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Mex I am: Live it Believe it Festival

Compiled by the El Reportero’s staff

The Consulate General of Mexico cordially invites you to the second edition of Mex I Am: Live It To Believe It, a multidisciplinary art and cultural Festival that will run July 19-26, 2015, at different venues across the San Francisco Bay Area.
The multidisciplinary Festival will feature some of the finest performers and food and wine artisans from Mexican genres and traditions at different venues across the San Francisco Bay. In addition to presentations by influential Mexican artists in their fields of expertise from around the world, including opera, art exhibitions, Latin jazz, ballet, as well as scientists, humanists and society game-changers, and more.
Mex I Am is proudly presented by The Mexican Foreign Ministry, the National Council for Culture and the Arts (Conaculta), and Mexico’s Ministry of Tourism (SECTUR), in collaboration with the SFJAZZ Center.
The presentations include:
Natalia Lafourcade – Songs of Agustín Lara
Thursday, July 23, 7:30 p.m.
SFJAZZ Center’s Miner Auditorium
A three-time Latin Grammy winner and the most celebrated singer to emerge from the Mexican pop scene in recent years, Natalia Lafourcade presents the West Coast premiere of material from her new album, Hasta La Raíz, on July 23.
 La Santa Cecilia
Friday, July 24, 7:30 p.m.
SFJAZZ Center’s Miner Auditorium
2014 Grammy winner La Santa Cecilia is on a meteoric rise as one of the most visible and celebrated Latin bands to emerge from the L.A. music scene in recent years, bringing universal songs of love, loss and heartbreak to audiences worldwide and to SFJAZZ on July 24.
Tania Libertad – A Tribute to Chavela Vargas
Saturday, July 25, 7:00 p.m. & 9:30 p.m.
SFJAZZ Center’s Miner Auditorium
Tania Libertad presents her loving tribute to influential vocalist Chavela Vargas whose songs of defiance and triumph broke down borders throughout the Americas for two shows on July 25.
 Flaco Jiménez and Max Baca
Sunday, July 26, 7:30 p.m.
SFJAZZ Center’s Miner Auditorium
The foremost living ambassador of Tex-Mex music, accordionist Flaco Jiménez has transcended the limits of the conjunto style, collaborating with artists including the Rolling Stones and Carlos Santana. He is joined by 12-string guitarist Max Baca, celebrating their new album, Legends & Legacies.
The Festival runs from July 23-26, For more information visit sfjazz.org.

The 2015 frozen line up: ready to dazzle and entertain
You are invited to the 2015 frozen opening night mixer.
This year’s lineup is set to chill out July 16th to the 18th! Films include jaw dropping documentaries, dramatic short and comedic film collections, an epic animation collection, plus international features, and intense surf/skateboarding films.
Come mix mingle and celebrate the arts at the 2015 Frozen Film Festival opening night party and meet other film lovers, filmmakers, singer/songwriters, media/bloggers and supporters! We want to meet you!
At Dalva (SF) on Thursday, July 16 at 7 p.m. 3121-16th St., SF. At the Roxie Theater, July 17 & 18, 3117 16th St, San Francisco San Francisco.
Celebrate the 50th anniversary of Medicare and Medicaid
Come and join the Berkeley-East Bay Gray Panthers. Hear Teri Gerritz
of California Retired Teacher’s Association(CalRTA) on the
expansion of Social Security and Jodi Reid of California Alliance
of Retired Americans(CARA). There will be music, fun and surprises.

Wednesday, July 22 at 1:30 p.m., at North Berkeley Senior Center, 1901 Hearst, Corner of MLK, Berkeley. All Welcome. Wheelchair Accessible.

Olga Tañon fulfills her dream of returning to Cuba

by the El Reportero’s news services

Puerto Rican singer Olga Tañon fulfilled her dream of returning to Cuba after the great concert Peace without Borders performed six years ago, which triggered the admiration of the Puerto Rican singer for Cuba.
On her Facebook and Twitter accounts, Tañon said she feels excited and happy to return to Havana, the ways of which is so close to her homeland Puerto Rico.
Since she arrived yesterday, Tañon has posted on the Internet several pictures of her arrival at the Jose Marti International Airport in Havana, her meetings with friends and her visits to some places in Havana, as Casa del Cafe and Hotel Nacional de Cuba, where she was greeted by many admirers.
Olga, as she is known by her closest friends, is back and Cubans are eagerly awaiting to hear her sing at least some of her most catchy songs, which have made her one of the most popular female singers of the Latin American music in the recent decades.
Born on April 13, 1967 in the Puerto Rican city of Santurce, Tañon has been awarded two Grammy Awards and two Latin Grammy, with more than twenty albums she is currently considered one of the most versatile Puerto Rican artists due to the variety of music styles through which she expresses her talent.

