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Puro party in the Mission with Dr. Loco’s band

Compiled by the El Reportero staff

Want to really have fun with cumbia, tex-mex and Mexican rock? Then you’re reading it right. Dr. Loco’s Jalapeño Band will be making you crazy with is loco tunes, and will be accompanied with Tracy Sirota and Triple Flame.
At the Elbo Room, on Wednesday, Sept. 14. Door opens at 9 p.m. Cover charge $8. Tell them you read it in El Reportero.

Entre Sur y Norte, Madelina y Los Carpinteros Premiering @ Berkeley’s La Peña

Meandering between the South and the North is La Peña’s debut concert of Madelina y Los Carpinteros and Friends. The group features the soulful voices of Madelina Zayas with Brandon Vance (both Buena Trova Social Club), and richly layered and deeply rooted acoustic performance from former members of Grupo Raíz, Fernando Feña Torres and Denis Schmidt and Bay Area jewels Ruthie Dineen, Craig Thomas and Brandon Vance. Special performance by sikuri master and choreographer Luis Valverde and partner Claudia Susana (Valverde dance and former Grupo Anqari), and Tomás Enguidanos on the Andean Mandolina.

Following the tradition of the Nueva Canción and Nueva Trova – movements that came out of The Americas’ liberation struggles to freshly embody the folk roots with an enriched lyricism – this concert will premiere Fernando Torres’ own compositions as well as unique interpretations of music from Puerto Rico to the Andes Mountains (Argentina, Chile, Perú, Venezuela, the Andes Region, Puerto Rico) and the mainland US.

It is not a coincidence that Madelina, Los Carpinteros and friends will be debuting at La Peña. Since its inception 41 years ago, the Berkeley’s venerated hut has become the casa of the nueva trova/nueva canción, where the attentive ear and lovers of the genre can enjoy the musical gems of its originators as well as the work currently developed locally. A not-to-be-missed Fall evening with some soulful and rhythmic picks into the Latin American cancionero, including originals from Fernando Torres and unique interpretations from Osvaldo Torres, Simón Diaz, Rafaél Manríquez, Roy Brown, Juan Antonio Corretjer, Rafael Hernández, Fernando Solanas and Roberto Goyeneche, amongst others.

Friday, September 30, 2016. 8pm. $15 adv. $20 dr. At La Peña Cultural Center, 3105 Shattuck Ave. Berkeley. 510-849-2568 Tickets: http://bit.ly/2bCQ1ka.

Exhibition China in my imagination with paintings by Mexican children

by the El Reportero news services

The 3rd Children’’s Painting Exhibition-Drawing Competition ‘’China in my imagination’’ based on the ancient history, traditions and cultural heritage of the Asian country is being exhibited today in Mexico City.

Inaugurated yesterday in the National Museum of Culture, it exhibits more than one hundred drawings that will be displayed until October.

The competition has been organized with the collaboration of the National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH, in Spanish) and the section of Artistic Education of the National Institute of Fine Arts, as well as the embassy and the China Cultural Center in Mexico.

In the competition students from 22 primary schools participated.

The three winning works, with seven honorable mentions and 138 paintings, which together make up the exhibit, reflect the view of children of several historical references.

In addition, historical and heritage attractions of the nation are represented, such as the so-called Silk Road, mythical animals such as dragons and the Great Wall of China, a statement by the INAH highlighted.

Spanish Editorial Samarcanda to launch Collection Cuban literature

Spanish editorial Samarcanda will create Guantanamera Collection, specialized in literature of Cuban authors, explained today their executives in an interview.

The genesis of Guantanamera started with a tour of the Spanish editor and journalist Daniel Pinilla a few months ago of several cities of the island, in representation of the group.

In cities like Holguin and Havana, he met with important writers in different institutions like the center Onelio Jorge Cardoso, the Center Dulce María Loynaz and Editions La Luz.

From the extensive investigation that involved dozens of promising and consecreated figures and genres so different as the novel, narrative journalism and poetry, Samarcanda elected during July and August the books which will start the new editorial chapter.

Some of those selected are the Prize Julian del Casal of 1981, Alex Fleites and the novel authors specialized in science fiction, Anabel Enríquez and Daniel Burguet.

In a communiuque Enrique Parrilla, leading Lantia Publishing and the Editorial Samarcanda, assured they are inspired in the figure of revolutionary leader and Havana writer, José Martí ‘who understood the importance of words’.

