Tuesday, September 3, 2024
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Boxing

Saturday, Nov. 27 — at Oakland, CA (Showtime)

WBA super middleweight titles: Andre Ward vs. Sakio Bika.

Wednesday, Dec. 1 — at Bali, Indonesia

WBA featherweight title: Chris John vs. Fernando Saucedo.

Thursday, Dec. 2 — at Paris, France

Jean Marc Mormeck vs. Hasim Rahman.

­Friday, Dec. 3 — at Santa Ynez, CA (Showtime)

Lateef Kayode vs. TBA Luis Franco vs. Leonilo Miranda.

Saturday, Dec. 4 — at Anaheim, CA (iNDEMAND)

Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. vs. Alfonso Gomez WBC lightweight title: Humberto Soto vs. Urbano Antillon.

Salsa in Sausalito

Compiled by Mark Carney

Edgardo y Gambon y su Orquesta CandelaEdgardo y Gambon y su Orquesta Candela

The Seahorse restaurant, in Sausalito, CA, will soon begin putting on a new event, called “Salsa Dancing With a View”. Located on the waterfront with spectacular views of San Francisco and the San Francisco Bay, the restaurant will charge only $5 for these performances. On Sunday, Nov. 28, Edgardo Cambon and his orchestra ”Candela”, will play from 4 to 7 p.m.

Known for their renditions of salsa classics like Aqui no Me Quedo, Oyelo que te Conviene, and El Cuarto, the band will be also be joined by special guest DJ Felipe El de La Clave. Seahorse Restaurant, 305 Harbor Drive, at Gate Five Road, Sausalito, CA. (415) 331-2899.

Musical performances at La Peña

As always, there will be great music at La Peña Cultural Center this month. On Wedesday, nov. 24, Gerry Tenney and the Hard Times Orchestra will perform. Gerry is a singer, guitarist and mandolinist who has composed a musical commentary about the economic downturn and the labor struggles of the poor.

In this performance, Gerry and his orchestra will combine their own compositions with others from bluegrass, klezmer, blues, and rock music. A guest narrator will provide historical commentary to this unique performance. The show begins at 8 p.m, and costs between $10 and 15, depending on how severely the economic downturn has affected you.

On Sunday, Nov.28, the monthly Mexican Tareada will take place. ­This is an informal jam session for lovers of Mexican music. If you can play an instrument, or simply want to listen, head for the café lobby at 3 p.m. La Peña Culural Center, 3105 Shattuck Avenue, Berkeley, CA. (510) 849-2568, ext. 15.

Tiburon Film Society presents free film

On Thursday, Dec. 2, the Tiburon Film Society will offer a free film to the public. Miracle in a Box, an hour-long documentary, is narrated by John Lithgow, the famous actor. It details the craft of piano restoration, and the humanistic values of craftsmanship. The director, Oscar winner John Korty, will be present at the showing. The film starts at 6 p.m, and will be shown at the Bay Model, located at 2100 Bridgeway, in Sausalito.

Dominican Bachata star and Mexican pop band the top Latin Grammy winners

­by Antonio Mejías-Rentas

Juan Luis Guerra: (PHOTO COURTESY OF BLINGCHEES.COM)Juan Luis Guerra ­(PHOTO COURTESY OF BLINGCHEES.COM)

TIED ON TOP: Two singer-songwriters Ñ a veteran Dominican who has internationalized his country’s bachata sound and a much younger Mexican who fronts a five-year-old pop band Ñ were the top Latin Grammy winners at a Las Vegas ceremony this year. Both Juan Luis Guerra and Mrio Domm earned three awards each at the Nov. 11 gala broadcast live by Univisin.

Guerra, whose career spans more than two decades, earned the evening’s top award, Album of the Year, for his hit-making A son de guerra. He commented that although the recording included danceable love songs, it also carried a message. The time has arrived for us to reclaim justice and integrity for the Latin American people, he told the audience at the Mandalay Bay Resort.

The album also earned Guerra the Latin Grammy for Best Contemporary Tropical Album. Its single Bachata en Fukuoka was named Best Tropical Song.

