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Boxing

­Oct. 6 At Kiev, Ukraine

Zaurbek Baysangurov vs. Lukas Konecny, 12, for Baysangurov’s WBO junior middleweight title.

At Bayamon, Puerto Rico

Moises Fuentes vs. Ivan Calderon, 12, for Fuentes’ WBO minimumweight title;

Rafael Marquez vs. Wilfredo Vazquez Jr., 12, for the vacant WBO International super bantamweight title.

Oct. 13 At Liverpool, England

David Price vs. Audley Harrison, 12, heavyweights.

At Home Depot Center, Carson, Calif. (HBO)

Nonito Donaire vs. Toshiaki Nishioka, 12, for Donaire’s WBO and IBF super bantamweight titles;

Brandon Rios vs. Mike Alvarado, 10, junior welterweights.

Oct. 20 At Barclays Center, New York (SHO)

Danny Garcia vs. Erik Morales, 12, Garcia’s WBC-WBA junior welterweight titles;

Paulie Malignaggi vs. Pablo Cesar Cano, 12, for Malignaggi’s WBA welterweight title.

Oct. 27 At Tokyo

Takahiro Ao vs. Gamaliel Diaz, 12, for Ao’s WBC super featherweight title.

At Moscow

Denis Lebedev, vs. Guillermo Jones vs. 12, for Lebedev’s WBA World cruiserweight title.

Boxing

Sept. 21 At Bethlehem, Pa. (NBCSN)

Gabriel Rosado vs. Charles Whittaker, 12, IBF junior middleweight eliminator;

Ronald Cruz vs. Antwone Smith, 12, for Cruz’s WBC Continental Americas welterweight title;

­Gabriel Campillo vs. Sergey Kovalev, 10, light heavyweights.

At Chumash Casino, Santa Ynez, Calif. (SHO)

Jhonatan Romero vs. Efrain Esquivias, 10, super bantamweights.

Sept. 22 At Glasgow, Scotland

Ricky Burns vs. Kevin Mitchell, 12, for Burns’ WBO lightweight title.

At Wroclaw, Poland

Krzysztof Wlodarczyk vs. Francisco Palacios, 12, for Wlodarczyk’s WBC cruiserweight title.

Sept. 29 At Hamburg, Germany

Alexander Povetkin vs. Hasim Rahman, 12, for Povetkin’s WBA World heavyweight title;

Kubrat Pulev vs. Alexander Ustinov, 12, IBF heavyweight eliminator and for Pulev’s European heavyweight title.

At Mashantucket, Conn. (HBO)

Edwin Rodriguez vs. Jason Escalera, 10, super middleweights;

Zsolt Erdei vs. Isaac Chilemba, 10, light heavyweights;

Luis Orlando Del Valle vs. Vic Darchinyan, 10, junior featherweights.

Legalized Hate Out Of My State a forum at Galería de la Raza

by the El Reportero’s staff

Eddie PalmieriEddie Palmieri

Galeria’s latest installment of the Digital Mural Project is a billboard by Favianna Rodriguez in collaboration with Roberto Lovato, and Gan Golan. The billboard addresses the Supreme Court ruling that upheld part of Arizona’s SB1070 law which allows police to profile by investigating people’s status.

At Galería Forum, Saturday, Sept. 22, from 2 p.m.-4 p.m.

Family Day with the best Latin music icons at Yerba Buena

Yerba Buena Family Day is downtown San Francisco’s biggest free arts day taking place Sept. 23 at 5 of the area’s top cultural institutions and museums — it’s an amazing free marathon of fun for all ages with free admission to museums, free outdoor performances (Latin jazz legend Eddie Palmieri from 1-3 p.m. at Yerba Buena Gardens and also Afro Puerto-Rican band Los Pleneros de la 21 at the Museum of the African Diaspora at 1 p.m. and again at 4 p.m.), lots and lots of family-friendly performances, tons of art making activities for kids and more … Just the free admission to all the venues is a value of more than $100 for a family of four!

