Signs

It’s been one of those weeks,

you know

one of those weeks.

Here’s the deal-

This guy puts up a billboard and spews hate filled bile from it

every chance he gets.

What he does has been called

” thought Provoking “

The only thing that billboard provokes in me is the urge to do some serious

Projectile Vomiting.

And in case your curious- yes I’ve driven by the ” The Sign ” and in all the years I’ve driven by it I’ve learned one thing from what I’ve read on them-

TO KEEP DRIVING…. 

I’d advise you to do the same.

07:36 PM PST on Saturday, November 17, 2007

By ROBERTA ROMERO / KING 5 News

LEWIS COUNTY, Wash. – A longstanding controversial billboard in Lewis County is once again garnering attention. Over the years, the owner has used the board to air his opinions about everything from politicians to homosexuality.

The latest message is raising deep concerns in the local Hispanic community. The grinning face of Uncle Sam is what drivers usually see first.

Then the written message on the billboard near I-5 gets clearer:“No Mexican Olympic teams?? All the runners and swimmers are here!”

Owner of the billboard Mike Hamilton, who did not want to go on camera, says he’s trying to deliver a serious message on illegal immigration — but in a funny manner:“I wanted to use humor to draw attention to illegal immigration,” he said. “My goal in the sign is to stir things up and inspire people to educate themselves about the subject.”

Hamilton has definitely stirred things up. While residents in the area are well used to the political and pointed messages on the billboard – this time people are speaking up

. The message seems to be especially painful for the growing Hispanic community in Lewis County. According to the U.S. Census, the population of Hispanics has doubled from 3,500 to 7,000 living in the area. Many are not laughing at the message“Very hurtful – I am Hispanic and I’m proud of it and that’s really wrong,” said Adelina Petersen, resident.

Others say it’s an obvious joke that is thought-provoking. “It makes you stop and think about it you know? I mean look at all the illegal immigrants we do have here you know,” said Travis Jones.

Yeah  look what’s happening to them:

 

FBI REPORT DOCUMENTS HATE CRIMES AGAINST LATINOS AT RECORD LEVEL

 

Hate crimes rise as anti-immigrant campaigns fill the airwaves and fuel anti-immigrant local ordinances

November 19, 2007 WASHINGTON, D.C. – The Federal Bureau of Investigation Hate Crimes Statistics Report released today demonstrates the real societal impact of anti-immigrant campaigns launched over the airwaves and through anti-immigrant legislation.

The report shows a sharp increase in the number of hate crimes reported against Hispanics based on their ethnicity or national origin to the highest levels since the reports were first mandated by the Hate Crimes Statistics Act.

According to the report, in 2006, Hispanics comprised 62.8% of victims of crimes motivated by a bias toward the victims’ ethnicity or national origin.  In 2004, the comparable figure was 51.5%. 

 Since 2004, the number of victims of anti-Hispanic crimes increased by 25%.    

 Anti-immigrant hatred heard on the radio and cable shows reaches America’s neighborhoods with real consequences,” stated MALDEF President and General Counsel John Trasviña. “Heightened anti-immigrant sentiment has blocked immigration reform and seeks to turn local police into immigration law enforcers thus making it more difficult for victims to report crimes.

The FBI report should serve as a wake up call to our nation’s leaders to take action on comprehensive immigration reform, reduce tensions and safeguard the basic civil rights and liberties of all Americans.”

The report goes on to demonstrate the steady growth of anti-Hispanic hate crimes after 2004.  2006: 576 anti-Hispanic crimes against 819 victims 2005: 522 anti-Hispanic crimes against 722 victims

2004: 475 anti-Hispanic crimes against 646 victims

2003: 426 anti-Hispanic crimes against 595 victims

2002: 480 anti-Hispanic crimes against 639 victims

Founded in 1968, MALDEF, the nation’s leading Latino legal organization, promotes and protects the rights of Latinos through litigation, advocacy, community education and outreach, leadership development, and higher education scholarships.

For more information contact:
Estuardo Rodriguez: 202-631-2892
Peter Zamora: 202-293-2828

 

It’s Right Human

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Not only do I write, I can bake a mean enchilada and fry a sinfully good lumpia on top of that I can do other things like work on Human Rights Issues.

This news article is from the Everett Herald here in Washington state and this story is about an Ordinance that I’m proud to say I’m helping to put together.

The Luis Moscoso quoted here is my husband, Jerry Hebert (also quoted) is the type of person who not only makes the world a better place…but a fun one too- Dave Somers and Roger are truly good guys and I’ve enjoyed working with them.

So I’ll stop babbling now and let you read on…

County needs commission to stand up for citizens, activists say

Members of a new group of minority-rights activists say a recent rise in racial bias and discrimination in Snohomish County is pushing them to better protect and explain the importance of civil rights.