Domm shared two of his awards with the other two members of Mexican pop band Camila: Recording of the Year for Mientes and Best Group Vocal Album for Dejarte amar. Mientes also earned Domm the songwriter award Ñ Song of the Year Ñ which he shared with Mnica Vlez.

Other winners at the 11th annual ceremony: Spanish pop star Alejandro Sanz, with his 17th Latin Grammy, Venezuelan duo Chino y Nacho, Puerto Rican salsa crooner Gilberto Santa Rosa and Colombian hip-hop group ChocQuibTown.

Highlights included Ricky Martin performing his first single in two years Ñ Lo mejor de mi vida eres t, a duet with Natalia Jimnez Ñ and young bachata star Prince Royce, singing his hit remake of Stand By Me with the song’s creator, Ben E. King.

‘GAZPACHO’ ON BROADWAY: The cold Spanish soup that was famously tainted with drugs in the Pedro Almodvar film Mujeres al borde de un ataque de nervios was served at the opening party for the stage version this month in New York. Patti LuPone, Brian Stokes Mitchell and Sherie Rene Scott star in the musical, at the Belasco Theatre through January.

A recipe for gazpacho, a pivotal plot element in both the fi lm and musical, is projected on the Belasko curtain for the production.

ONE LINERS: Spanish director Luis Garc a Berlanga, a leading fi gure of his country’s post-war cinema, died Nov. 13 at 89 Shannon Tavr ez, the 11-year-old who played Nala on Broadway’s The Lion King, died from complications from leukemia while awaiting a bone marrow transplant; she was buried Nov. 11 in Queens Following complaints by members of ­Los Kjarkas, Puerto Rican reggaeton performer Don Omar explaining that his sampling of the Bolivian group’s Llorando se fue was authorized by EMI Music; the song gained notoriety in the ’80s when it was remade as a lambada by Kaoma, a Brazilian group that Los Kjarkas successfully sued over copyright infringement Hispanic Link.

Fighting childhood obesity in San Mateo County

­Compiled by Mark Carney

In San Mateo County, minorities are disproportionately affected by childhood obesity: 74 percent of Hispanics, 69 percent of African-Americans, and 83 percent of Pacifi c Islanders could not meet all physical fitness standards set for students by the state of California. In response, the school district instituted a program of healthy nutrition and physical activity, which seems to be paying off. Eight after-school programs in the district recently received “Healthy Apple Awards for Excellence in Nutrition & Physical Activity”, awarded by a committee of recreational and healthcare professionals.

Although certainly an improvement, Dr. Scott Morrow, San Mateo County Health Offi cer, sadly noted that, “This is the fi rst generation of children who will live shorter lives and have a lower quality of life than their parents.”

Undocumented Californians Can Pay In-State Tuition

Undocumented California students gained a major victory when, in an unanimous decision, the California Supreme Court declared that students who attend at least three years of high school in California and who graduate from a California high school are eligible for in-state tuition rates at California public colleges and universities, regardless of their immigration status. The case, Martinez vs. Regents of the University of California, was argued by the ACLU and the National Immigration Law Center.

The true meaning of Thanksgiving

­by­ Dr. Carlos Muñoz

The year was 1637…..700 men, women and children of the Pequot Tribe, gathered for their “Annual Green Corn Dance” in the area that is now known as Groton, Conn.

While they were gathered in this place of meeting, they were surrounded and attacked by mercenaries of the English and Dutch. The Indians were ordered from the building and as they came forth, they were shot down. The rest were burned alive in the building.

The next day, the Governor of the Massachusetts Bay Colony declared: “A day of Thanksgiving, thanking God that they had eliminated over 700 men, women and children. For the next 100 years, every “Thanksgiving Day” ordained by a Governor or President was to honor that victory, thanking God that the battle had been won.

Newell based his research on studies of Holland Documents and the 13 volume Colonial Documentary History, both thick sets of letters and reports from colonial officials to their superiors and the king in England, and the private papers of Sir William Johnson, British Indian agent for the New York colony for 30 years in the mid-1600s.

