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A national sales tax is coming

by Jeff Harding

The “Center for American Progress” is the best example of an oxymoronish name that I can think of. This is a “progressive” (socialist) “think tank” (another misleading term) lead by John Podesta, a former Clinton Chief of Staff and Obama adviser.

They are coming out with a report on Wednesday that will recommend that:

[T]he administration should consider a tax on consumption, such as a value-added tax [VAT] system similar to that in use in the European Union. Podesta suggested that its impact should be limited to protect lower-income people, who otherwise might be hit particularly hard.

The center’s president and chief executive, John Podesta, who is an Obama adviser, said the administration should consider a tax on consumption, such as a value-added tax system similar to that in use in the European Union. Podesta suggested that its impact should be limited to protect lower-income people, who otherwise might be hit particularly hard.

“As progressives we need to debate the policy merits [of] a range of options, including designing a small and more progressive value-added tax,” Podesta said in a statement Tuesday.

Apparently even they recognize that you just can’t tax the rich enough to cover the Administration’s vast spending programs:

In order to pay for the national health care plan, the Democrats were already planning to impose a tax surcharge of between 1.0 percent and 1.5 percent on those whose income is $350,000 or more. I did the numbers on this and I came up with 300,000 lucky taxpayers who will be burdened with the privilege of paying for our health care (the Democrats say it’s more like 1,000,000 taxpayers, but I think I’m closer). Now it looks as if the regressives agree with me.

The report, which will be released on Wednesday, said the administration can’t rely on taxing richer Americans and companies to reduce the deficit ­to sustainable levels by 2014 because those groups would see 40 percent tax increases.

Guess what else is happening on Wednesday? Just a coincidence I’m sure, but the Volker Panel on How to Raise Taxes Without Anyone Noticing is meeting as well. The meeting will be streamed live starting at 12: 30 if you wish to tune in to their public deliberations.

I predicted in March of this year that the Administration would look to a VAT to raise taxes:

My guess is that it will include non-food retail sales and they will add services (information, professional, technical and scientific, administrative and support, waste management and remediation, but excluding medical services). The services aspect is important because this will skew the tax more to corporations and upper income taxpayers. … [Obama] will structure it so that low-income people will get a refund of taxes paid. The refund will be phased out as income increases. In 2008 retail sales (excluding food) were about $4 trillion. Services in 2007 were another $2 trillion.

Let’s say they need to raise $1 trillion over the next 4 fi scal years, or $250 billion a year. That would require a 4.5 percent national sales tax. In Europe they call this a value added tax (VAT) and the rate in the E.U. is about 15 percent.

Volker already said he thinks the VAT is a good idea. No surprise there; that’s why Obama chose him.

So, let’s see. They want to stimulate consumer spending to revive the economy. How do we get people to part with their money instead of socking it away in the bank? I know: let’s tax consumption. Brilliant.

 

Honduran resistence fractures

by the El Reportero’s news services

Roberto MichelettiRoberto Micheletti

On 28 September cracks appeared in the de factoregime that has been in power since the 28 June coup d’etat against the elected president, Manuel Zelaya.

The de facto president, Roberto Micheletti, was yesterday forced to backpedal on his draconian measures to suspend civil liberties after congress, the supreme electoral court and the main presidential candidates for the scheduled general elections on 29 November protested.

The Micheletti regime is beginning to lose some support from within because of its intransigent refusal to negotiate a resolution and to agree on a compromise that would allow the elections to have international legitimacy.

The international community’s insistence, however, on Zelaya’s restitution to oversee that electoral process looks no closer to being fulfilled.

In other related news:

Honduran Resistance under Siege

The National Front against the coup d’Etat stated that demonstrations for restoring constitutional order will continue Tuesday in the country, despite the suspension of guarantees established by the Constitution.

The decision was confirmed in a release of that vast alliance from people’s organizations, which has reached today its 94th consecutive days against the June 28 military coup.

The de facto government decreed the state of siege this weekend, after authorizing the police and armed forces to disperse protests, practice detentions and close opposition mass media.

The Front agreed during an assembly held Sunday with leaders of the country to stage a march in the capital today, but when rallied they were besieged by riot police groups.

The coup government decreed the state of siege for 45 days in an attempt of impeding popular mobilization, but people also staged protests within the country, ­according to popular leaders’ reports.

De facto President Roberto Micheletti closed Monday Radio Globo station and the television’s channel 36 Cholusat Sur, the capital’s only two media covering anti-coup rallies.

The radio station managed to transmit signals again, through internet.

