Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Next Meeting of the MDPF


La Siguiente Junta del Movimiento del Pueblo Fronterizo sera este Sabado 16 de Abril a las 10:00 a.m. en Mercado Mayapan, 2101 Myrtle. Habra menudo de venta desde las 9:00 a.m. Temas en la agenda incluyen:

- la crisis en las escuelas publicas incluyendo recortes y despido de maestros

- la estrategia a seguir para lograr justicia economica y el programa del siguiente Foro Popular el proximo 1 de Mayo.

- la eleccion al Cabildo de la Ciudad del siguiente representante por el Distrito 8 (Sur El Paso)
 

The Next Meeting of the MDPF will be this Saturday April 16 at 10:00 a.m. at Mercado Mayapan, 2101 Myrtle.

A menudo fundraiser will take place starting at 9:00 a.m. Items on the agenda include:

- the current crisis affecting our public schools, including budget cuts, teacher layoffs, and  Dept. of Education/FBI investigations of malfeance by administrators.

- proposed strategy to achieve economic justice and discussion of the next Peoples' Forum on Economic Justice on May 1

- the election of City Council Representative for District 8 (South El Paso)





Sunday, March 20, 2011

Movimiento del Pueblo Fronterizo & Save Our Schools Coalition

In keeping with the Movimiento del Pueblo Fronterizo's issues agenda, the weekend of March 11-13, a group of 11 of us traveled to Austin, Texas to attend a March/Rally called for by the Save Our Schools Coalition with the purpose of joining a state-wide effort against public education funding cuts. The message was carried loud and clear by more than 11,000 participants to Governor Perry and the Republican Party-dominated state legislature that under no circumstances will the people accept the defunding of public education.

Students and members of Bowie M.E.Ch.A. participated under the auspices of the Movimiento del Pueblo Fronterizo. The event was widely carried by all important media outlets in Texas except, of course, that of El Paso.

The Associated Press carried a story about the event including this connection to El Chuco: “Jesus Mejia, 16, a junior in El Paso's Bowie High School, made the 12-hour drive from El Paso with about a dozen classmates and a teacher. He said education was too important not to participate.”

Numerous dailies published pictures of the march and rally, including the Austin-American Statesman, the Houston Chronicle, the Dallas Morning News, and the San Antonio Express-News. Except our El Paso Times, algo sigue mal aqui.

Financial support for our participation came from Bowie teachers, members of MDPF, and Texas Senator Jose Rodriguez. Brian Donovan of Austin and the Save Our Schools coalition arranged housing for our delegation.  Gracias a todos ellos.  

Thursday, March 3, 2011

About the Wars: A Fragment of the First Letter from Subcomandante Marcos to Don Luis Villoro, beginning the correspondence about Ethics and Politics

Subcomandante Marcos


March 2, 2011

January-February 2011

Part 2 of the 4 that make up the first letter, which will appear in its entirety in the next issue of Rebeldía magazine.

As Mexican native peoples and as the EZLN, we have something to say about war. Above all if it is carried out in our geography and in this calendar: Mexico, in the beginning of the 21st century…

II. MEXICO’S WAR FROM ABOVE
“I would welcome almost any war because I believe that this country needs one.”Theodore Roosevelt.

And now our national reality is invaded by war. A war that is not only not far away from those who were accustomed to see war in distant geographies or calendars, but also one that begins to determine the decisions and indecisions of those who thought that wars were only in the news and in places so far away like…Iraq, Afghanistan,…Chiapas. And in all of Mexico, thanks to Felipe Calderón Hinojosa’s sponsorship, we don’t have to look towards the Middle East to critically reflect on war. It is no longer necessary to turn the calendar back to Vietnam, the Bay of Pigs, always Palestine. I don’t mention Chiapas and the war against Zapatista indigenous communities, because it is known that they aren’t fashionable (that’s why the Chiapas state government has spent so much money so that the media no longer puts it on war’s horizon, instead, it publishes the “advances” in biodiesel production, its “good” treatment of migrants, the agricultural “successes” and other deceiving stories that are sold to editorial boards who put their own names on poorly edited and argued governmental press releases).

The war’s interruption of daily life in current-day Mexico doesn’t stem from an insurrection, nor from independent or revolutionary movements that compete for their reprint in the calendar 100 or 200 years later. It comes from, as all wars of conquest, from above, from the Power. And this war has in Felipe Calderón Hinojosa its initiator and its institutional (and now embarrassing) promoter. The man who took possession of the title of President by de facto wasn’t satisfied with the media backing he received, and he had to turn to something else to distract people’s attention and avoid the massive controversy regarding his legitimacy: war. When Felipe Calderón Hinojosa made Theodore Roosevelt’s proclamation that “this country needs a war” his own (although some credit the sentence to Henry Cabot Lodge), he was met with fearful distrust from Mexican businessmen, enthusiastic approval from high-ranking military officials, and hearty applause from that which really rules: foreign capital.

Criticism of this national catastrophe called the “war on organized crime” should be completed with a profound analysis of its economic enablers. I’m not only referring to the old axiom that in times of crisis and war, the consumption of luxury goods increases. Nor am I only referring to the extra pay that soldiers receive (in Chiapas, high-ranking military officials received, or receive, an extra salary of 130% for being in “a war zone”). It would be necessary to also look at the patents, the suppliers, and the international credits that aren’t in the so-called “Merida Initiative.” If Felipe Calderón Hinojosa’s war (even though he’s tried, in vain, to get all Mexicans to endorse it) is a business (which it is), we must respond to the questions of for whom is it a business, and what monetary figure it reaches.

Some Economic Estimates
It’s not insignificant what’s at stake: (note: the quantities listed are not exact due to the fact that there is not clarity in the official governmental data. which is why in some cases the source was the Official Diary of the Federation [the federal government's official publication], and it was complemented by data from [government] agencies and serious journalistic information). In the first four years of the “war against organized crime” (2007-2010), the main governmental entities in charge (the National Defense Ministry–that is, army and air force–, the Navy, the Federal Attorney General’s Office, and the Ministry of Public Security) received over $366 billion pesos (about $30 billion dollars at the current exchange rate) from the Federal Budget. The four federal government ministries received: in 2007 over $71 billion pesos; in 2008 over $80 billion pesos; in 2009 over $113 million pesos; and in 2010 over $102 billion pesos. Add to that the over $121 billion pesos (some $10 billion dollars) that they will receive in 2011.

