Monday, September 9, 2024
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Creative ways to get kids to eat heathier

by PF Louis
Natural News

Getting kids to eat healthier is a challenge with all those TV ads promoting junk food for kids. As they grow old enough to mingle with their peers, they’re exposed to other kids who eat junk food in daycare, kindergarten, or first and second grades.

Setting a strong example is the basis for starting your children on a healthy diet path. If you’re eating chips and donuts or cookies while drinking sodas, that’s what your children will demand.

If you let them watch too many TV kiddie shows, they’re getting programmed for demanding you buy those silly drink mixes and bad cereals.

Average supermarkets are invitations to disaster. All those boxes of cereals and cookies advertised on TV children’s shows are displayed prominently to get your child’s programmed attention. They may demand you buy some and feel rejected if you don’t. It’s a good idea to take them with you while buying bulk items and produce at a good health food store. This sets a foundation for working things out at home with a few simple tricks.

Creative suggestions from foodie experts One thing all the experts seem to agree on is the family eating the same food together.

Common sense, flavorful cooking and mixing in veggies with rice or potatoes is encouraged. Be calm and patient but unrelenting.

One discipline to avoid is forcing the child to clear his or her plate. That creates a negative attitude about whatever you’re forcing to be completely consumed.

It also discourages the enough to eat signals a child takes into adulthood. This demands discrimination. You have to determine whether your child has really had enough to eat or is holding out for a dessert, which is another reason why desserts should be off the menu at home.

Eating simple carbohydrate and sugar deserts that digest quickly with slower digesting main meals leads to fermentation, poor digestion, and long-term gastrointestinal tract disorders. It’s a bad mix for young and old.

Don’t use sweets or sodas as a reward. That’s self-defeating. Research was done with young children using brightly colored labels or cards as rewards for eating vegetables. Remember how you thought it was a big deal to a have gold star placed on your early primary school homework?

Acquaint your kids with raw veggies using a salad bar system. Chop up dark greens, tomatoes, broccoli, carrots, and cucumbers.

Offer them as a platter to create their own salad. Avoid those transfatty acid hydrogenated salad oils created to extend shelf life if you want your children to stay healthy. They actually create disease over time. (http://www.naturalnews.com)

Another approach is to add some interesting toppings, tomato or marinara sauce, a light cream sauce, or mushrooms to veggies lightly steamed or stir fried.

It’s okay to have a few sweets around for snacking away from meals occasionally. Try to use the best pastries/cookies from health food store bakeries. Use fresh, organic fruits, apples, bananas, strawberries, plums, grapes, raisins, and whatever else may be available and yummy for healthy snacks. Add a few organic, raw nuts and coconut oil or hot air popped organic popcorn.

Avoid giving your kids pasteurized milk from confined grain-fed cows that have been shot up with antibiotics and growth hormones.

It’s beyond dead food. It’s poison. You may want to try healthy, raw milk if you can get it. You can also buy almond milk or make your own coconut milk. (http://www.elanaspantry.com/diy-coconut-milk/).

The whole family should be using reverse osmosis water if your water system’s fluoridated (­http://www.naturalnews.com/032129_fluoridation_intelligence.html). It’s a good idea to remineralize that purified water with some real sea salt or a liquid trace mineral supplement.

Mexico’s Peña Nieto confirmed president elect, rival defiant

­by the El Reportero’s wire services

Enrique Peña NietoEnrique Peña Nieto

MEXICO CITY: Mexico’s electoral tribunal officially named Enrique Peña Nieto as president-elect on Friday, clearing the way for him to focus on planned economic reforms, but his rival refused to accept defeat and held out the possibility of further protests.

The tribunal threw out an attempt to overturn his win by leftist leader Andres Manuel López Obrador, who had accused Pena Nieto of laundering money and buying votes in the July election. Centrist Pena Nieto, 46, will be sworn in on December 1.

But López Obrador, whose supporters blocked many of Mexico City’s main thoroughfares for weeks after he narrowly lost the 2006 election, rejected the judges’ decision.

“Civil disobedience is an honorable duty when directed against the thieves of the hope and happiness of the people,” López Obrador said.