Classic Italian film La Dolce Vita to be remade
La Dolce Vita, one of the most iconic films of Italian cinema, will have a new version. This is possible, because Federico Fellini’’s family sold the copyright, reported today the specialized media.
According to a press release, AMBI Pictures, along with Italian producer Daniele Di Lorenzo, will assume the remake of the classic movie, but still is unknown, who will direct it and who will take on the leading roles.
Francesca Fellini, niece of Federico Fellini, explained that the family was approached countless times and asked to consider remakes and re-imaginings to prequels and sequels, but they knew it would take very special producers and compelling circumstances to motivate the family to allow rights to be optioned.
AMBI Pictures “have a beautiful vision of a modern film, and considering their Italian heritage and deep appreciation and understanding of my uncle’s works, there couldn’t be a better alignment for this project”, she added.
More than 50 years after its premiere, La Dolce Vita still is one of the most outstanding films of the Italian cinema. This film won the Palme D’or at the 1960 Cannes Film Festival and was directed by Fellini.
The leading roles were played by Marcello Mastroianni, Anita Ekberg, Anouk Aimée and Yvonne Furneaux.

Stolen Auguste Rodin sculpture found after 24 years
Art Recovery International confirmed today, that a stolen sculpture by French artist Auguste Rodin was recovered at the auction house Christie’’s in New York. The sculpture disappeared 24 years ago.
The bronze statue, titled Young Girl With Serpent, is believed to be worth around $100,000. The statue was stolen from a house in the US city of Beverly Hills in 1991.
Roding is considered one of the fathers of modern sculpture by the Impressionist style of his works. The French artist also created extraordinary artworks like The Kiss, The Thinker and The Gates of Hell.

Mandatory vaccination: California is ordering genetic alteration

Vaccination = generation-to-generation genetic changes
Therefore, California is mandating genetic changes

by Jon Rappoport

Governor Jerry Brown just signed SB277 into law in California. No more religious or philosophical exemption from vaccination.
Now only a medical doctor’s note stating a person should not be vaccinated will provide an exemption—and you can be sure doctors who sign a number of these notes will be tracked, scrutinized, harassed, and attacked by the State.
SB277 requires all children who attend public and private schools to receive the full schedule of vaccines.
Home-schooled children can opt out of vaccination. Pay attention, parents.
I’ve written many articles about vaccines, about their dangers, their undeserved reputation for having eliminated contagious diseases in the West, and the absurdity of so-called herd immunity.
Here, first, I want to underline the obvious: freedom is under egregious attack. It has been replaced in the public mind by “safety and protection.”
This is a conscious formula for so much of what now passes for “culture” in America and other countries:
New, broader and more vague definitions of terrorist threats; pressure to conform to politically correct speech; the need to spy on everybody all the time; these are the signs of the times.
“We will protect you on every level. Just give up freedom.”
From the caves of 100,000 years ago, all the way forward to the Modern State, that assertion has been used to exert more and more control over the people.
At higher levels of political power, beyond direct medical issues, mandatory vaccination is being used as yet another hammer, in order to elicit compliance from citizens.
“We say do X; therefore, you must do X.”
In this case, X involves the injection of toxic substances like aluminum, formaldehyde, Polysorbate 80 and numerous other harmful chemicals into the body.
A Mother Jones article (6/12/2012), “Can Exposure to Toxins Change your DNA,” reports on the damaging effects of environmental chemicals. The connection to toxins in vaccines, though not mentioned, is an obvious parallel. Here are quotes from the MJ piece:
“The presumed mechanism of this unfortunate inheritance [generation-to-generation damage from toxic chemicals] is not a mutation in the DNA itself but rather changes in the biochemical on-off switches that determine whether or not specific genes get activated—a field of study known as epigenetics…
“Most recently, researchers from Washington State University, led by biology professor Michael Skinner, reported last month that short-term exposure of pregnant rats to several kinds of chemicals caused ovarian disease not just in their daughters but also in two subsequent generations of females. Symptoms that paralleled those found in human polycystic ovarian disease and primary ovarian insufficiency, both of which can reduce fertility, were identified in the descendants of rats exposed to a fungicide, pesticides, dioxin, jet fuel, and a mixture of plastics, but not among descendants of controls [given a placebo].”
We are talking about lasting genetic changes, from parents to children, down the line.
There is every reason to believe that injecting chemical toxins (in vaccines) would have a still greater permanent effect than, say, breathing pesticides.
But don’t worry. The State is here to protect you and your children. Just obey, and all will be well.

