Thursday, November 28, 2024
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California Controller Cohen Reports Monthly State Revenues

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SACRAMENTO — State Controller Malia M. Cohen today released her monthly Cash Report which tracks the state’s revenues, disbursements and actual cash balance, and issued the following statement on the state’s cash position:

“While December’s cash position fell short of Department of Finance Budget Act cash flow estimates for the month by $3 billion, the state still has a strong $88.5 billion in available borrowable resources. Barring any unforeseen circumstances, California still has ample cash in its coffers to pay its bills and meet its financial obligations through the end of the fiscal year.

“The Legislature and Governor have a difficult task ahead to bring revenues and spending into balance in the year ahead. However, their forethought in building rainy-day reserves in the Budget Stabilization Account has bolstered the state’s cash-on-hand and provided stability in the face of a budgetary deficit.”

December saw California’s total General Fund receipts fall $5.2 billion – or 21.4 percent – short of estimates for the month, while disbursements were $2.3 billion – or 10.1 percent lower than estimated.

The state is 22.2 percent behind forecasts for the fiscal year to date with General Fund receipts, $28.2 billion below estimates. Disbursements were $5.1 billion lower than expected, and 4.2 percent behind estimates for the first six months of the fiscal year.

As the chief fiscal officer of California, Controller Cohen is responsible for accountability and disbursement of the state’s financial resources. The Controller has independent auditing authority over government agencies that spend state funds. She is a member of numerous financing authorities, and fiscal and financial oversight entities including the Franchise Tax Board. She also serves on the boards for the nation’s two largest public pension funds. Follow the Controller on X at @CAController and on Facebook at California State Controller’s Office.

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CITY AND COUNTY OF SAN FRANCISCO Community Outreach Public Notice

San Francisco Board of Supervisors Board or Commission Vacancies:

Participate in a Board or Commission!

The Assessment Appeals Board (AAB)

The AAB resolves legal and appraisal issues between the Assessor’s office and property owners.

The hearings are quasi-judicial and are conducted in a manner similar to a court, with evidence and testimony presented by the

parts. The Board then evaluates the evidence and testimony and renders its decision.

To be eligible for appointment to the position, you must have a minimum of five years of professional experience in California as: (1)

Certified Public Accountant; (2) real estate broker; (3) lawyer; or (4) property appraiser accredited by an organization recognized by

national level, or certified by the Office of the Real Estate Appraiser or the State Board of Equalization.

For a complete list of current or future boards, commissions and task forces, visit https://sfbos.org/vacancy-boardscommissions-

task-forces.

Department Announcements

Elections Department

The choice is yours! Go paperless!

For each election, the Department of Elections publishes a voter information pamphlet and a sample ballot. The brochure provides

nonpartisan information on voting, candidates and measures. By law, we must mail you a brochure unless you choose not to receive it.

There are several reasons to opt out of paper brochure mailings:

 

  • You will save taxpayer money we use to print and mail. • You will reduce your carbon footprint.
  • You can access election information anytime, anywhere.

 

Does your household receive more than one copy of the Brochure? Consider having all but one voter opt out so that your household can

share a printed copy. Not sure you’ll like reading the online brochure? Give it a try – re-engaging is just as easy!

If you’re ready to make the switch to the digital pamphlet, go to sfelections.org/voterportal or call us at 415-554-4375.

Department of Child Support Services

Child support matters can be complicated, stressful and confusing. Department of Child Support Services Helps Parents

to understand the process so that they know their rights and options for making and receiving support payments. We are available to assist you

in person or by phone. Call us today at (866) 901-3212 for more information. Apply for services online or schedule an appointment at sf.gov/dcss

to find out how we can help you.

Department of Public Health

Count on WIC for Healthy Families!

WIC is a federally funded nutrition program for women, infants, and children. You may qualify if:

  • Are pregnant, breastfeeding, or have just had a baby;
  • Have children under 5 years old; and
  • You have low to medium income; I
  • Receive benefits from Medi-Cal, CalFresh (food stamps), or CalWORKS (TANF); and •Lives in California

WIC provides: Nutrition education and health information, breastfeeding support, food benefits for healthy foods (such as fruits and vegetables), referrals to medical providers, and community services.

Learn more at: MyFamily.wic.ca.gov or www.wicworks.ca.gov

Sign up early! Call today to see if you qualify and schedule an appointment – (628) 206-5494 or (415) 657-1724 This institution is an equal opportunity provider.

The City and County of San Francisco encourages public disclosure. Articles are translated into multiple languages to provide better

public access. The newspaper does everything possible to correctly translate articles of general interest. The city and county of San

Francisco or the newspapers assume no responsibility for errors and omissions.

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Celebrate Three Kings Day in San José – John Santos sextet in concert

by Magdy Zara

With different activities, the city of San José will be celebrating Three Kings Day, as part of the Christmas festivities.

One of the events was organized by the Cultural Affairs grant of the City of San José, this will be a day to celebrate with family, share food, give gifts and prepare the Rosca de Reyes (sweet bread or King’s Cake).

