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Government would launch a false pandemic alarm and then declare martial law

by Marvin J. Ramirez

Marvin  J. RamírezMarvin J. Ramírez

I can’t do anything else but try to share with you my readers whatever information I feel is true about what the federal government is doing to state citizens, who once were sovereign and free people.

The states created the federal government, but we have been made to believe that it is the other way around.

The feds are taking our water, land and most importantly, our freedom, which is guaranteed by the Constitution of this great nation. No longer freedom of speech and movement is a right to this government, which somehow its employees (Congress and else) are more interested in creating laws that imprison us and take our money, than laws that will give us back our freedom and respect our private property – the fruit of out labor.

In this editorial, I am providing my space to an article I just received, and which I think will bring some new light to all of you about what is supposed to be coming. The article was written by Kurt Nimmo, and was first published in Infowars.com.

On his show in Aug. 6, Alex Jones read an email sent by a listener.

“I work at the National Institutes of Health and we received an email about the upcoming International Swine Flu Conference that will be occurring in Washington, D.C. Aug 19 – Aug 21, 2009,” the listener writes. “They’re talking about mass fatality management and continuity of government. They’re going to hit us with a massive biological false flag attack.”

The email contains a PDF attachment of a brochure for the Swine Flu Conference. Breakout sessions detailed on the brochure include discussions on mass fatality planning, business continuity planning, and COOP or Continuity of Operations and Continuity of Government Planning. Additional sessions cover enforced quarantines, mass vaccinations, and how to “control and diffuse social unrest and public disorder.” The brochure is also available for download on the International Swine Flu Conference website sponsored by ISFC New-Fields Exhibitions.

“Top leaders and key decision-makers of major companies representing a broad range of industries will meet with distinguished scientists, public health officials, law enforcers, first responders, and other experts to discuss pandemic prevention, preparedness, response and recovery at the 1st International Swine Flu Conference,” the website

announces.

The conference is further evidence the government plans to launched a false flag attack under the cover of an engineered H1N1 flu pandemic and impose martial law.

Prison Planet and Infowars have covered the story of a manufactured flu pandemic in detail, including: On July 25, the Los Angeles Times reported the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention expects the flu pandemic expected this autumn to kill hundreds of thousands. “The number of potential deaths is much higher than that usually seen in seasonal flu, which kills an estimated 36,000 Americans a year, and is even higher than the nation’s most recent pandemic.” The 1957 pandemic of Asian flu killed 70,000. The 1918 Spanish Flu claimed between 500,000 to 675,000 lives in the United States.

The CDC has announced that it will no longer keep track of the number of people killed by the virus. “Health officials from the CDC said the virus was too widespread to continue counting,” the Digital Journal reported. “Health experts say millions have likely been infected worldwide.”

The U.S. government has bought 195 million doses of H1N1 swine flu vaccine for a possible autumn vaccination campaign, a U.S. federal official told Reuters on July 23.

The U.S. Health and Human Services Department has also contracted for 120 million doses of adjuvant, a compound to stretch the number of doses of vaccine.

In late 2007, the Bush administration issued a “directive” establishing a “National Strategy for Public Health and Medical Preparedness” based onBiodefense for the 21st Century. Prior to this, in May of 2007, the U.S. military had the foresight to “plan for a possible avian flu pandemic that could kill as many as three million people in the United States in as little as six weeks,” according to Yahoo News. Guidelines and “planning assumptions for US military services and combatant commands” were published in a document entitled “Implementation Plan for Pandemic Influenza.”

“Possible scenarios include US troops being called in to put down riots, guard pharmaceutical plants and shipments, and help restrict the movement of people inside the country and across its borders,” Yahoo summarizes.

“The plan envisions fast moving, catastrophic waves of disease that would overwhelm health facilities and cripple the ability of state and local authorities to provide even basic commodities or services.”

The “hidden agenda consists in using the threat of a pandemic and/or the plight of a natural disaster as a pretext to establishmilitary rule” and “suspend Constitutional ­government and allow the Military to intervene in civilian affairs in violation of the Posse Comitatus Act,” author Michel Chossudovsky wrote in 2005.