‘The fact that a poet became the most important leader of the War of Independence is a will of the purity of his ideas’, continued the note circulated among the authors who will be published in the catalog of the collection.

Parrilla assured the first actions of the Project will take place in the book fairs of Madrid and German fair in Frankfurt.

Here they come again the corporate lobbyists and their captive governments

They try to wear down our resistance with one fake trade treaty after another

by George Monbiot

Is it over? Can it be true? If so, it’s a victory for a campaign that once looked hopeless, pitched against a fortress of political, corporate and bureaucratic power.

TTIP – the transatlantic trade and investment partnership – appears to be dead. The German economy minister, Sigmar Gabriel, says that “the talks with the US have de facto failed.” The French Prime Minister, Manuel Valls, has announced “a clear halt”. Belgian and Austrian ministers have said the same thing. People power wins. For now.

But the lobbyists who demanded this charter for corporate rights never give up. TTIP has been booed off the stage but another treaty, whose likely impacts are almost identical, is waiting in the wings. And this one is more advanced, wanting only final approval. If this happens before Britain leaves the EU, we are likely to be stuck with it for the next 20 years.

The Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA) is ostensibly a deal between the EU and Canada. You might ask what harm Canada could do us. But it allows any corporation which operates there, wherever its headquarters might be, to sue governments before an international tribunal. It threatens to tear down laws protecting us from exploitation and prevent parliaments on both sides of the Atlantic from legislating.

To say that there is no mandate for such agreements is an understatement: they have received an unequivocal counter-mandate. The consultation the EU grudgingly launched on TTIP’s proposal to grant new legal rights to corporations received 150,000 responses, 97 percent of which were hostile. But while choice is permitted when you shop for butter, on the big decisions there is no alternative.

It’s not clear whether national parliaments will be allowed to veto this treaty. The European trade commissioner has argued that there is no need: it can be put before the European Parliament alone. But even if national parliaments are allowed to debate it, they will be permitted only to take it or leave it: the contents are deemed to have been settled already.

Only once the negotiations between European and Canadian officials had been completed, and the text of the agreement leaked, did the European Commission publish it. It is 1,600 pages long. It has neither a contents list nor explanatory text. As far as transparency, parity and comprehensibility are concerned, it’s the equivalent of the land treaties illiterate African chiefs were induced to sign in the 19th Century. It is hard to see how parliamentarians could make a properly-informed decision.

If you seek to buy a secondhand car these days, the salesperson might wheedle and spin, but they will also – thanks to EU consumer protection laws – be obliged to explain the risks and caveats. If you want to know whether or not to buy this trade treaty, you have no such protection: the EU’s website tells you what a wonderful set of wheels this is, but carries not a word about the risks.

Here is its answer to the question of whether the CETA negotiations were conducted in secret. “Not at all … During the five years of talks, the Commission held various civil society dialogue meetings for stakeholders.” I followed the link it gave and found that four meetings had taken place, all of them in Brussels, all dominated by corporate trade associations, which are likely to have been on the inside track anyway. Where was the publicity? Where were the attempts to reach beyond a gilded circle of lobbyists and cronies? Where were the efforts to take the discussion to other nations? Where were the debates, the drive to seek genuine public engagement, let alone consent? If this is transparency, I dread to think what secrecy looks like.

After long hours struggling with the treaty, I realised I hadn’t a hope of grasping its implications. I have had to rely on experts commissioned by groups such as Attac in Germany and the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives.

Like TTIP, CETA threatens to lock in privatisation, making renationalisation (of Britain’s railways, for example), or attempts by cities to take control of failing public services (as Joseph Chamberlain did in Birmingham, laying the foundations for modern social provision) impossible. Like TTIP, it uses a broad definition of both investment and expropriation to allow corporations to sue governments when they believe their “future anticipated profits” might be threatened by new laws.

Like TTIP, it restricts the ways in which governments may protect their people. It appears to prohibit, for example, rules that would prevent banks from becoming too big to fail. It seems to threaten our planning laws and other commonsense protections.

Anything not specifically exempted from the agreement is considered covered. In other words, if governments don’t spot a potential hazard before the hazard emerges, they are stuck with it. The European Union appears to have relinquished its ability, for example, to insist that investment and retail banking be separated.