Release is below in Spanish and there is more detailed info on the webpage at www.ybfamilyday.org. There will be a very detailed program that people can download there as well closer to the event. All ages are welcome despite the ‘family day’ emphasis.Sunday, Sept. 23, from 11 a.m. a 4 p.m.

How to prepare for an earthquake disaster

Do you know what to do in an earthquake? How will you reconnect with your family following a major disaster? Do you have the right items in your disaster kit? Every single person in the Bay Area needs to ensure they are personally prepared for disaster. Only in this way will all of us in the community be able to ensure the safety of our families and assist our neighbors.

The Excelsior Branch of the San Francisco Public Library in association with American Red Cross, Bay Area Chapter presents, Be Red Cross Ready Personal Disaster Preparedness Workshop.

In English, Tuesday, Sept. 25, 6:30-7:30 p.m. Spanish, Wednesday, Sept. 26, 6:30-7:30 p.m.

A night of Cuban flavor at Yoshi’s

Tito y su Son de Cuba is returning to Yoshi’s Oakland for two shows on Friday Sept. 28 at 8 p.m. and 10 p.m. Tito is presenting ‘A Night of Cuban Flavor’ featuring Grammy nominated timbalero, Ino Álvarez, formerly of the presigous Orquestra Aragon’. Special As a special guest will be performing Ino Alvarez, a Grammy nominated Timbalero! Formerly of the prestigious “Orquestra Aragon.”

On Friday Sept. 28 at 8 p.m. and 10 p.m. at Yoshis Oakland. To Purchase Tickets visit: http://yoshis.inticketing.com/

Redwood City Salsa Festival

This year we will again have a Latin Rock stage at the Festival. We like that the organizers realize that there are many types of “Latin” music and that “Latin Rock” is one that needs to be heard.

Richard Bean & Sapo will be back by popular demand to celebrate ­their 40th Anniversary of the Chicano Love-Anthem Suavecito.

Last year the group played a two-hour set at the festival and the crowd still wanted more. Also on the bill will be the East Bay dance group, Lava, who will have everyone on their feet. Their East Bay cousin Blanca will also perform her unique style of Latin Rock, which she has been touring this year with at shows in California and Denver. Three stages of live music: salsa, Latin Rock and Latin Jazz, Salsa Testing Competition, Kids Carnival Area, and more.

On Saturday, Sept. 29, from 12 noon to 8 p.m., at the Courthouse Square, 2200 Broadway, in downtown Redwood City. Admission Free!

 

Hispanics and organ and tissue donation

Consul General of Mexico addresses great need for donors, along with woman waiting for a lifesaving transplant

Consul General of Mexico in San Jose, Carlos Ponce Martínez will speak to area leaders about the need for more Hispanics to register as organ and tissue donors and about the 893 Hispanics in Santa Cruz, Santa Clara, San Benito and Monterey counties who are waiting for an organ transplant.

Guests will hear the personal story of a 25 year old Latina from San Jose who is waiting for a kidney transplant.

Hosting the “Sí a la Vida: Hispanic Heritage and Donation” event is the California Transplant Donor Network, the link between organ and tissue donors and individuals awaiting transplantation.

Speakers:

Carlos Ponce Martínez, Consul General of Mexico in San Jose

Marina Monica, 25, of San Jose and her mother, Emma Monica. Marina received a kidney transplant at age 13. Last year, that kidney failed. She now must to go to dialysis four times a week, three hours at a time to stay alive. She’s on the list again to receive a transplant (Marina is an English speaker; Her mother, Emma speaks Spanish).

Dr. Waldo Concepción, CTDN Medical Advisory Board member and transplant surgeon at Stanford Hospital and Clinics, on Hispanics and transplants.

Wednesday Oct. 3, 2012 4:30 p.m., 2125 Zanker Road, San Jose, California

Mexican-Amercan Patricia Riggan to head film about the 33 Chilean miners

by Hspanically Speaking News

Patricia RiggenPatricia Riggen

Mexican-born Patricia Riggen has now signed on to direct the film adaptation of the story of the 33 Chilean miners trapped underground for 69 days, currently titled, “The 33”, according to The Wrap.

