PRI candidate Enrique Peña Nieto Front-Runner for Mexican Presidency

Enrique Peña Nieto, photo by codiceenlinea.com

Polls for the July 1st Mexican Presidential election show Enrique Peña Nieto, of the PRI, leading PAN candidate, Josefina Vázquez Mota, and PRD candidate, Andrés Manuel Lopez Obrador.

These three candidates are vying to replace current president, Felipe Calderón of the conservative PAN party.  Calderón has lost the popularity he had at the outset of his term in 2006 in large part because of frustration with the ongoing drug war.

Calderón cannot run for a second term because Mexican law limits presidents to a single six-year presidency.

PAN’s candidate to replace him, Vázquez Mota is a former Secretary of Education who has sought to distance herself from the current president. She has said that she will look to create consensus between the parties and uses the one word campaign slogan, “Diferente.”

PRI candidate Peña Nieto has benefitted from the unpopularity of Calderón.  Many see the former Mexico State governor as the person who can bring Mexico back to a time before the drug wars. Others associate his party, the PRI, with suppressing democracy in Mexico for most of 20th century.

Liberal PRD candidate, Lopez Obrador, sits in third place according to recent polls from La Reforma and Consulta Mitofsky.  He lost the previous presidential race in a closely contested 2006 election to current president Felipe Calderón.

In the event that no single candidate wins over 50% of the vote, the two most popular candidates will challenge each other in a run-off election.  The next Mexican President will take office December 1.

Observing the night sky

Look up at the sky. Do you see those two bright dots that appear right before dusk every evening? Those aren’t stars. They’re planets! I’m sure by now most of you are aware of Venus and Jupiter’s brief rendezvous during the month of March, which resulted in an amazing planetary alignment. But did you know there are other planets gracing us with their presence? In fact, Saturn, the faintest visible planet is as bright as the brightest stars and its rings can be seen through a backyard telescope. Saturn comes up in the east at nightfall in early April and will stay out from dusk until dawn in mid-April (April 15), when it will shine at its brightest for the year.

The red planet, Mars can still be seen in the south-east sky at dusk and nightfall (look for a faint red dot) and it stays out all night, keeping watch on all the night owls. Mercury, the innermost planet, rises in the east before sunrise so it will be difficult to view in the Northern Hemisphere.

All throughout April, Jupiter and Venus will be the first two planets to appear with Venus being the higher and brighter planet and Jupiter the lower. Although Jupiter is still very visible for those who know where to look, it settles itself closer to the horizon a few hours after nightfall and will disappear from view in late April or early May. Jupiter will leave the sky altogether on May 13 and Venus will make its final appearance on June 5 and 6.

It’s not difficult to see all the beauty the night sky has to offer – even with light pollution. “All you have to do is look up and wait,” says Jose Francisco Salgado, Astronomer and Science visualizer at the Adler Planetarium who strives to find innovative ways of educating people about our solar system.

Salgado also told me that technology has advanced so much that it’s continuously opening new windows to make new, exciting discoveries, like the fact that there are currently planets orbiting stars. However, one does not have to be an astronomer to discover something new about the universe. All you need is an inquisitive mind and a reminder to keep looking up.

**Here are some important dates to look out for:

  • April 15 - Saturn reaches opposition and will be visible from dusk until dawn
  • April 22 - If you have an unobstructed view of the horizon and a clear sky, you might be able to see the last pairing of the waxing crescent moon and Jupiter
  • April 23, 24 and 25 – you should have no trouble viewing the waxing crescent moon close to Venus
  • On any moonlit night in early April, you can get a good view of Jupiter’s four largest moons with a backyard telescope
  • April 30 – you’ll get a chance to see the moon with the red planet

 

A sample of how the evening crescent moon, Jupiter and Venus will appear at dusk on April 22

2012 Chicago Baseball Preview

“I think the Sox and Cubs are so bad that an all-star team made of only Chicago players would come in 5th in the AL east.” – the opinion of a fellow freelance writer

Many believe that this will be a long season for the Cubs and the Whitesox. I wont bore you with what the “experts” say. I will just tell you what you need to know.

