the site domain is same: http://cockroachpeople.com
My website has moved! http://cockroachpeople.com
Friday, June 19, 2009
Posted by Rey Lopez-Calderon at 8:46 AM 2 comments
Caciques Part Two
Tuesday, June 9, 2009
Adriana Maestas over at Latinopoliticsblog.com has created quite a stir out in California. She claims that Congresswoman Loretta Sanchez (D-Orange County) has maintained an intimate relationship with a defense industry lobbyist even though she sits on the House Armed Services and Homeland Security Committees. Maestas' piece is well-researched and even includes her own sources, distinguishing it from the inane vitriol of many other bloggers who merely enjoy attacking anyone in power. But the quality of the piece is probably not what is fueling the subsequent brouhaha.
Posted by Rey Lopez-Calderon at 8:16 AM 4 comments
Labels: Adriana Maestas, Ancien Regime, Black Panthers, cacique, Chicago Machine, De Tocqueville, Gustavo Arellano, Latina, LatinoPolticsBlog.com, latinos, leadership, Loretta Sanchez, patronage, politics
The Atrocious Lingering of History
Friday, June 5, 2009
The atrocities of the past have a way of lingering. For those who have experienced oppression and persecution, the pain never goes away. That historical pain is often passed down to their descendants. Take for example the Zoot Suit (US Navy) Riots in the 1940s. My grand parents often talked about how they were treated like trash in California because they dared to dress differently and speak differently. In general, they dared to be different. For that, they were singled out as un-American. The Zoot-Suiters were stereotyped and vilified in the media. My grandparents recall being refused service in many stores and restaurants. In one instance, they were both beaten by the police and called dirty wetbacks. As I write this, I feel moved by my family's history. I feel some of their pain. I feel anger.
Posted by Rey Lopez-Calderon at 6:44 AM 2 comments
Labels: barrio, cairo, carlos montes, cesar chavez, Chicano, ernesto vigil, holocaust, Islam, jews, nancy lopez, obama, Pat marin, Zoot Suit
Sotomayor: A Wise Choice
Wednesday, June 3, 2009
Posted by Rey Lopez-Calderon at 6:58 AM 1 comments
Labels: Barry Schwartz, empathy, Latina, latinos, Lawrence v. Texas, philosophy, social neuroscience, Sophia, Sotomayor, Supreme Court, wisdom
Freire was right! Freire was wrong!
Tuesday, June 2, 2009
Often, I'm annoyed by community organizers and educators in America who romanticize Popular Education. My problem is not with Paolo Freire. I get annoyed because these folk morph his thinking into a philosophical system that ends up being more about the educator's own struggle to be less oppressive (perhaps that is why Popular Education is standard fare for cool non-Latino guys and gals working in Latino communities) than it is about actual pedagogy.
Posted by Rey Lopez-Calderon at 8:23 AM 0 comments
Labels: City Journal, community organizing, education, immigrants, latinos, Paolo Freire, pedagogy of freedom, pedagogy of the oppressed, Popular Education, Sol Stern, teaching
Et Tu Flu?
Tuesday, April 28, 2009
Posted by Rey Lopez-Calderon at 10:24 AM 2 comments
Labels: asian flu, hong kong flu, latinos, Mexican, pandemic, Smithfield, spanish flu, swine flu
Are Segregated Schools Inferior or am I a Snob?
Thursday, April 23, 2009
Ok, don't despair, here's some hope from the Bronx:
Posted by Rey Lopez-Calderon at 10:57 AM 2 comments
Labels: Bronx, Latino, Mendez, Mexican, Orange County, segregation, suburbs, Westminster
The Latino Image
Wednesday, April 22, 2009
Posted by Rey Lopez-Calderon at 7:18 AM 1 comments
Labels: angry white men, assimilation, Daniel Andreas San Diego, domestic terrorism, drug war, Jose Padilla, mexico, Timothy McVeigh
Is Torture the New Black?