 

And now, a look at the future of vaccines. See the New York Times, 3/15/15, Protection Without a Vaccine:
“By delivering synthetic genes into the muscles of the [experimental] monkeys, the scientists are essentially re-engineering the animals to resist disease.”
“’The sky’s the limit,’ said Michael Farzan, an immunologist at Scripps and lead author of the new study.”
“The first human trial based on this strategy — called immunoprophylaxis by gene transfer, or I.G.T. — is underway, and several new ones are planned.”
“I.G.T. is altogether different from traditional vaccination. It is instead a form of gene therapy. Scientists isolate the genes that produce powerful antibodies against certain diseases and then synthesize artificial versions. The genes are placed into viruses and injected into human tissue, usually muscle.”
Here is the punchline: “The viruses invade human cells with their DNA payloads, and the synthetic gene is incorporated into the recipient’s own DNA. If all goes well, the new genes instruct the cells to begin manufacturing powerful antibodies.”
Read that again: “the synthetic gene is incorporated into the recipient’s own DNA.” Alteration of the human genetic makeup. Not just a “visit.” “Permanent residence.”
The Times article taps Dr. David Baltimore for an opinion:
“Still, Dr. Baltimore says that he envisions that some people might be leery of a vaccination strategy that means altering their own DNA, even if it prevents a potentially fatal disease.”
Yes, some people might be leery. If they have two or three working brain cells.
This is where vaccination has been going since its inception, and this is where it’s going in the future: the restructuring of human DNA, under conditions sufficiently random to rule out any reliable predictions of the outcome.
And the State of California has just stamped its seal of approval to genetic alteration, by making vaccination mandatory.
Thank you, Governor Brown.
You’ll be remembered for your decision.
Make no mistake about it: the entire human race has been, is, and will be (unless resistance builds to a very high roar) the subject of a vast, multi-century genetic experiment.
(Jon Rappoport is the author of three explosive collections, The Matrix Revealed, Exit From The Matrix, and Power Outside The Matrix).

Greece is the latest battleground in the financial elite’s war on democracy

FROM THE EDITOR:

Dear readers, this article written by George Monbiot is synthesized well on the polemic of the debt and everything that has been on the cradle of democracy: Greece. I hope you will enjoy it.

From laissez-faire economics in 18th-century India to neoliberalism in today’s Europe the subordination of human welfare to power is a brutal tradition

by George Monbiot

Greece may be financially bankrupt, but the troika is politically bankrupt. Those who persecute this nation wield illegitimate, undemocratic powers, powers of the kind now afflicting us all. Consider the International Monetary Fund. The distribution of power here was perfectly stitched up: IMF decisions require an 85 percent majority, and the US holds 17 percent of the votes.
The IMF is controlled by the rich, and governs the poor on their behalf. It’s now doing to Greece what it has done to one poor nation after another, from Argentina to Zambia. Its structural adjustment programs have forced scores of elected governments to dismantle public spending, destroying health, education and all the means by which the wretched of the earth might improve their lives.
The same program is imposed regardless of circumstance: every country the IMF colonizes must place the control of inflation ahead of other economic objectives; immediately remove barriers to trade and the flow of capital; liberalize its banking system; reduce government spending on everything bar debt repayments; and privatize assets that can be sold to foreign investors.
Using the threat of its self-fulfilling prophecy (it warns the financial markets that countries that don’t submit to its demands are doomed), it has forced governments to abandon progressive policies. Almost single-handedly, it engineered the 1997 Asian financial crisis: by forcing governments to remove capital controls, it opened currencies to attack by financial speculators. Only countries such as Malaysia and China, which refused to cave in, escaped.
Consider the European Central Bank. Like most other central banks, it enjoys “political independence”. This does not mean that it is free from politics, only that it is free from democracy. It is ruled instead by the financial sector, whose interests it is constitutionally obliged to champion through its inflation target of around 2 percent. Ever mindful of where power lies, it has exceeded this mandate, inflicting deflation and epic unemployment on poorer members of the eurozone.
The Maastricht treaty, establishing the European Union and the euro, was built on a lethal delusion: a belief that the ECB could provide the only common economic governance that monetary union required. It arose from an extreme version of market fundamentalism: if inflation were kept low, its authors imagined, the magic of the markets would resolve all other social and economic problems, making politics redundant. Those sober, suited, serious people, who now pronounce themselves the only adults in the room, turn out to be demented utopian fantasists, votaries of a fanatical economic cult.
All this is but a recent chapter in the long tradition of subordinating human welfare to financial power. The brutal austerity imposed on Greece is mild compared with earlier versions. Take the 19th century Irish and Indian famines, both exacerbated (in the second case caused) by the doctrine of laissez-faire, which we now know as market fundamentalism or neoliberalism.
In Ireland’s case, one eighth of the population was killed – one could almost say murdered– in the late 1840s, partly by the British refusal to distribute food, to prohibit the export of grain or provide effective poor relief. Such policies offended the holy doctrine of laissez-faire economics that nothing should stay the market’s invisible hand.
When drought struck India in 1877 and 1878, the British imperial government insisted on exporting record amounts of grain, precipitating a famine that killed millions. The Anti-Charitable Contributions Act of 1877 prohibited “at the pain of imprisonment private relief donations that potentially interfered with the market fixing of grain prices”. The only relief permitted was forced work in labour camps, in which less food was provided than to the inmates of Buchenwald. Monthly mortality in these camps in 1877 was equivalent to an annual rate of 94 percent.
As Karl Polanyi argued in The Great Transformation, the gold standard – the self-regulating system at the heart of laissez-faire economics – prevented governments in the 19th and early 20th centuries from raising public spending or stimulating employment. It obliged them to keep the majority poor while the rich enjoyed a gilded age. Few means of containing public discontent were available, other than sucking wealth from the colonies and promoting aggressive nationalism. This was one of the factors that contributed to the first world war. The resumption of the gold standard by many nations after the war exacerbated the Great Depression, preventing central banks from increasing the money supply and funding deficits. You might have hoped that European governments would remember the results.
Today equivalents to the gold standard – inflexible commitments to austerity – abound. In December 2011 the European Council agreed a new fiscal compact, imposing on all members of the eurozone a rule that “government budgets shall be balanced or in surplus”. This rule, which had to be transcribed into national law, would “contain an automatic correction mechanism that shall be triggered in the event of deviation.” This helps to explain the seigneurial horror with which the troika’s unelected technocrats have greeted the resurgence of democracy in Greece. Hadn’t they ensured that choice was illegal? Such diktats mean the only possible democratic outcome in Europe is now the collapse of the euro: like it or not, all else is slow-burning tyranny.
It is hard for those of us on the left to admit, but Margaret Thatcher saved the UK from this despotism. European monetary union, she predicted, would ensure that the poorer countries must not be bailed out, “which would devastate their inefficient economies.”
But only, it seems, for her party to supplant it with a homegrown tyranny. George Osborne’s proposed legal commitment to a budgetary surplus exceeds that of the eurozone rule. Labour’s promised budget responsibility lock, though milder, had a similar intent. In all cases governments deny themselves the possibility of change. In other words, they pledge to thwart democracy. So it has been for the past two centuries, with the exception of the 30-year Keynesian respite.
The crushing of political choice is not a side-effect of this utopian belief system but a necessary component. Neoliberalism is inherently incompatible with democracy, as people will always rebel against the austerity and fiscal tyranny it prescribes. Something has to give, and it must be the people. This is the true road to serfdom: disinventing democracy on behalf of the elite.
• Twitter: @georgemonbiot. A fully referenced version of this article can be found at Monbiot.com