“My research is authentic because it is documentary,” Newell said. “You can’t get anything more accurate than that because it is fi rst hand. It is not hearsay.”

Newell said the next 100 Thanksgivings commemorated the killing of the Indians at what is now Groton, Connecticut [home of a nuclear submarine base] rather than a celebration with them. He said the image of Indians and Pilgrims sitting around a large table to celebrate Thanksgiving Day was “fi ctitious” although Indians did share food with the fi rst settlers.

Source: Documents of Holland, 13 Volume Colonial Documentary. History, letters and reports from colonial officials to their superiors and the King in England and the private papers of Sir William Johnson, Britsh Indian agent for the New York colony for 30 years.

Researched by William B. Newell (Penobscot Tribe) Former Chairman of the University of Connecticut Anthropology Department.

Dr. Carlos Muñoz, Jr. Professor Emeritus, Department of Ethnic Studies at UC Berkeley.

The killing street next door

by David Smith-Soto
Hispanic Link News Service

EL PASO, Texas — Generations of Mexican students have been commuting to the El Paso campus of the University of Texas for almost a hundred years.

Two of them were murdered in n­eighboring Juárez this month, riddled by 36 highpowered bullets as they drove home in a residential neighborhood where one of them lived. Manuel Acosta, 22, drove his red Nissan Sentra from UTEP across the line on the early evening of Nov.2 to Colonia Rincones de Santa Rita where his passenger Eder Díaz, 23, lived.

They were gunned down at the intersection of De La Arbolada and Manglares streets in their car near Diaz’s house.

Those of us who teach here in this beautiful campus now worry about the safety of every one of the some 1,400 students who cross the bridge to study here and then go home late in the day, every day. I teach journalism. Many of my former students commuted here and now write for newspapers in Juárez.

With the explosion of drug-related violence that started in 2008, UTEP enacted guidelines that prohibit any student or faculty member form engaging in any university activity in Juárez. Many of my students report for Borderzine.com, which is the hands-on newsroom capstone course in our journalism program.

I now tell them that no story is worth a life and have forbidden them from reporting from Juárez. Even those who live in Juárez are not allowed to report from there. That city is at war and there is no Green Zone.

In the past two years, thousands have been killed in that border city, so close to my classroom that I can see wash hanging on clotheslines on the other side of the interstate highway.

In what we now call Mexico’s drug war, some 6,800 persons have been shot to death, tortured, mutilated, hacked to pieces, beheaded and hanged like butchered animals from overpasses. Roomfuls of persons have been machine-gunned to death in drug rehab centers and at birthday parties in private homes. Backyards have become shallow graves as drug cartels fi ght for power, for the right to smuggle drugs into the U.S. and then smuggle millions in cash back to Mexico. In the vacuum left by the absence of any effective enforcement of law and order, any kind of credible political authority, a host of criminal subsidiaries have overtaken the civil society.

Even as fully armed soldiers patrol the streets, ordinary folks are kidnapped and ransomed for a fistful of pesos every day. One of my students narrowly evaded kidnappers a few days ago. The gang was already demanding a ransom by phone from his family as its members chased him to the bridge.

Businesses of every size Ð from street carts to fancy boutiques — are strongarmed into paying gangsters protection money just to stay open. Any criminal is entitled in a city without legal constraints. Markets that once bustled with gringo tourists wait poor and lonely for the visitors who never return. Gone are the days when we used to cross the bridge on a whim to visit one of Juárez’s world-class restaurants, always better than what was available in El Paso.

It has been said more than once that the U.S.ÐMexico border form a third country, not U.S., not Mexico, but Frontera, proud of a special heritage blended from both cultures.

But the unfettered violence has driven a bloody wedge into the heart of our special way of life.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton recently lighted a furor in Mexican offi cialdom by calling the violence there an “insurgency.” They didn’t like it. Think of an insurgency as a war like the ones the U.S. with all its military power and NATO allies has been fi ghting for nearly a decade in Iraq and Afghanistan.

