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Monday, December 25, 2017

On the Subject of Black Liberation: Ta-Nehisi Coates, Cornel West & Robin D. G. Kelley


Powerful piece



P


Great piece written by race relations historian and scholar Robin D. G. Kelley related to a debate between Ta-Nehisi Coates' politics of survival and Cornel West's belief in the power of societies to transform themselves.  Accordingly author Kelley highlights The transformation currently under way in Jackson, Mississippi, that is so very encouraging and signals a direction to go for all of our communities struggling for survival and justice as follows:

Our movements have had to do both—find ways to survive and dare to win. Political mobilization and a vision of a liberated future matter, but so does a sober assessment of the forces arrayed against us (and by “us,” I mean all oppressed people everywhere). Sometimes we confront power directly; other times, we struggle to build power where we are—through collectives, mutual aid, community economic development, and the like. All of this is happening now, in Jackson, Mississippi, America’s most radical city, where a genuinely revolutionary movement is building our first cooperative commonwealth dedicated to the principles of democracy, human rights, workers’ power, environmental sustainability, and socialism.


Beautiful work happening in Jackson, Mississippi.  Thanks to Dr. Pedro Noguera for sharing.

Feliz navidad, everyone!

Angela Valenzuela




Coates and West in Jackson

RACE

Coates and West in Jackson

When the emails started coming in, I ignored them. By day’s end, my voicemail and email inboxes were filling up with links to the Guardian, followed by links to Facebook pages and blogposts devoted to Cornel West’s takedown of Ta-Nehisi Coates. I felt like I was being summoned to see a schoolyard brawl, and, now that I no longer use social media, I was already late. By the time I read West’s piece, “Ta-Nehisi Coates is the neoliberal face of the black freedom struggle,” it had become the center of international controversy. Perhaps because West named me as an ally, the New York Times requested a comment, followed by Le Monde, and then a slew of publications all trying to get the scoop on the latest battle royale among the titans of the black intelligentsia.
The discourse about the piece descended to the level of celebrity death match, which is never about the celebrities but rather our collective bloodlust. Reactions are still coming in from all corners, calling out West for being dishonest and jealous, and for lobbing ad hominem attacks unrelated to his critique. Meanwhile Coates-haters are delighting in what they take to be the dethroning of the liberal establishment’s literary darling. Coates, to his immense credit, has bailed out of the fray, initially engaging but then exiting Twitter with a sigh of disgust. One can only hope he is reading and working and enjoying the holiday with his family. So to even call this a “feud” is something of a misnomer.
Black intellectual infighting is hardly a new thing, and social media encourages its rapid devolution. For my part, I see value in putting Coates’s and West’s perspectives in dialogue.
I, too, would prefer to stay out of it. I need to get a Christmas tree, a trampoline for my youngest, and finish grading papers. But I can't, partly because West named me in his piece and partly because I believe it is irresponsible of us to allow this kind of spectacle to, once again, obscure crucial political and philosophical issues. Black intellectual infighting is hardly a new thing, as Peniel Josephrecently reminded us. But social media encourages its rapid devolution, as many “followers” would rather tweet and retweet than actually read the subject of the latest Twitterstorm. As I wrote in these pages in 2016, there is a growing reluctance to read and engage arguments carefully, especially those with which we disagree. Besides, social media always loves a fight; the more personal and vitriolic, the more spectators.
For my part, I see value in putting Coates’s and West’s perspectives in dialogue. To be clear, I am not interested in repeating or endorsing West’s critique here, and Coates needs no one to defend him, certainly not me. Readers of Boston Review know that I have taken issue with parts of his Between the World and Me (2015)—yet, even when I disagree, I find Coates’s writing generative, thoughtful, and startlingly honest, and he pushes me to think harder and deeper about the depth of racism in both the public and inner life of black America. Rather, I want to offer brief reflections on what I find valuable in both Coates’s recent book, We Were Eight Years in Power (2017), and in West’s insistence on the transformative power of social movements. I believe that the reconciliation of their respective insights might open new directions. My mother raised my siblings and me to be Hegelians (even if his 1807 The Phenomenology of Spirit is not exactly bedtime reading), and that means the purpose of critique is dialectical, to reach a higher synthesis, which in turn reveals new contradictions demanding new critique.
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West’s position should not surprise anyone, nor should his ideas be reduced to a couple of interviews and a short piece in the Guardian. He has always combined the black prophetic tradition of speaking truth to power with what he identifies as the anti-foundationalism of young Marx—a critical observation central to West’s book, The Ethical Dimensions of Marxist Thought (1991). West’s Black Prophetic Fire (with Christa Buschendorf, 2014) consists of dialogues that consider the lives and work of black prophetic figures, including Frederick Douglass, W. E. B. Du Bois, Martin Luther King, Jr., Malcolm X, Ida B. Wells, and Ella Baker. His insights into these figures are acute and often original, and he refrains from hagiography. For example, he is sharply critical of Douglass, whom he castigates for his relative silence on Jim Crow once he became a fully enfranchised and powerful voice in the Republican Party. The book also contains a subtle indictment of President Barack Obama, implying that his two terms as president, and the emergence of a black neoliberal political class, represent a betrayal of the principles basic to the black prophetic tradition. His criticisms of President Obama are not personal but directed at policies that reflected both the neoliberal turn and the persistence of U.S. imperialism.
West believes that we can win. Coates is concerned that we survive. Our movements have had to do both—find ways to survive and dare to win.
Coates found his calling during a particularly combative period for black intellectuals. In March of 1995, West was the target of a scurrilous attack by New Republic editor Leon Wieseltier, an essay promoted on the issue’s cover with the headline “The Decline of the Black Intellectual.” A month later Adolph Reed, Jr. followed with a piece in the Village Voice titled, “What Are the Drums Saying, Booker?: The Curious Role of the Black Public Intellectual” which names West, Michael Eric Dyson, Henry Louis Gates, Jr., bell hooks, and yours truly. In the essay, Reed characterizes us as modern-day minstrels and attacks us for being “translators” of black culture to white folks, and thus palatable to fawning white liberals. Reed’s piece left a deep impression on Coates. As he recalls in We Were Eight Years in Power, “I was determined to never be an interpreter. It did not occur to me that writing is always some form of interpretation, some form of translating the specificity of one’s roots or expertise or even one’s own mind into language that can be absorbed and assimilated into the consciousness of a broader audience. Almost any black writer publishing in the mainstream press would necessarily be read by whites. Reed was not exempt. He was not holding forth from The Chicago Defender but from The Village Voice, interpreting black intellectuals for that audience, most of whom were white.”