UN Ready to aid drought-hit Nicaragua

The United Nations readies efforts to aid Nicaragua suffering a drought caused by climate phenomenon El Nino, informed an offi cial source.

According to Alfredo Missair, resident coordinator of the United Nations System in Nicaragua, his agency will supply 20 million dollars of aid.

The official added that he evaluates a series of contingency plans to prevent a food crisis.

The UN intends to cooperate in future emergency situations although, he said, we never work only in cases of emergency but later participate in recovery and later development.

The work of the international agency will be to collaborate and complement actions of the government and later will have to receive support from the international community, indicated Missair.

Arias warns Honduran elections won’t be recognized

Costa Rica’s President Óscar Arias on Tuesday commended the interim president of Honduras for saying he will reverse an emergency decree suspending civil liberties in his country.

But he warned that the results of the Nov. 29 presidential election in Honduras would not be internationally recognized if it is held while interim President Robert Micheletti’s government is in charge.

Arias said Micheletti’s government “has not moved an inch” in negotiations to return ousted President Manuel Zelaya with limited authority.

He called the June 28 coup that propelled Micheletti to power a “dramatic, historical backward step” that needs to be corrected through free and transparent elections under Zelaya’s government.

The history of the U.S. Latino press

by Lauren Alicia Mendoza

­

As the year-long bicentennial celebration of Latino newspapers in the United States comes to a close, its legacy con­tinues to grow and serve a community.

“The bicentennial is a significant event for journalism and we have a responsibility to document our history,” said Félix Gutiérrez, professor of journalism, communication and Mexican American studies at the University of Southern California. “We have deep roots, We should know them and others should know them.”

Even Gutiérrez was surprised by what he discovered in his research. Before the first U.S. Latino newspaper, the first printed news in the Americas was produced in a booklet, “hoja volante,” by Juan Rodriguez in 1541, nearly 150 years before the first English colony newspaper.

And in 1808 the first U.S. Latino newspaper, El Misisipí, was founded in New Orleans.

“I was surprised while digging into all this history,” Gutiérrez said. “Who would have thought the first U.S. Latino newspaper would be in New Orleans?”

Throughout the 200 years, U.S. Latino newspapers played multiple roles. They have been a voice for the people and to the people, whether they were students, women, labor unions or community organizations, said Gutiérrez.

They allowed a Cuban revolutionary leader, José Martí, to call for Cuban independence from Spain in his New York City newspaper Patria in 1892. They allowed people to voice their opinions during the Spanish American War in 1898 through various Latino publications.

During the U.S. war with Mexico in 1846, hundreds of Latino newspapers published stories that differed from what English newspapers were reporting, “reflected their own experiences,” Gutiérrez explained, “…history of America as reported by U.S. Latinos.”

In the late 1930s Latino newspapers emerged as a voice for Latino students, highlighting their achievements and their struggles in education. The Mexican Voice did it for students in Monrovia, Calif.

Then and today, they help immigrants adjust to life in a strange and sometimes

hostile land.

“They’re acquainting people to the U.S. who may not have been welcomed but have always wanted to be a part of American society,” said Gutiérrez.

What began more than 200 years ago in New Orleans has continued to flourish.

“Latino media in all forms, including newspapers, are growing at a time when others are suffering declines,” he said.

This influence was best portrayed in 2006 when Latino newspapers, including the influential Los Angeles daily La Opinión, encouraged readers to “hit the streets” to demonstrate for immigration reform. Nearly 500,000 people did so in Los Angeles.

Commemorating the bicentennial, the University of Southern California is recognizing this milestone of U.S. Latino newspapers on Sept. 30 with Voices for Justice, an event showcasing their legacy.

The opening event will be at 7p.m. at the USC Annenberg Auditorium and will feature a film preview of “Voices for Justice: The Enduring Legacy of the Latino Press in the U.S.” an exhibit presenting Latino newspapers and their stories, followed by a discussion on the future of U.S. Latinos and the media.

“We were looking for a theme that would translate 200 years. Voices for Justice seemed to fit. [Latino newspapers] were all looking for justice in a society that promises justice but doesn’t always give it,” said Gutiérrez.

­The exhibit shows the role newspapers have played in advocating Latin American independence, adapting to U.S. conquest of the Southwest, acquainting newcomers with U.S. ways, serving as a voice for leaders, and using new technologies to reach larger audiences.

Adrianna Venegas, a member of the production team that designed the exhibit, observed, “Latinos are not sleeping giants. We have this strong history that can change the minds of people who still believe that we just started.”

“The exhibit shows that we’re a literate and vibrant community,” Gutiérrez echoed.

