Wednesday, May 30, 2018

Rally demanding justice for Claudia Patricia Gómez González

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New York, NY - New Yorkers, elected officials and advocacy groups gathered on May 30, 2018 at Foley Square to demand justice for Claudia Patricia Gómez González.

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Last week, on May 23rd, unarmed 20 year old, Claudia Patricia Gómez González was shot and killed by Customs and Border Protection (CBP) in Texas. Claudia Gómez, was traveling to the US from a small village in Guatemala to find work to pay for her education.

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On May 30, 2018; a week after Claudia’s death, we are holding a rally at Foley Square to remember her and all those who’ve lost their lives to CBP. We are also demanding justice for Claudia and for Congress to step in and hold accountable those who abuse, separate and kill members of our communities. 

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Our Demands:
🔴 Justice For Claudia. 
🔴 Accountability and transparency for all CBP abuses and killings. 
🔴 Not one more dollar for this rogue agency.

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#AbolishICE #Activism #ClaudiaGomez #demonstration #DirectAction #DumpTrump #FoleySquare #humanrights #ICEfreeNY #ImmigrantNY #immigration #KilledByCPB #MakeTheRoadNY #news #NewYorkCity #NoHumanIsIlegal #NoICEinNY #NYC #NYCC #PeacefulProtest #PeacefulResistance #racism #racist #RefugeesWelcome #ResistTrump #revolution #RiseAndResist #SanctuaryCity #StopICEraids #StopTheHate #TakenFromUs

© Erik McGregor - erikrivas@hotmail.com - 917-225-8963
Hundreds of students gathered at City Hall to urge NYC Mayor and Council Members to take immediate action to ban toxic and polluting plastic foam

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New York, NY - In honor of World Ocean Day 2018, NYC Mayor Bill De Blasio, City Officials and about two hundred students from New York City schools gathered at New York City Hall steps on May 30, 2018, to urge City Council Members to pass Int 135, a bill to ban expanded polystyrene foam (EPS, or commonly called "styrofoam") and to oppose the industry-backed legislation to recycle EPS. 

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In 2013, NYC Council voted “yes’ to ban foam, but two industry-funded lawsuits have blocked this law. Students wanted their voices heard for for plastic-free oceans and to protect the health of marine wildlife, seafood and humans. 

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About 200 students came to City Hall to honor World Oceans Day, and deliver remarks based on research they’ve done about styrofoam pollution and the impacts it can have on the environment, particularly the ocean and in New York City.  

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PS 15 students have been studying marine plastic pollution for the past two years. They have conducted street and litter surveys and studied the life cycle of EPS foam.  

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EPS foam is one of the most common types of plastic pollution (Ocean Conservancy, 2016) and 80% of marine litter originates on land. EPS foam pollution easily breaks up into tiny, toxic pieces that are entering our local waterways at alarming rates. Once in our waters, microplastic foam litter acts like sponges, taking up chemical pollutants, such as pesticides, that make it even more toxic. Then it can be eaten by marine organisms as small as microscopic plankton, the base of our food chain, or as large as giant filter feeding whales. 

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EPS foam is made from styrene and benzene, both petroleum based chemicals. Styrene is recognized as a known animal carcinogen and found "reasonably anticipated to be a human carcinogen" by the National Toxicology Program and "probably carcinogenic to humans" by the International Agency for Research on Cancer.  

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“Each piece of expanded polystyrene foam may break up into THOUSANDS of tiny, toxic pieces,” said one PS 15 5th grader,  “and the more pieces that the foam breaks up into, the more creatures that can get sick from EATING all the pieces!” 

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“Just imagine if you were a tiny, tiny fish and then just imagine you see these little, little tiny pieces of food,” said another PS 15 5th grade student. “Well, you think it’s food because you don’t know that it’s going to be plastic foam and then a few minutes later you eat some more and then you always feel full.” 

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When people eat hot, greasy or acidic food in EPS foam containers, the chemical, styrene can leach into our food. In 2015, NYC School Food Directors eliminated EPS foam trays from all public school cafeterias due to both environmental and health concerns. The foam was replaced with compostable plates. 

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More than 100 US communities have already banned EPS foam, including Washington, DC, San Francisco, Baltimore, Seattle, Albany County (NY) and Ulster County (NY). Last month, Baltimore City passed a law to ban of foam food containers after 200 students rallied at City Hall, making their voices heard. 

