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Why are key Obama policies shrouded in secrecy?

by Joe Wolverton, II, J.D.
Analysis New American

“Everything secret degenerates, even the administration of justice; nothing is safe that does not show how it can bear discussion and publicity.” — Lord Acton Barack Obama campaigned for president promising to usher in an era of transparency in government. That promise stands next to 3you “if you like your doctor you can keep your doctor” in the Barack Obama Presidential Hall of Shame.

One of the most egregious examples of President Obama’s duplicity is the way he and his administration have responded to the roster of revelations that have come from the leaks of documents defining the surveillance activities of the National Security Agency (NSA).

Not only has the president been called out on his support of secrecy at home, but leaders around the globe have turned on him, as well, after learning that American snoops have been monitoring their phone calls for years.

Then there is the bugging of the United Nations, the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, and other organizations by none other than the NSA. This is germane to the secrecy analysis because the NSA is part of the Executive Branch and the head of that branch is Barack Obama.

Anita Kumar, writing for McClatchy Newspapers, points out the criticism the president has faced after his 180 on openness.

As criticism swelled at home and abroad, Obama said the nation should examine how the government can strike a balance between national security and privacy concerns. He said at an August news conference that Americans will resolve any disagreements about the NSA programs through “vigorous public debate.”

But what started out as a national examination largely turned into a private review with few public meetings, little document disclosure and next to no public debate, say some lawmakers, technology organizations and civil liberties groups. And now, as those behind-the-scenes reviews begin to wind down, Obama is not providing details of the results.

“As part of the overall review of our intelligence-gathering practices, decisions are being made by the president and implemented by the president, but beyond that, I have to ask you to wait until the reviews, the various reviews have been completed and we have more to say,” White House spokesman Jay Carney said.

A key tenet of the Obama administration’s code of silence seems to require the thickest walls be built around the sectors of government that can take advantage of the cover to do the most damage to liberty. As reported by Tech Dirt:

The administration, which likes to pretend it’s the most transparent in history, is actually one of the most secretive. Its attempts at transparency have almost exclusively been focused on where it can get the most political bang, not for what areas people expect the government to be transparent about — such as how it interprets the laws that allow the government to spy on everyone….

What’s incredible is that it appears that no one high up in the administration seems to recognize how this is a strategy that will almost certainly make things worse, not better. It may be how the administration is used to functioning, but it makes it much more difficult to believe anything that is said about a supposed “vigorous public debate” being held on the surveillance activities. It also means that as more leaks come out revealing more questionable practices, the constant backtracking and excuses will just destroy whatever credibility the administration has left on this issue. If, instead, it were to actually be transparent and simply reveal things like how it interprets the law, and allows for a real public discussion on these matters, that would actually result in some frank discussions that the administration seems terrified of actually having.

Beyond the violations of the Fourth Amendment evident in the NSA’s dragnet surveillance turning citizens into suspects, there are several other significant examples of President Obama’s fierce determination to keep Americans in the dark when it comes to policies and programs that pose the most potent threats to their freedom. One of the most egregious examples is the Trans- Pacific Partnership (TPP).

Every round of negotiations are conducted in secret and even the content of the draft agreement itself would be completely unknown were it not for a WikiLeaks project that resulted in the publication of a chapter on intellectual property. William F. Jasper, writing for The New American, explains how and why President Obama is keeping details of the TPP trade pact under wraps.

If there is one word that is used more often than “reform” by governments, politicians, and international organizations — and abused even more frequently and egregiously — it is “transparency.”

As with the United Nations and the World Trade Organization (WTO), the White House and the U.S. Trade Representative’s (USTR) office regularly proclaim their commitment to transparency while doing everything possible to hide their actions from their constituents.

The USTR’s “Fact Sheet: Transparency and the Trans-Pacific Partnership” is intended to give the impression that the Obama administration is forthrightly providing the American people with all the up-todate information they need to accurately evaluate the agreements that are being made in their name, and that would, if accepted by Congress, devastatingly impact their lives, their liberty, and their future.

And, perhaps the most deadly deception perpetrated by the secrecy-loving president is the number of innocent civilians who have been killed by missiles fired from U.S. drones. Until recently, in fact, the Obama administration denied the drone war was even being waged. Now, even though he admits to targeting “militants” using the remote control weapons, the president refuses to comment on how many civilians have been blown up in the process. Then, of course, there is ObamaCare. After the rollout derailed, press reports revealed that the president likely knew there were problems with his hallmark legislation and also knew that Americans would not be able to keep their doctor.

