OPINION: 720 hours More With a Dying Father.

Hispanic Funeral

My father worked 90 days at the last job of his life so he could get health insurance. In the early part of those 90 days, doctors found cancer that was eating him up fast. He needed rest and recovery, but the 90-day mark qualified him for health insurance.  He needed coverage to live — and to live financially — because medical costs would have killed him, before the cancer did.

So the toughest son of a bitch I’ve ever known, Rolando Rodriguez, Sr., worked a rigorous, blue collar mechanic job — as he’d always done — with cancer, dropping to 110 pounds and knowing his life was soon ending so the financial burden of health care wouldn’t take down his family – so he could get health insurance.

He made it the 90 days, got health insurance, but in the next 90 days, he was dead at 46-years-old.

He shouldn’t have spent those 90 days working. He should have been resting, fighting the cancer, preparing to die – anything – but not laying under an oily engine fixing trucks.

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OPINION: Mom, “I understand.”

preemo

Preemo, www.myspace.com/preemo

I sometimes question my path. I question it because, sometimes, the path we walk is wide and has big beautiful trees lined along its borders that give off miles of fresh air. You breathe deeply and you know life is right. It’s where you’re supposed to be.

Then the path narrows, the light and the trees disappear and nothingness surrounds it. Nothing surrounds you. You breathe deeply and you’re short of breath and you know life is confusing.  It’s not where you’re supposed to be.

My path has widened and narrowed several times. My path recently widened and there were no trees, just hip-hop. Brown hip-hop. Latino hip-hop. Instead of trees, rappers lined up along my path’s borders. They’re staring at me and I don’t know what it means. They represent thousands of songs, millions of lyrics, billions of beats.  Their music is a manifestation of the streets. My streets. They tell a story and it’s mine. But I question my path. Why me? Why am I here?

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OPINION: Is Soda the New Crack?

kid drinking soda

If it is, I was born a crack-baby. I was born craving the bubbly. I was one of those Mexican-American babies with that fizzling dark liquid in their bottle you shake your head at. I grew up on Coca-Cola. It accompanied breakfast, lunch and dinner. No joke, I used to drink a two-liter bottle… per day.

Think that’s funny?

I was a shitty big brother to my sibling eight years my junior, which is normal. Let me tell you what’s not. One time when he pissed me off, I made him drink water and he threw up everywhere. What’s more sickening? The act I committed against my brother or the fact that his body rejected one of the most important elements of the human body, because it was so foreign to him.

I rose up from tough circumstances and persevered. Today, I have everything a man could want – toys, beautiful women who keep me company at home and at work, clothes, a daughter who speaks multiple languages and is faster than a grown man, a car that’s faster than yours, 11th floor view from the living room, you name it – I got it. One of the greatest things I have is control over is my life. I do what I want, when I want.

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I Used to Think Green was the Wrong Kind of Green, but in Reality, it was Browner Than I Thought.

adriannagreen

Adrianna Quintero, Senior Litigator and Director of La Onda Verde.

Let me tell you what the “Green” movement looked like to me before I talked to Adrianna Quintero, Senior Litigator and Director of La Onda Verde at the National Resources Defense Council.

It looked like a black Cadillac Escalade. The new hybrid version, of course. You know the one. It looks just like a normal Escalade, only it has that cool little green “hybrid” logo that tells people “Hey, I’m wealthy enough to drive this SUV, but I’m cool, too, because I care about the planet. This logo validates my greenness.”

Green looked like a freaking blue chicken nugget on wheels, making me nervous as hell to pass it on the freeway in fear of causing a cross-wind that would blow it into oblivion and committing vehicular manslaughter. They’re called SmartCars, right?

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“Free SPM” Movement is More About a Community Needing to Face the Music Than it is About Freeing an Icon.

SPM

Carlos Coy (born October 5, 1971), better known by his stage name South Park Mexican, is an American rapper, and company founder of Dope House Records. His stage name is derived from the South Park neighborhood in Houston, Texas where he was raised. In 2002, Coy was convicted of aggravated sexual assault of a child and sentenced to 45 years incarceration, and is currently serving his sentence at Powledge Prison in Palestine, Texas.

A wise friend recently said to me that healing doesn’t happen in silence. It’s ironic that he used that choice of words because he was dead on. He was talking about a phenomenon that is opposite of silent, created by a community that sorely needs to heal. It is a phenomenon splattered on t-shirts, incorporated in rap videos and woven into lyrics of underground rap artists all over Texas. Yet, it isn’t giving the right message.

But I think it’s time someone does.

The phenomenon my friend was referring to was the “Free SPM” movement.  If you’re wondering if it has anything to do with jail, it does. In fact, it’s a rallying cry by mainly Latino Texas hip hop followers to free a rap legend know as South Park Mexican, a.k.a. Carlos Coy, who is serving a 45-year prison sentence for aggravated sexual assault of a child.

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