Climate caused biodiversity booms and busts in ancient plants and mammals

by the University of Michigan

ANN ARBOR, Mich.— A period of global warming from 53 million to 47 million years ago strongly influenced plants and animals, spurring a biodiversity boom in western North America, researchers from three research museums report in a paper published online this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

“Today, the middle of Wyoming is a vast desert, and a few antelope and deer are all you see,” said lead author Michael Woodburne, honorary curator of geology at the Museum of Northern Arizona. “But 50 million years ago, when temperatures were at their highest, that area was a tropical rainforest teeming with lemur-like primates, small dawn horses and a number of small forest rodents and other mammals. In fact, there were more species of mammals living in the western part of North America at that time than at any other time.”

Woodburne and coauthors Gregg Gunnell of the University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology and Richard Stucky of the Denver Museum of Nature & Science examined the records of ancient temperatures and information on the fossil plants and mammals that inhabited North America during the Eocene epoch and found that diversity increased and declined with rising and falling temperatures.

The Eocene began about 56 million years ago with a short period of increased warming, when many modern groups of mammals first appeared in North America, probably by emigrating from other areas. The period the researchers studied, called the Early Eocene Climatic Optimum (EECO), began about three million years later and included a long-term temperature increase regresarcoupled with a long-term rise in diversity.

During that time, as mean annual temperature warmed from about 60 degrees Fahrenheit to 73 degrees Fahrenheit (15 degrees Celsius to 23 degrees Celsius), vegetation changed, with many new plant forms appearing, and mammal diversity increased from 90 genera to an all-time high of 104 genera, the researchers found.

“This is also the part of the Eocene when we see the most new appearances of mammals due to evolutionary innovation, rather than immigration,” said Stucky, who is curator of paleoecology and evolution at the Denver Museum of Nature & Science. Some 30 new rodents, carnivores, primates and artiodactyls (the group that includes sheep, goats, camels, pigs, cows, deer, giraffes and antelopes, among others) ­appeared on the scene.

But then, as temperatures declined again, the number of mammal genera dropped to a low of 84, with the complete loss of many mammalian groups that previously were well represented.

Lower temperatures and a dryer climate continued to influence mammal and plant evolution as savanna habitats began to emerge.

Until this research, the consensus among paleontologists who study North American vertebrates was that climate played only a background role in supporting the evolution of mammals during the Paleocene and Eocene (65 million to 35 million years ago) and that only at the end of the Eocene, when Antarctic glaciations began, did Earth’s climate deteriorate enough to cause observable changes in land mammal diversity.

U.S. military bases in Colombia threatens UNASUR

by the El Reportero’s news services

Hugo ChávezHugo Chávez

Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez denounced that U.S. military bases in Colombia are threatening the Union of South American Nations (UNASUR) bloc. Colombia–EE.UU.: El nuevo pacto A letter Chávez addressed to his UNASUR peers was published on Sunday by El Nuevo Diario of Nicaragua.

In his letter, Chavez said everything is part of a political military plan orchestrated by Washington against UNASUR.

He also warned the military bases pose a threat to the region’s natural resources (oil, mining and the Amazonia forest).

According to Chavez, Colombia’s claims to allow the United States use its military bases and deploy troops in the South American nation are a real threat to peace and to Venezuela’s sovereignty.

Chavez’s letter was published on Sunday in several Latin American newspapers, sources from the Venezuelan embassy in Managua said.

Bolivia’s Morales accuses the right

On 13 August the police tentatively concluded that the two bombs that exploded on 12 August were linked. The terrorist attacks come just as the country is starting to gear up for general elections on 6 December. President Evo Morales lost little time in accusing his opponents on the Right of “hiring Peruvian gunmen” to perpetrate the attacks. This was an allusion to the arrest earlier this week of three Peruvians (and 20 Bolivians) with telescopic rifles in Cochabamba.

Castro to Cubans – “Yes, we can!”

On July 26, at a ceremony in Holguín to mark the 56th anniversary of the attack of the Moncada barracks, President Raúl Castro trotted out well-worn symbols of nationalist pride in an effort to urge Cubans to get to work, above all on the land, in order to confront the serious economic crisis facing the country. He insisted that Cubans together must take responsibility for the situation.

A few days later, in an August 1 speech to the national assembly, he was less conciliatory, condemning an “irresponsible attitude of consumption”, stating that “unsustainable spending” which, he said, made some people “impervious to work” would be pared back and warning that Cuba could not “eat socialism” before it had been fully constructed.