Central America and South Korea improve bilateral links

The countries of the Central American Integration System (SICA) and the Republic of Korea today review their relations in the 11 th meeting of deputy foreign ministers, to expand and strengthen ties.

Seen as a cooperative dialogue, the meeting will include bilateral meetings with each of the nations and will address matters concerning foreign policy, investment and other economic ties.

Climate change and the environment are also included in the agenda, considering the vulnerability of the region to the natural disasters which places it among the 10 areas with the most problems in the world.

Nicaragua’s ambassador in Japan, Saul Arana, highlighted Central America as an area of opportunity due to its water supply and food production.

Santos takes the plunge and plumps for peace process

Colombia’s President Juan Manuel Santos has confirmed the rumours that have  been circulating in Bogotá for weeks now. His government will seek a peace accord with the Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia (Farc), and indeed the Ejército de Liberación Nacional (ELN) if it wants to join talks. It is a bold move which will either make or break Santos politically. If he pulls it off, Santos will be able to stand for re-election in 2014 with the prospect of coasting to victory. If it turns into anything resembling the Caguán fiasco it will strengthen the opposition coalesced around his predecessor Alvaro Uribe (2002-2010), who has already gone on the attack.

US Marines operating in Guatemalan coasts

Some 200 US soldiers are currently in Guatemalan coasts, supposedly to fight drug trafficking, despite the fact that their country is the world´s main illegal drug consumer, according to the UN.

This is the first deployment of US Marines in the region, said US Marine Staff Sgt. Earnest Barnes, as the Guatemalan government stages today a crusade against drug trafficking in this nation.

A month ago, Guatemala and Washington signed a pact to authorize this operation.

The Guatemalan Executive is on alert against the effects of drug trafficking here, where the seizure of tones of cocaine paste and thousands of units of precursor chemicals indicate that this country is on the path of becoming a main illegal drug producer.

­Nearly 90 percent of the cocaine consumed in the United States enters the country through Mexico and Central America, according to a report of 2011 drafted by the International Narcotics Control Board, the 13 members of which are elected by the UN Economic and Social Council.

Rebellion erupts over school’s student chipping plan

Parents protest radio monitoring of their children

by Bob Unruh

A rebellion is developing in Texas against a plan by a school district in San Antonio that would monitor the exact location and activities of all students at all times through RFID chips they are being ordered to wear.

Katie Deolloz, a member of Consumers Against Supermarket Privacy Invasion and Numbering, told WND today that parents and students from San Antonio’s Northside Independent School District confronted the school board last night, stating their concerns about privacy and other issues “clearly and passionately.”

School district officials did not respond to a WND request for comment, but the developing furor comes only days after a coalition of civil rights and privacy organizations publicly stated their opposition to “spychipping” the students.

A “position paper” from groups including the American Civil Liberties Union, Electronic Frontier Foundation, Big Brother Watch, Citizens’ Council for Health Freedom, Constitutional Alliance, Freedom Force International, Friends of Privacy USA, the Identity Project and Privacy Activism said no students should be subjected to the “chipping” program “unless there is sufficient evidence of its safety and effectiveness.”

“Children should never be used as test subjects for technology, no matter what their socio-economic status. If schools choose to move forward without complete information and are willing to accept the associated liability, they should have provisions in place to adhere to the principles of fair information practices and respect individuals’ rights to opt out based on their conscientious and religious objections,” the statement said.

The paper said RFID tracking is dehumanizing, since it can “monitor how long a student or teacher spends in a bathroom stall.”

The plans also violate free speech and association, since the presence of a tracking device “could dissuade individuals from exercising their rights to freedom of thought, speech and association.

For example, students might avoid seeking counsel when they know their RFID tags will document their presence at locations like counselor and School Resource Officer offices.”

It argued that the technology also violates religious freedom and could be subject to unauthorized use.

“While RFID systems may be developed for use in a school, the RFID tags may be read covertly anywhere by anyone with the right reading device. Since RFID reading devices work by silent, invisible radio waves and the reading devices can be hidden, unauthorized or covert uses can be nearly impossible to detect,” the report said.

“A student’s location could be monitored from a distance by a jealous girlfriend or boyfriend, stalker, or pedophile.”

