(OTHER PARTY becomes known as THE TABLE)
we are every thursday except the 2nd thursday of every month - because of some art walk thingy - otherwise see you dere... slowly taking shape.
By Wu Tsang
The question of immigration policy and immigrant rights is inseparable from any discussion of Mac Arthur Park. Directly in front of the Westlake Theater is the park itself, where some of the most visible displays of solidarity among immigrant communities have taken place. In 2006, approximately 500,000 people marched in the streets of Los Angeles and gathered in Mac Arthur Park to protest H.R. 4437 and the criminalization of immigrants in the United States. Such shows of solidarity and political agency would be quelled one year later when at the same site an immigrant rights protest was violently repressed as police shot rubber bullets at thousands of peaceful protesters.
Our interest in the Westlake Theater lies not in a restoration of its architecture, but rather in its ruins. The theater's repurposing by the immigrant community provides a glimpse of a palimpsest in which the co-existence of past and present reveals culture as historically dynamic. In the Westlake stood a rare instance in which this transformation was not erased but rather shown for what it is-- as the ruins of one space and the life of another. As we pass into an era of the rapid development of this area, we have to ask for whom and on whose terms such development is being realized. The discourse of development is one that applies not only to processes of local gentrification but also to global discourses of the World Bank and IMF. On the margins of all these discourses of development lie the people who inhabit these formerly colonized locales, shuttled in the impossibility of contemporary globalization. Westlake Theater suspends a moment of transition and is an invitation to consider the affect that fills its process of erasure.
-Michelle Dizon and Camilo Ontiveros
"A lot of U.S. citizens are going to be swept up in the application of this law for something as simple as having an accent and leaving their wallet at home," said Alessandra Soler Meetze, president of the American Civil Liberties Union of Arizona.the bill has yet to be signed into law by gov jan brewer, and there is a heated protest mounting amongst immigrant rights organizers, who are says this law basically turns AZ into a "police state." READ MORE.


We are writing to you about an issue that we think is of great importance to the developing movement(s) for trans liberation. We are writing because we are organizations and individuals concerned with ensuring that trans movements are developed in ways that center racial and economic justice and the leadership of poor people and people of color. We come to this work with a critique of how as lesbian and gay rights has developed over the last 30 years, it has centered the experiences and leadership of white upper class people and its agenda has come to focus on narrow legal equality gains that have little to offer the people who face the worst consequences of homophobia. We believe that part of why that has occurred is that the movement professionalized, and the agenda increasingly was produced in backroom meetings by executive directors, lawyers and funders, with communities facing the worst marginalization (POC, people with disabilities, poor people, immigrants, criminalized people) unrepresented in those discussions. We want to stop the replication of these mistakes in emerging trans activism.