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“It should be our decision to ban foam because we live here in New York City,” stated one student at PS 15 Patrick F Daly (Red Hook, Brooklyn) in response to the lawsuits. “Innocent animals that don’t even know what’s going on have to deal with the mess that people make... We should make environmentally better products.” 

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“The people who make it, should take responsibility for it and they are NOT doing that,” said another PS 15 5th grader. “There are no warning signs on the package when you buy polystyrene.” 

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“If we do not stop this problem now, it will chase up to us the rest of our lives,” said a 6th grade student from PS 188 The Island School. “In 10 years we will be 21 and 22 years old. I don’t want any chemicals in my body.” 

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“I was so proud to join hundreds of New York City students today who are committed to plastic-free oceans and a styrofoam-free City,” said Council Member Brad Lander. “Since young people know they will be inheriting this plastic-choked planet, they are stepping up to take the leadership we need to see on the existential crisis of our time: climate change. I thank Cafeteria Culture and its student leaders for their incredible work to engage students on issues of waste, climate change and environmental sustainability.”  

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“One of the essential functions of a public education is to give students the tools they need to become active citizens in our democracy.  So it’s inspiring to see so many students coming to City Hall today to learn about civic engagement firsthand,” said Eric A. Goldstein, NYC Environment Director at the Natural Resources Defense Council. 

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“Thanks to student and parent advocacy, in 2015, New York City School Food Directors eliminated styrene foam trays from all public schools for both health and environmental reasons,” said Debby Lee Cohen, Executive Director and Founder of Cafeteria Culture. ”Students in our Plastic Free Waters program are happy to learn that our city is dedicated to protecting the health of 1.1 million students.” 

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#Activism #BanFoam #BanPlastic #BillDeBlasio #BradLander #CafeteriaCulture #carcinogens #CarlinaRivera #children #CityHall #EPSfoam #ExpandedPolystyreneFoam #foam #Int135 #microplastics #NewYork #NYC #NYCMayor #OffFossilFuels #PlasticFree #PlasticFreeWaters #Pollution #PressConference #PublicSchools #SchoolKids #styrofoam

© Erik McGregor - erikrivas@hotmail.com - 917-225-8963

Sunday, May 27, 2018

The 5th Annual TheaterLab at the 2018 Loisaida Festival: Bridging Resurgence

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Since 1987, the Loisaida Festival has been celebrated the Sunday before Memorial Day weekend in the Manhattan neighborhood known as the Lower East Side, the East Village, or Loisaida. This event is the largest community pride festival in the neighborhood and grows annually in size, excitement, and impact. It is presented in the Avenue C commercial corridor-renamed Loisaida Avenue since 1989.

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The Loisaida Festival includes diverse manifestations of the Puerto Rican and Latino cultures expressed through music, cuisine and arts. Although it began as a community event to celebrate the culture, heritage and accomplishments of Loisaida’s Puerto Rican/Hispanic community, the event has created a multi-cultural spirit where people from all races and backgrounds descend from all parts on the city into this historic and eclectic neighborhood.

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This year, we celebrate BRIDGING RESURGENCE and the histories and futures of eco-innovation, urbanism, and sustainability pioneered by the people of Loisaida and the diaspora. 

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Anchored at La Plaza Cultural Community Garden, the Loisaida Festival Theater Lab presents a wide variety of theatrical presentations ranging from well-established veteran companies, up-and-coming theater troupes to local youth productions in a green family-friendly outdoor environment. La Plaza Cultural serves as a wonderful outdoor venue and provides an alternative from the noise and crowd of the street with diverse performances for all tastes and ages.

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Calle Joroba - Calle Joroba es un colectivo de clown teatral, teatro físico, circo y títeres creado por el mimo, teatrero y maestro Luis Oliva en el año 2014. La misión del colectivo es poder exponer a través de estas técnicas temas universales como lo son la creación, la escasez del agua, la contaminación del aire, entre más. Su repertorio de piezas incluyen “Am i Ea” (2015), la primera pieza que estrenó el colectivo en el Circo Fest En el 2015 y “Wata” (2016) también presentada en el Circo Fest, que luego estuvo de gira por diferentes escuelas en Puerto Rico. 

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Casa Cruz de la Luna - “The Marquis de Sade is Afraid of the Sea” (second movement) - A re-visitation of the 1918 legendary earthquake in the South West of Puerto Rico; bodies resurrected from the flood; agitation of the masses, and the peaceful violence of quotidian life meet in the staging of this text by Aravind Enrique Adyanthaya. Featuring: Alejandra Morales, Christopher Cancel, Laura Mercedes and Caridad del Valle.