The Snohomish County Citizens Committee for Human Rights has gained momentum on its efforts after meetings were held this summer for an anti-gay group and what was billed as an illegal immigration summit.

Members also say the community must rally against racist graffiti and swastikas recently scrawled with spray paint on fences and cars.

To make progress, the Snohomish County Council needs to approve a local human rights commission in county government to hear concerns and stand up for the rights of residents, said Luis Moscoso of Mountlake Terrace, a member of the effort.

“I do believe in the area of human rights; there’s a lot more we could be doing,” he said. “We need to take responsibility for managing the communal climate we live in here.”

Moscoso reported progress on the proposal to the state Human Rights Commission at a meeting in Snohomish on Friday.

The County Council might consider a formal proposal next spring, he said.

“I applaud this effort,” Human Rights Commissioner Shawn Murinko said. The community is the best place to respond to civil rights debates, “and it only makes good sense to form these groups,” he said.

The state panel and its staff are advising the cutting-edge effort in Snohomish County, Commissioner Jerry Hebert said.

“The community is the one driving this,” Hebert said.

Earlier this year, Everett created a 15-member diversity board aimed at ridding city government of discrimination based on race, religion, income, gender, physical ability or sexual orientation.

County Councilman Dave Somers and county finance director Roger Neumaier have attended meetings of the planning group for the countywide effort.

“We support the human rights cause that the group is working on and we are looking forward to receiving the proposal so we can review it,” Neumaier said.

Unlike the state Human Rights Commission, which enforces state anti-discrimination laws, a local commission would be a more accessible venue to discuss race and discrimination issues as they arise in the county.

“We need ongoing community dialogue that is managed in a safe venue, where everyone feels safe to come to talk about what’s going on,” Moscoso said.

It might also be able to address community concerns.

“I would like to reinforce we’re not here to solve all the problems of the world,” Moscoso said. “There already are human rights laws on the books in Washington. This would be another way to enhance understanding and implementation in our community.”

Reporter Jeff Switzer: 425-339-3452 or jswitzer@heraldnet.com.

Diversity Commission Meeting

                                                                        

                                                                                                   

 

 

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PLEASE NOTE: IT HAS BEEN REPORTED THAT AT LEAST ONE I.C.E. AGENT WILL BE ATTENDING THIS MEETING. 

Maru Mora Villalpando

Community Organizer

Washington Community Action Network

La Red Activa Comunitaria de Washington

www.washingtoncan.org 

                                              

The Lynnwood Police Department will speak before the commission.

Urgency: cases continue to come, WCAN is still receiving calls

DECIDED: WCAN will attend the next DC meeting on November 14th at Lynnwood Library Conference Room, 19200 44th Ave W, at 6:45 p.m.

During the public comments we

v      won’t be emotional or

v      won’t try to debate the police testimonies

v      We’ll be positive during public comments

PLEASE NOTE: IT HAS BEEN REPORTED THAT AT LEAST ONE I.C.E. AGENT WILL BE ATTENDING THIS MEETING.

If you have relationship with other communities in the area (e.g. Asian, Muslim, parents groups, etc.), help us connect to them by inviting them to this meeting.

Hey Dawg I mean Gawd

 

Hey Big “G” look who stopped by for God Chat

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…just messin’ with you Dawg.

Okay, here we go:

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Hi God how’s your week been?

Mine has been boodles of fun-

First off this group that hates… Gays and Lesbians and Transgender people…oh and brown people and people who aren’t Christian Extremists like themselves and they probably even hate that cute little dog from the Taco commercials because they think he’s “illegal” came to Lynnwood, Washington to hold a rally.

 

There’s a good part God, there were more people OUTSIDE protesting then there were people inside attending the meeting itself.

Somy friends and me stood outside and waved signs and had a good time supporting our community.

The best part was the cars with families that honked and waved and yelled good job.

My personal favorite was the guy who was driving this big truck that slowed down and yelled, “ Love for us all. “

The bad part is that one of the groups’ ‘leaders’ is involving himself in local politics.

Ahem.

Oh and Lord of Wonders, I know you love those stories about the Mountlake Terrace City Council- but I don’t have any new ones. Don’t get all high and mighty on me, that divine intervention thing is in your department.

 

Now Lord, there this woman who wants people to celebrate a sugar free Halloween– that’s the kind of thinking that should get you assigned to the short bus and we both know it. Don’t think I’m letting this Halloween thing go- if Church people aren’t trying to make it ‘Church Friendly’ then Granola Heads are trying to make it healthy.

 

What next? Will we have to worry about Valentines coming under attack because the disembodied hearts remind people of human sacrifice and temple steps in South America drenched with blood….and heyyyyy….

 

 

No- if I mess with that one, every Jeweler and chocolate manufacturer in the on the planet will be after me.