The San Antonio plan was reported by Spychips, a website run by RFID expert Katherine Albrecht and Liz McIntyre.

“San Antonio’s Northside Independent School District plans to incorporate RFID tags into mandatory student ID cards. One school district in Brazil has incorporated the tracking tags into uniforms. In both cases, the goal is to keep students, teachers and staff under constant surveillance,” the report said.

“RFID is used to track factory inventory and monitor farm animals,” said Albrecht, director of CASPIAN and co-author of “Spychips.” “Schools, of all places, should be teaching children how to participate in a free democratic society, not conditioning them to be tracked like cattle. Districts planning to use RFID should brace themselves for a parent backlash, protests, and lawsuits.”

­According to the San Antonio newspaper, all students in the district’s John Jay High School and Anson Jones Middle School would be subject to chipping.

At that point, Supt. Brian Woods said, “We want to harness the power of (the) technology to make schools safer, know where our students are all the time in a school, and increase revenues. … Parents expect that we always know where their children are, and this technology will help us do that.”

WOAI television reported district spokesman Pasqual Gonzalez said the two schools have a high rate of truancy, and the district could gain $2 million in state funding by improving attendance.

However, student Andea Hernandez, with support from her father, has decided to challenge the district’s plan. The station reported she has decided to wear an older photo ID.

“With a smart phone you can use the option to use your locator, but this, I can’t turn it off,” she said.

Protests have been launched in front of the schools, and local stations are reporting the controversy:

Albrecht said in a statement to supporters the issue now is before the school district, and protesters are awaiting the superintendent’s response.

“We don’t give up or give in,” she said.

DOJ/Wells Fargo settlement bodes well for Latinos

­por Luis Carlos López
Hispanic Link News Service

Now that Wells Fargo has taken steps to protect Hispanic and African-American homebuyers and ceased financing mortgages through independent brokers, things may be looking up for both groups.

The behemoth banking institution agreed July 12 to a $175 million discrimination suit settlement with the U.S. Department of Justice. DOJ investigators found that during the housing boom of the last decade, Wells Fargo’s independent brokers discriminated against Hispanics and blacks.

The settlement offers compensation both to borrowers who were steered into subprime mortgages and who paid higher fees and rates than white borrowers because of their race or national origin. Details as to criteria such as when and how much have yet to be established.

“Wells Fargo will also provide $50 million in direct down payment assistance to borrowers in communities around the country where the department identified large numbers of discrimination victims and who were hard-hit by the housing crisis,” the Justice Department stated.

Responding to inquiries by Hispanic Link News Service following the agreement, DOJ spokesperson confirmed that from 2004 to 2009, nearly half of the 30,000 borrowers who had been charged higher fees were Hispanic.

Approximately 4,000 African-American and Hispanic borrowers who were qualified borrowers were steered to subprime loans. With the settlement, they will receive an average of approximately $15,000, a DOJ official said.

Some 30,000 of those borrowers were also charged higher fees and rates than non-Hispanic white borrowers. They are expected to receive an average of approximately $2,000.

National Association of Hispanic Real Estate Professionals acting director Gary Acosta said these practices happened far too often in Latino communities. He said Wells Fargo’s decision to discontinue contracting with independent mortgage brokers, whom he described as middlemen, on loans and exiting the wholesale business altogether was “a significant development.”

“Most Hispanics are relatively inexperienced in the home buying process,” Acosta, co-founder of NAHREP, a non-profit trade association based in San Diego, He mentioned that for four out of five Hispanic homebuyers, such a purchase is a new experience and many aren’t educated in financial literacy, leaving the door open to predatory lending.

Court documents show that Wells Fargo’s discriminatory practices occurred in 82 geographic markets across at least 36 states and the District of Columbia.

Some 3,500 were in the Washington, D.C.-Arlington-Alexandria metropolitan area with another 1,000 reported in the nearby Baltimore area. In addition, 4,500 victims were from the Los Angeles, 4,100 from Miami, 4,000 from New York, 3,200 from Chicago and 2,100 from San Francisco.

Other United States cities mentioned in the DOJ lawsuit against Wells Fargo include: Atlanta (1,400), Riverside, Calif. (1,300), Houston (1,170) and Philadelphia (1,030).

