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Prepare for the upcoming earthquake

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­by Marvin Ramíre­z­

­­Marvin  J. Ramírez­Ma­rv­in­ R­­­a­­m­­­í­r­­­ez­­­­­

NOTE FROM THE EDITOR : Dear readers, while navigating the internet, I ran into this interesting article, which conveniently, at this time when we have been threatened with a major earthquake in the West Coast of the United­ States, most of us lack important information to help us survive. The following article, which is an extract from Doug Copp’s article on ‘The Triangle of Life,” contains valuable information that could be used in case we have a natural or man-made catastrophe. Due to its length, I will share it with you in two parts. Where to go during an earthquake (part one) Remember that stuff about hiding under a table or standing in a doorway?

Well, forget it! This is a real eye opener. It could save your life someday. My name is Doug Copp. I am the Rescue Chief and Disaster Manager of the American Rescue Team International (ARTI), the world’s most experienced rescue team. The information in this article will save lives in an earthquake.

I have crawled inside 875 collapsed buildings, worked with rescue teams from 60 countries, founded rescue teams in several countries, and I am a member of many rescue teams from many countries. I was the United Nations expert in Disaster Mitigation for two years, and have worked at every major disaster in the world since 1985, except for simultaneous disasters. The first building I ever crawled inside of was a school in Mexico City during the 1985 earthquake.

Every child was under its desk. Every child was crushed to the thickness of their bones. They could have survived by lying down next to their desks in the aisles. It was obscene — unnecessary.

Simply stated, when buildings collapse, the weight of the ceilings falling upon the objects or furniture inside crushes these objects, leaving a space or void next to them – NOT under them. This space is what I call the ‘triangle of life’.

The larger the object, the stronger, the less it will compact. The less the object compacts, the larger the void, the greater the probability that the person who is using this void for safety will not be injured.

The next time you watch collapsed buildings, on television, count the ‘triangles’ you see formed. They are everywhere. It is the most common shape, you will see, in a collapsed building.

TIPS FOR EARTHQUAKE SAFETY

1) Most everyone who simply ‘ducks and covers’ when building collapse are crushed to death. People who get under objects, like desks or cars, are crushed.

2) Cats, dogs and babies often naturally curl up in the fetal position. You should too in an earthquake. It is a natural safety/survival instinct. You can survive in a smaller void. Get next to an object, next to a sofa, next to a bed, next to a large bulky object that will compress slightly but leave a void next to it.

3) Wooden buildings are the safest type of construction to be in during an earthquake. Wood is flexible and moves with the force of the earthquake. If the wooden building does collapse, large survival voids are created. Also, the wooden building hasless concentrated, crushingweight. Brick buildings will break into individual bricks. Bricks will causemany injuries but less squashed bodies than concrete slabs.

4) If you are in bed during the night and an ­earthquake occurs, simply roll off the bed. A safe void will exist around the bed. Hotels can achieve a much greater survival rate in earthquakes, simply by posting a sign on the back of the door of every room telling occupants to lie down on the floor, next to the bottom of the bed during an earthquake. I WILL CO N TIN U E IN TH E NEXT WEEK’S EDITION.

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Foundry workers strike to save their healthcare

­por David Bacon

En una de las más grandes huelgas de fundición del Oeste, de más de 500 trabajadores,: paralizó la fundición Pacific Steel Casting. (PHOTO BY DAVID BACON)A strike of over 500 workers in one of the largest foundries on the west coast brought production to a halt at Pacific Steel Castings. (PHOTO BY DAVID BACON)

Berkeley, California – Astrike of over 450 workers inone of the largest foundries on the west coast brought production to a halt Sunday night, at Pacific Steel Castings. The work stoppage, which began at midnight, has continued with round the clock picketing at the factory gates in west Berkeley.

Local 164B of the Glass, Molders, Pottery, Plastics and Allied Workers International Union (GMP) has been negotiating a new labor agreement at Pacific Steel for several months. The old agreement expired on Sunday night. The strike was caused by demands from the company’s owners for concessions and takeaway proposals in contract negotiations.

Those include:

– requiring workers to pay at least 20 percent of the cost of their medical insurance, amounting to about $300 per month per employee.