CETA claims to be a trade treaty, but many of its provisions have little to do with trade. They are attempts to circumscribe democracy on behalf of corporate power. Millions of people in Europe and Canada want to emerge from the neoliberal era. But such treaties would lock us into it, allowing the politics we have rejected to govern us beyond the grave.

If parliaments reject this treaty, another attempt is already being prepared: the Trade in Services Agreement that the European Union is simultaneously negotiating with the US and 21 other nations. May’s government has expressed enthusiasm: her Department for International Trade says “the UK remains committed to an ambitious Trade in Services Agreement.” So much for taking back control.

Corporate lobbyists and their captive governments have been seeking to impose such treaties for over 20 years, starting with the Multilateral Agreement on Investment (it was destroyed, like TTIP, by massive public protests, in 1998). Working in secrecy, without democratic consent, they will keep returning to the theme, in the hope of wearing down our resistance.

When you are told that the price of liberty is eternal vigilance, this is what it means. This struggle will continue throughout your life. We have to succeed every time, they have to succeed only once. Never drop your guard. Never let them win.
www.monbiot.com

Silencing America as it prepare for war Part 1

NOTE FROM THE EDITOR

DEAR READERS:

I hadn’t read an article with so much insight on international politics. Written with so much clarity, this article, authored by John Pilger, prepares the reader to really understand what is covered and what is not about American politics, by the so called mainstream media. PART 1 OF TWO.

Silencing America as it prepares for war

by John Pilger

Returning to the United States in an election year, I am struck by the silence. I have covered four presidential campaigns, starting with 1968; I was with Robert Kennedy when he was shot and I saw his assassin, preparing to kill him. It was a baptism in the American way, along with the salivating violence of the Chicago police at the Democratic Party’s rigged convention. The great counterrevolution had begun.

The first to be assassinated that year, Martin Luther King, had dared link the suffering of African-Americans and the people of Vietnam. When Janis Joplin sang, “Freedom’s just another word for nothing left to lose”, she spoke perhaps unconsciously for millions of America’s victims in faraway places.

“We lost 58,000 young soldiers in Vietnam, and they died defending your freedom. Now don’t you forget it.” So said a National Parks Service guide as I filmed last week at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington. He was addressing a school party of young teenagers in bright orange T-shirts. As if by rote, he inverted the truth about Vietnam into an unchallenged lie.

The millions of Vietnamese who died and were maimed and poisoned and dispossessed by the American invasion have no historical place in young minds, not to mention the estimated 60,000 veterans who took their own lives. A friend of mine, a marine who became a paraplegic in Vietnam, was often asked, “Which side did you fight on?”

A few years ago, I attended a popular exhibition called The Price of Freedom at the venerable Smithsonian Institution in Washington. The lines of ordinary people, mostly children shuffling through a Santa’s grotto of revisionism, were dispensed a variety of lies: the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki saved “a million lives”; Iraq was “liberated [by] air strikes of unprecedented precision”. The theme was unerringly heroic: only Americans pay the price of freedom.

The 2016 election campaign is remarkable not only for the rise of Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders but also for the resilience of an enduring silence about a murderous self-bestowed divinity. A third of the members of the United Nations have felt Washington’s boot, overturning governments, subverting democracy, imposing blockades and boycotts. Most of the presidents responsible have been liberal – Truman, Kennedy, Johnson, Carter, Clinton, Obama.

The breathtaking record of perfidy is so mutated in the public mind, wrote the late Harold Pinter, that it “never happened …Nothing ever happened. Even while it was happening it wasn’t happening. It didn’t matter. It was of no interest. It didn’t matter… “. Pinter expressed a mock admiration for what he called “a quite clinical manipulation of power worldwide while masquerading as a force for universal good. It’s a brilliant, even witty, highly successful act of hypnosis.”

Take Obama. As he prepares to leave office, the fawning has begun all over again. He is “cool”. One of the more violent presidents, Obama gave full reign to the Pentagon war-making apparatus of his discredited predecessor. He prosecuted more whistleblowers – truth-tellers – than any president. He pronounced Chelsea Manning guilty before she was tried. Today, Obama runs an unprecedented worldwide campaign of terrorism and murder by drone.