Those “feuds” of twenty-two years ago also generated an important Boston Review forum that centered on a provocative essay by Reverend Eugene F. Rivers III, “Beyond the Nationalism of Fools: Toward an Agenda for Black Intellectuals” (1995). In it, Rivers drops a dose of reality that is still relevant today:
The debate about responsibility [of black intellectuals] has degenerated into star-worship and name-calling, the stuff of television talk shows. The issues are too serious for that. It is time to get back on track. The Black community is in a state of emergency; Black intellectuals have acquired unprecedented power and prestige. So let’s quit the topic of salaries and lecture fees, leave the fine points about Gramsci on hegemony to the journals, and have a serious discussion of how intellectuals can better mobilize their resources to meet the emergency.
Few took up Rivers’ call, especially as black public intellectuals gained greater access to mainstream media outlets. Coates benefited but could not shake Reed’s diatribe, wondering, “How do you defy a power that insists on claiming you?” For West, however, “the answer should be clear: they claim you because you are silent on what is a threat to their order (especially Wall Street and war). You defy them when you threaten that order.” I don’t believe the answer is so clear. The truth is, you cannot control who embraces your work, but you can call out those who are simply riding the fad or who are unwilling to act to change the realities that your work engages. This, I believe, is West’s major point: how do we translate critique into action as opposed to readers’ self-pity or self-satisfaction with being “woke?”
But even more importantly, not all white folks are the same. West and Coates know this, but given what passes for commentary on the Internet, I have to conclude that most people don’t know this. No one’s ideology or political stance is fixed at birth; ideas, perspectives, and movements are always in flux. Part of the task of mobilizing requires ideological work, changing minds, challenging received wisdom, revealing hidden structures of oppression and the possibility of human liberation. So even if Coates says he has very little hope, many read him and see for the first time the deeply entrenched and hidden processes that reproduce inequality within the United States. And they’re not all white! I’ve had literally hundreds of students—black, white, Latinx, Asian American—read Coates’s work on reparations or Between the World and Me (which was core reading for most first-years across our campus) and come running to my courses, questioning their liberalism, seeking out more radical critiques of racial capitalism, some even jumping headlong into groups such as Refuse Fascism (an organization with which West is associated).
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So what are the substantive differences between West and Coates?
At the end of his Guardian essay, West writes that we cannot afford “to disconnect white supremacy from the realities of class, empire, and other forms of domination—be it ecological, sexual, or others.” Coates would agree. He treats these forms of domination as deeply intertwined but not synonymous: “I have never seen a contradiction between calling for reparations and calling for a living wage, on calling for legitimate law enforcement and single-payer health care. They are related—but cannot stand in for one another. I see the fight against sexism, racism, poverty, and even war finding their union not in synonymity but in their ultimate goal—a world more humane.” He may not map out what that “fight” for a more humane world might look like, but I don’t think his perspective can be reduced, as West does, to “narrow racial tribalism and myopic political neoliberalism.”
West’s ideas should not be reduced to a couple of interviews and a short piece in the Guardian. He has always combined the black prophetic tradition of speaking truth to power with what he identifies as the anti-foundationalism of young Marx.
It is true that We Were Eight Years in Power does not give us a sustained critique of Wall Street or the global War on Terror, or keep “track of our fightback.” In fairness, that is not Coates’s project. Rather, the book offers personal reflections on the Obama years and the period leading up to Obama’s political ascendance, interspersed between eight previously published essays that explore a wide range of topics: the rabbit hole of black bourgeois respectability politics; race and Civil War history; the case for reparations; the impact of mass incarceration on black families and communities; the prophetic voice of Jeremiah Wright; the devastating price that Shirley Sherrod, a powerful advocate for small farmers, paid when Obama succumbed to right-wing pressure to fire her; and the constraints and contradictions of the Obama presidency.
Importantly, Coates’s title is a reference not to Obama’s administration, as many seem to suppose, but rather to Reconstruction and the white backlash that followed its tragic overthrow. Coates quotes Du Bois’s Black Reconstruction (1935): “If there was one thing that South Carolina feared more than bad Negro government, it was good Negro government.” Du Bois’s insight is key here; he recognizes that it was the success of Reconstruction in creating arguably the world’s first social democracy that posed the greatest threat to white supremacy. History has a long life: the ways in which formerly enslaved people not only helped overthrow the Confederacy but immediately went to work building a new society—armed, organized, and fighting back—is the story that haunts and illuminates Obama’s presidency.
Coates is certainly attentive to the forces arrayed against the Obama administration, and to the extraordinary hope black people had invested in him, but he is no apologist for Obama. He writes:
Obama was elected amid widespread panic and, in his eight years, emerged as a caretaker and measured architect. He established the framework of a national healthcare system from a conservative model. He prevented an economic collapse and neglected to prosecute those largely responsible for that collapse. He ended state-sanctioned torture but continued the generational war in the Middle East. . . . He was deliberate to a fault, saw himself as the keeper of his country’s sacred legacy, and if he was bothered by his country’s sins, he ultimately believed it to be a force for good in the world. In short, Obama, his family, and his administration were a walking advertisement for the ease with which black people could be fully integrated into the unthreatening mainstream of American culture, politics, and myth. And that was always the problem.
Coates chose the word “caretaker” very carefully. “Good Negro government” here might be described more precisely as “good Negro in government,” especially since the Obama years were a far cry from Reconstruction, when black legislators were empowered to rewrite state constitutions and were ubiquitous at virtually every level of local government. Coates also describes what he calls a “theory of personal Good Negro Government,” or the theory that if black people comport themselves respectably, dress and speak well, they can gain citizenship and acceptance. Historian Kevin K. Gaines, in his classic text Uplifting the Race: Black Leadership, Politics, and Culture in the Twentieth Century (1996), called this “uplift ideology.” But as Coates correctly argues, this theory “denies the existence of racism and white supremacy as meaningful forces in American life. In its more nuanced and reputable form, the theory pitches itself as an equal complement to anti-racism. But [my argument] is that Good Negro Government—personal and political—often augments the very white supremacy it seeks to combat.” The takeaway is that what passes as “Good Negro Government,” the maintenance of the neoliberal order in black face, will not free us. On the contrary, it reinforces hegemony of the ruling racial regime, patriarchy, class domination, and U.S. empire. So Obama did good for a segment of the ruling class, but the ruling bloc is also composed of white people outside of elite circles whose deeply entrenched racism obscured their class anxieties and saw in Obama a symbolic threat to their status.