Riggen, 42, directed 2007’s La Misma Luna(Under the Same Moon), the story of a young Mexican boy who travels to the U.S. to find his mother after his grandmother dies. She al­so stepped behind the camera for 2012’s Girl in Progress, which starred Eva Mendes and Disney’s Lemonade Mouth in 2011.

The story of the 33 Chilean minors garnered international attention. On August 5, 2010, a cave-in at a troubled copper-gold mine near Copiapó, Chile trapped the men about 2,300 ft. underground. It was 17 days after the collapse before the men were found via exploratory boreholes. A number of people from various countries worked tirelessly to create a plan to get the men out and on Oct. 13, the men were lifted to safety one by one.

Almost all of the miners were rescued in good medical condition with no long-term physical effects anticipated. However, two miners were found to be suffering from silicosis, with one also having pneumonia. Others had dental infections and corneal problems.

Riggen is said to be in Chile with the film’s producers speaking with the miners and others involved in the incident.

‘It’s been an extraordinary experience to meet the miners in person and hear from them the detailed account of their time underground,’ Riggen said in a statement to The Wrap. ‘Since their rescue a little less than two years ago, the real story of their incredible survival has gone untold. In their darkest hour, they struggled to maintain their unity. The collapse brought out the best and the worst Razain them. Ultimately, the human spirit triumphed and all of them came out alive.’

Filming is expected to begin in January of 2013, with release predicted for the following fall.

Penelope Cruz vows to produce films in Spain to stimulate economy

Spanish actress Penelope Cruz said in an interview published Saturday by Italian daily La Stampa that she plans to produce at least two films a year in her homeland to create jobs amid sky-high unemployment.

“I want to bring jobs to my people … I’ll use my privileged position. It’s what interests me the most right now. I know it’s a grain of sand in the desert, but it’s a responsibility I think I have,” Cruz said.

“I’ll produce a couple of films a year. A way to give work to hundreds of people. It’s a set idea I have.”

Cruz, winner of a best-supporting actress Oscar for her role as an unstable artist in Woody Allen’s 2008 comedy-drama “Vicky Cristina Barcelona,” said she has worked hard but also has had a lot of opportunities in life.

Proposition 30 and the Future of Public Education in California

by Dr. Julian Nava, CNA’s “Yes on Prop 30 & No on Prop 32” Latino Chair

During the last ten years, state support for K–12 public education in California has been reduced to a situation in which:

California is first among all states with the largest number of pupils per teacher

California spends close to $2,900 less per student per year compared to the national average

All aspects of public education have been hurt by these cuts. The conditions of buildings,equipment, supplies and books have suffered. Administrators and counselors are overworked, and, of course, teachers have been overloaded. More and better work is being demanded with less support. Our national economy and our changing place in the world demand more from our schools

One result is that California schools are failing Latino and African American students who have higher dropout rates and lower than average numbers going to college.

What does this mean for our children’s education and their future? children? Your “yes” vote on Proposition 30 will help ensure a better future by providing more funding for our schools.

My 12 years of elected service on the Board of the Los Angeles Unified School District has given me some insights. For example, inadequate education

handicaps young individuals with life-long inabilities to perform up to their potential. Too many youngsters end up working in menial occupations with poor income. The handicaps can negatively impact the next generation.

Family life and individual efforts do play a vital role in shaping the future of our youth. But factors like broken homes, residential mobility, unemployment, and bad television are powerful forces shaping a youngster’s early learning. Schools are often the main positive influence while personal character is being shaped.

Many teachers have told me that they were swamped by demands they faced in class..rRecords show that many such pupils drod out of school or became delinquents, rather than college students. In California, about a third of Latino students don’t graduate in four years from high school..The result—low college attendance numbers.

­Ever more skilled help is needed outside the classroom. My high school counselor, for one, steered me into auto shop to become a mechanic because my grades were only average. There was no effort taken to evaluate my full potential. Only while in the Navy during Word War II did I take an interest in learning. What would my counselor think if he saw me getting my Ph.D. at Harvard? A good public school education costs less than a poor one, and it produces more good things for everyone. So, please, vote “yes” on Proposition 30.

