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The FCC’s plan to take over the internet has began

by John Merline

“It’s not a government takeover of the Internet.” That was the mantra of those who backed the Federal Communication Commission’s “net neutrality” rules, which the FCC approved a little over a year ago.

“Not only are the new rules not a government takeover,” argued one supporter in Variety, “they are well in keeping with how communications have been successfully fostered and regulated in America in the past.”

The rules were only meant to keep the Internet “free and open,” advocates said. All the government was doing was blocking ISPs from discriminating against users by charging more for faster speeds.

But to impose “net neutrality,” the FCC reclassified the Internet so that it could regulate it in the same way it regulated the telephone monopolies. FCC chairman Tom Wheeler promised that — despite the fact the FCC had just granted itself wide-ranging control over ISPs — it would use a “light touch” when it came to regulating ISPs.

But now, 12 months later, the FCC tipped its heavy hand with a proposal for a new set of regulations that could, as the Morning Consult put it, “reshape the tech industry.”

The proposed new rules don’t have anything to do with “net neutrality.” They are about privacy. Now that the FCC can do so, Chairman Tom Wheeler has decided that the government should impose what it determines are the appropriate privacy protections on all Internet service providers.

On the surface, the purpose of the rules seems perfectly reasonable. “Consumers should have effective control over how their personal information is used and shared by their broadband service providers,” Wheeler says.

In practice, however, it would anything but simple or straightforward.

As the Morning Consult notes, “the impact of new FCC rules on the industry would be huge.”

For one thing, a new set of FCC rules would conflict with long-standing privacy rules set by the Federal Trade Commission. Data-hogging websites sites wouldn’t have to comply with the stricter FCC rules.

In a letter to the FCC, various “consumer advocacy” groups said those FTC rules aren’t good enough, and want the commission to “exercise the full extent of its rule-making authority to protect consumer privacy.”

Industry groups say the result would be “regulatory chaos” as businesses try to figure out what rules apply where.

The point is that anyone who thought the FCC had finished its work when it imposed “net neutrality” is sorely mistaken.
The commission’s privacy rules will only be the first of many as regulators flex their newly acquired Internet muscles and as advocacy groups, well-connected businesses, or anyone looking to get a regulatory leg up on the competition will be pressuring the commission to add new rules, always wrapped in a “good for the consumer” package.

Further intrusion into the ISP world will only worsen the damage already being done by the FCC’s decision to treat the 21st century Internet like a 20th century telephone monopoly.

As FCC Commissioner Ajit Pai explained in a recent speech at the Heritage Foundation, in just the first year, “growth in broadband investment has flat-lined,” and smaller ISPs “have reduced investment in the communities they serve.” As an example, he noted that Verizon (VZ) recently decided to acquire AOL for $4.4 billion because “it made more sense than increasing fiber deployment.”

Pai, who fiercely opposed the FCC’s actions, says home broadband adoption has declined for the first time “since the advent of the commercial Internet.”

He notes that the rule is hampering innovative services like T-Mobile’s (TMUS) Binge On program, which lets customers stream videos without it counting against their data usage. Despite the obvious consumer benefit, the FCC thinks Binge On might violate the government’s new Internet “conduct standard,” and so has opened an investigation.

“At least three other companies have received similar treatment,” Pai noted.

Pai and others had warned about all these outcomes from the get go. Those who are surprised by the FCC’s actions over the past year have only themselves to blame.

Peru’s Electoral Board rules in favor of presidential candidate

by the El Reportero’s wire services

Lima´s Special Electoral Board decided in favor of the continuity of Keiko Fujimori´s presidential run, by ruling that she did not violate the law while presiding over an act in which money was handed out.

In a statement announced early today, the court ruled that the request for exclusion was groundless. The candidate has been accused of handing out money with proselytizing purposes, a practice that is banned by the law.

“The candidate has not engaged in the prohibited practice of handing out money or gifts in order to obtain votes”, adds the resolution, published on the Board´s website.

The text continues on saying that no strong evidence that proves a breach of the Political Organizations Act.

Keiki Fujimoru, daughter of former ruler Alberto Fujimori who is in prison for crimes against humanity and corruption, argued that the during the ceremony prize money was given to winners in a dance contest; it was not a party meeting and neither her nor her organization handed out the prizes.

The decision leaves open the possibility for complainants to appeal to the National Electoral Board, which could definitely ratify or modify the decision.

Monsignor Romero remembered on his murder anniversary

Salvadorans today remember Monsignor Oscar Arnulfo Romero, Blessed of the Catholic Church for his commitment to defend the poor from the ambitions and abuses of power groups, on the 36th anniversary of his assassination.

The date of his murder coincides this year with Holy Thursday, when the priestly promises are renewed.