A CBS News report about the weekly GOP address that Senator Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) gave on November 16 on the president’s broken promise noted: “Millions of Americans are coming to realize that those are your tire tracks on their canceled policies,” Johnson said to the president, accusing Mr. Obama and his Democratic allies in Congress of perpetrating “political fraud” to aid their political goals. “Consumer fraud this massive in the private sector could — and should — bear serious legal ramifications,” Johnson said. “For President Obama, however, it helped secure enough votes to pass Obamacare and win re-election.”

As he continues burrowing deeper and deeper into the sands of secrecy, President Obama seems not to realize that that soil shifts and there will always be those committed to digging around until the truth is told.

McClatchy writes: Mark Jaycox, a policy analyst for the Electronic Frontier Foundation, said he doesn’t expect the administration to change much even amid the intense criticism. This administration, he said, has always held fast against similar criticism. For example, it resisted for years bipartisan pressure to release more information about its top-secret targeted killing program.

“It’s a pattern of the Obama administration,” he said.

Tech Dirt recognizes the problem for the president: Extreme secrecy may seem like the easier shortterm strategy, but it’s just digging an ever deeper hole that the administration is going to have to try to climb out of in the long-term. Hiding reality from a public that’s going to find out eventually is just making the problem worse.

The human race is in trouble’ now that the post-antibiotic era is on our doorstep

by Ethan A. Huff

The first person ever to fall victim to the so-called “post-antibiotic era” — a New Zealand man recently died from a novel bacterial strain that is fully resistant to every known antibiotic — has sparked fresh concerns about what some are now referring to as the real-life zombie apocalypse. Drug-resistant bacteria, warns John Aziz from The Week, is probably humanity’s biggest threat for which there are currently no solutions in sight, and this could very soon have devastating consequences unlike anything the world has ever seen.

The advent of drug-resistant bacteria is nothing new, as this phenomenon has been occurring ever since the first man-made antibiotics hit the scene back in the 1940s. But the tendency of pathogens to continually adapt and develop resistance to the  very substances originally designed to kill them has reached a major turning point, as there are simply not enough new antibiotics being developed to tackle all these new and virulent “superbugs.”

In other words, malignant bacteria are outsmarting the best that modern medicine has to offer, which does not bode well for the future of humanity.

Perhaps most responsible for the rapid uptick in antibiotic resistance is the widespread use of antibiotics in factory farm animals, which accounts for some 80 percent or more of antibiotic use. The administration of antibiotics to healthy livestock for the purpose of bulking them up faster, for instance, a practice that has been taking place since the 1950s, represents just one of the ways in which antibiotics have been widely overprescribed. It is also one of the primary drivers behind the superbug epidemic we are facing today.

“It is not difficult to make microbes resistant to penicillin in the laboratory by exposing them to concentrations not sufficient to kill them,” warned Alexander Fleming, the creator of the first antibiotic, penicillin, back in 1945 when he received his Nobel Prize for medicine.

“There is the danger that the ignorant man may easily underdose himself and by exposing his microbes to non-lethal quantities of the drug make them resistant.”

Perverse drug companies refuse to invest in solutions to ‘superbug’ problem they caused Fleming was right, and he was definitely ahead of his time as far as his understanding of microbiology and human pathology goes.

And the solution, at least for the first few decades, was simply to develop new antibiotics to replace the old ones. But this approach is no longer working and is further exacerbated by the drug industry’s refusal to develop new antibiotics, which are not nearly as profitable as other areas of drug research.

“The economics are perverse,” writes Aziz about the issue. “Taking preventative action today would not be very profitable because there are fewer potential customers. The incentives to produce more and better antibiotics only kick in under the worst circumstances, when millions of people are dying from antibiotic- resistant infections.”

To say that the future of disease treatment is unsettling would be an understatement, at least as far as conventional medicine is concerned. The good news is that there are plenty of amazing natural remedies such as colloidal silver, oil of oregano and full-spectrum earth and sea salts that are capable of destroying harmful pathogens, even resistant ones, and will never become obsolete. But the medicalindustrial complex is unlikely to adopt these simple solutions anytime soon.

“In the pre-antibiotic world, silver ions were king,” writes one commenter at The Week, validating a recent study out of Boston University.

“They still work. The fat cat pharmaceutical companies that get billions from antibiotics have spent a lot of money bribing doctors, medical associations and the FDA to disparge silver.” (Naturalnews.com).