The Ministry of Public Security alone went from receiving a budget of $13 billion pesos in 2007 to receiving one of over $35 billion pesos in 2011 (perhaps because cinematic productions are more costly). According to the [federal] Government’s Third [Annual] Report in September 2009, in June of that year, the federal armed forces had 254,705 soldiers (202,355 in the Army and Air Force and 52,350 in the Navy). In 2009 the budget for the [Ministry of] National Defense was $43,623,321,860 pesos, to which was added $8,762,315,960 pesos (25.14% more), in total: over $52 billion pesos for the Army and the Air Force. The Navy: over $16 billion pesos; Public Security: almost $33 billion pesos; and the Federal Attorney General’s Office: over $12 billion pesos. The “war on organized crime’s” total budget in 2009: over $113 billion pesos. In 2010, an Army private earned about $46,380 pesos per year; a major general received $1,603,080 pesos per year, and the Secretary of National Defense received an annual income of $1,859,712 pesos. If my math is correct, with 2009’s total war budget ($113 billion pesos for the four ministries) could have paid the annual salaries of 2.5 million Army privates; or 70,500 major generals; or 60,700 Secretaries of National Defense.

But, of course, not all that is budgeted goes towards salaries and benefits. Weapons, equipment, bullets are needed…because those that they already have don’t work anymore or they’re obsolete. ”If the Mexican Army were to engage in combat with its over 150,000 weapons and its 331.3 million cartridges against an internal or external enemy, its firepower would only last on average 12 days of continuous combat, according to the Joint Chiefs of Staff’s estimates for the Army’s and Air Force’s weapons. According to the predictions, the gunfire from 105mm howitzers (artillery) would last, for example, 5.5 days of combat if that weapon’s 15 grenades were shot continuously. The armored units, according to the analysis, have 2,662 75mm grenades.

In combat, the armored troops would use up all of their rounds in nine days. In the Air Force, it is said that there are a little over 1.7 million 7.62mm cartridges that are used by the PC-7 and PC-9 planes, and by the Bell 212 and MD-530 helicopters. In a war, those 1.7 million cartridges would be used up in five days of aerial fire, according to the Ministry of National Defense’s calculations. The Ministry warns that the 594 night vision goggles and the 3,095 GPS used by the Special Forces to combat drug cartels “have already completed their service.”

The shortages and the wear in the Army and Air Forces’ ranks are evident and have reached unimaginable levels in practically all of the institution’s operative areas. The National Defense [Ministry's] analysis states that the night vision goggles and the GPS are between five and thirteen years old, and “they have already completed their service.” The same goes for the “150,392 combat helmets” that the troops use. 70% reached their estimated lifespan in 2008, and the 41,160 bulletproof vests will do so in 2009.

In this panorama, the Air Force is the sector most affected by technological backwardness and overseas dependency, on the United States and Israel in particular. According to the National Defense Ministry, the Air Force’s arms depots have 753 bombs that weigh 250-1,000 lbs. each. The F-5 and PC-7 Pilatus planes use those weapons. The 753 that are in existence would last in air-to-land combat for one day. The 87,740 20mm grenades for F-5 jets would combat internal or external enemies for six days. Finally, the National Defense Ministry reveals that the air-to-air missiles for the F-5 planes only number 45, which represents only one day of aerial fire.” — Jorge Alejandro Medellín in “El Universal”, Mexico, January 2, 2009. This was made known in 2009, two years after the federal government’s so-called “war.” Let’s leave aside the obvious question of how it was possible that the commander-in-chief of the armed forces, Felipe Calderón Hinojosa, could launch a war (”long-term” he says) without having the minimal material conditions to sustain it, let alone “win it.” So let’s ask: What war industries will benefit from the sales of weapons, equipment, and vehicles? If the main promotor of this war is the empire of stripes and cloudy stars (keeping note that, in reality the only congratulations that Felipe Calderón Hinojosa has received have come from the US government), we can’t lose sight of the fact that north of the Rio Grande, help is not granted; rather, they make investments, that is, business.

Victories and Defeats
Does the United States win with this “local” war? The answer is: yes. Leaving aside the economic gains and the monetary investment in weapons, vehicles, and equipment (let’s not forget that the USA is the main provider of all of this to two contenders: the authorities and the “criminals.” The “war on organized crime” is a lucrative business for the North American military industry), there is, as a result of this war, a destruction/depopulation and a geopolitical reconstruction/rearrangement that benefits them.

This war (which was lost from the moment it was conceived, not as a solution to an insecurity problem, but rather a problem of questioned legitimacy) is destroying the last redoubt that the Nation had: the social fabric. What better war for the United States than one that grants it profits, territory, and political and military control without the uncomfortable body bags and cripples that arrived, before, from Vietnam and now from Iraq and Afghanistan? Wikileaks’ revelations about high-ranking US officials’ opinions about the “deficiencies” in the Mexican repressive apparatus (its ineffectiveness and its complicity with organized crime) are not new. Not only amongst the people, but also in the highest circles of government and Power in Mexico, this is a certainty. The joke that it is an unequal war because organized crime is organized and the Mexican government is disorganized is a gloomy truth.

On December 11, 2006, this war formally began with “Joint Operation Michoacan.” Seven thousand soldiers from the army, the navy, and the federal police launched an offensive (commonly known as the “michoacanazo”) that, when the media’s euphoria passed, turned out to be a failure. The military official in charge was Gen. Manuel García Ruiz, and the man in charge of the operation was Gerardo Garay Cadena of the Ministry of Public Security. Today, and since December 2008, Gerardo Garay Cadena is imprisoned in a maximum security prison in Tepic, Nayarit, accused of colluding with “el Chapo” Guzmán Loera.