The martyr of the Catholic Church, baptized by the people as San Romero of America, was killed by a sniper on March 24, 1980, when he was holding a mass in the chapel of Divine Providence Hospital in this capital.

‘I would like to make a special appeal to the men of the army, and specifically to the bases of the National Guard, police, barracks Brothers, are our own people, killing your own brother peasants and above an order to kill given by a man must prevail the law of God that says: “You won’t kill”, said in a homily. ‘No soldier is obliged to obey an order against the law of God. An immoral law, nobody has to comply it. It is time to regain your conscience and obey before your conscience than an order of sin ‘, he added.

Monsignor Romero, being aware of abuses suffered by the population, had demanded the end of repression one day before his death.

He assured the church, defender of the rights and the law of God and human dignity, could not remain silent before such abomination.

The Truth Commission investigating the crimes committed during the armed conflict (1980-1992), pointed the founder of the party Nationalist Republican Alliance, Roberto d’Aubuisson, as the mastermind of this murder.

Monsignor Oscar Arnulfo Romero was beatified on May 23, 2015.

Influenza kills 277 people in Mexico

Influenza affected 7,236 people and killed 277 patients during the winter season in Mexico, according to a report published by the Secretariat of Health on Saturday.

For the second week in a row, the AH1N1 stem infected 3,115 patients, accounting for 43 percent of the total number of cases, the secretariat added.

Mexico City reported most cases, followed by the states of Mexico and Jalisco.

Adults over 65 years of age, babies aged 1-4, and young people between 30 and 34 years old are the most vulnerable groups.

The Jazz Ambassadors present the history of 100 years of Jazz

Compiled by the El Reportero’s staff

Free Concert Fun for the Whole Family!
The Jazz Ambassadors, the official touring big band of the U.S. Army, travel thousands of miles each year to present jazz to enthusiastic audiences across the nation and around the globe. Celebrate 100 years of jazz, America’s original art form, featuring swing, bebop, Latin, contemporary jazz, standards, pop, Dixieland, patriotic tunes and more!
Formed in 1969, this 19-member ensemble has received great acclaim at home and abroad. The band’s rigorous touring schedule and reputation for excellence has earned it the title of “America’s Big Band.”
As a component of the United States Army Field Band of Washington, DC, the Jazz Ambassadors support its mission of carrying “into the grassroots of our country the story of our magnificent Army.” In performances throughout the world, the men and women of this internationally-acclaimed organization take great pride in reflecting the excellence of all our nation’s Soldiers.
On Saturday, March 19 at 7 p.m., at the Valley Christian Schools Conservatory of the Arts, Main Gymnasium, 100 Skyway Dr, San Jose, California. FREE Admission!

Teatro Nanual presents Leyendas y Realidades
Continue the shows on Saturday, March 19 with a reception at the Mexican Museum at 6 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. for the event of “Leyendas and Realidades.” We will also have the special participation of  Fuego, the new Mexican folkloric ballet and danza academy. Sunday, March 20 at 3 p.m. and Saturday, March 26 at 7:30 p.m. At 14271 Story Road, San Jose.
Purchase your tickest at the door or at: http://www.teatronahual.org/next.html

Chilean Pinochet victim Carmen Gloria Quintana to visit the Bay Area
Carmen Gloria Quintana will attend the encore performance of the cantata La Vida Vence a la Muerte / Life Triumphs Over Death.
On the morning of July 2, 1986, during a two-day national strike and protests against the military rule of General Augusto Pinochet, two teenagers, Rodrigo Rojas de Negri, 19 year-old, and Carmen Gloria Quintana, 18, were cornered by a military patrol brutally beaten, doused with petrol and set them on fire. The patrol then dumped them in a ditch alongside a deserted road on the outskirts of Chile’s capital city, Santiago.
On Saturday, March 19, at Berkeley’s La Peña Cultural Center. She will be in the Bay Area, March 18, 19, and 20.

Absolute beginning Taiko workshop with Bruce Ghent
Learn the ancient art of Japanese Taiko drumming with Sensei Bruce ‘Mui’ Ghent. The Introductory Taiko class will cover basic fundamental skills and history which will prepare students to advance to the next level of classes.
Beginners ages 12-adult, with little or no music experience are welcome. Taiko drumming is a rigorous physical activity. Bring water and wear clothes to exercise. Class is taught with traditional martial arts etiquette and discipline as outlined in the student handbook supplied.
For more information, contact Bruce “Mui” Ghent at bruceghent@gmail.com or visit www.maikazedaiko.com.
Through April 10: Sundays, 10:30 a.m.-12 p.m., at the Dance Mission Theater. To register call 415-826-4441 or email dancemissiontheater@yahoo.com.