FDA says: modified fats to be banned from human foods within 3 years

by Jonathan Benson
Natural News

The federal government is finally acknowledging that industrially processed trans fats are damaging to human health and don’t belong in the food supply. Trans fats, which are completely synthetic and highly toxic, are a major contributor to the heart disease epidemic that’s now the number one killer in America.
After dragging its feet on the issue for years to accommodate the processed food industry, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has finally and reluctantly issued a ruling that trans fats are no longer on its “generally recognized as safe” list. Also known as GRAS, this coveted classification is the holy grail of the processed food industry, as it allows manufacturers to use additives indiscriminately without having to first consult the FDA for approval.
This monumental decision by the FDA won’t come into effect for another three years, though, which is highly unfortunate from a public health perspective. Millions of Americans will continue to gobble down trans fat-laden processed foods for no other reason than to give food corporations extra time to come up with another more than likely toxic replacement.
Hydrogenation process to create trans fats involves use of metal-based catalysts
Trans fats, as you may already know, typically hide in processed foods under ingredient names preceded by the words “hydrogenated” or “partially hydrogenated.” So-called vegetable oils like soybean (which isn’t even a vegetable, by the way), cottonseed (this definitely isn’t a vegetable) and canola are heated at high temperatures under immense pressure using metal catalysts such as nickel and cobalt to create solid-at-room-temperature “fats” that don’t exist in nature.
The oil of soybeans, cottonseed and canola, of course, are naturally liquid at room temperature, which makes them difficult to incorporate into foods that are meant to stay solid rather than melt. But the hydrogenation process transforms these oils so they stay semi- or fully solid at room temperature, mimicking the state of naturally saturated fats such as coconut and palm.
It’s a disgusting process, to be quite frank, and one that could easily be avoided if food manufacturers just used butter, coconut oil, palm oil, lard or a number of other fats that naturally remain solid at room temperature. But taxpayer-subsidized junk oils like soy and canola are far cheaper, it turns out, hence the chemical industry jumped all over the trans fat trend once hydrogenation was discovered.
Just because a product says it contains “zero grams of trans fat per serving” doesn’t mean it’s truly trans fat-free
At least the FDA has stepped up to the plate and done something, though, even if it’s too little, too late. By June 2018, processed food manufacturers selling products in the U.S. will have to completely phase out the use of trans fats, which a recent study published in the journal Food and Chemical Toxicology declared to be “an important cause of cardiovascular disease and the resulting clinical end points such as strokes and heart attacks.”
Some of the biggest processed food offenders, including Betty Crocker and Bisquick, both brands owned by General Mills, claim they’ve already been “working diligently” to remove trans fats from their products, and that many of their products now have “zero grams of trans fat per serving.” But it’s important to remember that labels bearing this claim aren’t necessarily trans fat-free, as food manufacturers have learned how to simply jockey around their serving sizes in order to keep trans fat content below the labeling threshold, which the FDA has established as 0.5 grams.
“Suppose a product contains 0.4 grams [of trans fat] per serving and you eat four servings (which is not uncommon). You have just consumed 1.6 grams of trans fat, despite the fact that the package claims that the product contains zero grams of trans fat per serving,” explains the advocacy page BanTransFats.com.