Maduro triumphs in municipal elections but oposition wins key

by the El Reportero’s wire services

Nicolás MaduroNicolás Maduro

If the late former president Hugo Chávez (1999-2013) were still in power the results of Venezuela’s municipal elections on 8 December would have been considered a setback for the Bolivarian Revolution.

The opposition Mesa de la Unidad Democrática (MUD) won more municipalities than in the last elections in 2008; it won the main state capitals; it retained four of the five Caracas municipalities; and, in its most symbolic triumph, it took the capital of Barinas, the native state of Chávez.

But, for President Nicolás Maduro, who has faced a battle for legitimacy since winning last April’s presidential elections, as well as acute economic difficulties, taking upwards of 200 municipalities constituted a noteworthy victory, albeit many of these were fairly small and rural. It consolidates his position going into 2014, a year which, for once, is free of elections.

Government supporters harass Cuba’s Ladies in White

Members of the Ladies in White dissident group on Tuesday were severely harassed by Cuban government supporters as they were trying to gather at a crowded spot in Havana to begin a march to commemorate U.N. International Human Rights Day. Efe saw at least 20 of the Ladies, who arrived at the spot in small groups, cleared from the location and placed by security agents and police into cars and buses while being harassed by a large pro-regime mob.

“Death to the Ladies in White” and “Down with the worms” were some of the insults shouted by government partisans at the women, the latter term being a common one used by island authorities and residents for Cubans who do not support the Revolution.

The Ladies offered no resistance to their eviction and some of them shouted phrases like “Freedom for Cuba” making an “L” with their fingers. Other opposition members were also the targets on Tuesday of state-sponsored harassment, including a discussion group headed by Antonio Gonzalez Rodiles in his home to celebrate the anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

Near Gonzalez Rodiles’ home the Communist government organized festive activities and games with the assistance of several dozen school children while loudly singing songs by popular singer Silvio Rodriguez. In remarks to Efe, Gonzalez Rodiles said he regretted that the Cuban government considers Human Rights Day to be a day of confrontation and called it “really low” to use children “for these things.”

REPORT: Systematic mistreatment of deported migrants at hands of U.S. officials

A recent report exposes a systematic, widespread abuse of immigrants waiting to be deported from the U.S. The ‘Bordering on Criminal: the Routine Abuse of Migrants in the Removal System’ report was authored by the Immigration Policy Center along with the Center for Latin American Studies at the University of Arizona. The report highlights the verbal and physical abuse the migrants endure while in U.S. custody. The report also notes the chronic theft of the possessions taken from the migrants during processing; possessions that are often not returned to them when they leave U.S. custody.

Data shows that 11 percent of deportees report some form of physical abuse and 23 percent report verbal mistreatment while in U.S. custody. Racist remarks appear to be the preferred form of verbal abuse the study found. Undocumented immigrants held in detention for over a week were most likely to have their possessions taken and not returned.

The report is based on information gleaned from a bi-national, multi-institution study of 1,110 randomly selected, recently repatriated migrants surveyed in six Mexican cities between 2009 and 2012.

Two Constitutions of the United States Last Part

by Marvin Ramirez

Marvin J. RamirezMarvin Ramirez

NOTE FROM THE EDITOR: (Last week, mistakenly we published the previously published Part 1, instead of Part 2. So, this week we are correctly publishing the correct Part 2 of this two-part series.)

Dear El Reportero’s readers, I received this interesting article which can be found in several websites around the internet. It goes deep into a U.S. history not told in past and current history books or universities. I found it worth publishing it and share it with you all. It opens up a different perspective and exposes controversial claims about how the U.S. really operates behind the scene – not as a country but rather as a corporation. However, you must do your own research in order to get a better understanding of this information. Last Part

1st was suspended in favor of a Vatican corporation in 1871

First published by Press Core

As of 1871 the United States isn’t a Country, it’s a Corporation! In preparation for stealing America, the puppets of Britain’s banking cabal had already created a second government, a Shadow Government designed to manage what “the people” believed was a democracy, but what really was an incorporated UNITED STATES. Together this chimera, this two-headed monster, disallowed “the people” all rights of sui juris. [you, in your sovereignty]

The U.S.A. is a Crown Colony. The U.S. has always been and remains a British Crown colony. King James I, is not just famous for translating the Bible into “The King James Version”, but for signing the “First Charter of Virginia” in 1606 — which granted America’s British forefathers license to settle and colonize America. The charter guaranteed future Kings/Queens of England would have sovereign authority over all citizens and colonized land in America.