Dr. Julian Nava was the first Mexican American to graduate with a Ph.D. from Harvard, the first Latino to serve on the Los Angeles Unified School Board, and the first Latino to serve as U.S. Ambassador to Mexico.

Police in the U.S. are an invading army

by Luke Hiken and Marti Hiken

The police have become a colonial army in virtually every city in the United States. With 18,000 state and local law enforcement agencies in the U.S., they constitute a greater danger than they serve as protection. In 2008, 12,501 local police departments with the equivalent of at least one full-time officer were operating in the U.S. Also in that year, local police departments had about 593,000 full-time employees, including 461,000 sworn officers. About 60 percent of all state and local sworn personnel were local police officers.

According to Bureau of Justice Statistics, an estimated 75 percent of local police officers in 2007 were employed by police departments that authorized the use of “conducted energy devices” — such as tasers — up from 47 percent in 2003. Sixty-one percent of local police departments regularly used video cameras in patrol cars during 2007, compared to 55 percent in 2003. There were about 71,000 in-car cameras in use during 2007, compared to 49,000 in 2003. Police “apprehensions” have resulted in 150,000 to over 200,000 Stop-and-Frisk tactics in only the city of New York so far this year, with over 85 percent of those stopped being Hispanics and African Americans.[ii] Until the people of this country realize what is happening with the impact armyof the police on our communities, there will continue to be a level of repression, illegal surveillance and imprisonment unlike anything seen in the rest of the world.

Police who murder are placed on “paid administrative leave” and permitted to obtain the services of their unions and their attorneys before independent investigations can be initiated by district attorneys or other non-internal police agencies. (Just imagine being sent on a paid vacation as a benefit of having killed someone – the victim’s family doesn’t get a paid vacation – only the killer cop gets one!) The police have months to assemble their stories (or versions of the killing) before the rest of the community even hears what occurred. After a crime, the police deliver their version of the facts to the media. That “story” is accepted as gospel.

Since it is currently a crime for anyone but the police to videotape or record the murder scene until the police have come to an agreed upon description of what they say had occurred, the police have dictatorial power over the facts in American “justice.” It is widely believed that the police plant evidence into crime scenes, such as the guns, incendiary devices and drugs allegedly used during the commission of the crime. The public is not allowed to view the aftermath of the scene until the police issue their reports and hold their press conferences.

At the site of an accident or crime scene, they use their authority to stop traffic for countless hours when they deem it is necessary. For example, on 680, a major thoroughfare through the Bay Area when an officer/shooting had occurred, traffic was held up for nine hours affecting thousands of people.

Another example relates to the funerals of police officers killed in action. Public funds are used for grandiose funeral parades with thousands of officers involved.

They repeat the mantra “Our officers are trained to use whatever force is reasonable and necessary to effect an arrest or eliminate a threat” to justify whatever atrocities the police commit, as if merely uttering those words makes it so. Thus, in what can be characterized as self-serving, tautological nonsense, police acquit themselves of any misconduct by being their own judges, juries and executioners. Vallejo police, for example, have killed a citizen every month for the last 5 months – all of the murders deemed “reasonable and necessary.”

San Francisco, with almost twice the number of police officers as San Jose, is party to twice as many killings a year as our neighbors to the south. One out of three black men in the United States is in prison or on parole. We arrest and imprison more citizens percentage-wise in our country than anywhere in the world.

­And yet, the daily newspapers cite one police chief after another, claiming that if we just had more money to hire additional street thugs to police us, we would be safer.

C’mon people, learn to think critically, and read between the lines. Fewer police will result in fewer murders, crimes and racism. We can protect ourselves better without their invasion of our communities. A limited number of police, available to handle violent, gang, Mafia and Congressional-related crime, is much preferable to the standing armies that now inhabit our cities.