Future of California’s economy in hands of Latinos

by Claudia J. González
We’Ced Youth Media

MERCED, Calif.– Ruby Aguirre is beating the numbers.
“I feel so proud to be graduating today,” said the first generation Mexican-American student at last month’s Merced College commencement. “This is my biggest achievement.”
Aguirre, 21, graduated with an Associate’s degree in psychology and plans to transfer to California State University, Humboldt, where she will pursue her Bachelor’s degree in social work.
According to the State of Higher Education in California: The Latino Report, released by the advocacy group Campaign for College Opportunity, Aguirre is among a minority of Latinos in California who are managing to thrive in higher education.
The report shows that fewer than two in 10 working Latinos in the state have a college degree. It also found that on average only 45 percent of Latinos enrolled in the Cal State system manage to graduate within six years, compared to 51 percent for non-Latinos.

Within the University of California system, the average overall graduation rate is 84 percent, while for Latinos it is only 75 percent.
The report also states that about two thirds of Latino college students (7 out of 10) begin their college career at a community college, with many planning to finish their education elsewhere through a transfer pathway.
Edmundo Zaragoza, 21, became the first in his family to graduate college. He earned a Bachelor’s in history from UC Merced earlier this year. The ceremony capped years of struggle both in school and at home.
Zaragoza attended a charter school in Southern California where he said he felt like he was “just a number.” Without much support, his grades slipped, though he eventually got back on track by putting in extra hours of study and moving straight into UC Merced after high school.
At home, however, Zaragoza says his parents were less than supportive in his transition to college.
“I did not know what I was doing,” said Zaragoza. “No one taught me what to do, they just expected me to know. I felt all alone.”
Zaragoza’s story highlights the challenge many Latino youth encounter when preparing for college.
“Many of us are first generation students,” explained Zaragoza. “Schools often overlook this. They do not understand how hard it is for us.”
A combination of factors make the road from high school to graduation difficult for first generation Latino college students, beginning with the significantly higher chance that a Latino student will attend a low-performing high school in a low income area. In 2013, only three out of four Latinos graduated from high school in four years, and many who do graduate do not demonstrate academic readiness for college-level work.
Despite many of these challenges, Zaragoza remained focused and earned his diploma, an accomplishment he feels belongs to his whole family, not just himself.
Zaragoza said his college experience would have been easier had his family been more informed about the process. That is, in fact, one of the major recommendations of the Campaign for College Opportunity report.
“Research suggests that Latino students and their families have inaccurate perceptions of requirements, do not receive enough or accurate information in a timely manner, or are deterred by the application process altogether,” the report said. As a result, many never complete their Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) or apply for a Cal Grant.
“One major issue is that there is not enough material or outreach in the native language of these families.” said Daniel Ruíz, a Financial Aid Student Services Assistant at Merced College. “Because of this, many students are not aware of the various federal programs like the Pell Grant, work study, and direct loans.”
In addition, the transfer pathway program into the CSU and UC systems can often be difficult to navigate for Latinos in community colleges.
Aguirre said she received so little information about transfer options that she turned to her peers for advice, instead of seeking help from counselors.
Undocumented students face even greater challenges. The report estimated that three out of four college age undocumented youth are not enrolled in school, primarily because they cannot afford it, and are largely unable to access financial aid.
Citing the growing Latino population in California, the report concluded, “The future of our economy and state will rise or fall on the educational success of Latinos.”
In Merced County the tide may already be turning. In late May, Merced College held its 52nd annual commencement ceremony, handing out over 1,000 degrees and certificates. A majority went to Latino students.