While much of its history has been forgotten because it has been recorded in Spanish.” its story is just beginning, he maintained. “There is a continuing fight for freedom of Latino press. Its history is still being made. It will never be done.” Hispanic Link.

(Lauren Alicia Mendoza is a journalism master’s candidate at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles.) ©2009

Getting closer events celebrating Hispanic Heritage Month

by the El Reportero’s staff

Mariachi Orgullo MexicanoMariachi Orgullo Mexicano

The San Francisco Bay Area prepares to celebrate the traditional Hispanic Heritage Month, and the San Francisco Public Library – Mission Branch, proudly presents an event that you won’t forget.

Dance and music from Mexico. Wear a traditional costume, play instruments, learn about Mexican culture, and dance! (Costumes will be provided.), Tango Argentino (1:00 – 2:30), the roots, history, and examples of Argentine tango dance and music will be presented.

Also in attendance will be Maria Medina Serafin (2:30 – 3:00), a bilingual poeta/percussionist and sonera of salsa music; Xiuhcoatl Danza Azteca (3:00 – 3:30), a traditional Aztec dance of ancient Mexico.

All this to happen on Oct. 3, from 12 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. at 24th St. and Bartlett, SF.

Honoring the Maya in the International Year Of AstronomySiguenz

This event is part of the program “El Sol nos Une a Todos”, coordinated by the CSE in California with funding from NASA, with the goals of inspiring and engaging Latino/Hispanic families through community outreach activities and engaging and educating teacher leaders and teachers of Latino/Hispanic students in space and atmospheric sciences.

In celebration of 2009 as the International Year of Astronomy, the October 10th event will feature public talks by experts from NASA and Yucatán, México, dance ­performances from Mesoamerica, an exhibit and demonstration of traditional Maya textiles, educational activities and prize raffles for families, day and nighttime telescope viewing, a social dance, as well as traditional Yucatecan food for sale.

This event is sponsored by Community Maya Astronomy UC Berkeley, NASA and Casa de La Cultura Maya.

A free event with different themes covered through out the day from 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. on Saturday, Oct. 10. For more informationcall 415-404-6982. Pickleweed Center, 50 Canal Street, San Rafael, CA 94901.

At the Pickleweed Center, 50 Canal Street, San Rafael, CA 94901.

More on Hispanic Heritage Month

In conjunction with 20th anniversary of the HIV Clinica Esperaza/Clinic of Hope and the Hispanic Heritage Month and National Latino AIDS Awareness Day, the San Francisco Neighborhood Health Center will also celebrate its own 41st anniversary by holding, “In the Heart of the Mission Gala. There will be lavish culinary reception, celebrity appearance, live auction, world class performance.

This event will take place on Oct. 15, at 6 p.m., at Elan Event Venue, 839 Howard Street, San Francisco.

For reservations please call 415 552-1013 ext. 225,. $125.00 Per Person. Business & Cocktail attire—parking accessible.

Culture Clash is performing its Greek adaptation classic, Peace

by Antonio Mejías-Rentas

3 de la Habana: ¿Cómo es posible que el público de SF no haya ido a ver a los “3 de la Habana” el miércoles 23 de sepiembre? Un grupo tan talentoso, diferente, con ritmo y gracia que llegaron desde Miami. Pero la pequeña audiencia que fue a verlos a Roccapulco se sintió.3 de la Habana: How is it possible that the SF public wasn’t able to go see the “3 de la Havana” on Wed. Sept. 2 at Roccapulco? A talented, different, with gracious rhythm who arrived from Miami. But those who went, were glad they played only for them. (photo by Marvin J. Ramirez)­

ON THE SO CALSTAGE: Two Los Angeles-based theater groups are having important premieres this month.

The Latino Theater Company is staging a world-premiere production of Evelina Fernández’s Solitude at its downtown base, while Culture Clash is performing its adaptation of the Greek classic comedy Peace at an outdoor amphitheater in Malibu.

Inspired by Octavio Paz’s El Laberinto de la Soledad, Fernández’s play is directed by José Luis Valenzuela and has original music by Semyon Kobialka. It is performed by film and TV actor Robert Beltrán and several members of the company, of which Fernández and Valenzuela’s husband-and-wife team—are founding members.

Solitude plays Sept. 9 through Oct. 4 at the Los Angeles Theatre Center—a downtown venue with long-time ties to both the Latino Theater Company and Culture Clash.

The comedy trio made up of writer/performers Richard Montoya, Ric Salinas and Herbert Siguenza adapted Aristophane’s Peace with author John Glore for a production commissioned by the Getty Museum. It is being presented at an outdoor theater at the institution’s Getty Villa in Malibu.