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Teatro 220 - Grupo de jóvenes actores latinos que por medio de la improvisación teatral, llevan comedia, música y entretenimiento para toda la familia. Nuestro fin es llevar alegría, risas e impactar a su audiencia con un mensaje refrescante y positivo. El grupo está compuesto por: Andrés López-Alicea, Gilberto Gabriel, Zuleinette Ralat y Venuz Delmar. Teatro 220, significa que somos ese conducto de 22O voltios de locura por el cual transmitimos alegría y carcajadas a nuestro público.

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Mezcolanza: ¡​Ay María​! - Some neighbors who did not know each other before the hurricane joined after the catastrophe, to collect debris, share food and rely on their needs. These neighbors are the actors and actresses. Some of the people / characters represented in the piece are taken from the Puerto Rican reality, people / characters that we find in our neighborhoods, urbanizations or towns. We also parody public figures and politicians who through the media have been part of the hurricane experience. Cast: Mickey Negrón, Mariana Carbonell, José Eugenio Hernández, José Luis Guitierrez, Marisa Gómez. Directed by​: Maritza Pérez Otero​. THIS PRODUCTION HAS BEEN STAGED IN ALL 78 OF PUERTO RICO'S MUNICIPALITIES. IT IS THE NEW YORK PREMIERE!

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Kairiana Núñez Santaliz: Chiquitita - In Chiquitita, Ms. Miller Parachute Woman is a character that moves between ridiculous and reality. Between the joke and the speeches that have us cornered in the dependency. She is a right-wing military officer. She is a recalcitrant Republican. She repeats neoliberal spiels as if there were critical ideas she owns. The fact is that many military were part of the so-called "Reconstruction" of Puerto Rico after Hurricane Maria. They took over the streets along with the local police. The military returned, as they always return.

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Karen Langevin: Fortune - An interactive whimsical game of chance that uses improvisational movement to foretell. FORTUNE winks at the futility of our desire to know the future through the unavoidable presence of the body.

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Luna y Vecky - After having expanded their audience to more than 15 people, Luna and Vecky decide to make a little concert in The Theater Lab, Mezcolanza platform​. Luna and Vecky studied music at Berkley and fuse their music with different musical genres and performance. They use their music to express their darker feelings. They have been in depression for more than 10 years.

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Paulina Pagán: Bestias de paraíso 2 - El fuego y la jicotea* - In honor of my Caribbean grandmothers, especially Levina Wiltshire (1938-2014) In this piece my body becomes a river, a vessel, a bridge between my ancestors, our island ecology, Puerto Rican bomba, its violent history and the joy of dancing. *The jicotea (Trachemys stejnegeri stejnegeri) is the only native Puerto Rican freshwater turtle. The bomba song “El fuego y la jicotea,” composed by Christian Tonos, ignited this creative process.

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Mickey Negrón: Carpeta - A look at the persecution process that the PR nationalist movement lived in the * 80s and the current solution.

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Eduardo Alegría - Puerto Rican musician and singer-songwriter, developed in theater and experimental dance, improvisation, democracy and politicization of the body. This amalgam of disciplines informs his work. Part of training as an actor he did with the director Maritza Pérez Otero in the political theater. He is an observer of the country and of society. On this occasion he will sing accompanied by Desmar Guevara on the piano.

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Loisaida Community Pageant - The artists used recyclable materials or what is “at hand,” and whatever can be salvaged from NYC curbsides. Adam and Daniel are the lead artists are dedicated to the mission of transforming the detritus of our lives and society into beautiful works. The materials these artists use will include cardboard boxes, scraps of wood and fabric, used latex paint, foam, broken bicycle inner tubes, old cd’s, paper mâché, and whatever other surprise garbage we can find to inspire creativity.

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#Art #Boricua #BoricuaPride #BridgingResurgence #festival #loisaidafest2018 #LowerEastSide #Mezcolanza2018 #NewYork #NYC #Performance #PuertoRico #PuertoRicoNoSeVende #Puppets #streetart #StreetFair #StreetFestival #streetphotography #Theater #TheaterLab #theaterlab2018

© Erik McGregor - erikrivas@hotmail.com - 917-225-8963

Wednesday, May 23, 2018

During Donald's Trump Visit to New York, Several Hundred New Yorkers Protest Loudly Outside Lotte Hotel

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New York, NY - Hundreds of New Yorkers joined members of Rise and Resist to protest Donald Trump's visit to New York City on May 23, 2018, outside the Lotte New York Palace Hotel, where he's expected to participate in a roundtable on immigration and then attend dinner with supporters. Originally this protest was scheduled to be at Trump Tower.