The Feast of the Three Wise Men is a holiday widely recognized by many cultures around the world, and especially in many Spanish-speaking countries, the Feast of the Three Wise Men honors the Epiphany.

The invitation is not to miss the opportunity to make and decorate a crown, enjoy the lively and traditional youth mariachis and folk dances, the Three Wise Men will give gifts (chocolate coins) to those present.

The appointment is this Saturday, January 6, 2024, starting at 9:30 a.m. At 180 Woz Way in San Jose, CA.

You can also Sing with the Kings, this January 6, in an event organized by the Caravan of Agricultural Workers, who invite you to celebrate Three Kings Day.

The organizers of the event reported that there will be the presence of opera singer Omar Alejandro Rodríguez, who will lead the party with familiar Christmas melodies and songs from “The Golden Age”, which were made famous by classic artists such as Los Panchos, Jorge Negrete and Pedro Infante.

Attendees can also join in with their voice or instrument or simply enjoy the festivities with Rosca de Reyes, atole and happy music.

The activity will be this January 6, 2024, starting at 2 p.m., at Trinity Presbyterian Church 3151 Union Avenue, San José. Entrance is free.

John Santos sextet in concert

John Santos, producer, multi-percussionist, historian, writer, teacher, composer and orchestra director, with more than 50 years of experience on stage, launches his new record production called Vieja Escuela, and to make it known he has prepared a masterful concert.

John Santos

Vieja Escuela, the new recording from the John Santos Sextet, brilliantly reflects the legacy of John and his cohorts, and is blessed by some of John’s most beloved mentors who represent the highest level of respect and excellence in Afro-Latin music: the Cuban royalty and the golden voice.

During the concert, honors will be given to Ernesto Oviedo (RIP), the extraordinary composer and rumbero; Cuban Raúl de la Caridad González Brito “Lali” (RIP), and Puerto Rican Latin jazz legend Jerry González (RIP), as well as his former collaborator/teacher and pioneering Cuban percussionist Orestes Vilató (alive).

The album also features several wonderful guests such as José Roberto Hernández, Fernanda Bustamante and Anthony Blea, who will also be present and

The venue chosen for this special concert is Freight & Salvage, located at 2020 Addison Street, Berkeley, and will take place this Saturday, January 13, 2024, starting at 8 p.m., tickets are $30 and $35.

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Contemporary and counterculture art scene in Oaxaca’s galleries

by Laurel Tuohy, Mexico News Daily

Oaxaca is considered the cultural heart of Mexico, acting as a muse for creatives and drawing artists from across the country and world, who adopt the colonial city as their home.

Some are attracted by the graphic art traditions of printmaker Francisco Toledo and painter Rufino Tamayo, but the city is also a hotbed of startling street art. Ethereal murals share wall space with mock advertisements offering great apartments to foreigners – back in their own countries – while crude graffiti advises gringos to shut up, go home or worse. Much of the city’s ever-evolving street art also references Oaxaca’s history of cultural rebellions, state violence, corrupt leadership and battles for Indigenous autonomy.

Harnessing all of this energy are collectives, galleries and artists curating spaces across the city to share diverse points of view in settings that range from gentrified to gritty.

Natalia Siu Munro is an indigo, or añil, textile artist with Nicaraguan-Chinese heritage from the UK who has lived in Oaxaca for four years.

“I was seeking a place where art lived and breathed, and Oaxaca was it. [Art] is ingrained in the culture and you can find it everywhere. For me, the scene accepts all and has no prejudices. It’s constantly shifting. There’s a new exhibition every other week – sometimes three openings on the same night. Generations of artists work and collaborate to evolve [Oaxaca] into a safe creative space for all,” she said.

Farid Cruz Vásquez, director of Cocijo Gallery, has noticed that the artistic culture of the city is always growing in sphere and influence. “So many cultures in one place, with different visions of life. Now all the world is coming to work and enjoy,” he said.

But it’s the abundant street art – from dreamscape-y murals to quickly-laid, expletive-laden stencils – that provides the city with an artistic vibrance that envelops you immediately – even if you never step inside a gallery.

Renowned painter Guillermo Olguín believes the city’s best art showcases are its avenues, lanes and alleys. “The art on the streets is sophisticated, well executed and not only political. There is poetry in it, there is very fine talent and the continuation and revival of the classic Mexican graphic school technique,” he said.

Within the city limits lies one of the country’s most admired graphics institutes, and continues to give birth to artists and galleries that take the tradition to the people. The Instituto de Artes Gráficas de Oaxaca (IAGO) was founded by Toledo, the celebrated creator of iconic Mexican intaglio prints lovingly called ‘el maestro’ and hero of many local tales.

Red Dot Art Gallery – Director Teresa Diaz sees Oaxaca as a place “recognized as a fountain of artists of all different techniques. Influences from abroad make it an inspirational destination and have diverted the long-holding trance of Mexican Magical Realism that once permeated the city’s art.”

She noted artists like Demian Flores, Mauricio Cervantes and Emilia Sandoval, who are creating micro and macro works that go beyond the personal to broach a global significance, while Zapotec printmaker Gabriela Morac and painter Alberto Mendiola use their mediums to ironically meld pre-Columbian imagery with ideas of branding, marketing and merchandising.