In reality, calling what is happening next door an insurgency is an understatement. Our sister city now is more like Mogadishu, divided up by warlords who fi nance the carnage with the export of illicit drugs and the import of truckloads of cash. They control the region and there is no viable opposition in sight.

Our sister city is a Grendel devouring its own children, a LLorona nobody wants to hear.

(David Smith-Soto is executive editor of Borderzine, an online publication of Latino student journalists in coordination with the University of Texas at El Paso.)

This immigration reform is being brought to you by…

por Jorge Mújica Murias

… the Mexican government, of course!

The news of the week is that the one who has failed to have an immigration reform in the United States is… the Mexican government. If the Mexican government had been a serious institution we would have had immigration reform here for awhile. At least that’s the sense of Mexican Ambassador Arturo Sarukhan words a couple weeks ago. In fact, it sounds a lot like the Minuteman arguments of “let’s just enforce the law,” except because he’s talking about the Mexican law.

Sarukhán’s opinion not only contradicts his boss Felipe Calderón, in the sense that Mexicans can do anything they want as far as traveling inside the country, and even have the right to leave it if they want to do so, but he also contradicts the Mexican Constitution. Article 11 – All men (women don’t!) has the right to enter the Republic, leave it, travel across its territory and change his residency, without the need of safe-passage letters, passports or other similar requirements.

But Sarukhán openly told the Editorial Board of the Dallas Morning News that “Regardless of what happens on this side of the border, México has to be able to do two things that has had not either the power of the will to do in the past. First, it has to push for economic development and create well paid Jobs to ‘anchor’ those men and women (who leave.) Second, it should make sure that all Mexicans who cross the border do so with papers, at a designated crossing point, legally”. That would be to act like the Migra, but in reverse, on exit.

­The Ambassador is legally right. The idea is not even new. Since Vicente Fox was talking (to itself, it seems) about a migration treaty with the United States, his then Foreign Relations Minister Jorge Castañeda proposed something similar. My namesake wanted stricter immigration controls, not only for tourists and foreigners, but for Mexicans as well, and not allow anyone to enter or leave the country without papers. It was part of his idea of a “complete enchilada” The idea even made it trough the Mexican Chamber of Deputies and accepted in a resolution point in February of 2006 as part of a document elaborated by a group of paisanólogos (people who look at migrants from the distance and then write big documents explaining who we are,) by the name of “México: Facing the Migration Phenomena”.

From the dish to the mouth…

Sarukhán’s opinion created a ruckus in both sides of the border, including a call for his resignation, because it was perceived that such policy would benefit more the US than México; in other words, it sounded more like a US offi cial than a Mexican one.

But I would not worry much about it. The Mexican General Population Law (we don’t even have an Immigration Law,) said pretty clearly on its Article 11 that “International transit through ports, airports and borders will use only designated places and within the established schedules by migration authorities”. That’s what Sarukhan wants, that nobody leaves México at midnight through the Sasabe dessert.

Furthermore, Article 16 says that “Immigration Services will have priority… to inspect the entry and exit of people, in whichever way they do it, including national and international vessels, by sea or air, at shores, ports, borders and airports. Even more, Article 3 says “To enforce this law, the Ministry of the Interior will dictate and execute, or in its case it will promote with the concerning authorities the necessary measures to: (Fraction VIII) Restrict the emigration of Mexican nationals when the national interest so demands”.

But like everything else in México, the law defeats itself. For all of the above to happen, it would be necessary to apply Article 10, and a big failure resides there: Article 10 It is the exclusive prerogative of the Ministry of the Interior to design the appropriated places for International transit, … previous opinion by the Finance and Public Credit Ministry, the Transport and communications Ministry, the Health and Public Assistance Ministry, the Foreign Affairs Ministry, Agriculture and Cattle Ministry and, if necessary, the Ministry of the Navy”.

There goes the plan!

By the time Finance and Public Credit, Transport and Communications, Health and Public Assistance, the Foreign Affairs, Agriculture and Cattle and the Navy get together, create a committee, give huge salaries to friends and cousins of the ministers, and then agree on the points where you have to present your papers we will be already in the XXII Century.

