to LWOP well exceeds its mark of “exceptional circumstances.

The authors argue the United States maintains that it only sentences juveniles to LWOP at the state level, not the federal level, and that states don’t have to follow international law.

Parker called the argument “ridiculous because states are obliged to follow international law. There are youths serving LWOP in federal prisons, I found one.”

She said that during her research she met one youth at the U.S. Penitentiary in Ellenwood, Pa.

The Bureau of Justice Statistics stated they had no data because there were no youths serving LWOP in federal prisons.
­Hispanic Link.

Boxing

Saturday, December 8 – at Las Vegas (HBO PPV)

  • 12 rounds, WBC welterweight title: Floyd Mayweather Jr. (38-0, 24 KOs) vs. Ricky Hatton (43-0, 31 KOs).

­Sunday, December 23 – at Tokyo

  • 12 rounds, WBC bantamweight title: Hozumi Hasegawa (22-2, 7 KOs) vs. Simone Maludrottu (25-1, 10 KOs).

Cesar Latin All Stars to perform at Metronome

by Juliana Birnbaum Fox

Poncho SánchezPoncho Sánchez

Cesar’s Latin All Stars will be playing live music. The ten-piece Latin orchestra, led by Cesar Ascarrunz, plays salsa, merengue, boleros and cumbias to dance the night away. Starting Dec. 7th, every Friday and Saturday night from 9 p.m. – 2 a.m. at the Metronome Dance Center. Tickets are available at the door, at 1830 17th Street (at De Haro) in San Francisco. For more information call 415-252-9000, or visit www.metronomedancecenter.com.

Latin Jazz Sensation Poncho Sánchez Performs at Chabot College

The sizzling sounds of Poncho Sánchez come to the Chabot College Performing Arts Center in Hayward. Recognized as one of the premiere Latin ensembles of our time, Sanchez mixes Afro-Cuban rhythms with bebop to create his own style of music, inspired by the conga playing of Cuban great Mongo Santamaria.

On Friday, Dec. 7 at 8:00 p.m. at the Chabot College Performing Arts Center, located on campus at 25555 Hesperian Boulevard in Hayward. The group performs under the direction of Jon Palacio, Director for Jazz Studies at Chabot College, and a former alumnus of both the Jazz Ensemble and the Jazz Orchestra.

Tickets are $25 for general admission and may be purchased by calling (510) 723-7233 or by visiting ­www.chabotcollege.edu/music.

City College holds Job Fair

Current and future positions available at City College of San Francisco will be highlighted at the fourth annual Job Fair Friday, Dec. 7 from 9 a.m. – 4 p.m. at the Hotel Kabuki, 1625 Post Street, San Francisco. Jobs available include full and part-time faculty, administrative, and support staff. Participants can meet College department representatives, obtain applications and job announcements, learn how CCSF’s hiring process works and get answers on site. For full details about the Job Fair, telephone (415) 241-2246 or visit the College’s Human Resources Department web site at www.ccsf.edu/hr.

Campaign Boot Camp at the Commonwealth Club

Attorney/activist Christine Pelosi, daughter of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, will discuss public service through grassroots organizations and community politics, and offer a glimpse into American politics and the hectic world of campaigning. Pelosi has over 30 years of experience in voter contact, education and mobilization in local, state and federal efforts. On Wednesday, Dec. 12, check in for the event is at 6pm, the program starts at 6:30, and at 7:30 there will be a reception and book signing. Pelosi will be at the Club office, 595 Market St., 2nd Floor, San Francisco. Tickets are $12 for Members, $20 for Non-Members. To buy tickets call 415/597-6705 or register at ­ www.commonwealthclub.org.

Dance and learn about Foundation for El Salvador

The Foundation of Disabled ­and Handicapped for Integral Development in El Salvador, an organization benefitting people disabled during the Salvadoran war, will host an evening with Orquestra “Son de Caña.” Dance and inform yourself about the Foundation whose president will update us on the ecological and cultural project to be built in the province of San Vicente, El Salvador. On Saturday, Dec. 15th, 7-12 p.m.at the Women’s Building, 3543 18th St. in San Francisco.