The Cubs start their season at the friendly confines this afternoon at 1:20 pm against the Washington Nationals. Ryan Dempster will take the mound against Stephen Strasburg.

The Whitesox will start their season against the defending American League Champion Texas Rangers at 1:05 pm Friday afternoon. John Danks will take the mound for the southsiders while Colby Lewis starts for the Rangers.

Best-case scenario for the Cubs and Sox

  •  Cubs – .500 record.
  •  Whitesox – The team challenges for the second wild card spot.

 Worst-case scenario for the Cubs and Sox

  •  This could be the worst baseball season in Chicago collectively since the 1970’s.

Enjoy the season baseball fans!!!

 

And I thought “Latino” was the way to go: Pew Hispanic Releases Study

Today the Pew Hispanic Center released a report about Latinos and identity named “When Labels Don’t Fit: Hispanics and Their Views of Identity.” They also sent out this email summarizing the data that they found.

Nearly four decades after the United States government mandated the use of the terms “Hispanic” or “Latino” to categorize Americans who trace their roots to Spanish-speaking countries, a new nationwide survey of Hispanic adults finds that these terms still haven’t been fully embraced by Hispanics themselves. A majority (51%) say they most often identify themselves by their family’s country of origin; just 24% say they prefer a pan-ethnic label.

Moreover, by a ratio of more than two-to-one (69% versus 29%), survey respondents say that the more than 50 million Latinos in the U.S. have many different cultures rather than a shared common culture. Respondents do, however, express a strong, shared connection to the Spanish language. More than eight-in-ten (82%) Latino adults say they speak Spanish, and nearly all (95%) say it is important for future generations to continue to do so.

Hispanics are also divided over how much of a common identity they share with other Americans. About half (47%) say they consider themselves to be very different from the typical American. And just one-in-five (21%) say they use the term “American” most often to describe their identity. On these two measures, U.S.-born Hispanics (who now make up 48% of Hispanic adults in the country) express a stronger sense of affinity with other Americans and America than do immigrant Hispanics.

The survey finds that, regardless of where they were born, large majorities of Latinos say that life in the U.S. is better than in their family’s country of origin. Also, nearly nine-in-ten (87%) say it is important for immigrant Hispanics to learn English in order to succeed in the U.S.

This report explores Latinos’ attitudes about their identity, including race; their language usage patterns; their core values; and their views about the U.S. and their families’ country of origin. It is based on findings from a national bilingual survey of 1,220 Hispanic adults conducted Nov. 9 through Dec. 7, 2011, by the Pew Hispanic Center, a project of the Pew Research Center.

In addition, about 51 percent of people surveyed use their country of origin to identify themselves. This I can understand, especially if you hang out with different Latinos. In a general term, I have always felt that using Latino was the way to go. But according to this study done, more people prefer the term Hispanic to Latino (33 vs. 14 percent).

We are currently in an influx of paying attention to Latinos in the United States. This typically comes in waves. First it was the Latino Boom with Ricky Martin’s music when people realized we were here, then it was the immigration crisis and now it’s the immense population boom from the Census statistics. We’re also in the midst of a presidential election that is more potently discriminatory in various fashions and our community is being used to scare them straight…or crazy: “If you don’t sound appealing to Latinos…”

This study only goes to show what Latinos in the community have been saying all along: We can’t be pigeon-holed. We can’t be categorized. We’re an intelligent group of people, immigrants or native born, and we know what we like and what we don’t. The one piece that I found exceptionally important in this study was the fact that 95 percent of those surveyed felt that it’s important to keep Spanish going in future generations. On top of that, 82 percent of adults surveyed say they speak Spanish. Another thing we’ve said repeatedly: WE’RE BILINGUAL. I feel a sense of warm to finally see numbers portraying our beliefs. Makes me see for a fact that we weren’t just making it all up.