Though art can be enjoyed throughout the city – on its streets, in a number of museums and through a variety of groundbreaking collectives – these are the art galleries in Oaxaca that have stolen our hearts.

Espacio Zapata – A space as revolutionary as its namesake Emiliano Zapata, the gallery, tied to the Assembly of Revolutionary Artists of Oaxaca (ASARO), furthers Mexican graphic and political heritage alongside lithographs, woodblock prints and more. You’ll spot this place from the top of the street with its high-energy facade featuring ever-changing, eye-catching murals – currently it’s painted with dozens of Mexican art motifs in shades of gold and black. Inside, discover friendly and passionate artists showcasing work that extends from frames to walls – and from the art world into the community.

Red Dot Art Gallery – Focused on experimental and avant-garde visual arts, this large space favors unconventional points of view and always leaves visitors with new ideas to ponder. Exhibitions investigate issues of culture, gender, humanities and politics while a regular roster of public talks, music and events offer even more reasons to return to the bright and airy space.

Stellah Gallery – This small, intimate gallery holds a gorgeously curated selection of textiles, furnishings and paintings alongside Australian owner and curator Stellah De Ville’s own tactile ceramic vessels and sculptures. With a preference towards organic shapes, colors and materials, guests feel an immediate sense of calm wonder upon entering.

Av. José María Morelos 301, Oaxaca 

La Santísima Gallery – Fans of dark, minimalist print work with a bent towards the macabre will gravitate to this grungy, authentic and frenetic space where the city’s creatives gather to drink canned beer on opening nights and view works by up-and-coming painters, textile makers and artists like graffiti muralist Dreka Ventura. Pick up unique gift items made by gallery artists in the adjoining shop.

Miguel Hidalgo 1019, Oaxaca 

Siqueiros Gallery – A must-stop spot for fans of political street art, this multi-room gallery offers a large range of graffiti, paintings and prints alongside merch like tote bags, stickers and pins. Most pieces have a unique story related to some aspect of Oaxaca’s history. The multilingual staff are eager to share these tales and you may find yourself in deep contemplation and long conversations here.

  1. Porfirio Díaz 510, Ruta Independencia, Oaxaca

Cocijo Gallery – Focused on weirdly wonderful paintings and woodcuts, including many that reflect on the region’s rich past and incorporate a full circle of influences. Discover works by emerging Mexican artists such as Indigenous lithograph artist Gilberto Delgado, J-Paw and Tupac Emiliano as well as occasional demonstrations and classes.

  1. de Mariano Abasolo 107, Ruta Independencia, Oaxaca

Laurel is a nomadic lifestyle journalist whose favorite stories focus on weird and wonderful travel and culture. Her work has appeared in The Wall Street Journal, Vice, BBC Travel, Travel + Leisure, South China Morning Post, The Culture Trip and more. 

@laureltuohy, www.laureltuohy.com

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Multiple opportunities to learn English for immigrants in San Francisco

by Olman Valle Hernández

Five thousand students is the record of active students who will be entering the different classrooms at different levels of the City College on the Mission campus, and 1,700 new students for this next academic year 2024 as part of its academic offer in teaching English to students from different nationalities around the world who live in San Francisco.

For students who enroll at City College, English is the language of international communication, commerce and finance, it is a lingua franca in many corners of the planet and the official language of this country where you can express yourself, communicate, and understanding it is not a luxury, but a universal necessity.

Belkys Adellemo, supervisor of the City College Mission Center Admissions office, said that the team of counselors, teaching staff and admirers do their best to ensure that immigrant students once they enroll and become part of the family of this house of studies they are provided with all the available language learning tools.

“We not only provide support to each student when they register to study English, we provide and develop tools so that everyone, regardless of age, becomes familiar and feels comfortable practicing their pronunciation and grammar, we guide and advise our students “That they learn to develop in other disciplines, such as literature, North American culture and another technical career that allows them to prepare and be competitive in a better and broader world of work,” said Adellemo.

She also emphasized that there are help programs within the school such as a daycare center for those single mothers without financial resources to pay for a babysitter and who have the desire to learn the language. The school provides this service as well as food and easy access to the library with laptop computers so that the student can do their homework and work assigned by the teacher.

Frank Arias, originally from Cuba, is an active student at the school. In his country he dedicated himself to modeling and is a specialist in Cuban gastronomy. He has been living in San Francisco for a year and six months. He expressed that since he left his homeland he had already thought that the first thing he would do when he arrived in the United States would be to study English to be able to communicate.

“Immigrating to a country, where you don’t know anyone and don’t know the language, makes all things complicated. Thanks to the opportunities that school gives us, this barrier is not so difficult and allows us to make the path easier.” making it very easy for you; “I am very grateful for the support that our teachers and everyone who makes it possible for me to grow as a person have given us,” said Arias.

“That reminds me that every day I am there among countrymen and among Latin brothers, it is a pleasure to be there and the most beautiful thing is that it is free of charge, because that helps us take greater interest and responsibility, but above all a great personal commitment ”Arias expressed.

