Wednesday, January 01, 2020

'A new focus for us': Canada's building code being modernized to address climate change

The update is being done this year, and 'the major action will come in 2025,' says National Research Council

A man stands on a residential street surrounded by floodwaters in the town of Rigaud, Que., west of Montreal on April 21, 2019. The new code will upgrade building requirements for wind resistance and how buildings bear snow loads. (Graham Hughes/The Canadian Press)
And as climate change makes all kinds of extreme weather more frequent and more destructive, scientists at the National Research Council are trying to figure out how to ensure Canada's built environment is ready.
"We're going to see change in the way we're designing new buildings to help prevent the spread of wildfire, prevent the damage from flooding," said Marianne Armstrong, who manages the council's research effort.
"We want to create a culture of thinking about resiliency."
The council is coming to the end of a five-year research program that has considered how changing weather and the new norms it brings will affect stresses on buildings, roads, wastewater, transit, bridges and other infrastructure.
More than 100 researchers have been working on the project, which has had a budget of $42.5 million. They include materials experts, ocean scientists and aerospace and transport engineers.
Another 100 organizations, such as universities, provinces and municipalities, have been involved.
Canada's building codes are modernized every five years. The next update is due this year and is likely to see the first changes meant to address the country's new climate reality.

New standards coming

"Climate change, the fact that we now see a rapid change of that environment, is a new focus for us," said Frank Lohmann, the research council's manager of code development.
The new code will upgrade building requirements for wind resistance and how buildings bear snow loads. There will be new rules for rainwater collection. Automatic backflow systems will be compulsory to reduce flooding risk.
New standards related to climate change are also on the way for windows, exterior insulation, fire tests, air barriers and asphalt shingles.
The coming changes are just the start, Lohmann said.
Members of the RCMP return from a boat patrol of a still flooded neighbourhood in High River, Alta., on July 4, 2013. The town of 12,000 just south of Calgary gained an international profile when flooding in parts of southern Alberta resulted in billions of dollars in damage. (Jeff McIntosh/The Canadian Press)
"The major action will come in 2025."
The research council is building a database predicting climate stresses under different scenarios for every region of the country. Researchers are looking into how those stresses are likely to affect the durability of walls and roofs.
Some are developing new guidelines for how structures can better resist higher flood levels. Others are working on how to ensure buildings stay cool during hotter heat waves.
"Just now we're getting the data together for those future climate conditions and coming up with how to design for it," said Armstrong.
"That information will be finished by 2020 and in time to be considered for the next cycle of changes to the building code."
While the council writes the national building code, it has no force until it is adopted by provinces, which write their own regulations. That means scientific advice may be reflected in a variety of ways — from outright rules to guidelines to incentive programs.
Canada is not alone in its efforts. Armstrong is recently back from a conference where Americans, New Zealanders and Australians were all asking the same questions.
"From all perspectives," she said, "Canada is a few years ahead of the game. We have momentum in this country to adapt."
The twisted remains of a building crane hang off a construction project in Halifax on Sept. 8, 2019. Hurricane Dorian brought wind, rain and heavy seas that knocked out power across the region, left damage to buildings and trees as well as disruption to transportation. (Andrew Vaughan/The Canadian Press)

Still more to do

It's a big job.
The council has to consider not only the variables of climate, but the different ways the world will respond to its challenges. It has to look at how Canada's population could shift and how land use will be altered.
"There's still a lot of questions, still a lot of science and work that needs to go in," Armstrong said.
The future's always going to be uncertain. That being said, we can tell you how uncertain, so you can make up your mind how to design for it.- Marianne Armstrong, of Canada's National Research Council
"The future's always going to be uncertain. That being said, we can tell you how uncertain, so you can make up your mind how to design for it.
"We do know for certain that past history does not represent the future."

Archaeologists unearthed a large ancient Maya palace




Archaeologists from Mexico’s National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH) unearthed a large ancient Maya palace in the archaic city of Kulubá, according to The Guardian.

The ruins, located in modern-day northern Yucatan, check in at 19.6 feet tall and 49 feet wide. Experts believe the building itself dates back to 1,000 years ago and was occupied during AD 600 and AD 1050. The structure consists of pillars, stairways, a basement and more. The palace was likely occupied by Maya elite.

Kuluba’s archaeological zone is divided into three groups that are accessible to the public, with the option for guided tours throughout the week. The site offers pre-Hispanic structures with unique construction techniques and a rich history we may never know fully.

“The work is just beginning,” archaeologist Alfredo Barrera said in a video shared by INAH. “We have barely begun uncovering one of the most voluminous structures of the site.”

According to DW, four other structures in Group C are being explored. The site is bordered by a jungle that is being reforested to prevent damage at the site and will soon be open to visitors as well.

Their hope is that the digging and passion for discovery in the zone will continue and attract visitors.

maya, Mexico. Friday, December 27, 2019

Meet Dairon Elisondo, the Cuban Doctor Treating Immigrants While Awaiting US Asylum in Mexico

A camp for asylum seekers stands next to the international bridge to the United States on December 09, 2019 in Matamoros, Mexico. Photo by John Moore/Getty Images

By Ecleen Luzmila Caraballo | 6 days ago

For months, Dairon Elisondo Rojas has been an invaluable resource at an immigrant camp in Matamoros, Mexico. The 28-year-old doctor is fighting solo, sans lawyer, to get asylum in the United States after clashing with the Cuban government. In the meantime, he’s working with an international nonprofit called Global Response Management to serve ill people of all ages. The camp is home to at least 2,500 immigrants, and the young doctor has helped folk with everything from asthma to a broken leg.

According to The New York Times, Elisondo is the only full-time doctor in the tent city. Naturally, he has a heavy caseload. “It’s what I know. It’s what I do best,” he told the newspaper.

He and his girlfriend traveled for more than a month to Florida, where they presented their case and got sent to Mexico to await their hearing under President Donald Trump’s Remain in Mexico policy.