“What is the Scandal? – The ignored cry of an Immigrant”
Eliana is a Venezuelan actress who arrived to San Francisco after falling in love with a raising politician from San Francisco. She leaves behind her country and career, so when their new son is born her new family becomes her only priority. However cultural differences, language barrier, her fear to lose her son because her immigration status, racial bias and a highly publicize political scandal will break her family until she almost loses it.
Based on a true story, this play have been seen for over 2000 people in NY and San Francisco, and the story has been eye-opening for some and cathartic for others. After 34 performances of this dramatic comedy and plenty of feedback, 3 Lopez Productions took the time to work in the evolution of the play rewriting several scenes in order to explore the effects of criminalization, family bonds and self transformation in a more intimate and personal way.
Performed by Eliana López, What is the Scandal is directed by Alfonso López and Produced by Ivette Carolina Agudelo. At the Mission Cultural Center for Latino Arts, on March 25, from 8 to 9:30 p.m. For more info call 415- 70-5543, by email: whatisheescandal@gmail.com. To see the trailer: www.elianalopez.net

Film of ex President Mujica at Toulouse Festival

by the El Reportero’s news services

The Toulouse Latin American Film Festival today screens the documentary ‘Pepe’ Mujica, el Presidente.
The film is considered a moving and inspiring depiction of an exceptional man. Its director, Heidi Specogna, shot it after years of constant exchange with the former Uruguayan president (2010-2015).

About 30 films are competing in the festival, which concludes on the 20th of March, in the categories of fiction, short films and documentaries.

Rated as epic concert of The Rolling Stones in Colombia

The Rolling Stones are recovering today from the concert given at Bogota’s Nemesio Camacho El Campín stadium, to travel to Mexico early next week, for the penultimate performance in their current Latin American tour.

Their presentation yesterday in Bogota is described today by the cultural spaces as epic, even more with the surprise performance of Juanes featuring the British group.

Managing more than the Spanish, the leader of the band, Mick Jagger said the Colombian slang, in the middle of the concert: Dear rolos (people from the capital) we have a surprise for you, now comes to sing with us a parcero (friend) that we love.
It was a delirium what happened on Nemesio Camacho stadium when the antiochiam musitian appeared with his guitar to play with Jagger and the veteran group the song ‘Beast of Burden’, the great success of the quartet’s album ‘Some Girls’, released in 1978.

Juanes had announced on social networks hours before that he was very excited to attend the concert, but the surprise was maintained until the announcement at the football field by the lead singer of The Rolling Stones.

The followers of the UK group hummed each of the songs played by the band from the first minute, while being astonished by the conservation of the voice and energy of Jagger, already 72 years old.

The British rock band will conclude its Latin American tour with a free concert on March 25 at the Havana’s Sports City, which is already considered by many as the historical end of the tour.

50th Berlin International Tourism Fair kicks off

Latin tourism has a big impact today in the Berlin Internaytional Tourism Fair ITB 2016 in this capital, specially the Mexican representation.

Mexico opens its stand at the fair on the first day according to Mexican Amabssador in Germany Patricia Espinosa.

ITB Berlin is a 5-day event being held from 9th March to the 13th March 2016 at the Messe Berlin in Berlin, Germany. This event showcases product from Business Services, Education and Training industries.

ITB is the biggest international fair in the world with 11163 exhibitors from more than 185 countries who want to generate business and promote their image among the well targeted buyers.

Tourist organizations, traffic carrier, tour operator, hotel business, research institute, educational institution, tourism associations and institutions, travel technology, information and reservation systems, travel agency, business travel, publisher, press and telecommunications are present at the show.

Covering a huge exhibition area of about 160000 meter square, with numerous exhibition booths, this event helps the exhibiting companies to showcase their products with convenience and promote their brand extensively.

The guest of honor country is Maldives Islands,in the South Pacific.

She had an abortion at 15, how it changed her life

by Kelsey Harkness

Nona Ellington was 15 years old when she found out she was pregnant. A victim of rape, Ellington felt alone, ashamed, and desperate for help.

After a free pregnancy test came back positive, showing that Ellington was five weeks pregnant, she went forward and scheduled an abortion.

Around October 1983, Ellington, who was still in high school at the time, aborted the only child she would ever successfully conceive.

“As a result of that [abortion], I was never able to have children,” Ellington told The Daily Signal. “I had five miscarriages, two were pregnancies that required emergency surgery, and [during] the last one in 2004, the only tube I had left ruptured, so I was bleeding internally, and they almost lost me.”

When Ellington was eventually ready to have children with her then-husband, she said she visited a fertility doctor who “confirmed that it was the abortion that had damaged me so much that I was not able to have children.”

Ellington considered trying in vitro fertilization (IVF)—where an embryo is manually transferred into the uterus—but said even if it would work, her health insurance didn’t cover the cost.