It is true that We Were Eight Years in Power does not give us a sustained critique of Wall Street or the global War on Terror. In fairness, that is not Coates’s project.
“For now,” Coates writes, “the country holds to the common theory that emancipation and civil rights were redemptive, a fraught and still-incomplete resolution of the accidental hypocrisy of a nation founded by slaveholders extolling a gospel of freedom. This common theory dominates much of American discourse, from left to right. Conveniently, it holds the possibility of ultimate resolution, for if right-thinking individuals can dedicate themselves to finishing the work of ensuring freedom for all, then perhaps the ghosts of history can be escaped.” This theory is an illusion, one liberals continue to hold on to: the belief that we are on the right track, we just need time and patience and a reminder of the ideals upon which the nation was founded. But this is the same democracy that sanctions the violence of the state, the Second Amendment, the castle doctrine, stand your ground laws, militias, vigilantes, and lynching as a form of popular justice (and entertainment). In other words, Coates rejects the American myth of democracy’s promise and the notion that liberalism is incompatible with slavery and white supremacy. It is a perspective found in Cedric Robinson’s writings on democracy, powerfully elaborated by Lisa Lowe’s Intimacies of Four Continents (2015), and one Coates culled from reading Edmund Morgan’s classic American Slavery, American Freedom (1975), as well as the work of Barbara J. Fields and David Roediger. For these thinkers, the liberalism that grounds U.S. democracy was founded on a definition of liberty that places property before human freedom and human needs: it permits (if not promotes) various forms of unfree labor, dispossession, and subordination based on “race” and “gender.”
This is where West and Coates part ways. It is not so much their understanding of history, though. West understands that U.S. “democracy” was built on slavery, capitalism, and settler colonialism. But he also recognizes its fragility or malleability in the face of a radical democratic tradition.
This radical democratic tradition cannot be traced to the founding fathers or the Constitution or the Declaration of Independence. Instead, it is manifest in the struggles of the dispossessed to overturn the Eurocentric, elitist, patriarchal, and dehumanizing structures of racial capitalism and its liberal underpinnings. It is manifest in the struggle to restore the “commons” to the commonwealth, which has been at the heart of radical abolitionism—or what Du Bois called the Abolition Democracy. West knows that social movements, or what he calls “our fightback,” have and will alter history. West believes that we can win. While I wouldn’t call Coates’s vision fatalistic, it is deeply pessimistic because his focus is on structures of race and class oppression, and the policies and ideologies that shore up these structures. He is concerned that we survive.
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Our movements have had to do both—find ways to survive and dare to win. Political mobilization and a vision of a liberated future matter, but so does a sober assessment of the forces arrayed against us (and by “us,” I mean all oppressed people everywhere). Sometimes we confront power directly; other times, we struggle to build power where we are—through collectives, mutual aid, community economic development, and the like. All of this is happening now, in Jackson, Mississippi, America’s most radical city, where a genuinely revolutionary movement is building our first cooperative commonwealth dedicated to the principles of democracy, human rights, workers’ power, environmental sustainability, and socialism.
The movement in Jackson, Mississippi embodies the best of West’s prophetic vision and Coates’s concern with building power amidst white supremacy.
The movement in Jackson embodies the best of West’s prophetic vision and Coates’s concern with building power amidst white supremacy. Although the struggle to make Mississippi a safe, livable, and sustainable place for black people has deep roots in Reconstruction, the promise of Jackson didn’t come on the radar of most progressives until 2013, when the late Chokwe Lumumba, a radical lawyer and leader in the New Afrikan People’s Organization (NAPO) and the Malcolm X Grassroots Movement (MXGM), was elected mayor. Lumumba had come to Mississippi from Detroit in 1971 with the Provisional Government of the Republic of New Afrika, a movement for black self-determination that envisioned the South as the site for establishing an independent black nation. The PGRNA initially demanded that the U.S. government hand over the territory to black people and recognize the PGRNA as a government in exile. In addition to the transfer of land, the PGRNA called for reparations from the U.S. government in the amount of $400 billion in order to sustain the new nation during its first few years. Although the demand for reparations never disappeared, the group eventually purchased land, set up cooperative farms, built institutions, and, despite relentless state repression, took root in the city of Jackson.
In the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, the MXGM developed the “Jackson Plan,” which included establishing a “solidarity economy,” akin to the Mondragon Corporation in Spain’s Basque region, through worker cooperatives; eco-friendly community gardens; building inexpensive, energy-efficient housing; and developing community and conservation land trusts to make land available to the community and house the homeless—an effort to restore the “commons.” But the plan also included a political strategy of creating People’s Assemblies, open meetings to discuss community needs, ensure full democratic participation, and mobilize working people to win political power. The People’s Assemblies were not only responsible for Chokwe Lumumba’s victory and the recent mayoral election of his son, Chokwe Antar Lumumba, but for creating a structure for participatory budgeting.
The city’s latest initiatives focus on addressing the needs of Jackson’s poor and working-class communities through cooperative economic strategies. In other words, concern with survival and the creation of new democratic institutions can consolidate power and move the city toward a sustainable future. Rather than see Jackson’s immense poverty and revenue shortfalls as barriers to building a radical movement, the People’s Assemblies and veteran organizers realized that the city’s ongoing crisis demanded a radical response.
The struggle for Jackson is certainly no cakewalk. State government is trying to strip the predominantly black city council of local control, has already reallocated revenues from the city’s 1 percent sales tax to other state initiatives, and has introduced legislation that would strip Jackson’s control of the airport and related commerce.
So I propose that we turn away from the latest celebrity death match, turn our attention to Jackson, Mississippi. Read Jackson Rising: The Struggle for Economic Democracy and Black Self-Determination in Jackson, Mississippi (2017), edited by Kali Akuno and Ajamu Nangwaya,  And revisit the work of West and Coates and others wrestling with the critical issues of our times. I stand with West and his unwavering commitment to the power of collective resistance, his optimism of the will. And I stand with Coates and his insistence on a particular kind of pessimism of the intellect that questions everything, stays curious, and is not afraid of self-reflection, uncomfortable questions, or where the evidence takes him.
And above all, I stand with the people of Jackson, who have built the country’s most radical movement, mobilized new forms of political participation, and elected a people’s government committed to building a socialist commonwealth. Free the Land!