After America declared independence from Great Britain, the Treaty of Paris, signed on September 3, 1783 was signed. That treaty identifies the King of England as prince of U.S. “Prince George the Third, by the grace of God, king of Great Britain, France, and Ireland, defender of the faith, duke of Brunswick and Lunebourg, arch- treasurer and prince elector of the Holy Roman Empire etc., and of the United States of America“– completely contradicting premise that America won The War of Independence.

Article 5 of that treaty gave all British estates, rights and properties back to Britain.

It is agreed that Congress shall earnestly recommend it to the legislatures of the respective states to provide for the restitution of all estates, rights, and properties, which have been confiscated belonging to real British subjects; and also of the estates, rights, and properties of persons resident in districts in the possession on his Majesty’s arms and who have not borne arms against the said United States. And that persons of any other description shall have free liberty to go to any part or parts of any of the thirteen United States and therein to remain twelve months unmolested in their endeavors to obtain the restitution of such of their estates, rights, and properties as may have been confiscated; and that Congress shall also earnestly recommend to the several states a reconsideration and revision of all acts or laws regarding the premises, so as to render the said laws or acts perfectly consistent not only with justice and equity but with that spirit of conciliation which on the return of the blessings of peace should universally prevail. And that Congress shall also earnestly recommend to the several states that the estates, rights, and properties, of such last mentioned persons shall be restored to them, they refunding to any persons who may be now in possession the bona fide price (where any has been given) which such persons may have paid on purchasing any of the said lands, rights, or properties since the confiscation.

And it is agreed that all persons who have any interest in confiscated lands, either by debts, marriage settlements, or otherwise, shall meet with no lawful impediment in the prosecution of their just rights. It is becoming increasingly apparent to American citizens that government is no longer being conducted in accordance with the U.S. Constitution, or, within states, according to state constitutions.

While people have recognized for more than 150 years that the rich and powerful often corrupt individual officials, or exert undue influence to get legislation passed that favors their interests, most Americans still cling to the naive belief that such corruption is exceptional, and that most of the institutions of society, the courts, the press, and law enforcement agencies, still largely comply with the Constitution and the law in important matters. They expect that these corrupting forces are disunited and in competition with one another, so that they tend to balance one another.

Mounting evidence makes it clear that the situation is far worse than most people think, that during the last several decades the U.S. Constitution has been effectively overthrown, and that it is now observed only as a façade to deceive and placate the masses. What has replaced it is what many call the Shadow Government – created with the illegal passing of the Act of 1871. It still, for the most part, operates in secret, because its control is not secure. The exposure of this regime and its operations must now become a primary duty of citizens who still believe in the Rule of Law and in the freedoms which this country is supposed to represent.

Source: presscore.ca, http://www.pakalertpress.com/2013/06/20/twoconstitutions-in-the-unitedstates-1st-was-suspendedin-favor-of-a-vatican-corporation-in-1871/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+pakalert+%28Pak+Alert+Press%29.

Technocracy is failed mind control

by Jon Rappoport
www.nomorefakenews.com

Whether we know it or not, like it or not, want it or not, we are engaged in a struggle, and that struggle concerns the human spirit—understanding it, experiencing it, defending it against attacks.

The spirit isn’t some vague ghost or apparition. It’s front and center, even in this blind world. It animates action. It has great power. It defies reduction.

The spirit proliferates thought and vision. It doesn’t settle for simplistic harmonies that short-circuit its inventions. It isn’t a happy-happy rainbow. It isn’t a child’s fairy tale.

In articles about my collection, The Matrix Revealed, I’ve stressed, over and over, that human thought originates in a non-material sphere. A sphere outside conventional energy and space and time.

That means the brain isn’t thinking. It’s performing calculations directed by ideas that are far more than chemical/biological reflexes.

Technocracy and its utopian fantasies provide a perfect negative example.

Addled researchers look forward to the day when your brain, connected to a massive computer that is “a super brain,” will have instant access to so much information it will ascend to a new level of knowledge and power…and then Greater Reality will emerge.

But on what assumptions is this fantasy based?

First, you can “download” information from the super brain. You can perceive it all and somehow incorporate it. Translation: the super brain will impose itself on you. This is called mind control, plain and simple.

You’ll be able to “think with the super brain,” which directs your thought patterns and your conclusions. Again, mind control.

The super brain is like a very, very wise parent who gives you “best information and best conclusions.” You will obey, because the parent is right, correct, and is looking out for your best interests.

As if that isn’t enough, you’ll also be able “gain new insights,” because your brain and the super brain (computer) are in sync. But none of this really involves active thought, because what the two brains are doing is automatic.