And last but not least, if you forgive me for having bad thoughts about you for letting my cat die, then I’ll forgive you for the fact that the Halloween Monster Fest on AMC really, really sux this year.

Pax?

Good.

Take Care

See you way later

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And

Ahhhhemennnn

An Important Lesson From The Twilight Zone:

 

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It’s one thing to speak your mind,

it’s another to commit those thoughts to paper.

That particular act has never gone by unnoticed.

Sometimes it has a cost .

The Important Thing Is

 You find a way to get your story out there.

I’ve learned that from my hero Rod Serling …

full story here

Rod Serling was surely one of the most idealistic, outspoken, and iconoclastic writers of television’s Golden Age. His highly developed social conscience, his strong opinions against bigotry and prejudice, his antipathy toward network censorship, were eloquently expressed in the more than 200 teleplays he wrote and in the many interviews he gave to national newspapers and magazines- by Linda Jay Brandt

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Community meeting with the Diversity Commission of the City of Lynnwood

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Recent actions by local police have damaged trust between local police and residents. For example, many residents when stopped for traffic infractions have been asked about their immigration status, and later sent to Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

When this happens, many people no longer feel safe reporting crimes or collaborating as witnesses.

The Diversity Commission will hear stories from Seattle, where residents and city officials have worked together to pass an ordinance and build relationships that are making the community safe for all residents. These examples show that trust between police and the community make the community safer and stronger.

Come and join us, and let’s work together to make Lynnwood a safe and welcoming city!

WHERE:   Lynnwood Library 

                  19200 44th Ave W 
   Lynnwood, WA 98036 

WHEN:   6:30PM

WHERE:   Wednesday, October10th

 

Washington Community Action Network

La Red Activa Comunitaria de Washington

220 S River St

Seattle, WA 98108

206-389-0050 x106

WASHINGTONCAN!

 

Find Out What It Means To Me

 

 

My Mom’s family live in Hawaii and over the years I’ve been treated to ” Happy Hawaiin Stories ” by my friends here on the mainland.

One came from a person at a party over heard me mention my Mom had grown up in Hawaii.

This guy told me how on one of his many trips to Hawaii he once he dropped a dollar and this” Little Old Crippled Up Hawaiin Lady  in a mu’u mu’u ” chased them down the street waving the dollar in the air and calling for them to stop.

Just remembering how funny she looked trying to chase them down  ‘always busts him up’.

so he said that the next day he threw a penny down and these ” Hawaii  people”  dove on top of it and raced around trying to find the owner.

Everyone knew it was a ‘joke’ and laughed.

I mean, why not laugh? It’s not like he was making fun of ‘real people’ right?

Well, take a look at this story- it is about real people.

Really.

It’s time to kick myth of crabs in a bucket

ISLAND VOICES
Honolulu Advertiser
Sunday, January 27, 2002

By Kekailoa Perry
Student of Hawaiian history and an activist

Here in Hawai’i there’s a myth known as the alamihi crab syndrome. It is used to explain everything from the 1893 overthrow of the monarchy to the Office of Hawaiian Affairs’ circus-like atmosphere.

We are taught in schools, neighborhoods and workplaces that the Native Hawaiian people carry on like alamihi crabs trying to climb out of a bucket. Each time one is able to get to the top, another crab reaches up and pulls it down. Over the years people have accepted this fiction as truth.

Though Native Hawaiians struggle daily to overcome the effects of the alamihi crab syndrome, the subtle attack on their identity undermines their souls’ aloha. When the alamihi story becomes part of the unspoken fabric of the school systems, economics and government, attempts to overcome the negative stereotype become a momentous task requiring a lifetime of educating and soul-searching. In fact, Native Hawaiian people have gone so far as to live out the life prescribed for them via this fictitious story.

Today, there is no lack of alamihi examples when we look at OHA, Punana Leo, the Department of Hawaiian Home Lands, Kamehameha Schools and other Hawaiian institutions: Hawaiians pulling other Hawaiians down just as we’ve been taught to do. Life in the proverbial bucket becomes a mainstay for many who can no longer see the rocks and seashore on the other side. In fact, many Hawaiians have become rather comfortable in the bucket system and tend to do extremely well there.

The OHA bucket is a breeding ground for personal gain and political influence. Since accepting the table scraps from the overrated ceded lands settlement of the Waihe’e era, OHA has become a sweltering hole of power plays and favoritism. Some trustees use OHA’s economic power to leverage political influence and elevate themselves to higher office.

Other trustees and Hawaiian leaders use their positions to gain greater political exaltedness. The result is that the Hawaiian people and the programs that are meant to serve them fall straight to the bottom of the bucket.