Now that Wells Fargo has agreed to stop financing such loans, noting that it quit making subprime loans in 2008, Acosta says Hispanics will likely lift the housing market from its current dismal economic performance.

A March 2012 NAHREP report, “State of Hispanic Homeownership,” predicted that Hispanics are expected to account for 40 percent of the estimated 12 million net new households, with people of color comprising 70 percent of total growth in the next decade. “Without this population surge, the economic development of key regions in the U.S. would have been stunted,” the report said.

“We want to let the public know of the Hispanic home buying power,” Alejandro Becerra, NAHREP research director, said when the report was released

In response to the settlement, Wells Fargo Home Mortgage president Mike Heid said the bank would be “settling this matter because we believe it is in the best interest of our team members, customers, communities and investors to avoid a long and costly legal fight and to instead devote our resources to continuing to contribute to the country’s housing recovery.”

­Alfredo Padilla, another Wells Fargo spokesman, told Hispanic Link that the bank would no longer fund mortgages that are originated, priced and sold by independent mortgage brokers through its mortgage wholesale channel.

“Mortgages sold by independent brokers in this manner currently represent five percent of the company’s home mortgage funded volume. Mortgage brokers operate as independent businesses and are not employed by Wells Fargo,” he stressed.

(Luis Carlos López is a contributing columnist with Hispanic Link News Service. Email him at lclopez@gmail.com)

Nicaragua hosts the International Dance Festival

­by the El Reportero’s wire services

Festival Internacional de Danza ContemporáneaFestival Internacional de Danza Contemporánea

MANAGUA, (Prensa Latina) The 18th International Dance Festival starts here today and will run until Aug. 26, with guest dancers from Costa Rica, El Salvador and Nicaragua.

The National Ruben Darío Theater will host the opening, with shows to reach other theatres from the capital and the city of Granada.

The meeting will be dedicated to the Finnish artist Tarja Rinne, for her work to improve dance in Nicaragua, reported the newspaper La Prensa.

The National Salvadoran Company, the Paola Lorenzana (Costa Rica) and Hijos del Otro, will be among other foreign companies to perform.

Workshops on contemporary dance will be taught by Rinne at the National School and at the Nicaraguan Academy.

Nickelodeon Actress Maria Gabriela de Faria To Make Big Screen Debut

This is the time of Venezuelan actress Maria Gabriela de Faria’s life – not only is she nominated for the Kids’ Choice Awards Mexico but she’s out to conquer the world of movies and music.

The 19-year-old De Faria, who plays the evil witch Mia in the popular Nickelodeon teen series Grachi, will play the part of the rebellious daughter of John Leguizamo and Karen Martínez in the Spanish-language film El Paseo 2 that has just finished filming in Colombia.

“I never did movies, and this has been a wonderful chance with two great actors. I’m so excited!” said the Caracas native who began her career at the age of 5 in television commercials and telenovelas like Ser Bonita No Basta (Being Pretty Isn’t Enough) and the children’s series Tukiti, Creci de Una (Tukiti, I Grew From One).

Later Maria Gabriela soared to international fame with the Nickelodeon series Isa TKM and Isa TK+.

“I always loved acting. It’s really interesting work because you have to understand everything about human nature, both in its bright side and its dark side,” she said.

“Right now I’m working on my album, but I can’t say much about it yet in the way of details. I can only say that my disc will be very youthful and very much like me,” said the fan of Pink and Beyonce, to whom she looks for inspiration when it’s time to create.

Mexico establishes new award for literary translation

A new award bearing the name of Spanish-born Mexican author, translator and poet Tomas Segovia (1927-2011) has been created to honor outstanding work in literary translation, Mexican cultural officials said.

The prize recognizes translations that “bring the Hispanic literary tradition to other languages,” National Culture and Arts Council, or Conaculta, president Consuelo Saizar said in a press conference Wednesday in this western Mexican city.

The honor carries a cash prize of $100,000 and is financed by Conaculta in partnership with Fondo de Cultura Economica – Mexico’s leading publishing house – and the Guadalajara International Book Fair, where this year’s award ceremony will take place in November.