The members of Culture Clash play most of the characters in the modernday ­adaptation of the satirical look at society at war, butthey are joined on stage by actors John Fleck and Amy Hill and by a singing trio led by Mariachi Divas’ Suzanne Garcia. It opened Sept. 10 and runs through Oct. 3.

DOUBLE DUTY: Latin Grammy nominations are announced in Los Angeles the same day the A/ma Awards are given out.

Actors Jimmy Smits and Paul Rodriguez as well as performers Beto Cuevas, Luis Enrique and Luz Rios will be on hand early on Sept. 17 to announce nominees in various recording categories. The latter three are likely to be on the list. Smits and Rodriguez have musical ties, nevertheless: they are partners at the Los Angeles club Conga Room where nominations will be announced. Latin Grammys will be handed out Nov. 5 in Las Vegas. Hispanic Link.

To AMTRAK: No guns, no funds

by the El Reportero’s staff

The Constitution clearly states that everyone who lives under the protection of the U.S. Constitution or that the Constitution is for the protection of everyone, knows that the 2nd Amendment gives everyone the right to bear arms, and of course the right to transport your own gun everywhere within the country if you needed so.

But agencies’ regulations sometimes infringe on these rights.

Currently, under Amtrak train regulations, passengers are prohibited from transporting firearms onboard, whether in checked or carry-on baggage. Problem is, contends Erich Pratt, Communications Director of the Gun Owners of America (GOA), it’s an unrighteous fact that must be changed. However, a Republican Senator Roger Wicker (R-MS), has made a move to do just that.

Erich points out that, interestingly enough, that law-abiding gun owners can transport fi rearms on a commercial plane, as long as they declare the weapon and check it properly with the airline.

Wicker’s proposal, in the form of an amendment to the 2010 Transportation Housing & Urban Devel- opment Appropriations bill, calls for blocking any federal taxpayer money to Amtrak if the railway does not lift its gun restriction and allow its passengers to travel with their guns similar to the way they can on a plane.

Groups condemn and accuse Senator Mark Leno for betrayal

A diverse coalition of environmental and social justice organizations roundly condemned California State Senator Mark Leno for using the power of his offi ce to betray community process and environmental protection, in order to enrich the profi ts of Miami based Lennar Corporation.

The condemnation followed Senator Leno’s authoring, and passage on Thursday, September 10, of Senate Bill 792, which will privatize and destroy portions of San Francisco’s Candlestick Point State Recreation Area, California’s only urban state park wetland and wildlife habitat. Lennar will build luxury condominiums and a yacht harbor development onthe parkland.

Candlestick is the only signifi cant open space and hiking area for residents in the San Francisco Bayview Hunters Point neighborhood which has long been plagued by environmental injustice and toxic emissions from various industries, freeway bypasses, and the contaminated remnants of the U.S. naval shipyard which was once housed there.

Ron Paul gets his hearing on Fed Audit , Friday morning

The House Financial Services Committee has scheduled a full committee on Friday, Sept. 25 a hearing on Ron Paul’s HR.1207 to audit the Federal Reserve. The hearing is slated to begin at 9 a.m. eastern time.

For details and a link to the (eventual) live streaming video of the hearing check out the committee website.

As with many of these committee hearings, the 4schedule is tentative and right now there are no witnesses listed.

“By now we know what the opponents of the bill will argue, but it doesn’t change the fact that the bill has over 290 bipartisan cosponsors and 75 percent of the American people want a Fed audit,” said a written announcement received at NOTICEEl Reportero.

­If the Federal Reserve, a private corportation, is audited, many predict it will be the end of the IRS and the national debt. The United States would stop borrowing money and ultimately end its bankruptcy status that makes her borrow money every year, hence the trillions plus the country owes now to the private bank.

Medical doctor exposes the true deadly content of H1N1 vaccine

BY Dr. Sherri Tenpenny,
DO NewsWithViews.com

Much concern has been generated over the upcoming new swine flu H1N1 vaccines that are being rushed to market. Clinical trials will be short – less than three weeks – and the potential for the addition of toxic oil-in-water adjuvants to be added at the last minute to stretch the vaccine supply is disconcerting. However, the problems with flu shots go beyond current concerns. The new manufacturing process for flu shots, called cell-line technologies, are little understood and have the potential for serious, long-term consequences.

Manufacturing the “regular,” annual flu shot

Each year, between January and March, an FDA advisory panel selects the three influenza strains expected to be in circulation during the upcoming flu season. Admitting that the process is an “educated guess,” the CDC sends the selected seed virus to the FDA for approval prior. Seed virus is then distributed to manufacturers for production.