“It covered abortion. But not fertility stuff,” Ellington said.

Looking back on her experience, Ellington calls abortion the most “selfish” decision she ever made, and now she spends her time trying to warn other women against it.

As part of that effort, Ellington joined 3,348 women who shared their abortion “injury” stories with the U.S. Supreme Court as part of what’s called an amicus curiae brief.

Their hope is that by discussing their “injuries”—both physical and mental—the Supreme Court justices will uphold a controversial Texas law that places new regulations on the abortion industry.

The case, Whole Woman’s Health v. Hellerstedt, is being called one of the biggest abortion cases since Roe. v Wade, in which the Supreme Court said that women have a right to abortion while also affirming a state’s right to regulate the practice.
Whole Woman’s Health v. Hellerstedt could signal how far states are allowed to go in issuing those regulations.

The law in question, known as H.B.2, requires abortion facilities in Texas to maintain the same standards as ambulatory surgery centers and abortion doctors to have admitting privileges at nearby hospitals.

Whole Woman’s Health and its supporters believe that the imposed regulations dangerously limit women’s access to safe and legal abortion.

“Abortion is one of the safest medical procedures performed in the United States, and neither of the requirements imposed by the Texas law would make it any safer,” the American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists said in a statement. “Worse, this law clearly imposes an undue burden on a large number of Texan women, who would no longer have reasonable access to abortion care when needed, forcing them to wait longer before an abortion, travel across state lines for safe care, or even forego abortion care altogether.”

Those in favor of upholding the law argue that the regulations are “commonsense” for the health and safety of women.
The law, wrote Sarah Torre, a pro-life expert at The Heritage Foundation, “was passed in response to the conviction of late-term abortionist Kermit Gosnell, who ran a ‘House of Horrors’ abortion clinic for over a decade with nearly no government oversight.” She added:

After the Gosnell grand jury recommended new clinic regulations and after hearings on the medical risks of abortion, Texas (along with other states) decided to require abortion clinics to meet the same minimum cleanliness and safety standards as other outpatient surgery facilities and require doctors performing abortions to have the credentials to admit a patient to a nearby hospital.

Myra Jean Myers, another plaintiff on the Supreme Court brief, said she’s experienced some of these dangers firsthand. Both Myers and Ellington spoke last week at a press conference held at the Family Research Institute one day before the court heard oral arguments for the case.

“Abortion is a dangerous procedure,” Myers said. After her procedure, Myers said, “I had a hysterectomy two months later.”
A hysterectomy is a surgery to remove a woman’s uterus. At 28 years old, Myers, too, would never be able to conceive again due to her abortion.

Allen E. Parker, a lawyer at The Justice Foundation, which is the non-profit submitting the personal testimony by women who allege injuries caused by abortion, said most of the participants “suffered grievous psychological injuries,” “but many suffered severe physical complications as well.”

The most common physical complications of abortion, he added, are hemorrhaging, punctured uterus, punctured colons, and scarring of the uterus.

“In abortion, you’re basically scraping the walls of the uterus and the contents of the uterus with a scalpel-like instrument,” he said. “And you’re doing it by hand in most instances, or by feel, the doctors would say. And you can punch the wrong part, and that’s where the complications occur.”

As for the mental conditions, Parker cited guilt, shame, sadness, depression, anxiety, drug abuse, and suicide as the most common conditions.

Ellington blames her abortion for causing her to “spiral” into a “very destructive behavior of drugs, alcohol, and promiscuous sex.”

Myers said that while the physical scars are still present, it’s the mental anguish that continues to haunt her.
“Nothing wounds you like being responsible for the death of your child,” she said at the press conference.

Parker, who sounded hopeful that the Supreme Court will consider the testimony of the 3,348 women when issuing their ruling in the case, added, “Whether you’re for abortion or against it, you can acknowledge that some women are hurt by abortion, and we ought to do everything we can to protect these women.”

This article has been updated to correct a fact about Nona Ellington. The original article referred to a court document that was about a different Nona Ellington. (The Daily Signal).

Elimination of the First Amendment is a precondition to genocide – Part 3 and Last

NOTE FROM THE EDITOR:

Very little is written in the mainstream media about the Constitution, which is the column from where liberty sustains itself. This following article, written by Dave Hodges, is a good piece everyone should read, if not, follow this writer. Because of its length, we have divided it into three parts. THIS IS PART 3 of 3.

by Dave Hodges

I believe that ultimately, the questions of the future will not revolve around who flies, but who dies.

According to insider sources, demographic maps have already been created in which red dots appear on a data screen by address of people judged to be a threat as determined by the algorithms derived the NSA protocols.

