Thursday, September 5, 2024
Home Blog Page 415

City workers barganing rights under siege in Silicon Valley

por David Bacon

implementasindicato luchará, dijo, no sólo la imposición de las drásticas reducciones del servicio, sino también la amenaza del: sindicato protestaron por una oferta de quitarles los derechos negociadores al sindicato. (PHOTO BY DAVID BACON)San Jose city workers and union members rallied to protest a proposal to take away bargaining rights from the union.  (PHOTO BY DAVID BACON)

Members of the city workers union in San Jose, the capital of California’s Silicon Valley, marched Tuesday to City Hall and packed the council chambers, in a growing confrontation with Mayor Chuck Reed over proposed budget cuts. Yolanda Cruz, president of Local 101 of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, spoke to a rally of hundreds of union members in a church behind City Hall. The union will fight, she said, not just the imposition of drastic service reductions, but also the Mayor’s threat to go to the ballot with a measure to require an election every time city workers want a raise or benefit increase.

“We will not be forced to pay for the city’s economic crisis with our bargaining rights,” she declared. Cruz was supported by the union’s national secretary treasurer, Lee Saunders. He compared Reed to Scott Walker, the governor of Wisconsin, who rammed a measure through that state’s legislature drastically curtailing public worker union rights. “They think they can bring Wisconsin to California,” Saunders thundered to an angry crowd. “That’s just sonot going to happen.” The church exploded in cheers.

Later union members marched to City Hall for a second rally with community supporters. Cindy Chávez, former city council member and now executive secretary of the South Bay Labor Council, told union members that the rest of Silicon Valley’s labor movement would give them the same support public workers in Wisconsin received from unions throughout the country.

Local labor and community groups have backed Local 101 in previous conflicts with the city. In 1981 the union struck for nine days, and won the nation’s first contract provision guaranteeing women equal pay for work of comparable worth. At the time, women earned 18 percent less than men in sex-segregated jobs.

The strike challenged sex discrimination that was pervasive throughout city employment. But even more, it was an indictment of the low wages and inequality suffered by hundreds of thousands of women who make up the vast majority on the production lines in Silicon Valley’s huge electronics plants. That fight earned the union respect from working women in the valley that has lasted 30 years.

­Mayor Chuck Reed intends to put that loyalty to the test. San Jose has a projected budget deficit of $115 million for next year. He has announced drastic service cuts, including the elimination of over 400 city jobs. Citing a “fiscal emergency,” his threatened initiative on the November ballot would raise the city’s retirement age and cut the pensions of retirees.

 

Cell phone use found to affect the glucose metabolism of the brain

by Dave Gabriele

Does using a cell phone have an effect on the brain? According to a 2011 study titled “Effects of Cell Phone Radiofrequency Signal Exposure on Brain Glucose Metabolism,” the answer is absolutely. The study, headed by Nora D. Volkow, M.D. and conducted by the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Maryland, examined the effect of cell phone use on the brain by utilizing positron emission tomography (PET) on 47 participants.

Cell phones were placed against the ears of the participants for a period of 50 minutes while PET scans measured brain activity.

Two scans were performed: one while the phones were off and a second time while the phones were on. The PET scans were used to detect the effect of the cell phone radiation on the brain’s glucose metabolism. The glucose metabolism affects every area of the brain and is associated with cellular and behavioral brain function. It plays a role in memory and cognition, as well as diseases such as schizophrenia, stroke and diabetes.

The study found that the cell phone radiation did not change the entire brain’s function, but significantly affected the regions closest to the antennae. The orbitofrontal cortex and temporal pole, nearest to the ear, had a 7 percent increase in glucose metabolic activity.

“These results provide evidence that the human brain is sensitive to the effects of RF-EMFs from acute cell phone exposures,” the paper concluded. The study was published in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA).

In an associated editorial, Henry Lai, Ph.D., of the University of Washington, Seattle, and Lennart Hardell, M.D., Ph.D., of University Hospital, Orebro, Sweden, question whether the results of the study suggest the possibility of other effects on brain function, such as neurotransmitter and neurochemical activities. “If so, this might have effects on other organs, leading to unwanted physiological responses.

­Further studies on biomarkers of functional brain changes from exposure to radiofrequency radiation are definitely warranted.” Nora D. Volkow, M.D., has been the Director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) at the National Institutes of Health since 2003. NIDA supports most of the world’s research on the health aspects of drug abuse and addiction.