And, with each step that is taken in this war, the federal government finds it more difficult to explain where the enemy is. Jorge Alejandro Medellín is a journalist who collaborates with various media outlets–Contralinea magazine, the weekly Acentoveintiuno, and Eje Central, amongst others–and he’s specialized in militarism, armed forces, national security, and drug trafficking. In October 2010 he received death threats because of an article where he pointed to possible between drug traffickers and Gen. Felipe de Jesús Espitia, ex-commander of the V Military Zone and ex-chief of the Seventh Section–Operations against Drug Trafficking–during Vicente Fox’s administration, and in charge of the Drug Museum located in the offices of the Seventh Section. Gen. Espitia was removed as commander of the V Military Zone following the tumultuous failure of the operations he ordered in Ciudad Juarez and for his poor response to the massacres committed in the border city.

But the failure of the federal war against “organized crime,” the crown jewel of Felipe Calderón Hinojosa’s government, is not a destiny that the Power in the USA laments: it is a goal to reach. As much as corporate media tried to present resounding successes for legality, the skirmishes that take place every day in the nation’s territory aren’t convincing. And not just because the corporate media have been surpassed by the forms of information exchange used by a large portion of the population (not only, but also the social networks and cell phones), also, and above all, because the tone of the government’s propaganda has passed from an attempt to deceive to an attempt to mock (from the “even though it doesn’t appear as though we’re winning” to “[drug traffickers are] a ridiculous minority,” which pass as barroom boasting for the president). About this other defeat for the written, radio, and television press, I will get back to that in another missive. For now, and regarding the current issue, its enough to remind people that the “nothing’s happening in Tamaulipas” that was extolled by the media (namely radio and television), was defeated by the videos shot by citizens with cell phones and portable cameras and shared on the Internet.

But let’s get back to the war that, according to Felipe Calderón Hinojosa, he never said was a war. He never said it, right?

“Let’s see if this is or isn’t a war: on December 5, 2006, Felipe Calderón said: “We work to win the war on crime…”. On December 2007, during breakfast with naval personnel, Mr. Calderón used the term ‘war’ on four occasions in a single speech. He said, “Society recognizes in a special manner the important role our marines play in the war my Government leads against insecurity…”, “The loyalty and the efficiency of the Armed Forces are one of the most powerful weapons in the war we fight…”, “When I started this frontal war against crime I stated that this would be a long-term struggle,” “…that is precisely how wars are…”. But there’s more: on September 12, 2008, during the the Commencement Ceremonies of the Military Education System, the self-proclaimed “president of employment” really shined when he said war on crime a half a dozen times: “Today our country fights a war that is very different from those that the insurgents fought in 1810, a war that is different from that which the cadets from the Military College fought 161 years ago…” “…it is the duty of all of Mexicans of our generation to declare war on Mexico’s enemies… That’s why, in this war on crime…” “It is essential that all of us who join this common front go beyond words to acts and that we really declare war on Mexico’s enemies…” “I am convinced that we will win this war…” (Alberto Vieyra Gómez. Agencia Mexicana de Noticias, January 27, 2011).

By contradicting himself, taking advantage of the calendar, Felipe Calderón Hinojosa neither corrects his mistakes nor corrects himself conceptually. No, what happens is that wars are won or lost (in this case, lost) and the federal government doesn’t want to recognize that the central focus of this administration has failed militarily and politically.

Endless War? The Difference Between Reality… and Videogames

Faced with the undeniable failure of his warmongering policies, will Felipe Calderón Hinojosa change his strategy?

The answer is NO. And not just because war from above is a business, and like any other business, it is maintained as long as it is profitable. Felipe Calderón de Hinojosa, the commander-in-chief of the armed forces, the fervent admirer of [former Spanish Prime Minister] José María Aznar, the self-proclaimed “disobedient son,” the friend of Antonio Solá[1], the “winner” of the presidential elections by a half a percentage point thanks to Elba Esther Gordillo’s alchemy[2], the man of authoritarian rudeness that is close to a tantrum (”Get down here or I’ll make them bring you down here!”[3], he who wants to cover up the murdered children in the ABC Daycare Center in Hermosillo, Sonora, with more blood[4], he who has accompanied his military war with a war on dignified work and just salaries, he who has calculated autism when faced with the murders of Marisela Escobedo[5] and Susana Chávez Castillo[6], he who hands out toe tags that say “members of organized crime” to little boys and girls and men and women[7] who were and are murdered by him because, yes, because they happened to be in the wrong calendar and the wrong geography, and they aren’t even named because no one keeps track, not even the press, not even the social networks.

He, Felipe Calderón Hinojosa, is also a fan of military strategy video games. Felipe Calderón Hinojosa is the “gamer” “who in four years turned the country into a mundane version of The Age of Empire–his favorite videogame–,(…) a lover–and bad strategist–of war.” (Diego Osorno in Milenio, October 3, 2010). It is he who leads us to ask: Is Mexico being governed videogame-style? (I believe that I can ask these sorts of controversial questions without them firing me for violating an “ethics code” that is determined by paid advertising[8]). Felipe Calderón Hinojosa won’t stop. And not only because the armed forces won’t let him (business is business), but also for the obstinacy that has characterized the political life of the “commander-in-chief” of the Mexican armed forces. Let’s remember: In March 2001, when Felipe Calderón Hinojosa was the parliamentarian coordinator of the National Action Party’s federal deputies [in Congress], that unfortunate spectacle took place when the National Action Party (PAN) did not let a joint indigenous delegation from the National Indigenous Congress and the EZLN take the podium in Congress during the “March of the Color of the Earth.”

Despite the fact that he was making the PAN out to be a racist and intolerant political organization (which it is) by denying the indigenous people the right to be heard, Felipe Calderón Hinojosa stood firm. Everything told him it was an error to take that position, but the then-coordinator of the PAN deputies refused to cede (and he wound up hiding, along with Diego Fernández Cevallos and other distinguished PAN members, in one of the chamber’s private halls, watching on television as the indigenous people spoke in a space that the political class reserves for its comedy sketches). ”No matter the political cost,” Felipe Calderón Hinojosa would have said at the time. Now he says the same, although now it’s not about the political costs that a political party assumes, but rather the human costs that the entire country pays for that stubbornness.