– a wage freeze for the first two years of the agreement, and tiny raises after that.

– eliminating the ability of workers to use their seniority to bid for overtime, allowing criteria including speedup, discrimination and favoritism. “All eight other foundries in the Bay Area have agreed to a fair contract,” said Ignacio De La Fuente, GMP international vicepresident.

“Workers at Pacific Steel haven’t had a raise in the last two years, in  order to help the company pay for increases in health plan costs. Pacifi c Steel is now alone among the rest in trying to make its workers give back $300 a month.”

The $300/month would mean an approximately 10 percent cut in wages for most workers at the foundry. Joel Soto, a member of the union’s negotiating committee, has worked eight years at Pacifi c Steel, and has a wife, 2-year-old child and another on the way. Soto said, “We’ve been trying to save money for a house. If we have to give up $300 a month, we’ll have to continue renting. My wife and I both support our parents, and that $300 cut is what we’re able to give them now that they’re old. And with my wife pregnant, we can’t do without that medical care.”

Benito Navarro has ten years at the foundry, and a wife and son. “That $300 is what I pay for my car to get to work. I’m the only one in my family working, so if we don’t have that money, I’ll have to give up the car. But I’d rather eat than drive.”

On both Monday and Tuesday dozens of Berkeley police, with helmets and face shields, shoved and hit strikers as they attempted to help the company bring trucks full of castings out of its struck facility. On Tuesday, one striker, Norma Garcia, who is seven months pregnant, was struck in the abdomen and taken to a hospital.

“It is inexcusable that Berkeley is spending precious municipal resources on providing protection for this business, and opening the city to liability through these unprovoked actions by police against strikers,” said De La Fuente.

“That violence isn’t necessary,” added Soto. “We’re just struggling for our rights. I wouldn’t be so surprised to see this in other cities, but Berkeley?” Another worker showed the swelling on his arm he said was caused by a blow from a police baton.

Workers feel additionally betrayed by the company because they and their union testifi ed before the Berkeley City Council three years ago. They urged the city to draft environmental regulations that would allow the foundry to continue operating while installing needed pollution control equipment.

Pacific Steel Casting Co. is a privately held corporation, the third-largest steel foundry in the United States. Its large corporate customers include vehicle manufacturers, like Petebilt Corp., and big oil companies, including BARCO. ­The company has been very productive in recent years, despite the recession. It chose not to comment.

 

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Mainstream media journalists flunk when reporting on radiation

by Mike Adams Natural News

I’ve seen a lot of lousy, inaccurate reporting from the mainstream media over the years, but some of the reporting we’re seeing now on the Fukushima catastrophe is just astonishing in its ignorance of basic physics. Today, the Boston Globe published a story containing this whopper: Nuclear safety spokesman Hidehiko Nishiyama says the air above the leak contains 1,000 millisiverts of radioactivity.

For starters, even the unit is spelled incorrectly. It’s not “millisiverts” but rather “millisieverts.” But that’s a small issue compared to the bigger one.

Millisieverts describe a measured dose of received radiation. Exposure to millisieverts only makes sense in the context of this nuclear catastrophe when it is measured over time. In other words, it makes no sense to say “the air has 500 millisieverts of radiation.”

That’s a complete nonsense sentence. The correct statement is that a person standing in that area would be exposed to “500 millisieverts of radiation PER HOUR.” Without the unit of time, the sentence makes no sense.

This writer of this article, it seems, must have flunked high school physics. Do they also describe the speed of their car as “55 miles?” Do they describe their gas mileage as “20 miles?” When they buy bulk foods at the grocery store, do they understand what it means to pay dollars per ounce? Or is that just too complicated for these people?

Millisieverts are emitted overtime

Furthermore, the air does not “contain” a fi xed quantity of millisieverts. The radioactive particles in the air are EMITTING radiation at a certain rate (millisieverts per unit of time). If the air only “contained” 1000 millisieverts, as explained by the Boston Globe, then once it emitted those 1000 millisieverts, there would be no more radiation, right?

But in reality, the radiation being emitted by the particles in the air can continue to emit that radiation for weeks, months, years or even millennia, depending on the half life of the radioactive isotopes contained in the air.