S O U R C E S :

http://jama.ama-assn.org/content/305/8/82 8h t t p : / / w w w . s c ie n c e d a i l y. c o m / r e l e a ses/2011/02/110222162308.h t m

Dave Gabriele, D.Ac, BA, is a registered acupuncturist and health researcher helping people in and around the Greater Toronto Area. He has been a teacher of Chinese martial arts since 1997, including the arts of Taiji and Qigong.

In 2006, he received a BA from York University followed by a diploma in TCM Acupuncture from TSTCM in 2010. He is currently studying Chinese Herbology and Western Nutrition with the goal of becoming a doctor of Chinese Medicine.

Mexican violence knows no borders

by the El Reportero’s news services

Álvaro ColomÁlvaro Colom

On May 16, President Alvaro Colom declared a state of siege in the northern department of Petén, following a massacre there three days earlier, carried out by presumed members of the Mexican drug gang, Los Zetas, who killed 27 peasant workers, decapitating 25 of them.

Though Guatemala is one of the most violent countries in the region, the massacre is one of the most brutal since the end of the country’s 30 year civil war (1960-96). It underlines the growing problem posed to the country by the presence of Mexican drug gangs, which have stepped up their actions in response to antigang measures implemented in their own home territory.

Cuba’s (r)evolution

On 19 April President Raúl Castro closed the ruling Partido Comunista de Cuba (PCC)’s sixth party congress with a defiant vow “to defend, preserve and continue perfecting socialism, and never permit the return of capitalism”.

It’s unclear what the 79-year old Castro meant by “capitalism”, but it’s certainly the case that the ruling gerontocracy that was (re-) confi rmed in the leadership may well struggle with the planned transition to a mixed system, whereby a centrally planned economy run by a one party state is expected to co-exist in harmony with a limited private  entrepreneurial sector forthe fi rst time in fi ve decades.

Correa’s “yes” will prove a Pyrrhic victory

Ecuador’s President Rafael Correa faces a real test of his mettle now after he failed to get the resounding victory he had anticipated in a national referendum on 7 May.

The result, far from reasserting his authority after last September’s police uprising, will have revitalised the beleaguered opposition, especially indigenous groups and leftist dissidents.

It is important to note, however, that the disparate opposition lacks a clear fi gurehead; that Correa remains by far the most popular politician in Ecuador; and that the split vote refl ects a desire to constrain Correa rather than to replace him.

Return of Manuel Zelaya to Honduras announced

F o r m e r H o n d u r a n President Manuel Zelaya will return to Honduras between May 27 and 29, his legal advisor, Rasel Tome, said Tuesday. ­Zelaya will arrive at Toncontin international airport in the capital, where thousands of Hondurans will gather to welcome him, organized by the National Popular Resistance Front (FNRP), Tome said. Zelaya is returning to Honduras a few days before the 41st Assembly of the Organization of American States in El Salvador, which begins June 5.

While two trials on corruption charges against Zelaya were annulled, the FNRP insists that the government is responsible for his personal safety once in Honduras, where his wife recently denounced a conspiracy to murder him.

Zelaya has been living in the Dominican Republic for more than a year after Honduran soldiers kidnapped him and sent him to Costa Rica on June 28, 2009. Honduras was expelled from the OAS, which set the safe return of the Honduran president as a condition for re-entry.

The Strauss Kahn frameup: The Amerikan police state strides forwards

by Paul Craig Roberts
Infowars.com

T h e I n t e r n a t i o n a l Monetary Fund’s director, Dominique Strauss-Kahn, was arrested last Sunday in New York City on the allegation of an immigrant hotel maid that he attempted to rape her in his hotel room. A New York judge has denied Strauss-Kahn bail on the grounds that he might flee to France.

President Bill Clinton survived his sexual escapades, because he was a servant to the system, not a threat. But Strauss-Kahn, like former New York Governor Eliot Spitzer, was a threat to the system, and, like Eliot Spitzer, Strass- Kahn has been deleted from the power ranks. Strauss-Kahn was the first IMF director in my lifetime, if memory serves, who disavowed the traditional IMF policy of imposing on the poor and ordinary people the cost of bailing out Wall Street and the Western banks. Strauss-Kahn said that regulation had to be reimposed on the greeddriven, fraud-prone financial sector, which, unregulated, destroyed the lives of ordinary people. Strauss-Kahn listened to Nobel economist Joseph Stiglitz, one of a handful of economists who has a social conscience.

P e r h a p s t h e m o s t dangerous black mark in Strauss-Kahn’s book is that he was far ahead of America’s French puppet, President Sarkozy, in the upcoming French elections. Strauss-Kahn simply had to be eliminated.