Regardless, the dense studies of the changing Latino demographic are emerging left and right. People have written about it for years, but now we have studies, numbers and statistics. Marketers, corporations and companies are still trying to grasp the meaning of all of this and in a way, so are we. As someone who fits into these studies, I find myself a bit confused in attempting to understand myself from an outsiders perspective. But nonetheless, the one main point that I draw from all of this is that I know what they’re talking about because I’m living it and they’re studying me.

 

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Chicago Beer Festival

Saturday afternoon and evening Union Station will host the Chicago Beer Festival.

According to their very slim website the festival will feature “dozens of domestic and international beers, as well as Chicago’s favorite local breweries.”

As a homebrewer and a craft beer enthusiast I remember the days when the Middle West lagged way behind the west coast and Europe for fine beers. But around the time I got old enough to drink legally the “fad” of making good beer started to take hold all over the country. Now, almost a decade later, that “fad” seems to be here to stay with great breweries in and around Chicago like: Half Acre, Five Rabbit, and Revolution Brewery. Even if the purchase of Goose Island makes 312 a little less local, the community continues grow.

We’ll have some more coverage for you after the event on Monday. If you have any thoughts about the fest, the state of beer in Chicago, or even if you’ll just be at the event please let us know.

Chicago Beer Festival
1 pm – 4 pm and 6 pm – 9 pm
Union Station
210 S. Canal St.

Fact checking > Yellow journalism

Conservative radio show host Rush Limbaugh made some inflammatory comments about La Raza. Limbaugh insinuated that La Raza, the nation’s largest Latino civil rights and advocacy organization has not been vocal about the Trayvon Martin shooting because George Zimmerman, Martin’s killer has identified himself as being Hispanic.

“You know, that’s an interesting point,” Limbaugh said to one of the callers to his show. “You’re right. I haven’t heard a word from La Raza about this.”

When I hear comments like that two words come to mind: Yellow Journalism. According to most journalists, anyone who engages in this practice exploits, distorts, or exaggerates the news to create sensations and attract readers.

This story was picked up by an African-American website called The Grio. The Grio did not say that La Raza was wrong for not discussing the story they just mentioned that Limbaugh insinuated that La Raza was distancing itself from the story because of Zimmerman’s Latino heritage.

The blame for this type of journalism falls at the feet of Rush Limbaugh and The Grio. I wonder if any of them even bothered to check if this was even true. In case you are wondering, I did some fact checking of my own. La Raza did indeed release a statement regarding the Trayvon Martin shooting over a week ago read it here.

If anybody out here has ever read any of my blogs, I always stress to people to do their own research, connect the dots and come to your own conclusions.

 

March Madness brings out the ugly in everybody

Why didn’t the fans of Southern Mississippi  University’s basketball team know that Puerto Rico is a U.S. territory(which means they are U.S. Citizens)??

Why does a Chicago police officer tell a journalist and a photographer that their first amendment rights can be “revoked?”

And why have more people in social media posted links about Kony 2012 than about Trayon Martin?? 

I think that it is very interesting that an armed neighborhood watch volunteer can disregard the orders of a police dispatcher and go after a teenager,shoot him, and not be arrested. That does doesn’t sound right does it??? The kid was armed with a bag of Skittles and an iced tea. Sounds like he’s armed and dangerous. I’m okay with people wanting to post about Kony 2012 as long as they also post things about stuff going on here in the city too. It bothers me that people have no problem posting things about places they know very little about and completely ignore stuff that happens in the city i.e. the 6 year old girl who killed in Little Village when she was sitting on the porch.

So why was voter turnout  at an all-time low last night??

I think that it was a referendum on how people are aware than some politicians are not interested in being public servants. People are fed up with politicians who take cash bribes and only come around during election time looking for votes. It is very difficult to get people excited about elections when the general public decides to give all elected officials a no-confidence vote.