So insights, whatever they may consist of, are programmed into you. If that sounds like freedom, Pavlov was Thomas Paine.

Brain activity on any level, whether biological or chemical or machine, isn’t about freedom. It’s about carrying out directives that originate in free choice.

Actual thought is based in freedom. You think, which is to say, you make inquiries and decisions and conclusions outside the automatic venue of chemical and biological activity. You do that.

You aren’t your brain.

If you were your brain, freedom wouldn’t exist and we could all pack it up and go home and forget about life and the future.

Therefore, no super brain computer is going to supply you with freedom. It’s going to enforce autoPartematic reflexes based on somebody’s algorithms.

How did we get into this mess? The answer is simple. We forgot about what freedom is. For decades, we’ve taken it for granted. We’ve overlooked the study of freedom and its implications.

If you develop a vision about the future you want, that’s thought taking place in a sphere outside the automatic chemical/ biological reflexes and processes of the brain. That’s you thinking, freely.

Technocracy is all about “best answer.” It’s a fairy tale in which all humans go along with a master plan.

And as for the nuts and bolts…do you really believe that if you have access to a program that teaches a foreign language, you’ll instantly be able to speak in that language?

If the super brain gives you a one-second blast of information about automotive repair, do you really think you’ll be able to open the hood of your car and fix it?

Do you really believe you’ll be able to plug into a reservoir of data about playing the piano and immediately sit down and roll out Chopin and Beethoven?
Take chess. We’ve already seen that big computers can defeat human chess champions. Does that mean you can plug into the computer’s programs and become Bobby Fisher? Having access and actually doing something with that access are two very different things.

Doing something means you are making choices and decisions, freely. It doesn’t mean you’re submitting to a mechanical pattern.

Technocracy is the latest piece of insanity derived from the notion that you can have everything you want handed to you on a silver platter. I have news. At bottom, people don’t want that silver platter. They want the fruits of their own efforts. They want the joy that comes from those efforts and freely made choices.

Technocracy is the latest effort to explain “the genius mystery.” It offers the lunatic notion that genius is a mere program that can be loaded into a brain.

That’s called a metaphor, but it’s being taken seriously as a literal explanation.

Talent, achievement, and creative imagination are far more interesting and marvelous than programs. They originate in non-material spaces where the individual invents thought and energy.

The Matrix is the sum total of efforts to deny and bury that fact.

This is why I do the work I do.

Back in the late 1980s, when I met a brilliant hypnotherapist named Jack True, I changed my focus. Jack told me a simple thing: “I stopped doing hypnosis because I realized new patients who were walking into my office were already hypnotized.”

He didn’t mean they were in a zombie-like trance. He meant that their ceaseless activity covered a core place in their consciousness that was asleep.

In this core, people are submitting to a program about how to perceive reality. This complex program is devised to hide their basic non-material power to change reality, to invent new reality on a radical scale.

Because that is how suthe projection of mass reality is achieved: by spreading amnesia about the capacity of every individual human to create without limit. Technocracy is a mirror of that amnesia.

Technocracy is a surrender to that amnesia. It’s a blockbuster movie loaded with special effects that hide its paucity of real ideas. It’s lack of free thought parading as advanced thinking. It’s simplistic plot operating like junk food—pleasant impact followed by vacuum and blank stare.

“Before you can figure out all the lies, we’ll have you trapped in a new system.” That’s the challenge hurled at us. How we respond will decide the future of life on planet Earth. Our response depends on  our understanding and conviction about what we are.

Free and intensely creative beings, or sub-machines connected to the Big Machine. Jon Rappoport

Boxing

The Sport of Gentlemen

Boxing” de Molina

Saturday, December 21 – Elche, Spain –

junior featherweights: Kiko Martinez (29-4, 21 KOs) vs. Jeffery Mathebula (27-4-2, 14 KOs)

Saturday, December 21 – Leeds, England –

IFB bantamweight title: Stuart Hall (15-2-1, 7 KOs) vs. Vusi Malinga (21-4-1, 12 KOs)

Saturday, December 21 –

Buenos Aires, Argentina – super flyweights: Omar Andres Narvaez (40-1-2, 21 KOs) vs. Manuel Vides (15-2, 9 KOs).

ASCAP welcomes Arturo Sandoval into Jazz Wall of Fame

by the El Reportero’s news services

Arturo SandovalArturo Sandoval

Cuban-American trumpet player Arturo Sandoval entered ASCAP’s Jazz Wall of Fame in a year the musician will never forget – he had already received the Medal of Freedom from President Barack Obama and had won his ninth Grammy Award.

