Category Archives: what I’m thinking about today

Turning Point: The Voting Rights Act, Then and Now

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1994 Ephemera: Turning Point – The 1964 Mississippi Freedom Summer Published by The Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies, Washington D.C. Authored by Frank R. Parker. Photograph taken in 1994 to commemorate Freedom Summer also known as the Summer of ‘64. This was a freelance assignment for the Washington Post.

This post in honor of the life of Trayvon Benjamin Martin

You can watch the webcast here via the Senate Judiciary website or here via Cspan

1994 Ephemera: Turning Point – The 1964 Mississippi Freedom Summer Published by The Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies, Washington D.C. Authored by Frank R. Parker. Photograph taken in 1994 to commemorate Freedom Summer also known as the Summer of ‘64. This was a freelance assignment for the Washington Post.

          This post in honor of the life of Trayvon Benjamin Martin

The Senate Judiciary Hearing will meet on Wednesday July 17th to conduct a hearing on the Voting Rights Act in the wake of the Supreme Court’s decision in a case from Alabama.

You can watch the webcast here via the Senate Judiciary website or here via Cspan

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These photographs recorded in Santa Maria, California on assignment. Published in the Santa Barbara News-Press and syndicated to the Associated Press, CNN and other print and broadcast outlets.

Yesterday Today: A Picture is Worth a Thousand Words

webimg259 webimg263 webimg268 webimg269 webimg291Building my website has been an exercise in many disciplines.

Apart from viewing my professional history through my photographs, more and more I realize them for what they are: a record, a document and a mirror of our society.

One of the questions I have been asking myself recently is, how much have we grown as a nation? How forward thinking, have we become as a country?

We call ourselves the greatest democracy in the world, yet we are willing to destroy our natural resources,  sell our democracy to lobbyists whose only consideration is their own profit, and undermine our constitution, all in the name of progress?

Progress for whom?

This progress guarantees no future for our children and in the name of this progress we  give permission to take their lives prematurely in an epidemic called gun violence.

Not only is Congress giving permission and guaranteeing a shorter life span for children they are starving our children and working families while feeding the insatiable belly of corporations. Corporate greed and religious intolerance galvanizes and energizes the chasm dividing our nation, through a violence that especially targets the most vulnerable populations, children. As George Zimmerman said: “I was doing God’s plan.” His  justification rooted in a moral ethic that is supported by lobby espoused religious zeal, dressed up as law, entitling him to take the  life of Trayvon Benjamin Martin.

Have we really become a nation that settles for watching “reality TV” while dismissing, denying and refusing to participate in our own democracy?

Why are these same themes repeating themselves?

The life of an African-American males continues to be devalued and discounted, around the country and especially  in the very same regions that would take our right to vote.

Women are still fighting, clamoring for our right to own our bodies, to choose, to access healthcare.

The sentinels screaming the religious indignation of  ‘Right to Life‘ are the very same guardians obstructing health care outside the womb. The very same group body opposing the collective body of citizens in the right to vote, in equality for all people, of all colors and races, in life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness and in our inalienable right in freedom of speech.

In love thy neighbor as thyself, where is the love to feed those who do not have enough to eat because the appetite of corporate greed exceeded their neighbors?

These guardians, the very same sentinels whose right to bear arms will stand their ground in ‘Right to Life.’ Right to whose life?

We are in peril of losing one of our most precious pillars of democracy, and that is our right to vote. It is our collective voice. Our mandate. The navigation that guarantees our waters of democracy.

Our guarantee of an even keel for all, not just the few.

If a picture is worth a thousand words, then I have written a few toward this sum today.

These photographs, my copyright, were recorded while on assignment for the Los Angeles Times and will be available via my archive

Electronic Lynching: A Memoir Part II

This is an update to my  Electronic Lynching: A Memoir post 

Looking through my http://anaelisafoto.blogspot.com webmaster tools, I went into my stats to view who was coming to my site and from where.  Looking at the keyword search, I noticed the word “attack.” I took the next logical step, searched my name ana elisa fuentes, added the word “attack” and found the citations below via the Google search engine. They were not found on yahoo! or bing or any other search engine, only Google.

What am I to make of this?

I followed the necessary steps. I had already contacted police authorities. Did anyone bother to contact me? Reply to me?

Did anyone bother to contact me to offer protection?

Bother, to keep me informed? To offer reassurances of any kind?

NO THEY DID NOT.

GOOGLE CERTAINLY DID NOT. NOT EVEN AN APOLOGY OR REPLY SAYING THAT THEY WERE LOOKING INTO THIS.

Not one agency, authority, individual bothered to contact me.

Or perhaps, as an afterthought thank me.

In addition to my previous complaints filed against Google with ICANN, Interpol I also contacted the German Court of the Constitution

in addition to many other support groups and agencies.

So for those individuals who believe that women have come a long way, and that feminism is an outdated concept, think again.  I stand firmly and absolutely with a resounding NO! According to this report by Scientific American, Violence Against Women is Epidemic 

Protections for women are needed now more than ever. Misogyny and  VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN is unfortunately on the rise, despite the laws we have on the books.

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A few days ago I found additional abuse via the Google search engine. I attempted to file a defamation violation with the Google search engine but it proved unsuccessful. I tried three-times to file and it was blocked.

My digital signature is clear and the correct box ticked but it was refused by Google. Another example of Google’s selective and discriminatory algorithm.

Here are the screen captures which confirm blocked access from filing. So Google, consider this another formal complaint.

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Women, Climate Change and World Refugee Day: Connect the Dots

webIMG_0164Today is World Refugee Day, and this begs the question, how  many of us will become refugees as a result of climate change? This Haitian woman, is a hurricane survivor who was relocated to a camp in the Dominican Republic at the border with Haiti. TWO PERCENT of Haiti is forested. Simple math tells that the remaining 98 percent is DEFORESTED.

Soil erosion is the result of deforestation, which makes the island nation vulnerable to landslides and floods during hurricane season.

Where there is no soil, there is no food;  which leads to hunger.

Deforestation has led to Haiti to depend on other nations, agencies, ,and NGO’s for food.

According to a report published on June 10th, 2015,  by the United Nations Internal Oversight Services, “over 200 women were forced into sexual acts with UN peacekeepers in exchange for basic necessities”

Think about the number of displaced persons as a result of hurricane Katrina.

Were they not climate refugees?

This week the Guardian published an article on American’s First People who are now America’s First Climate Refugees.

The people of Newtok, Alaska, like the people of Haiti are, literally,  losing the ground below their feet.

Photograph and text copyright Ana Elisa Fuentes

Shundahai

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Sunrise Prayer – Shundahai – Peace and Harmony With All of Creation

image copyright anaelisafuentes

Renewable Wind Energy Day

In honor of renewable wind energy day, wind turbine installation, California.

image copyright anaelisafuentes

stroll

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webimg234London stroll

I put this in the category of #wildart, a term used in the newspaper world, to find those unusual, unexpected, unscheduled  images. The fun of totting the camera along.

image copyright anaelisafuentes

 

foam foam and more foam

ocean.foamThe unpredictable and mysterious ocean foam

washes ashore Arroyo Burro Beach in Santa Barbara, California..

Yes, it is as toxic as it looks.

Some of the causes are as you might expect;

crude oil discharge from tankers at sea, motor oil, detergents, etc .. Contact with the foam

can cause skin irritations and respiratory discomfort.

All rivers and storm drains lead to the sea.

#worldoceansday

image copyright anaelisafuentes

from my photo assignment archive

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The bizarre world of humans and the cats that own them

Kitty Cat

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