It is possible that Strauss-Kahn eliminated himself and saved Washington the trouble. However, as a well-travelled person who has often stayed in New York hotels and in hotels in cities around the world, I have never experienced a maid entering unannounced into my room, much less when I was in the shower.

In the spun story, Strauss-Kahn is portrayed as so deprived of sex that he attempted to rape a hotel maid. Anyone who ever served on the staff of a powerful public figure knows that this is unlikely. On a senator’s staff on which I served, there were two aides whose job was to make certain that no woman, with the exception of his wife, was ever alone with the senator. This was done to protect the senator both from female power groupies, who lust after celebrities and powerful men, and from women sent by a rival on missions to compromise an opponent. A powerful man such as Strauss-Kahn would not have been starved for women, and as a multimillionaire he could certainly afford to make his own discreet arrangements.

As Henry Kissinger said, “power is the ultimate aphrodisiac.” In politics, sex is handed out as favors and payoffs, and it is used as a honey trap. Some Americans will remember that Senator Packwood’s long career (1969-1995) was destroyed by a female lobbyist, suspected, according to rumors, of sexual conquests of Senators, who charged that Packwood propositioned her in his office. Perhaps what inspired the charge was that Packwood was in the way of her employer’s legislative agenda. Even those who exercise care can be framed by allegations of an event to which there are no witnesses. On May 16 the British Daily Mail reported that prior to Strauss-Kahn’s fateful departure for New York, the French newspaper, Liberation, published comments he made while discussing his plans to challenge Sarkozy for the presidency of France. Strauss-Kahn said that as he was the clear favorite to beat Sarkozy, he would be subjected to a smear campaign by Sarkozy and his interior minister, Glaude Gueant. Strauss-Kahn predicted that a woman would be offered between 500,000 and 1,000,000 euros (more than $1,000,000) to make up a story that he raped her. http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1387625/IMF-chief-Dominique-Strauss-Kahnfeared-political-enemy-paywoman-allege-rape.html

The Daily Mail reports that Strauss-Kahn’s suspicions are supported by the fact that the first person to break the news of Strauss-Kahn’s arrest was an activist in Mr Sarkozy’s UMP party – who apparently knew about the scandal before it happened. Jonathan Pinet, a politics student, tweeted the news just before the New York Police Department made it public, although he said that he simply had a ‘friend’ working at the Sofitel where the attack was said to have happened. The first person to re-tweet Mr Pinet was Arnaud Dassier, a spin doctor who had previously publicized details of multi-millionaire Strauss-Kahn’s luxurious lifestyle in a bid to dent his left wing credentials.

Strauss-Kahn could just as easily been set up by rivals inside the IMF, as well as by rivals within the French political establishment.

Michelle Sabban, a senior councillor for the greater Paris region and a Strauss-Kahn loyalist said: ‘I am convinced it is an international conspiracy.’

She added: ‘It’s the IMF they wanted to decapitate, not so much the Socialist primary candidate. ‘It’s not like him. Everyone knows that his weakness is seduction, women. That’s how they got him.’ Even some of Strauss-Kahn’s rivals said they could not believe the news. ‘It is totally hallucinatory,’ said centrist Dominique Paille.

‘If it is true, this would be a historic moment, but in the negative sense, for French political life. I hope that everyone respects the presumption of  innocence. I cannot manage to believe this affair.’ And Henri de Raincourt, minister for overseas co-operation in President Nicolas Sarkozy’s government, added: ‘We cannot rule out the thought of a trap.’

Michelle Sabban is on to something when she says the IMF was the target. Strauss-Kahn is the first IMF director who is not lined up on the side of the rich against the poor. Strauss-Kahn’s suspicions were of Sarkozy, but Wall Street and the US government also had strong reasons to eliminate him. Wall Street is terrified by the prospect of regulation, and Washington was embarrassed by the recent IMF report that China’s economy would surpass the US economy within fi ve years. An international conspiracy is not out of the question.

Indeed, the plot is unfolding as a conspiracy. Authorities have produced a French woman who claims she was a near rape victim of Strauss-Kahn a decade ago. It would be interesting to know whether this allegation is the result of a threat or a bribe. As in the case of Julian Assange, there are now two women to accuse Strauss-Kahn. Once the prosecutors get the odds of two females against one male, they win in the media.

It has not been revealed how the authorities knew Strauss-Kahn was on a fl ight to France. However, by arresting him aboard his scheduled flight just as it was to depart, the authorities created the image of a man fl eeing from a crime.