Elisondo was allegedly punished for voicing his disapproval of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro’s regime while on assignment in the South American country after medical school. Although he was allowed back into his native Cuba, he tells the Times he was harassed by local police and banned from practicing medicine in the Caribbean nation.

Elisondo, whose specialty is critical care, found Global Response Management, an organization that provides aid in high-risk, low-resource areas, by accident, and asked if he could be of service. Elisondo sent his credentials via WhatsApp to Helen Perry, the organization’s executive director, and he now meets with patients in his makeshift office at the camp from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. local time on a daily basis. The doctor makes $30 a day.

“He doesn’t know this,” Perry said, “but I am going to send him to other places in the world. He is highly trained.”

Elisondo hopes to practice medicine in the U.S. His next court appearance is scheduled for late February.

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LATIN AMERICAN RESISTANCE IN 2019


Art by Alan Lopez for Remezcla
Written by Raquel Reichard | 4 weeks ago
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The year 2019 started with President Nicolás Maduro and opposition leader Juan Guaidó both claiming to be the official leaders of Venezuela. Over in Haiti, thousands of people were demanding the resignation of their president, Jovenel Moïse. As summer hit, a few hundred miles away in the Caribbean, former Puerto Rican Gov. Ricardo Rosselló was caught disparaging his citizenry in 889 pages of secret chats. Back in South America, Peruvian President Martín Vizcarra had dissolved Congress. By fall, Bolivian President Evo Morales was accused of voter fraud, Ecuadorian and Chilean leadership hiked prices on certain goods and services and Panama approved controversial constitutional reforms.

Suffice it to say, the people of Latin America and the Caribbean have had a tumultuous year – but with each crisis and scandal that developed, there were hundreds to thousands of people in each country and territory fighting back by crowding city streets and occupying state buildings.

As 2019 comes to a close, and many of our homelands continue engrossed in struggles against powerful regimes, we take a look back at what Latin American resistance looked like during a year that witnessed historic international uprisings.

Puerto Rico

Protesters demonstrate near a police barricade on a street leading to the governor’s mansion as expectations remained high that Gov. Ricardo Rossello would step down on July 24, 2019 in Old San Juan, Puerto Rico. Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images

The summer of 2019 will forever be an important time in Puerto Rico’s history. It’s the moment people-power toppled a corrupt and bigoted governor and reminded an archipelago still reeling from 2017’s devastating Hurricane María of its might. After 889 pages of damning chats between Gov. Ricardo Rosselló and his administration were leaked – revealing misogynistic, transphobic and homophobic conversations, as well as jokes about those who died from the Category 4 storm – Puerto Ricans were prompted to protest on July 13. A movement catapulted by secret chats became about so much more.

For some, it was the growing rates of violence against women or the unelected fiscal control board. For others, it was massive cuts to education and healthcare or the island’s colonial status. But for the nearly million people who shut down highways, closed up shops, took down U.S. flags and created revolutionary art in Old San Juan and across the Caribbean archipelago, it was about removing pro-statehood Rosselló from La Fortaleza, the governor’s mansion, which the massive demonstrations accomplished when he stepped down on August 2, 2019. The historic moment energized Puerto Ricans, who continue to push back against Gov. Wanda Vázquez Garced and fight for a free and just Puerto Rico. 

Chile

A demonstrator waves a Chilean flag next to a fire as clashing with riot police during a protest against President Sebastian Piñera on October 21, 2019 in Santiago, Chile. Photo by Marcelo Hernandez/Getty Images

On October 17, high school students in Santiago, Chile’s capital, rallied against fare hikes by refusing to pay for public transportation and encouraging others in their country to do the same. The fare-dodging demonstration turned into social disobedience when some students forced station gates open and cracked fires, sparking, whether they knew it or not, one of the biggest protest movements in Latin America this year.

In the nearly two months since then, Chile has risen against social inequality, with hundreds of thousands of people throughout the South American country taking to the streets and using art to protest neoliberal policies that have made the country one of the wealthiest in the region but that hasn’t changed the stark economic disparities that lingers on.

While the momentous demonstrations have forced the government to make changes, including President Sebastián Piñera reversing the fare hike and introducing a new spending package and constitution, the state’s brutal response to the protests have kept people demonstrating, many now against police abuse. According to Reuters, at least 26 people have died and 13,000 others have been injured in cases related to the protests. Recently, the name of Gustavo Gatica, a 22-year-old student who was blinded after he was hit with police rubber bullets while photographing the rallies, has become a rallying cry against state violence in Chile. 


Panama

Protest sign in Panama reads “no a la impunidad.” Photo by Ariadna Ulloa / iStock / Getty Images Plus

Last month, protests erupted in Panama against constitutional reforms that had been preliminarily approved by the legislature. Hundreds of protesters in the Central American country flooded streets in Panama City and attempted to enter the National Assembly, demanding public input and expressing their anger over several constitutional reforms. Among them: amending the constitution to define marriage as between a man and a woman, the creation of a constitutional court that gives more power to congress by allowing them to pass a national budget, set their own salaries and oversee investigations of judges and prosecutors, as well as privatizing higher education and more.

During the protests, which started on October 30 and carried into November, there were multiple reports of excessive force, including the use of tear gas, as well as incidents where politicians made homophobic remarks at demonstrators. At least 40 people were arrested. 

Bolivia

A supporter of Evo Morales holds a Whipala flag in front of the military police during a protest on November 15, 2019 in La Paz, Bolivia. Photo by Gaston Brito Miserocchi/Getty Images

In August, hundreds of Bolivians took to the streets to protest then-President Evo Morales’ re-election bid. The politician, who became the South American country’s first Indigenous leader in 2006, had been in power for 13 years. While widely commended for his leadership, including shepherding the country’s growth, paving roads, sending the first satellite to space, curbing inflation and increasing rights and opportunities for Indigenous communities, protesters – including some supporters – grew concerned that he had been in office for too long.