The annual flu shot contains three viral strains: two type influenza A viruses and one type influenza B. Most commonly, two of the viruses are the same viruses included in the preceding year’s shot. The third virus is typically a new strain in circulation. This is the purported reason for giving the shot each year. The new strain is modified through a laboratory process called reassortment to ensure that it can readily grow in eggs. Once the modification is complete, all three viruses proceed through tricky manufacturing steps to create what goes in that vial.

The cumbersome flu shot production process utilizes up to 500,000 fertilized chicken eggs per day for up to eight months. Hundreds of millions of fertilized eggs become “mini-incubators” for cultured viruses. When the chick embryos are 11-days old, the amniotic membrane (the egg white) is manually injected with a drop of viral-containing solution. Several days later, the gooey viral suspension is centrifuged to remove as much chicken blood and tissue from the solution as possible. Residual egg protein remains within the final vaccine solution and is the reason why persons with an egg allergy are advised against receiving the flu shot.

The entire process, from viral selection to viral harvest, can take up to nine months.[1] With the potential for a pandemic and the Director General of the WHO, Margaret Chan, requesting up to 4.9 billion of flu shots to vaccinate the world,[2] the slow lead time and labor-intensive production process cannot meet the demand for massive quantities of pandemic flu vaccine.

Enter Cell Line Technology

Cell line technologies, the use of cells and tissues for growing viruses found in vaccines, have been used since the 1950s. Examples include calf lymph for smallpox vaccines; African green monkey cells (AGMK cells) for polio vaccines and mouse brain cells for the Japanese encephalitis vaccine. In the 1960s, cells from aborted human fetal tissue, called MRC-5 and WI-38 cells, were developed and are still used for the manufacture of rubella chickenpox, hepatitis A and shingles vaccines.

Since the early 2000s, dozens of human and animal tissues have been investigated for use in viral vaccines, especially for the production of influenza shots. Batches of vaccine can be produced in less than six weeks instead of just one crop per year with eggs, a particularly useful methodology for ramping up production of flu shots.While many of the new cell lines are still considered experimental, cell line techniques have attracted all the major players in the vaccine and biotech industry.

Prior to 2007, cell lines were little used for fl u shots, primarily for logistical reasons: Flu shots made from cells instead of eggs required a complete retooling of existing production facilities. None of the manufacturers were willing to invest the hundreds of millions of dollars and the fi ve to seven years to construct new vaccine plants. But when the threat of the bird fl u pandemic was hyped in 2006, the government opened is coffers and spilled billions of dollars into the pockets of the drug companies, giving them the capital to build new fl u shot production facilities. By 2012, the fi rst cell line factory will be completed in North Carolina. Vaccine giant, Novartis, will then have the capacity to produce 150 million fl u shots per year, making it the number one commercial production plant for infl uenza vaccines and the adjuvant MF-59, in the world.

Cell Cultures: The Next Frontier in Vaccine Production

Several cell lines are currently under investigation. Novartis’ EU-approved fl u shot, Optafl u, was produced using a cell line called Madin-Darby (MDCK), cells extracted from the kidneys of a female cocker spaniel. Dutch giant, Solvay Pharmaceuticals, has been working with MDCK cells since the early 1990s.

Another independent company, Protein Sciences Corporation, has been working on a patented infl uenza vaccine produced from caterpillar eggs. This vaccine strategy, known commercially as FluBlok, isolates a purifi ed concentration of (H) antigen on the surface of an influenza virus and inserts the antigen into a second virus called a baculovirus. The (H)-containing baculovirus is then inserted into insect cells growing in culture. Several clinical trials involving the bug-created vaccine have shown that the antigens elicit a strong antibody response in humans.[3] The vaccine, no doubt, contains snips of insect DNA. This technology is being tested in Europe and is not yet approved for use in the US.

A third type of cell line, called PER.C6 cells, is derived from retinal cells of aborted fetal tissues. The fetal cells are transformed by infecting them with an adenovirus, turning them into “immortalized” cells and the capability to replicate endlessly. By their very nature, these cells are neoplastic (cancer-causing); researchers refer to them as “oncogenic” cells. If tumors are formed when the cells are injected into experimental animals, the cell lines are beyond oncogenic; they are tumorigenic.

A serious concern about whole, live PER.C6 cells is that they are capable of causing tumors when transplanted into the skin of mice. The FDA requires a filtration method to be used during vaccine production that is designed to removes all cells before the final product is packaged. Even though several studies have been conducted to assure vaccine developers that PER.C6 cells do not cause cancer and do not contain stray tumor causing viruses,[4] the risk of the cells making their way into the final vaccine products remain.

