Author: mopress

  • From MALDEF Press Release via Email

    MALDEF regional counsel Nina Perales commented on the continued need for affirmative action:

    “We urge Texas A&M officials to rethink their decision to reject using race as a plus factor in

    admissions.” She added, “A&M says it hopes to increase diversity with race-neutral outreach, but they

    have tried that approach for many years now and they are still running into a brick wall.” The report

    found that under the Ten Percent Plan, A&M enrollments for African Americans and Latinos in 2003 were

    still one-third lower than in 1995, before affirmative action was discontinued. SALT co-president

    and St. Mary’s law professor José (Beto) Juárez stated, “The Supreme Court’s recent Grutter v.

    Bollinger ruling recognizes that student diversity creates educational benefits that ‘are not

    theoretical but real.’” Juárez explained, “This report is needed because universities in Texas must

    rigorously evaluate the effectiveness of their previous race-neutral policies before restarting

    affirmative action programs.”

    Michael A. Olivas, a law professor at the University of

    Houston and co-author of the Ten Percent Plan legislation, said, ‘I believe that ‘blend it, don’t

    end it’ is a wise approach, surely preferable to the Texas A&M approach, which declined to employ

    Grutter and originally included the Aggie Legacy points until they were embarrassed into ending the

    point system. Texas colleges need to build on the Ten Percent Plan’s contribution to socioeconomic and

    geographic diversity at the flagship universities.’

    Olivas added, ‘At the same time,

    it is also clear that much more needs to be done to increase racial diversity, especially in Texas

    professional schools and graduate programs.’ For example, only 3.3% of Texas medical degrees went to

    African Americans, less than half of the national average. Without affirmative action at the UT Law

    School (1997-2003), African American enrollments dropped by nearly three-fifths compared to 1990-95,

    and Mexican American enrollments dropped by over one-quarter.

    Wade Henderson, General

    Counsel for the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights Education Fund stated, “Affirmative action

    continues to be an essential tool to give qualified individuals equal access to opportunities in higher

    education. The Leadership Conference on Civil Rights Education Fund, through the Americans for a Fair

    Chance project, will continue to work with Texas institutions of higher education as they strive to

    advance equal opportunity for all students.”

    William Kidder of the Equal Justice Society

    explained, “Our findings challenge the unwarranted claims by the Bush Administration’s Department of

    Education, which appears determined to scare universities away from constitutionally permissible forms

    of affirmative action regardless of the evidence.”

  • Web Nugget: Black Inventors at China Daily

    There is an incredible collection of Black Inventors being remembered at the forums for China Daily. We stumbled upon it through the wealthy sail maker James Forten, who once upon a time got his primary education from Anthony Benezet. Good summer reading.

  • Rio Grande Guardian Opens New Era in Texas Journalism

    Email from Jay Johnson-Castro

    Hola y’all…

    I have enjoyed a wonderful relationship with the media. Printed, radio and television. It is only through the media that we grass roots folks can get our voices heard. The border wall. Hutto. Raymondville. Haskell. Whether local, state, national or international…mainstream or indy media and blogsphere…it is the media that allows us to connect with fellow Americans and therefore make a difference in our country and the world around us.

    I am quite proud to announce a great privilege bestowed upon me by one of my favorite media sources…the publishers and editors of the Rio Grande Guardian. Although I will continue my quest in human rights activism…and work closely with all of our media friends…I have been invited to be a weekly columnist.

    Steve Taylor has long been considered the one of the premiere journalists on the Rio Grande. His internet news network, the Rio Grande Guardian (RGG) has been the go to place for lobbyists, politicians (local, state and national), other media sources as well as the commercial and business community. http://www.riograndeguardian.com has been a subscription source up until today.

    Well…today, July 7th, is the anniversary of the Rio Grande Guardian. And officially as of today…it has a new look and a new feel…and…it is free!

    Back in October…it was a phone call from Steve that sealed the reality of the first Border Wall-K…which opened a whole new chapter in my life. When Steve broke the story of the Border Wall-K…my life would change forever.

    Steve also broke the story on my first Hutto Walk…and subsequent vigil. Since then, Steve has kindly posted a few of my border related stories as a guest columnist. Our relationship has now taken a more tightly woven course.

    As of today, on the Rio Grande Guardian’s anniversary launch, the RGG has given me my own weekly column entitled…Inside the Checkpoints. Here is my first in a series of articles that give voice to those of us who live in the only militarized zone in America.