Venezuela to expand education

After the enactment of the Education Bill, Venezuela on Sunday enters a new stage in its drive to guarantee Venezuelans from all walks of life free access to education.

President Hugo Chávez on Saturday signed the bill that had been passed by Parliament early in the morning, despite attempts against it by the opposition, the private school system, the media, and the national Catholic hierarchy.

The bill does not eliminate private schools or prohibit religion teaching, but get it out of the curriculum.

The State can now supervise resources delivered to public universities, a mechanism that does not protect university autonomy and that, according to accusations, favored corruption and embezzled resources.

To guarantee education funds, the law establishes that the State will allot the sector a priority share of the Gross Domestic Product.

Why is Brazil doing so much better than Mexico

The region’s two big economies are facing very different prospects over the next 18 months. Brazil is increasingly confident that it is emerging from the global economic cri­sis while Mexico is far from sure that the worst of its economic crisis is over, despite claims from the government to the contrary. (Latin news and Prensa Latina contributed with this report).

What to do if forced vacinated

by Dr. Russell Blaylock

Dr. Blaylock’s List of suggestions on wow to reduce the toxic effects of the A/H1N1 Vaccine, is as follows:

  1. ­Number one on the list says Dr. Blaylock, is to bring a cold pack with you and place it on the site of the injection as soon as you can, as this will block the immune reaction. Once you get home, continue using a cold pack throughout the day. If you continue to have immune reactions the following day, have cold showers and continue with the cold press.
  2. Take fish oil. Eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA), one of the omega 3 fatty acids found in fish oil supplements, is a potent immune suppressant. If you take high dose EPA you will be more susceptible to infections, because it is a powerful immune suppressant. However, in the case of an immune adjuvant reaction, you want to reduce it. Studies show that if you take EPA oil one hour before injecting a very powerful adjuvant called lipopolysaccharide (LPS), it would completely block the ability of the LPS to cause brain inflammation. Take a moderate dose everyday and more if needed to tame a cytokine storm.
  3. <http://lpi.oregonstate.edu/f-w00/flavonoid.html>Flavonoids are third on the list, namely curcumin, quercetin, ferulic acid and ellagic acid, particularly in a mixture. The curcumin and quercetin20in particular have been found to block the ability of the adjuvants to trigger a long-term immune reaction. If you take it an hour before the vaccination, it should help dampen the immune reactions says Dr Blaylock.
  4. Vitamin E, the natural form that is high in gamma-E will help dampen the immune reactions and reduces several of the inflammatory cytokines.
  5. An important ingredient on the list is Vitamin C at a dose of 1000 mg, taken four times a day between meals. It is a very potent anti-inflammatory and should be taken in a buffered form, not as absorbic acid, says Dr Blaylock.
  6. <http://www.naturalnews.com/002156.html> Also use astaxanthin as it’s an anti-inflammatory. According to Dr Blaylock, fatal reactions to vaccines in aboriginal and African children occurred in those who were deficient in carotinoids, like astaxanthin. It is a good protection against the toxic effects of the vaccine.
  7. Likewise, it was found that children who were deficient in zinc had a high mortality rate. Zinc is very protective against vaccine toxicity. (Do not use zinc mixed with copper however, as copper is a major trigger of free-radical generation according to Dr Blaylock).
  8. Ensure you avoid all immune-stimulating supplements, such as mushroom extracts, whey protein and <http://www.betaglucan.org/>beta-glucan.
  9. Take a multivitamin-mineral daily one that does not contain iron. This multivitamin-mineral is to make sure your body has plenty of B vitamins and selenium. Selenium, said Dr Blaylock, is very important for fighting viral infections and it reduces the inflammatory response to vaccines.
  10. Magnesium citrate/malate 500 mg of elemental magnesium two capsules, three times a day. (This was not mentioned during the show, but was posted at Dr Deagle’s website, <http://www.clayandiron.com/news.jhtml?method=viewnews.id=2103>ClayandIron.com).
  11. What is very important is vitamin D3, which is the only ‘vitamin’ the body can manufacture from sunlight (UVB). It is a neural hormone, not really a vitamin says Dr Blaylock and helps if you are over-reacting immunologically by cooling down the reaction. Similarly, if you are under-reacting, it helps to boost your immune response. In addition it also protects against microorganism invasion. Black people and those in colder climates are particularly deficient, so they will almost certainly require supplementation. Dr Blaylock recommends that following vaccination it will help to keep the immune reaction under control if: i) All children get 5,000 units a day for two weeks after the vaccine and=2 0then 2,000 a units a day thereafter; ii) Adults get 20,000 units a day after the vaccine for two weeks, then 10,000 units a day thereafter; iii) And with that adults should take 500-1000 mg of calcium a day and children under the age of 12 years should take 250 mg a day, as vitamin D works more efficiently in the presence of calcium.
  12. Ensure you avoid all mercury-containing seafood or any other sources of mercury, as the heavy metal is a very powerful inducer of autoimmunity, is known to make people more susceptible to viral infections and will be in H1N1 vaccines.
  13. Avoid the oils that significantly suppress immunity and increase inflammation – such as corn, safflower, sunflower, soybean, canola and peanut oils. 14. Drink very concentrated white tea at least four times a day. It helps to prevent abnormal immune reactions.
  14. Pop parsley and celery in a blender and drink 8 ounces of this mixture twice a day. Dr Blaylock says the parsley is very high in a flavonoid called apigenin and that celery is high in <http://www.dietaryfiberfood.com/antioxidants/flavonoidantioxidant.php>luteolin. Both are very potent in inhibiting autoimmune diseases, particularly the apigenin, so go and plant some parsley in your garden now.