The risks of residual retinal DNA and stray viral contaminants from the animal tissues getting into flu shots are real. DNA snips are classified as either “infectious” or “oncogenic” by researchers who worry that the stray DNA is being incorporated into the recipient’s DNA, even thought FDA regulations insist on the “importance of minimizing the risk of oncogenesis in vaccine recipients.” Manufacturers have been instructed to ensure the final vaccine contains less than 1 million residual animal cells and the amount of stray DNA is less than 10 ng. per vaccine.[5] These regulations admit that animal DNA is injected into human babies and adults with every shot.

Is every lot tested for purity and these parameters?

No. Spot-checked lots are sent to the FDA and the FDA trusts the word of vaccine manufacturers that these standards have been met.

Tumorigenic Cells: The Risks Are Known

Since 1998, the FDA and its subdivision, the Centers for Biological Evaluation and Research (CBER), have been drafting regulations to allow use of both oncogenic and tumorigenic cell lines to be used in vaccine production. The FDA is fully aware that the new cell lines, especially the PER.C6 cells, have substantial risks, including the risk of potentially deadly adventitious [stray, outside] viruses making their way into shots. For example, the FDA acknowledges that the SV 40 virus (simian virus 40 from monkey kidney cells) was in the early polio vaccines and acknowledges the risks:

­“The experience in the early 1960s with SV40 contamination of poliovirus and adenovirus vaccines and the continuing questions regarding whether SV40 could be responsible for some human neoplasms [cancers] underscores the importance of keeping viral vaccines free of adventitious agents [viral contaminants].

This is particularly important when there is a theoretical potential for contamination of a vaccine with viruses that might be associated with neoplasia [cancer]…It is unclear whether cell substrates have a greater or lower risk [of contamination] than other types of cells…However, if their growth in tissue culture is not well controlled, there may be additional opportunities for contamination…”[6]

And it gets worse. The same FDA memo goes on to say: “In addition to the possibility of contamination of cell substrates with adventitious viruses…the use of immortalized, neoplastic human cells to develop [vaccines] raises theoretical concerns with regard to possible contamination with TSE/BSE agents.”[7]

TSE is Transmissible Spongiform Encephalopathy, a condition that includes a group of rare degenerative brain disorders characterized by tiny holes in the brain tissues, giving a “spongy” appearance when viewed under a microscope. When this condition occurs in cows, it is called Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy,

commonly known as “mad cow disease.” In a study published in 2004, researchers found that any cell line could potentially support the propagation of TSE agents.[8]

Clearly, CBER is aware and disquieted over the carcinogenic potential of animal cells in vaccines because they require manufacturers to take “every available precautionary step” to eliminate the suspicious cells from the vaccine final product. The FDA also admits concerns about cancer-causing possibility from all types of cell lines. The question begging to be answered is, knowing the potential risks of using cell lines to create vaccines, why is research using cell line technologies allowed to be used at all?

Despite substantial evidence—and even admissions of concern—the FDA appears to be flagrantly ignoring the potential for harm caused by this new cell line technology. The U.S. government have poured billions of dollars into flu shot development and is recklessly approving the use of cell lines for products that have a questionable necessary pandemic vaccine. Let the buyer beware.

California swine flu checkpoint identified

­by Marvin J. Ramirez

­Marvin  J. RamírezMarvin J. Ramírez­­

­Recently El Reportero published an article from www.Infowar.com which told the alarming news that the government is planning to set roadblocks to verify if those stopped had received the H1N1vaccine. As a mean to follow up on the story, we are publishing another story from Inforwar.com, which actually show that those roadblocks are real, and have started being set up in some parts in the U.S.

To keep our readers and the community at large well-informed about this pressing issue, we offer you the benefit to read the article in El Reportero, your favorite newspaper. The public and government agents are free to write to us to dispute its validity.

by Paul Joseph Watson

The testimony of a woman who claimed she was part of a military drill in California centered around setting up roadblocks to check if people had received the H1N1 vaccine has potentially been validated with another report of a swine flu checkpoint near San Diego.

Earlier this month we reported http://www.prisonplanet.com/police-and-military-train-to-intern-swine-flu-vaccine-refusniks.html) on the You Tube video of a woman who claimed to have taken part in an Army exercise which involved setting up roadblocks and checkpoints so authorities could check who has received the swine flu vaccine. Those who have had the shots will be fitted with an RFID bracelet so they can be tracked. Those who have not taken the shot will be offered it there and then and if they still refuse, will be carted off to an internment camp, according to the woman.