How Greece was robbed by the bankers

Banks control the politics of nations

by Truth And Satire
Analysis

Every single mainstream media has the following narrative for the economic crisis in Greece: the government spent too much money and went broke; the generous banks gave them money, but Greece still can’t pay the bills because it mismanaged the money that was given. It sounds quite reasonable, right?
Except that it is a big fat lie … not only about Greece, but about other European countries such as Spain, Portugal, Italy and Ireland who are all experiencing various degrees of austerity. It was also the same big, fat lie that was used by banks and corporations to exploit many Latin American, Asian and African countries for many decades.
Greece did not fail on its own. It was made to fail.
In summary, the banks wrecked the Greek government, and then deliberately pushed it into unsustainable debt … while revenue-generating public assets were sold off to oligarchs and international corporations. The rest of the article is about how and why.
If you are a fan of mafia movies, you know how the mafia would take over a popular restaurant. First, they would do something to disrupt the business – stage a murder at the restaurant or start a fire. When the business starts to suffer, the Godfather would generously offer some money as a token of friendship. In return, Greasy Thumb takes over the restaurant’s accounting, Big Joey is put in charge of procurement, and so on. Needless to say, it’s a journey down a spiral of misery for the owner who will soon be broke and, if lucky, alive.
Now, let’s map the mafia story to international finance in four stages.
Stage 1: The first and foremost reason that Greece got into trouble was the “Great Financial Crisis” of 2008 that was the brainchild of Wall Street and international bankers. If you remember, banks came up with an awesome idea of giving subprime mortgages to anyone who can fog a mirror. They then packaged up all these ticking financial bombs and sold them as “mortgage-backed securities” for a huge profit to various financial entities in countries around the world.
A big enabler of this criminal activity was another branch of the banking system, the group of rating agencies – S&P, Fitch and Moody’s – who gave stellar ratings to these destined-to-fail financial products. Unscrupulous politicians such as Tony Blair joined Goldman Sachs and peddled these dangerous securities to pension funds and municipalities and countries around Europe. Banks and Wall Street gurus made hundreds of billions of dollars in this scheme.
But this was just Stage 1 of their enormous scam. There was much more profit to be made in the next three stages!
Stage 2 is when the financial time bombs exploded. Commercial and investment banks around the world started collapsing in a matter of weeks. Governments at local and regional level saw their investments and assets evaporate. Chaos everywhere!
Vultures like Goldman Sachs and other big banks profited enormously in three ways: one, they could buy other banks such as Lehman brothers and Washington Mutual for pennies on the dollar. Second, more heinously, Goldman Sachs and insiders such as John Paulson (who recently donated $400 million to Harvard) had made bets that these securities would blow up. Paulson made billions, and the media celebrated his acumen. (For an analogy, imagine the terrorists betting on 9/11 and profiting from it.) Third, to scrub salt in the wound, the big banks demanded a bailout from the very citizens whose lives the bankers had ruined! Bankers have chutzpah. In the U.S., they got hundreds of billions of dollars from the taxpayers and trillions from the Federal Reserve Bank which is nothing but a front group for the bankers.
In Greece, the domestic banks got more than $30 billion of bailout from the Greek people. Let that sink in for a moment – the supposedly irresponsible Greek government had to bail out the hardcore capitalist bankers.
Stage 3 is when the banks force the government to accept massive debts. For a biology metaphor, consider a virus or a bacteria. All of them have unique strategies to weaken the immune system of the host. One of the proven techniques used by the parasitic international bankers is to downgrade the bonds of a country. And that’s exactly what the bankers did, starting at the end of 2009.

This immediately makes the interest rates (“yields”) on the bonds go up, making it more and more expensive for the country to borrow money or even just roll over the existing bonds.
From 2009 to mid 2010, the yields on 10-year Greek bonds almost tripled! This cruel financial assault brought the Greek government to its knees, and the banksters won their first debt deal of a whopping 110 billion Euros.
The banks also control the politics of nations. In 2011, when the Greek prime minister refused to accept a second massive bailout, the banks forced him out of the office and immediately replaced him with the Vice President of ECB (European Central Bank)! No elections needed.
The puppet masters had the best month ever in November 2011.
Few months later, in 2012, the exact bond market manipulation was used when the banksters turned up the Greek bonds’ yields to 50 percent!!! This financial terrorism immediately had the desired effect: The Greek parliament agreed to a second massive bailout, even larger than the first one.
Now, here is another fact that most people don’t understand. The loans are not just simple loans like you would get from a credit card or a bank. These loans come with very special strings attached that demand privatization of a country’s assets. If you have seen Godfather III, you would remember Hyman Roth, the investor who was carving up Cuba among his friends. Replace Hyman Roth with Goldman Sachs or IMF (International Monetary Fund) or ECB, and you get the picture.
Stage 4: Now, the rape and humiliation of a nation begin. For the debt that was forced upon them, Greece had to sell many of its profitable assets to oligarchs and international corporations. And privatizations are ruthless, involving everything and anything that is profitable. In Greece, privatization included water, electricity, post offices, airport services, national banks, telecommunication, port authorities (which is huge in a country that is a world leader in shipping) etc.
In addition to that, the banker tyrants also get to dictate every single line item in the government’s budget. Want to cut military spending? NO! Want to raise tax on the oligarchs or big corporations? NO! Such micro-management is non-existent in any other creditor-debtor relationship.
So what happens after privatization and despotism under bankers? Of course, the government’s revenue goes down and the debt increases further. How do you “fix” that? Of course, cut spending! Lay off public workers, cut minimum wage, cut pensions (same as our social security), cut public services, and raise taxes on things that would affect the 99 percent but not the 1 percent. For example, pension has been cut in half and sales tax increase to more than 20 percent. All these measures have resulted in Greece going through a financial calamity that is worse than the Great Depression of the U.S. in the 1930s.
Of course, the ever-manipulative bankers demand immediate privatization of all media which means that the country now gets photogenic TV anchors who spew propaganda every day and tell the people that crooked and greedy banksters are saviors; and slavery under austerity is so much better than the alternative.
If every Greek person had known the truth about austerity, they wouldn’t have fallen for this. Same goes for Spain, Italy, Portugal, Ireland and other countries going through austerity.
This is the essence of the New World Order — a world owned by a handful of corporations and banks.