In 2009, Obama promised to help “rid the world of nuclear weapons” and was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. No American president has built more nuclear warheads than Obama. He is “modernizing” America’s doomsday arsenal, including a new “mini” nuclear weapon, whose size and “smart” technology, says a leading general, ensure its use is “no longer unthinkable”.

James Bradley, the best-selling author of Flags of Our Fathers and son of one of the US marines who raised the flag on Iwo Jima, said, “[One] great myth we’re seeing play out is that of Obama as some kind of peaceful guy who’s trying to get rid of nuclear weapons. He’s the biggest nuclear warrior there is. He’s committed us to a ruinous course of spending a trillion dollars on more nuclear weapons. Somehow, people live in this fantasy that because he gives vague news conferences and speeches and feel-good photo-ops that somehow that’s attached to actual policy. It isn’t.”

On Obama’s watch, a second cold war is under way. The Russian president is a pantomime villain; the Chinese are not yet back to their sinister pig-tailed caricature – when all Chinese were banned from the United States – but the media warriors are working on it.

Neither Hillary Clinton nor Bernie Sanders has mentioned any of this. There is no risk and no danger for the United States and all of us; for them, the greatest military build-up on the borders of Russia since World War Two has not happened. On May 11, Romania went “live” with a NATO “missile defense” base that aims its first-strike American missiles at the heart of Russia, the world’s second nuclear power.

In Asia, the Pentagon is sending ships, planes and special forces to the Philippines to threaten China. The US already encircles China with hundreds of military bases that curve in an arc up from Australia, to Asia and across to Afghanistan. Obama calls this a “pivot”.

As a direct consequence, China reportedly has changed its nuclear weapons policy from no-first-use to high alert and put to sea submarines with nuclear weapons. The escalator is quickening. PART TWO WILL CONTINUE NEXT WEEK.

7 sneaky food marketing strategies designed to trick you

by Jennifer Lea Reynolds

All of those “buy 2 for the price of 1” supermarket or massive chain-store deals sound appealing, don’t they? Well, you may not be getting the deal you think you are. Many so-called deals are nothing more than clever food marketing tactics. Translation: many times, you may end up spending more than you intended.

Here’s what to watch out for while shopping.

1. Attention-getting colors and designs

Getting your attention is what sales are all about. A drab store filled with bland boxes and boring end displays will hardly entice consumers. But brightly-colored cereal boxes and unique designs are attractive to many people. Unfortunately, much of this food marketing strategy applies to junk foods. Think about all of those potato chip and cookie bags. If it’s bold, has a shiny foil wrap, or a large font that “screams” out to you, that’s food marketing and branding at it’s best — and it’s not always good for your health. But it is good for many food giant’s bank accounts.

2. The before and after notion

Those too-good-to-be true markdowns? Be careful. The “after” price is usually what the actual price should be. However, seeing a more expensive, marked-up cost slashed down makes you think you’re getting the steal of the century.

3.It’s all in your walk

Researchers have discovered that most people shop the way they drive (interesting, right?), so if you drive on the right side of the road then you tend to walk that way while shopping. Therefore, items are stocked based on that concept. It’s no coincidence that you find yourself putting things in your cart that aren’t even on your shopping list; marketers count on this!

4. Oh, look how cute that is!

Those cute teeny cans of soda or on-the-go cheese sticks? Food marketers know that small packaging generates big spending. Because some of these mini products often come with a reasonable price tag, you’re more likely to pick two or five up. And up goes your bill.
5.You found that where?

If you ever pondered why fingernail files are near greeting cards or other odd placement variations, well, it’s intentional. According to University of California’s marketing professor Wendy Liu, this is mostly about getting you to buy on impulse. You’re sending a card to a friend, so hey, why not take do something nice for yourself and take care of your nails while you’re at it? She explains that such distractions are intentional, giving you a false sense of product attachment. In your cart it (usually) goes.

6.You’re made to feel special

Many stores advertise a limited-time only deal or quantity of a product, making you think you have to act now to get in on a great deal. This must be your lucky day! Truth is, you’re falling into the “bulk bargain” trap. Chances are, you don’t need to buy 8 pounds of coffee now to get in on the so-called deal of a lifetime. That coffee will be there next week.

7. That smells great!

Finally, researchers are very cognizant of how smell and sound can attract customers. Stores that sell food samples that sizzle on mini-grills and the sounds of a gentle thunderstorm erupting as you reach for some lettuce are examples. In fact, it was found that when experts pumped in the smell of apple pie in an appliance store, refrigerator sales increased nearly 25 percent.