In alternating years, the award will honor the work of professionals who translate from Spanish into another language and those who translate from other languages into Spanish, Saizar said.

According to Mexican financial daily El Economista, the first edition of the prize will honor professionals whose target language is Spanish.

This “new and necessary” literary translation prize honors the work of Segovia, who brought universal works such as Shakespeare’s Hamlet and Victor Hugo’s religious epic Dieu (God) to readers of Spanish, Padilla said.

Born in Valencia in 1927, Segovia’s childhood was interrupted by the 1936-1939 Spanish Civil War, which forced his family to flee Spain and resettle in Mexico in 1940.

­In addition to translation and text correction, he also dedicated part of his professional life to cinema, radio and cultural promotion in Mexico, where he spent most of his life.

Candidates in the first edition of the Tomas Segovia prize may be nominated by cultural or educational institutions, associations or publishing groups by Oct. 29.

 

­

Peruvian singer Tania Libertad to perform in San Francisco

by the staff of El Reportero

­­Circo Nacional de la República Popular de China.The National Circus of the People’s Republic of China.

Peruvian singer Tania Libertad will be celebrating the 50th Anniversary of her musical career in a great San Francisco concert.

She will be accompanied by an orchestra and Mariachi band. Tania, a 2009 Grammy award recipient who currently lives in Mexico, will perform at the Herbst Theater, 401 Van Ness Avenue in San Francisco, on Sept. 8, at 7 p.m. For more information call at 510-825-6479. For tickets call at 415-392-4400.

A Benefit for Food Not Bombs, Help the People who FEED the People

Food not Bombs! (FNB) has done food pickups for more than 15 years with an 8-foot Bikes at Work bike trailer, which has gotten so messed up that it is practically useless, and they need a new one.

The old bike cart helped the environment immensely, and for FNB to continue to serve the community, they need to foster the ethics and principles of food recycling. Via this method, FNB can accomplish this, simply by using human power.

Tania LibertadTania Libertad

In response to this need, Harold Adler has graciously cooperated, allowing the use of his Art House and Cultural Center located at 2905 Shattuck Ave. in Berkeley, Calif. Adler will host an event September 1st from 6-10 pm, which includes a meal and performances by Beet The System, Grace Under Pressure, AYR, Sammy, and more. The food will be vegetarian, and there will be cake too! East Bay Food Not Bombs! is a not-for-profit, all-volunteer group that has served free vegetarian meals at People’s Park in Berkeley for more than 20 years. For more info, visit the FNB Website, ebfnb.org for the most up-to-date information.

Cal Performances presents

Direct from Beijing, one of the oldest and most distinguished circuses in all of China, the National Circus of the People’s Republic of China. They will perform at Zellerbach Hall, UC Berkeley Campus. Bancroft Way at Telegraph Ave. Berkeley, Calif., during September and October. Ticket prices range from $22.00–$52.00. Available through the Cal Performances Ticket Office at Zellerbach Hall; via phone at (510) 642-9988; or online at www.calperformances.org; or at the door.

¡VivaFest!, The Tech Museum of Innovation, and CasaQ, Partner on a Film Showcase and new Festival Events

Now in its third year, ¡VivaFest! the San Jose Mexican Heritage and
Mariachi Festival has partnered with the Tech Museum of Innovation on a
series of films celebrating Latino cultural heritage from independent
Latino filmmakers.

New this year is a partnership for Cine y Cena dinner and movie events
with CasaQ by Darlene. Series highlights include Mosquita y Mari, a
Sundance Official Selection, and a screening and panel discussion of the
documentary Tijuana Jews with Hollywood director/producer Isaac
Artenstein (A Day Without A Mexican) and festival veteran Michael
Ronstadt and Ronstadt Generations.

“It has been a wonderful partnership for ¡VivaFest! and The Tech Museum to bring culturally appropriate and timely films to the festival,” said Marcela Davison Aviles, Executive Producer of the festival and President and CEO of the Mexican Heritage Corporation (MHC). “and we are delighted at the curatorial additions of Darlene Tenes of CasaQ, with film and food events celebrating the 20th anniversary of the film Like Water for Chocolate and the end of the Maya Calendar.”