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Donald Trump was in NYC after giving a speech on MS-13 and immigration in Long Island. After calling immigrants ANIMALS, comparison's to Hitler - who called Jews "rats" - are striking. 

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Every time Donald Trump suppresses his cowardice enough to visit New York City, residents turn out in droves to protest his precarious presidency. Today will be no different. Several hundred locals will protest outside Lotte Hotel where Trump announced he'd be today, with drums and noisemakers, chants and signs, and anger and concern. 

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"I will do everything in my power to prevent him from harming more people, spreading more hate, and lying constantly to his constituents with no evident conscience," said Martin Quinn, member of Rise and Resist, the direct action group that organized the protest. "When America has faced the worst of injustice, people took to the streets and won. That's why we're in the street today." 

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Rise and Resist is a diverse group of new and experienced activists committed to opposing, disrupting, and defeating any government act that threatens democracy, equality, and our civil liberties. 

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#Activism #demonstration #DirectAction #DumpTrump #fundraiser #humanrights #impeach #impeachment #ImpeachTrump #LoveTrumpsHate #NewYorkCity #NoHumanIsIlegal #NotMyPresident #NotWelcome #NYC #POTUS #Protest #ResistTrump #RiseAndResist #SanctuaryCity #‎Solidarity #StopTheHate #trumpvsallofus #unwelcome

© Erik McGregor - erikrivas@hotmail.com - 917-225-8963

Friday, May 18, 2018

Hundreds of Palestinian nationals and of Pro-Palestinian activists gathered for Nakba Day 2018 - Great Return March

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New York, NY - March 30th, Land Day, marked the first day of the Great March of Return, a 46 day struggle leading up to Nakba Day on May 15th. From now until then and beyond, we in New York and around the globe must support the ongoing struggle in Palestine. As the struggle escalates throughout historic Palestine and the diaspora, join NY4Palestine as we reiterate our commitment to the liberation and the right of return of all of historic Palestine from the strangles of the settler colonial Zionist state of “israel.” 

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It has been 70 years since nearly 1 million Palestinians were forcibly expelled from their homes by Zionist forces during the Al-Nakba (Arabic for the Catastrophe) To this day they and their descendants are still barred from returning. Israel has recently escalated its racist and genocidal policies, with the detention and killing of children increasing whilst Al-Quds, the capital of Palestine, is under threat. 

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In reaction to the increase in these policies of ethnic cleansing the resilient Palestinian people, alongside their international allies, are organizing to let the world know that the land, from Haifa to Jerusalem to Gaza and all in between, will be liberated and that a sovereign, independent, free Palestine is inevitable as long as its people remain beacons of resistance.

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While we mourn the Nakba, we celebrate the resistance and its steadfast sacrifices in ensuring that the question of Palestine gets an answer. The Zionists did not expect that 70 years later Palestinians would still be fighting for their freedom and dignity. As the fight for liberation continues in the homeland, the fight for liberation continues from inside the belly of the beast. 

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We will be rallying to demand the right of return for ALL Palestinians in the diaspora, to demand Israel keep its hands off al-Quds, to celebrate 70 years of resilience and resistance, and to denounce the settler colonial state of “israel.”

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The Nakba did not end in 1948, nor did the resistance.

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#Activism #AlQuds #Apartheid #BDS #BuildMovementsNotWalls #DirectAction #DumpTrump #EndIslamophobia #FreePalestine #GAZA #GazaSolidarity #GazaUnderAttack #genocide #GreatMarchOfReturn #GreatReturnMarch #HandsOffJerusalem #intifada #IsraeliWarCrimes #JerusalemForAll #NAKBA70 #NewYork #NY4palestine #NYC #NYC2Palestine #Palestine #PeacefulProtest #PeacefulResistance #ResistTrump #Right2Boycott #RightToResist #SanctuaryCity #‎Solidarity #StopTheHate #TimesSquare 

© Erik McGregor - erikrivas@hotmail.com - 917-225-8963