The demonstrations mushroomed last month, when Morales claimed a victory in the presidential election and was accused of voter fraud, allegations that multiplied after a report from the Organization of American States (OAS) found “serious irregularities” concerning the vote count. The mass protests, which had then turned violent, and calls from military leaders for Morales to step down forced him to resign as president in what he and his supporters have called a coup.

Since then, the country has become socially and politically divided. As Morales has accepted political asylum in Mexico and opposition leader Jeanine Áñez has declared herself interim president, she and her supporters have attempted to undo some of Morales’ changes, including turning the country from a secular state that respected all religions into a Catholic one and, more controversially, removing the Wiphala flag, an emblem of the Indigenous people of the Andes region that was made a national symbol in 2009, from state uniforms and buildings. The protests, which have turned into a battle between Morales supporters and the opposition, have become increasingly violent, with a death toll of 26 and abuse accusations by the Human Rights Watch against Áñez’s government. 


Ecuador

A demonstrator waves an Ecuadorian flag near the Presidential Palace of Carondelet during protests against the end of subsidies to gasoline and diesel announced by President Lenin Moreno’s government on October 9, 2019 in Quito, Ecuador. Photo by Jorge Ivan Castaneira Jaramillo/Getty Images

On October 1, President Lenín Moreno announced that his administration would end fuel subsidies as part of a package of economic measures with the International Monetary Fund (IMF). The cut, which took place two days later, resulted in the doubling of diesel fuel prices and a 30% hike in regular fuel. From there, the cost of basic goods skyrocketed. On October 3, unions, student groups and Confederation of Indigenous Nationalities of Ecuador (CONAIE), a collective of various Indigenous groups, joined forces to organize a protest. Thousands of Ecuadorians flooded the streets of Quito, the South American country’s capital, calling for a decision reversal. Many taxi, bus and truck drivers also joined the demonstrations, blocking roadways. To disperse crowds, military and authorities excessively fired tear gas and tanks. The following day, Moreno declared a state of emergency.

By October 8, protesters, many of them Indigenous individuals, had overrun Quito, forcing the president to relocate his government to the coastal city of Guayaquil. Demonstrators also occupied at least three oil fields and main roads, essentially forcing the country into a standstill. The following day, protesters briefly took over the National Assembly before they were forced out by police with tear gas. It was neither the first nor the last violent clash between strikers and the state. With demonstrators refusing to stop resisting, Moreno organized a conversation between his government and CONAIE. The dialogue, which was televised, led to collaborative new economic measures to tackle overspending and debt without economically burdening the people. After repeatedly saying he wouldn’t reverse his decision, Moreno ultimately withdrew the IMF-backed plan, bringing fuel costs back down and ending the two-weeks long uprising

Haiti

A women holds a Haitian flag and roses as people pray together during a church service that is set up outdoors near an encampment after numerous churches were destroyed during the massive earthquake on January 24, 2010 in Port-au-Prince, Haiti. Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images

Since the start of the year, Haitians have been protesting around the Caribbean country, demanding the resignation of President Jovenel Moïse. While demonstrations for his removal started in the summer of 2018, a response to a hike in fuel prices, the movement intensified this February, with activists and everyday Haitians calling for a new government, political autonomy, social programs and the prosecution of corrupt officials. While the months-long uprising aims to topple Moïse, it’s also confronting neoliberal policies that have kept the country poor and its people scouring for basic goods. They are demanding public policies that invest in social programs, an end to foreign dependence and interference, food sovereignty, environmental protections, reparations, new economic models and more.

According to the United Nations, there have been 42 deaths and 68 injuries related to the protests since mid-September. 


Peru

A local man sits in front of a line of police officers during a protest in Plaza De Armas on May 24, 2018 in Cusco, Peru. Photo by Dan Kitwood/Getty Images

This summer, massive changes occurred in Peru, sparking protests across the South American country. In September, Peruvian President Martín Vizcarra dissolved congress, a move he hoped would end a yearlong fight with rightwing lawmakers, who held a majority in the chamber, over his corruption reforms. Under Peru’s constitution, presidents are allowed to dissolve Congress and call for new elections if members show no confidence in a government.

According to opinion polls, most Peruvians support the president’s decision. That’s why it came with little surprise when, following the dissolution, protesters gathered outside of Congress in Lima, the country’s capital, to pressure lawmakers to step down.

More recently, protests occurred again last week when Peru’s Constitutional Tribunal released opposition leader Keiko Fujimori from prison. The politician, who is the daughter of former authoritarian President Alberto Fujimori – who is currently imprisoned for corruption and human rights crimes – was jailed for a year for allegedly receiving illegal contributions to her campaign and money laundering, claims she denies. Following the news, hundreds of protesters gathered on the streets denouncing her release. 

Nicaragua

Photo by NatanaelGinting / iStock / Getty Images Plus

In 2018, massive nationwide protests in Nicaragua made international headlines, but while media attention on the unrest in the Central American country has dulled, the same can’t be said about turmoil in the country. Throughout the year, Nicaraguans have continued to protest and demand the resignation of President Daniel Ortega, despite his government banning opposition demonstrations.

There have been multiple marches calling for a “halt to repression and the murder of farmers.” There have been large-scale vigils for those who died by state force during protests, including teenager Matt Romero who was killed last year. And there have been hunger strikes calling for the release of 130 political prisoners who were incarcerated due to their involvement in the years-long demonstrations.

As of February 11, 2019, there were at least 568 deaths related to the crisis, the non-governmental Nicaraguan Association for Human Rights (ANPDH) reports. Of them, 248 were youth and 235 were adults. Just last month, the United Nations called on the Nicaraguan government to end its “persistent repression of dissent.” 


Colombia

Demonstrators gather and make noise with pots while musicians perform at a protest against the government of Colombian President Ivan Duque on November 28, 2019 in Bogota, Colombia. Photo by Guillermo Legaria/Getty Images

In Colombia, the South American country is currently experiencing one of the largest mass demonstrations in recent years. It started on November 21, when hundreds of thousands of people participated in a strike to protest increasing unemployment and economic reforms under socially conservative President Iván Duque. Since his inauguration in August 2018, his administration has faced criticism for economic stagnation as well as his handling of the peace process with Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia (FARC) rebels and the rising attacks on Indigenous groups as they fight illegal mining.