The half-life of iodine-131, for example, is much shorter than the half-life of cesium-137. The half life of cesium-137 is roughly thirty years, meaning that air contaminated with cesium-137 that’s releasing 1000 millisieverts of radiation per hour right now would still be emitting 500 millisieverts of radiation per hour 30 years from now. And then 250 millisieverts of radiation per hour 60 years from now.

The story was actually written by the Associated Press

Now, here’s something else may truly shock you: This story published by the Boston Globe wasn’t even written by the Boston Globe. It was written by the Associated Press (AP).

The AP, of course, is the centralized news agency that writes a lot of the news that all the other newspapers just copy and paste onto their own websites. You know how Google says it penalizes websites for copying and pasting identical content onto their own websites?

The mainstream media does it every single day, and they get no penalty from Google. In fact, the mainstream media is the largest “news copying” operation in existence today, and Google News strongly favors them by removing smaller, truly independent news sources from its index. And most of these mainstream media news sites just take news written by the AP and slap it onto their own sites, regardless of its accuracy.

ABC News gets it right

ABC News is one of the few mainstream media sources that actually got this story right. They said, “The air above the radioactive water in the pit is measuring 1,000 millisieverts of radiation per hour, according to Nishiyama.”

That is the correct description of it, showing that ABC News has writers who are a lot better educated about the laws of physics than the Associated Press writers (who would no doubt fl unk high school Physics).

So if the Associated Press doesn’t understand radiation, and they’re the news source feeding “canned news” to most of the mainstream media websites that are heavily favored by Google News, did you ever wonder why the masses are so misinformed? It’s obvious: Most of the mainstream news is canned, copied and wildly inaccurate, written by poorly educated people who don’t understand the laws of physics, or economics, or even cause and effect for that matter. So where can you get news that’s truly intelligent?

The answer, of course, is the alternative media. Sites like NaturalNews.com, InfoWars. com, Rense.com and many others. This is where you get real news from people who are, by the way, far more telligent than your typical AP ­writer. Not only do we understand radiation a lot better than these AP writers, we also understand how dangerous it can be. That’s why we’re all warning you to get prepared while you still can, just in case the media is lying to you about the true status of the Fukushima facility.

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Politics to the fore again

­by the El Reportero’s news services

Felipe CalderónFelipe Calderón

As we have argued before, most recently in January, we agree with President Felipe Calderón Hinojosa that Mexico is not a failed state. In an interview with Spain’s El País published on March 17 he argued, strongly, that the US was wrong to categorise Mexico as a failing state. Calderón pointed out that the economy is working normally in Mexico, children go to school and most parts of everyday life go on as usual.

After spreading southward, cocaine production enters Central America

The recent discovery of a cocaine-processing lab in Honduras — the first of its kind — points to a new twist in the trend towards the development of a production capacity in countries until recently seen only as transit routes for drugs on their way to markets in the US and Europe. This trend is already quite evident in several South American countries, as confirmed in recently released US and UN reports.

Too much of a good thing ?

Latin America’s economies have started 2011 unusually by producing pleasant surprises almost across the board. The most important surprise, probably, is that domestic demand in Mexico is picking up strongly. This means that the economy should have a much better 2011 than most economists had expected. It may also mean that the violence will diminish. There are already signs that the murder rate has stopped increasing and may even be falling.

Peru marred by protests ahead of election

On March 30, Keiko Fujimori, a former congresswoman and the daughter of former (and imprisoned) president Alberto Fujimori (1990-2000), was the fi rst presidential candidate to face serious protests. Political protests are making electoral waves in the regions.

If hard evidence of Keiko Fujimori’s countervote was needed, this was it. The protests in Iquitos, in the Amazonian department of Loreto, which borders Ecuador, were so large and violent that they had to be dispersed by tear gas.

Besides the overtly political protests in Loreto, there are environmental protests in southern Peru, which may swell support for the left-wing Ollanta Humala’s congressional candidates in Arequipa. Humala’s Gana Perú’s congressional candidates are part of a 3,000 strong protest, entering its eighth day, against an open cast copper project mine.

A new opinion poll on March 30 by a marketing company, IMA, put the former president Alejandro Toledo (2001-2006) back in front but had Humala consolidating his second place.