Keep on trucking

by José de la Isla

HOUSTON, Texas – In March, President Obama signed a bill that, among other things, ended a pilot program that allowed some Mexican cargo trucks to travel on U.S. highways. Mexico responded quickly with retaliatory tariffs on 89 agricultural and industrial products from 40 states, affecting about $2.4 billion worth of goods and tens of thousands of jobs.

Under the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), Mexican trucks were to have unrestricted highway passage in Arizona, California, New Mexico and Texas in the beginning and later all highways. Roadblocks, however, of one kind or another have been imposed since 1995 and the Clinton administration. By October 2008, a Department of Transportation study pilot program found Mexican trucks were safer, in some cases, than U.S. trucks. But some U.S. special interests succeeded in pressuring to keep the 15-year foot-dragging going.

Obstructionism is beneath us, of course. But the recession and the retaliatory tariffs have set off an alarm we cannot ignore. A plan appears to be in the works and is undergoing review, according to the Washington Times, for Congress to act and allow Mexican trucks onto U.S. highways.

But there’s more to it than that. It runs deeper.

As the United States pulls slowly and painfully out of this recession, the realization is coming that we overextended our commitments and treasury for dubious purposes. Too often we tried to buy solutions instead of investing in answers. Our 2009 $1.75 trillion deficit tells us we just don’t have the kind of money anymore, for example, to maintain 865 military facilities in 40 countries and U.S. territories.

We do it, retired policy expert Prof. Chalmers Johnson reminds us, and we get nothing in return. Instead, many things we ought to be paying attention to get neglected.

For instance, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) says we need 4,000 new officers and $4 billion in infrastructure and technology improvements for maintaining secure and efficient inland ports of entry.

These directly affect our security and trade.

It might take a while for public attitudes to warm up to the fact that we are increasingly perceived abroad as part of a North American community and not standing alone. For example, some Indian firms are looking to boost their operations in Mexico to serve both Latin America and the United States, especially in the event of new visa restrictions on foreign workers that Mexican IT workers are less subject to.

In another sector, the United States could adopt Canada’s guest-worker formula to avoid our annual farmworker shortage.

How to work together should not have us in a quandary. North American advanced higher-education institutions all should operate with some active collaboration involving a sister college or university in Canada or Mexico.

Take for instance what two Mexican students, Layda Negrete and Roberto Hernández, did while each worked on their doctorates at the Goldman Public Policy

School at UC Berkeley, Examining Mexico’s justice system, Layda prepared a conventional, dry public-policy briefing presentation showing 80 percent of defendants in that country were tried and convicted in court without ever seeing a lawyer. She was hooted by the incredulous audience.

But after she and Roberto teamed up to tell the same story in a 20-minute documentary, political channels took note. The issue soon became part of a national debate.