While the ongoing protests have mostly been peaceful, law enforcement have deployed tear gas at demonstrators in the country’s capital of Bogotá, ordered a curfew in Cali and closed borders to block entry by land and sea from Ecuador, Peru, Brazil and Venezuela. Last week, Colombian teenager Dilan Cruz died from wounds sustained by riot police who were forcefully breaking up demonstrators. The 18-year-old, who was getting ready to graduate from high school that week, participated in the protests to call for greater access to higher education. While demonstrations carry on – and given new energy with Cruz’s passing – Duque has met with unions and business leaders who organized the initial strike. 

Brazil

A piece of cardboard held by a woman reads in Portuguese, “The Amazon is Ours” during a protest in defense of the Amazon and against deforestation and forest fires on August 23, 2019 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Photo by Bruna Prado/Getty Images

In August, thousands of Brazilians crowded streets across the South American country in response to the worsening Amazon fires. In Rio de Janeiro, thousands flooded the steps of town hall, lambasting President Jair Bolsonaro’s plans to develop the Amazon forest and allow mining and commercial agriculture on protected Indigenous reserves. In São Paulo, demonstrators blocked a main avenue while calling for the resignation of environment minister Ricardo Salles. Even in Florida, Boston and cities worldwide, the people rallied at Brazil’s embassies to express outrage over the president’s failure to protect the Amazon.

According to data released by the National Institute for Space Research last month, the rate of deforestation in Brazil’s Amazon has spiked to its highest level in 11 years. For many, Bolsonaro is partly responsible due to his history of denying the severity of the deforestation, dismantling several of the country’s environmental protections, rejecting foreign aid to help fight fires and the increase in assaults and invasions of Indigenous land in the country since he took office on January 1, 2019. 


Venezuela

Venezuelans wave flags and hold signs as people gather at PNUD for a demonstration called by opposition leader Juan Guaidó during the 208th anniversary of the Venezuelan Independence declaration on July 5, 2019 in Caracas, Venezuela. Photo by Edilzon Gamez/Getty Images

In January, Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro had his second inauguration, an event that has sparked on-and-off protests in the country throughout the year. To start, his second presidential inauguration was met by opposition leader Juan Guaidó, the president of the National Assembly of Venezuela, declaring himself acting Venezuelan president on January 23, a controversial claim that was recognized by almost 60 governments worldwide and sparked a crisis concerning who is the legitimate president of Venezuela.

Since then, Guaidó has led a series of rallies. The largest one came on April 6 when tens of thousands of the politician’s supporters participated in what was called Operation Freedom to oust Maduro from power. What was thought to be the start of an uprising, however, dwindled down over the last few months, with Guaidó’s own support dropping from 60% in February to 42% in November. Recently, he has attempted to take advantage of the revolutionary energy sweeping South America by holding the biggest anti-government demonstration in the country in the latter half of the year last month. Inspired by the protests that toppled Morales in Bolivia, which Maduro has described as a coup, Guaidó has called for daily protests.

#Venezuela, 2019 in review, Bolivia, brazil, chile, colombia, ecuador, Haiti, Nicaragua, panama, Peru, puerto rico. Thursday, December 5, 2019 at 5:31 PM EST
NOT JUST GRETA
10-Year-Old Francisco Javier Vera Is at the Forefront of Colombia’s Fight Against Climate Change

Art by Stephany Torres for Remezcla
By Yara Simón |

For the youth, in particular, climate change is an ever-pressing issue. As we inch closer to the “point of no return,” many children have been forced to become activists and call for action. Recently, 10-year-old Francisco Javier Vera addressed the Colombian Congress and gave a passionate speech that impressed many.

“Today, I came to represent my group Guardianes por la vida to ask everyone to take consciousness of the damage we’ve caused the environment, you and me, the damage we’ve caused,” he said. “I ask you, as senators of the republic… legislate for our lives. For example, go against fracking campaigns, animal testing, single-use plastic and the mistreatment of animals. We are, in my opinion, unfairly tasked as children to fight for our planet.”


Tomemos conciencia ambiental!

Francisco Javier Vera nos invita a luchar por un planeta sostenible, y a seguir nuestras luchas contra los plásticos de un solo uso!

Aquí su intervención en el Senado #PlasticAttackColombia
➕♻️ pic.twitter.com/lT5dzcWYXM

— PlasticAttackColombia (@PlasticAttackCO) December 18, 2019


On top of talking to the country’s most powerful people, Francisco is also out there protesting and raising awareness in any way possible. The young boy is at the forefront of the fight against climate change and he’s inspiring others as well.

Learn more about him below.
NOW THIS VIDEO

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A Look Back at Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s Momentous First Year in Congress
Art by Stephany Torres for Remezcla
Written by Angely Mercado | 2 weeks ago


The year 2019 has been a busy one for Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY). It began when she was sworn in as a new member of the 116th Congress, which boasted the most diverse cohort in U.S. history, on January 3. AOC, as she’s been widely called this year, wore a striking red lip, a set of killer gold hoops and a confidence that came unexpectedly from the youngest member of Congress.

Leading up to her new gig, the New York politician, who represents parts of Queens and the Bronx, gave her supporters a look into what it was like to get started in politics through her Instagram Stories and Instagram Live. Often cooking while answering users’ questions, Ocasio-Cortez has helped demystify congressional processes and brought a refreshing transparency to constituents. Her supporters appreciate how she made politics feel approachable and engaging for the average person. 

But a new job, especially such a public one, has come with unique challenges for the nascent representative. This July, Louisiana officer Charlie Rispoli made a disturbing comment about AOC on Facebook. While sharing a fictitious article about Ocasio-Cortez, he stated that “this vile idiot needs a round.” Althougj Rispoli was fired for his remark, it wasn’t the only death threat the Puerto Rican congresswoman has received since taking office. 