Humala is holding strong, with 21.9 percent to Toledo’s 23.9 percent, whilst Keiko Fujimori dipped, for the fi rst time in the past six weeks, to 17.6 percent. Toledo’s former fi nance minister, Pedro Pablo Kuczynski, is snapping at Keiko’s heels, but remains in fourth place on 16.9 percent. The first round is on April 10. The top two go through to a run-off on June 5.

Mexican Organized Crime Among Largest armies in the world

Mexico, Mar 31 (Prensa Latina) Every year organized crime in Mexico gets USD $40 billion from the United States, the equivalent of senadora, Patty Murray, y cuando la funcionaria prometió resolver el problema. Hasta ahorita, la “resolución” ha sido entregarle una solicitud para que pida la ciudadanía, y avisarle que como es veterano de guerra, no le costará nada.

Para que las cosas fuera parejas, una de dos. O deportan a Leeland a su nativo Canadá, o regresan a Emily Samantha a Estados Unidos. O de tres. Podrían poner a Leeland en adopción, y Guatemala podría deportar a Emily Samantha de regreso a Estados Unidos. O de cuatro. Podrían arreglar la estúpida y absurda ley de inmigración que no sirve para nada, y ninguno de los dos absurdos anteriores volvería a repetirse. mexicodelnorte@yahoo.c­om.mx

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Say good-bye to free checking and hello to new bank fees

by Charles Wallace

The era of free checking accounts is coming to an end. Many consumers will face an extra $144 a year in account fees, plus higher annual dues for their debit cars, and increased ATM charges may be on the way.

J.P. Morgan Chase (JPM), which has has 27 million checking accounts, has announced it will impose fees ranging from $10 to $12 per month on those accounts — though the fees can be avoided if you maintain a minimum daily balance of $1,500 or set up a direct deposit of $500 or more each month into your account.

“Honestly, we are looking at the pricing of all of our products and our revenue streams based on some of the changes that are going on right now,” says Christine Holevas, spokeswoman for Chase.

Meanwhile, Bank of America (BAC), which has 57 million consumer and small business customers, has started a pilot program to charge new customers in Arizona, Georgia and Massachusetts for checking accounts, says spokeswoman Anne Pace. The four account options on offer have fees ranging from $6 to $25 a month, but customers maintaining a minimum daily balance of $5,000 won’t have to pay the fees.

When the results of the test programs are clear, Pace says, the bank will decide whether it will impose the fees nationwide.

A push back against f i n a n c i a l r e f o r m s

Brian Foran, a banking analyst at Nomura Securities  International In NewYork, says the rising fees are part of an effort by the banks to recoup some of the income they lost from two recent regulatory changes.

Thanks to last year’s passage of the consumerprotecting Credit CARD Act, the Federal Reserve has changed the rules so that banks can no longer automatically charge overdraft fees on debit card purchases. Customers must actively opt into allowing their account to be overdrawn, or their charges will simply be rejected when their account balance is insufficient.

The larger portion of banks’ lost income comes from a reduction in the interchange fees paid on the use of debit cards. Merchants typically paid 2 percent of a transaction to the banks and credit card companies, but that has been reduced. Under new rules adopted under the Durbin Amendment — passed as part of last year’s fi nancial reform law — banks can only charge 12 cents per transaction, a decline of about 70 percent from what they previously earned. Foran says he estimates banks made $8.7 billion in interchange fees before the new regulations, but will now make only $1.4 billion, a loss of $7.3 billion in revenue.

“J.P. Morgan has a secondary motivation of trying to send a pretty clear message to Washington that if you regulate prices, we have to charge more somewhere else,” Foran says.

Looking for cover to recoup their lost billions

While big institutions like Chase and Bank of America are the fi rst movers in this trend, smaller banks are preparing to take similar steps. U.S. Bancorp (USB) said on its recent investor conference call that it will likely be forced to implement some kind of fee structure. “In general, the smaller banks are looking to the bigger banks to lead the way because that will give them air cover,” Foran says.

Nomura estimates big banks may make up as much as 40 percent of their lost revenues through checking account fees, $1 billion to $2 billion more via annual fees for debit cards, and $500 million to $1 billion by reducing   their rewards program benefits for debit transactions. “Every bank knows that Durbin killed free checking, and every bank knows they need to raise fees, but no bank is terribly excited about being the fi rst bank to raise fees because when you do, a bunch of customers are going to leave the bank and go to some other bank across the street,” Foran says.