Currently, online and in-person registrations are still available for the new school period that begins on Jan. 16, 2024.

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Migrants kidnapped from bus in Tamaulipas

El año pasado, 49 migrantes fueron secuestrados de un autobús en San Luis Potosí y luego rescatados.--Last year, 49 migrants were abducted from a bus in San Luis Potosí and later rescued. (Screen capture)

by the El Reportero‘s wire services

Armed criminals abducted 31 migrants traveling by bus in Tamaulipas on Saturday, according to authorities in the northern border state.

Five of the victims were located, but the other 26 remain missing.

Tamaulipas security official Jorge Cuéllar Montoya said in an interview on Monday that a bus driver reported the abduction of 31 of 36 passengers on the Reynosa-Matamoros highway.

A bus operated by Grupo Senda, a Monterrey-based bus company, was intercepted by armed men in five pick-up trucks, Cuéllar said.

The bus was traveling to Matamoros, Tamaulipas, from Monterrey when the incident occurred, he said.

“According to the driver’s report, … 31 passengers of different nationalities were taken by these five trucks,” Cuéllar said.

The migrants are reportedly from Venezuela, Honduras and Colombia. According to a Reforma newspaper report, they were traveling to Matamoros to attend appointments with U.S. immigration authorities.

Cuéllar said that state and federal security forces had been searching for the missing migrants, but hadn’t located any of them.

However, the Tamaulipas government said Monday night that the National Guard found five Venezuelans including two children in a vehicle traveling on the Monterrey-Matamoros highway in Reynosa, a border city opposite McAllen, Texas.

In a post to Facebook, the government said that the vehicle performed “evasive maneuvers between traffic” before coming to a halt. Two men subsequently fled on foot.

The Venezuelan migrants told authorities they were kidnapped while traveling on a Senda bus.

The government said that the five migrants were taken to National Immigration Institute offices. The vehicle in which they were being transported was seized and will be turned over to the Tamaulipas Attorney General’s Office, according to the social media post. According to a report from El País newspaper, Cuéllar indicated the five migrants were a “separate case” from the Saturday mass abduction, but provided no further details.

The abduction of the migrants on Saturday came after weeks of warnings from migrant advocates of an increase in kidnappings in the border region of Tamaulipas, according to Reforma.

The newspaper noted that Cuéllar didn’t explain “how the criminals were able to commit this mass kidnapping with impunity on one of the state’s most important highways and during holiday season when there is a heavy flow of travelers and security has supposedly been strengthened with [the presence of] police and the military.”

Migrants are frequently targeted by criminal groups as they travel through Mexico toward the northern border. Many have been forcibly recruited by cartels, while others have been killed.

Forty-nine migrants were kidnapped while traveling through San Luis Potosí by bus in May last year. They were subsequently rescued.

With reports from El Universal, Reforma, El País and López-Dóriga Digital.

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Blessed December passed, and welcome year 2024 – and may there be a viable solution to immigration law

Marvin Ramírez, editor

This Christmas was quite hard for many, I am referring to many migrants who left their houses in their countries in search of the American dream in the USA, a dream that really is no longer, a dream that is just a mirage of the past, when residing or visiting this country, even for a short period – achieved enormous economic advances.

Many immigrants have ventured to leave their countries due to lack of opportunities in the midst of a major global crisis that affects many countries. And even in the midst of uncertainty, they begin these trips that often become a moment of sadness for them.

Many are left stranded at a cruel border, which does not allow them to cross due to lack of permission, and they have to suffer cold and hunger, waiting for a helping hand to pass them some water and food while they manage to reach the entrance and are granted the blessed ‘conditional release’ or parole that allows them to enter legally and be able to work, while their asylum requests – mostly unfounded – are processed.

For others, the mirage fades when they are deported back to their countries of origin as soon as they cross, due to new, last-minute emerging US policies. Thus, their dreams become true nightmares for them and their relatives who had to sell belongings or pawn their houses to be able to pay for their dangerous and uncertain odysseys. Along the way many are robbed, kidnapped and the women raped.

In some places they are well received.

In McAllen, Texas, Sister Norma Pimentel, executive director of Catholic Charities of the Rio Grande Valley, which runs the facility, says Christmas celebrations especially are a time when immigrants coming to this country should be welcomed. with open arms.

“Many of their families are still separated. They uprooted themselves and left everything behind: everything they are, you know, their culture, their food, their friends, their everything. And it’s not an easy thing,” he said. They offer them shelter, clothes and food

The challenges are many, and very dangerous, but when there is hope and a light on the other side of the tunnel, it is worth the risk for many, even if it is painful.

For a good number, the pain has been felt firsthand lately.

“Ambulances take them daily to hospitals in El Paso, San Diego and Tucson, Arizona, writhing in pain: bones protruding from arms and legs; skulls broken; spines shattered. The men and women arrive on stretchers flanked by an officer in the revealing green uniform of the United States Border Patrol.

“One look and I know it’s another wall fall,” said Brian Elmore, an emergency medicine doctor at Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center in El Paso, The New York Times reports.