    In future articles we will look very acutely at the life and the lives along the Texas Mexico border. If anyone feels that there is a perspective or issue that is being neglected…or that the public needs to be aware of…let’s talk! Most of you who know me…already know that I don’t care a lot about protocol. Fear and intimidation have no hold on what I say or don’t say. I believe that…while we still have a chance…we should say it like it is. Freedom is like a muscle. Use it or suffer atrophy. And this also applies. “No pain…no gain”.

    We will feature our border assets and deficits. We will highlight our strengths and weakness. We will always oppose the wall. With great pride, will illuminate our special geography and culture. We’ll be fearless in dealing with the dark side. So…if you want an issue dealt with…that you might even feel is slighted or overlooked by the media…feel free to contact me personally.

    We will welcome advertisers and sponsors to this page. That will help the Rio Grande Guardian to be a free news and opinion source.

    Welcome…and enjoy…

    Jay

    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    Jay J. Johnson-Castro, Sr.

    jay@villadelrio.com

  • Boots Down at the Rio Grande?

    By Greg Moses

    CounterPunch / OpEdNews

    In Operation Jump Start, the National Guard is engaging in a federal mission of law enforcement and anti-terrorism that under the Posse Comitatus Act would require authorization by Congress, if we had a Congress capable of saying anything in the face of escalating militarism except “more.”
    Today’s hearing in Laredo, for example, will be structured by its Congressional organizers to legitimize further militarization of the border, especially under the alibi of anti-terrorism. Of course, when the feds put their boots down to protect us from terrorism, they are carrying a rationale that would seem impossible to disprove, but we ought to be able to disprove one thing by now: you don’t fight terrorism with an Army.

    Remember the argument that some of us were making during the frozen autumn of 2001? A terrorism network is an organized crime, and if you want to fight organized crime in your neighborhood, you don’t militarize the streets, instead you work on intelligence and precisely-targeted law enforcement. If we were called loony in 2001, what does the evidence now show?

    According to the Congressional leadership in Laredo today, the evidence shows that Al Qaeda could be crossing the border at the Rio Grande. And once again, they say, give us more military boots, and we’ll kick back the terrorist threat once and for all.

    To begin with, let’s take the Congressional leadership at their word and suppose that Al Qaeda is preparing to exploit the Rio Grande as a place to enter the USA. Don’t we face the same question we faced prior to the militarization of Afghanistan? Is wholesale military deployment really the most effective way to identify, isolate, and prevent terrorist activity? Or would it be better to intensify intelligence and law enforcement related to actual terrorist cells?

    As the Congressional leadership would have us believe, the most efficient way of protecting against incursions along the Rio Grande would be a regime of total surveillance and control of a geography. But this is the awful folly of the Bush war on terror and the lesson that Americans refuse to learn. So long as the people insist on a military-geographical model of anti-terrorism (Afghanistan, Iraq) rather than a network model (focused on actual terrorist cells, remember Tora Bora?) they will clamor for more safety in a way that guarantees only more state interference into their ordinary lives.

    After five years of this gruesome nonsense, don’t we finally have enough evidence in hand to convince ourselves that the Bush war on terrorism is a model that in the name of anti-terrorism actually produces ever more unaccountable powers over the ordinary lives of non-terrorists the world over?

    And haven’t we learned that the best way to isolate a terrorist is to make peace and civil justice?

    Contrary to the lessons we have learned in the Bush war on terrorism, Operation Jump Start provides a bankrupt model of militarized, geographical lockdown that begins to get citizens of the USA used to the big lie, that anti-terrorism and military deterrence are natural born twins.

    But we have been too charitable to the Congressional leadership by taking them at their word. If militarized geographical control is the best way to fight terrorist incursions, how do Congressional leaders explain their presence in Laredo today? Why are they not in Detroit? We ask the question not in order to shoo their posing pinstripes northward to inflict their stupidity on the people of Detroit, but in order to expose the double standard of their pretensions.

    What the Bush war on terrorism accomplishes actually is a way of demonizing entire geographies for the purposes of war profiteering. As the model has worked pretty well against the vast, pan-Muslim world, so it will now be attempted in USA relations with Latin America, beginning where Latin America begins, north of the Rio Grande.

  • Parents in Prison, Children in Despair: A Link

    Scrolling through my friendly blog links I found this deep reflection from Scott Henson on the children of prisoners. It is well worth considering.

    In the criminalizing trends of USA public policy over the past generation our images of prisoners tend to come at us in mug shots that isolate the face, the life, the consequence of incarceration.

    But as Henson pleads for us to remember, the cost of prison is always more than the cost of the prisoner, because so many are moms and dads, too.

    Henson’s story contributes fresh impressions for taking seriously our mutual responsibilities to decriminalize the USA, but quickly.

    Link to the program that inspired Henson’s reflection.