Eventually, in 2008, an amendment was made to the Mexican Constitution to include

due process rights and presumption of innocence of defendants.

A full-length film by the pair about one of their cases recently debuted in Amsterdam.

“The film is our policy memo,” Roberto says.

Unless we increase norms for civic, political and economic exchanges to influence each other’s countries, how else does change happen?

No matter how we try to make it seem, our economic situation is awakening us to the fact that the North American nations are intertwined in ways we have been reluctant to acknowledge, including driving delivery trucks. Hispanic Link News Service

[José de la Isla’s latest digital book, sponsored by The Ford Foundation, is available free at ­www.DayNightLifeDeathHope.com. He writes a weekly commentary for Hispanic Link News Service.]

Educate yourself to boost achievement in kids

by the University of Michigan

El pintor nicaragüense, Raúl Barrios, muestra una de sus obras artísticas pintadas en el tronco de arbol: a El Reportero en la ciudad de Managua. (photo by Marvin Ramirez)Nicaraguan painter Raúl Barrios, shows to El Reportero one of his paintings made on the trunk of a tree in the city of Managua. (photo by Marvin Ramirez)

ANN ARBOR, Michigan.— With school days just around the corner, a University of Michigan researcher has some advice for parents who want to increase their children’s academic success.

“If you want your kids to do well in school, then the amount of education you get yourself is important,” says Pamela Davis-Kean, a psychologist at the U-M Institute for Social Research (ISR). “This may mean that parents need to go back to school.”

“A growing number of large-scale, long-term studies now show that increasing parental education beyond high school is strongly linked to increasing language ability in children. Even after controlling for parental income, marital status, and a host of other factors, we find that the impact of parental education remains significant.”

Davis-Kean, who is also affiliated with the U-M Psychology Department, directs the ISR Center for the Analysis of Pathways from Childhood to Adulthood, funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF). She is co-editor of the July 2009 issue of the Merrill-Palmer Quarterly, a peer-reviewed journal presenting research sponsored by the Center that employs multiple perspectives to analyze the impact parents have on their children’s educational attainment.

One of the studies in the special issue examines the long-term effects of parental education on children’s success in school and work, beginning when children are eight years old and extending until they are age 48.

Another study examines how language skills and school readiness of three-year-olds are positively affected when mothers return to school.

“In every case, we’ve found that an increase in parental education has a positive impact on children’s success in school,” says Davis-Kean. “And this impact is particularly strong when parents start with a high-school education or less.”

“These findings may be reassuring to parents at a time when many are unemployed or worried about future job prospects,” Davis-Kean says. “They clearly show that in terms of the effect on children’s achievement, it’s more important for parents to get a good education than to get a high-paying job. Of course, the more education you have, the more likely it is that you’ll find a good job, so an increase in education is often leads to an increase in income.”

The reasons behind the power of parental education are not yet fully understood, but researchers think it’s more than just providing a model that children want to imitate. More education might mean that parents are more likely to read to their children, suggests Davis Kean. Or it could be that parents who are in school need to be more organized in order to get everything done, so they tend to create a more structured home environment, with dinner and bed-time occurring at regular times, for example. This kind of predictable, structured environment has a positive impact on child development, many studies have shown.

Creating a more structured environment for children – as opposed to giving them lots of free time – has been getting something of a bad reputation lately, Davis-Kean notes. But she believes that for the vast majority of U.S. children, the value of free time has been exaggerated.

“There’s this idealistic, nostalgic idea that free time gives children a chance to go out and play, and just experience nature,” she says. “But in reality, in today’s world where both parents are likely to be employed outside the home, what free time means for most kids is sitting in front of the TV, playing video games, and generally being bored with no stimulation.

“What’s really valuable for children is being engaged in activities that are supervised by adults. When kids are unsupervised, you see an increase in injuries. And ­summer down-time also has negative infl uences on school achievement in the fall.”

So parents who are going to school themselves should not worry about the effects of arranging more supervised activities for their children, according to Davis-Kean.

Unasur fails to reach consensus over Colombian-U.S. military bases

­­by the El Reportero’s news services

Alvaro UribeAlvaro Uribe

The Union of South American Nations (Unasur) met in Quito on August 10. Its official agenda went all but unreported as it was hijacked by the debate over Colombian-U.S. military bases.