The way Amerikan justice (sic) works is that prosecutors in about 96 percent of the cases get a plea bargain. US prosecutors are permitted by judges and the public to pay for testimony against the defendant and to put sufficient pressure on innocent defendants to coerce them into making a guilty plea in exchange for lesser charges and a lighter sentence. Unless the hotel maid has a spell of bad conscience and admits she was paid to lie, or gets cold feet about perjuring herself, Strauss-Kahn is likely to fi nd that Amerikan criminal justice (sic) is organized to produce conviction regardless of innocence or guilt.

­On May 16, the day folpero lowing Strauss-Kahn’s arrest, the US Supreme Court threw its weight behind the Amerikan police state by destroying the remains of the Fourth Amendment with an 8-1 ruling that, the U.S. Constitution notwithstanding, Amerika’s police do not need warrants to invade homes and search persons. This ruling is more evidence that every American is regarded as a potential enemy of the state, not only by Airport Security but also by the high muckety- mucks in Washington.

The conservatives’ “war on crime” has created a police state, and conservatives, who originally stood for limited government and civil liberty, are euphoric over the expanded and unaccountable powers that a conservative Supreme Court has handed to the police.

On the same day the federal government reached the $14.3 trillion debt ceiling, which forced the Treasury to “borrow” money from federal employee pensions in order to continue funding Amerika’s illegal wars and crimes against humanity. The breached debt ceiling serves as an appropriate marker for a country that has squandered its constitutional heritage and has arrived at moral as well as fiscal bankruptcy.

— Dr. Paul Craig Roberts is the father of Reaganomics and the former head of policy at the Department of Treasury. He is a columnist and was previously an editor for the Wall Street Journal. His latest book, “How the Economy Was Lost: The War of the Worlds,” details why America is disintegrating.

Spring Jazz Concert at CCSF

­by Annalis Flores

Omar Sosa: (PHOTO BY IROM WORD PRESS)Omar Sosa: (PHOTO BY IROM WORD PRESS)

City College of San Francisco is proud to present the Spring Jazz Concert featuring David Hardiman Jr. brought to you by the Music Department and Concert and Lecture Series. Renowned trumpet player, David Hardiman Jr. has been a performer since his elementary school days. Now as a professor of Jazz History at CCSF he has released his latest CD, “Portrait of David Hardiman.”

Former music instructor and top jazz player, David Hardiman Sr., will serve as MC of the event featuring salsa trumpet players and music instructors in the SF Bay Area. The Tuesday Night Stage Band and the Jazz/Rock Improvisational Workshop will perform under the direction of David Hardiman Jr. with special guest Wayne Wallace. The free even will be on Tuesday, May 17 at Diego Rivera Theaer, Ocean Campus, from 8 p.m.-10 p.m.

Informational meeting on Patriot Act

Civil Liberties under attack and the chance to review your chance to discuss three most controversial sections of the Patriot Act at the Unitarian Center by the SF Gray Panthers program.

The SF Gray Panthers have begun “hosting public informational meetings and participating in demonstrations against the Act,” since the introduction of the USA Patriot Act. The Act is “the greatest threat in decades to civil liberties and constitutionally protected rights of free speech and protections against unwarranted searches and seizures.”

This program will relate on the Patriot Act and the Bill of Rights at the Unitarian Center, Fireside Room, on Tuesday, May 17 at 1 p.m.

Sosa and Santos at Yoshi’s SF

Get ready for some music to your ears. The Omar Sosa Quintet will be performing at Yoshi’s San Francisco with John Santos brought to you by Art Works, The Jazzschool Institute, Soundsafe, and The Bernard Osher Foundation. Sosa is a Grammynominated recording artist with recordings based in Oakland. Along with his Octet, Sosa recently performed at Carnegie Hall’s new Zankel Hall. Though Sosa is a Cuban rooted musician, his music is said to be vary universal.

Santos is a legendary composer, producer, ac-tivist, percussionist and five-time Grammy nominee. He has been focusing much of his time on music having already released two albums in the year. There will be two chances to catch the show on Wednesday, May 18. The fi rst will be at 8 p.m. with the Jazzschool Institute Latin Jazz Ensemble and the last show will be at 10 p.m. For information and tickets visit www.yoshis.com.

Women’s Initiative celebrate business women

Are you a woman graduating in business? If so, come and check out Women’s Initiative/ Alternativas Para Latinas en Autosuficiencia (ALAS) program, Step by Step at the auditorium of International Community School in Oakland.