“It’s been a beautiful year with so many exceptional things going on,” Sandoval told Efe.

The musician said he wanted to thank God for the many extraordinary moments in his life, like the day he met his wife, with whom he has been married for 40 years, and when the first of his children was born and when his granddaughters were born.

“I believe every year is good,” the artist, who has lived for the past four years in Los Angeles after living 20 years in Miami, said.

The year 2013 is now added to the unforgettable times in the life of the musician, composer and orchestra conductor, who last Nov. 20 received the Presidential Medal of Freedom for his cultural contributions, “an enormously important prize, an enormous satisfaction,” together with group of other distinguished Americans from other fields.

Last Friday the Cuban’s music was heard at the lighting of the Christmas tree at the White House, and on Sunday he played the U.S. national anthem at an event in Kennedy Center while still buoyed by his latest Grammy Award. On Monday he was recognized as one of the legends of jazz by ASCAP at an event in the organization’s headquarters, just a short walk away from Manhattan’s famous Lincoln Center.

The musician, who came to the United States in 1990 at age 41, could not have been more pleased at the honor and told Efe that the public generally associates him with the trumpet, “but I spend much more time at the piano composing that I do playing the trumpet, yet rarely does the composer get a mention.”

Thalia celebrates her star on Hollywood Walk of Fame

Thalia became the first Mexican-born singer to be awarded one of the iconic stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, which was unveiled at a crowded ceremony during which the artist emotionally recalled her mother, who died in 2011.

To cries of “Thalia, Thalia!” hundreds of excited fans greeted Thursday the vocalist of “Amor a la Mexicana,” as she arrived together with her husband, record executive Tommy Mottola, at the famous Hollywood thoroughfare, visibly excited by the honor that fulfilled one of her childhood dreams.

Thalia posed standing, sitting, lying down, front and back, and even with the flag of her country, beside the five-pointed terrazzo and brass star that now bears her name and which, she believes, also honors “all those women who work and struggle every day to maintain their families and arrive home smiling.”

“This is the star of the Latino woman,” said the singer, who during her career of almost 30 years has sold more than 40 million discs.

Bands pay tribute to Jenni Rivera at location of her last show

A dozen musical groups are offering a big concert in the Arena Monterrey to pay tribute to singer Jenni Rivera, who died a year ago in a plane crash after performing in the same venue.

Organized by her family, the Jenni Lives event featured Marisela, La Original Banda El Limon, Larry Hernandez, Chuy Lizarraga, Los Herederos de Nuevo Leon and Tito El Bambino, among other artists.

Fans from across northern Mexico and from north of the border made long lines starting early on Monday to enter the free event.

People attending the concert carried signs, photos and other items pertaining to the California-born singer who died at the age of 43 when her plane went down on Dec. 9, 2012.

Also killed in the accident were Rivera’s publicist, her make-up artist, her stylist, her attorney and the two pilots of the plane in which the group was traveling after the concert in the northern city of Monterrey.

Rivera, who left behind five children and two grandchildren, was considered one of the most important female artists of Mexican regional music since she made her debut in 1999 with the album “Reina de reins.

Protest in the Mission against Ellis Act evictions

Compiled by the El Reportero staff

Youth Jazz Ensemble.Youth Jazz Ensemble.

Local organizations Eviction Free San Francisco and Our Mission No Evictions are going to stage a protest against the Ellis Act eviction of Tom Rapp and Patricia Kerman, who live in a building owned by Dattani. This is to draw attention to public outcry over this action and other no fault evictions that have been hitting the neighborhood.

This demonstration follows a series of other visible protests hosted by the these organizations, including recent rallies at the home of Castro resident Jeremy Mykaels, a protest last week at the office space of real estate firm Urban Green (called “Urban Greed” by the group), and a 1,000+ person demonstration at Mission and 14th during Día de los Muertos (Day of the Dead) honoring the displacement of long-time residents from the neighborhood with San Francisco’s largest Latino community.

Tom Rapp, who is being evicted by Dattani Realty expressed his dismay.

“I’m tired of seeing the city I love turn into a place for only millionaires and billionaires.”

The demonstration is expected to have over 100 hundred participants, and will feature speakers in English and Spanish.

Next Wednesday, Dec. 18 at 12 p.m., at the offices of real estate offices of Dattani Realty on 3232 22nd Street @ Mission Street.

SJJF brings Latin Youth Jazz Ensamble

San Jose Jazz, the producer of the San Jose Jazz Summer Fest, presents dozens of concerts in San Jose year-round.