In any case, I hope US legislators take Sarukhan seriously… and approve some kind of immigration reform… mexicodelnorte@yahoo.com.mx

The Agenda of the Illiminati (fifteenth part of a multi-series)

by Marvin Ramirez

­Marvin  J. Ramírez­Ma­rv­in­ R­­am­­í­r­­ez­­­­­­

­NOTE FROM THE EDITOR: Given the important and historical information contained in this 31-page article on the history of the secret and evil society, The Illuminati, El Reportero is honored to provide our readers with the opportunity to read such a document by Myron C. Fagan, which mainstream media has labeled it a conspiracy theory. To better understand this series, we suggest to also reading the previous article published in our editorials. This is the fifteenth part of the series.

The following is a transcript of a recording distributed in 1967 by Myron C. Fagan. He had hoped that if enough Americans had heard (or read) this summary, the Illuminati takeover agenda for America would have been aborted, just as Russia’s Alexander I had torpedoed the Illuminati’s plans for a One World, League of Nations at the Congress of Vienna from 1814-15. Fagan correctly describes those members of congress, the executive branch, and the judicial branch of that time as TRAITORS for their role in assisting to implement the downfall of America’s sovereignty. It’s understandable that most listeners of that period would have found it impossible to believe that the Kennedy’s, for instance, were (are) part of the Illuminati plot, but he did say that Jack had a spiritual rebirth and attempted to rescue the country from the Illuminati’s stranglehold by issuing U.S. silver certificates, which apparently greatly contributed to the Illuminati’s decision to assassinate him (his son, John Jr., was also murdered because he had intended to expose his father’s killers after he gained public office).

— Russia would be on the winning side this time as it was in 1814 and therefore the Czar would be securely seated on his throne. Here it is pertinent to note that Russia, under the Czarist regime, had been the one country in which the Illuminati had never made any headway nor had the Rothschilds ever been able to infiltrate in their banking interests thus a winning Czar would be more difficult than ever to cope with.

Even if he could be enticed into a so-called “League of Nations,” it was a foregone conclusion that he would never, but never, go for a one-world government. So even before the outbreak of World War I, the conspirators had a plan in the making to carry out Nathan Rothschild’s vow of 1814 to destroy the Czar and also murder all possible royal heirs to the throne and it would have to be done  before the close of the war.

The Russian Bolsheviks were to be their instruments in this particular plot. From the turn of the century, the chiefs of the Bolsheviks were Nicolai Lenin, Leon Trotsky, and later Joseph Stalin.

Of course, those were not their true family names. Prior to the outbreak, Switzerland became their haven. Trotsky’s headquarters was on the lower East Side in New York, largely the habitat of Russian-Jewish refugees. Both Lenin and Trotsky were similarly bewhiskered and unkempt. In those days, that was the badge of Bolshevism. Both lived well yet neither had a regular occupation.

Neither had any visible means of support, yet both always had plenty of money. All those mysteries were solved in 1917. Right from the outset of the war, strange and mysterious goings on were taking place in New York. Night after night, Trotsky darted furtively in and out of Jacob Schiff’s palace mansion and in the dead of those same nights there were a gathering of hoodlums of New York’s lower East Side. All of them Russian refugees at Trotsky’s headquarters and all were going through some mysterious sort of training process that was all shrouded in mystery. Nobody talked, although it did leak out that Schiff was financing all of Trotsky’s activities.

Then suddenly Trotsky vanished and so did approximately 300 of his trained hoodlums. Actually they were on the high seas in a Schiff-chartered ship bound for a rendezvous with Lenin and his gang in Switzerland. And also on that ship was $20,000,000 in gold; the $20,000,000 was provided to finance the Bolsheviks takeover of Russia. In anticipation of Trotsky’s arrival, Lenin prepared to throw a party in his Switzerland hideaway.