Women’s Initiative has been supporting Bay Area’s women for over twenty years. They strive to help and finance women who go on to open their own business and create jobs. This will be an opportunity for your contacts and friends to learn more of Women’s Initiative. The event is to be held May 18 from 5 p.m.- 8 p.m., for more information call Marianela Mendoza at (510) 287-3102.

John Santos opposes NARAS decision

por Annalis Flores

John Santos (sentado tocando congas izq) con el actor Andy García (sentado tocando bongos der).: (PHOTO BY MARVIN RAMIREZ)John Santos (sitting playing congas left) with actor Andy García (playing bongos left).  (PHOTO BY MARVIN RAMIREZ)

Legendary Afro-Latin percussionist and fi ve-time Grammy nominee, John Santos, recently held a press conference to oppose the elimination of 31 categories from the Grammy’s.

This is the first of many conferences, which will be held across the country. Personal and read statements were presented in this public forum held at Yoshi’s world famous Jazz club in Oakland. Santos is a respecter performer, writer, and composer. He has collaborated with many artists including Omar Sosa Quintet, Tito Puente, Danilo Perez, Mark Levine, and many, many more.

Although not a huge crowd was present, many independent writers and radio stations were among the crowd who are outraged by the elimination of the Latin Jazz categories eliminated by National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences (NARAS). Santos stated, Boricua lawyer, Vylma Ortiz offered to “take a look at the NARAS bylaws, just in case, an is on standby for whatever might come up.”

On another note, Santos and his Sextet released Filosofía Caribeña Vol.1. This marks Machete Records 210’s 11th release, which is “John’s work-in progress of the last year-and-a-half.

The album “gives a hint of the dominant political overtones of the thematic content” which was in cooperation with Eastside Cultural Center in Oakland and commissioned by the East Bay Community Foundation, the National Association of Latino arts and Culture, the Ford Foundation, and individual donors.

Santos most recently held a Jazz Appreciation class at the Healdsburg Center for the Arts. “The Anatomy of Latin Jazz” was a lecture that featured rare recordings of Santos’ collection. His lecture was to include the “ever-growing awareness of Latin American roots in U.S. pop culture” as well as the musical elements and its important role. This once in a lifetime event was sure to answer many questions to fans of Latin Jazz.

Celebrities present at NMAL Final Report

Eva Longoria and Emilio Estefan celebrated the delivery of the Final Report of the National Museum of the American Latino (NMAL). Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar and Congressional leaders were among the guests at the ceremonies held at the White House and on Capitol Hill. Under congressionallyestablished and presidentially-appointed, Chairman Henry R. Muñoz, the task will be to “study the potential of a national museum dedicated to the art, culture, and history of the Latino Community in the United States.”

According to Secretary Salazar, “With the creation of a national museum rooted here, in our nation’s capital, the contributions of Latinos will forever be recognized and woven into the American story.” This moment will forever be remembered in the nations diverse history.

Golinger­ speak at the Mission

With a life in the investigative world of journalism, Eva Golinger made a stop at the Mission Cultural Center for Latino Arts on May 12 courtesy of The Task Force on the Americas, the Bay Area Latin America Solidarity Coalition, and MCCLA. Golinger is 2009 winner of the International Award for Journalism in Mexico.

The Venezuelan- American attorney from New York is currently living in the city of Caracas, Venezuela. Her best-selling books have gone on to have great praise as Golinger analyzes and writes of the US intervention in Venezuela. With an introduction by Consul Generl of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela, Martin Sanchez, Eva Golinger went on to talk “on Wikileaks and the Empire’s Web.

Announcement for increased affordable housing on Treasue Island

­Compiled by the El Reportero’s staff

San Francisco Supervisor Jane Kim joined a community-based coalition to increasing the number of affordable housing units on the proposed Treasure Island development plan. The effort plans to increase the affordable housing on Treasure Island from 25 percent to 30 percent,” which translates into 400 units of affordable housing that the community needs.

The Treasure Island development is slated to construct 8,000 units of housing, 25 percent of which is currently set aside for affordable housing. An additional 140,000 square feet of new commercial space and 100,000 square feet of office space will round out the development. Representatives from community groups, labor unions, and affordable housing non-profit organizations will speak at the press conference. “Increasing the affordable housing component on Treasure Island is critical to addressing the needs of our community, particularly those transitioning out of poverty,” said Gail Gilman, Executive Director of Community Housing Partnership.

