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#olvidados
leregirenga · 6 months
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Huir, escapar, perderse en quien sabe donde, en sitios olvidadas, en distancias, en lejanías de países o culturas extrañas para ti. Perderse por temporadas para descansar la mente de tantas chingaderas, alejarse de personas tóxicas, de cosas indeseables, de momentos caóticos. Estar lejos para que te valoren y valorar tu también, ya que dicen que uno no sabe lo que tiene hasta que ve que lo ha perdido. Por eso pienso que si tuviera un super poder, eligiría volar, ya que eso me daría la posibilidad de trasladarme a donde quisiera, a lugares remotos y exóticos, en donde la tranquilidad y la paz serían mis compañeros de cuarto y ahí, emprender nuevos caminos o cielos por explorar. Leregi Renga
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carlotocotta · 1 year
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CARLOTO COTTA Olvidados (2014) | dir. Carlos Bolado | History, War
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good-memory · 1 year
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Por favor dime que no soy tan facil de olvidar como tu silencio me hace sentir.
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fragmentos-olvidados · 3 months
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lastresartes · 1 year
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Un relato propio que espero que os guste..
Soy un cuadro olvidado
Soy un cuadro mal pintado, cuyo autor empezó a crear y lo dejó olvidado. Soy una idea que no tiene forma. Soy un retrato que necesita ser acabado, para poder ser expuesto u olvidado...
https://clubdelastresartes.blogspot.com/2021/11/relatos-propios-soy-un-cuadro-olvidado.html
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realidadposts · 1 year
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umass-digiturgy · 2 years
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A Brief History of Repatriation and Deportation in the US
by Pedro Eiras (MFA in Dramaturgy and Assistant Dramaturgy and Assistant Director for Olvidados)
The US has a long history of deportation, expulsion and repatriation.  Despite its standing as a nation created by immigrants, it has deported nearly 57 million people since 1882, which is more than any other country in the modern world. In 1798, merely 22 years after the US became an independent nation, the Alien and Sedition Act was signed, giving the president the power to deport “alien enemies” in times of war. In the decades that followed, legislation on all levels of government gave states and the federal government power to remove unwanted people from their borders. Oftentimes, the target of deportations and forced relocations have been those on whose backs this country was built, such as when the American Colonization Society, established in 1816, advocated and carried out the expulsion of free Black people from the United States, a cause promoted by founding father Thomas Jefferson and, later, Abraham Lincoln.
 In 1830, Andrew Jackson passed the Indian Removal Act and enlisted the U.S. Army to force Native Americans in the Southeast—the Creeks, the Cherokees, the Choctaws, the Chickasaws, and the Seminoles— westward. In the forced migration of 16,000 Cherokee men, women, and children, as many as 4,000 died of disease, drought, or exposure. A few decades later, in 1882, the Chinese Exclusion Act was signed, followed by what was known as the Driving Out period, during which time hundreds of Chinese immigrants were beaten, burned alive, forced into hiding and starvation, and, eventually, deportation. 
 The desire to remove people of color from this country is an American tradition, but it was not until the last decades of the nineteenth century that a series of Congressional acts and Supreme Court decisions created the framework for these deportations to happen with the establishment of a vast federal immigration bureaucracy. It was under the auspices of this new deportation machine that the Mexican Repatriation of the Great Depression took place. During that period, Mexican immigrants and many Mexican-Americans were blamed for the economic downturn and huge unemployment rates of the Great Depression and then targeted because of their race. Many scholars now consider Repatriation as an ethnic cleansing effort. The Mexican Repatriation was a brutal practice that shipped away hundreds of thousands of people, many of whom were rightful citizens and many more who were born here.
 Their plight was, unfortunately, not unprecedented. They were neither the first nor the last group of people to be deported or repatriated after being exploited in the US, though the number of people repatriated during this time far outnumbers any other such movements in the history of the United States. Later, in 1953, Puerto Ricans became the target of efforts of repatriation. Officials in Chicago estimated that the population of Puerto Ricans there had grown to twenty thousand people. This boom in migration caused concern on the part of city officials who viewed Puerto Ricans as contributing to “serious problems in the community.” Alvin E. Rose, commissioner of public welfare for Cook County, traveled to Puerto Rico to discuss plans to repatriate migrants with local authorities. He also publicly discouraged any other “unskilled workers” from coming to Chicago. There is private correspondence that shows he planned to “ship Puerto Ricans back in plane lots and allegedly urged the public welfare agency ‘not to make it too easy for them to stay or bring others in.’”
 This impetus to deport, remove or repatriate mainly people of color became even more institutionalized in 2002, when President Bush signed the Homeland Security Act which, in turn, created the modern framework of border control, patrol and deportation. This movement only increased during Obama’s presidency, when over 4 million people, many rightfully requesting asylum in the United States, were deported or removed from the US. In fact, the daily number of noncitizens detained both at the border and internally increased from 7,475 in 1995 to 33,330 in 2011, three years into Obama’s first term. This led Janet Murguía, a third-generation Mexican American and president of UnidosUS, the most important Latino advocacy organization in the country, to label Obama as the “Deporter in Chief.”
 During Trump’s Presidency, the number of deportations and expulsions decreased, but the number of immigrants being detained increased dramatically, to over 50,000 a day in 2019. It was also under his “zero tolerance” immigration policy that thousands of families were separated, with kids as young as four months old being removed from their parents. In 2020, during the early days of the covid pandemic, Trump enacted Title 42, allowing for the immediate expulsion of immigrants without any due process. President Biden kept Title 42 in place until May 2022, and during that time, the order was used to expel those legally seeking asylum over 1.7 million times.
 Sources:
Decade of Betrayal: Mexican Repatriation in the 1930s, by Francisco E. Balderrama and Raymond Rodríguez, 2006
Becoming Mexican American : Ethnicity, Culture, and Identity in Chicano Los Angeles, 1900-1945 by George J. Sanchez,   Charles Bergquist,  and Ricardo Penaranda, 1993
The Deportation Machine: America’s Long History of Expelling Immigrants, by Adam Goodman, 2020
Once I was You: A Memory of Love and Hate in a Torn America, by Maria Hinojosa, 2020
Brown in the Windy City: Mexicans and Puerto Ricans in Postwar Chicago, Lilia Fernandez[MOU4] , 2012
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dxys · 1 year
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¿Estás llenando mi ausencia con alguien más?
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conalola · 5 months
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Somos el mejor país de Chile 🇨🇱
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efimeracamaleonica · 5 months
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Mi boquita 😍🥰💖🥵🫠❤️‍🔥
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el-diablo-espacial · 5 months
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Eterno silencio🍃
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r3-sensible · 1 year
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No me olvides.
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Créditos a quien corresponda
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heartmondox · 11 months
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Random thoughts I
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