Men of the very highest places in the world were to be guests at that party. Among them were the mysterious Colonel Edward Mandell House, Woodrow Wilson’s mentor and palsy-walsy, and more important, Schiff’s special and confi dential messenger. Another of the expected guests was Warburg of the Warburg Banking Clan in Germany who was financing the Kaiser and whom the Kaiser had rewarded by making him chief of the Secret Police of Germany. In addition, there were the Rothschilds of London and Paris also Lithenoth, Kakonavich, and Stalin (who was then the head of a train and bank robbing gang of bandits). He was known as the “Jesse James of the Urals.” WILL CONTINUE ON THE NEXT EDITION.

Rally to stop worker wages theft

­­

por Mark Carney

Organizaciones pro derechos laborales protestan en la Alcaldía de SF: (PHOTO BY MARK CARNEY)Pro labor rights organizations protest at SF City Hall. ­(PHOTO BY MARK CARNEY)

­Seeking to end the problem of wage theft, many progressive San Francisco organizations held a rally on Thursday, Nov. 18, on the steps of City Hall. The event, part of the “National Day of Action Against Wage Theft”, took place in cities across the U.S., and was intended to draw attention to an issue that affects many low-income U.S. workers, and particularly immigrants.

The participating groups, which included Young Workers United, the Chinese Progressive Association, La Raza Centro Legal, the Filipino Community center, and Pride at Work, is urging greater enforcement of labor laws, and the creation of a citywide Low-Wage Worker’s Bill of Rights. Appearing in support of this proposal, Supervisor David Campos said, “It is a San Francisco value that the rights of workers are protected.”

In San Francisco itself, most wage theft victimizes immigrant workers, according to many of the speakers. Even though San Francisco has an hourly minimum wage of $9.92, many workers receive a lower wage—sometimes as little as $5. “Immigrant workers don’t receive the minimum wage, or overtime, or get rest periods. Sometimes, after working all day, they don’t get paid at all,” said Renee Saucedo, of La Raza Centro Legal Day Laborer Program.

The Chinese Progressive Association (CPA), an organization that advocates for the rights of Chinese-American laborers, recently completed a thorough study on the working conditions of Chinatown restaurant workers. Minimum wage violations and lack of overtime pay are so common, according to Alex Tom, executive director of the CPA, that “eight million dollars in wages have been lost. Workers who try to obtain their rightful wages are sometimes fi red, or have their schedules changed, as retaliation.” And, as in many immigrant communities, fear of their employer often prevents them from ever taking action. “Some of them, after winning their claim for back-wages, are afraid to pick up their checks. The checks just sit there,” he added.

Whereas most Chinese immigrants work in restaurants or in the garment factories in the Bayview, Chinatown, or SOMA (South of Market) neighborhoods, Latino immigrants work in a wider range of industries: Males often work in restaurants or as construction day laborers, while females work in restaurants or as ­domestic workers. Although the typical hourly wage for a day laborer is $15, those who wait on the street, or outside building supply stores, usually make between $8 and 12 per hour, according to Renee Saucedo, of La Raza Centro. Saucedo, who runs a program at La Raza that guarantees participants $15 per hour, said that “day laborers who look for work on the street do not always receive the agreed-upon wages at the end of the day…sometimes they aren’t even paid.”

Domestic workers, too, have problems obtaining their wages, and because they work inside their employer’s house, they can even be subject to sexual harassment. “When they ask for the wages they have earned, they are threatened with the loss of their job, or even with deportation,” Saucedo noted.

BREAKING: Senate votes cloture on S 510 – must now be voted on in 60 days

Farmers market and growing food at home might become illegal

by Rady Ananda, Food Freedom

By a vote of 74 to 25, at noon on Dec. 17, the U.S. Senate voted for cloture on S 510, the Food Safety Modernization Act, which means it must now be voted on in the full Senate within 60 days. All amendments to the controversial food control bill must be completed by that time.

One of S 510’s supporters, Saxby Chambliss of Georgia, opposed cloture because modifications to the bill do not reflect its original intent, he said on CSPAN. Chambliss fully supports giving the FDA more power over the US food supply, but is unhappy with the Manager’s Amendment submitted in August.