Lower income customers will leave

In an investor’s day presentation last month, Chase estimated that 15 percent of its customers will no longer be able to qualify for free checking.

“Based on current attrition rates, we expect 50 percent to 60 percent of these customers to leave Chase within the next year,” the bank said.

The bank expects to lose many of the lower-income customers it acquired when J.P. Morgan took over Washington Mutual in September 2008 after it was seized by bank supervisors in the largest bank failure in U.S. financial history.

Under the new Chase pricing plan, most customers will be charged $12 a month for their accounts unless they meet the requirements for avoiding the fees. But former WaMu customers in California, Oregon and Washington state will only be charged $10 a month, Holevas says. In addition to its new checking account charges, ­Chase has also started a pilot program to boost the fees it charges non-customer for withdrawals from its ATM machines in Texas and Illinois. The fee will be $5 in Illinois and $4 in Texas, up from the current nationwide withdrawal fee of $3. TD Bank Financial Group (TD) and PNC Financial Services (PNC) are also raising their ATM fees.

“You never make tons of money on ATM fees to non-customers, but the idea is you really don’t care if you piss off someone else’s customer,” Foran says. “But it’s never going to come close to offsetting the lost revenue from the Durbin Amendment.”

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Recepción de Hernández en de Young

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by Annalis Flores

Los Muñequitos de MatanzasLos Muñequitos de Matanzas

Prepárese para una noche de emoción y alegría porque se realizará recepción en la Galería Kimball Education en honor a Roberto Yamir Hernández por sus CoLoRes OrGaniCos! Hernández es el artista en residencia de este mes de la galería deYoung. Está dando una oportunidad para aprender a hacer colores en la práctica de elementos naturales. Este proceso creativo indígena incluye elementos tales como el fuego, tierra, agua, frutas, minerales y aire.

Los elementos naturales trajeron colores al mundo mesoamericano y han transformado las piezas artísticas de ese tiempo. El ambiente de Hernández, Mi Casa, cuenta con más técnicas y pinturas que se deberían ir a ver. Habrá música y comida en la recepción, que es completamente gratuita, así como un pase de cortesía para la exhibición OLMEC. El viernes 25 de marzo de 2011 de 6 p.m.- 8:30 p.m. a la Galería Kimball Gallery en el Museo deYoung.

Un regreso que debe ver

Los maestros de la rumba música y baile, Los Muñequitos de Matanzas tocarán Tambor de Fuego en San Francisco por primera vez en 19 años presentados por el Festival de Arte Internacional de San Francisco.

El grupo se encuentra entre los percusionistas mejor considerados del mundo. Cubriendo tres generaciones de una extendida familia de cantantes, bailarines y músicos, Los Muñequitos son maestros del ritual Afro-Cubano, la música y la danza. Mantienen viva la música de 500 años y preservan la cultura de la Diáspora Africana.

Nuevas composiciones y coreografías musicales siguen hacienda del grupo un grupo innovador para ver. Tocan percusiones de la religión Santería y los ritmos son originarios de la tribu Yoruba, las canciones Abakuá y rumba cubana Los Muñequitos tocarán en el Auditorio de la Escuela Secundaria de la Misión el lunes 4 de abril. El evento comenzará a las 7 p.m. y el valor de las entradas oscilará entre los $15 y $50, para información sobre las en tradas llame al (800) 838-3006 o visite www.sfi af.org.

Poesía en película

Prepárese para algo de poseía porque WritersCorps presenta Poetry Projection Project, cortometrajes basados en poemas de jóvenes.

El festival de cine está programado para realizarse en abril, ya que será el Mes Nacional de la Poesía. Contará con cortometrajes de cineastas emergentes y artistas de video del Área de la Bahía y otros de fuera. El jurado invitado, Peter Bratt, director de La Misión asistirá y presentará dos premios de $150 en efectivo.

Las exhibiciones comenzarán el 16 de abril en el Centro Cultural de la Misión para Artes Latinas. El evento es completamente gratis, visite www.writerscorps.­org para más información y listas de los calendarios.