Friday, December 22, 2017

A Personal Message from Angela Valenzuela | Please Consider TCEP for Your 2017 End-of-Year Giving

December 22, 2017

Dear Friends:

Happy holidays, everybody!  For those of you that keep up with all of our work in Texas, locally, nationally, and statewide, you probably know how effective we have been in various policy arenas at multiple levels.  And you may wonder how we do it.

The answer is that Texas Center for Education Policy at The University of Texas is behind so much of this.  We have big plans for the new year and really appreciate your support. 

Please consider us for your tax-deductible, end-of-year giving.  Any amount is greatly appreciated!  Please donate here.

Wishing you and your family the best for 2018!

 


Angela Valenzuela, Ph.D. Director
Texas Center for Education Policy
University of Texas at Austin


Thursday, December 21, 2017

Our testimonies at the December 18, 2017 AISD Board of Trustees Meeting [VIMEO]

Our testimony at the December 18, 2017 Austin Independent School District Board of Trustees Meeting [VIMEO]

Nuestro Grupo's post-testimony group photo, Dec. 18, 2017


It went well for us in this past Monday evening at the school board level. You can hear our testimonies from the AISD-Vimeo website as follows:


Cori Salmeron—1:12:30
Angela Valenzuela—1:15:00
Emilio Zamora—1:17:49

We in Nuestro Grupo, the community-based organization that organizes the activities of  Academia Cuauhtli —recoiled recently when we got word recently of school closures and consolidations of Eastside schools, including Sanchez, Metz, and Zavala. You can read about these terrible news here.

Me testifying.  You can get the publication I'm holding HERE.
These are all incredibly historic schools with embedded memories that track back to segregation. And now, gentrification.