A message on Mother’s Day

As the California Assembly Appropriations Committee heard AB 889, a bill that recognizes the importance of domestic workers to our state’s economy and would improve the quality of care in the vital household-worker industry, domestic worker advocates from all over the state sent a mother’s delegation of nannies, house-cleaners, and caretakers to Sacramento. This event served as an extended celebration of international mother’s day.

The DREAM Act To was introduced into the Senate and House

The DREAM Act, which based on last session’s provisions of the bills, provides the opportunity for undocumented students who entered the United States as children to obtain legal status if they pursue college education or join the military, was reintroduced in the House and in the Senate on May 11.

“The DREAM Act is good and fair for these children, good for our economy, and good older Americans who will be depending for the social security on contributions by younger workers and professionals, including the DREAM Act students, and generally good for our country,” stated Mark Silverman, Director of Immigration Policy of the ILRC.

San Mateo County releases 2011 homeless census

On May 12, the HOPE Interagency Council, released its biennial Homeless Census and Survey. The report details the number of homeless individuals and families living in San Mateo County at the time of its oneday count on Jan. 27, 2011.

The report also includes information about the backgrounds and living conditions of homeless people and those at-risk. Since the county started counting the homeless in 2007, the number has increased by 85 individuals, or 4 percent.

“It’s heartbreaking to see so many homeless people,” said Carole Groom, Board President and Cochair of the HOPE Council, “Despite the economy and the high unemployment rate, we’ve made great gains to prevent homelessness, but there is more that we must do as a community to end it altogether.” Since 2007, the county’s unemployment rate has doubled.

Mexico’s march gets world’s attention

por José de la Isla

Hispanic Link News Service

MEXICO D.F.–“That’s the march where they want Calderón to withdraw the army from the war on the narcos,” my friend said over the phone. “They want the government to withdraw. It’s for abdication and against Felipe Calderón,” he said, referring to the Mexican president. His comment suggested U.S. news audiences are getting another kind of scramble with their morning breakfast.

In actuality, 29 Mexican cities and 17 countries around the world supported the march. U.S. actor Edward James was photographed with Javier Sicilia, its leader, at the head of the 60-mile march, when it departed Cuernavaca for Mexico City. Sicilia’s son is one of 35,000 casualties of the “war” over the past four years, The civic movement has attracted church leaders, artists, business and social elites, the Alta burguesia, the glitterati and some party leaders. Even Subcomandante Marcos, who led an indigenous uprising two decades ago, headed a support march in Chiapas state. Mexico has perhaps not witnessed public pressure like this since the silent march of 1927, which opposed President Elias Calles after the execution of a priest, Miguel Pro. That led Mexico to the abolition of capital punishment.

Members of the writers group Colectivo Entrópico suggested the best place to see how many groups and average citizens participated was to stand in front of the Palace of Fine Arts. The colectivo is a gathering of creative writers, editors, illustrators and web techies who meet often for conversation, word riffs, good humored jokes, gossip and information about who’s giving a book reading where.

On the way to the Metro subway station following the session, I asked Luis Alonso Gómez, a freelance copy editor, what he thought the march would accomplish. For the next hour, like someone accustomed to correcting style, he meticulously explained how two  previous marches, led byvictim’s family members, had shaped public thinking, that an emerging national civic union was changing the country with people power. In the past, two families have led similar marches. One even brought the wrongdoers in and oversaw passage of a new law protecting threatened and extorted families. A prominent businessman chastised the president and his cabinet to do their job protecting the public or resign.

In Cuernavaca after three alleged drug gang members kidnapped and murdered Javier Sicilia’s son and six other young men last month outside a club, the poet and journalist used his renown, not without criticism, to plead for a non-military approach to fight the crime spree. Luis Alonso explained that the government’s problem is having used the military. The government has whacked a beehive, making the killer bees more dangerous.

The news magazine Siempre! has reported that a United Nations working group on disappearances and forced detention concluded that the military is not trained to investigate or even to interact with civilians concerning the 3,000 kidnapping cases for which organized crime and drug cartels are presumed responsible. With the military involved, government measures come at a tremendous cost of human rights.

The underlying complaint is that when the military was unleashed, elected and appointed officials became increasingly unresponsive to the public. Instead, they became further beholden to political patrons and party interests, focused on future elections — and not public problem-solving. State and local police forces and judiciaries especially are held in contempt for their inept roles in following professional procedure and dispensing justice. Wholesale corruption has compromised public confidence.

Hence the theme: ­”peace and justice” — public peace through competent law enforcement. This may well be the greatest challenge yet to corrupt public-policy practices that created the beehive in the fi rst place, says Luis Alonso. He ought to know. He is an editor, one called a corrector, who can change a whole storyline with the turn of a phrase, a new understanding.