So, do your best to stick to that grocery list. Cross off each item as you go. Even better, avoid mass store chains and shop local if you can. You’ll be supporting local businesses and probably won’t be faced with tactics that clutter your mind and epty your wallet.
Happy shopping! Natural News.

The Obama Administration temporarily blocks the Dakota access pipeline

Protesters demonstrate against the Energy Transfer Partners' Dakota Access oil pipeline near the Standing Rock Sioux reservation in Cannon Ball, North Dakota, U.S. September 9, 2016. REUTERS/Andrew Cullen - RTX2OVHS

by Robinson Meyer
The FreeThoughProject.com

The surprise move came after a federal judge declined to stop the 1,100-mile fossil fuel project’s construction.

The Standing Rock Sioux Tribe and the hundreds of Native protestors who have joined them in rural North Dakota won a huge but provisional victory in their quest to stop the Dakota Access pipeline, as the U.S. government announced late on Friday afternoon that it was voluntarily halting work on the project.

The triumph tasted all the sweeter because it had followed so closely after a seemingly immense defeat. Mere minutes after a federal judge declined the Tribe’s request for an injunction to stop construction on the pipeline, the Obama administration made a surprise announcement that it would not permit the project to continue for now.

“Construction of the pipeline on Army Corps land bordering or under Lake Oahe will not go forward at this time,” said a joint statement from the Department of Justice, the Department of the Interior, and the U.S. Army. “We request that the pipeline company voluntarily pause all construction activity within 20 miles east or west of Lake Oahe.”

The Army will now move to “reconsider any of its previous decisions” regarding whether the pipeline respects federal law, especially the National Environmental Policy Act, the statement said.

The Obama administration also announced that it will invite tribes to formal consultations this fall about whether any federal rules around national infrastructure projects like the Dakota Access pipeline should be reformed in order to protect tribal resources and rights. It will also consider whether new laws should be proposed to Congress.

As planned, the Dakota Access pipeline would run 1,100 miles from oil fields in northwest North Dakota to a refinery and port in Illinois. Hundreds of people, many of them from Native communities or nations, have gathered on tribal land near the Missouri River since April to protest the pipeline’s construction. The camps are one of the largest Native protests in decades.

In July, the Standing Rock Tribe sued the Army Corps of Engineers, the federal agency which approved the pipeline. The tribe claimed that the pipeline’s construction would destroy nearby sacred and burial sites, and that, if the pipeline ever leaked or failed, it would pollute the tribe’s drinking water. It sought a temporary injunction to halt its construction. I wrote about the tribe’s case this week.

On Friday, the court declined that injunction request with a 58-page ruling. (The Department of Justice, apparently waiting for the decision, issued its own statement blocking the pipeline minutes later.)

The judge, James Boasberg of the D.C. district court, said that the Army Corps had sufficiently followed federal law in approving the pipeline. The tribe’s claims that the pipeline crossed archeological sites were moot, since most of those sites were on private property, he said. And he seemed to lament that the injunction was sought under the National Historic Preservation Act and not the Clean Water Act, where he hinted that the tribe would have had sturdier standing.

“This Court does not lightly countenance any depredation of lands that hold significance to the Standing Rock Sioux,” wrote Boasberg. “Aware of the indignities visited upon the Tribe over the last centuries, the Court scrutinizes the permitting process here with particular care. Having done so, the Court must nonetheless conclude that the Tribe has not demonstrated that an injunction is warranted here.”

Of course, all this will change now that the executive has stepped in. “This federal statement is a game changer for the Tribe and we are acting immediately on our legal options, including filing an appeal and a temporary injunction to force DAPL to stop construction,” said a statement from the Standing Rock Sioux on Facebook.

While the government’s block is temporary, the pipeline’s future now looks much more uncertain than it did hours ago. Most of the pipeline will be built on private land owned by Energy Transfer Partners, but it still needs Army Corps approval to cross federal waterways. Given the outcry from climate activists, the Obama administration may be more willing to cancel the pipeline’s federal permits, as it did with the Keystone XL pipeline last year.

I found it particularly interesting that the administration’s statement called out the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). That law requires federal agencies to account for environmental risks and hazards when they approve a project. Earlier this year, President Obama decreed that the NEPA process should account for the costs of greenhouse gas emissions, a potential opening for federal agencies to obstruct a huge fossil-fuel infrastructure project like Dakota Access.  
  