To cut them back, to repurpose, to eliminate them is to erase historical memory beginning with the changing of the names like Spike Lee has recently commented on NPR regarding gentrification‘s impact on the soul of a community. It’s so sad—and for so many of us that have spent years working in and with these schools—enraging.

These are the ones that we as Nuestro Grupo work closely with through Academia Cuauhtli.  We also draw children and families from Houston and Pérez elementary schools in Southeast Austin.

To add insult to injury, this was done right after the successful bond election where Trustee Dr. Ted Gordon’s conciliatory plea to the struggling and the dispossessed, to support a bond that even in its outlay was going to be inequitable.  The sincerity of his plea and his expressed commitment to work toward equity actually encouraged me and many others to support the bond.  Regardless of where things stood pre-bond election, he promised that everything was still going to be negotiable— which was the reason that he put forward to support the bond. Our deep respects, Dr. Gordon.

So I expressed some dismay with that and shared my research-based literature review on Grow Your Own Educators.  N.B. Thanks to IDRA for giving me this opportunity to research, write, and publish this.

I also asked them to begin to take some notice of all of the amazing things that we are accomplishing. I guess we have been invisible.


Thankfully, the AISD Board and Superintendent Paul Cruz and Associate Superintendent Edmund Oropez have redoubled their commitment to work with us as a community.  

We are invisible no longer, my friends. We are coming together!  All of us. Everything on the table. There’s so many wonderful people in the district and in our community that we look forward to working with in the coming weeks and months.

 
All of it also sounds simultaneously fun, creative, and community-uplifting. We certainly have our hopes up!  Sí se puede!  Yes we can!   


-Angela Valenzuela

READ CORI'S AND EMILIO'S EXCELLENT TESTIMONY BELOW

URGENT REQUEST: Call Congress at (478) 488-8059 and Call for a Clean DREAM Act

Friends,

This is an urgent request.  Join me today in calling this number to demand support (478) 488-8059 for a Clean DREAM Act. 

Our young people, our daughter, Luz Valenzuela Zamora, included, are currently in Washington, D.C. with United We Dream staging hourly protests.  She, and all of our youth there, are a source of pride like no other for those of us who have labored and struggled for freedom and justice for all throughout our lives.  

You can in fact dial (478) 488-8059 multiple times as the number cycles through offices.  In addition to our own Senators here in Texas Senators John Cornyn and Ted Cruz, I've already placed 6 calls since yesterday and got a chance to connect each time with a different member of Congress with this same number.  Simply call and urge them to pass a clean DREAM Act and tell them how important it is to you.  You can and should also call your own specific Congressional members.  Go to this link to get their names and contact info.

Everyday that Congress fails to pass the DREAM Act, 122 young people lose their DACA status and run the risk of deportation.  C'mon everybody.  These young people are already exemplary, law-abiding individuals who want nothing more than to stay in a country they already call their home.  

You must know that without DACA our country could lose a whopping 20,000 teachers currently working as teachers in our nation's classrooms (see U.S. could lose an estimated 20,000 teachers, many bilingual, as DACA is phased out).

As you can read from this story, several are already in dire straits after having gotten arrested outside of the offices of Democratic Sen. Chuck Schumer and New York and Republican Rep. Carlos Curbelo.  They are not provding them their names and they are on a hunger strike.

You can keep up with the movement at this link:  United We Dream 

-Angela Valenzuela

#NoDreamNoDeal #Dreamact #daca

 #CleanDREAMAct   #DreamActNow

7 Dreamers Arrested During Sit-In At Schumer And Curbelo Offices

The so-called "Dreamers" refused to provide their names and fingerprints, and all agreed to go on a hunger strike, a media rep said.

https://patch.com/district-columbia/washingtondc/7-dreamers-arrested-schumer-curbelo-offices
By Daniel Hampton, Patch Staff | | Updated
WASHINGTON, DC —Seven so-called "Dreamers" as well as one of their allies were arrested during a sit-in Friday at the Washington, D.C., offices of Democratic Sen. Chuck Schumer of New York and Republican Rep. Carlos Curbelo of Florida, according to a media representative from an advocacy organization. And now they're going on a hunger strike and facing possible deportation.
A Facebook post on behalf of Erika Andiola said she was among those arrested, and said they plan to remain jailed until Schumer and Curbelo publicly confirm they have enough votes to block any spending bill that doesn't come with a "clean Dream Act."
President Donald Trump eliminated the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, or DACA, in September, cutting off all new applications and providing a six-month window for renewal applications from recipients whose permits were set to expire between Sept. 5, 2017 and March 5, 2018.
"DACA recipients are demanding that Members of Congress block any spending bill that does not include a clean DREAM Act," according to the advocacy group Fight For Our Dream.
In a video of the sit-in at Schumer's office, one man said Schumer has a responsibility to listen to his constituents and demands Schumer support a clean Dream Act.
"As Minority Leader, he has the capacity to gather all the democrats to stand up for the community that he says he supports so much," the unidentified man said. "As a Dreamer and a New Yorker, I am here making that demand. And I will not leave until he listens to what we're saying."
Andiola, who describes herself as a native of Durango, Mexico, on the organization's website, and the others will remain held in police custody until at least Tuesday morning, her Facebook post said. Candice Fortin, a media representative for the group, said the arrestees refused to give their names and fingerprints. There was an arraignment Saturday, she said, and none are cooperating.
"Right now they are refusing to give their names and fingerprints," she said. "It's basically acting as a jail strike."
They're scheduled to appear Tuesday for a trial before a jury, Fortin told Patch.
"They also are all in agreement to do a hunger strike," Fortin said. "They refuse to eat."
Andiola's Facebook post said they had been brought before a judge and the government asked to hold them in response to their noncooperation. Attorneys for the seven did not oppose the hold, in accordance with their clients' wishes. They believe U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE, was contacted regarding Andiola.
A message left with ICE wasn't immediately returned.
"Every day they are in police custody the danger of additional ICE engagement and then deportation grows, as it grows for all undocumented youth with each day that goes by without passage of the Dream Act," the Facebook post said.
Andiola's profile said her family came to America to escape domestic violence.
"I am risking arrest today because there are thousands of people who are losing hope, who feel attacked and this is the time for us to model courage and to stand together because that was the only way we were able to win DACA in the first place," the website said. "That's how will we win the Dream Act now."
She said they are "undocumented and unafraid."
Curbelo represents southern Florida's 26th congressional district, which includes Monroe County and parts of Miami-Dade county. He was first elected three years ago.
Patch wasn't immediately able to reach pre-trial services, Schumer's office, Curbelo's office, or the DC Department of Corrections.
Photo credit: Candice Fortin