Still, despite the mounting attacks against Ocasio-Cortez, she has pushed forward to have an impressive first year in office — showing us what Bronx women are made of. Here, some of Ocasio-Cortez’s biggest accomplishments and celebrated moments in 2019.

Raising Money for Trans Youth

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) takes questions during a Green New Deal For Public Housing Town Hall on December 14, 2019 in the Queens borough of New York City. Photo by Yana Paskova/Getty Images

This January, AOC helped raise money for trans youth. When YouTuber Harry Brewis hosted a Donkey Kong 64 livestream to garner funds for Mermaids, an organization that supports transgender children, Ocasio-Cortez called in to support and discuss trans rights amid the government shutdown at the time. With her help, the digital event raised more than $300,000 for the organization. 

Supporting Government Workers

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) listens during a House Financial Services Committee hearing on April 10, 2019 in Washington, DC. Photo by Alex Wroblewski/Getty Images

Also during the government shutdown, Ocasio-Cortez gave a speech on the floor of the Senate in support of the government workers who were not being paid during their forced time off. She described how the shutdown was affecting one of her constituents, an air traffic controller at John F. Kennedy International Airport. A video of her speech was widely shared, becoming C-SPAN’s most-watched Twitter video ever. It highlighted how AOC is capable of telling stories that connect with others as well as spotlighted her social media influence. 


Introducing The Green New Deal

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) speaks as Sen. Ed Markey (D-MA) and other Congressional Democrats listen during a news conference in front of the U.S. Capitol February 7, 2019 in Washington, DC. Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images

In February, Ocasio-Cortez and Sen. Ed Markey (D-MA) unveiled plans for the Green New Deal, proposed legislation that aims to address both climate and economic inequality in the U.S. The initial proposal outlined policies that would help the country achieve net-zero greenhouse gas emissions, invest in infrastructure that would help create jobs and promote social justice and equality. Since the unveiling, AOC has emphasized that the Green New Deal should be implemented in a way that doesn’t exclude marginalized communities and that addresses climate change in the long run. 

Offering a Glimpse at What Environmental Justice Looks Like

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) attends a rally for Democratic presidential candidate, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) in Queensbridge Park on October 19, 2019 in the Queens borough of New York City. Photo by Kena Betancur/Getty Images

In April, AOC teamed up with The Intercept to create “A Message From the Future With Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.” In the video project, which was co-written by AOC and Canadian documentary filmmaker Avi Lewis, the congresswoman is seen taking a train from New York to Washington, DC, in an imagined future where the Green New Deal is a reality. In it, she outlines the path to tackling climate change, mentioning scientists that sounded the alarm in the ‘80s and the fossil fuel companies that strategically created a campaign to enrich themselves and spread doubt about climate science. She also talks about how climate scientists in 2018 gave the planet 12 years to cut carbon emissions in half in order to stop climate disaster. It shows an inspiring future where the U.S. economy doesn’t leave anyone behind. 


Starring in the Netflix Documentary "Knock Down The House"

Knock Down the House / Netflix

In late April, Netflix dropped a trailer for Knock Down The House, a documentary that featured Ocasio-Cortez along with progressive 2018 candidates Cori Bush, Paula Jean Swearengin and Amy Vilela as they ran for various government offices around the country. The documentary made the festival rounds earlier this year, screening both at Sundance and SXSW. In February, the film made national headlines when news broke that Netflix spent more money to purchase the project than any other documentary in the platform’s history. It cost the company $10 million for worldwide rights and features intimate snapshots with AOC’s partner and her supporters. It also shows the lead-up to the viral online video of Ocasio-Cortez learning that she won the election. The documentary did an amazing job highlighting the intimate details that led to AOC’s more public moments that were caught on video and shared online. It also showed just how hard it is for working-class people to break into politics, despite how necessary they are, especially in communities like the one the Latina politician now represents. 

Working as a Bartender Once Again

U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) serves a drink at the bar at the Queensboro Restaurant on May 31, 2019 in the Queens borough of New York City. Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images

Ocasio-Cortez went back to her bartending roots this May to show solidarity for tipped workers in the service industry. She stood behind the bar again to help spread awareness for the Raise the Wage Act, which would put an end to below-minimum wages for tipped workers in bars and restaurants. The event was put together by an organization called Restaurant Opportunities Centers United. The group urged New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo to institute the wage act in the past and believed AOC could help get their cause more attention. They were right. 


Starring in Multiple Books

“The ABCs of AOC” by Jamia Wilson and illustrated by Krystal Quiles

In August, Workman Publishing announced that it would be releasing a biography on Ocasio-Cortez by independent journalist Prachi Gupta. At around that time, another book about her was announced: The ABCs of AOC. This children’s book, written by Jamia Wilson and illustrated by Krystal Quiles, highlights different words, like “feminist” and “grassroots,” and features the congresswoman on its cover dressed in her iconic white swearing-in outfit, a bold red lip and, of course, her hoops. 

Landing a Feature on "The Simpsons"

U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) speaks as Reps. Ayanna Pressley (D-MA), Ilhan Omar (D-MN) and Rashida Tlaib (D-MI) listen during a press conference at the US Capitol on July 15, 2019 in Washington, DC. Photo by Alex Wroblewski/Getty Images

Apart from being the focus of several books, AOC was also featured in a short clip from The Simpsons. In West Wing Story, a parody of West Side Story, President Donald Trump, receiving the classic Simpsons animated treatment, is seen holding a photo of The Squad — Ocasio-Cortez, Rep. Ayanna Pressley (D-MA.), Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-MN) and Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-MI) — and singing to the tune of the classic song, “America.” In the scene, AOC and the rest of the politicians show off their dance moves and talk about how to undo Trump’s policies. 