Regardless, Dakota Access looks like a tentative success for Native protestors and the climate activists who supported them. It also hints at how actively the current Democratic administration will involve itself in environmental issues, especially when pushed by t concerns about the environment and historic, sacred sites,” said the joint statement. “It is now incumbent on all of us to develop a path forward that serves the broadest public interest.”

Why a nurse and a pastor object to being forced to help abort babies?

by Leah Jessen

A pastor and a nurse want Congress to pass legislation that would allow Americans the freedom to opt out of the abortion process.
Chris Lewis, lead pastor of Foothill Church in Glendora, California, says his congregation doesn’t want to be coerced into covering abortions on employee health insurance plans.

But that is exactly what the state of California is doing, Lewis told The Daily Signal in a phone interview.

Lewis said it is “shocking” that the state Department of Managed Health Care would force his 1,000-member church, against its deeply held religious convictions, to cover abortion in the health plans of roughly 100 employees.

A pastor and a nurse want Congress to pass legislation that would allow Americans the freedom to opt out of the abortion process.
Chris Lewis, lead pastor of Foothill Church in Glendora, California, says his congregation doesn’t want to be coerced into covering abortions on employee health insurance plans.

But that is exactly what the state of California is doing, Lewis told The Daily Signal in a phone interview.

Lewis said it is “shocking” that the state Department of Managed Health Care would force his 1,000-member church, against its deeply held religious convictions, to cover abortion in the health plans of roughly 100 employees.

“We’re stuck in this horrible place,” Lewis told The Daily Signal. “We’re essentially being coerced by the state to violate our conscience.”
“We don’t want to have to cover [abortion],” he said.

Lewis spoke on Capitol Hill at a House forum in July on conscience rights, urging Congress to pass the Conscience Protection Act.
Among about eight others who spoke was a nurse of 26 years, Fe Esperanza Racpan Vinoya.

“I became a nurse to help people, but not to do harm,” Vinoya said.

In 2014, the state of California issued an order requiring all health insurance plans to cover abortion, without a religious exemption.

Lewis said he and his congregation believe life begins at conception, and covering abortions on employee health plans violates the church’s core tenets.

“I can’t believe that we as a church, with this fundamentally, deeply held conviction of ours, can be put in a position to violate our conscience like this,” Lewis said. “We felt like we were over a barrel.” He added:
On the one hand, we’re required to offer coverage under Obamacare. We want to provide that for our employees. … We want to care for them. We want to care for their families. At the same time, we’re being told … to have coverage of the termination of all pregnancies, regardless [whether it is] elective or otherwise.

“I’m really troubled by the idea that the state can just say it doesn’t matter, that your religious freedoms don’t matter to us,” Lewis said.

The House of Representatives passed the Conscience Protection Act, introduced by Rep. Diane Black, R-Tenn., by a vote of 245-182 the week after the forum where Lewis and Vinoya spoke.

The legislation would prohibit the federal government and state or local governments that receive federal health dollars from penalizing or discriminating against health care providers for refusing to “perform, refer for, pay for, or otherwise participate in abortion.”

The legislation is the House’s amended version of an originally unrelated Senate bill sponsored by Sen. John Thune, R-S.D. The Senate now must vote on the amended bill.

President Barack Obama is expected to veto the measure should it win final passage in his final five months in office.

The Obama administration “strongly opposes” the legislation, according to a statement from the Executive Office of the President.
“This bill would unduly limit women’s health care choices by allowing a broadly defined set of health providers (including secular sponsors of employer-based health coverage) to decline to provide abortion coverage based on any objections,” the statement says.

Donna Crane, vice president of policy at NARAL Pro-Choice America, described the Conscience Protection Act as legislation that “lets even more people get in between you and the health care you choose.”

Vinoya, the veteran nurse, told The Daily Signal that she doesn’t want to be forced to participate in abortions.

About five years ago, Vinoya was part of a group of 12 pro-life nurses who sued the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey over a hospital rule that would force all nurses to assist in abortions.

“No one actually knew what to do because the management was saying to us that we were going to lose our job or … be transferred to another unit [for not cooperating],” Vinoya said.

It was a “horrible feeling” for everybody, she said.