Evan F. Moore is a Freelance journalist who also is a blogger for Chicago Now. He blogs at Fanning the Flames since 1978.

So much violence. Where are the answers?

Special contribution by Stephen Franklin

I’m frustrated and maybe you can help.

I hope you can. 

When I first read the news accounts of 6-year-old Aliyah Shell’s death, it sadly seemed like so many other news stories.

A child killed by a random bullet. Police say it may be gang-related. Family, neighbors, and many others are heart-broken and outraged.

Same story, again.

Next I saw Superintendent Garry McCarthy, quoted at a news conference saying that the gun violence which fatally swallowed Aliyah Shell and nine others and injured 39 others over the weekend, was largely the result of gang violence.

And gangs have splintered and sprawled, he said, according to a story in the Sun-Times, making it more difficult to track them. Still, he said police know that gangs have had a greater role in the mayhem, claiming as much as 80 percent of the firearm violence in the city.

What I would like to know is what is exactly going on with these gangs. I remember folks from CeaseFire saying a while ago that some of the violence nowadays comes form gang wannabes, or just dumb tough kids, which makes it even more chaotic.

I would like to know why gangs live on in here despite years of police crackdowns. What is missing here? Not long ago I figured out that possibly as much as $100 million comes into Chicago yearly to deal with youth violence.

Tell me if this money is making a difference. Tell me if goes off in different directions or there’s a broad strategy in place.

And what feeds the gangs’ existence?

Is it the poverty that appears deeper and more punishing in many poor black and Latino communities?

Is it the sea of guns? If so, tell me about these guns. Where do they come from? What kind of guns are they? Tell me about the life of a gun so I can see the toll it takes.

Is the drugs? If so, tell me how they are marketed and who sells them and what happens the dealers? Let me see the lines that connect the drug links here.

I see from the Tribune that homicides are up 42 percent so far this year, and nonfatal shootings are up, too, 38 percent. I wonder about people who have been shot multiple times because we know that’s a reality too.  How many carry such wounds?

Tell me where the violence reigns. What streets? What police beats? Tell me who are the people the police arrest.

Tell me about violence’s long lingering impact on the streets where it happened, on the victims and the families it touched and  on the  emergency crews, the police, the court workers and all who regularly face it. Take me to the county jail or state prison or wherever I can hear from those who are the major actors in this terrible tragedy.

I wonder too about the latest count of those who have been paralyzed or disabled from the violence. I’ve heard that these numbers have been growing lately.

Help me see the larger picture.

Tell me what is happening in this broad human context so I can see where differences might be made.

Help me to spread the word that we don’t want the same story with few questions asked and few answers offered.

So, please pass the word that we have to know more.

If you work for a non-profit agency, or you are a journalist, or you simply care about what’s happening, talk to me. Let’s change the story.

We need to understand so we don’t hear the same story again and again this summer.

Talk to me. And most importantly, talk to the news media.

Steve@chicagoistheworld.org

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Review: Vetusta Morla at Chicago’s Instituto Cervantes

It is one of the most beautiful nights Chicago has ever seen and those of us gathered at Instituto Cervantes have just been told by the music hall’s master of ceremonies, that we are about to embark on a very “emotional experience.” Pause. Say what? The audience responds with giggles and soon everyone is wearing bright smiles as it is quickly proven that the MC was right. Spain’s Vetusta Morla performed in stellar fashion, full on rock mode from the very first song, surprising and immediately engaging those who were expecting an acoustic performance. It seemed the band was still reeling from weekend performances at Austin’s South by Southwest Music and Media Conference (SXSW).

The six band members of Vetusta Morla, who are currently on tour and heading to Mexico for a performance at the acclaimed Vive Latino music festival, had us entranced as soon as they set foot on stage. Curiously, the drummer and his kit were situated behind a large see-through sound structure while a second smaller drum/percussion set, together with a second keyboard and several electronic devices, was to his right. It was a small space for so many musicians and instruments, but it didn’t matter one bit as the band declared they were there to rock Chicago. They performed over 12 songs, re-exploring singles from most of their albums including Un Dia En El Mundo and their most recent release, Mapas.