Wednesday, December 20, 2017

San Antonians Holding Vigil Tonight for Passage of the DREAM Act

San Antonians Holding Vigil Tonight for Passage of the DREAM Act: Congress is now two days away from the deadline to pass a spending bill to keep the government running. Currently, that bill has earmarked $1.6 billion...
Posted By on Wed, Dec 20, 2017 at 4:43 PM
LYANNE A. GUARECUCO
Lyanne A. Guarecuco
Congress is now two days away from the deadline to pass a spending bill to keep the government running. Currently, that bill has earmarked $1.6 billion to fund the first installation of President Donald Trump's border wall. Using the tight deadline as leverage, some lawmakers have said they won't vote on the bill unless it cuts the border wall funding and includes a "clean" DREAM Act — a measure guaranteeing children of undocumented immigrants a pathway to citizenship.

Undocumented immigrants and immigrants with Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA, a temporary version of the DREAM Act that was cut by President Donald Trump in September) status have flooded Capitol Hill to demand their representatives follow suit.

That includes three San Antonio DACA recipients, who met with Congressman Joaquin Castro in his D.C. office to share their stories Wednesday morning. It also includes the seven DACA recipients who were arrested Friday during sit-ins at the offices of Sen. Chuck Schumer and Congressman Carlos Curbelo. The group has refused to give their names to D.C. police and have been on a hunger strike since their request.

On Wednesday evening, San Antonians will hold a vigil to show their support of both the seven in custody, their fellow San Antonians at the Capitol, and the other 2 million immigrants who immigrated to the country before the age of 16 who'd be protected under the proposed DREAM Act.

"Undocumented immigrants and refugees need to know that they have our support," said Barbie Hurtado, a member of the Texas Refugee and Immigrant Network (TRAIN), who's organized the Wednesday event.

A DACA recipient and several undocumented immigrants will speak at the 7 p.m. vigil to be held at San Antonio's Main Plaza.

Congressman Castro and Congressman Lloyd Doggett have already sworn not to vote on a spending bill that doesn't include the DREAM Act, but other San Antonio lawmakers have remained silent on the issue. In a Tuesday, Dec. 12 editorial in the San Antonio Express-News, San Antonio City Councilman Rey Saldaña asked Congressman Will Hurd (a Republican whose immense district includes south San Antonio and a huge chunk of the borderlands) to support the bipartisan movement.

"You must join with your Republican colleagues and congressional Democrats to pass a clean DREAM Act," wrote Saldaña. "Something can be done, but time is quickly running out."


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Tuesday, December 19, 2017

Marichuy: The Indigenous Woman that wants to Shake Up and Decolonize Mexico

We all need to read about María de Jesús Patricio Martínez, or "Marichuy," a feminist, indigenous voice from the grassroots who seeks the presidency of Mexico.  

She is definitely stirring up a lot of excitement.  Poderosa!  Powerful!

—Angela Valenzuela

#indigenousrevival #Marichuy #Roots @rootsmexico

Marichuy: la mujer indígena que está estremeciendo a México

Esta es la única candidata presidencial para quien los votos no es lo más importante. Lo que busca es visibilizar a un pueblo orpimido durante siglos por la clase política tradicional. Esta es su historia.