Gaining Her Very Own AOC Action Figure

FCTRY / Kickstarter

This October, a Seattle-based artist and a Brooklyn-based design studio launched a Kickstarter announcing that they were creating an AOC action figure. The Ocasio-Cortez doll will be part of their Real Life Action Figures collection that features other notable people, like Pope Francis and Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA). The figurine also shows AOC in her stunning all-white suit, a red lip and a set of gold hoops. The fundraising campaign got a lot of attention and the creators even had to increase the goal several times. At the time of writing, they have raised $72,000. 

Becoming Halloween Costume Inspo

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) talks to fellow members of Congress during the first session of the 116th Congress at the U.S. Capito. Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images

This Halloween, conservative commentator Tomi Lahren tried to diss Ocasio-Cortez by dressing up as the “terrifying” politician for Halloween; however, to AOC’s fans, she ended up making a great case for why the congresswoman is so awesome. The representative’s online supporters came out in full force and pointed out that trying to insult AOC by calling her a “former bartender” outlined how classist some political commentators are. It began an interesting conversation about how people from working-class communities are stigmatized and misunderstood. Even more, Ocasio-Cortez was genuine Halloween costume inspiration for countless other girls and women who share her progressive vision for the country. 


Centering Marginalized Communities

Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) hold a news conference to introduce legislation to transform public housing as part of their Green New Deal proposal outside the U.S. Capitol November 14, 2019 in Washington, DC. Photo by Somodevilla/Getty Images

This November, AOC released the first Green New Deal bill alongside presidential hopeful Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT). The proposed legislation aims to make public housing environmentally friendly by transforming the 1.2 million public housing units in the U.S. by upgrading their health and safety features, including eliminating carbon emissions. During the projected 10-year process to complete the proposed legislation, public housing would receive grants for installing solar panels, all-electric modern appliances and low-flow toilets to reduce water waste. The proposal would create more than 200,000 jobs per year. It shows how dedicated Ocasio-Cortez is to her mission of creating a Green New Deal that centers those who are most impacted by climate change, particularly lower-income communities. 

Reigning Queen of the Social Media Clapback

House Financial Services Committee member Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) puts on her glasses as the committee takes a break in the testimony of Facebook co-founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg in the Rayburn House Office Building on Capitol Hill October 23, 2019 in Washington, DC. Bu Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

This year, AOC solidified that she’s the queen of the clapback. It started with hints in 2018 when she tweeted the lyrics to Aventura’s classic “Obsesion” after Fox News held a panel to discuss her fashion sense. Despite having to deal with disparaging comments and threats against her, the newly minted politician continued to use her social media following to clapback against anyone who came at her. A crowd favorite, with more than 700,000 likes and more than 150,000 retweets, is one of her dancing up to her office in Washington, DC. It was a response to haters who framed a leaked college video of her dancing with friends as a “scandal.” AOC showed the world that she didn’t care and tweeted, “I hear the GOP thinks women dancing are scandalous. Wait till they find out congresswomen dance, too …” She has spent the rest of the year making her now-celebrated social media clapbacks, and she’ll likely bring them along in the new year as well. 

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. Friday, December 20, 2019 
Meet the First Trans Latina Pastor Ordained by the Evangelical Lutheran Church


Art by Stephany Torres for Remezcla
By Ecleen Luzmila Caraballo | 2 weeks ago

Last month, Nicole Garcia made history as the first known transgender Latina to serve as pastor in the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America.

Ordained on November 23, the minister gave her first sermon at Westview Lutheran Church in Boulder, Colorado on December 1 to a congregation of more than 100.

“As a transgender Latina, I bring a breath of fresh air into all the places I walk into,” the 60-year-old told NBC News.

The Latina’s road to the altar was decades in the making. While she was raised Roman Catholic, she abandoned the church in her 20s. At the time, she was divorced from a woman she had been married to for eight years, dependent on alcohol and angry with God for not being able to “fix” her.

Nearly two decades later, Garcia began accepting herself and embarked on her transition journey. “I’ve always been Nicole. I’ve always been a woman,” she says.


Her 10-year transition was accompanied by a “come-to-Jesus” moment. She found an inclusive space within the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, a Christian denomination founded in 1988 with more than 4 million followers.

In 2008, Garcia was appointed transgender representative to the national board of directors of ReconcilingWorks: Lutherans for Full Participation, and four years later she applied and was surprised to be accepted into the Luther Seminary in Saint Paul, Minn.

Garcia’s pastorship comes 13 years after Megan Rohrer became the first-ever trans person to be ordained by the Lutheran church.

“Nobody can question my faith, my devotion to Christ, my devotion to the church,” Garcia told the news site. “That’s why I’m the pastor here. Being trans is secondary.”

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USA 
This Bill Could Create a Pathway to Citizenship for Thousands of Undocumented Farmworkers


A Latino laborer works on planting tobacco May 4, 2009 in Vander, 
North Carolina. Photo by Chris Hondros/Getty Images

By Raquel Reichard | 3 weeks ago

On Wednesday, the House passed a bipartisan bill that would grant legal status to thousands of undocumented farmworkers.

The Farm Workforce Modernization Act, which was approved 260-165, would establish a pathway to citizenship for immigrants working in agriculture but would also limit access to social services for its beneficiaries and require companies to verify whether workers are in the U.S. legally through E-Verify, a controversial federal system.

The legislation was introduced in October by Reps. Mario Diaz-Balart (R-Fla.), Zoe Lofgren (D-Calif.), Dan Newhouse (R-Wash.), Collin Peterson (D-Minn.), Jimmy Panetta (D-Calif.), Mike Simpson (R-Idaho) and Doug LaMalfa (R-Calif.).

The bill, which is aimed at boosting labor in U.S. agriculture after enhanced immigration enforcement sparked a shortage, would allow undocumented laborers who’ve worked in the U.S. agricultural industry for at least 180 days in the past two years to request five-year visas for themselves, their spouses and their minor children. Visa-holders would be eligible to renew their authorization if they show they have worked in agriculture for more than 100 hours each year.