The eclectic series of films will launch the week-long ¡VivaFest! from Sept. 8 -30. Screenings will take place at The Hackworth IMAX Dome Theater at The Tech Museum. Schedule and tickets are available at The Tech Museum box office or online at ­www.thetech.org.

 

 

Boxing

At TBA, Germany­

Felix Sturm vs. Daniel Geale, 12, for Sturm’s WBA Super World middleweight title and Geale’s IBF middleweight title.

Sept. 8 At SC Olimpiyski Arena, Moscow

Vitali Klitschko vs. Manuel Carr, 12, for Klitschko’s WBC heavyweight title.

At Oakland, Calif.

(HBO), Andre Ward vs. Chad Dawson, 12, for Ward’s WBC-WBA Super World super middleweight titles;

Antonio DeMarco vs. John Molina, 12, for De- Marco’s WBC lightweight title.

At TBA (SHO), Randall Bailey vs. Devon Alexander, 12, for Bailey’s IBF welterweight title.

Sept. 15 At Thomas & Mack Center, Las Vegas (PPV)

Sergio Martínez vs. Julio César Chévez Jr., 12, for Chavez’s WBC middleweight title.

At MGM Grand, Las Vegas (SHO)

Canelo Álvarez, vs. Josesito López, 12, for Alvarez’s WBC super welterweight title;

Jhonny González vs. Daniel Ponce De León, 12, for González’s WBC featherweight title;

Marcos Maidana vs. Jesús Soto Karass, 12, junior middleweights.

Arizona denies Dreamers GED classes to block deferred action

Valeria Fernández­

New Americ­a Media

Las classes de GED no estarían disponibles para los estudiantes que se encuentran bajo el estatus del Acta Dreamers en Arizona.GED classes wouldn’t be available to students under the status of the Dream Act in el estado de Arizona.

PHOENIX — Anti-immigrant legislation in Arizona is creating hurdles for undocumented youth wishing to enroll in the new federal “deferred action” program announced by the Obama Administration last June, that would defer deportation for certain undocumented immigrants and allow them to obtain work permits for a renewable period of two years.

To qualify for Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA), applicants need to have been younger than 16-years-old when they entered the country illegally. They must also meet other criteria, such as being enrolled in high school or having earned a diploma or General Education Development (GED) certificate, and an absence of certain criminal convictions.

But in Arizona, a state law – Proposition 300 — approved by voters in 2006, bars state-funded schools from offering free GED classes to undocumented immigrants, making the path to DACA eligibility difficult for those who may have aged out of the high school system but still wish to become eligible for the new federal program.

Complicating matters further was Arizona Republican Governor Jan Brewer’s executive order last Wednesday that bans access to driver licenses and public benefits for immigrants participating in DACA.

Advocacy groups like the Arizona Dream Act Coalition (ADAC), however, are now scrambling to shatter the myth that Proposition 300 removes their right to take the GED exam altogether. Rather, say advocates, it merely bars them from taking GED classes at state institutions. One alternative, said Dulce Matuz, chairperson of ADAC, is to enroll in GED classes offered for a fee by private institutions.

“Don’t be confused, if you can’t take classes that doesn’t mean you can’t take the exam,” said Matuz, also one of TIME magazine’s 100 Most Influential People in the World.

Although one need not be a legal resident to take the GED exam, test-takers are required to present two forms of identification, which also poses a problem for undocumented youth.

Carmen Cornejo, an advocate at ADAC, said she’s been flooded with phone-calls from students who tried to take the GED exam but were turned away because they didn’t own a state issued ID. Cornejo said she has been encouraging those students to insist on taking the test, given they can provide a passport or matriculation card. For undocumented students who need to take the GED exam but can’t afford to pay for private classes, there are several other options.

Non-profits like Chicanos Por La Causa (CPLC) offer free classes through the Workforce Development Center in West Phoenix twice a week, and do not require the presentation of legal documents.

At least 75 percent of the calls the workforce center is currently receiving come from students trying to find out how they can take the GED classes. Demand for the classes, said those at the center, has already outweighed capacity. “We have a waiting list of at least 30 youth that are asking for our support (to take the classes) since President Obama made his announcement,” said Maria Jesus Cervantes, a spokesperson for CPLC. In response to the higher demand, CPLC will be expanding the number of classes they offer, said Cervantes.

