Four hours before the Sept. 30 deadline, Gov. Gavin Newsom vetoed Assembly Bill 331 — a bill to require that California high school students complete a course in ethnic studies.
Los Angeles Times
The initial gathering of family history may start out as a
curiosity, regardless . . .
the activity enlarges the soul of the researcher, with increased love for
family and for
others, as well.
~ Mimi
Latest NEWS . . . |
Post upcoming
events with Hispanic Marketing 101 |
====================================================================== October 2020 Update Upcoming Event: November 19, 2020: NHBWA, 20th Anniversary Annual Awards and Scholarship Event National Association of Latino Independent Producers Announces Latino Media Fest Awardees What’s the Big Y-700 Test? Should I Choose a Y-DNA Test? by Diahan Southard Premium 23 Unexpected Websites You Can Use for Genealogy Research by Lisa A. Alzo 50 Years Ago in East Los Angeles, Special L.A. Time magazine online Gov. Gavin Newsom vetoes Ethnic Studies Assembly Bill 331 The 1984 Pulitzer Prize Series on California's growing Latinos has been digitized. Comments by Raul Pickett and Richard Soto on Being Chicanos Newsom vetoes ethnic studies requirement bill by Beau Yarbrough Ángel de Cervantes, Director, New Mexico DNA Project, Iberian Peninsula DNA Institute 2020 LDC U.S. Latino GDP Report View updated Society of Hispanic Medal of Honor Recipients website, plus events, click to: hispanicmedalofhonor.com Official Site American Indians website of photos, go to https://pin.it/2boVWEZ sent by Robert Smith The Vinland Map is a modern forgery and valueless / El mapa de Vinland es falso, go to 15th Century file |
|
====================================================================== August 2020 Update Free How-To Classes on Doing Family History Research Why This Revolution Isn't Like the '60s by Victor Davis Hanson House Approves Development of National Latino Museum, July 27th, 2020 Latino 247 Media Group invites Latino heritage groups to post information The José Martí Publishing Awards Marina Gonzales, New President & CEO of the San Antonio Hispanic Chamber of Commerce Diana Maldonado, New President & CEO of the Austin Hispanic Chamber of Commerce California State University students required to take an ethnic studies or social justice class. TV Free Series of Spain's global Explorations and Colonization: "Al final del Camino" |
|
|
=============================================================================== |
|
NALIP (National Association of Latino Independent Producers) Announces Latino Media Fest AwardeesRead
the article on Variety here!
|
At a virtual event TODAY NALIP announced the Latino Media Fest Awardees:
|
|
A: In January 2019, Family Tree DNA (FTDNA) announced the Big Y-700 test, a new upgrade to its Big Y test. As the name suggests, the Big Y test examines DNA on the Y chromosome, which only men have. You can use Y-DNA to sort out genealogical problems in your paternal line or involving surnames (since surnames follow paternal lines in most cultures). For example, Y-DNA can help you determine if two men with the same (or similar) surname share the same male common ancestor. The Big Y-700 actually includes two tests: one that can help make more distant ancestral connections, and one that helps with more recent connections. These tests correspond to two different kinds of DNA markers, called STRs and SNPs:
Benefits of the Big YThe Big Y really shines because of its SNP analysis and exploratory nature. Other SNP tests, like the ones used to test our autosomal DNA, are like planned tours of your chromosomes. Each of these tours examines a designated 700,000 or so stops along the chromosome. If you are traveling along chromosome 7 and see something interesting a ways off the path—too bad! You can’t stop! But the Big Y is like a jungle safari. You have a guide, but you can explore interesting trails you come across and generally deviate from the planned course anytime you like. This means the Big Y test will find unique Y-DNA variants that only your specific paternal line carries. Only men who share a direct paternal line with you (perhaps 10 to 20 generations) will share these SNPs with you. These SNPs help fill the gap between what the STRs can tell you (about 10 generations back) and the oral histories or genealogy you have stretching (at best, back to the 1400s or so). On average, the Big Y test will find about 70,000 SNPs on your Y chromosome that make up your Y-DNA signature. Do I need the Big Y-700 test?Well, that depends. The Big Y-700 test is most valuable for individuals who have solid paper trails and traditional Y-DNA testing that matches others going back at least eight generations. It will help them find connections with men who may connect to them around that 12-to-15-generation mark before surnames existed to guide us. The “700” part of the test could provide greater definition between the lines they already know are related. Many related lines have zero or just a few differences at the 111-marker level—great for determining relatedness, but terrible if you want to figure out which of four brothers was your ancestor. The Big Y-700 test could find those differences. |
https://www.familytreemagazine.com/premium/big-y-700/?trk_msg=M0ID13RU2JTKL5 CAKFFK952EQ8&trk_contact=VV1A4L0C04AUM38D554UP70KK8&trk_module= new&trk_sid=PAG0CCTC6B0KQONN5B4FT36L4S&utm_source=Listrak&utm_medium= Email&utm_term=DNA+Q%26amp%3bamp%3bamp%3bamp%3bamp%3bA%3a+What%e 2%80%99s+the+Big+Y-700+Test%3f+Should+I+Choose+a+Y-DNA+Test%3f&utm _campaign=FT+Newsletter&utm_content=10-16-2020 |
|
|
|
|
M |
Cristina
Rivera Garza, 56 The
“genius" grant, as it is commonly known, is a prestigious
$625,000, no-strings-attached award “to extraordinarily talented and
creative individuals as an investment in their potential,” according
to the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, which awards the
grants annually. “This
is an incredible— and quite unexpected— honor. I am suddenly short
of words,” said Rivera Garza.
|
M |
M |
|
|
By Beau Yarbrough
|
California’s high school students
will not be required to take an ethnic studies class to graduate. At
least, not for now. Gov.
