My Social Hub
RSS icon Home icon
  • Zack de la Rocha Returns to Phoenix

    Posted on April 13th, 2009 admin No comments

    zac22Phoenix New Times – The folks that put thousands in Phoenix’s streets February 28 to protest Sheriff Joe Arpaio and the 287(g) program are ready to do it again May 2, with Rage Against the Machine frontman Zack de la Rocha slated to participate as he did before.

    The difference this time is that the anti-Arpaio march will start at the Wells Fargo Building downtown, where the sheriff keeps two pricey floors of executive offices. It will end with stops at Joe’s Estrella and Durango jails.

    “It’s to highlight the 287(g) agreement,” explained Phoenix civil rights leader Salvador Reza of the decision to march to Joe’s gulags. “And how 287(g) is being used in the jails. It’s not good in the jails or in the streets. It’s also to highlight all the abuses that are going on in there, like with the broken arm lady, the broken jaw lady, and anyone else who as been abused in there.”

    Reza’s referring to the fact that the 287(g) program has deputized 160 of Arpaio’s men to enforce federal immigration law. Arpaio not only uses these men in his anti-immigrant hunting sweeps and in his worksite raids, but also in the jails, where they often coerce and sometimes physically injure undocumented immigrants who are being held pending their transfer to ICE custody.
    Read the rest of this entry »

  • Protest at the Village Voice

    Posted on April 8th, 2009 admin No comments

    protestersVillage Voice – Well, it’s nice to know someone cares enough to show up in the rain.

    A handful of AIDS denialists showed up in front of the Voice offices on Cooper Square this afternoon to hand out leaflets protesting our cover story this week.

    In the story, the Voice had complained that the New York Times was acting as though the recent completion of a three-year study by the Vera Institute of Justice had put to rest, finally, any questions about the AIDS-babies-as-guinea-pigs story that gripped much of the town a few years ago.

    Voice staff writer Elizabeth Dwoskin bothered to call folks at the Vera Institute, and found out that far from settling matters, the researchers at the institute were actually very frustrated that, for example, they had never been able to get access to the medical records of the children who had been subjected to AIDS drug testing from 1989 to about 2002, some of whom died.

    Dwoskin then cataloged all of the still-unanswered, troubling questions about how much the children suffered side-effects from toxic experimental drugs, and she also tracked down a 22-year-old who actually lived through the horrific times at Incarnation Children’s Center, something the Times didn’t bother to do.

    The protesters, however, were handing out leaflets suggesting that the Voice somehow “excused” the treatment of the children. But it’s more likely that they didn’t appreciate the way we pointed out that AIDS denialists had contributed to so much disinformation over the years about what happened in the drug trials.

  • New Times Takes On Sheriff Joe Again

    Posted on April 2nd, 2009 admin No comments

    sheriffarpaioprisonerspinkshirtsPhoenix New Times – Stepping off the plane in Washington D.C. this afternoon was like my first trip to New York many moons ago. The cab driver is Russian. The hotel front desk guy is from someplace in Africa. The room service waiter is from El Salvador. In other words, D.C. shows us to be a nation of immigrants. The nativists back in Arizona would freak out.

    Not that you can’t find diversity in Phoenix and Maricopa County, it’s just that it scares the bejeezus out of too many local Caucasians. For many in AZ, Mexicans are a despised class, one that’s ruthlessly exploited, marginalized and cast as criminal, even when members been here for decades, never committed a serious crime, and have children born on American soil.

    Regular readers of Feathered Bastard can guess why I’m here in the nation’s capital — to live blog the House Judiciary Committee Hearing on immigration law, the 287(g) program, and, in part, Sheriff Joe Arpaio’s handling of it. Sadly, Arpaio (pictured) couldn’t make it to the hearings. It would have been grand to see Maricopa County’s boisterous top gendarme under the direct interrogation of the U.S. Congress.