Hispanics become largest ethnic group in California

by the El Reportero’s wire services

The Latino population has become the largest ethnic group in California with 15 million people, the United States Census Bureau has confirmed today.
According to census figures, California´s Latinos outnumber the 14.99 million non-Hispanic whites living in the state.
It is the first time this happens in California, where the Anglo population started to decline in the 1970s.
The surge of the Latino population in the state coincides with an increase off this minority population in the country, reaching the 55.4 million people, according to recent figures.
Other regions with a large number of Latinos are Texas (10.41 million), Florida (4.78 million), New York (3.67 million) and New Mexico, where Latinos represent more than 47 percent of the state´s population.
Figures suggest that the community will continue to grow in other US territories, even in those with less presence like Kentucky, Idaho, Montana, North Dakota and New Hampshire.

OAS mission visits the Dominican Republic and Haiti
A mission of the Organization of American States (OAS) today began to assess the situation of Haitian immigrants in the Dominican Republic, to tackle afterwards the same subject in Port au Prince.
The group is headed by the Secretary for Political Affairs of the OAS, Francisco Guerrero, who is accompanied by Gabriel Bidegain, advisor to the secretary general, Luis Almagro, and officials from the the Caribbean Community and the United Nations could join.
The objective is to know on the field the status of Haitians immigrants to facilitate a lasting solution to regularize their status and rights, said Almagro.
The mission is the result of two special sessions of the Permanent Council of the OAS that has addressed the existing crisis between Haiti and Dominican Republic, Almagro said.
First, the Dominican Foreign Minister, Andrés Navarro defended his government’s plan to bring order to the illegal immigration in the country.
He also referred to the Special Naturalization Act (169-14), which recognizes the status of Dominicans to those born from illegal immigrants and has benefited 8,755 people.
The Dominican plan, which ended on June 17 after 18 months of execution, was to provide an opportunity for illegal immigrants to legalize their status.
Because of it, 288,466 foreigners have begun to receive documents that legalize their stay in the country, but many Haitian immigrants were eligible for this plan. The Haitian ambassador in Dominican Republic, Daniel Supplice, acknowledged to the newspaper Le Nouvelliste: “We are responsible for what happens to our countrymen today.”
The Haitian government did not provide the required documents (passports, identity cards or birth certificates) so that these people could start their migration regularization.
As a result of this situation, during the last weeks over 20,000 Haitians voluntarily returned to their country with their belongings because they feared to be repatriated.
The Haitian government reacted by denouncing alleged mass deportations and argued that they are violating the rights of their countrymen and their children born on Dominican soil.
For the Dominican ambassador to the OAS, Pedro Verges, the Haitian government has generated a disinformation campaign with the sole purpose of hiding its abandonment towards their countrymen who emigrate.

Fallece distinguida dama nicaragüense en SF (May 31, 1931-May 20, 2015)

por Marvin Ramírez

 

Doña Carmen Zavala de Wheelock entregó su alma al Señor el 20 de mayo de 2015, dejando lágrimas entre familia y amigos que la amaron. Tenía 84 años de edad.

Recordada por sus deliciosos banquetes culinarios, falleció repentinamente en el hospital después que fue de emergenca por una dolencia cardíaca.

La señora Zavala llegó a San Francisco aproximadamente a los 11 años de edad, en 1942 y asistió a la escuela Mission Dolores, donde conoció a su futuro esposo, el caballero descendiente de ingleses, don Ernesto Wheelock. Luego en 1951 regresó a Nicaragua para ambos radicarse allá con su suegro don Wilfredo Wheelock, quien era propietario de haciendas de café en El Crusero. Después que la pareja tuvieron tres hijos estos se separaron. En 1978, un año antes del triunfo revolucionario en este país centroamericano, regresa a radicarse en SF.