At the point of ending this missive, I found the statements of the US Secretary of Homeland Security, Janet Napolitano, speculating about the possible alliances between Al Qaeda and Mexican drug cartels. One day prior, the undersecretary of the United States Army, Joseph Westphal, declared that in Mexico there is a form of insurgency lead by the drug cartels that could potentially take over the government, which would imply a US military response. He added that he didn’t want to see a situation in which US soldiers were sent to fight an insurgency “on our border…or having to send them to across the border” into Mexico. Meanwhile, Felipe Calderón Hinojosa was attending a rescue simulation in a simulated town in Chihuahua, and he boarded an F-5 combat plane and he sat in the pilot’s seat and joked with a “fire missiles.”

From the strategy video games to the “aerial combat simulation” and “first-person shots”? From Age of Empires to HAWX? HAWX is an aerial combat video game where, in a not-so-distant future, private military companies have replaced governmental militaries in various countries. The video game’s first mission is to bomb Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua, Mexico, because the “rebel forces” have taken over the territory and threaten to cross into US territory. Not in the video game, but in Iraq, one of the private military companies contracted by the US State Department and the Central Intelligence Agency was “Blackwater USA,” which later changed its name to “Blackwater Worldwide.” Its personnel committed serious abuses in Iraq, including murdering civilians. Now it has changed its name to “Xe Services LLC” and is the biggest private security contractor the US State Department has. At least 90% of its profits come from contracts with the US government.

The same day that Felipe Calderón Hinojosa was joking in the combat plane (February 10, 2011), and also in the state of Chihuahua, an 8-year-old girl died when she was hit by a bullet from a shoot-out between armed people and members of the military. When will this war end? When will “Game Over” appear on the federal government’s screen, followed by the credits, with the producers and sponsors of the war?

When will Felipe Calderón be able to say “we won the war, we’ve imposed our will upon the enemy, we’ve destroyed its material and moral combat abilities, we’ve (re)conquered the territories that were under its control”? Ever since it was conceived, this war has no end, and it is also lost. There will not be a Mexican victor in these lands (unlike the government, the foreign Power does have a plan to reconstruct-reorganize the territory), and the defeat will be the the last corner of the dying National State in Mexico: the social relations that, providing a common identity, are the base of a Nation. Even before the supposed end, the social fabric will be completely broken.

Results: the War Above and the Death Below

Let’s see what the federal Ministry of the Interior reports about Felipe Calderón Hinojosa’s “not-war”:
“2010 was the most violent year during the current administration, accumulating 15,273 murders linked to organized crime, 58% more than the 9,614 registered during 2009, according to statistics published this Wednesday by the Federal Government. From December 2006 up to the end of 2010 34,612 murders were counted, of which 30,913 were reported as “executions”; 3,153 are listed as “clashes” and 544 are listed as “homicides-attacks.” Alejandro Poiré, the National Security Council’s technical secretary, presented an official database created by experts that will show, beginning now, “monthly disaggregated information at the state and municipal level” about violence in the whole country.” (Vanguardia, Coahuila, Mexico, January 13, 2011)

Let’s ask: Of those 34,612 murders, how many were criminals? And the more than one thousand little boys and girls murdered (which the Secretary of the Interior “forgot” to itemize in his account), were they also organized crime “hitmen”? When the federal government proclaims that “we’re winning,” against which drug cartel are they referring to? How many tens of thousands more make up this “ridiculous minority” that is the enemy that must be defeated?

While up there they uselessly try to tone down this war’s murders with statistics, it is important to note that the social fabric is also being destroyed in almost all of the national territory. The Nation’s collective identity is being destroyed and it is being supplanted by another. Because “a collective identity is no more than an image that a people forges of itself in order to recognize itself has belonging to that people. Collective identity is those features in which an individual recognizes himself or herself as belonging to a community. And the community accepts this individual as part of it. This image that the people forge is not necessarily the persistence of an inherited traditional image, but rather, generally it is forged by the individual insofar as s/he belongs to a culture, to make his/her past and current life consistent wit the projects that s/he has for that community. So identity is not a mere legacy that is inherited, rather, it is an imagine that is constructed, that each people creates, and therefore is variable and changeable according to historical circumstances.” (Luis Villoro, November 1999, interview with Bertold Bernreuter, Aachen, Germany). In a good part of the national territory’s collective identity, there is no (as they wish us to believe) dispute between the national anthem and the narco-corrido ["narco-ballad"] (if you don’t support the government you support organized crime, and vice-versa.

No. What exists is an imposition, by the force of weapons, of fear as a collective image, of uncertainty and vulnerability as mirrors in which those collectives are reflected.What social relationships can be maintained or woven if fear is the dominant image which which a social group can identify itself, if the sense of community is broken by the cry “Save yourself if you can”? The results of this war won’t only be thousands of dead… and juicy economic gains. Also, and above all, it will result in a nation destroyed, depopulated, and irreversibly broken.

Alright, Don Luis. Cheers, and let critical reflection inspire new steps.

From the mountains in the Mexican Southeast.
Subcomandante Insurgente Marcos.
Mexico, January-February 2011
Translated by Kristin Bricker

Translator’s Notes:
[1] Antonio Solá is a Spaniard who was in charge of Felipe Calderón’s “Image” during his presidential campaign.

[2] Elba Esther Gordillo is the despised (and arguably self-imposed) president of the National Education Workers Union (SNTE), one of the largest unions in Mexico. Critics argue that thanks to Gordillo, the teachers’ vote gave Calderón the 0.5% advantage he needed in the 2006 elections.
[3] In October 2007, Calderón visited Villahermosa, Tabasco, to inspect flood-damaged areas. He helped fill sandbags for a few minutes, then yelled, “Get down here or I’ll make them bring you down here!” to observers on a bridge. He then sent the military to get them so that they would help fill sandbags. http://www.tabascohoy.com.mx/noticia.php?id_nota=144019

[4] On June 5, 2009, the ABC Daycare Center in Hermosillo, Sonora, caught on fire, killing 49 children and injuring another 76, all between five months and five years old. The daycare caught fire when an adjoining file warehouse belonging to the Sonora state government caught on fire. A lack of fire alarms, fire extinguishers, and emergency exists lead to the enormous loss of life. The children’s parents continue their fight for justice and accountability.http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Incendio_en_la_Guarder%C3%ADa_ABC

[5] Marisela Escobedo fought for justice in the disappearance and murder of her daughter, Rubí. Rubí’s boyfriend admitted to murdering her and directing authorities to her body, but he was released for lack of evidence. Marisela campaigned unsuccessfully to have him imprisoned until she herself was assassinated in front of the Chihuahua municipal palace on December 16, 2010.