The legislation also creates a route to legal permanent residence, a prelude to citizenship. Farmworkers who have labored for more than 10 years in the field at the time of enactment would need to grind for four more years in agriculture to obtain legal permanent status, while workers with less than 10 years experience would need to labor for eight more years to qualify. All are also required to pay a $1,000 fine.

According to the Pew Research Center, undocumented immigrants accounted for 15% of workers in the agriculture industry in 2016, a figure that is likely higher.

The legislation would need to pass in the Senate to take effect. So far, It’s unclear when or if the chamber will take up the bill.

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Film

REVIEW: ‘This Is Not Berlin’ Is an Explosive Look at How the Art World Was Fighting Homophobia in 1980s Mexico


Xabiani Ponce de León appears in 'This is not Berlin'
 by Hari Sama. Photo by Alfredo Altamirano.
 Courtesy of Sundance Institute

By Carlos Aguilar


Hari Sama’s Esto no es Berlin (This is Not Berlin) sets its sights on 1986’s Mexico City: a year post-earthquake and gearing up for the nation to host its second World Cup. Long-haired teenager Carlos (Xabiani Ponce de León), a character inspired by Sama’s own adolescence, attends an all-boys high school where hypermasculinity defines most social exchanges.

Ferocious fist fights with young men from rival campuses are a quotidian affair in Carlos’ upper-middle class environment. He participates with minimal effort to maintain his status as one of the guys. Sports, of course, function as yet another opportunity for masculine posturing. Heated fútbol passion is not present here solely as a backdrop, but interpreted as a pillar of the machismo that has perpetuated the pervasive homophobia and use of slurs in Mexico.

Encouraged by his rebellious role model, uncle Esteban (played by the director himself), Carlos slowly develops an identity that sets him apart from the majority of his classmates – one marked by sophisticated musical choices and his aptitude for mechanical engineering.

Such countercultural inclination is only intensified when neighbor and best friend Gera (José Antonio Toledano), who grapples with greater insecurities, invites Carlos to The Azteca, a gritty club for intellectuals, musicians, and visual artists that serves as headquarters for their underground collective. There gestate provocative ways to denounce discrimination, the AIDS crisis, and unjust government policies.


The protagonist’s still malleable mind is soon enraptured by these alternative worldviews, and takes on the role of a protégé to group’s leader, Nico (Mauro Sanchez). Meanwhile at home, his estranged relationship with his mother (Roma’s excellent Marina de Tavira), exasperates the feeling of isolation he is fighting.




‘This is not Berlin’ photo by Alfredo Altamirano. 
Courtesy of Sundance Institute.

More than a coming-of-age, Carlos’ metamorphosis from wallflower to freethinking performance artist experimenting with his sexuality is a reflection of an entire generation of Mexicans, queer and otherwise, who for the first time decried the homogenizing status quo. In turn, the film operates as moving document of a bygone era rarely featured in official historical accounts, since only those who reveled in it firsthand can attest to its risky magic. Sama is one of them.

Although less preoccupied with a detailed recreation its time versus other Mexican period films, what This is Not Berlin exploits to its advantage are the inherently vibrant colors, outfits, and wildly theatrical moments that come with the world it’s portraying. Evocative shots of bare bodies moving in sync with music or the illicit substances they’ve ingested are enhanced by deliberate lighting choices giving The Azteca an ethereal atmosphere. The contrast between this safe haven for otherness and the world beyond its walls is stark.

In an effort to engage with what was taking place outside his suburban bubble, Sama inserts a sequence where Gera and his sister Rita (Ximena Romo), the vocalist of a politically minded band, attend a gig in Ecatepec – a low-incoming area in the outskirts of the city – and are exposed to a grungier musical expression than the polished, more fresa circles they are accustomed to. It’s a small nod to the parallel universes that coexisted, and still do, in the massive metropolitan area divided along class lines.

For its emotional impact, This is Not Berlin depends on the fraternal bond between Carlos and Gera, and how this is affected by their disparate approaches to understanding the people they are becoming. Ponce de León and Toledano exude timeless youth and credible banter, enough to get across the notion that this friendship has been tried and tested. Not surprisingly, by delving into his intimate recollections, Sama, a director with several features to his name, has assembled his most laudable movie yet.

Esto no es Berlin (This is Not Berlin) premiered at the 2019 Sundance Film Festival.

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Film

REVIEW: This Doc Tells the Wild, True Story of How Famed Architect Luis Barragán’s Ashes Got Turned Into a Diamond



Courtesy of Oscilloscope Laboratories.

By Manuel Betancourt

There’s an outlandishness to the titular offering in Jill Magid‘s The Proposal. It involves, after all, an engagement ring, a years-long correspondence between two women, an art installation in Switzerland, an archive that’s been under lock and key for decades, and, oh yeah, the exhumation of a celebrated Mexican architect’s remains. Yet Magid’s documentary, with its soothing voice over and its exacting formal compositions — her shots could double as spreads on a coffee table book — makes the crazy story it’s telling sound almost quaint. At its center is Luis Barragán, one of Mexico’s preeminent architects in the twentieth century (“He had a literary idea of architecture,” as a friend explains in the doc). He’s both the reason for Magid’s “proposal” and the protagonist of her same-named documentary.

But first, some history: when Barragán died in 1988 he split his archive in two. By the early nineties, his personal archive remained in Mexico while his professional one was bought by the Chairman of the Swiss furniture company Vitra, allegedly as a gift for his fiancée, Federica Zanco. Zanco now serves as Director of the Barragan Foundation (note the lack of accent; that’s how it was registered). As Magid explains, that professional archive has been mostly closed off to anyone but Federica, much to the frustration of many in Barragán’s own home country. As Magid becomes more and more enamored of the Mexican architect’s work (much of which is recorded and photographed beautifully by her for the film), she begins to hatch a plan. A proposal.