Estrellas afro-cuba n a s e n B e r k e l e y

Más música afro-cubana se escuchará en el Área de la Bahía ya que Juan De Marcos González y su Afro-Cuban All Stars tocarán en el Hall Zellerbach. Gonzáles es una reconocida fi gura en la música cubana hoy, no sólo como una voz en este género sino como director musical, guitarrista e intérprete de tres. El artista cubano ha estado rodeado de música desde que crecía, obteniendo popularidad como el co-fundador de Sierra Maestra en 1978. Después de mucho éxito en esa banda, González formó Afro-Cuban All Stars.

Desde principios de los 1990 el grupo ha tocado música tradicional y contemporánea en formato de gran banda. El grupo cuenta con nombres como Eliada Ochoa, Omara Portuondo, Manuel Licea aka “Puntillita,” Pio Leyva, y Félix Valoy. Estos y otros miembros tienen entre 13 y 81 años, cuatro generaciones de músicos. Vea a González y a Afro-Cuban All Stars el 19 de abril en el Hall Zellerbach de la UC Berkeley a las 8 p.m. Las entradas están disponibles, para información sobre las entradas llame al (510) 642-9988.

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Camacho, Argentina’s selection for an Oscar in the Bay Area

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by the El Reportero’s staff

Ricardo Darin and Martina Gusman in ‘Carancho.’Ricardo Darin and Martina Gusman in ‘Carancho.’

Carancho, Argentina’s bid for Foreign Film Oscar opens March 25, 2011 at Landmark’s Lumiere Theatre in San Francisco, and Landmark’s Shattuck Cinemas in Berkeley. It is also scheduled to open April 8, 2011 at Camera 3 in San Jose. The film was also part of the official selection in Cannes Film Festival 2010. In Argentina, more than 8,000 people die every year in road accidents, with each victim representing millions of pesos in medical and legal expenses. Behind every tragedy, there is an industry.

Set in Buenos Aires, the film noir thriller Carancho stars Ricardo Darín (The Secret in Their Eyes) as Sosa, an ambulance-chasing, disbarred attorney with questionable ethics. Luján (Martina Gusman, Lion’s Den) is a young doctor from the provinces, trying to make a living out of many jobs. Alone, with a work rhythm that barely allows her to sleep, she tries to establish herself in a city unknown to her. After Luján and Sosa’s paths repeatedly cross (she’s trying to save a life; he’s trying to add another client to his portfolio), the two form an unlikely romance that is threatened by Sosa’s turbulent past.

With traffic accidents as the number one cause of deaths in Argentina, bodies are currency, and a black market strives to get rich from the personal tragedies that literally litter the streets. Directed by Pablo Trapero (Lion’s Den, 2008 Cannes Film Festival). For more information, visit http://strandreleasing.com/films/film_details.asp?BusinessUnitID={BFD06A96-7612-4F21-AEC0-3452C34902C4}&ProjectID={4447E845-5CD0-4E74-ADB5-9D960108D2E5}

Enrique Castillo, star of Weeds supports Padres Contra el Cáncer

Star of Showtime’s hit series Weeds, Enrique Castillo lends his presence in support of PADRES Contra El Cancer, a nationally recognized organization committed to improving the quality of life for children with cancer and their families. At an exclusive event to be held on March 26, 2011 at La Cita in historic Downtown Los Angeles, Castillo will introduce Multi-platinum Texan rockers Los Lonely Boys as they take the stage and treat guests to a very special performance featuring songs from their new album, Rockpango, set to release March 29, 2011.

The event is part of PADRES campaign designed to raise awareness on a national level for children with cancer from all races and ethnicities who are in need of financial assistance to continue treatment. Castillo is scheduled to visit some of the young patients affected by the disease at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles.

“I am proud and honored to support Padres efforts in the fight against cancer and I look forward to future opportunities in working with them,” said Castillo about his partnership with the organization.

John Santos live in the studios of KPFA

John Santos played live in the studios of KPFA, ­in Berkeley, California, Wednesday night March 23rd on Sing Out, hosted by the inimitable, long time Bay Area programmer and journalist, Larry Kelp on Pacifica Radio KPFA 94.1 FM. The program was also broadcast in the Central and San Joaquin Valley on sister station KFCF (88.1 FM) in Fresno. It was streamed live on www.kpfa.org where it will also be archived for two weeks.