[6] Susana Chávez Castillo was a poet from Chihuahua who coined the slogan “Not one more [murdered woman]” (”Ni una más”). She was mutilated and murdered in January 2011.

[7] Mexico is in the midst of a “false positive” scandal in which soldiers murder civilians and then the government issues press releases arguing that the dead were members of organized crime who attacked the soldiers. Such is the case of five-year-old Bryan and nine-year-old Martin Salazar, shot by soldiers at a checkpoint and accused of being members of organized crimehttp://mywordismyweapon.blogspot.com/2010/04/mexican-soldiers-murder-two-children-us.html ; and US citizen Joseph Proctor. Soldiers murdered Proctor at a checkpoint and then planted a weapon in his hands to argue that he had opened fire on the soldiers…except that the gun was registered to the soldiers, and not even Rambo can drive a minivan and shoot an assault rifle at the same time.http://mywordismyweapon.blogspot.com/2010/09/mexican-military-kills-us-citizen.html

[8] Radio and TV journalist Carmen Aristegui, a critic of Calderón, was fired in February 2011 for having asked on air if Calderón has a drinking problem.http://english.aljazeera.net/indepth/features/2011/02/201121316295645310.html

Sunday, February 27, 2011

Hola Gente!
Please join us in this Holistic workshop incorporating ancient practices for our well-being. Learn about the commonality between Mexica, Yogic, and Taoist practices and tools to calm our minds and take care of our bodies.


When: Saturday March 5, 2011

Time: Relaxation practices 10:00am - 12:00pm

Herbal Respiratory Health 2:00pm-4:00pm

Where: The Root Yoga Studio 501 Texas Ave.

Register now before it fills up!

Send your names to rubi.orozco@cal.berkely.edu

Sponsored by Tlahuilcalli Yolohtli with support from the Tides Foundation, Honor the Earth Fund
Kalpulli Tlalteca, Fiscal Sponsor

Hope to see you there!

Con Paz,
Jacqueline Barragan

FIRST SENATE REPORT & ADVISORY GROUP MEETINGS

Dear friends and fellow activists:

Senator Rodriguez will sponsor the first meeting of his advisory groups on Saturday March 5th at the YISD Administration Bldg beginning at 10 a.m. Please mark your calendars and make every effort to attend. If you need additional information please respond to this e-mail and we will send you a copy of the agenda. Those of you who had signed up previously will be receiving an invitation by mail. Looking forward to seeing all of our friends.

Carmen Rodriguez
 
Submitted by Irma Camacho

MEChA Movie Night


Film screenings highlighting revolution, anti-imperialism and most of all, people power!

THE FOURTH WORLD WAR - From the front-lines of conflicts in Mexico, Argentina, South Africa, Palestine, Korea, and the North; from Seattle to Genova, and the War on Terror in New York, Afghanistan, and Iraq, The Fourth World War is the story of men and women around the world who resist being annihilated in this war.

While our airwaves are crowded with talk of a new world war, narrated by generals and filmed from the noses of bombs, the human story of this global conflict remains untold. The Fourth World War brings together the images and voices of the war on the ground. It is a story of a war without end and of those who resist.

The product of over two years of filming on the inside of movements on five continents, The Fourth World War is a film that would have been unimaginable at any other moment in history. Directed by the makers of This Is What Democracy Looks Like and Zapatista, produced through a global network of independent media and activist groups, it is a truly global film from our global movement.

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Saturday February 26, 2011

The next general meeting of the Movimiento del Pueblo Fronterizo is this


Saturday February 26

10:00 a.m.

Mercado Mayapan

2101 Myrtle

Folllowed by the Forum on Gender Violence.
Speakers will address the various forms in which we endorse gender oppression while we are working towards achieving social justice. We will collectively reflect on how we will foster a safe environment for women, lgbt, and men.



Monday, February 14, 2011

PUERTO RICO: STRIKERS OFFENSIVE BEGINS TO PENETRATE OBSCURE PLACES

Photographer: Omar Rodríguez Ortíz
Huffington Post
By Jesus Davila, NCM News (Submitted by Guillermo Glen)
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico, February 13th 2011(NCM) The orgy of violence unleashed by the national police in an effort to contain the student uprising had the unexpected result of opening a breach in the wall of internal support for Governor Luis Fortuno so wide that it has allowed begun the flow of complaints and information about criminal plans and the squandering of treasures property of the University of Puerto Rico.

At the same time the University strike continues unabated and this weekend a human wave surrounded the UPR, blocked traffic with a sit in on one of the main thoroughfares and later entered the main University campus where the students once again took over the Tower -to the cheers of the crowd- and even danced defiantly less than a meter of the besieged police.

In this way the tone of the crisis rises at a time when various social protests are taking shape and when the president of the Puerto Rican Bar Association, Osvaldo Toledo, chose civil disobedience in response to an order from the United States District Court and is being held in a federal jail. The protest by attorneys in a case in which their Headquarters can be seized, joins and is fueled by the University crisis.

Photographer: Omar Rodríguez Ortíz
Huffington Post
Last Saturday 72 social civic and political entities- including all the opposition parties- joined the gigantic march.

"Last night at the UPR you charlatan hit my Lola, last night at the UPR you charlatan come hit her now" parents and student sympathisers sang at a police alignment that observed from a prudent distance, referring to last Wednesdays violent incidents. So choking was the scandalous conduct of riot police against the students, that it provoked a crisis within the pro government operatives to the point that some of the police involved were removed and the president of the UPR, Jose Ramon de la Torre, had to resign after demanding the withdrawal of the Police from the eleven campuses in the system.

At the same time the first report arrived of a student being fired from their job in a tourism business as retaliation for their participation in the strike.