The concerts feature well-known musicians and talented “gems” of San Jose’s music scene playing jazz, Latin jazz, blues, R&B, folk, Americana and related genres. The programs offer a diverse set of genres and venues, but share the quality and sense of discovery for which San Jose Jazz is known.

Mid December, the Latin Youth Jazz Ensemble (Dec 13) and our 2013- 14 High School All Stars (Dec 20) are focusing on the Holidays, with Christmas- inspired repertoires.

Enjoy the rest of our December performance schedule below, and visit sanjosejazz.org for the latest information on artists, venues, and times.

Mittens and Mistletoe: A Winter Circus Cabaret

Sweet Can Productions is proud to announce the 4th Annual Mittens and Mistletoe: A Winter Circus Cabaret! Now a holiday tradition, ‘Mittens’ is back with more comedy, music, spectacular circus feats, and holiday high jinks. This year’s cast includes veterans from Teatro Zinzanni, Circus Bella, Vespertine Circus, The Pickle Family Circus, and will be hosted by Bay Area performing legend, Joan Mankin. Come see the holiday show that everyone will love.

Friday, Dec. 20 and 21 at 8 p.m., Sunday, Dec. 22 at 2 p.m. and 4 p.m., Monday, Dec. 23 at 2 p.m., Tuesday, Dec. 24 at 2 p.m. and 4 p.m. Tickets $15-$60. www.brownpapertickets.com. Produced by Sweet Can Productions presents.

San Jose Jazz High School

All Stars Now in its 15th season, the 2013-14 San Jose Jazz High School All Stars feature some of the Bay Area’s most gifted young musicians. Representing ten high schools and led by Dr. Aaron Lington, the audition-based big band challenges students to gain a mastery of improvisation techniques while advancing their knowledge of music theory, arranging, composition, performance, and Jazz history.

This will be one of the first concerts with the 2013- 2014 High School All Stars. Friday, Dec.20, 7 p.m. – 9 p.m. Free Admission.

Mayor of Hawaii’s Big Island signs anti-GMO bill into law

A protest in Hawaii against GMO.

by Natural News’s news services

Mayor Billy Kenoi signed Bill 113 into law this week, banning biotech companies and new genetically modified crops from the Big Island of Hawaii. The island’s GMO papaya industry is exempt from the bill. The law reflects Hawaiian sentiments to encourage community-based farming, as opposed to letting global corporations take over their agriculture. Biotech companies have not yet begun operations on the Big Island, and the new bill will help keep it that way.
Much of Hawaii’s agricultural sector opposed the bill, and, the mayor said, some farmers were “treated disrespectfully” while the new legislation was being debated. Kenoi urges community healing and an end to the angry rhetoric that lead to the passage of the bill. Just a few weeks ago, Kauai passed its own law to regulate GMO and pesticide usage.
“Our community has a deep connection and respect for our land, and we all understand we must protect our island and preserve our precious natural resources,” Kenoi wrote to council members. “We are determined to do what is right for the land because this place is unlike any other in the world.” (Originally reported by Sophie Cocke – (http://www.huffingtonpost.com))

Polls consistently show overwhelming majority of Americans support GMO labeling

As reported by RT.com, polls consistently show that the majority of Americans support laws for requiring the labeling of foods that contain genetically modified organisms.

A New York Times poll conducted earlier this year revealed that 93 percent of respondents were in favor of GMO labeling, and a 2010 survey by the Washington Post resulted in 94 percent in favor.

In recent years, states such as California and Washington have tried to pass GMO labeling initiatives, which polls had shown were supported by most of the residents who responded. Despite this, biotech companies like Monsanto and DuPont and food corporations like PepsiCo, Coca-Cola and Kellogg have furiously poured money into pro-GMO propaganda in those states and kept such legislation from passing, against the best interests of their customers.

Regardless of advertising, GMO labeling laws have recently been passed in Maine and Connecticut, but they will not be in effect until four other northeastern states with a combined population of at least 20 million enact similar laws.

GMO labeling continues to gain steady support across the country as people realize the dangers of eating pesticides, chemicals and man-made creatures and blindly trusting corporations with the safety and quality of their food. Enacting sensible labeling laws is possible, and we must continue our efforts to do so if we are to achieve the health freedom that we, and future generations of Americans, deserve. (http://rt.com/usa/gmo-labeled-majority-americans-601/)

Argentinian Monsanto protester threatened, then physically beaten, by industry goons

A mother of three has met the brutal hand of the insanely powerful biotechnology industry, which recently sent a duo of thugs to literally beat her relentlessly after earlier threatening to murder her. GM Watch reports that Sofia Gatica, who has successfully spearheaded campaigns to block plantings of genetically modified organisms (GMOs) in her home country of Argentina, was targeted by two men on motorbikes who very likely would have killed her if it were not for the intervention of her neighbors.