The patients are all immigrants who crashed to the ground while trying to scale the wall that separates Mexico and the United States along long stretches of the border.

“In a quest to stop unauthorized immigration, the U.S. government has expanded the length and height of fortifications in recent years, and the Biden administration has authorized a new stretch. But many immigrants have not been deterred by barriers, and for hundreds of them, the result has been debilitating injuries requiring multiple surgeries, according to doctors who work in American hospitals near the border.

Caring for patients can impose a considerable financial burden because immigrants typically lack insurance but often require multiple complex surgeries and prolonged hospital care, the report explains.

Buses loaded with people who have just crossed the Texas line – which is where migrants mostly cross – head towards the sanctuary states of New York or Chicago by mandate of the Texas government, and thus prevent them from depleting the resources of the local economy. by becoming a public charge.

Upon arriving in these states, many cannot fit into the overcrowded shelters and have to sleep in parks and sidewalks in these sanctuary cities. This is causing the repudiation of local residents who already suffer from a lack of housing and jobs, and feel betrayed by their political representatives when they see that their taxes are used to support these immigrants – who say they know nothing about them, since they crossed the border without proper immigration inspection.

An orderly immigration policy could resolve this immigration crisis that exceeds the capacity to process immigrants.

The bipartisan Dignity Act (H.R. 3599), spearheaded by Representatives María Elvira Salazar (R-FL) and Verónica Escobar (D-TX), has made significant progress in the House of Representatives since it was introduced last May.

Dozens of prominent stakeholders have weighed in, including support from across the business sector, immigration groups, the agricultural community, the faith community, educators, economic experts, community leaders, ambassadors and United States senators.

If you would like to add your voice of support to the Dignity Act, please email JMK@mail.house.gov and jgo@mail.house.gov.

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INDIVIDUAL POWER: Why are people afraid to talk about it?

Jon Rappoport

by Jon Rappoport

Because they equate it with misuse of power.

The two are not the same.

I’m talking about the power to affect events; the power to move toward more freedom from oppression, the power to sweep away the garbage of control being exercised over us.

I’m talking about the power to fight and win against evil.

The power to create an enterprise based on merit.

The power to expand that enterprise.

The power to resist slave masters.

The power to rise above the mob mislabeled “democracy.”

The power of the individual to stand up, speak out, and the power to break the chains of cause and effect that would box us in.

The power to invent new realities.

The power to reject those who say we should have no power.

The power to defeat those who claim we must be as weak as the weakest among us.

The power to go beyond the inhibiting strictures of The Group.

The power of the individual to think, and think for himself.

The power to make one’s own future.

The power to stand alone, when necessary.

The power to choose, freely, to work with other honest and honorable individuals.

The power to tear off the masks of groups who pretend to work for the greater good.

The power of the individual to succeed in what he is doing, and not abandon what he is doing because others are failing.

The power to reject the lowest common denominator.

The power to make freedom with responsibility the center of life.

The power to go beyond what we’re told the individual is capable of doing.

The power to reject the shame and guilt other people tell us we should feel. The power to shrug that off like dust.

The power to neutralize and destroy evil Collectivism.

The power to walk freely, even if others insist on crawling.

The power to remove dictatorships over body, mind, and soul.

The power to reject conformity.

The power to use all this power without enslaving others.

There is an obvious and crucial difference between individual power and hostile power over others. There should be no limit on the former, and every limit on the latter.

The law, applied correctly, should enforce the latter.

Because we live in a time of massive Collectivism, individuals are afraid to speak out on their own behalf. This is a fatal mistake.

Collectivism (the group is all) is a con designed to make it seem that enlightened leaders can rule and act on behalf of everyone in the same charitable way. This is unworkable. More than that, it’s a ruse criminals use to rise to political power. Meaning: control. They proclaim themselves prophets and messiahs of a better world—but they’re seeking slaves.

The individual stands against all forms of Collectivism and their disguises.

Within those forms, there are always individuals who aim to gain and use power over others.

If there were an individual who could take off from the ground and fly over rooftops and swoop above streets, it would take about an hour for angry mobs to gather below him, shake their fists, and try to bring him down.

Regardless of their claimed reasons for attempting to destroy him, their real reason would be: they’re pledged to weakness. That’s their ace in the hole. That’s all they have. The “flying man” is unassailable evidence that weakness is not all there is.

In the old days, before Collectivism and its blood brother, Wokeness, swept through Western societies like a tidal wave, eager children read about and looked at illustrations of the flying man:

Superman.

Do you really think these children saw him as evil? Or prayed that he would come down like a god and save them?

Of course not.

The children wanted to BE Superman.

With his powers.

Do you really think these children were scheming to use those powers to harm and enslave others?

Of course not.

They wanted to use those powers to feel joy, and to liberate people from criminals. As any hero would.

For the past hundred years or so, we’ve been deluged with propaganda echoing Lord Action’s famous words: “Power corrupts…absolute power corrupts absolutely.”

False.

Individuals with prior hostile and evil designs will use power in corrupt ways.

Weak individuals who somehow gain power will succumb to temptation and use it corrupt ways.

This has always been the case.