Gavin Newsom vetoed Assembly Bill 331 Wednesday, his deadline to
approve bills in the most recent legislative session.
“There is much uncertainty about
the appropriate K-12 model curriculum for ethnic studies,” Newsom
said in a statement. “The latest draft, which is currently out for
review, still needs re-revision."
The bill was the brainchild of
Assemblyman Jose Medina, D-Riverside, a former ethnic studies
teacher for the Riverside Unified School District. That district,
and the Los Angeles Unified School District, both made ethnic
studies a graduation requirement in the past few months.
Medina expressed regret over
Newsom’s decision. “The veto of AB 331 is a missed opportunity
for the state of California and a disservice to our students who
have called for ethnic studies in their schools,” Medina said in
a statement. “This veto comes at a time when the Trump
administration is threatening to punish school districts for
teaching anti-racism and antibias curriculum.”
On Sept. 17, President Donald
Trump blasted public schools’ lessons on racism and slavery as
“leftwing indoctrination” and said he would create a national
commission that would promote a “pro-American curriculum” on
American history.
“As civil unrest and racial
tension have risen across the nation, California has marketed
itself as a progressive beacon working to overcome its past
transgressions and chart an equitable future,” Medina said.
“In order to build racial justice in this state and country, all
of our students need to learn the real history of America — and
that history includes the diverse experiences and perspectives of
people of color.”
Had it been approved, the bill
would have required the Class of 2030, and subsequent classes, to
have taken ethnic studies in order to get a high school diploma.
But AB 331, which was introduced
last year, ran into problems with its model curriculum. The
curriculum, which was to be an example for districts creating
their own programs, was accused of being anti- Semitic and for
focusing on African Americans, Asian Americans, Hispanics and
Latinos and Native Americans. On Sept. 10, a coalition of 80
groups, including B’nai B’rith International, wrote a letter
to Newsom, urging him to veto the bill, citing concerns over
politicized and anti-Semitic viewpoints in the curriculum.
The California Teachers
Association expressed regret at the veto.
“We know that ‘justice
delayed is justice denied’ and while we are disappointed with
this setback, we look forward to joining Superintendent of Public
Instruction Tony Thurmond and state board President Linda Darling
Hammond on developing an authentic ethnic studies program that our
students deserve and our society needs,” CTA President E. Toby
Boyd said in a statement.
Coming up with an ethnic studies
curriculum on which everyone can agree is a tall task, according
to Marcia Godwin, a professor of public administration at the
University of La Verne.
“This brings to mind the old
saying that a camel is a horse designed by a committee,” she
said in an email on Thursday. “Newsom very much sees himself as
a policy expert who masters the details of each bill. The economic
challenges with the pandemic also mean that we can expect Newsom
to exercise fiscal restraint in his decisions on whether to sign
or veto bills.”
In August, Los Angeles Unified
voted to require it, starting with the Class of 2024. Riverside
Unified voted to do the same in September, starting with the Class
of 2025.
“Especially at this time of
racial reckoning and divisiveness over the issue of race,
providing ethnic studies is more important than ever,” said Los
Angeles school board member Kelly Gonez, who introduced the
district’s ethnic studies resolution. “While we will continue
to lead in LAUSD … I do hope that there will be a path forward
to providing these critical courses to all students in
California.”
It’s likely that an ethnic
studies graduation requirement will come up again in a future
session of the California legislature.
Medina first introduced an ethnic
studies bill in 2016. Then-Gov. Jerry Brown rejected AB 2772 in
2018, saying California’s students were “overburdened” with
existing graduation requirements. In August, Newsom signed AB
1460, which made ethnic studies a graduation requirement for
California State University students. The Cal State system had
made that a graduation requirement in July.
Wednesday, Newsom didn’t close
the door on an ethnic studies requirement in future.
“In California, we don’t
tolerate our diversity. We celebrate it,” Newsom’s veto
message said. “That should be reflected in our high school
curriculum. I look forward to our model curriculum achieving these
goals.” Staff writer
Linh Tat contributed to this report.
Oct 2, 2020 |
|
Four hours before the Sept. 30 deadline, Gov. Gavin Newsom vetoed Assembly Bill 331 — a bill to require that California high school students complete a course in ethnic studies.
Newsom
correctly pointed out that the current ethnic studies model
curriculum is unbalanced and needs revision — as I and
others have pointed out. Writing in the Wall Street Journal,
I was the first published critic of the 2019 draft of the
curriculum. I also provided, again in the Journal, a
thoroughgoing criticism of the 2020 draft.
The 2019
draft was interwoven with jargon, bigotry, and revolutionary
anti-capitalist propaganda. Newsom himself had condemned
that draft and promised it would be “substantially
amended.” Linda Darling- Hammond, president of the State
Board of Education, said she also thought revision was in
order.