If you are in the independent media, you are at the top of the list. When the DHS goon squads arrive at our homes at 3AM, we in the alternative media will be going to a FEMA Camp, or worse. And what is our crime? Encouraging citizens to express their positive or negative opinions against this out of control administration.

My sources for years have revealed that the leaders of the resistance are on what could be called a “red list” and will be summarily executed along with their families.

The Verizon and Google data dump to the feds is just the tip of the iceberg. For example, because of cell phone tracking, if you have ever met with a person of concern (e.g. an alternative media figure), your score goes up because your two cell phones came into close proximity. And the  longer you meet with this person, the more points are awarded to your threat matrix score. This is a violation of another First Amendment right, the right peaceably assemble.

Keep in mind the Threat Matrix Score is like golf. The goal is to have a low score, that is if you want to live.  The person’s score will also rise if they visit the wrong websites, belong to the Libertarian party, own a gun, vote for third party candidates and are a veteran.  Many of the sources for the independent media has revealed that demographic maps have already been created in which red dots appear on a data screen by address. The red dots represent people who have received a high score and DHS swat teams will sweep pre-designated areas. The DHS swat teams along with their 2.2 billion rounds of ammunition and 2,700 armored personnel carriers will be the vanguard force behind this terrible tyranny.

All others will continue to be placed under extreme surveillance with the threat of removal to a re-education camp or worse. There is a reason why DHS has spent billions on Intellistreet light poles and spy cams at every major intersection. And if you think you can ride this out, read Executive Order 13603. You will be assigned to work wherever this administration wants. Families will be broken apart by this calamity. All of sudden, the CPS tactics and the anti-family courts make a little more sense don’t they? If you are taken to a re-education camp, please consider that your family will be split apart. Men to one camp, women to another and children to a third and you don’t even want to know what my sources tell me about the third kind of camp.“

“I don’t care if the government spies on me and monitors my activities and the statements that I make because I am not doing anything wrong.” Hopefully this article exposes the folly of this thinking.

Conclusion

If you wish to stay mired in the matrix, you will of course see no threat to your existence. Of course none of this will never happen. The government may pass laws which appear on the surface to be quite draconian, however, they would never act upon these laws and Executive Orders. The government may tell you that you, in effect, that your bank deposits are not money and are no longer insured. But they don’t really mean it. The 2.2 billion rounds of ammunition purchased by DHS is only for target practice. And you are the target, for daring to express your First Amendment right to free speech and peaceably assemble. How long will it be until they come after another protected activity, namely, freedom of religion? That day is coming as we are witnessing the incremental dismantling of the First Amendment. This administration and those that follow them must really be up to no good if they are working this hard to stifle free speech.

Let’s be clear. When governments engage in genocide, they first engage in the following progression of events.

Elimination of Free Speech.
Confiscation of guns.
Identification of the “enemy of the State” that must be eliminated for the safety of all.

What blood pressure is and how to control it yourself

by Ben Fuchs
Critical Health News

The body is always talking to us. We may not listen, but it’s always reporting back about what’s going on with it, how it’s responding to our actions and what we’re doing wrong and right. If you have a problem dairy, your intestine will signal its distress with cramping, bloating and other digestive symptoms. These symptoms can be correlated to eating things like cheese, gluten, strawberries eggs and any other foods that initiate intolerance or allergies. Drink too much alcohol, the next day’s hangover can be a communication so clear and impactful you may never imbibe again. On the other hand, sometimes a burst of happiness or a hit of energy or just some plain old peace of mind, can let you know that you’re on the right track, doing something your body really needs, wants and likes. For instance soaking in hot tubs, a brisk workout or playing with babies and puppies come to mind.

While digestion, immunity, skin and respiration are all exquisitely sensitive to their environments, no part of the body is more responsive than the heart and circulatory system. Considering something on order of one out of every two or three Americans have some sort of circulatory health challenges, that’s good news. That’s because, once we recognize our complicity in our vascular health challenges, we’ll be able to address them for real. This can be done without doctors, devices, diagnostics or drugs and their associated side effects.

One of the more significant manifestations of cardiovascular disease is hypertension, and it’s a serious problem. According to an infographic published in the January 12, 2013 edition of New Scientist Magazine, hypertension is the leading contributor the global burden of all disease. Yet nothing exemplifies our participation in our own health and our health challenges more than high blood pressure. Which is the source of endless fodder for comedian’s jokes and is universally acknowledged for its association with stressful situations. Yet while seemingly everyone knows that stress and hypertension go hand in hand, most hypertensives think nothing about accepting the standard diagnosis of “essential” hypertension (i.e. hypertension caused by meaning caused by “unknown” factor) and pharmacological anti-hypertensives that are among the most toxic of all prescription medication.