But the propaganda tells us there are no other types of individuals. They’re all hostile, evil, or weak.

This is a lie.

It’s convenient for the weak to believe and promote it. It gets them off the hook. It frees them from the need to be strong, honest, intelligent, creative, independent, courageous. It frees them from the need to invent the future they truly want. It frees them from the need to fight and win against evil.

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Massive migrant caravan heading to US-Mexico border

It is the largest caravan in over a year, may balloon to up to 15K people, activist warns

Shared from/by Social Links for Melissa Koenig and Social Links for Selim Algar

Border officials reported the highest number of migrant crossings ever, with a seven-day average of more than 9,600 in December, a Homeland Security official told CNN.

According to the New York Post, the massive migrant caravan making its way through Mexico to the US border is the largest in more than a year — as it was revealed more than 730,000 asylum seekers have been encountered at the southern border since October alone.

The hordes of migrants — primarily from Cuba, Haiti and Honduras — set off for the United States on Sunday, walking more than nine miles from the Mexican southern border city Tapachula to get to Alvaro Obregón.

An estimated 8,000 asylum seekers are en route, marking the largest migrant caravan approaching the US since June 2022.

Their Christmas Eve dinner comprised sandwiches, a bottle of water and a banana handed out by a local church, and they spent Christmas night sleeping on cardboard or plastic under awnings and tents.

But radical migrant rights activist Luis Garcia Villagran, who is accompanying the group, has warned that the caravan could grow to 15,000 people, carrying signs reading “Exodus from poverty,” by the time it reaches the border.

“We won’t stop — we’ll keep walking,’’ he vowed.

The influx of new migrants threatens to further strain the United States’ already overburdened Border Patrol.

There have been more than 730,000 migrant encounters at the besieged southern border since Oct. 1, US Customs and Border Patrol sources told Fox News reporter Bill Melugin — a staggering number that eclipses the entire population of Denver, the capital of Colorado.

December is currently on pace to set a monthly record in migrant encounters, Melugin added.

As many as 10,000 migrants have been apprehended each day at the southwest border this month, US Customs and Border Patrol officials have said. The total number of migrant encounters in December has already surpassed 200,000.

Last week, the US Customs and Border Patrol halted railway operations at international crossings into Texas to try to curb the massive migration into the country.

“CBP is continuing to surge all available resources to safely process migrants in response to increased levels of migrant encounters at the southwest border, fueled by smugglers peddling disinformation to prey on vulnerable individuals,” the agency said in a statement at the time.

“After observing a recent resurgence of smuggling organizations moving migrants through Mexico via freight trains, CBP is taking additional actions to surge personnel and address this concerning development, including in partnership with Mexican authorities.”

But Border Patrol agents say they have become overwhelmed by the surge in migrants, with the migrants outnumbering agents 200 to 1 at one Texas crossing.

The National Border Patrol Council said “agents are more than willing to sacrifice holidays to protect our fellow Americans, but what we are doing is not enforcing our laws; because of bad policy, our government is allowing cartels to control our border,” it said in a statement to NewsNation.

Federal officials are set to meet with their Mexican counterparts in Mexico City to stem the tide of migrants coming into the US.

The Mexican government has already said it is willing to help try to stop migrants from crossing its country, and White House National Security Council spokesman John Kirby said President Biden and Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador shared concerns about the “dramatic” increase, according to the BBC.

But López Obrador has said he is urging the Biden administration to ease up on its restrictive sanctions against the lefty governments of Cuba and Venezuela, where about 20% of the 617,865 migrants whom US agents encountered at the border between October and November were from.

He also said he wants to see the US dole out more money to struggling Latin American countries, which some migrants say they are fleeing in search of better economic opportunities.

With reports from the New York Post.

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They lived in an East L.A. home almost 30 years. Now their landlords want to move in

María Vela arma una caja de cartón mientras su familia se prepara para mudarse de su casa de casi 30 años en el este de Los Ángeles el 17 de diciembre de 2023. --María Vela assembles a cardboard box as her family gets ready to move out of their home of nearly 30 years in East Los Angeles on Dec. 17, 2023. Photo by Adriana Heldiz, CalMatters

by Alejandra Reyes-Velarde

CalMatters

Days before Christmas, María Vela was saying goodbye to the narrow one-bedroom apartment in East L.A. that has been the backdrop of her family’s lives for the last 30 years.

Vela looked at her wedding photo hanging in their living room. The couple hosted their wedding reception out on the driveway, Vela said, gesturing outside. They raised four children in the duplex near the end of a cul-de-sac in their historically Latino neighborhood. Their kids enjoyed a quintessential East L.A. upbringing until one-by-one they left for college, except for Vela’s youngest girl, a high school junior.

Now the family is being evicted by Christmas so their landlords, who live next door, can move in.

“It feels like someone is taking a part of my story,” Vela said.

Family evictions

Evictions are on the rise nationwide and in California. While most Los Angeles-area evictions happen because tenants struggle to pay rent, even tenants who manage to remain current with rent are at risk of eviction. These “just cause” or “no fault” evictions happen because landlords want to move into their tenants’ units, renovate a unit or leave the rental market.