Former Kansas state trooper Greg Evensen spoke of similar checkpoints recently, when he told an audience in West Virginia that preparations to enforce mandated vaccinations were being focused around preventing those who haven’t had the shot from traveling.

“I have been told by state troopers across the country that there are plans ready to be implemented that would include roadblocks and choke points as we call them, major interstate junctions around major cities and so forth where the greatest number of people can be held until they prove their vaccination by papers,” Evenson said, adding that permanent RFID bracelets would then be used to identify those who had taken the shot.

“I have been told that the plans would include buses standing by for people at roadblocks that refuse to take the inoculation,” added Evenson, saying that such refusniks would then be taken to military bases and imprisoned.

“Get your shot or get on the bus, that’s what’s coming,” warned Evenson.

Authorities in Boston have already trialed RFID bracelet technology, with the purpose of creating a “vaccination map” charting which people have taken the vaccine and which have not, or “creating a citywide registry of everyone who has had a flu vaccination,” as a Boston Globe article describes. http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2008/11/21/boston_launches_flu_shot_tracking/Participants were given a bracelet with a unique identifier code, exactly as described in the You Tube clip of the woman’s testimony.

We have now received yet another report of a roadblock staffed by armed military personnel centered around checking whether people have received vaccines.

A reader e mailed us a photo (see top of page) and the testimony of his friend who was traveling from California to Arizona after visiting friends. The man was driving through mountains east of San Diego when he came across a roadblock.

“As I neared the border they had a checkpoint set up but not the usual stateline checkpoint,” he writes.

“As I approached I noticed armed military personnel had most of the cars pulled over and there were a lot of people going in and out of a mobile trailer. The people looked confused and some upset. Seeing what was going on made me really nervous,” the man adds.

He was then approached by a women in military fatigues who asked him where he was driving and “something about a vaccination.”

“I got scared and told her I was a state geologist doing field research and because

I was doing so much driving back and forth I had my vaccine on campus. She didn’t say anything for a few seconds and then the car behind me started honking and she got pissed and waved me on. I was so scared!,” he concludes.

The truck with the green stripe seen in the image is undoubtedly a border patrol car, but a blow up of the picture shows men dressed in military cammo, not the usual single color green uniform of border patrol agents. One of the men on the left hand side of the car in front appears to be carrying a large firearm.

Whether this was just another of the sprawling internal checkpoints that are now popping up all over the country is open to debate, but the fact that vaccines were mentioned indicates that this was potentially another drill in preparation for a mass swine flu outbreak. The addit­ion of mobile trailers and unhappy people being forced to leave their cars and undergo some form of involuntary procedure hints that this could have been something even more ominous. For a complete video expose, please see: http://www.infowars.com/california-swine-flu-checkpoint-identified/.

Salvadorian leaders in the U.S. Congress

by Salvadorans in the World

Víctimas y miembros de la comunidad protestan los robos de sus vehículos por la Policía de SF: que son remolcados a los prediós de la compañía de grúas, SF Auto Return a cambio de largas sumas de dinero. (PHOTO COURTESY OF PODER)Victims and members of the community protest the stealing of their vehícles by the SFPD and then stored at the property of the tow company, SF Auto Return, for a ramson of large sums of money. (PHOTO COURTESY OF PODER)

Washington, DC – Near to a hundred Salvadorians congregated on Sept. 24 in Washington for the First Summit of Salvadorian American Leadership, organized in groups, visited approximately 42 U.S. congress people and senators to ask for support for an immigration integral immigration reform that will cover to approximately 12 million undocumented immigrants, of whom 1,000,000 might be or Salvadoran origin.

The Salvadoran activists requested democratic legislators and republicans from both cameras of Congress to check the possibility of introducing an agreement of law that facilitates the securing of permanent residence to more than 220 thousand Salvadorians who are covered under Temporary Protection Status (TPS).

Lincoln Díaz-Balart, republican congressman for Florida, said to representatives and leaders of the Diaspora, that it is difficult to introduce another piece of parallel law, while “ the definitive proposal ” has not been defined on the complex migratory system in the U.S.

In spite of everything, Congressman Lincoln Díaz-Balart and his brother Mario Díaz-Balart, also a representative in the low camera for the State of Florida, they affi rmed that his vote would be in favor of an integral migratory reform that does not break and destroys families.

On his part, Francisco Rivera, President of Salvadorian in the World (SEEM), said that the United States must refl ect on the roll of the immigrants and make distinctions without passion at the time of packing the suitcase of undocumented people who live in this country.

opportunity, the president ofOf the many millions undocumented immigrants who live in this country, the overwhelming majority is hard-working people, not delinquents, who deserve an SEEM said.