    For those of you who do not dwell in the Grand Canyon State, and are only vaguely familiar with the guy from his appearances on Lou Dobbs, where he once declared, “It’s an honor,” to be referred to as “KKK,” I would suggest you imagine a cross between J. Edgar Hoover and Boss Hogg from The Dukes of Hazzard. That’s to say he’s part clown, part power-mad authoritarian.

    For 16 years, Arpaio has ruled Maricopa County like a petty tyrant. In Arpaio’s Arizona, enemies are retaliated against. Editors and publishers are jailed (as were Village Voice Media Executive Editor Michael Lacey and VVM CEO Jim Larkin in 2007). Deaths and injuries in his medieval gulags are shrugged off, as are the multi-million dollar payouts because of the Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office’s malfeasance. Indeed, Arpaio’s the most-sued sheriff in the nation, with $42.3 million and counting in settlements and awards against his department.

    A little over two years ago, Arpaio jumped on the anti-illegal immigrant bandwagon, and has been riding it ever since. Under the federal 287(g) program, he has the largest contingent of officers deputized to enforce federal immigration law in the country — 160. And he’s been using them for anti-immigrant sweeps in Hispanic neighborhoods, pulling over cooks and gardeners on traffic violations as a pretext to ask them about their immigration status.

    Currently the MCSO is under investigation by the Department of Justice for civil rights violations, and the ACLU has a lawsuit pending concerning allegations of racial profiling. The Democratic leadership of the House Judiciary Committee had called on DOJ to do something, and now DOJ is doing it. These hearings will hopefully explore how this federal 287(g) authority is misused by such bad actors as Arpaio.

    Phoenix New Times’ special reports section on Arpaio has all the background on the Sheriff. As for the hearings themselves, just stay glued to this blog, and I’ll tell you everything you need to know.

  • … and April Fools Begins…

    Posted on April 1st, 2009 admin No comments

    victoryBay Guardian – t was hard in the good old days. Back when we were young and San Francisco was cheap and I was really cool with my long hair and motorcycle and stuff. You could rent an apartment for $200 a month, and even though we weren’t making much money in those days, there was plenty left over for drugs.
    Back then, a guy like me would never have respected a politician like Gavin Newsom. You know: Party pooper. High-society twit. He even blamed his drinking for his tawdry affairs; we always though our tawdry affairs were the best reason for our drinking. And we never went into rehab. How, like, Betty Ford can you be?
    But now I’m older and have a family and take cholesterol medication and I’ve come to realize how much I like Gavin Newsom. I mean, I don’t like him, not all Beth Spotswood or anything, but he’s growing on me. Read the rest of this entry »

  • Mischke Online Radio

    Posted on March 18th, 2009 admin No comments

    Tom Mischke, former KSTP radio personality, is now streaming his show from his house in St. Paul, MN for City Pages. He found the closet off of his main office the best place for setting up the sound booth. Mischke Lights up a cigar, Because he can.

    Tom Mischke, former KSTP radio personality, is now streaming his show from his house in St. Paul, MN for City Pages. He found the closet off of his main office the best place for setting up the sound booth. Mischke Lights up a cigar, Because he can.

    This was a wonderful project to work on. Local celebrity Tom Mischke signed with our Minneapolis paper (citypages.com) and is now hosting a 2 hour program daily online. Tom like it because no FCC regulations. ;)

    Shortly after getting fired by KSTP, radio rebel T.D. Mischke threw out his entire music collection and half his wardrobe. After 17 years of broadcasting, it was time for a change.
    Read the rest of this entry »

  • VVM @ SXSW Part 1

    Posted on March 18th, 2009 admin No comments


    Alltop CEO Guy Kawasaki gave a shout out to L.A. Weekly, the Village Voice and SF Weekly right before his March 17 SxSW keynote with Wired editor Chris Anderson regarding Anderson’s upcoming book, Free. In Kawasaki’s pre-keynote video interview above with Viddler.com, the interviewer (referring to Clay Shirky’s treatise) asked Kawasaki how the concept of “free” applies to newspapers which she refers to as “essentially dead.” Kawasaki said favorably of the Village Voice Media papers:
    Read the rest of this entry »