Although the
2020 draft toned down the 2019 language, it kept the
anti-capitalism and underlying critical racial theory. The
2020 draft continued to neglect the findings of mainstream
social science and refused to give ethnic students any
understanding of the achievements of minority groups and how
others could similarly succeed in America. It further
continued to treat ethnic studies classes as training
sessions for future identity-politics activists.
The new
version explicitly condemned capitalism as oppression. It
relied on socialist historian Howard Zinn’s erroneous
narrative of American history, citing him 19 times. It
mentioned Malcom X twice as often as Martin Luther King, Jr.
as well. It recommends that students study the philosophy
and growth of the racist and anti-Semitic Nation of Islam.
One of the sample classes (on “resistance”) listed cop
killer Mumia Abu Jamal’s website as a resource. Jargon was
still present: the guiding principles of ethnic studies are
said by the document to include a critique of “white
supremacy, racism, … patriarchy, cisheteropatriarchy,
capitalism, ableism [and] anthropocentrism.”
The veto
happened not only because of this content, but also because
of the process for creating the curriculum and the politics
associated with it.
When the
2019 version was sent back to the drawing board, there were
three main strategies for revision: 1. Fight to keep the
2019 draft as is (the position of the drafters and the
radical identity- politics movement; 2. keep the essence of
the 2019 draft but tone down the language (State
Superintendent Tony Thurmond and his Department of
Education); or 3. revise it more deeply and thoroughly (the
position held in various forms by Newsom, Darling-Hammond,
various ethnic groups, business groups, and social
scientists (such as myself and UCLA economist Lee Ohanian).
The
California Department of Education tried to follow its
toning-down approach. But it was sabotaged from within by
the “keep 2019” proponents and from the outside by the
identity- politics movement’s well-organized lobby. This
sabotage was most evident in the August 13, 2020, meeting of
the state curriculum commission where commissioners directed
the Department of Education staff to return in November with
a glossary — which in the 2019 draft was replete with
critical race theory and jargon — and the deleted 2019
draft’s lessons. Those lessons heralded militant and
violent revolutionaries as models for students to study and
conceivably emulate.
Various
Democratic politicians, including Newsom, had hoped for
greater inclusiveness in the 2020 draft, perhaps including
Jews and Armenians, who were massacred abroad yet overcame
difficulties and discrimination to succeed in America.
Jews and
Armenians had lobbied to be included in the 2020 model
curriculum, as did Sikhs and Koreans. But this was not to
be.
Here’s the
formula for an improved ethnic-studies curriculum: Get rid
of the anti-capitalist ideology. Ditch the anti-Semitism,
hidden and overt. Make ethnic studies classes a place for
learning, not training agitators. Rely on mainstream social
science, not anti-white demonization.
Instead of
solely dwelling on victimhood, ethnic studies classes should
give ethnic minorities evidence that individuals and groups
can climb the ladder in America. Such changes would support
tolerance and civil rights, improve learning, and increase
interracial understanding. Williamson M. Evers is a
senior fellow and director of the Center on Educational
Excellence at the Independent Institute in Oakland.
California
Gov. Gavin Newsom, speaking in August in Sacramento,
recently vetoed an Assembly Bill that would require state
high school students to to complete a course in ethnic
studies.
Los Angeles Times
|
|
|
It's interesting how Mead rationalizes why Mexicans respond so "weakly" to getting ahead through education. Of course, this is baseless and obviously, racist. Conversely, when Chicanos, as a people, took their futures into their own hands under the guise of the Chicano movement, hundreds of thousands of Mexicanos(as) began graduating from college. In 2020, we are at parity in the CSU system and nearly at parity in the UC system in California, quite a contrast to the 1960s when we were a sprinkling of students in higher education. An accomplishment achieved in only 50 years. Similar achievements have occurred throughout the Southwest. Why and how? Because the early Chicano graduates were empowered with the consciousness and commitment to make a difference, Classroom by classroom, school by school, and system by system we began to challenge the norms and prepared our youth to graduate from colleges and universities, and now, to pursue professional careers and hold elected office. Not because they were Democrats or Republicans but because they were Chicano(s). The problem now is how do we maintain the momentum. its definitely not by pursuing the Hispanic, or Latinx route, and possibly, even Latino. Although we identify asLatinos, we are different from Cubans, Colombianos, Peruvians and other 'Latino" groups.. It's not the attitudinal glue that binds our people together, like Cuban binds Cubans, Colombiano binds Colombianos and Peruvians bind Peruvianos etc... Actually, we're more like Puerto Ricanos and Native Americans. We have a historical connection to the land that can never be taken away from us, not even through conquest. To truly seek out our true collective identity we must look to the past, and inwardly to determine its true value, and eventually to know our future. |
======================================================================================
I agree 100 % we are a generation, a time period that occurred and will never occur again. We are like the creation, migrant, Mexican American, and then Chicano. I stand with you and what we reacted to in the 60's, 70's and 80's. Let the X people define their time period and let's see what they do with it. I am proud to be a Chicano and at 76 or later I will die a Chicano. We did a lot, we accomplished a lot and I would stack our success against any other time period. Richard Soto, Vietnam Veterano, MEChista, Brown Beret, High School Counselor and founder of the Chicano Research Center. Y Que! RICHARD SOTO ellobo44@COMCAST.NET
|
|
|
Below is an example of the kind of DNA research which is underway in New Mexico. If you would like to learn more about the Byzantines and the mark they made on the Iberian Peninsula then this presentation is for you. We will also discuss the Y-DNA E-Mutation in European populations. There will be a talk on the subject on Saturday October 24, at 12:00 PM, through the Iberian Peninsula DNA Institute. For more information, contact Ángel de Cervantes
Albuquerque,
NM
Fee:
$15.00 (checks only)
Ángel de Cervantes , Executive Directorangelrcervantes@gmail.com
|
|
|
The
2020 LDC U.S. Latino GDP Report seeks to provide a factual view
of the large and rapidly growing economic contribution of Latinos living
in the United States. We estimate the U.S. Latino GDP based on a
detailed, bottom-up construction which leverages publicly available data
from major U.S. agencies. The most recent year for which the core
building block is available is 2018. Thus, this year’s report provides
a snapshot of the total economic contribution of U.S. Latinos in that
year. As
a summary statistic for the economic performance of Latinos in the
United States, the 2018 Latino GDP is breath-taking. The total economic
output (or GDP) of Latinos in the United States was $2.6 trillion in
2018, up from $2.3 trillion in 2017, and $1.7 trillion in 2010. If
Latinos living in the United States were an independent country, the
U.S. Latino GDP would be the eighth largest GDP in the world. The Latino
GDP is larger even than the GDPs of Italy, Brazil or South Korea.