He objects to the small farm exclusion on the grounds that the $500,000 annual gross revenue limit is an arbitrary number that is too quickly reached by small farms. He called for numerous amendments to the bill as it appears today.

Senator Sherrod Brown of Ohio supports S 510, and called out the statistics by the Centers for Disease Control that report there are 76 million food-borne illnesses a year, with 5,000 resulting in death. What Brown did not say was that the FDA — the very agency further empowered by S 510 — is responsible for the approval of pharmaceutical drugs that result in 100,000 deaths a year.

None of the supporters of S 510 will acknowledge the corrupt nature of the Food and Drug Administration. Monsanto executives now work at the FDA or on President’s Obama’s Food Safety Task Force. What legislators continue to ignore from the public is that we do not support giving federal agencies even more power — especially over something as inherently private as food choices.

None of the legislators will discuss the FDA raids on natural food operations, which sickened no one, while it allowed Wright County Egg to sicken people for decades before finally taking action. Yesterday, Senator Bob Casey informed his Pennsylvania constituents that the $1.6 billion price tag for S 510 will stop food smuggling in the United States. I kid you not: “These provisions add personnel to detect, track and remove smuggled food and call for the development and implementation of strategies to stop food from being smuggled into the United States.” Is food smuggling a problem in the United States? Well, the “biggest food smuggling case in the history of the U.S.” busted wide open in September.

Eleven Chinese and German executives were indicted for bringing in $40 million worth of commercial grade honey over a fi­ve-year period, reportedly to avoid paying $80 million in import fees. (No wonder they tried smuggling.)

That amounts to 3 percent of the 1.35 billiondollar honey market over a five-year period.

Since that was the biggest food smuggling bust, food smuggling is not the problem. Clearly. It hardly seems worth it for the U.S. taxpayer to cough up $1.6 billion so the FDA can stop such illegal activities, especially in our current economic recession.

“It would allow the government, under Maritime Law, to define the introduction of any food into commerce (even direct sales between individuals) as smuggling into “the United States.” Since under that law, the U.S. is a corporate entity and not a location, “entry of food into the U.S.” covers food produced anywhere within the land mass of this country and “entering into” it by insurvirtue of being produced.”

This is absurd. Food smuggling is not the problem with food safety.

Tainted food comes from monopoly operations in a highly centralized food system.  Break up the monopolies and revert to localized food systems to ensure food safety. Let local authorities control local food safety.

Bill 510 will lead end farmer markets, growing food in the backyard

by Mike Adams Natural News

Senate Bill 510, the Food Safety Modernization Act, has been called “the most dangerous bill in the history of the United States of America.” It would grant the U.S. government new authority over the public’s right to grow, trade and transport any foods. This would give Big brother the power to regulate the tomato plants in your backyard. It would grant them the power to arrest and imprison people selling cucumbers at farmer’s markets. It would criminalize the transporting of organic produce if you don’t comply with the authoritarian rules of the federal government.

“It will become the most offensive authority against the cultivation, trade and consumption of food and agricultural products of one’s  choice. It will be unconstitutional and contrary to natural law or, if you like, the will of God.” – Dr. Shiv Chopra, Canada Health whistleblower http://shivchopra.com/?page_id=2.

This tyrannical law puts all food production (yes, even food produced in your own garden) under the authority of the Department of Homeland Security. Yep — the very same people running the TSA and its naked body scanner / passenger groping programs.

This law would also give the U.S. government the power to arrest any backyard food producer as a felon (a “smuggler”) for merely growing lettuce and selling it at a local farmer’s market.

It also sells out U.S. sovereignty over our own food supply by ceding to the authority of both the World Trade Organization (WTO) and Codex Alimentarius. It would criminalize seed saving turning backyard gardeners who save heirloom seeds into common criminals. This is obviously designed to give corporations like Monsanto a monopoly over seeds.

It would create an unreasonable paperwork burden that would put small food producers out of business, resulting in more power over the food supply shifting to large multinational corporations.