(José de la Isla, a nationally syndicated columnist for Hispanic Link and Scripps Howard news services, has been recognized for two consecutive years for his commentaries by New America Media. His forthcoming book is “Our Man on the Ground.” Previous books include “DAY NIGHT LIFE DEATH HOPE” (2009) and “The Rise of Hispanic Political Power” (2003).

The Comcast-NBCU-Telemundo deal – is it for real?

by Joseph Torres

Hispanic Link News Service

It is hard to imagine NBC would ever broadcast just half an hour of local news daily on its networkowned stations in cities such cities as New York and Chicago. That would simply be unacceptable.

But that’s exactly what NBC has done with the Telemundo stations it owns in our nation’s largest Latino markets, located in our nation’s largest cities, according to a study released this week by Free Press.

When NBC bought Telemundo in 2002, it pledged to the Federal Communications Commission that it would increase investment in the network’s news operations at Telemundoowned stations. Instead, over the past decade it has gutted the Spanish-language network’s news operations, creating a huge disparity in how it respects its Spanish-language viewers. Free Press’s report reviewed the amount of news that aired on NBC – and Telemundo – owned-andoperated stations during the first quarter of this year. It found that NBC’s English- language stations aired an average four hours and 42 minutes of local news per day compared to just 48 minutes on Telemundo stations owned by NBC.

NBC’s local stations devoted about 20 percent of their weekly time to local programming; the average Telemundo station aired less than 3 percent.

In New York and Chicago, NBC stations aired more than five hours of local news. That contrasts to slightly more than half an hour for Telemundo. In Los Angeles, the NBC station aired four hours, Telemundo, less than an hour. In Denver and Boston, Telemundo stations offered none. The Free Press report serves as a reminder about the dangers of media consolidation. Companies seeking to merge always tout the societal benefi t of an informed community.

In 2002, NBC promised that the Telemundo network would receive the resources needed to compete locally as well as nationally with Univisión. Latino groups such as the National Council of La Raza and the League of United Latin American Citizens were skeptical. They opposed the merger. Their fears were validated in 2006 when NBC eliminated the local Telemundo newscasts in several cities in such large Latino markets as Dallas, Houston, San Jose, Denver,  Phoenix and San Antonio.

The National Association of Hispanic Journalists called the cuts a “disservice to the Spanish-speaking community” that “undermine the principals of the First Amendment and the ability of local stations to “act as a watchdog for local government.”

Telemundo audiences are suffering from NBC’s past broken promises. Will history repeat itself now that the Comcast conglomerate acquired NBCU and Telemundo in January? Or will Comcast use its vast resources to re-invest in Telemundo’s local news operations?

“Considering Comcast’s enormous resources, there is no reason why it couldn’t broaden local news coverage for all Telemundo stations,” says former NAHJ president Verónica Villafañe. “Now more than ever, the need is evident.”

Unlike in 2002, the national Latino civil rights groups endorsed the Comcast-NBCU deal. They signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with Comcast that, while unenforceable, calls for increasing the participation of Latinos throughout the company’s corporate governance, programming, workforce, procurement and community investment efforts. It creates a Latino advisory committee that will meet for the fi rst time this month. However, Comcast’spromises regarding Telemundo’s

news operations are marginal, at best. It now agrees to increase local news by 1,000 hours for the 10 stations that are NBCowned, but made that same pledge for only six of the 15 Telemundo-owned stations, a pledge that was added only after groups such as Free Press and NAHJ criticized the cable giant for treating Spanish-language stations like country cousins.

It promises “not to cut” local news for the remaining Telemundo stations – in effect, to continue doing nothing for local communities that aren’t being ­served. This is a far cry from Latino groups’ demands of NBC a decade ago. The fi rst order of business for the Latino advisory committee created by Comcast should be to call for local news parity for Telemundo with other NBC stations. It’s simply unacceptable for the committee to allow this offensive double standard to continue. (Based in Washington, D.C., Torres is the senior advisor for the media reform group Free Press. Prior to joining Free Press, Torres served as deputy director of the National Association of Hispanic Journalists and editor of Hispanic Link

What is HAARP? Part 4

­by Marvin Ramíre­z­

­­Marvin  J. Ramírez­Ma­rv­in­ R­­­­a­­m­­­­í­r­­­ez­­­­­
­

FROM THE EDITOR: Given the latest tsunamis, earthquakes and hurricanes that have stricken several nations in the world, leaving many deaths and destruction, there are beliefs – based on scientific analysis -that those events might have been man-made. El Reportero found the following article, which due to its length it will be published in six parts. The is the forth part. In order to better read and follow up the complete story, we suggest you read part one, two and three in older editions in our website. You may access older editions at: https://elreporterosf.com/editions/?q=epublish/1.