Since community colleges and other learning institutions are barred from offering the GED classes for free because they receive funding from the state, some schools, like Rio Salado Community College, have found a way to circumvent the state law by offering 14-week GED courses online for $90.

“You have to be able to show (a state-issued ID card) in order to take a class in person,” said Tom Gariepy, a spokesperson for Maricopa County Community Colleges. “(But online), because you pay for it, there’s no requirement to show legal presence.” “We can’t get distracted from our goal,” said Matuz. “We need more youth to join the movement and find out what we can do to get a permanent solution.”

Immigrant rights activists and attorneys from the American Immigration Lawyers Association in Arizona say that with DACA firmly in place for the foreseeable future, Dreamers should not be rushing to file their applications; rather, they should be taking their time to make sure they get it right.

“There’s no expiration for [DACA] right now,” said Cornejo.

The silver lining for many students in Arizona is that once they obtain their GED, if they qualify for DACA, getting a college education may become more affordable.

Even though a separate provision of Proposition 300 – the same state law that prohibits undocumented youth from enrolling in free GED courses — requires undocumented students to pay out-of-state tuition for their education (regardless of how long they lived in Arizona), Obama’s plan would allow those same youth to get a work permit and obtain temporary but renewable legal residency, meaning they would be eligible to pay in-state tuition at Arizona universities, after all.

­If a student presents a legal work permit and can prove they’ve been residing in the state for at least one year, said Gariepy, they would technically qualify to pay the in-state-tuition rate.

Governor Brewer’s executive order does not specifically mention tuition costs for undocumented students, and immigration attorneys disagree as to whether or not the DACA work permit would allow those students to qualify for in-state tuition.

“Students need to be proactively looking for the information (on how to prepare for the GED). It’s time worth investing,” said Cornejo.

“This is a good step, for the student to start with the GED so they can follow that with a college education and (meet) qualifications for a future immigration process.”

 

Vaccine schedules in U.S. and U.K. prove they are based on government lies

by Ethan A. Huff
Natural News

A comprehensive investigation into the inner workings of the U.K.’s nationalized healthcare system has revealed a shocking legacy of corruption and lies concerning the country’s vaccine policy.

According to Dr. Lucija Tomlijenovic, Ph.D., from the University of British Columbia in Canada, the advisory and governing bodies that set vaccination policy in the U.K. have, for many decades now, hidden the truth about vaccine dangers, and deliberately pushed unsafe vaccines on the public in order to uphold the official vaccination schedule.

Official documents uncovered from secret meetings of the U.K.’s Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI), an independent body that helps set vaccination schedule policy in the U.K., reveal that JCVI ignores independent data showing vaccines to be unsafe, and reinforces questionable data produced by vaccine companies claiming that vaccines are safe. The group also discourages all research that might question the safety of vaccines, and knowingly lies to parents in order to increase the overall vaccination compliance rate.

“[T]he JCVI made continuous efforts to withhold critical data on severe, adverse reactions and contraindications to vaccinations to both parents and health practitioners in order to reach overall vaccination rates which they deemed were necessary for ‘herd immunity,’ a concept which with regards to vaccination, and contrary to prevalent beliefs, does not rest on solid scientific evidence,” writes Dr. Tomljenovic in her paper.

“Official documents obtained from the U.K. Department of Health (DH) and the JCVI reveal that the British health authorities have been engaging in such practice for the last 30 years, apparently for the sole purpose of protecting the national vaccination program.” The 45-page paper blows the lid off the myth that government vaccination policy is based on sound science, and instead shows that vaccine advisory committees, which help set vaccine policy, are typically padded with vaccine industry shills that specifically promote vaccines in spite of evidence showing their dangers. This has been true in the U.K. since at least the early 1980s, and it is certainly true in the U.S. as well. (http://www.naturalnews.com/033455_Institute_of_Medicine_vaccines.html).