Video: Vetusta Morla – Lo Que Te Hace Grande

It’s endearing to watch Vetusta Morla create their alternative rock, pop, fairy tale sounds before us. They are keen on details, eager to quench our high expectations. You can feel how important it was that the rhythm guitarist was on bent knee during the song Baldosas Amarillas, creating mini-passages of sound with the continuous twist of guitar pedals. The song’s romantic lyrical poetry alone induces sighs of disbelief. It was like imagining the sound track to a sound track.

The band also provoked dancing in the aisles as soon as Copenhague was uttered, eluding to the song’s idea of letting go. They were eager to play their best and proved this time and again, for example, during El Hombre Del Saco when three of them improvised the opening drum sounds by tapping together large wooden sticks in effortless rhythm. They played into the most perfect of endings ever seen at Instituto Cervantes.

Vetusta Morla continues its tour with several dates in Mexico, returning to perform in Los Angeles in early April, then heading home to Spain for several headlining performances. Their album Mapas is available on iTunes as well as the band’s website. As an added bonus, Mapas includes a postcard for each of their songs. Perfection!

March 21st election primer

Mudslinging, scare tactics and random people putting elections signs in your front yard while you sleep. YES!! It’s that time of time of the year. The Democratic primary is today March 20, 2012. There are several races that might pique your interest.

Incumbent Edward Acevedo, the state representative in the 2nd district is running for re-election against community leader Cuahutemoc Morfin (unsuccessfully ran for alderman in 25th ward last year) and Josip “Joe” Trutin. The 2nd congressional district includes portions of Bridgeport, Pilsen, Chinatown, McKinley Park, Back of the Yards and Brighton Park.

Ricardo Munoz has been Alderman of the 22nd ward since 1993. Now Munoz wants to move from the city council to county government by challenging incumbent Dorothy Brown for the position of the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Cook County. According to Alderman Munoz, the website of the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Cook County is not up to date.” In DuPage County 85% of paperwork is filed electronically. They save money by not having to push paper around and my opponent has been promising electronic filing since the year 2000. She’s been there for 12 years She hasn’t been able to do it so it’s time to get out of the way.” Munoz said

There are two races that have gotten down right nasty.

Maria Antonia “Toni” Berrios is running for re-election in the Illinois General Assembly as the 39th District State Representative. Her Northwest Side Chicago district includes parts of the Avondale, Belmont Cragin, Dunning, Hermosa, Irving Park, Portage Park and Logan Square communities. The five-term state representative is running against former Huffington Post Associate Editor and Beat Reporter Will Guzzardi. This race got really nasty when Berrios sent out several mailers, accusing Guzzardi of being backed by a law firm that was found to provide cover for a tax shelter scheme that cheated taxpayers out of more than $62 million.

The 21st District seat seems to pit two up and coming opponents who are backed by Alderman Ricardo Munoz and Juan Rangel, CEO of United Neighborhood Organization, the Latino charter school organization. Rudy Lozano, Jr. (backed by Ald.Munoz) is up against former journalist Silvana Tabares (backed by Rangel). Things got interesting in this campaign when a mailer was sent out by Tabares’ campaign saying that Lozano is influenced by local street gangs.

Cook County State’s Attorney Anita Alvarez is running unopposed which is a real shame since it appears that no one out there wants to take advantage of the R.J. Vanecko controversy she was remotely involved in.

Honorable mention for good old fashion Chicago-style corruption goes to State Rep. Derrick Smith; Smith was arrested last week for allegedly collecting a $7,000 cash bribe to write an official letter of support for a day care center that is seeking a state grant. Smith was appointed last year to fill a vacancy in the General Assembly representing parts of city’s Near West and Near Northwest sides.

After reading this maybe you do your civic duty and vote. Or you will sit at home doing whatever it is you already do.