In fact, professors, administrative employees and the cleaners and maintenance Union closed down the campus on Thursday and Friday in order to prevent further violent confrontations, leaving an atmosphere of uncertainty in the face of the fear that the coming week will bring a "blood bath". In this instance, however, it's not only about the typical rumors in cases such as this.

The Puerto Rican Association of University Professors reported having information about a meeting on Monday at the highest governmental levels in which it was evaluated that "everything was working out fine" in the UPR crisis and that the only thing missing was a death to be blamed on the students. After this was made public NCM News obtained specific information about the participants in this alleged meeting and their links to Santa Catalina Palace, the government headquarters.

The fact is that on Tuesday anti riot units known as "shock troops"went too far against the female students in the vicinity of the school of social sciences, following which a crowd forced them to retreat and then roamed throughout the streets and buildings on campus. The next day the police began video taping students who painted slogans in the traditional "street of consciousness"in a blatant violation of the law which which categorizes the crime of "carpeteo" (filing), which is the creation of a police file of citizens conducting legal activities.

A group of students surrounded the police and attempted to physically prevent the continuation of the illegal practice and a few minutes later the shoving, beatings stone and even paint throwing began. Riot police, arrest units and a squad of mounted police went into action with indiscriminate beatings to all who came in proximity and arresting indiscriminately those they caught, leading the courts to find no merit to the detentions.

The mob dispersed and reappeared on the other side of the campus in a march that quickly grew to over a thousand demonstrators which resumed marching through the campus. When they arrived in front of the General Studies building two police attempted to confront the crowd which forced them out of the way having one of their hats fly through the air.

Photographer: Omar Rodríguez Ortíz
Huffington Post
Once again the police arrived, but when they tried to brake through with their motorbikes the students opened the way only to surround them and pull them of their vehicles. The mounted units fared no better as the students threw stones aimed at the riders who had to retreat. As the riot police arrived the crowd of student vanished only to reappear minutes later surrounding the University Tower where since mid morning the Brotherhood of unaffiliated Non Educational Staff maintained control of the rectory demanding the immediate withdrawal of the Police.

The day came to an end with two community marches in support of the University and a report that attorneys for the Confederation of University Professors had began preparing criminal complaints against the police for the torture of students.

But the most surprising event occurred when a student member of the Board of Trustees, Rene Vargas made a formal request for copies of the inventory of the wealth of properties without heirs -which by law the UPR has been given over the last 80 years- and was told that these properties are sold as soon as they are received. This raises the dual problem of where is the accounting that guarantees all benefits are being received and the bigger question is how could the Governmental Development Bank accept these properties which no longer exist as part of collateral for a one hundred million dollar line of credit.
NCM-CHI-SJ-NY-13-02-11-05
Further info at Huffington Post

Sunday, February 13, 2011

City Planning Meeting at Bowie High School Cafeteria

On Wednesday February 9th Oscar Lozano of Movimiento Del Pueblo Fronterizo sent out an urgent call requesting that members attend a city planning meeting at Bowie high School for February 10th.


"We are asking all adherents and supporters of the MDPF to attend a City of El Paso Planning department sponsored meeting tomorrow Thursday at 5:30 p.m. at the Bowie high School Cafeteria.


The City will be asking the public's input as to the future of Segundo barrio, Chamizal Neighborhood, and other Central El Paso communities."


“We, as the MDPF should be present to ensure that future plans for these areas should:

1. include plans for economic development and job creation programs, in particular the funding of La Mujer Obrera's Museo Mayachen Project.

2. guarantee that a process of gentrification does not result from any City-initiated plans that will result in the dislocation of the present inhabitants of these areas.

3. that the City's planning process, including this meeting, include guarantees that the people's voice will actually be taken into account and not merely used to legitimize previously arrived at decisions.”

Oscar lozano reported the following

“At least 10 of us from the MDPF were there at the Bowie cafeteria, I myself got in at the tail end of the meeting. There were very few community people present, a lot of City bureaucrats and hired consultants, also some La Fe employees. The City Planning dept went through the motions of eliciting input from those present as to what they would like to see in the neighborhoods of central El Paso, including Segundo Barrio and the Chamizal Neighborhood. Guillermo and people from La Mujer Obrera lobbied so that the Museo Mayachen economic development project be considered. The planners listened to various other suggestions from other participants, not all of these suggestions would be beneficial to our Barrios. The planners will take these opinions and incorporate them into a Master Plan for the city, how much of our input will be really taken into account remains to be seen. It is up to us to keep their feet to the fire. Guillermo Lorena, Pete, or Carlos might be able to offer a different perspective.”

Pete Duarte commented that in his perspective it was an out of town consultant firm and doubted that input would be considered by the city. As Oscar Lozano said, it is up to us to pressure the city to take us into account.

posted by Ramon Arroyos

Friday, February 11, 2011

Victory! University of Texas-El Paso Reinstates Cesar Chavez Day!

by Gabriela Garcia • February 09, 2011

• In Texas, a state where elementary and middle school students can no longer learn about civil and workers rights leader Cesar Chavez in official textbooks, there is some positive news amidst that maddening reality. Namely, that social justice leaders and university student groups are refusing to let awareness of Chavez's legacy fall by the wayside. If states want to ban ethnic studies, Chavez's close ally Dolores Huerta told AlterNet earlier this year, we'll just have to start “freedom schools” to pass the knowledge on.


• And when University of Texas-El Paso decided to abruptly ban Cesar Chavez Day as an official holiday, Students for Cesar Chavez, a coalition formed by students at the university, called for an immediate reinstatement of the day of remembrance. More than 7,000 people, including 134 Change.org members, signed a petition launched on the students' behalf by Chavez's United Farm Workers. The outrage also pushed a major donor to withdraw his support from the university, while student leaders and community activists rallied on the ground. The pressure worked.

• KFOX TV reports that the UTEP faculty senate held a vote and decided to reinstate March 31 as Cesar Chavez Day. It will rejoin other officially observed days such as Martin Luther King Jr. Day and Presidents' Day.