Digital TV: Mind control by the sound of silence

Marvin J. RamirezMarvin J. Ramirez

FROM THE EDITOR: Dear readers: This is the second part of this illuminating story written by By A. True Ott, PhD, ND, The Sound of Silence, which exposes the intention of the elite’ pursuit to gaining total control of all humans in the U.S. and the world through technology. It is a source of information not offered by the mainstream media or the educational system, which much of the time works for these same corporation by conducting researches and studies that will not benefit the people, but rather the elite.

Author’s Note

This is an extremely timely and important essay. It overviews a secret Pentagon psychotronics technology known as Silent Sound Spread Spectrum (SSSS) that has been fully operational since the early 1990s. I first found out about the use of this technology from Al Bielek in a 1992 video he made with Vladimir Terziski. This technology was used against battle-hardened Iraqi troops fortified in deep underground bunkers in Kuwait and Iraq in the first Gulf War in January of 1991.

THE SOUND OF SILENCE

The Antithesis of Freedom

Eisenhower was an honest and patriotic American. Like Marine Corp General Smedley Butler, who decades earlier declared to Congress that “War is a Racket,” Ike knew that such absolute power and total covert control over the minds and hearts of individual citizens would corrupt society absolutely. He also knew and understood, as did the German philosopher Goethe: “No man is more hopelessly enslaved, than he who falsely believes that he is free.” Therefore, he issued his strong, concluding warning to America. Today, this author must do no less.

The Sound of Silence is a military-intelligence code word for certain psychotronic weapons of mass mind-control tested in the mid-1950s, perfected during the 70s, and used extensively by the “modern” U.S. military in the early 90s, despite the opposition and warnings issued by men such as Dwight David Eisenhower.

This mind-altering covert weapon is based on something called subliminal carrier technology, or the Silent Sound Spread Spectrum (SSSS) (also nicknamed S-Quad or “Squad” in military jargon). It was developed for military use by Dr. Oliver Lowery of Norcross, Georgia, and is described in US Patent #5,159,703 — “Silent Subliminal Presentation System” for commercial use in 1992. The patent abstract reads: “A silent communications system in which nonaural carriers, in the very low (ELF) or very high audio-frequency (VHF) range or in the adjacent ultrasonic frequency spectrum, are amplitude- or frequency-modulated with the desired intelligence and propagated acoustically or vibrationally, for inducement into the brain, typically through the use of loudspeakers, earphones, or piezoelectric transducers. The modulated carriers may be transmitted directly in real time or may be conveniently recorded and stored on mechanical, magnetic, or optical media for delayed or repeated transmission to the listener.”

In layman’s terms, this device, this “Sound of Silence”simply allows for the unwarranted implantation of specific thoughts, emotions, and even prescribed physical actions into unsuspecting human beings. In short, it has the very real ability to turn human beings into mere puppets in the hands of certain “controllers,” or puppet-masters.

Eisenhower knew full well what such a “weapon” could do in the hands of greedy, conspiring men and women scheming to control the planet. It could easily result in the takeover of American society without a single bullet being fired. This is what he was warning America about, this is the “combination” he feared above all others.

Have the leaders of America ignored Ike’s warning? Have conspiring and evil men and women utilized this diabolical technology on unsuspecting Americans and others outside of our borders? If so, will they continue to utilize the technology through the medium of television and radio? This exposé will attempt to answer these questions, and give the reader a clear picture of exactly who made the decisions to use the “Sound of Silence” in both war and peace.

On March 23, 1991, a news brief was released in the form of an ITV News Bureau Ltd (London) wire service bulletin entitled “High-Tech Psychological Warfare Arrives in the Middle East.” This was during the administration of George Bush Sr., during “Operation Desert Storm,” and describes in remarkable detail a US Psychological Operations (psy-ops) covert operation successfully deployed against Iraqi troops in Kuwait.

Saddam Hussein’s vaunted “Republican Guard” crack troops were promising Bush “the mother of all battles” with many thousands of dead coalition troops. On paper, it looked convincing. Hussein’s Republican Guard troops were battle-hardened veterans of the 10 year war with Iran, while coalition troops were unblooded. The Iraqis had modern weaponry and were well trained in how to use it.