|
|
|
Fall 2020 Meeting & Special Topics Town Hall (via Zoom) Campus Virtual Host - Mt. San Jacinto College Tuesday October 13, 2020 9:00AM – 1:15PM PST *Registration
is required to receive Zoom instructions September 2020 Update Upcoming Events: |
|
|
Be
a part of this 3 day event where you can watch live and prerecorded
panels, NALIP
· 3415 S Sepulveda Blvd, #1100, Los Angeles, CA 90034, United States |
|
|
|
|
September 29, 1959 Sixty one years ago people said it will NEVER happen Well, is it happening? Hard to believe it was that long ago.............and it looks from where we are now it is coming true. Khrushchev's Message 61 years ago to the United States : "Your children's children will live under communism, You Americans are so gullible. No, you won't accept communism outright; but we will keep feeding you small doses of socialism until you will finally wake up and find you already have Communism. We will not have to fight you; We will so weaken your economy, until you will fall like overripe fruit into our hands." "The democracy will cease to exist when you take away from those who are willing to work and give to those who would not." Do you remember what Russia's Khrushchev said in 1959? Remember, socialism leads to Communism. So, How do you create a Socialistic State? There
are 8 levels of control; read the following recipe: 2) Poverty - Increase the poverty level as high as possible, poor people are easier to control and will not fight back if you are providing everything for them. 3) Debt - Increase the debt to an unsustainable level. That way you are able to increase taxes, and this will produce more poverty. 4) Gun Control - Remove the ability to defend themselves from the Government. That way you are able to create a police state. 5) Welfare - Take control of every aspect (food, housing, income) of their lives because that will make them fully dependent on the government. 6) Education - Take control of what people read and listen to and take control of what children learn in school. 7) Religion - Remove the belief in God from the Government and schools because the people need to believe in ONLY the government knowing what is best for the people. 8) Class Warfare - Divide the people into the wealthy and the poor. Eliminate the middle class This will cause more discontent and it will be easier to tax the wealthy with the support of the poor Sent by Yomar Cleary ycleary@charter.net
|
|
In 1967, five college students started a civil rights organization that played an integral role in Texas History. The Mexican American Youth Organization or MAYO was founded in San Antonio to fight for the civil rights of Mexican-Americans across the nation. The founders of MAYO, Los Cinco (meaning "the five"), consisting of José Ángel Gutiérrez, Willie Velásquez, Mario Compean, Ignacio Pérez, and Juan Patlán were college students at St. Mary’s University when they formed the organization. MAYO and its political organization, Raza Unida Party, were major players in Texas politics during the late 1960s and early 1970s. They were a part of the larger Chicano movement in the United States, and played a pivotal role in bringing about civil rights for Mexican-Americans. Unfortunately, both Willie Velásquez and Juan Patlán have passed away but the three surviving founding members of MAYO, José Ángel Gutiérrez, Mario Compean and Ignacio Pérez will participate in a panel during Hispanic Heritage Month at UTSA. September 23, a panel was held, exploring the history of the Chicano movement including the history, politics, leadership, ideology, strategies and tactics, and discuss how the lessons of the past can help during the current political climate. Roger
Enriquez, J.D.
|
|
Telling the Entire
Story
|
|
|
|
Today, September 22, 2020, the President welcomed the veterans of the Bay of Pigs Brigade 2506 at the White House. He honored these courageous veterans and their families in his remarks (VIDEO). In addition to paying tribute to their commitment to democracy and freedom, he recognized the many contributions of our Hispanic community to the nation and announced the U.S. Treasury Department amended regulations to restrict revenue sources to the Cuban regime. Below are photos from the event, a tweet from the National Security Council, and a STATEMENT from the U.S. Treasury Department. If you or your organization put out a message about today’s events, please send us the links to those social media posts. Sent by Andrea.R.Ramirez@who.eop.gov |
Office of the Press Secretary
|
During National Hispanic
Heritage Month, we celebrate the countless contributions of more
than 60 million Hispanic Americans to our culture and society.
Hispanic Americans are the largest minority group in the United States
today, and generations of Hispanic Americans have consistently helped
make our country strong and prosperous. They contribute to our
Nation beyond description. Hispanic Americans embody the best of
our American values, including commitment to faith, family, and country.
