Vote on your mun2 favs of 2008 for Bleepin Best 08

damn, yankee

daily dos

wed 10/22/2008

 
daily-dos-damn-yankee

A study by The Alzheimer's Association finds that Latinos are at a higher risk for developing dementia and getting Alzheimer's at an earlier age than the national average.

 
 

cashing out

daily dos

thu 9/18/2008

 
daily-dos-checks-cashed Check cashed neon sign.

(image by Daquella manera via flickr)

Half of all Latinos believe the U.S. is in worse shape today than it was a year ago according to a survey by the Pew Hispanic Center. (via MySanAntonio.com)

 
 

cashing out

daily dos

thu 9/18/2008

 
daily-dos-checks-cashed Check cashed neon sign.

(image by Daquella manera via flickr)

Half of all Latinos believe the U.S. is in worse shape today than it was a year ago according to a survey by the Pew Hispanic Center. (via MySanAntonio.com)

 
 

blue pantaloons

daily dos

mon 2/25/2008

 
Jeanius. Four pairs of blue jeans hang.

(image by Kent Wang via flickr)

The "vast majority" of Latino and African-American families are in danger of falling out of the middle class, according to a new report by Demos and Brandeis University. (via Hispanic Tips)

 
 

tug of guar

daily dos

thu 2/21/2008

 
New York Senator Hillary Clinton New York Senator Hillary Clinton during a speech.

(image by marcn via flickr)

Latinos are now the majority in the Los Angeles Police Department but are not being hired in enough leadership positions, according to the department's Consent Decree Bureau.

 
 

free fallin'

daily dos

fri 2/15/2008

 
Don't shoot! A yellow post it note with a drawing of a satellite floating in space.

(image by Joe Hastings via flickr)

Interesting propaganda of the week: 80% of young Latinos who support Barack Obama say they won't vote in November if Hillary Clinton is the Democratic nominee for president, according to a poll conducted by Hispanic Economics [sic] on behalf of the Obama campaign. (via Latina Lista)

 
 

reves/yo sorry

daily dos

tue 2/12/2008

 
My bad. Wisin in a purple shirt in front of a black background.

(image via Pix)

The U.S. Latino population will triple by 2050, according to a study by the Pew Research Center.

 
 

Latinos stood up on Super Tuesday

politics

thu 2/7/2008

 
Estamos aquí, voting. Multilingual polling station sign.

(image by myjon via Flickr)

Latinos stood up on Super Tuesday, mostly to vote for Hillary Clinton. According to various exit polls, six out of ten Latino voters nationwide voted for Clinton, helping her win delegates in key states.

The New York senator received a whopping 70 percent of the Latino vote in California, where Hispanics turned out to vote in record numbers while African-American participation dropped.

According to one of Clinton's many influential Hispanic backers in California, Los Angeles Mayor Antonio R. Villaraigosa, early voters may also have tipped the balance for the former first lady since her opponent, Illinois Senator Barack Obama, only recently picked up important endorsements in the nation's most populous state.

Clinton also won the majority of Latino votes in other states with high numbers of Latino voters like New York, New Jersey and Massachusetts.

In Arizona, where more than a third of the population is Hispanic, the African-American Obama picked up a higher than expected 40 percent of the Latino vote. Clinton also had the backing of most Latinos in New Mexico, where the current governor, Mexican-American Bill Richardson, picked up five percent of the vote despite having withdrawn from the race a month prior.

The next big Democratic contest is in Texas, where once again Latinos could play a decisive role in determining who will be the Democratic presidential nominee.

On the Republican side, John McCain, a strong proponent of last year's immigration reform bill, picked up support from nearly 4 out of 10 Latino Republicans.

In his home state of Arizona, Senator McCain earned even more support, racking up a stunning 70 percent of the Latino vote. In California and his home state, McCain was most popular among Republicans who believe in a path to citizenship and temporary worker programs, according to CNN. In the same contests, Mitt Romney, McCain's chief opponent, earned most of his votes from those who believe undocumented immigrants should be deported.

Barring any major upsets, John McCain is the favorite to win the Republican nomination, a likelihood that has disappointed influential conservatives like talk show host Rush Limbaugh and evangelical leader James Dobson. Both reject McCain for his views on taxes, campaign finance reform and, importantly, immigration.

Some conservatives have taken to calling the senator "Juan McCain," using a spanish name to denote their distaste for his moderate stance on immigration across the U.S.-Mexico border.

 
 

fresh like baby breath

daily dos

thu 12/21/2006

 
I can't breef Breath Capture lets you collect a loved one's breath.

Five percent of U.S. Latinos are going hungry.