Colombia’s President Alvaro Uribe had spent the previous week on a peripatetic tour of South America in an endeavor to, if not drum up support, win understanding for the accord with the U.S.

Unasur heads of state failed to reach a consensus over the thorny issue, which they agreed to discuss at a special summit in Argentina at a later date. Venezuela’s President Hugo Chávez, meanwhile, once again ratcheted up the tension with Colombia, indulging his taste for sabre-rattling: “the winds of war have started to blow,” he said.

Sonia Sotomayor takes Constitutional Oath

by Erick Galindo

WASHINGTON, D.C.— After 220 years on the outside looking in, Hispanics are celebrating the arrival of their first initiate to the U.S. Supreme Court. By a comfortable 68-31 majority, the U.S. Senate confirmed Aug. 6 President Obama’s nomination of Sonia Sotomayor, an appellate court judge from New York, as an Associate Justice.

Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. administered the constitutional oath in a private ceremony Aug. 8. That was repeated in the Court’s East Conference Room with some five dozen Sotomayor family and close friends as witness. The formal investiture will take place exactly one month later at a special sitting of the nine member Court.

The former litigator, of Puerto Rican background, has dominated public attention for weeks, including four days of sometimes acrimonious hearings in June, in which she answered questions that often focused on a remark she made 10 years ago at the University of California-Berkeley during a speech suggesting one’s personal experiences and outlook can affect decision-making on the bench.

Sotomayor’s personal and legal positions on abortion, gun ownership and eminent domain, and her tenure on the board of the Puerto Rican Legal Defense and Education Fund were areas of intense scrutiny.

She answered 17 questions in reference to her now-famous “wise Latina” speech, which her detractors claimed implied that she was not without bias. Each time, she affirmed she would uphold the Constitution and precedent. Once citing ‘’empathy” as a desirable quality, she avoided suggesting it as a qualification for judgeship.

Shortly after the Senate vote, President Obama than ked its members “for giving Judge Sotomayor a thorough and civil hearing in a timely manner so she can be fully prepared to take her seat when the Court’s work begins this October.” The president added he was pleased with the margin of her support.

The vote was strongly partisan. All 31 opposing votes came from Republicans. Nine GOP members supported it.

Senator Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.) was not present to vote, but he previously expressed his support for confirmation. Kennedy is convalescing after surgery for a brain tumor.

The Republican opposition drew criticism in many Latino circles over how race, ethnicity and gender issues drew more attention than did judicial qualifications. Other speculation centered on whether a wall was going up between the Republican Party and Hispanics.

“That so many from one party were reluctant to recognize Judge Sotomayor’s impressive qualifications will be something our community is likely to remember,” said David Lizarraga, chairman of the Hispanic Chamber of Commerce.

Democrats accused Republicans of ignoring the judge’s substantial record. Minutes before the full Senate vote, Sen. Patrick Leahy of Vermont urged Republicans to vote their ~conscious.” He denounced any suggestion that Sotomayor’s ethnicity or gender would play any role in her rulings, and called the insinuation “demeaning to women and all communities of color.”

Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund president Thomas Saenz agreed with Senate Democrats, saying, “Her eminent qualifications and wise committee testimony shattered a glass ceiling. This tremendous accomplishment is marred only by the fact that so many senators chose to elevate partisanship and political pandering over principle. History – and the fast-growing community of Latino voters – will judge these senators harshly.”

Both Hispanic senators, Mel Martinez (R-Fla.) and Bob Menendez (D-N.J.), voted in favor of confirmation.

“This is a moment at which a young Latina, sitting in an elementary school classroom, will fully understand that anything is possible in this amazing country,” Menendez stated.

Organizations throughout the country held confirmation parties. In Washington, D.C., rallies on the day before the Senate vote were held as major Hispanic organizations came together to show PMsolidarity.

“It is a date that will quickly take hold in the memories of millions of Hispanic Americans of all ages and backgrounds,” National Council of La Raza President Janet Murgufa said. “Finally, our community has representation on the highest court in the land. For that reason and many others, this vote matters to Latinos and it matters to our country.”