Su nieta Danilú Murillo de 41 años de edad, hija del ya fallecido músico (bajista) nicaragüense, Danilo Murillo, y quien es invidente, tenía una relación bien cercana con su abuelita.

Cariñosamente la describe cómo una señora vanidosa, sociable, “le gustaba mucho cocinar, y decía la frase, ‘esta divino’ – con toda las personas que se encontraba en el edificio… les preguntaba si ya habían comido, para ofrecerles lo que ella había cocinado”. Cuando iban a hacer una fiesta sus familiars la buscaban para cocinar, pues era muy diestra en el arte culinario.

La señora Zavala fue la pionera de la familia en llegar a los EE.UU. A través de quien pudieron llegar otros – a los cuales asistió en sus necesidades para establecerse en su nuevo hogar, San Francisco. Laboró por varios años en la famosa panadería Kirkpatrick.

Sus restos fueron velados en la funeraria Duggan’s en la calle 17 en SF, y se le ofreció una misa de cuerpo presente en la Iglesia San Carlos, para luego ser llevados al Cementerio Holy Cross.

Le sobreviven dos hijos, Ernesto ‘Tito’ Wheelock, Carmen del Socorro ‘Coco’ Wheelock, su hermana Melba Angulo-Zavala, seis nietos: Danilú Murillo y Danilo Murillo (hijos de Coco Wheelock y de Danilo Murillo), Mauricio Delgado y Gustavo Marotha Jr. (hijos de Coco Wheelock), y Janet y Marjory Wheelock (hijas de Ernesto Wheelock, Jr.); y siete bisnietos.

El personal de El Reportero y en especial su editor, Marvin Ramírez, se une a la familia doliente en este tiempo de dolor. Doña Carmen era una ardiente lectora de El Reportero.

Because children rock too!

Compiled by the El Reportero’s staff

Redwood City is proud to offer our kids music series for a third year! For three Sundays this summer, the ubiquitous Andy-Z will be the Master of Music and Play by bringing his high energy to Courthouse Square.
Sponsored by Redwood City’s Public Library and Parks, Recreation and Community Services Department, this series will provide a safe and fun environment for kids to dance and enjoy live music from 11am to 1pm. Your family will be thrilled to enjoy free live music, along with an inflatable play-land at the Kidchella series this summer!
Kidchella 2015, Courthouse Square , on July 12, Aug. 9 and Sept. 13 from 11 am – 1 p.m.

The 2015 frozen line up: ready to dazzle and entertain
You are invited to the 2015 frozen opening night mixer.
This year’s lineup is set to chill out July 16th to the 18th! Films include jaw dropping documentaries, dramatic short and comedic film collections, an epic animation collection, plus international features, and intense surf/skateboarding films.
Come mix mingle and celebrate the arts at the 2015 Frozen Film Festival opening night party and meet other film lovers, filmmakers, singer/songwriters, media/bloggers and supporters! We want to meet you!
At Dalva (SF) on Thursday, July 16 at 7 p.m. 3121-16th St., SF. At the Roxie Theater, July 17 & 18, 3117 16th St, San Francisco San Francisco.

Campaign to preserve, improve, and expand Medicare-to-All
This summer marks the 50th year of Medicare and the 80th year of Social Security, arguably the nation’s two most successful social programs, keeping millions of older and disabled people out of poverty.
Yet both programs are at a crossroads: The corporate agenda in government is to restrict who is eligible, reduce their benefits, cut their funding, and turn them over to private companies. But workers, retirees, and their families need these programs as never before.
The speakers will describe how senior groups, labor unions, and community groups are mounting a Preserve, Improve, and Expand-Medicare-to-All campaign, including a giant event at Oakland’s Ogawa Plaza on Thursday, July 30 at 11 a.m.
They will also describe how these groups are also actively supporting bills in Congress to improve and stabilize Social Security.
At 555 Ellis Street (Between Leavenworth & Hyde).  Contact Michael Lyon, 415-215-7575, mlyon01@comcast.net or Kathie Piccagli, 415-235-1300, kpiccagli@gmail.com

Silicon Valley’s premier annual music event – San Jose Jazz Summer Fest 2015
San Jose Jazz is thrilled to announce the return of Summer Fest 2015 for its 26th festival season.
A showcase for jazz and related genres, Summer Fest is also nationally recognized as one of the biggest Latin festivals in the country, and a standout summer destination for music lovers, concert-goers and families alike with its 12 stages of live music pulling in tens of thousands of visitors to downtown throughout the weekend.
From Friday, August 7 – Sunday, August 9, 2015 in and around Plaza de César Chavez Park in downtown San Jose.