Something very strange happened, however. The “mother of all battles” ended before it began, as literally hundreds of thousands of Iraqi soldiers surrendered en masse without even firing a shot!

­Here is what the British press reported on the incident (while the American press was censored): “… an unbelievable and highly classified psy-ops program utilizing ‘Silent Sound’ techniques was successfully deployed. The opportunity to use this method occurred when Saddam Hussein’s military command-and-control system was destroyed. The Iraqi troops were then forced to use commercial FM radio stations to carry encoded commands, which were broadcast on the 100 MHz frequency. The US psy-ops team set up its own portable FM transmitter, utilizing the same frequency, in the deserted city of Al Khafji. This US transmitter overpowered the local Iraqi station. Along with patriotic and religious music, psy-ops transmitted ‘vague, confusing and contradictory military orders and information.

“Subliminally, a much more powerful technology was at work, however. A sophisticated electronic system designed to ‘speak’ directly to the mind of the listener; to alter and entrain his brainwaves, to manipulate his brain’s electroencephalographic (EEG) patterns and thus artificially implant negative emotional states —- feelings of intense fear, anxiety, despair and hopelessness were created in the Iraqi troops. This incredibly effective subliminal system doesn’t just tell a person to feel an emotion, it makes them feel it; it implants that emotion in their minds.”

While utilizing such a “non-lethal” covert psy-ops weapon resulted in many lives being saved, both American, Coalition, as well as Iraqi, the question begs to be asked: how can Americans be assured that such a weapon is not being used on them by “Big Brother” on a daily basis? IT WILL CONTINUE NEXT WEEK.

U.S. police chiefs, Congress issue stark warning over survillance drones

Largest consortium of police officials says use of unmanned aircraft should be restricted; vehicles should not be armed; Congressional Research Service flags major constitutional concerns­

by Steve Watson
Infowars.com

Drones o aviones no piloteados serán utilizados para vigilancia doméstica.Drones o nmanned aircraft will be used for domestic spying.

­The International Association of Chiefs of Police (IACP), the biggest union of law officials in the US, has issued guidelines calling for a reassessment of the potential widespread use of aerial drones for domestic policing.

The Association’s national advisory for the use of unmanned aircraft notes that more and more departments across the nation are considering turning to drones to conduct search and rescue operations, traffic accident scene mapping and surveillance activities.

The federal government is in the process of rolling out new rules on the use of the unmanned drones, with the FAA announcing procedures will “streamline” the process through which government agencies, including local law enforcement, receive licenses to operate the aircraft.

Critics have warned that the FAA has not acted to establish any safeguards whatsoever, and that congress is not holding the agency to account.

The IACP advisory notes that police should, in all cases, acquire search warrants before using drones for any activity that may “intrude upon reasonable expectations of privacy,” As we have previously reported, some police departments have expressed a willingness to arm drones with rubber bullets and tear gas.

Don Roby, chairman of the IACP’s aviation committee noted in comments to USA Today, that in the face of such plans, the advisory represent an “urgent” call to limit the use of drones.

“It’s very important that people understand that we won’t be up there with armed predator drones firing away,” said Roby, who also is a Baltimore Police Department captain. “Everytime you hear someone talking about the use of these vehicles, it’s always in the context of a military operation. That’s not what we’re talking about.”

“Equipping the aircraft with weapons of any type is strongly discouraged.” notes the advisory.

“Given the current state of the technology, the ability to effectively deploy weapons from a small UA (un-manned aircraft) is doubtful … (and) public acceptance of airborne use of force is likewise doubtful and could result in unnecessary community resistance to the program.” the advisory further states.

While the guidelines are certainly encouraging, the ACLU argues that they are not satisfactory on their own.

“We don’t think these recommendations go far enough to ensure true protection of privacy from drones,” the ACLU said in a statement, adding that privacy protections should be written into law, as has been suggested by Kentucky Senator Rand Paul, rather than “merely promulgated by the police themselves.”