• "The students' determination and refusal to give up ― and the response from thousands of farm worker supporters ― are the best evidence that Cesar's legacy is alive and thriving nearly 18 years after his passing," UFW president Arturo S. Rodriguez wrote in a statement. As Chavez would say, sí se puede.

• Photo Credit: Troy Holden

• Gabriela Garcia is a freelance writer who has written for Latina, the Miami New Times, National Geographic Traveler blog, and Matador Network blogs, amongst other publications.

Story from change.org


Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Students get Cesar Chavez Holiday Restored

Arturo Rodriguez UFWA
Congratulations to the students at the University of Texas at El Paso on convincing the Faculty Senate to reverse its decision last month to cancel the Cesar Chavez Day holiday on a campus where 76 percent of students are Latino. More than 7,000 Americans from across the country overwhelmingly responded by endorsing the appeal from students. Removal of the Chavez holiday for four years was "an act with deep consequences," noted Adrian Rivera, a bilingual education student and coordinator of Students for Cesar Chavez. UTEP students organized both on campus and outside the university. The UFW distributed their appeal throughout the nation. The students' determination and refusal to give up--and the response from thousands of farm worker supporters--are the best evidence that Cesar's legacy is alive and thriving nearly 18 years after his passing. We all congratulate the students at UTEP as well as our friends who lent them their support. Si Se Puede!


Arturo S. Rodriguez, President
United Farm Workers of America



Sunday, February 6, 2011

Rally in support of restoring the Cesar Chavez Holiday at UTEP

Carlos Marentes Director of Trabajadores Agrícolas Fronterizos

   On January 28th several organizations gathered to protest the decision of UTEP to remove Cesar Chavez Day as an official holiday. Speakers were Father Arturo Banuelos, Pete Duarte, Madelin Santivalles of MEChA,  Carlos Marentes Director of Border Agricultural Workers Center, Eustolia Olivas of the board of Directors,Rodolfo Diaz, Antonio Flores, Max Munoz of the Mexican American Bar Association, Selfa Chew, Adrian Stello Rivera, Yolanda Leyva of the History Department, CAUSA and Miners Without Borders. The speakers demanded the reinstatement of the Cesar Chavez Holiday and Pete T. Duarte a founder of La Fe Clinic, and former CEO of Thomason General Hospital returned the Gold Nugget Award he received for his support of UTEP. The Following statement was made by Mr. Duarte. Pete and supporters met with Dr. Natalicio who promised to reinstate the holiday but has yet to officially do so.
    Statement by Pete T. Duarte presented at UTEP on January 27, 2011 for Cesar Chavez protest.  "


Pete Duarte returns Nugget Award

 My name is Pete T. Duarte and I am a retired health care administrator, a University of Texas at El Paso (UTEP) graduate with a Master’s Degree in Sociology, a concerned citizen and a proud El Pasoan. Today we are gathered here to protest the decision by the Faculty Senate of the UTEP to eliminate the observance of the Cesar Chavez Holiday on March 31, 2011. This University is located in the City of El Paso where the Mexican American-Chicano-Hispanic population is over eighty percent. The action taken by the Faculty Senate is not only a slap in the face to the students, faculty and staff on campus but it is an act of cultural/racial genocide against the majority population of our area. Cesar Chavez was not only an internationally known leader who was sought out by religious, civic, political and labor leaders for his counsel on labor/minority/social justice issues during his most active years from the 1960’s until his death in 1993. He was recognized as a leader of the most neglected socioeconomic segment of American workers ---the agricultural workers of America be they Mexican American, Filipinos, African American,” poor whites”, women or undocumented immigrants. What made him an extraordinary human being was his character since he never sought personal fame, wealth or recognition, only social justice and equality for all of us. His struggle inspired thousands of us to stand up for justice, humanity, peace, equality, freedom and nonviolent social action. I was moved to observe leaders from all of the religious denominations. International politicians, national celebrities, athletes and thousands of students throughout the nation join him in his marches, demonstrations, picket lines, and month long fasts that reaffirmed his commitment to nonviolence . For me there will never be a more inspirational heroic figure then Cesar Chavez.   

Dr. Natalicio promised to provide a solution
 
I was the eighth and last child of Eduardo S. and (Maria) Jesus Duarte who were migrant farm workers in the Central Valley of California. Every year, until I was thirteen years of age, we would leave Southern California and travel up through the agricultural farm lands of Central California ,picking cotton, potatoes, grapes, fruits, tomatoes, citrus and walnuts from early spring to early fall. Often the sky and the heavens were our roof, other times we slept and lived in barns, or farm labor shacks and even in automobiles. We were always well received but always encouraged to leave as soon as the crops were picked. Often we worked as the skies were filled with pesticides as the farmers tried to protect their crops from infestations and I learned then that the crops were more valuable than the workers’ health. If we were allowed to enroll in school, the children of farmworkers were always separated from the year round students and we were told forcefully that we would have to sit and behave or be expelled. Seldom were we taught anything except contempt and denigration of who we were as a people. I learned the bitter lessons of discrimination, inequality and racial profiling at an early age.

Despite my parents socioeconomic status I was able to rise above their social standing. I was one of three high school graduates in our family; I went on and became the first college graduate of our extended family. After graduation I joined the Peace Corps and married a fellow Corps member, Joy Hudson. I came to El Paso in 1968 as a health care community organizer during the War On Poverty where I was able to unite with outstanding community leaders and establish the Father Rahm Social Service and Referral Organization, which in the early seventies became Centro de Salud Familiar La Fe, Inc. Later I was selected by parents, students and faculty to head Project Upward Bound at UTEP .and in the early nineties I became the CEO of Thomason General Hospital, now called University Medical Center. During my tenure the hospital was twice named among America’s Top 100 Hospitals. In 2004 I resigned after serving at the hospital for fourteen years as its Chief Servant, or CEO.

I prefer the title Chief Servant to CEO because my role models and heroes were all Servants---Martin Luther King, Gandhi, Mother Teresa, Nelson Mandela, our first Chicana County Judge for El Paso County, my parents and Cesar Chavez. All of them were visionary and they all acted on hope, a value that guides all of us as we seek a better understanding of the forces that shape and determine our lives. Their lives were demonstrations of the highest moral character and the goodness that defines humanity. Cesar Chavez epitomized these virtues as he fought a lifelong battle to improve the lives of the destitute marginal population in the USA and he never once sought the limelight for his efforts. As all seekers of social justice he did what he had to do because it was the right thing to do.