They serve in our military and protect us as members of law enforcement.
In fact, Hispanic Americans make up half of our Border Patrol
agents. The Hispanic-American community has left an indelible mark
on our government, culture, and economy. As part of our commitment
to promoting the success of Hispanic Americans, my Administration will
always promote educational opportunity for our Nation’s
Hispanic-American communities. Hispanic Americans benefit greatly
from school choice programs, including the Nation’s largest school
choice program in Florida, where more than one-third of the recipients
are Hispanic-American students. No American student should ever be
trapped in a failing public school or a school that does not meet his
individual needs. Additionally, we have spurred the creation of
more than 16 million education and training opportunities through our
Pledge to the American Worker. My Administration is also
working to increase economic opportunities for Hispanic Americans by
providing pathways to in-demand jobs and investing in Hispanic-American
communities. On July 9, 2020, I signed an Executive Order to
establish the White House Hispanic Prosperity Initiative to promote
educational and workforce development, encourage private-sector action
and public-private partnerships, and to monitor how Federal programs
best provide opportunities for Hispanic Americans. Additionally,
this Executive Order established the President’s Advisory Commission
on Hispanic Prosperity, which is dedicated to advising my
Administration on ways to improve access to educational and economic
opportunities for the Hispanic-American community. This year, my
Administration also delivered $1 billion in funding to
Minority-Serving Institutions, including Hispanic-Serving Institutions.
And since I signed the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 into law,
nearly 9,000 Opportunity Zones have attracted an estimated $75 billion
in new capital investment in economically distressed areas, helping to
bring wealth and jobs to the neighborhoods where many Hispanic Americans
live. We are already seeing the
positive results of these policies in communities throughout the United
States. In the 2017-2018 academic year, the graduation rate
for Hispanic students at public high schools rose to 81%, the highest
level ever recorded. Before the coronavirus pandemic, the median
income for Hispanic Americans had reached its highest level in history.
Unemployment reached the lowest rate ever recorded. The poverty
rate for Hispanic Americans also hit a record low. And from 2017
to 2018, 362,000 Hispanic Americans became new homeowners, the largest
net gain for Hispanics since 2005. In the past 4 months as we
have recovered from the coronavirus, we added 3.3 million jobs for
Hispanic Americans. It is my promise to the Hispanic-American
community and to all Americans that my Administration will continue to
do everything in its power to rebuild the economy, ensure opportunity,
grow wages, and cut regulations so every family can achieve their own
American Dream. Hispanic Americans will
play an incredible role in our country’s great years to come, and my
Administration proudly stands with them. Their steadfast
commitment to America’s core values, their steadfast opposition to
socialism, and their innumerable contributions to our prosperity enrich
our Nation and add to our unmatched culture and way of life. To honor the achievements
of Hispanic Americans, the Congress, by Public Law 100-402, as amended,
has authorized and requested the President to issue annually a
proclamation designating September 15 through October 15 as “National
Hispanic Heritage Month.” NOW, THEREFORE, I, DONALD
J. TRUMP, President of the United States of America, by virtue of
the authority vested in me by the Constitution and the laws of the
United States, do hereby proclaim September 15 through October 15,
2020, as National Hispanic Heritage Month. I call on public
officials, educators, librarians, and all Americans to observe this
month with appropriate ceremonies, activities, and programs. IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have
hereunto set my hand this fourteenth day of September, in the year of
our Lord two thousand twenty, and of the Independence of the United
States of America the two hundred and forty-fifth. DONALD
J. TRUMP The White House You may want to read about her before you contact her.
Andrea R. Ramirez, Ph.D.
|
|
(UnitedVoice.com) – In August, President Trump landed a historic peace deal between the United Arab Emirates and Israel. On Friday, September 11, 19 years after the horrific terrorist events that changed America forever, the president did it again. From the Oval Office, September 15, Trump announced that Bahrain agreed to normalize relations with Israel as well and establish full diplomatic ties.
|
Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg |
Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg
passed away September 18, at age 87. She was the second woman appointed
to the Supreme Court, and the first Jewish woman to serve on the highest
court of the land. She served more than two decades on the Supreme
Court. Ginsburg was born in Brooklyn, New York, in 1933. She attended Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, and later Harvard Law School before transferring to Columbia Law School. She tied for first in her class when she graduated from Columbia. Ginsburg was appointed to the Supreme Court by President Bill Clinton in 1993. She was considered to be on the left wing of the court and defended many liberal causes, most especially those relating to women's rights.