The university’s hospital in Newark said at the time that it was not directly forcing nurses to participate in any abortions.
In her remarks July 8 during the House Energy and Commerce Committee’s Forum on Protecting Conscience Rights, Vinoya said:
Participating in the destruction of human life is not only a violation of my religious convictions as a Christian, it also conflicts with my calling as a medical professional to protect life, not to end it.

After a court hearing in 2011, the New Jersey hospital agreed not to force the pro-life nurses to assist in abortions.
Alliance Defending Freedom, a Christian legal aid group, represents Lewis and his church as well as Vinoya and the other pro-life nurses.

“I think that the [Conscience Protection Act] should be passed for professionals like me who are not fortunate enough to have people … who have selflessly helped us get through this ordeal and saved us our jobs,” Vinoya told The Daily Signal.

Lewis said he wants to stand up for the rights of unborn children.

“The most voiceless people in the culture are the unborn,” Lewis said. “We want to be a part of not further propagating abortions and allowing that to happen, but actually trying to see [abortions] reduced [and] restricted.”

Mexican scientific community concerned with cuts in 2016

by the El Reportero’s wire services

Mexico, Sep 12 (Prensa Latina) The implementation of science and education cuts in the state budget for next year is considered a mistake by researchers from the scientific community of Mexico.

The researchers are claiming the discussion of this issue at the Congress to adjust budget and avoid affecting this field, as drafted in the bill sent by President Enrique Peña Nieto.

The bill, presented to parliamentarians, includes a cut of $239.7 billion pesos ($13.3 billion USD) to the public spending that will affect disadvantaged fields.

The main cuts will affect Petroleos Mexicanos, Public Education, Health, Agriculture Development, Environment, Economy, Communications and Transport, as well as the National Institute for Women and the Executive Committee for Victims.

Increased Internet Access in Latin America and Caribbean, Says CEPAL

The Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (CEPAL) confirmed here today that Internet users compared to the total population of the region grew 10.6 percent annually between 2000 and 2015.

As a result, it went from 37.2 percent in 2010 to 25.2 percent last year among Latin American and the Caribbean countries and members of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, said a statement by CEPAL that will be followed by a Report on the Situation of Broadband 2016, to be presented here.

The report, that will be issued at the 2nd meeting of the Conference of Science, Innovation and ICT, to be opened this afternoon at the Hotel Aurola Holiday Inn, said that the number of households connected to the Internet in Latin America and the Caribbean grew 14.1 percent as annual average over the last five years.

Hence, 43.4 percent of all households in the region was connected in 2015, an amount that almost doubled the total in 2010, nevertheless, despite these advances, there are problems linked to quality (connection speed) and equal access (differences by location and socioeconomic situation of the population), said the document.

There is also a huge difference in the range of access amid countries in the region: out of the 24 ones researched in 2015, three countries had less than 15 percent of Internet access in homes; 15 countries were between 15 percent and 45 percent; three countries between 45 percent and 56 percent, and only Chile, Costa Rica and Uruguay reached 60 percent.

Underground world of Cuban cars

Compiled by El Reportero’s staff

Tiburon Film Society will present Yank Tanks at the Tiburon Library located at 1501 Tiburon Blvd. in Tiburon., on Thursday, Sept. 8, 2016 @ 6:30 PM.

Aging can be a great adventure. Come and see!

Our mission is to present an annual film festival with films that educate, entertain and inspire intergenerational audiences about the issues of aging: the triumphs and challenges. Sept. 16-18, 2016. Opening night The Art of Living, at 5:30 Friday, Sept. 16, 5:30 p.m. at New People Cinema 1746 Post Street (between Webster and Buchanan), Japantown. For a complete Festival Program: http://www.legacyfilmfestivalonaging.org/

Dance Brigade auditions, be a part of history!

Dance Brigade is seeking female and male professional dancers with strong technique in ballet and modern (partnering experience +) for Dance Brigade’s 40th Anniversary Celebration at Yerba Buena Center for the Arts on January 13 and 14, 2017.

3316 24th Street and Mission

Paid rehearsals and performances. Rehearsals begin Sept. 19, 2016, Mondays 1:30 p.m. – 3:30 p.m. Wednesdays and Fridays 9:30 a.m. – 12 p.m.  At 3316 24th Street and Mission Streets, SF.
Please bring resume and photo. For more info call 415 826-4401 or email dancebrigade1984@gmail.com.