Hypertension is about stress. To the body there is no more important stress factor than a shortage of oxygen in the blood, a condition called “hypoxia”. Once a critical hypoxic threshold is reached, changes immediately take place in the blood vessels, causing a rerouting of blood. These modifications, that are the result of the intelligent shunting and strategic opening and closing of vessels, lead to an increase in blood pressure. Blood pressure is the force with which the sanguineous fluid moves through the circulatory system and represents the body’s attempt to get more blood (and oxygen) to the brain, heart, lungs, musculature and other vital parts of the body.

Hypertension isn’t the only cardiovascular effect of hypoxia. Oxygen acts as a buffer, separating red blood cells, helping keep them freely floating in easy and smooth fashion throughout the 50,000 mile long river of blood in the circulatory system. Under conditions of low blood oxygen, blood cells will tend to clump up. This clumping can create clots and further impede the delivery of oxygen to tissues, inducing even more hypertension. That’s not all. Hypoxia can disrupt electrical conductivity in the heart, leading to various heart arrhythmia, including the dreaded A-fib. Not coincidentally, among the most prescribed drugs in America are the anti-coagulants, medication that pharmacologically compels blood to thin. These drugs include beta blockers to chemically ablate (destroy) the heart, to prevent electrical malfunctioning and anti-hypertensives, that lower blood pressure by poisoning vessel valves, forcing them to open like a dam in a tsunami.

BAD NEWS: Circulatory diseases are serious business. They’re collectively by far the leading cause of death and illness in the United States not to mention spent dollars and wasted time. If you participate in the medical model’s impotent strategy of drugging, electrocuting and sticking in stents, you’re not going to be getting better.

GOOD NEWS: If you are dealing with any cardiovascular health issue, by applying simple lifestyle strategies, like slow deep breathing, nutritional supplementation, dietary modification and plain old relaxation, you can dramatically reduce your blood pressure, with zero toxicity and no side effects on your own. These tools are available to you without doctors, pharmacists, insurance companies or any other pharmaco- medical intervention.

Community rallies to stop the return of the Beast on Bryant Street

by Josh Wolf

A developer who attempted to placate the Mission community by dedicating land for affordable housing instead of building a smattering of affordable units has once again found himself at odds with housing and neighborhood activists.

On Wednesday, March 16, the Nick Podell Company hosted a community meeting to present a new version of a proposed development that he plans to build on Bryant between 18th and 19th Streets in the Mission. Employees of the company handed out brightly-colored copies of a flyer promoting the project to the dozens of people who crowded the room to learn about Podell’s latest attempt to build a massive new development deep in the Mission.

As Podell clicked through a series of slides to show off the new project, his presentation was punctuated by outbursts from the community. Despite the fact that the audience was clearly opposed to his proposal, Podell and his team soldiered on through the performance before taking questions.

Questioner after questioner pummeled Podell and his plan. When Podell claimed that the project would be the least profitable one in his whole career, the crowd erupted in shock and disbelief.

Lisa Vincenti, a community activist, asked Podell to disclose how much money he stood to make on the development, and his response of 5.8 percent triggered a repeating chorus demanding he open up his books to back up that claim.

I asked Podell, if he would be willing to make his financial data available to help ease the growing distrust of the community.

“No,” he said. “Because I’ve heard no understanding of how production works. The answer is no. We’re not opening the books.”
“I personally believe in supply and demand, and I think that the problem is a lack of supply,” said Podell.

In March 2013, The Nick Podell Company purchased a large industrial building, which had become an arts colony in 1996 under the name CELLspace. Podell then partnered with Junius Real Estate Partners, a division of J.P. Morgan that made headlines last year when it announced a development in Bel-Air with homes starting at $115 million, to build nearly 300 apartments on the land.

Podell submitted a proposal in December 2013 to build 227 luxury apartments along with 47 units set aside for residents who could not afford market rate housing. In preparation to demolish the building he pushed out dozens of artists, an auto repair shop, the locally-owned Tortilla Flats Cafe, and other businesses on the site.

As the tech boom accelerated, the demand for housing in San Francisco — particularly in the Mission District — grew louder. Simultaneously, thousands of Latino and other long-time Mission residents found themselves forced out to make way for newcomers who were willing to pay top dollar. With no other way to stay in the city, the need for affordable housing grew even more dire, and the community started organizing against the numerous luxury developments that threatened to further aggravate the crisis.

Community members organized to demand more affordable housing and worked to stop luxury condos and apartments from moving forward. Podell’s proposal became known as the Beast on Bryant. Meanwhile, the project slowly wormed its way through the planning department, but he decided to pull it at the last minute last August when it became clear it lacked enough votes on the Planning Commission to move forward. Now Podell is scheduled to return to the Commission in May, but based on the community’s reaction at his own meeting, he faces a steep uphill battle to get it approved.