No-fault evictions are contributing to the displacement of families from their longtime communities, along with other factors such as rising rents, too few affordable units, and expired tenant protections.

“Homeowner move-ins have been bringing about this exodus of Angelenos leaving their communities because they can no longer afford rent,” said Cinthia Gonzalez, an organizer at Eastside Leadership for Equitable and Accountable Development Strategies (LEADS). “It’s a heavy load.”

After state pandemic-era tenant protections expired, average monthly eviction filings surpassed pre-pandemic levels in a dozen of California’s most populous counties, according to court records obtained by CalMatters.

Counties that extended local eviction moratoria saw delayed, but still stark, eviction increases. That was the case for Los Angeles County, which saw a 17% increase in eviction filings the first eight months of 2023, compared to pre-pandemic levels.

Even though there have been state and local efforts to strengthen protections against evictions for “just cause,” those protections didn’t help Vela’s family stay in their longtime home.

A man who identified himself as one of Vela’s landlords told CalMatters he didn’t want to comment on the matter.

Part of a community

Vela has lived in the same home since she immigrated to the U.S. in 1996.

She met her husband at a party while he was visiting Mexico. Within months they wed and went together to East L.A., where he was already living with his three brothers.

When the brothers came across the duplex unit in the early 1990s, it was dilapidated and littered with trash in a neighborhood with active gangs. The brothers asked the landlord if they could fix it up in exchange for being able to live there. The landlord agreed and charged them $300 monthly.

As the family grew, the home started to feel smaller.

Over the years various landlords neglected the property, Vela said. Walls are chipping, holes where mice have crept in are covered by unsecured wood, and mold grows in the bathroom.

But they were able to remain there long enough to give Vela’s children the stability and joyful upbringing they needed to succeed.

Carolina Correa, 23, graduated from Brown University and landed a job at an environmental justice nonprofit in San Francisco. Diana Correa, 26, graduated from UC Berkeley and is pursuing a master’s degree in history. Jesús Correa, 19, started at UC Merced in the fall.

The youngest, 16-year-old Fabiola Correa, wants to follow in her siblings’ footsteps and become valedictorian or salutatorian at Esteban Torres High School. She’s eyeing UC Berkeley too.

Carolina remembers whispering with her siblings as they lay on bunk beds or on the floor, to not wake her parents in the bedroom. They slept in the living room and another living space in the apartment and had little privacy, but it helped them stay close.

Their father taught them to ride bikes and he’d watch them ride in circles on the dead end street, Carolina said. He hosted carne asada barbecues with family. Block parties with live bands and traditional Mexican food and sweets brought neighbors together. 

“It was really nice to just have that literally right in front of my house, on my street, and to be a part of community in a way that is something so special to East L.A.,” Carolina said.

Displaced neighbors 

Tina Rosales, an attorney with the Western Center on Law and Poverty, likened the family’s displacement to other times in history when Latinos were moved from their neighborhoods, including the years before Dodger Stadium opened in 1962.

“This is heartbreaking, but it’s not new,” Rosales said. “It’s a trend. As we put more value on homes and people owning property, we tend to displace the communities that have been there forever.”

Rosales is among the attorneys who worked on a tenant protection law recently passed by Gov. Gavin Newsom to close loopholes to “just cause” eviction protections. The law requires owners who move out tenants and then move themselves or family members  in to reside there for at least a year. And it will require landlords to pay one month’s rent in relocation assistance.

Tenant advocates pushed for the law because they believe landlords were taking advantage of the rules. Landlords sometimes use owner move-ins as a pretense, Rosales said, when actually they want to put their units back on the market at a higher rent.

“It’s important to balance the interests and needs of both (landlords and tenants) while recognizing that housing is a basic need, and as a society we must prioritize keeping people housed,” said Sen. María Elena Durazo, the Los Angeles Democrat who authored the law. “Market housing is a business, and like in many areas of business, consumer protections are necessary in order to ensure that bad actors out to increase their own profits are not able to take advantage of or abuse the consumer.”

Los Angeles County and city have even stronger just cause protections, but local advocates say even those rules have weak spots.

For instance, in L.A. County landlords or their family members who move into tenants’ units have to live there for three years. If they don’t, the previous tenants have a right to move back in under their original lease terms and rent.

But the law seems to place the burden of keeping track of the landlords on tenants. Javier Beltran, deputy director of the Housing Rights Center in L.A., said he hasn’t heard of a case of a tenant successfully reclaiming their unit because of landlord violations.

“In reality once (tenants) move out, it’s hard to keep up with that particular tenant,” Beltran said. “They probably moved on to a different place, situated themselves and to a certain extent, moved on. It’s hard for them to come back.”

‘Terminated for no fault’

On a recent December morning, Vela sat at her kitchen table with her hands on her temples, a folder filled with papers spread in front of her.

“All of this is so frustrating,” she said with a sigh.

On the table was a scanned copy of the most recent $1,000 rent payment she sent, various phone numbers from housing leads scribbled on a notepad, and her official 60-day eviction notice issued October 23.