|
|
MeXicanos
2070, a national organization dedicated to regaining and enriching
Mexican American culture through educational programs and alliances
launches the first classes of the Colegio Chicano del Pueblo (CCP), with
college-level distance learning on September 16, 2020, in collaboration
with Prescott College of Prescott, Arizona. Dr. Ernesto Todd Mireles, a professor in Xicano Studies and Community Organizing at Prescott College, chair of the MeXicanos 2070, is the coordinator of the virtual school. Mireles, along with Dr. Jerry Garcia, Vice President of Educational Services at Sea Mar Community Health Centers in Seattle Washington, will kick off its first classes using the online learning platform Google Classroom. “Our intent is to bring Xicano studies to the largest assembly of Mexican American students ever – anyone with access to a computer and the internet,” Mireles stated. “There is no cost to take the courses. The only expense to the student is the time and effort they put into working through the courses.” Each self-paced course is set for an eight-week period. Course load work for each class will be the equivalent of a university level four-credit course. The three inaugural courses titled, "Building MeXicano Political Power I and II," and "Bringing Xicano History to the Present," will focus on building political power in Xicano communities and understanding their historical past. “Regardless of your background or academic interest, it is important to understand the Xicano community to better address their needs and issues,” said Garcia. Prior educational experience is not required to enroll in the CCP courses. Since each course is self-paced, the student works through the course until they have mastery of the subject. The goal of the CCP curriculum is to build a 28-32 credit program equivalent to a minor/specialization in a particular academic field. “We believe Xicanos and Xicanas of all ages want access to professionally developed, undergraduate and graduate level courses specifically about the Xicano community,” Mireles added. “These free online courses will serve as a resource for professional development for grassroots community organizations who want to deepen staff knowledge on the history, literature, and politics of the Xicano community,” said Professor Armando Rendón, a board member for MeXicanos 2070 and author of the Xicano movement classic, Chicano Manifesto. Anyone interested in taking courses should click this link . Anyone interested in potentially developing courses should send an inquiry email Subject: Colegio Chicano, to 2020mexicano2070@gmail.com.
|
|
|
AUGUST 2020 |
||||
|
||||
https://www.familysearch.org/wiki/en/Classes_in_the_Learning_Center Learning Center classes, offered free of charge on FamilySearch.org There are 2118 online lessons with detailed and specific hints on
how to search in a particular country, even South Africa. The lessons
are presented in the following eleven languages, listed in order of
frequency: |
||||
|
|
Victor Davis Hanson |
In the 1960s and early '70s, the U.S. was convulsed by massive protests calling for radical changes in the country's attitudes on race, class, gender, and sexual orientation. The Vietnam War and widespread college deferments were likely the fuel that ignited prior peaceful civil disobedience. Sometimes the demonstrations became violent, as with the Watts riots of 1965 and the protests at the 1968 Democratic convention in Chicago. Terrorists from the Weathermen (later called the Weather Underground) bombed dozens of government buildings. The '60s revolution introduced to the country everything from hippies, communes, free love, mass tattooing, commonplace profanity, rampant drug use, rock music and high divorce rates to the war on poverty, massive government growth, feminism, affirmative action and race/gender/ethnic college curricula. The enemies of the '60s counterculture were the "establishment" -- politicians, corporations, the military and the "square" generation" in general. Leftists targeted their parents, who had grown up in the Great Depression. That generation had won World War II and returned to create a booming postwar economy. After growing up with economic and military hardship, they sought a return to comfortable conformity in the 1950s. A half-century after the earlier revolution, today's cultural revolution is vastly different -- and far more dangerous. Government and debt have grown. Social activism is already institutionalized in hundreds of newer federal programs. The "Great Society" inaugurated a multitrillion-dollar investment in the welfare state. Divorce rates soared. The nuclear family waned. Immigration, both legal and illegal, skyrocketed. Thus, America is far less resilient, and a far more divided, indebted and vulnerable target than it was in 1965. Today, radicals are not protesting against 1950s conservatism but rather against the radicals of the 1960s, who as old liberals now hold power. Now, many of the current enforcers -- blue-state governors, mayors and police chiefs -- are from the left. Unlike Democratic Chicago Mayor Richard J. Daley in the '60s, today's progressive civic leaders often sympathize with the protesters. The '60s protests were for racial assimilation and integration to reify Martin Luther King Jr.'s agenda of making race incidental, not essential, to the American mindset. Not so with today's cultural revolution. It seeks to ensure that racial difference is the foundation of American life, dividing the country between supposed non-white victims and purported white victimizers, past and present. In the '60s, radicals rebelled against their teachers and professors, who were often highly competent and the products of fact-based and inductive education. Not so in 2020. Today's radicals were taught not by traditionalists but by less-educated older radicals. Another chief difference is debt. Most public education in the 1960s was bare-bones and relatively inexpensive. Because there were no plush dorms, latte bars, rock-climbing walls, diversity coordinators and provosts of inclusion, college tuition in real dollars was far cheaper. The result was that 1960s student radicals graduated without much debt and for all their hipness could enter a booming economy with marketable skills. Today's angry graduates owe a collective $1.6 trillion in student loan debt -- much of it borrowed for mediocre, therapeutic and politicized training that does not impress employers. College debt impedes maturity, marriage, child-raising, home ownership and the saving of money. In other words, today's radical is far more desperate and angry that his college gambit never paid off. Today's divide is also geographical in the fashion of 1861, not just generational as in the 1960s. The two blue coasts seem to despise the vast red interior, and vice versa. Yet the scariest trait of the current revolution is that many of its sympathizers haven't changed much since the 1960s. They may be rich, powerful, influential and older, but they are just as reckless and see the current chaos as the final victory in their own long march from the '60s. Corporations are no longer seen as evil, but as woke contributors to the revolution. The military is no longer smeared as warmongering, but praised as a government employment service where race, class and gender agendas can be green-lighted without messy legislative debate. Unlike the 1960s, there are essentially no conservatives in Hollywood, on campuses or in government bureaucracies. So the war no longer pits radicals against conservatives, but often socialists and anarchists against both liberals and conservatives. In the '60s, a huge "silent majority" finally had enough, elected Richard Nixon and slowed down the revolution by jailing its criminals, absorbing and moderating it. Today, if there is a silent mass of traditionalists and conservatives, they remain in hiding. If they stay quiet in their veritable mental monasteries and deplore the violence in silence, the revolution will steamroll on. But as in the past, if they finally snap, decide enough is enough and reclaim their country, then even this cultural revolution will sputter out, too. ACT For America is a 501c3 nonprofit organization. We do not receive any government funding or grants so that we are not muzzled from speaking the truth. We rely on the generosity of patriots who believe in the importance of our work so we can continue exposing America's enemies foreign or domestic and mobilizing Americans to stand up and defend freedom. We would be so grateful for your support. Copyright © 2020. ACT for America, All rights reserved.