Reports indicate that the men approached Gatica near her work, just 72 hours after she received a terrifying death threat. An outspoken activist on issues relating to GMOs, Gatica led the charge back in 2012 to require that chemical companies first prove the safety of their poisons before gaining official approval for their use in Argentina. She is also currently leading efforts to prevent the establishment of a new Monsanto facility in the Malvinas region of Argentina, where she helped set up blockades to impede construction.

“I was at the bus stop and two men appear on a motorcycle in the opposite direction,” recalls Sofia about her terrifying experience at the hands of pro-GMO thugs. “One jumped on top of me and they kicked and beat me. I screamed loudly and the neighbors came out to help me,” she adds, noting in a separate interview with La Voz del Interior that the men hit her “neck, arms, legs, everything.”

The unidentified assailants did not steal anything from Gatica, nor did they target her property or her neighbors, which leads her to believe that the attack was prompted by the very industry players that she actively works to prevent from destroying her homeland. Argentina, after all, is a major biotech target and is currently the world’s third largest exporter of Monsanto’s Roundup Ready GM soybeans, which require heavy applications of deadly chemicals.

Gatica filed a complaint with local police not long after the incident but was wary about having to enlist the help of guards for protection. But with three little ones at home and more work to be done on the food freedom front, Gatica has cooperated with local law enforcement and agreed to have an armed guard stand watch at her property.

“I didn’t want to have guards watching over me,” she told Cordoba’s Canal 10 news. “I just want the people of Monsanto to leave me in peace.” (NaturalNews).

Juan Orlando Hernández declared Honduras president

by the El Reportero’s news service

Juan Orlando HernándezJuan Orlando Hernández

Conservative Juan Orlando Hernández, the candidate of the governing National Party, has been declared the winner of the presidential election held last week in Honduras, election officials said.

Hernandez won 36.8 percent of the vote, while former first lady Xiomara Castro, of the leftist Liberty and Refounding Party, or Libre, garnered 28.79 percent, the Supreme Electoral Tribunal, or TSE, said.

The final results were released on Saturday, six days after the election was held in the Central American country.

“As a result, the winner of the elections at the presidential level is attorney Juan Orlando Hernandez Alvarado, of the National Party of Honduras,” TSE chairman David Matamoros told radio and television networks.

Matamoros did not say what percentage of the ballots were counted to achieve the final result.

The TSE will continue “with the counts at the level of National Congress legislators and municipal entities, following the established technical and legal rules,” Matamoros said. The Libre party said it would ask the TSE on Sunday for a review of hundreds of allegedly defective ballots.

Castro is the wife of President Mel Zelaya, who was ousted in a June 28, 2009, coup. Honduras, unlike some other Latin American nations, does not require an absolute majority for victory.

Honduras has the world’s highest murder rate, but last Sunday’s voting was largely peaceful, though five people were gunned down nearing a polling place.

REPORT: Most corrupt Latin American countries

Transparency International’s annual Corruption Perceptions Index was released this week.

The report found that corruption worsened in Latin America over the past year as economic heavyweights Brazil and Mexico didn’t improve and gang-plagued Central America worsened. The Corruption Perceptions Index ranks countries and territories based on how corrupt their public sector is perceived to be.

The countries that had the least perceived corruption were Denmark and New Zealand who scored 91 out of 100 on the survey. The countries that had the highest perceived corruption were Afghanistan, North Korea, and Somalia who scored 8 out of 100 on the survey. The least perceived corrupt country was Uruguay, who tied with the United States with a score of 73 out of 100.

Checkout Latincorrupt countries below. 123. Dominican Republic (29 out of 100) 123. Guatemala (29 out of 100) 127. Nicaragua (28 out of 100) 140. Honduras (26 out of 100) 150. Paraguay (24 out of 100) 160. Venezuela (20 out of 100)

USA deports more than 46,000 Guatemalans

The number of Guatemalans deported from the United States in the first 11 months of the year totaled to 46,198, which was 23 percent more than the same period last year, the National Immigration Office said. Of the total deported this year so far, 41,965 are men, 3,941 are women and 292 were younger than 18, the office said. The higher number of deportations did not negatively impact family remittances, which totaled $4.281

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