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Settled lawsuits help non-English speakers in Oakland

by El Reportero staff

Non-English speakers will have access to government services from the City of Oakland after two lawsuits settled obligations by the “Equal Access to Services Ordinance,” (EAO). The lawsuits focused on the failure of the city to provide services accessible to more than 70,000 Oakland residents with limited English speaking abilities. An administrative instruction to all city de­partments will be given to institutionalize EAO enforcement.

The settlement requires key documents to be translated, sufficient bilingual staff, and telephonic services to be translated and provided to the majority of Spanish and Chinese speaking residents. According to Corinne Jan, Chief Executive Officer of Family Bridges, “Despite their contributions to our community and substantial numbers, limited English profi cient Oaklanders have at times been denied equitable access to services. This settlement should prevent that from reoccurring.”

P r e l i m i n a r y l a y o f f a p p r o v e d

San Francisco Board of Education has approved 425 preliminary layoffs for full time positions in the district. Budget cuts from the state are to blame for the layoffs which are set to be issued by this week from SFUSD. This only adds to the $113 million planned cuts by the district. Math, science, and Special education will be exempted from the cuts as they are hard-to-fill positions.

A few possible scenarios are on the works including a tax extension which will be placed in the June ballot and eligibility refund if certain conditions are met. Less favorable scenarios will also be looked into as the district has to meet state deadlines. The final budget will be determined after May 15 when the final layoff notifi cations take effect.

N e w C h i e f A t – t o r n e y a p p o i n t e d

Matt Gonzalez was appointed Chief Attorney of the San Francisco Public Defender’s office by the Public Defender himself, Jeff Adachi. Gonzalez’s position is taken into effect as soon as possible as former Chief Attorney Teresa Caffese stepped out of the position on December 31st.

This will mark Gonzalez’s return to the office where he previously served as deputy public defender. Adachi found an excellent fi t for the position stating, “We want a top trial lawyer who understands our work has a commitment to our clients and a dedication to preserving the resources that allow our offi ce to function. That person is Matt Gonzalez.”

Salazar not a target

After 40 years, a 20- page report stated no evidence proves the death of journalist Ruben Salazar was intentional by the Los Angeles Sheriff department. Salazar was shot in the head with a tear gas missile while at the Silver Dollar Café on August 29, 1970. As a news director for Spanishlanguage KMEX-TV and columnist for the Los Angeles Times, Salazar was a key fi gure in the Mexican-American civil rights movement.

The offi ce of Independent Review scheduled the examination of thousands of Sheriff’s Department records, one which included the riots in East Los Angeles. Investigation proved deputies did not have great communication at the time of the riots and tactics were executed poorly thus leading to an innocent man’s death.

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How the elite control controls your mind and life

by the Globalist Agenda

Who are the globalists? Simply put, the globalist movement is an alliance based on self-interest of the private international financiers and the royal, dynastic and hereditary land owning families of Britain, Europe and America which over the years have intermarried to create a self regenerating power structure that through lies and deception seeks to control everything and everyone on earth. Through their control of the ability to create money, they are able to exercise control over all the power centers of society including the corporations, the media, culture creation, the educational system, the historical societies, the political system, the military, religion, foundations and other NGOs, medicine, and law. Over time they have extended their network of control to include elites from countries all over the world working towards the same end. Their structure has been illustrated in a variety of different ways by different researchers.

But of course its never a simple matter. Many of those involved are not privy to the inner workings and aims of the core group, rather they think they have power but in reality only play their part as unwitting dupes to enact the real aims of the elites at the heart of the movement. Think of it as rings within rings within rings with only those at the very center understandings its true aims and intent.

Long time researcher into the globalists, their roots and agenda, is G. Edward Griffin. His presentation given at the University of Texas on April 29, 2008 titled “The Quigley Formula – A Conspiratorial View of History as Explained by the Conspirators Themselves” provides a valuable insight into the elite’s plan for continued domination. This discussion is by no means the end all be all in understanding the elite but is a necessary and vital primer on the history and goals of the elite.