Under the new proposal Podell wouldn’t build any below market-rate housing, but he would donate a third of the land to the city to build affordable housing. Altogether, when — and if — both buildings were completed there would be 129 units of affordable housing and 186 units available at market rate prices.

The project would also include 11,000 sq. ft. of what’s known as PDR space, which stands for production, distribution, and repair. About two-thirds of that space, would be in the affordable housing building, with the remaining third in the other.
Historically, the neighborhood surrounding the property was a center for light-industrial manufacturing; later on, as industry left the city, it was this PDR-zoned property that became a viable home for the arts due to its comparatively-low costs to lease. The current building has about 50,000 sq. ft. of PDR space, so the proposal represents a loss of about 40,00 sq. ft.

That loss is of grave concern to some people in the community. The Cultural Action Network first formed around stopping the Beast on Bryant, but the organization has become involved in other fights to protect arts space around the city. That organization, which I have been working with for the past several months, has a policy to fight for every foot of PDR space lost to development to be replaced in all new projects. The city has also prioritized protecting PDR space, but its constant battle to juggle priorities has allowed developers to carve away much of it to make way for housing.

Since February, a group of community members brought together by the Cultural Action Network have been meeting to discuss the latest proposal and to plan their response. Podell’s decision to donate a third of the land for affordable housing, may have quelled some of the opposition but it’s clear that many people still see the project as the Beast on Bryant and are working to stop the project once again.

In addition to examining where the development could be vulnerable to members of the Planning Commission, the community is also working to develop their own model for what they would like to see on the site. I’ve been actively involved in facilitating that project and so far it appears that there is strong support for keeping the entire floor dedicated to serving the arts and local community, and a greater percentage of affordable housing.

The plan is that by presenting a viable community-driven alternative to the site, while organizing against the existing proposal, that the Planning Commission will yield to the community and empower the people of San Francisco to have a voice that actually resonates in planning the future of the city.

City had to stop arresting actual criminals because they filled up jail with non-violent offenders

by Justin Gardner

Greene County, MO – The epidemic of mass incarceration is coming back to bite authorities in one American city. Because the Greene County jail is completely full, Springfield (pop. 165,000) is unable to arrest more than 12,000 people accused of crimes such as traffic infractions and misdemeanor assaults.

Missouri’s third-largest city has lost almost half a million dollars in less than a year from unpaid fines and fees. These lost extortion fees are likely the biggest concern to city officials.

“Springfield Police Chief Paul Williams said offenders are thumbing their noses at police.

“They’re tearing tickets up in front of people,” Williams said. “Officers are frustrated because they can’t arrest anyone, judges are frustrated that they can’t see people, prosecutors are frustrated. It has just kind of spun out of control.”

Springfield’s citizens are taking advantage of the problem. One judge said that 82 people were supposed to appear in court under a docket of cases, but only eight bothered to show up.

There has been no significant difference in crime rate beyond normal fluctuation, and the city acknowledges that it can’t tell if the lack of arrests has any effect.

The situation is causing quite the kerfuffle between Greene County Sheriff Jim Arnott and city officials. Last April, Arnott said he would not take any more municipal prisoners, even though the city says there was an agreement that the jail, which opened in 2001, would take them.

However, Arnott is taking federal inmates despite the full capacity. The county gets paid $61 per day for each federal inmate, while the city does not pay anything to the county for housing inmates.

It seems that the nature of the American for-profit prison-industrial complex is at the heart of this dispute. The sheriff is fine with taking prisoners when he makes a profit, but turns them away if there is no money involved. It’s not really about right and wrong, but about feeding the profits of the jail system.

The city of Springfield and Sheriff Arnott have filed lawsuits against each other. It has gotten so bad that Springfield Mayor Bob Stevens on Tuesday blamed the sheriff for an incident where a man with outstanding warrants hit a police officer and dragged him 150 yards.

While it is entertaining to see law enforcement authorities casting fallacies at each other, the issue in Springfield is a symptom of the malady of mass incarceration. Law enforcement is hungry to lock up people for victimless crimes such as traffic violations and “offenses” under the War on Drugs.

This demand for prisoners feeds a system where profits are reaped off the backs of mostly poor- to middle-class citizens, extorting money at every turn, from going to jail to getting out on bail to being monitored on probation. It creates an incentive for cops to intrude on the lives of more and more people, so they can justify an ever-expanding quest for more equipment and training to carry out more oppression.

Instead of fighting each other to make way for more prisoners, Springfield and every other city should consider that making people into criminals for victimless crimes is not the answer.

A simple and instant solution to end the over crowding of prisons is this — End the War on Drugs.

Even cops know ending the war on drugs will not only fix the prison overpopulation problem, but it would dramatically reduce crime.