|
|
|
|
||
|
Congressional Hispanic Caucus
Statement
“Today’s House passage of H.R. 2420 represents a historic step towards securing a new home for the Latino story to be told. The Congressional Hispanic Caucus eagerly welcomes the creation of a new Smithsonian museum on the National Mall to showcase Latino history, art, and culture, and applaud passage of H.R. 2420,” said Congressman Joaquin Castro, Chairman of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus. “Spanish was the first non-native language to be spoken in the United States. Latinos have fought in every U.S. war. Food and music from Latin America are enjoyed in every American city. American Latinos are parents, veterans, teachers, activists, innovators, artists, scientists, business owners, immigrants, patriots and so much more. Right now, Latinos are disproportionately represented among the essential workers keeping America safe, fed, and running during the unprecedented COVID-19 crisis. The Latino story is an American story, and our history is a central thread in the history of our nation,” added Chairman Castro. “Now, more than ever, America’s Latinos deserve to have our story told and our voices to be heard. There will be no better place for that than the National Museum of the American Latino that this bill will help establish. The Congressional Hispanic Caucus is proud to join this bipartisan effort to leave a lasting legacy for generations of American Latinos who will see their culture, art, and history celebrated in the heart of our nation’s capital,” concluded Chairman Castro. Other Important Museum News Smithsonian Latino Center’s Molina Family Latino Gallery To Open in 2021 at the National Museum of American History in Washington, D.C. The Smithsonian Latino Center’s first gallery space, the Molina Family Latino Gallery, will be dedicated to celebrating the U.S. Latino experience and open at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History in 2021. The gallery, designed by Museum Environments/Branded Environments LLC, will feature 4,500 square feet of bilingual stories for all audiences. Rotating exhibitions featuring multimedia activities, objects and first-person narratives will be complemented by participatory experiences and viewer-generated content. “Once social change begins, it cannot be reversed. You cannot uneducate the person who has learned to read. You cannot humiliate the person who feels pride. You cannot oppress the people who are not afraid anymore." ~ César Chávez Sent by How Shorr
If approved by the Senate, it would become the first Smithsonian
museum specifically dedicated to the history and culture of Latinx
communities. |
|
Hispanic Marketing 101 |
|
The José Martí Awards are named after José Julián Martí Pérez (January 28, 1853-May 19, 1895), a Cuban poet, essayist, journalist, revolutionary philosopher, professor, translator, political theorist and publisher. Through his writings and political activities he became a symbol for Cuba’s struggle for independence from Spain. He also fought against the threat of United States expansionism in Latin America. During his lifetime, his writings were published in numerous newspapers, magazines and journals in most Latin America countries and the USA. In the USA he wrote for publications in both Spanish and English. | |
|
|
The NAHP is planning its largest convention in more than a decade with the September 21-25 event. The virtual event promises key insights from advertisers, corporations, health, digital and media professionals More importantly, it will offer insights from a number of key marketing and publishing professionals. 2020 has become a key year for our industry of Latino content providers. It's FREE to all NAHP members and their staff. For more information, contact
Executive Director, Kirk Whisler kirk@whisler.com
760-579-1696 |
|
|
The San Antonio Hispanic Chamber of Commerce (SAHCC) Board of
Directors announced Marina Gonzales as the new President and Chief
Executive Officer of the 91-year-old organization.