Announcing Round 10 of the Alternative Exposure Grant Program

We are proud to inaugurate the tenth year of our Alternative Exposure grant program, which supports the independent, self-organized work of artists and small groups playing a critical and significant role in the San Francisco Bay Area visual arts community.
Application period deadline to apply: Sept. 22, 2016. soex.org/alternative-exposure/how-apply.

9th Annual Redwood City Salsa Festival

The Redwood City Salsa Festival, a FREE outdoor festival happening in downtown Redwood City. With three stages of live entertainment, and a Salsa Competition & Tasting, this event is a high point in Redwood City’s summer event.

Multiple stages featuring a variety of music, including Salsa, Latin Jazz and Reggae, will fire up Redwood City with music and dancing all day long. FREE hands-on art projects, and a Children’s Play Area, complete with bounce houses, and more! More info at 650-780-7340 or  www.redwoodcityevents.com.

Here’s some on the Salsa Fest Schedule: Music starts at 12 noon with Fito Reinoso, Orquesta Bembé, Carlos Xavier y su Orq., Edgargo y Candela; Latin Jazz Stage: Kat Parra, Cabanijazz Project, and Ray Obiedo and the Urban Latin Jazz Project; On Saturday, Sept. 24, 12 p.m.-8 p.m. Courthouse Square 2200 Broadway, Redwood City. More info at 650-780-7340 or visit: www.redwoodcity.org/events/salsafest.html. FREE Admission.

The Hug of the Serpent film draws attention in Venezuela

by the El Reportero’s news services

The award-winning Colombian film El Abrazo de la Serpiente drew the attention in the 9th Latin American Film Festival in Venezuela, which includes 22 films from the region. El Abrazo de la Serpiente, the first Colombian film nominated for the Oscar awards, also has some 30 awards at festivals around the world.

Based on the diaries written by early explorers traveling the Amazonia in the early 20th century, Ciro Guerra’s film shows in black and white the immensity of the jungle.

The river is a kind of common thread of the story that to show the intricacies of Latin American indigenous cultures uses the meeting of shaman Karamakate with German ethnologist Theodor Koch-Grunberg and US biologist Richard Evans Schultes.

El Abrazo de la Serpiente was mostly filmed in regions of Mitu, capital city of the Colombian department of Vaupes, where 27 native ethnic groups live.

The festival, running from Sept. 1st to 22nd, includes films from Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Guatemala, México, Panama, Peru and Uruguay.

Juan Gabriel ashes to arrive Saturday to Juarez, Mexico

The ashes of Mexican singer Juan Gabriel were conserved in Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua, Mexico, stated on Sept. 2 Governor César Duarte.

El Divo de Juárez, whose original name was Alberto Aguilera, was born in Parácuaro, state of Michoacan, on Jan. 7, 1950. Juan Gabriel died last Sunday in Santa Monica, California, at 66 years of age due to a heart attack.

With the arrival of his ashes on Saturday in Juárez, the author of Abrazame muy Fuerte, returns to the city where he lived, worked and took his first steps as a creator and artist.

The urn, transported by his family members, arrived at the airport in El Paso, Texas, getting to Mexican territory through Santa Fe Bridge. It was then transported to his 16 de Septiembre Avenue home.

According to the program, it was offered a mass with the participation of the town people and subsequently a cultural evening.

Mexico City will Host International Festival of Short Films

The capital prepares to host the 11th edition of the International Festival of Shorts Mexico, which will screen over 350 short films of 35 countries, from Sept. 1 thru 8. The challenge was to resort to short formats to project an idea in the big screen without trespassing the frontier of 30 minutes, expressed Jorge Magaña, director of the festival.

Alejandro Galindo, of the National Cinematheque, announced the Festival will have 28 venues in cultural centers of the capital.
After a work of selection among two thousand short films received, the jury decided to screen 354 films of which 155 are from abroad.

Meanwhile, Hugo Villa, president of the Commission of Films of the Secretary of Culture of the federal district, said that ‘the short film is not a minor gender, but a film format in which the same effort is put’.

As every year, the event present the competition in different categories.

The jury is made up by 33 personalities of the film industry.

When ending the exhibition in the City of Mexico, the event will make a tour to 14 states and after that it will travel abroad with a special selection of Mexican short films.