I believe that the world is a better place, and I am a better person, for having men like Cesar Chavez as national icons. It is difficult for people to improve if they have no role models but themselves to copy after. Cesar Chavez was and remains my role model. His vision, his hopes, for a better future for all people is a laudable goal and one that I choose to follow.
I believe that the action taken by the University to cancel the Cesar Chavez Holiday is wrong and I regret this action because it is a significant step backwards for a University ostensibly trying to reach tier 1 status. It appears that this University is getting on the Arizona bandwagon of erasing us, the Hispanic population, from history. For too long we have passively accepted whatever fate might be bestowed upon us. Now I say, “YA BASTA!” It is time for El Paso and its majority population to speak out against this injustice. I for one will no longer support the university financially and I ask that my friends to the same thing. I am also returning the Gold Nugget Award that I received in 2004 as a clear show of my disgust at this action!!!"
Pete T. Duarte


Monday, January 31, 2011

Protest @ Utep Magoffin Auditorium.

   Protest Against Tax money wasted on border security, Workers and Students are upset that Obama's priority for the border has been Security and helping the Trasnational Corporations cross their products instead of investing in border economic development.   Low income women workers need jobs, we don't need more border patrolman.Border Security for whom?? We live in the secound safest city in the United States. We are asking the federal Goverment to invest in border economic development and the Creation of jobs for low income workers. This is the first portest of many more to come until some jobs and economic development start happening for low income workers on the border.                                   
 

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Movimiento Del Pueblo Fronterizo takes action

  Movimiento del Pueblo Fronterizo, a coalition of El Paso organizations met  Saturdayy January 22 to discuss issues in the community.
Lorena Andrade and Guillermo Glenn
Lorena Andrade of Mercado Mayapan reported on the decision of la Mujer Obrera to begin to cut hours of the mercado and to concentrate on the community organizing and the use of the cultural space. Ms. Andrade explained that the efforts to keep the mercado open distracts from their ability to organize. The mercado will downsize beginning on February. The cultural space,artsan booths, safe space for youth and food court will remain open on Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays with Mujer obrera concentrating on organizing to bring or create jobs for women.
   Guillermo Glenn, labor organizer, commented that members of La Mujer will travel to Austin to lobby for the Governors Enterprise Fund. The organization believes that the funds should be used for small business and not to supplement big business in Texas and they intend to bring attention to the need of jobs and enterprise for our communities. Additionally there are plans to continue to petition HUD for funds for communities and not for the usual agencies that already have resources. Guillermo also noted that 280 Fortune 500 Companies do business in Juarez and are the beneficiaries of the so called border security. Tat funds are provided for high technology business while neglecting businesses and persons that work on businesses that don't employ high technology and essentially jobs are scarce for persons who do not persue higher education.

Carlos Marentes of the Farmworkers Union commented on the plight of the workers and the use of city funds for political purposes and the need to change their  laissez-faire attitude  for the economy of the city and commented on the need to insist on a working city council. 
Selfa Chew and Carlos Marentes

Selfa Chew Provided information on the Press Conference and protest of the abolition of Cesar Chavez holiday. The protest is set for Thursday January 27th at 10:00 am at leech Grove on the university canpus. Pete Duarte former head of La Fe Clinic and Thomason General Hospital and long time activist will be returning the UTEP Nugget award that he was given for his support of the University. It was suggested that all persons write about their displeasure of cancelation of the Cesar Chavez Holiday and that we shall never donate money to UTEP.  Ms. Chew also informed the organization that several teach ins on cesar Chavez are being planned for UTEP students who do not know about the organizers life and his importance to our History.                                

The next Foro Popular is being planned for February 12th concerning gender violence within the movimiento. Selfa Chew and Miguel Juarez are putting together the program.

Next meeting of the organization is set for February 26th






Carlos Marentes, Pete, T. Duarte, and Irma Camacho

 


UTEP M.E.Ch.A Letter to Dr.Natalicio

Dear Dr. Natalicio,

As proud Mexican American and Chican@ students we are concerned about the Faculty Senate's decision to not observe César Chávez Day.  UTEP stands not only in a unique geographical and cultural location, but also as the university proudly proclaims—UTEP stands as a model for other universities to follow.  Therefore, we students, faculty, and administration, should support this model by celebrating and promoting cultural awareness, and more importantly, multiculturalism, through remembrance of César Chávez Day. 

Although, the Chicano Studies Program is sponsoring several noteworthy events, such occasions are not wholly satisfactory when encompassing what César Chávez Day represents to our community and people of color, particularly when taking to account our university’s demographics and the active Farm Workers Center only a few blocks away from campus.

In taking away this holiday, the Faculty Senate has robbed students and community members of part of our hard fought history—be it Mexican American, Chicano@, farm worker, or human rights history—and of our social progress.  Furthermore, in seeing the movement against Mexican-origin people from Arizona to Washington D.C., we are afraid this xenophobic and unfounded hysteria is reaching our university.

We demand that the University not follow such racist and inhumane examples. Therefore, we demand the following:
            -We demand that the Faculty Senate’s minutes be posted online
            -We demand every holiday be re-evaluated not only César Chávez Day
            -We demand the university not commit to such votes in secret from the student                             population
            -We demand a one-on-one meeting with the Faculty Senate
            -We demand a one-on-one meeting with you
            -We demand a say in our university’s decisions which directly affect the students
            -We demand extensions in Ethnic Studies—be it African American, Chican@,
            Native American, Asian American, or White Studies
            -We demand that both the African American and Chicano Studies                                                  Programs become a Departments
            -We demand UTEP refute institutionalized racism by reinstating César Chávez                              Day

The attempt to cancel a holiday that is central to the Mexican American and Chican@ community and El Paso as a whole, leads us to believe that we are neither respected nor wanted in this institution. If our demands are not met, further actions will be taken.
Sincerely,
Sincerely,
UTEP M.E.Ch.A