Tuesday, April 21, 2009
Every time some new document is released about the Bush administration's War on Human Rights, I can't help thinking that what has been released is not nearly as bad as whatever was deemed not releasable. President Obama has received a lot of criticism for disclosing torture memos. But for those of us Chicagoans who are familiar with Barack's style (i.e. he is not crazy), we know that he probably provided the documents that were just bad enough to get the public to pursue the issue (perhaps forcing the administration to turn over the truly horrible stuff).
Posted by Rey Lopez-Calderon at 7:49 AM 0 comments
Labels: Arlen Specter, Christian Science Monitor, human rights, impunity, Latin America, lex talionis, memo, obama, Orwell, Patrick Leahy, reconciliation, torture, truth commission
We Don't Need No Stinkin' Gun Control
Monday, April 20, 2009
Posted by Rey Lopez-Calderon at 7:22 AM 0 comments
Labels: Angel Cruz, gun control, Latino, militia, obama, Southern Poverty Law Center, sovereigns, Waukegan
And a Laptop for All
Thursday, April 16, 2009
Posted by Rey Lopez-Calderon at 8:04 AM 0 comments
Labels: Brazil, facebook, favela, myspace, poor, Rio de Janeiro, sergio cabral, speaking truth to power, UC Berkeley, Wi-Fi
The New Caciques
Wednesday, April 15, 2009
A good friend of mine participated in a scheme that robbed four families of the equity in their homes. Shockingly, my friend, let's call him Alfredo, had no idea that he had done this. Alfredo is certainly no Bernie Madoff. In fact, he his someone I could trust with the keys to my home or even the password to my bank account. So how did this happen?
Posted by Rey Lopez-Calderon at 7:42 AM 0 comments
Labels: al sanchez, bernie madoff, cacique, caciquism, fraud, jose rivera, Latino, mortgage, ponzi
Castro's Cojones
Tuesday, April 14, 2009
Posted by Rey Lopez-Calderon at 10:51 AM 0 comments
Labels: alberto coll, castro, Cuba, embargo
Day of Light
Monday, April 13, 2009
Sometimes I forget what kind of experiences some of our brothers and sisters from Latin America bring with them. It's easy to get caught up in community life thinking that merely transferring a sense of entitlement to our people will suffice (e.g. getting them together to pass a bill for more resources or to fight for a stop sign in their neighborhood). Often, our gente don't find themselves to be the downtrodden or the wretched of the earth--back home they might even be considered rich. I remember one family I used to work with in Cicero, IL that was active in church and in the community but never viewed themselves in the way some us of us Chicanos do (i.e. as the have-nots). That's probably because they left a town in Mexico that had no running water or electricity. In Cicero, they have a basic infrastructure, two cars and own a 3-bedroom home. Maybe, to someone in Oakbrook or Winnetka, IL they are certainly the have-nots--but to them they had finally "made it." Their motivation for a sense of community was not out of mere self-interest to better themselves--it was about some part of their soul or psyche that led them to believe they had to help others acheive success as they had defined it. My point is that those of us who work in the community can't take for granted that the civil rights history we have had (the Black Power and Civil Rights Movement, the Chicano Movement, the Women's Movement, Gay Rights Movement,etc.) has enough explanatory power for what immigrants are dealing with here in the states (whether or not our parents were immigrants). Further, we have to tailor our work (especially community organizing) to take into account the latino immigrant version of the nouveau riche syndrome that is causing our people to work 6-7 days a week for 10+ hours so their kids can have the XBOX 360 they never had--y luego nos sorprendemos cuando los hijos se meten a las pandillas...This video is from the so-called "trash dump community" of Managua in Nicaragua.
Day of Light from Love Light & Melody on Vimeo.
Posted by Rey Lopez-Calderon at 7:30 AM 1 comments
Labels: Chicano, community, Latino, Nicaragua, organizing