Por: Juan Pablo Duque
El sol irrumpe en la Ciudad de México, desde el cerro, redondo y gigante baja a iluminar el océano de concreto que en forma de casas, colonias y edificios conforman una de las urbes más caóticas del planeta.
El sol traspasa el sinfín de automóviles y avenidas y choca contra una pancarta que dice: “Venimos a hablar de cosas imposibles porque de lo posible se ha dicho demasiado”. El 28 de noviembre, María de Jesús Patricio Martínez—Marichuy—visitó, como parte de su recorrido nacional, a miles de universitarios de la máxima casa de estudios. No fue un día cualquiera en Ciudad Universitaria, ni en la Universidad Autónoma de México (UNAM). Pero, ¿por qué hubo tanto revuelo? ¿Quién es Marichuy y por qué está estremeciendo a México?
Marichuy es, para unos, una aspirante a candidata independiente para la contienda presidencial; para otros es la vocera del Congreso Nacional Indígena de Gobierno (CNI), una organización autónoma de comunidades, pueblos, barrios y tribus indígenas de México, creada en 1996. Vocera o candidata, Marichuy es una mujer en un país donde, aproximadamente, 7 mujeres son asesinadas al día y únicamente el 25% de los casos son investigados como feminicidios.
También es una indígena en un país donde la reciente Encuesta Nacional sobre Discriminación demuestra que existe una relación entre los rasgos de origen y las oportunidades laborales, económicas, educativas, sociales y de salud. Dicho de otro modo, es una mujer indígena en un país sexista con altas tasas de racismo y discriminación.
Nació en Tuxpan, Jalisco, en el año de 1963. Originaria nahua, desde pequeña ha sido testigo de los despojos y la opresión a sus comunidades, lo que ha calado en una inspiradora rebeldía. “Estamos cansados de que el sistema nos siga destruyendo”, le decía a la periodista Carmen Aristegui. Ha dedicado su vida a la medicina tradicional, heredó de su madre y de su abuela tradiciones que pone al servicio de su comunidad en un centro de salud que fundó en 1992, al que llamó Calli Tecolhocuateca Tochan o Casa de los Antepasados, recinto avalado por la Universidad de Guadalajara.
En la coyuntura de 1994, cuando el Ejercito Zapatista de Liberación Nacional (EZLN), irrumpió en el panorama nacional mexicano, muchos pueblos indígenas fueron llamados a alzar su voz. Marichuy fue invitada por el EZLN a participar en el Foro Nacional Indígena, que se realizó en San Cristóbal de Las Casas, en Chiapas. Desde ahí ha sido una referente para los pueblos originarios de México, siendo la lucha contra el machismo, la batalla por la dignidad indígena y el combate contra el sistema capitalista sus ideales políticos característicos.
“Nuestra propuesta es muy sencilla: estremezcamos juntos esta nación”, decía Marichuy en una tarima improvisada en los altos de la Biblioteca Central, de Ciudad Universitaria, ambientada por los murales de Juan O`Gorman y por los ojos expectantes de una multitud de universitarios. “A ustedes, la juventud consciente, los reconocemos como una gran luz en medio de tanta muerte y oscuridad”, dijo Marichuy y un ensordecedor aplauso apareció en el ambiente.
Marichuy representa a la izquierda más radical—de raíces— la que tiene como principios: mandar obedeciendo, representar y no suplantar, servir y no servirse, convencer y no vencer, bajar y no subir, proponer y no imponer, y por último construir y no destruir. Representa a las comunidades que quieren cambiar a México y el mundo desde abajo y a la izquierda para crear “un mundo en el que quepan muchos mundos”.
A finales del mes de mayo de 2017, la Asamblea Constitutiva del CNI, designó a Marichuy como la vocera de su movimiento de cara a las elecciones de 2018. Inmediatamente desde todos los colores e ideologías se hicieron presentes primero los puristas, quienes criticaron que los indígenas tuvieran una candidata a la presidencia que estuviera en el juego electoral, cuando han sido estos —las comunidades originarias—los más críticos con el sistema.
Por otro lado, aparecieron los progresistas de la izquierda institucional, quienes atacaron la designación de Marichuy argumentando que restaría votos a su representante, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, lo que en términos electorales, beneficiaría a los candidatos de los partidos tradicionales: Partido de la Revolución Institucional (PRI) y Partido Acción Nacional (PAN), a lo que Marichuy y el CNI han contestado: “No queremos votos, nuestra pelea es por la vida.”. ¿Una candidata que no quiere votos? Por paradójico que suene, es congreunte con los años y las acciones de lucha del EZLN y del CNI. Carlos Gónzalez, miembro del CNI, afirmó el 15 de abril: “Las elecciones son por excelencia la fiesta de los de arriba, y queremos colarnos en esa fiesta y echárselas a perder hasta donde podamos”.
El sol se despedía de Ciudad Universitaria. El naranja gobernaba el cielo y Marichuy seguía sacando de su boca frases como estas: “Estremezcamos a esta nación, descolonicemos el pensamiento capitalista y patriarcal. Evidenciemos que otra forma de gobernarnos es posible. Entre las ruinas nacen esperanzas y mundos nuevos”. Dentro de los espectadores del mitín se encontraba Santiago, estudiante de último semestre de psicología; quien dijo: “que ella vaya a una universidad para acercarse a los estudiantes es algo que pocos hacen”, refiriéndose a la disposición de Marichuy para conversar con los estudiantes.
Ella, ahí parada envuelta en flores, con su vestido blanco y a sus pies un millar de cabezas atentos a los movimientos de su boca; “debemos lograr que la transimisión de conocimiento esté vinculada y al servicio de los de abajo y que no sea un arma de los poderosos” y los presentes le devolvían un cántico: “Zapata vive, la lucha sigue y sigue”, haciendo referencia a Emiliano Zapata, líder de la Revolución. Bien decía Foucault que el espacio no es un telón de fondo sino una relación entre personas, así la explanada de la Biblioteca Central, al sur de la Ciudad de México, se convirtió en un espacio para anhelar un mundo mejor.
El cambio ya está hecho
Que Marichuy, una mujer indígena, se haya convertido en la vocera del CNI para las elecciones, hizo que la opinión pública de México retumbara y con ella salieran a la luz los comentarios machistas, misóginos, clasistas y racistas que se esconden en todo tipo de discursos, de izquierda y de derecha. Pero que Marichuy recorra el país y le hable a los mexicanos desde su posición antisistémica constituye un hecho muy importante en la vida política latinoamericana. Su voz unifica a los más perseguidos, visibiliza las problemáticas relacionadas con la mujer y la pobreza, da cuenta de las injusticias que los pueblos originarios han sufrido desde muchos siglos atrás y muestra que los de abajo siguen sin acceder a servicios dignos de salud y educación. Marichuy es una mujer del color de la tierra llamando a la lucha de todos los pueblos indígenas, quienes no pueden ser excluidos del proyecto de nación pluricultural: “No más un México sin nosotros”, gritaba Marichuy.
Pese a que todavía no ha recogido las firmas necesarias para validar su candidatura ante el Instituto Nacional Electoral (INE), Marichuy ya ha cambiado el panorama político y las elecciones presidenciales de México. Ya puso a los feminicidios en el debate nacional. Ya hizo un recorrido para escuchar a las comunidades indígenas. Ya pudo hablar de frente con los universitarios y dejarles un mensaje: “Nuestra lucha no es por el poder, ni votos, ni por puestos políticos. Venimos buscando la consciencia colectiva de abajo, esa que hemos visto florecer en los estudiantes organizados”. Marichuy ha demostrado que otra política es posible, que los subalternos existen y que pueden organizarse para alzar su voz. Marichuy demostró lo que muchos niegan: que la gran mayoría de mexicanas viven en una espiral de violencia, inseguridad e injusticia que carcome sus vidas. Por último, en un mundo acelerado, lleno de contingencias, Marichuy ha regaldo momentos, vivencias e instantes inolvidables para las personas que luchan a lo largo y ancho del territorio mexicano, como dice Fernanda, estudiante de letras en la UNAM: “Marichuy nos está regalando magia y esperanza en el tiempo”.