“You are hereby notified that effective sixty days from the date of service on you of this notice, the tenancy by which you hold possession of the premises is terminated for No Fault Just Cause…” the letter reads.

She spoke in a whisper and raised the volume of her television so her landlords couldn’t hear her talk about the eviction. They live next door and the walls are thin, she said.

Vela always knew eviction was a possibility. The duplex had been bought and sold multiple times in the last several decades, and each new owner had been willing to keep them as tenants, until now.

Eastside LEADS helped Vela delay her eviction by a year and a half after finding flaws in the landlords’ eviction process. For example, Gonzalez said, the landlords offered less than the required amount for relocation assistance.

But after the organization sent a letter to the landlords, they corrected their mistakes and agreed to pay the $12,688 in relocation assistance the county requires in this case.

Searching for housing

Vela has found searching for housing difficult. She and her husband aren’t fluent in English, they are undocumented and they’ve purchased most of their belongings in cash, which means they don’t have much credit history.

Also the going rents in that neighborhood are sometimes double what they’re paying now, which would be impossible for them to afford on her husband’s meatpacking salary, she said.

At one recent home viewing, Vela brought her daughter Fabiola to translate. The landlord interrogated Fabiola: Did the family have visitors often? Did they party? Were they loud?

Vela left feeling dejected and worried about Fabiola.

Carolina has been trying to help from the Bay Area, where she lives. After work or on her breaks, she finds housing leads and makes phone calls on behalf of her parents. She adds herself and her boyfriend as co-signers, hoping that’ll increase her parents’ chances.

“I’ve submitted applications for them to move into places and then burst into tears afterward,” Carolina said. “I want them to get into these places so bad, but because I’m not there I can’t facilitate further. I do what I can and so does my older sister, but it’s difficult.”

Diana, the oldest, feels guilty she hasn’t been able to help as much as she’d like.

“(I was) really angry with myself and with the timing,” Diana said, adding that if the landlords had waited five more years, she could finish her master’s program,  start working and pool her money with her siblings to buy their parents a house. “I was like, damn, I’m not ready.”

Recently she created a GoFundMe page hoping friends and community members will help defray the cost of storage units and moving trucks.

Harder to thrive

Vela said she is coming to grips with the fact that their only option may be to leave East L.A., and maybe Los Angeles altogether. With no immediate home to go to, Vela thought about moving in with her sister in San Bernardino County temporarily while her husband stays in his brother’s El Sereno apartment, closer to his work.

The lack of affordable housing for very poor residents is a major factor in the state’s rising homelessness problem.

Margot Kushel, director of UC San Francisco’s Benioff Homelessness and Housing Initiative, said even if this family isn’t immediately homeless after vacating their home, they could be at risk for homelessness in the future.

Kushel’s research on homelessness in California revealed 49 percent of those without a home had been “non-leaseholders,” usually people staying with friends or family until it isn’t possible anymore. Those living arrangements often are precarious and lead families on a path toward homelessness, Kushel said.

She listed other challenges contributing to people’s vulnerability to homelessness: high deposit fees, moving costs, the impact of moving on peoples’ jobs and personal stability.

A recent law passed to limit what California landlords can charge for security deposits won’t be in effect until next summer,  too late for Vela.

Evictions and potential homelessness impact entire families, Kushel said, risking people’s ability to graduate from college or high school and to build wealth in the future.

“Housing is really at the root of thriving,” Kushel said.

Mixed emotions

The solution is to build more affordable housing far faster than Los Angeles is currently doing, said Stuart Gabriel, a real estate professor at UCLA’s Anderson School of Management. Most investment in housing creation is driven by profit and built by the private sector.

Not everyone purchases property to make a profit, he said. “It’s a very complicated and nuanced story and doesn’t lend itself to easy culprits and easy answers,” he said.

Vela’s family recognizes their landlords probably just want more space for their family. She said the landlords are two siblings who live with their elderly mother.

The family has conflicting feelings about the landlords and their family’s situation.

“It’s complicated for us because they do have a case and we don’t anymore,” Diana said. “I get it. You bought a house. But at the same time you knew we were here.”

Vela’s husband said he’s grateful for the time they were allowed to stay.

“It just so happened that someone bought the house and now we have to leave. But without resentment or anger,” Jesús Correa Cabrera said. “We’ll close the door behind us and say ‘thank you very much.’ And life goes on.”

Within days the family slowly disassembled their East L.A home, packing belongings they’ve accumulated over several decades into black trash bags and cardboard boxes.

Diana, Carolina and young Jesús’s high school class photos, Fabiola’s shelves of books, the quinceañera and wedding photographs, were all taken down.

As Christmas neared, they summoned a sense of hope for the future.

“I feel sad, kind of stressed for my family,” Fabiola said as she sorted a drawer of colored pencils and pens. “But at the same time I feel like we’re going to get out of this and maybe start a new time of our lives. A new beginning.”

The day before the family was preparing to move out, they heard they were approved for an apartment in El Monte, a one-bedroom for $1,700 a month, plus utilities and rental insurance.

It’s far from their community, smaller, and too expensive for them to afford comfortably. But the family said they have no other choice.

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