­Dr. Tomlijenovic explains; for instance, how JCVI has known since as early as 1981 that the measles vaccine, which is part of the government’s official vaccine schedule, is linked to long-term neurological damage and death. She also outlines, with full citations, evidence showing that JCVI has long been aware that many of scheduled vaccines cause permanent brain damage in children, but have continued to promote those vaccines anyway. JCVI knew MMR vaccine was capable of causing brain damage Another stunning discovery in Dr. Tomlijenovic’s paper deals with the MMR vaccine, and how JCVI was aware that this controversial jab can cause brain damage.

The transcript from a 1990 meeting of the JCVI CSM/DH Joint Sub-Committee on Adverse Reactions notes that JCVI was aware that MMR was definitely linked to causing at least 10 known cases of both meningitis and encephalitis.

JCVI addressed the issue f MMR safety again in 1991, noting that in a follow-up review of the earlier cases of meningitis and encephalitis that were definitively linked to the vaccine, two of the children developed permanent neurological damage as a result.

One other developed behavioral problems, which are linked to autism, and another developed cerebral astrocytoma, a type of brain tumor. None of this critical information was publicly disclosed. You can read Dr. Tomlijenovic’s full 45-page paper on vaccine corruption here: http://www.ecomed.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/3-tomljenovic.pdf.

Central America police coordinates strategy in Nicaragua

by the El Reportero’s wire services

Aminta GraneraAminta Granera

MANAGUA (Prensa Latina) Chiefs of Police in Central America, Mexico, the Caribbean and Colombia review on Aug. 23, in this capital joint plans to combat violence caused by drug trafficking and transnational crime.

According to reports, the military institutions hope to adopt a common strategy to deal in a coordinated way with widespread phenomena like human trafficking, illegal trafficking of drugs and money laundering.

The general director of the Nicaraguan police, First Commissioner Aminta Granera, recently confirmed that the meeting’s purpose is the establishment of a system of “red alerts” in order to facilitate the capture of criminals, in coordination with the International Police Organization Criminologist (Interpol).

Transnational crime must sense it is up against a wall, from Mexico to Colombia, including the Caribbean, “with a single fist, with one goal, one action”, she said.

In late July, the regional event held in Managua moved ahead on arrangements to design a system of circulated red alerts to allow simultaneous tracking in the region.

Headquartered at the Hotel Barceló, the meeting will take place while a police court in the capital is holding a public trial against 24 alleged members of a network trafficking and laundering money for drug cartels in Mexico and Colombia.

International assessments place Central America among the most insecure areas of the planet due to drug activity, with the disadvantage of being sandwiched between the world’s largest drug market to the north, in the U.S., and drug producers in the southern part of the continent.

Colombian peace talk rumors

Senator Roy Barreras of the ruling Partido de la U (PU) read a joint statement onAug. 22 on behalf of the Senate and Lower House Peace commissions declaring that “the president [Juan Manuel Santos] is not alone in the search for peace. Congress opens the doors to the house of democracy to debate the paths to peace”, reported Latin Briefs.

Also from Latin Briefs: Graziano calls for coordinated action to head off global food price crisis

With global food prices spiraling on the back of the worst drought for generations in the US midwest, José Graziano da Silva, the Brazilian head of the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), has repeated his calls on the US to waive the mandate that 10 percent of each gallon of gasoline sold in the US be mixed with ethanol, so as to free up scarce corn supplies for the food chain.

Warning that unilateral actions by governments in 2007 and 2008 proved counterproductive and exacerbated the last food price crisis, he has also called upon the world’s leaders to act “in a coherent manner” this time round so as to avoid the latest price spike becoming entrenched.

Uruguay to sign gas deal with Angola

MONTEVIDEO – (Prensa Latina) Raúl Sendic, president of Uruguay state-run oil Co. Ancap will travel next September to Angola with the mission accompanying FM Luis Almagro to sign with counterpart Sonangol a gas venture agreement, says La República daily.

­Sendic assured Ancap and the local UTE Electricity Co. are speeding the construction of a gas plant two kilometers from the coast in Puntas de Sayago, Montevideo, adding that having better sales prices demand having good contracts while La Republica daily highlights Sonangol’s excellent reserves and facilities to become a supplier.

The official, at once, denied the existence of set prices on the sales of futures to Argentina for the latter must invest in building the plant first to know of the exact expenses and payoff.