The Supreme Court was formally established in 1789. Alabama Republican Jeff Sessions, ranking member of the Judiciary Committee, said that the vote against Sotomayor was a stance against Obama and an indicator of possible obstacles for future court nominees. Republicans cited Sotomayor’s perceived bias against gun rights as a major factor in their votes. With a pending gun-rights case on the Court’s docket, Sotomayor refused to state a specific opinion on the matter, saying only that the Court had recognized the right to bare arms as an individual right.

­Libertarian Party spokesman Donny Ferguson called the confirmation “a defeat for individual property and gun rights.”

Several key pro-gun senators voted in favor of confirmation.

Among them were Democrats Mark Warner, Virginia; Tim Johnson, South Dakota; Max Baucus, Montana; and Republicans Lamar Alexander, Tennessee, and Lindsey Graham, South Carolina. All have an “A” rating from the National Rifle Association.

Police Gazette on the border

by José de la Isla

HOUSTON, Texas – During one week in July, the news from the U.S.-Mexico border region read like the Police Gazette. For younger readers unacquainted with that publication, it was a tabloid circulated from 1845 until 1982. It mostly ran crime stories. Each testosterone-toned issue featured murder, mayhem, the Wild Wild West, prostitutes and burlesque, sometimes touching the edges of the obscene.

A lot of coverage from the U.S.-Mexico frontera comes out equally grotesque, giving the impression that little else is going on. The portrayal of life on the borderline makes the more timid among us want to retreat into our tortoise shells.

Take the final few days of July. Mexican authorities arrested alleged immigrant smugglers near Tecate, Mexico, in connection with the death in Campo, Calif., of U.S. Border Patrol agent Robert Rosas. Four guns, four suspects, reported the federal police.

A day earlier, the U.S. Consulate in Ciudad Juárez, Mexico, across the border from El Paso, Texas, issued a travel advisory in the aftermath of the killing of “Benji” LeBaron and his brother-in-law, “Wicho” Widmar, a martial arts practitioner.

They died fighting off LaBaron’s attackers.

LeBaron had become an outspoken anti-crime activist following the May abduction for ransom of his 16-year-old brother Eric (who was eventually released). The three resided in a Mormon enclave of 1,000, in Chihuahua, a bustling state of 3.5 million.

As many as 100,000 U.S. citizens are estimated to live in Juárez, the state’s largest city.

Official fumbling and corruption goes with the daily headlines that reveal how the Mexican government is trying to dismantle organized drug-trade syndicates in Chihuahua and its other border states, with lots of casualties in both camps.

The Mexican newsweekly Proceso splashed evidence revealed in Federal District Court in Washington, D.C., showing that both Mexico’s President Felipe Calderón and the administration of his predecessor Vicente Fox were provided spy information about the whereabouts of leaders of Los Zetas, the henchmen of the Gulf Cartel, but failed to act on the intelligence.

The new revelation is reported as part of the history-making prosecution of 19 Los Zetas and Gulf Cartel members for the production, trafficking and distribution of drugs.

Case No. 08-057 de-scribes how cartel leaders, acting like corporate executives, organize and direct violent acts against Mexican law-enforcement officials and rival drug traffickers, executing those who interfere with the distribution of marijuana and cocaine.

Elsewhere, Newspaper-Tree.com is covering the courtroom allegation by El Paso police officer Michael Short that Hudspeth County Sheriff Arvin West stopped him and other cops at a roadblock and forcibly took them to a substation when they were on a stakeout.

Sheriff West is quoted in the complaint as saying, “Whatever you were working on is f****d up now, and you’re free to leave.”

The Police Gazette has had many imitators over the years. As the granddaddy of supermarket tabloids, it was a great contributor to the tradition of yellow journalism. Perused by suits at newsstands and soaked up by young boys at barbershops, it contributed greatly to the idea of civilization run amok, especially during Prohibition, during the Depression and in war years. There was plenty of truth in its articles but one page does not a novel make.

If murder-and-mayhem is all you read or hear about the border, that picture doesn’t square with the astonishingly realistic, less salacious assessment — and even hopeful future — found in the book by Fernando Romero, “Hyper-Border: The Contemporary U.S.-Mexico Border and its Future.” Hispanic Link.

You can choose. Is it Police Gazette or is it Hyper-Border?