.@OscopeLabs has picked up the North American rights to @TheProposalDoc. The film will be released in theaters sometime in 2019. Read more at @Deadline: https://t.co/HodF7CNtXf pic.twitter.com/CD3vU31YmR

— The Proposal (@TheProposalDoc) January 8, 2019


Seeing as her correspondence with Federica is courteous but ultimately futile (she can’t get access to the archive, can’t nail down a way to do so), Magid sets her sights on a bizarre quest: she wants to exhume Barragán’s remains and get some of his ashes for an art installation she’s working on about his work. What drives her artistic output and this elliptical documentary is a series of related questions: “What happens to an artist’s legacy when it is owned by a corporation and subject to a country’s laws where none of his architecture exists? Who can access it? Who can’t?”


What happens to an artist’s legacy when it is owned by a corporation?

Slowly, we see Magid meeting with Barragán’s family, coaxing them into agreeing to such a brazen proposition, and putting into motion a rather implausible plan to convince Zanco (whose letters back and forth make up much of the film’s voice over narration) to return Barragán’s vast archive to Mexico. It’s the kind of plan only an artist like Magid could dream up, romantic and cheeky in equal measure, turning Barragán (quite literally) into an object to be exchanged between two women. In this case, a diamond made from his ashes that adorns an engagement ring the New York-based artist will gift Zanco – on the condition that she commit to relocating the influential treasure trove she’s been handling for more than two decades in Switzerland. The “proposal” is not without its detractors, and Magid offers us plenty of examples of op-eds, articles, panels and news broadcasts that show just how controversial her entire gamble had been, especially in Mexico. If nothing else, it seems, she got plenty of people talking about Vitra’s handling of the archive, though many questions remain about what Barragán’s legacy looks like now that it’s entangled with Magid’s.

At once an intellectual exercise and an artistic manifesto of sorts, The Proposal also serves as an archive of Barragán’s work. Her time spent at his house in Mexico City frames much of the documentary: her slow pans across the rooms he created and lived in offer an intimate look at his literate take on architecture. And while audiences may balk at her impulse to center a story about a Mexican treasure on her own artistic vision – (Does she really care about Barragán’s archive more than she does about her artwork about him? Is the film a conversation starter or a navel-gazing document?) there’s no denying that Magid’s attention-grabbing antics are hard to look away from.


The Proposal opens in New York May 24, 2019.
Film

REVIEW: This Doc on Mexico’s Private Ambulances is a Frightening Look at a Broken Healthcare System



A still from Midnight Family by Luke Lorentzen, 
an official selection of the U.S. Documentary Competition
 at the 2019 Sundance Film Festival. 
Courtesy of Sundance Institute | photo by Luke Lorentzen

By Manuel Betancourt

“In Mexico City, the government operates fewer than 45 emergency ambulances for a population of 9 million. This has spawned an underground industry of for profit ambulances, which are often run by people with little or no training or certification.” That is the context we’re offered by Luke Lorentzen’s documentary Midnight Family. It’s a mind-blowing statistic and one which colors everything that follows. Opting for a cinema verité style, Lorentzen’s follows the Ochoa family as they work sleepless nights in the cramped private ambulance they operate. Offering little to no contextual info, we see them scouring emergency calls to find potential patients/clients. A static camera in front of the ambulance gives us as objective a view of the proceedings as possible, while Lorentzen, usually in the back of the ambulance with his camera, is often running around capturing the boys in action while they clean blood off their equipment, carry patients onto the back of the ambulance, and later deal with hospital bureaucracy and family members to secure whatever meager earnings they can muster.

“Is this expensive?” That’s the first question a young woman utters when the Ochoa family’s ambulance crew arrives to help her. She’s bleeding, crying, and a tad disoriented. Those treating her ignore her question, urging her instead to tell them how she got her head wound (an angry boyfriend who’s fled the scene), whether she has insurance (she doesn’t) and if she agrees to have them contact her family (they end up calling her mother). “Is this expensive?” she pleads again. The question hangs in the air and everyone’s decision to not answer her point-blank feels like an answer in itself. That silence over the cost of the ambulances’ services gets at the tricky and oft-unsavory ethical issues at stake in running a private ambulance service — especially one which, as we slowly learn, gets a cut from a specific (private) hospital when they deliver patients there.

A still from Midnight Family by Luke Lorentzen, an official selection of the U.S. Documentary Competition at the 2019 Sundance Film Festival. Courtesy of Sundance Institute | photo by Luke Lorentzen

Juan, the young, entrepreneurial sixteen year-old who seems intent on making this family business a legit one, tells the camera over and over again that he doesn’t understand why people (including the police in several instances) wouldn’t just agree to be helped and pay them in turn. Government ambulances aren’t showing up and they’re just trying to make a living. Why would people be concerned with their legality or their expenses at times when their lives are literally on the line? He doesn’t get it. It’s obvious that Lorentzen does. Moreover, the Connecticut-born director nudges us to consider both the system that’s allowed these kinds of services to pop up in such a populous city, as well as the one that’s left Juan and his family with few other opportunities to thrive.

Juan may want his little brother to go to school (the latter refuses since he doesn’t have a pencil let alone a backpack) but he more often than not indulges him, bringing him on late-night runs where he tucks himself in the back of the ambulance. It’s arguably a choice that does as much to show how close the family is, as show just how ill-equipped the operation is when a 9 year-old is a stowaway in the backseat.

Lorentzen’s filmmaking is unfussy and near-surgical in its precision. At times it’s as thrilling as any action movie, at others as quiet as an intimate family drama. He balances reckless car chase scenes on nighttime streets where dueling ambulances try to be the “first” on the scene with gentler moments at the furniture-less home. That he doesn’t crowd the movie with talking heads or factoids about Mexican health care, speaks to his desire to merely document and observe. He offers up the Ochoas and their behavior and invites us to make our own judgments. Hard to watch, with an unspoken message that’s even harder to swallow, Midnight Family is an unflinching look at a broken system and the unseemly choices people make to merely survive.

Midnight Family screened as part of the Sundance Film Festival.

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