FACING RACE
By MARISSA GAVEL   
Thursday, 01 May 2008

Forming “a more perfect union” isn’t a cut-and-paste task in Larimer County.

 

ImageShortly after his former pastor’s controversial ideas about racism and the state of the world were aired, Barack Obama gave what is now most commonly known as his “race speech,” entitled “A More Perfect Union,” on March 18 in Pennsylvania. Some say it was a last-minute effort, albeit an eloquent one, to distance himself from a bad apple in his campaign bushel. Others see it as the quintessential reason for his candidacy: That his message of hope for the American people includes a real look at who we are and what we have become.

Larimer County is by no means a fair representation of the nation as a whole. We are predominantly white, middle class, college educated and lacking diversity in many senses of the word. Yet, as the community members we recently spoke to for this piece reveal, we are participating in the nationwide conversation that has honed in on diversity, or lack thereof, and what it means to be a part of American history, whether your ancestors were slaves, slave owners, migrant workers or their employers.

That history has shown us that the oral tradition is paramount to the way we learn and how we teach. Sometimes, all it takes is one person to make a statement, controversial or otherwise, to stir a conversation that has been lingering beneath the social norms for decades. Martin Luther King did it with his “I Have a Dream” speech, and Kanye West did it after Katrina. The difference lies in Obama’s seemingly unwavering faith in the discourse that is to follow his words.

His was not a motivational speech or an unprepared utterance driven by anger. It was an invitation for all of us to begin to speak about race, ethnicity, history and what it means — to be white and watch the changes in each generation move you further and further from your own childhood, to be black and an unwilling spokesperson for your ethnic group; to be Latino and speaking in languages that come with stereotypes and pressure to claim a specific nationality.
 

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INTO THE GREAT WIDE OPEN
By SADIE MOORE   
Thursday, 01 May 2008

In Larimer County — the area we serve as the only independent, weekly newspaper — there has been much consideration in recent times about sustainability. What we’re usually talking about are hard resources, like working farms, clean water and renewable energy. While we’re not the first, we’d like to suggest a dialogue about “softer” resources, those not often considered under the banner of sustainability, such as libraries, arts, local economies or education. Okay, what we’re getting at is that we’d like to talk about independent, local media, like ourselves.

On May 15, the Rocky Mountain Chronicle will publish our last weekly print version of what we started in October 2006. We are looking toward this time as a transition to a more sustainable model of what we’ve been working on. Without this, we are concerned that the communities in Larimer County — currently without advocates in a media landscape dominated by an unsustainable old guard of mainstreamers — will suffer. As all types of newspapers across the country contemplate how best to remain a sustainable resource, we’re looking for a way to do so, as well.

Today, alternative newspapers across the United States continue to reflect their local communities more meaningfully than most other forms of print publications, particularly struggling traditionalist-minded papers that are still approaching their craft and audience with tonal arrogance or, worse yet, lack of context or locally informed perspective. The challenge for the alternative press now is maintaining our deep community connections sustainably, and that means re-envisioning our place inside a quickly evolving media landscape that is coming to favor an online presence over a print one, or at least some savvy combination of the two.

 

But this letter is not an obituary — merely a request for a sabbatical, to re-evaluate how best to serve the needs of our readers and the needs of the dedicated staff that has worked tirelessly and with passion, toiling over print to produce this paper. Deciding to end this phase of the Chronicle was an incredibly difficult decision — but it is also the right one. This is the short list of things I didn’t even consider: selling out; filling our pages with irrelevant fun facts and canned stories rather than quality pieces about local issues meant to inform and spark productive dialogue among our readers; or reforming our voice and editorial policies to become a “safe” read. To compromise on these points would be to undermine what makes our publication different and good. In the first letter I wrote for this paper, I promised you that the Chronicle would remain an independent, local and alternative publication. And I meant it.

 

While the current incarnation of the Chronicle comes to an end, what will not cease is our undying devotion to independent media and our desire to see it survive within this community. As Northern Colorado continues to grow, the need for independent, investigative journalism will only increase. We have no intention of abandoning the cause. We are currently considering a variety of possibilities for continuing this publication in another format, or configuration of formats.

Toward that goal, as we consider our options, we ask you for your opinion. Please, share your thoughts on what local, independent and alternative media means to you, what makes it different, what you believe local media can be, as well as our role in the future of our community.

We look forward to hearing from you. In the meantime, we will be on print hiatus for the week of May 8, but we will return with a special community edition on May 15 that will include your submissions in addition to the features we’ve been proudly creating for our award-winning weekly editions. We’ll immediately begin the experiment in building our online community, with your contributions and feedback, on our blog, www.rmholla.blogspot.com


 
SING ME BACK HOME
By ELLIOTT JOHNSTON   
Thursday, 01 May 2008

Los TexManiacs bring their roots and stories from Iraq to the Fort Collins Cinco de Mayo Fiesta.

 

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Los TexManiacs
Los TexManiacs have toured Iraq twice. One of their gigs — held under a large tent on a U.S. Air Force Base in Ramadi — was interrupted by mortar fire. Max Baca, Los TexManiacs’ bajo sexto player, remembers the day. Huge plumes of smoke from frequent bombings were visible on the horizon (at this base, it was as standard as seeing snowcaps on Longs Peak), while a tent full of soldiers relaxed with soda and non-alcoholic beer — and Baca’s band, three songs into their set.

“It hit like a hundred and fifty yards right outside the perimeter, man,” he says, of one bomb. “And we just felt the bandstand just shake with our gear, and we put on our bulletproof vests and our helmets and everything. So here we go to the bunkers. Then we hear our people retaliating back, and then after that it was quiet and they kind of got it under control.”

Back at the tent, after the dust settled, two hundred soldiers were gathered to hear more from the band. Los TexManiacs, a San Antonio-based Tejano conjunto showband, are a supergroup of the Tejano music world. Lead singer and accordion player David Farias was inducted into the Tejano Roots Hall of Fame in 2007; bass player Speedy Villanueva was a member of La Mafia, one of the most successful Tejano groups of all time; and Baca’s bajo sexto playing (a twelve-string traditional conjunto instrument that incorporates bass and guitar strings) has earned him countless high-profile gigs as a sideman, including work on three Grammy-winning albums.

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