|
“Marina’s wealth of knowledge, experience and track-record make her the top candidate for this critical role. On behalf of the board of directors I want to congratulate and welcome her as our new President and CEO,” said Dr. Erika Gonzalez, SAHCC Chairwoman. “Her connections with the San Antonio community and her strategic leadership will transform our organization. We are incredibly excited to begin working together and for the future of our beloved Chamber.” A search committee was formed earlier this year and led by Denise Hernandez, True Flavors Vice President of Development and SAHCC Chair-Elect. The committee was comprised of local and national leaders, each of whom brought knowledge and expertise to identify the most qualified candidate for the Chamber “I want to thank our search committee for their commitment to this process during these challenging times. We are confident they found the best candidate who will bring innovation and growth to our Chamber,” said Denise Hernandez, SAHCC Chair-Elect. “I am certain Marina’s vision and passion for advocacy will better our business community and it will be an honor to work together with her and our Chair, Dr. Erika Gonzalez to lead our chamber into a new era of success.” Gonzales holds a J.D. from the University of Illinois-Chicago John Marshall Law School, and a B.A. from St. Mary’s University. Prior to her role as President and CEO of CASA, Gonzales served as an executive with CentroMed, overseeing government and legal affairs and prior to that, was Chief of Staff to Texas House of Representatives District 117. “As a first-generation college and law school graduate, and daughter of an entrepreneur, I understand the critical role that Hispanic-owned businesses play in the success of our community and our economy,” said Marina Gonzales, SAHCC Incoming President and CEO. “Our businesses and our nation are facing unparalleled challenges and I want to ensure our Hispanic Chamber members are successful. I will work with staff, stakeholders and our board of directors to ensure we are at the forefront of advocacy and policy that will lead us to resiliency and recovery. Gonzales will officially begin her new role as President and CEO of SAHCC on Monday, August 17, 2020. Major General (USMC Ret) Juan G. Ayala has served as the Interim President and CEO of the organization since March as he continued to oversee his main duties with the City of San Antonio as the Director for the Office of Military and Veteran Affairs with a part-time loaned executive agreement with the Chamber. Moving forward, General Ayala will remain active as the Chair of the Development Committee and member of the SAHCC Executive Board. “I also want to thank General Ayala and the City of San Antonio for their support during this unique transition period for our Hispanic business community. It allowed us time to ensure we had a strong leader to position our chamber for future success,” said Dr. Gonzalez. “General Ayala’s leadership has been invaluable to our members during the pandemic, he and staff have worked hard in providing resources and guidance along with reassurance San Antonio will persevere.” # # # July 20, 2020
|
|
|
"As a long time stakeholder in Central Texas, I've seen firsthand the integral part the Chamber provides for the Latino business community. Now more than ever, it is imperative to champion the progress and opportunities that bring a voice and presence to the 51,000 Latino-owned businesses with an economic engine of $12 billion in our area,” said Diana Maldonado, incoming President & CEO.
|
Previous to her role as a Financial Advisor, Maldonado was the first Latina to represent Williamson County in the Texas House of Representatives. In this role, she facilitated and secured $16 million for education, $10 million for road expansions, and additional funding for renewable energy initiatives by collaborating with key stakeholders. “After an extensive search of candidates from coast to coast, the GAHCC is pleased to announce the next leader of the organization. Diana was chosen for multiple reasons including stellar in-market, long-standing relationships; her ability to strategize and envision a future where members will grow their businesses through proven tactics and solid programs offered through their Chamber; and her policy experience. This is a win-win for the GAHCC and the community at large. I am excited and energized to see her succeed with the support of our Board of Directors,” said Joseph Cajas III, Chairman of the GAHCC and President of The Cajas Digital Agency. Maldonado graduated magna cum laude from St. Edward’s University in Austin, with a Bachelor of Business Administration. Active in our community, she served six years on the Round Rock ISD Board of Trustees where as president in 2006 she supported a $349 million bond election to build multiple schools and aid with renovation projects. She continues to serve on education and leadership boards as President for Seedling Mentors, on the Advisory Council for The Bill Munday School of Business at St. Edward’s University, and as a member of the National Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials (NALEO). Maldonado will officially join the GAHCC as President & CEO on Monday, August 3, 2020. Thomas Miranda, Founder & CEO of Sparkovation Advisors has served as Interim President & CEO. Miranda will remain an active member of the GAHCC. “I look forward to working with a dynamic team and an esteemed board at this pivotal and exciting time,” Maldonado responded. “It is indeed an honor and privilege to lead the Chamber in continuing to build successful relationships and earning recognition as a premier organization for its members and partners." ### About the Greater Austin Hispanic Chamber of Commerce (GAHCC): Established in 1973, the GAHCC is a 501(c)6 nonprofit organization with the primary goal of continuing the advancement and progression of a strong and stable economic culture for Hispanic Businesses. Our board and members represent diverse industries from corporations, small businesses, and nonprofits, to governmental agencies that touch all corners of the Greater Austin area. The mission of the GAHCC is to be the leading resource and advocate for the Hispanic business community. www.latinastyle.com
|
|
California State University
undergrads must take by Nina Agrawal |
In the first major change to general education across its system in decades, all 430,000 undergraduates attending Cal State Universities must take an ethnic studies or social justice course, a requirement approved by CSU trustees Wednesday (7-22-2020) following a fierce two-day debate that left some longtime social activists in the awkward position of voting “no.” The requirement will take effect starting in the 2023-24 academic year in the nation’s largest four-year public university system. Five trustees voted against it — including State Supt. of Public Instruction Tony Thurmond and social justice activists Lateefah Simon and Hugo Morales — who said it did not hew closely enough to the definition of ethnic studies. One trustee abstained. Two questions dominated their debate: What should an ethnic studies requirement include? And who should decide: faculty, trustees or state lawmakers? “I’m trying to hold with fidelity to what ethnic studies is and has been and what those who framed it and have been fighting for 52 years have asked for,” Thurmond said at the meeting Wednesday, referring to the discipline’s focus on the experience of four oppressed groups in the U.S. : African Americans, Asian Americans, Latinos and Indigenous peoples. Source: Hispanic Marketing 101, Vol.18, Issue 19,
July 23, 2020 |
|
"Al
final del camino" |
En RTVE se pueden ver muchas series,
GRATIS:
Isabel
La corona partida
Carlo Rey Emperador
La catedral del mar
EL ministerio del tiempo,
etc.
https://www.rtve.es/alacarta/videos/el-final-del-camino/final-del-camino-capitulo-6/3916339/
|
10/23/2020 10:11 AM