OHA is just a microcosm of the Native Hawaiians’ sad state of affairs. No one entity — not Ka Lahui, DHHL or even Alu Like Inc. — has escaped the tentacles of the alamihi myth. Table scraps from so-called ceded lands and Hawaiian Home Lands settlements do nothing to turn the tide. They simply perpetuate the same misinformation and colonizing history.

The alamihi story dictates that our survival is dependent on life in the bucket. Anyone who believes that there is life outside the bucket should be pulled down and put in his place.

Is this truly a Hawaiian point of view? Is this the aloha we so proudly wave as the military and tourists come into our country without regard for the ethnocide that is committed by their very presence? Of course not. Yet, for any one of us to try to see the world outside the bucket is almost like yelling “fire!” in front of a firing squad. Very few have the courage to do so and accept the eventual freedom that comes with such an act. We doom ourselves, against our gut feelings, to live out the life of crabs in a bucket.

In traditional times, Native Hawaiians never kept crabs in buckets. In fact, there were no buckets until Capt. James Cook and his diseased crew fell upon our shores. Whenever Hawaiians needed crabs, they collected them from the environment, where they thrived in coexistence with other creatures. You see, the natural habitat for the crabs is atop the rocks, a solid foundation. In their natural environment, the alamihi crabs do not tear each other down. There’s no need, because there is a place for all of them on the stable foundation of the ‘?ina.

When we realize this simple truth, we understand that the Native Hawaiian life in the bucket is alien, unbalanced and insecure. In the bucket, humanity gives way to violence, and integrity is replaced with unethical behavior. This should not be surprising, considering the intent and purpose of the story: to keep everyone in Hawai’i believing that the native people should fare no better than the lowest in society, thus keeping Native Hawaiians trapped in a soul-strangling lifestyle.

The Hawaiian, like the crab, was never meant to live in a bucket. Hawaiians must flourish on the solid foundation rooted in their spirituality and culture. That foundation is not OHA. Neither is it a nation within a nation. In either case, the people will continue to exist in the proverbial U.S. bucket. The foundation must be an independent one, and the people become consciously aware of their colonial situation.

Will such a thing occur? Not overnight, but it will happen. Of course, we need to be willing to live outside of the bucket. In fact, this is one bucket we should all be willing to kick.

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an alien idea

brought to you by

an alien writer

Civil Rights From The Twilight Zone

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Rod Serling gave this speech back in 1968, just after I turned four years old. (link at the end of this post)

 In the wake of Jena, The ICE Raids and the Wars in Iraq And Afghanistan as well as the questions raised by the Patriot Act

one can see that

Rod Serling could have given this speech yesterday.

How sad and how utterly tragic that is.

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moorpark college

Suddenly we are a nation whose new battle slogan is law and order. 

Last year it won countless numbers of elections. 

It’s the great new American euphemism. 

Law and Order. 

It is now interchangeable with God, Motherhood, the Constitution and the Holy Grail. 

But how empty and how suspect is this sloganry when it points up the incredible selectivity on the part of America’s citizenryhow picky and choosey they are when it comes to moral outrage. 

Rod Serling

December 4, 1968

Moorpark College

It’s Not Like The Movies

So I go to this meeting that about Race and Immigration and sitting up in the front row is this seven foot tall ( okay, he wasn’t that tall ) white guy with blond hair cut military short and black boots but he’s wearing casual clothes in neutral colors and everytime someone from the press took a picture of the speaker and he was in the shot he would cover the lower part of his face with his hand or look down into his lap.

Yeah.

That’s what I thought too.

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Bring It On Home Baby

As I’ve mentioned here in my journal before, I think it’s important to stand up for what you believe in, that it sometimes it comes at a cost and that at other times you have to wonder if the price you’re going to have to pay is going to be worth it.

Here in my state an individual who is running for city Council in a neighboring city has been routinely targeting individuals who dare to speak up for the rights of others or to express opinions contrary to her own on her website

She runs their pictures on her front page, tells people where they work and live and in a very indirect way ‘ encourages’ her readers to be aware of these people.

Recently this person has targeted  my husband.

She ran his picture; distorted facts about his support of human rights and out right misrepresented his position on immigration.

 And then posted it all on the front page of a racist website.

She also told like-minded individuals where we live.

From her site

“The open borders crowd, including Democrat Kingpin Luis Moscoso (far left of course),”…

Luis Moscoso, Dist. 1 Democrat kingpin from Mountlake Terrace (with halo) nuzzles up with WA Gov. Christine Gregoire (sitting, no tiara) and other democrats to spend some more taxpayer cash

Quotes only- I will not provide links to this individual’s forum here.

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On the face one could feel intimated and fearful. But in the world my husband and I live in we have good friends, we belong to a strong community and have the support of individuals who work every single day to make our Community a better and a safer one for everybody.

Even for people like her.