Of course, it is important to recognize that this conspiracy of the elite at war with the public is nothing new. In fact, it is thousands of years old. The elite have always sought to advance themselves and enslave the people whom they rule. Sadly, today is no different in that respect. There are, however, a number of very important distinctions between now and then. First, they are much better organized today than they have been in the past as you shall discover.

Second, they have and are using advanced psychological/propaganda techniques which they are applying through the mass media (culture creation – TV, radio, video games, music, fashion) and the educational system. Third, the elite now have an arsenal of technology far more advanced than they tell the general public that they are ­using covertly and will use more overtly in the future to attempt to ensure their dominance. And fourth and finally, given the psychological and technological means and methods at their disposal as they now seek their utopia which, if we don’t stop them, will result in the complete enslavement of humanity over the coming decades once and for all (at least for those of us who unlike them have a conscience). If they are successful, there will be no turning back as they will eliminate those who do not serve them and the state and replace us with new improved genetically  engineered servants.

To fully recognize who they are and what their goals are requires an extensive study of history and everyone is encourage to read their books and do your own research on all topics discussed. On this website we seek to expose them by referencing their own works and those of tireless researchers over the past several decades so that you might come to understand more fully the world in which you live and that you might come to break the conditioning provided by these social engineers and envision for yourself a very different possible world.

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El Reportero is celebrating 20 years

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­by Marvin Ramíre­z­

­­Marvin  J. Ramírez­Ma­rv­in­ R­­a­­m­­­í­r­­­ez­­­­­

Do you remember my friends, that beautiful song of Carlos Gardel, the god of tango that gave life to our grandparents and parents with such deep songs that touched us in the heart, and now brings us memories in these modern times? I am referring to Volver. And I bring the mention of this song to you because it speaks of time.

The time.The time that I have spent working arduously almost day and night, almost seven days a week, mostly alone locked in with very little help to produce El Reportero. It has been a time dedicated with much love, and not wasted, since thousands of people have followed me, that wherever I go, someone tells me, “I always read you… you are doing a great job, keep it up,”

As Gardel says, time is the one that plants all in the temple, although after so many years of physical and mental work, return with the wilted forehead each day and continue doing what you like to do time and again, and see that there have been 20 years that have passed over your life. Volver (return) with the wilted forehead, the snows of the time silver-plated my temple…To feel… that life is a puff, that 20 years is not swum, that feverish the look, wandering in the shadows, seeks you and names you. – Carlos Gardel.

This was one of the most favorite songs of my father José Santos Ramírez Calero, a great journalist and author of my inspiration in journalism, whose passing anniversary is on June 12. He died in 2004. He was 87.

During these last 20 years, two decades, I have seen a lot, but surely, not all. But sufficient as for to have turned El Reportero from being an advertising newspaper of an unjust system that has converted us all practically into slaves, following a school of journalism designed in the University, under the influence of the mainstream media, that obey the line of those who provides the most corporate profits, with the main objective of selling and selling and making people to buy, buy. Positioned at the service of the interests of the large corporations and not of the human race. I have brought to you in recent years information to awake everyone from the daydream that they have accustomed us to follow through their televisions, newspapers and radios, educating us to become zombies, beings without our own reasoning and criticism, and to believe everything they say in their TV shows and newscasts.

I have left the box where we all live under corporate dictates, telling us what is happening in the world through their pre-designed and fi ltered newscasts, that no longer deceive us all, because many of us are already awaking; and know that their goal is to control our mind, convert us into consumers of their products and become obedient beings without objecting.

I have removed myself from the influence of its press, the one that ‘advises’ us in how to spend our harshly earned money, offering us its products – that we don’t need – using known celebrities of the cultural and artistic world to persuade us and win our trust. And one more reason why El Reportero is different, is because I, its director, haven not seen since April of 2009, just like I have not read their newspapers.

­And as you can see, we practice a different journalism, a journalism without a hidden agenda, without the yellow, but simply a benefi cial, sincere, and simple journalism for the people. I think it is important that a newspaper publishes something that the people will keep in their mind to use and to help them make social and political decisions later on.

We are celebrating 20 years thanks to all of you. Continue giving us your support. Thank you.

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