— In addition to the NEPA process described above, the Air Force and Navy would comply with all applicable state and federal regulations for construction and operation of the HAARP facility. Additional Information An updated version of this fact sheet will be issued as often as program changes warrant to keep interested parties apprised of significant developments in regard to HAARP. Any individual seeking additionalinformation about HAARP,or wishing to provide commentsregarding HAARP, can contact any one of the individuals listed below.

  • Mr. John Heckscher

    Pl/gpia

    Phillips Laboratory

    29 Randolph Road Hanscom AFB, MA 01731-3010

  • Mr. Ralph Scott

    3rd Wing Public Affairs Division

    Elmendorf AFB, AK 99506

  • Mr. Guy McConnell

    Alaska District Corps of Engineers,

    Planning Npaen-pl-er Anchorage, Alaska 99506-0898

I s H a a r p A S t a rwa r s W e a p o n ?

Defending against enemy missile attacks and other imagined threats has generated futuristic and science fiction sounding proposals better known as Starwars. Concepts and ideas circulated wildly throughout government, military and civilian circles. As the former Soviet Union broke up, the

backing for U.S. Starwars efforts evaporated and the spending on such projects was dropped. But not soon enough. Many experimental starwars research projects are still funded and being pursued by the military. HAARP (High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program), being constructed for the Air Force and Navy by an ARCO subsidiary, is such a project.

Touted as scientifi c research, HAARP is a thinly disguised project to “perturb” the ionosphere with extremely powerful beams of energy to see what military uses it can serve. According to the HAARP RFP, these energy beams will be used to “control ionospheric processes in such a way as to greatly enhance the performance of C3 systems (or, to deny accessibility to an adversary).” That sounds like a weapon to this writer. Other such projects go by the code names BIME, RED AIR, CRRES, E X C E D E , C H A R G E IV, WISP, ACTIVE, HIPAS, RADC, AIM, etc.

Nuclear bombs exploded in high altitude tests in the late fi fties and early sixties by both the U.S.S.R. and the U.S. caused weather and jet stream changes that lasted almost 20 years. Do the HAARP heaters offer the same potential as they “perturb” the ionosphere? The ionosphere is home to many benefi cial natural phenomena among them fi ltering the sun’s harmful rays and refl ecting radio waves used for communications.

Although not totally understood, the ionosphere also directly effects the weather systems and the jet streams. HAARP, “the most powerful facility (of its kind) in the world” is currently under construction near Gakona, Alaska. Other smaller ionospheric heaters of this type are already in operation in Norway, Ukraine, Russia, Tadzhikistan, Puerto Rico and Fairbanks (yes, right here in Alaska). Could tests and experiments with these ionospheric heaters already be changing global weather systems? Could they be a contributing cause for the floods in the U.S.? Could this be the kind of secret weapon that Zhirinovsky speaks of? Can these heaters change the earth’s magnetic fi elds as well and cause equal reactions half-way around the globe? Will we need to protect ourselves from the sun’s rays due to new holes in the ionosphere? What will happen to the individuals living near HAARP when it operates, will they be exposed to unnecessary risk of electromagnetic radiation?

Some of the specific language in the HAARP documents is quoted below:

“The HAARP is to ultimately have a HF {High Frequency} heater with an ERP {Effective Radiated Power} well above 1 gigawatt {1,000,000,000 watts} (on the order of 95-100 dBW); in short, the most ­powerful faci!ity in the world for conducting ionospheric modification research.”

“The Soviets, operating at higher powers than the West, now have claimed signifi cant stimulated ionization by electron-impact ionization. The claim is that HF energy, via wave-particle interaction, accelerates ionospheric electrons to energies well in excess of 20 electron volts (eV) so that they will ionize neutral atmospheric particles with which they collide. Given that the Soviet HF facilities are several times more powerful than the Western facilities at comparable midlatitudes, and given that the latter appear to be on a threshold of a new “waveparticle” regime of phenomena, it is believed that the Soviets have crossed that threshold and are exploring a regime of phenomena still unavailable for study or application in the West.”

“A key goal of the program {HAARP} is the identification and investigation of those ionospheric processes and phenomena that can be exploited for DoD purposes, such as outlined below. IT WILL CONTINUE ON THE NEXT EDITION.