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  • Events Calendar Sponsored by ChattanoogaHasFun.com
    March 2010
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    Today\'s Events
    • Mike Speenburg at The Comedy Catch, 7:30pm
    • Mystery of the Red Neck Italian Wedding at Vaudeville Cafe , 8:30pm
    • Downstream at Bud's Sports Bar, 10pm
    • Faretheewell, Epic Romance, Feed the Lions, Questions for a Scientist at Warehouse Row, 7pm
    • "Still Lifes from the Permanent Collection" at Hunter Museum of American Art
    • Mac Comer at T-Bone's Sports Cafe, 10pm
    • "Recent Landscapes: Lawerence Mathis" Exhibition at Warehouse Row, 12pm
    • New Death Sensation, Declare your Victory, Permillisecond, Failing the Fairest at Club Fathom, 7:30pm
    • Bloody Sacrifice, Apocalyptic Visions, Double Barrel Democracy at Ziggy's Package Store, 8pm
    • Hubble in 3D at IMAX 3D Theater
    • Wild Ocean in 3D at IMAX 3D Theater
    • "Peter Pan" at Tivoli Theatre
    • "Talk Portraiture" Exhibition at Shuptrine Fine Art Group
    • Bluegrass Pharaohs at Market Street Tavern, 10pm

    Tomorrow\'s Events
    • Rick Rushing and the Blues Strangers at Mudpie Restaurant, 6:30pm
    • Creative Discovery Museum’s Exhibit “Good For You” at Creative Discovery Museum, 10am
    • Wild Ocean in 3D at IMAX 3D Theater
    • Born of Osiris, Your Demise, Every Word a Prophecy, Permillisecond at Warehouse Row, 7pm
    • Mike Speenburg at The Comedy Catch, 8pm
    • "Twenty Original American Etchings" at Hunter Museum of American Art
    • "Still Lifes from the Permanent Collection" at Hunter Museum of American Art
    • Hubble in 3D at IMAX 3D Theater
    • "Recent Landscapes: Lawerence Mathis" Exhibition at Warehouse Row, 12pm
    • “Explorations in Steel” by Julie Clark at In Town Gallery, 11am
    • Tea Leaf Green, Moon Taxi at Rhythm & Brews, 9pm
    • "Earth" at Warehouse Row, 12pm
    • "Jellies: The Living Art" Exhibition at Hunter Museum of American Art, 10am
    • "Talk Portraiture" Exhibition at Shuptrine Fine Art Group

    Later Events
    • "Jellies: The Living Art" Exhibition at Hunter Museum of American Art, 10am
    • "Earth" at Warehouse Row, 12pm
    • "Speak Easy" Spoken word and poetry at Mudpie Restaurant, 8pm
    • Hubble in 3D at IMAX 3D Theater
    • “Explorations in Steel” by Julie Clark at In Town Gallery, 11am
    • "Talk Portraiture" Exhibition at Shuptrine Fine Art Group
    • "Recent Landscapes: Lawerence Mathis" Exhibition at Warehouse Row, 12pm
    • Southern Literature Book Club Meeting: "Gap Creek" at Rock Point Books, 6pm
    • "Still Lifes from the Permanent Collection" at Hunter Museum of American Art
    • Creative Discovery Museum’s Exhibit “Good For You” at Creative Discovery Museum, 10am
    • Wild Ocean in 3D at IMAX 3D Theater
    • "Twenty Original American Etchings" at Hunter Museum of American Art
    • Auditions for "Pig Farm" at Chattanooga Theater Center, 7:30pm

    Ask A Mexican: Rebel Amnesty

    Written by Gustavo Arellano
    January 13, 2010 – 12:13 pm


    Dear Mexican,
    I’m surprised by the choice of the word “amnesty” by those who would demonize immigration reform, especially in the South. Doesn’t the modern well-being of many Southerners derive in some way from their ancestors’ having sworn to amnesty oaths, both before and after the Civil War? Isn’t it being disingenuous to make the “but-my-family-immigrated-legally” argument when your great-great-great-grandparents got amnesty for their own federal faux pas?
    — Gringo del Sur

    Dear Southern Gabacho,
    Modern-day Know Nothing retellings of American immigration history are disingenuous like Guatemalans are slow, Gringo, but I’m more interested in these Dixie oaths. Gabachos received amnesty in this country before? You mean to tell me we pardoned a bunch of traitorous, backwards, racist pendejos for their federal crimes? And the Union did not perish, but instead became stronger? See, America? There’s hope in giving amnesty to Mexicans after all! Yeah, we’ll probably continue to stupidly worship the flag of a defeated country, be an economic drag on everyone else for a good generation, stereotype negritos and worship our heritage a bit much, and the idiots among us will secretly try to secede from the States from time to time, but we’ll eventually join the fabric of this land—and at least we won’t create something as ridiculous as the Confederate Memorial Carving. Nah, we celebrate our heroes on cereal boxes—and if you don’t know what I’m talking about and don’t want to know, readers, please don’t try to find the Cesar Chavez cornflakes box on Google…

    Dear Mexican,
    I recently heard that casino building projects done by many of the tribes in Washington state require a certain percentage of Native American labor with no restrictions on tribe. I was told that they had a difficulty meeting their quota, so I wondered who counts as a Native American? Why are Mexican-Americans born on both sides of the border not recognized as Native Americans in the same way that the Apache or Blackfoot are? How do Mexicans with indigenous roots feel about this?
    — Curious White Seattleite

    Dear Gabacho,
    This is ¡Ask a Mexican!, not ¡Ask Black Elk!, so I’ll leave it to my native hermanos to determine who belongs to their respective tribes and why. The case of borderland tribes like the Yaqui and Apache is especially hard to untangle—not only did their historical homelands not have to cross the border, the border crossed them thrice. But the U.S. Census doesn’t have a box to check for those people born in Mexico who possess or identify with an indigenous Mexican group, because the U.S. Census is a crock of mierda with racial classifications no doubt created by a pencil pusher with too much tequila the night before. That said, there are enough indigenous Mexicans in the United States to begin rethinking this—demographers estimate there are over 100,00 Mixtecs and Zapotecs (Indians from the state of Oaxaca) in the United States, and they freely acknowledge it’s probably a severe undercount due to these people being ostracized by both gabachos and Mexicans. And this isn’t counting the many Chicano yaktivists who think taking on an Aztec name and hanging the calendar stone on their bedroom wall classifies them as a direct descendant of Cuauhtémoc.

    REMEMBER, READERS: Start asking me questions on my Youtube channel, youtube.com/askamexicano. The bigger the sombrero, the better!

    Ask the Mexican at themexican@askamexican.net, myspace.com/ocwab, facebook.com/garellano, youtube.com/askamexicano, find him on, Twitter, or write via snail mail at: Gustavo Arellano, P.O. Box 1433, Anaheim, CA 92815.


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