Funes asks at the ONU “for the vote of ours brothers and sisters in abroad. “

The President of El Salvador, Mauricio Funes, went up to the podium of the United Nations in New York and there he advocated the vote of Salvadorans abroad.

In addition to the suffrage for the migrantes, the Salvadoran chief spoke about the big problems of his country, in which it highlighted the crime, the insecurity, the emigration, and what his government is doing to try to solve them.

The President of El Salvador, Mauricio Funes, was raised to the podium of the Nations Joined in New York and there he advocated the vote of the Salvadorans in the exterior.

In addition to the suffrage for migrantes, the Salvadoran chief spoke about the big problems of his country, in which it highlighted the crime, the insecurity, the emigration, and what his government is doing to try to solve them.

Funes dedicated a good part of his speech to speak especially about the migratory problem and the escape of talent and labor of El Salvador that has marked alarming records in the last 20 years.

The emigration is “a family diffi cult task to carry and the permanent evidence that we are able to create the necessary conditions to retain our children in house and of that we will never be able manage ourselves individually and collectively as a society if we do not take care of this bad wound,” Fumes said.

About the inclusion of immigrants that the new government is foreseeing, Funes detailed that he is going to get involved thoroughly so that the Salvadorans abroad can vote without regardless the geographical point of residence.

“I have asked the political parties, the intellectuals, academicians and magistrates, to prepare the bases of a political national consensus that pushes the necessary reforms to expand and to strengthen democracy, trans parent the life of the political parties and to improve the performance of the electoral national justice, as well as, and this is an essential point of my request, that guarantee the right to vote of our sisters and brothers abroad,” President ­Funes said.

 

New reconstruction method makes speaking, eating possible after tonsil cancer surgery

by the University of Michigan

ANN ARBOR, Mich. — A new technique for reconstructing the palate after surgery for tonsil cancer maintained patients’ ability to speak clearly and eat most foods, a new study shows.

The technique, developed at the University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center, is described in the September Archives of Otolaryngology – Head & Neck Surgery.

“This is the area that triggers swallowing, that separates the mouth from the nasal cavity. It affects speech and eating – typically, patients have difficulty eating when they have this kind of tumor and undergo surgery. We can remove the cancer, but there are major quality of life issues,” says study author Douglas Chepeha, M.D., M.S.P.H., associate professor of otolaryngology head and neck surgery and director of the microvascular program at the University of Michigan Health System.

Tonsil cancer develops in the back of the throat, which means surgery could include parts of the palate, the tongue and the jaw. Traditional reconstruction efforts have meant taking a large, round piece of tissue to plug the hole left when the tumor is removed. But this impairs the way the palate and tongue function, and does not restore the complex components of the throat that allow a person to speak and swallow.

With the new technique, surgeons first create a tube from the remaining palate by attaching the palate to the back part of the throat, next to where the tumor was removed.

This tube separates the mouth from the nasal cavity and closes during swallowing, allowing pathan half. The patients were followed for an average of five years after the surgery.

Both groups reported few problems with speech. Patients who had more than half their palate removed were more limited in what they could eat and reported some restrictions to eating out in public. Emotional scores were high for both groups, suggesting overall satisfaction with their lives.

“In particular, patients who have less than half their palate removed do very well with this reconstruction. We’re trying to make sure the remaining tongue and palate they have really work. Our goal is to get patients eating in public and back to work,” Chepeha says.

The number of tonsil cancers diagnosed has increased in recent years due Culture Clash presentará su adaptación del clásico griego Peacetients to eat and speak.

Then the surgeons sew up the defect in the base of the tongue to separate the tongue from the rest of the reconstruction. This ensures that the tongue can move, which improves swallowing and speech. The shape of the remaining defect is irregular,

so a template is designed for using transplanted tissue to fill in any other holes left by the surgery.

The tissue used in the reconstruction is a transplant from the arm or another part of the patient’s own body. L-shaped patterns, similar to dress patterns, help the surgeon determine the size and shape of the skin tissue they’ll remove for transplant.

­The study followed 25 patients with tonsil cancer. Patients were grouped based on how much of their palate was removed during surgery: less than half or more to HPV, or human papillomavirus, the virus that is also linked to cervical cancer.

Cancer statistics: 12,610 Americans will be diagnosed with throat cancer this year and 2,230 will die from the disease, according to the National Cancer Institute. The tonsils are one of three locations in which throat cancer occurs.