FAA documents recently obtained and released by the Electronic Frontier Foundation have confirmed that the roll out of domestic unmanned drones will, for the most part, be focused solely on the mass surveillance of the American people. In a report, EPIC recently noted: With some exceptions, drone flights in the U.S. have been all about developing and testing surveillance technology. The North Little Rock Police Department, for instance, wrote that their SR30 helicopter-type drone “can carry day zoom cameras, infrared cameras, or both simultaneously.”

Not to be outdone, the Seattle Police Department’s drone comes with four separate cameras, offering thermal infrared video, low light “dusk-dawn” video, and a 1080p HD video camera attachment.

The Miami-Dade Police Department and Texas Department of Public Safety have employed drones capable of both daytime and nighttime video cameras, and according to the Texas Department of Public Safety’s Certificate of Authorization (COA) paperwork, their drone was to be employed in support of “critical law enforcement operations.”

However, the FAA didn’t just rubber stamp all drone requests. For example, the Ogden Police Departmentwanted to use its “nocturnal surveillance airship [aka blimp] . . . for law enforcement surveillance of high crime areas of Ogden City.” The FAA disapproved the request, finding Odgen’s proposed use “presents an unacceptable high risk to the National Airspace System (NAS).”

Furthermore, thousands of pages of FAA experimental drone flight records that were obtained by the Center for Investigative Reporting (CIR) detail just how complicated and risky it would be to operate thousands of unmanned arial vehicles safely without spending billions of dollars.

Another report released last week, by the Congressional Research Service found that ”the prospect of drone use inside the United States raises far-reaching issues concerning the extent of government surveillance authority, the value of privacy in the digital age, and the role of Congress in reconciling these issues.”

“Police officers who were once relegated to naked eye observations ­may soon have, or in some cases already possess, the capability to see through walls or track an individual’s movements from the sky,” the report notes. “One might question, then: What is the proper balance between the necessity of the government to keep people safe and the privacy needs of individuals?”

The “ability to closely monitor an individual’s movements with pinpoint accuracy may raise more significant constitutional concerns than some other types of surveillance technology,” CRS says.

“Unless a meaningful distinction can be made between drone surveillance and more traditional forms of government tracking,” the report notes, “existing jurisprudence suggests that a reviewing court would likely uphold drone surveillance conducted with no individualized suspicion when conducted for purposes other than strict law enforcement.”

Following intense lobbying, almost exclusively by defense contractors, Congress recently passed legislation paving the way for what the FAA predicts will be somewhere in the region of 30,000 drones in operation in US skies by 2020. Steve Watson is the London based writer and editor for Alex Jones’ Infowars.com, and Prisonplanet.com. He has a Masters Degree in International Relations from the School of Politics at The University of Nottingham in England.

 

GoDaddy attack likely a psyop to discredit Anonymous

Meanwhile it pushes cyber security executive order

by Mike Adams

It is likely no coincidence that on the verge of President Obama’s plan to sign an unconstitutional Executive Order (EO) implementing police state cyber security measures, the internet gets hit with one of the worst DDoS attacks ever perpetrated. Today, GoDaddy got “nuked” with a highly-coordinated DDoS attack, taking down its name servers, websites, hosted email and all its internal phone systems.

The mainstream media is blaming “Anonymous” for the attack, but this is almost certainly a cover story. The problem with being an anonymous groupis that anyone can claim to be you. What’s even more revealing is that the attacker who claimed responsibility for the attack openly stated he is not part of Anonymous.

His twitter name was “Anonymous Own3r,” eluding to the hacker slang of someone “owning” a selected target. This term is often used in online video games. It means this user is saying he achieved victory over Anonymous, not that he IS Anonymous.

The attack itself was devastating not only to GoDaddy’s customer base, but also to the reputation of Anonymous itself. That was probably the whole point: to make Anonymous look like a group of online terrorists when, in reality, the real Anonymous group historically only attacks selective targets with strong ties to the police state. Across the mainstream media, from PC Magazine to CBS News the mainstream media is falsely reporting that “Anonymous” claimed responsibility for the attack.