One of the leading groups of law enforcers working to end the drug war is LEAP, or Law Enforcement Against Prohibition.  LEAP lists some particularly startling facts on their website:

There is a drug arrest every 19 seconds in the U.S. Of the more than 1.6 million drug arrests in 2009, 82 percent were for possession alone. (1)

The U.S. government estimates that more than 118 million Americans above the age of 12 (47 percent of the population) admit to using illegal drugs. (2)

One out of every 100 American adults is behind bars in jail or prison, (3) and the U.S. houses nearly 25 percent of the world’s prisoners (4) despite having less than five percent of the world’s total population. (5)

In four years, more than 35,000 people have been killed in violence related to Mexico’s war against the cartels that control the illegal drug market. (6)

The Department of Justice says that the illegal drug market in the U.S. is dominated by 900,000 criminally active gang members affiliated with 20,000 street gangs in more than 2,500 cities, (7) and that Mexican drug cartels now directly control illegal drug markets in at least 230 American cities. (8)

One of the co-founding members of LEAP is former police Captain, Peter Christ. Christ travels around the country blowing the lid off of America’s corrupt and immoral war. His argument is based on facts and grounded in reality. The War on Drugs promotes violence, ruins lives, and costs taxpayers billions of dollars a year.

Below is quite possibly one of the most damning 15 minutes presented against the drug war. Please share this article to raise awareness to the horrid reality that is the war on drugs.

Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/county-jail-full-cops-fighting-city-lost-500k-11-months/#h7LIOpJqesb3ECKS.99

First flight for direct Postal Service with EE.UU. arrives in Cuba

Edwardo Clark, a Cuban-American, holds an American flag and a Cuban flag as he celebrates outside the new Cuban embassy in Washington, Monday, July 20, 2015. The United States and Cuba restored full diplomatic relations Monday after more than five decades of frosty relations rooted in the Cold War. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)

by the El Reportero’s wire services

The direct postal service between the United States and Cuba was resumed today with the arrival to the Island of the first flight from US territory.

The Cuban Ministry of Foreign Relations Director General for US Affairs, Josefina Vidal, reported on her Twitter account @JosefinaVidalF that this was the first such trip between the two countries in nearly 50 years.

According to the Cuban News Agency (ANC), a little after 10:00 local time, a IBC Airways SAAB 340 arrived with postal cargo at the Jose Marti International Airport, Havana.

US Postal Security inspector, Carlos Rodriguez, symbolically gave President of Correos de Cuba, Carlos Asencio, a letter that reinstated the postal exchange between the two countries and a sample of the postmark designed for the occasion, which he described as history in the making.

First Vice President of Correos de Cuba, Zoraya Bravo, told ACN that the flights will come to Cuba from Miami, Florida, three times a week, on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, as of March 25.

This will make possible the receipt and sending of mail, parcels and courier and express packages through post offices in both countries.

In other news about Cuba:

The US announce partial changes of sanctions against Cuba

The US departments of Treasury and Commerce announced on March 15, new regulations that modify some aspects of the sanctions against Cuba, while maintaining the main body of the economic, commercial and financial blockade.

The measures, which will come into force tomorrow, will allow American individuals to visit the island through people-to-people educational exchange programs, and partially lifts the restrictions on the use of the US dollar in Cuban transactions with banks in the US.

The current US laws allows US citizens to make trips to Cuba, but from tomorrow they will be able to do so as a individual, although tourism is still prohibited by the embargo, which only Congress can lift.

The Secretary of the Treasury, Jacob J. Lew, said today that the new provisions were to continue the steps taken in the last 15 months to break down barriers between the two countries and to empower the Cuban people.

The restrictions on Cuban international financial transactions is one of the main obstacles to the development of trade links between the two countries.

Contingency phase one due to high pollution in Mexico’s capital

Vehicle restrictions have been activated, reported the Environmental Commission of Megalopolis (CAME) in the metropolitan area of the Valley of Mexico, which includes the capital.

This is due to high levels of ozone concentration in the area, the highest in 11 years.

The first phase of an environmental contingency has been implemented after almost two days of pre-alert and poor air quality.
There have been 50 environmental contingencies since 1988. The most recent was in January 2005 when the index reached 167 Imeca points for suspended particles (PM10), that is, solid or liquid particles of dust, ash, soot, metal , cement or pollen, whose diameter is less than 10 thousandths of a millimeter.

The Federal Attorney for Environmental Protection (Profepa) reported that they are carrying out a tour of inspection of industry under federal jurisdiction, so as to check the reduction of productive activities which involve combustion processes.
In the metropolitan area of the Valley of Mexico there are over 3,400 companies under federal jurisdiction that may be emitting pollutants to the air.