Evolution is Written on the Wings of Butterflies


Every year, millions of monarch butterflies migrate south from Canada and the United States to hibernate in the high mountains of Michoacán, Mexico. Thousands of visitors come to witness one of nature's greatest glories each year. Seeing nearly a billion butterflies fluttering in the treetops is truly one of nature's wonders and certainly worthy of inclusion in the seven wonders of the world. 

The trip to the monarch butterfly reserve (Monarch Butterfly Biospere Reserve) is roughly two hours by car or bus from Morelia. Once one arrives, the hike up the mountain from the parking area at a level of 6,000 feet to reach the monarchs who settle in the mountain forest fir trees between 10,000 feet and 12,000 feet is worth the effort! Although be aware of possible altitude sickness if one is not acclimated to these lofty heights! 

From December to mid-March, "These migrating Monarch butterflies travel in colonies of about 20 million insects and will travel between 80-120 nautical miles per day, depending on the wind and other weather conditions. The butterflies take advantage of ascending warm-air currents, gliding in the thrust they provide, needing only to flap their wings when the air current diminishes a little or when they change their flight path. This technique uses their energy efficiently, and physically enables them to undertake the long journey.

Sadly, the Trump administration's border wall threatens these wondrous creatures" (Monarch Butterflies). Butterfly sanctuaries in the path of the border wall are coming under attach as the Trump administration seeks to clear land for the border wall (Trump Environmental Destruction for the Wall). Monarch butterflies may not hold a high place in the Trump Administration's list of priorities, however environmental degradation at the hands of this administration is something that should concern all thinking people. To learn more about the monarch butterflies, their migration, and their importance as a measure to gauge environmental change including climate change, check out the film Flight of the Butterfly which is available on Netflix (Flight of the Butterfly). The Earth is our mother. We must treat her with kindness and respect. 

Sunday, December 17, 2017

Concerning Recent News about Charter School in Texas and Beyond




Here are several big items related to charter schools that I have posted within the past month or so.  Here goes again.  It would be good to set some time over the holidays in a more relaxed mode to read these.  Not that all charter schools are "bad," as some are good.  One can say this and simultaneously hold a research-based view that as policy, it's a limited and harmful policy direction overall.  We need to build and defend strong public schools.  That's what many of us are doing this evening at our monthly Austin Independent School District school board meeting.  

We have such gems in our school district and community, including the great work with our Academia Cuauhtli/Cuauhtli Academy Saturday school for children from Sanchez, Metz, Zavala, Houston, and Perez Elementary schools that many of us are involved in.

We're headed over there this PM to let our school board members know how hard our bilingual education/dual language teachers work and how excellently they're performing their jobs (for information on this, see my earlier post titled, "Exciting Results on Bilingual and Dual Language Education in AISD!!!"). 

Bilingual and dual language education work, my friends.  These are not matters of evidence, but politics.  That's why we always have to advocate for, and defend, them.  Ethnic Studies, too.  Someday, both of these, bilingual education and Ethnic Studies, will be simply termed, "A good education."

-Angela Valenzuela


Earlier post:
Related article:
o   NAACP President: Why We Should Pause the Expansion of Charter Schools by BY CORNELL WILLIAM BROOKS, OCTOBER 28, 2016