But that’s simply not true: the “Anonymous Own3r” user claimed responsibility for it. And he added, in a Tweet, these words: “It is not Anonymous collective it’s only me. Don’t use Anonymous collective name on it, just my name.”

(http://www.foxnews.com/tech/2012/09/10/everygodaddy-registered-site-…)

So if Anonymous didn’t wage the attack on GoDaddy, who did?

Acyber security false flag attack As InfoWars reported just yesterday, the Obama troadministration is on the verge of pushing through a cybersecurity executive order. Read details here: ­http://www.prisonplanet.com/obama-plans-executive-order-to-force-cybe

To push through a new police state internet directive, however, you can’t just smack it down without justification. You first have to create a demand for it by staging your own false flag attack that brings down a significant portion of the internet for a day or so. And then, when the internet business owners cry out for the government to “do something!” you respond with the executive order. To “keep the internet safe,” of course.

This is a classic problem-reaction-solution tactic. First, you create the problem, wait for the reaction, and the implement your solution — the thing you wanted all along. In the case of false flags, the “solutions” are always an expanded police state, more government power, fewer civil liberties and the crushing of freedom.

This is what’s been happening in America at an accelerated rate ever since 9/11 and the Patriot Act. Now that this false flag attack on GoDaddy has been pulled off, you can expect a swift reactionary — and even “extremist” — response from the White House. Watch for a cyber security EO to be signed and implemented within the next few weeks, and watch for this attack on GoDaddy to be cited as the reason for “needing” the EO. Welcome to the world of false flag cyber warfare.

Nicaragua inching towards canal with financing from Chinese firm

by the El Reportero’s staff

Nicaragua has signed a memorandum of understanding with a Chinese company on financing for a $30 billion inter-oceanic canal, a government official told Efe on Friday.

The document was signed by Nicaraguan deputy foreign minister and president of the Grand Interoceanic Canal Authority, Manuel Coronel Kautz, and the head of the HK Nicaragua Development Inversion Company, Wing Jang, the official said.

In the MOU, the Nicaraguan government authorized the Hong Kong-domiciled firm to structure and manage the financing for the project, President Daniel Ortega said in comments posted on the government Web site El 19 Digital.

Nicaragua has also sought financing for the project from Brazil, China, Russia and Venezuela.

The Nicaraguan Congress, controlled by Ortega’s allies, approved a bill on July 3 authorizing construction of the inter-oceanic canal project, a joint public/private venture in which the state will have a 51 percent stake and offer the remaining 49 percent to countries, international organizations, corporations or individuals.

Initial projections are that the canal could be partially completed by 2019, when it would have the capacity to accommodate 416 million metric tons, or 3.9 percent of global maritime cargo.

The canal construction zone also will be declared “of public use,” with owners of the affected properties to be compensated by the Nicaraguan government within a period of no more than 10 years.

Nicaragua is studying six potential routes, all of which traverse a section of Lake Nicaragua and one that would have ships navigate a portion of the San Juan River, the Nicaraguan-controlled waterway that forms the country’s border with Costa Rica.

Three Dutch companies currently are conducting pre-feasibility studies for the construction of the canal, the Nicaraguan government says.

Hispanically Speaking News contributed to this report.

Colombians optimistic about peace talks

On 11 September the so-called ‘great poll’ conducted by Ipsos Napoleón Franco for some of the country’s leading media outlets showed that 77 percent of Colombians approve of President Juan Manuel Santos’s decision to establish peace talks with the Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia (Farc).

­Rate of young Mexicans without working, studying grows

The population of young Mexicans between the ages of 15 and 29 years without working or studying increased from 2008 to 2010, according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD).

The report underlined a 0,5 percent of increase of this rate, while Mexico continues to be the third country of the OECD holding the highest percentage (24,4 percent) of that rate following Turkey and Israel.

In Mexico, nearly 7,226,000 people do not attend schools or are part of the labor force and 1,930,000 are between the ages of 15 and 19 years old.