[José de la Isla’s latest book is now available free in digital version at www.DayNightLifeDeathHope.com. He writes a weekly commentary for Hispanic Link News Service and is author of The Rise of Hispanic Political Power (2003). E-mail him at ­joseisla3@yahoo.com] © 2009

The “Second American Revolution” has begun

­by Marvin J. Ramirez

Marvin  J. RamírezMarvin J. Ra­m­írez­

­NOTE FROM THE EDITOR: I just received the following article, which I believe is part of the good things we get from the alternative media online, as opposed to the distracting, entertaining news offered by FoxNews, CNN, PBS, NBC, ABC, Univision, and the likes, which day and night bombard us with information that have nothing to do with reality or for the advancement of our communities.

The world is changing, but not for our own good, rather for the rulers of the world: the corrupt and criminal banking elite that keep us in poverty and are now ready to rule the world in a New World Order to enslave us all. Anyone who wishes to contest with evidence that this is not true, is welcome to write to us. —

The “Second American Revolution” has begun.

KINGSTON, NY, 12 August 2009 — The natives are restless. The third shot of the “Second American Revolution” has been fired. History is being made. But just as with the first two shots, the third shot is not being heard.

America is seething. Not since the Civil War has anything like this happened.

But the protests are either being intentionally downplayed or ignorantly misinterpreted. The first shot was fired on April 15, 2009. Over 700 anti-tax rallies and “Tea Parties” erupted nationwide. Rather than acknowledge their significance, the general media either ignored or ridiculed both protests and protestors, playing on “tea bagging” for its sexual innuendo.

Initially President Obama said he was unaware of the tea parties. The White House later warned they could “mutate” into something “unhealthy.”

Shot #2 was fired on the Fourth of July, when throngs of citizens across the nation gathered to again protest “taxation without representation.” And as before, the demonstrations were branded right-wing mischief and dismissed.

The third volley, fired in early August, was aimed point blank at Senators and House members pitching President Obama’s health care reform package to constituents.

In fiery town hall meetings, enraged citizens shouted down their elected representatives. It took a strong police presence and/or burly bodyguards to preserve a safe physical space between the politicians and irate townspeople.

The White House and the media have labeled protestors “conservative fringe elements,” or as players in staged events organized by Republican operatives that have been egged on by Fox news and right-wing radio show hosts.

In regard to this latest wave of outbursts, health industry interests opposed to any reform are also being blamed for inciting the public. But organized or spontaneous is not the issue.

While most protestors exhibit little grasp of the complex 1,000-page health care reform document (that nary a legislator has read either), their emotion is clearly real and un-staged.

Rightly or wrongly, the legislation is regarded as yet another straw on the already overloaded camel’s back. A series of gigantic, unpopular government-imposed (but taxpayer-financed) bailouts, buyouts, rescue and stimulus packages have been stuffed down the gullet of Americans. With no public platform to voice their opposition, options for citizens have been limited to fruitless petitions, e-mails and phone calls to Congress … all fielded by anonymous staff underlings.

Now, with Congress in recess and elected representatives less than a stone’s throw away, the public is exploding. The devil is not in the details of the heath care reform, the devil is the government mandating health care. Regardless of how the plan is pitched or what is being promised, to the public the legislation is yet another instance of big government taking another piece out of their lives and making them pay for it; again telling them what they can or cannot do.

Though in its early stages, the “Second American Revolution” is underway. Yet, what we forecast will become the most profound political trend of the century – the trend that will change the world – is still invisible to the same experts, authorities and pundits who didn’t see the financial crisis coming until the bottom fell out of the economy.

Trend Forecast: Conditions will continue to deteriorate.

The global economy is terminally ill. The recession is in a brief remission, not the early stages of recovery.

Cheap money, easy credit and unrestrained borrowing brought on an economic crisis that cannot be cured by monetary and 4fiscal policies that promote more cheap ­money, easy credit and unrestrained borrowing.

Nevertheless, Washington will continue to intervene, tax and exert control. Protests will escalate and riots will follow.

Fourth Shot of the “Second American Revolution”: While there are many wild cards that could light the fuse, The Trends Research Institute forecasts that if the threat of government-forced Swine Flu vaccinations is realized, it will be the fourth shot. Tens of millions will fight for their right to remain free and unvaccinated.

Publisher’s Note: The power of the Internet and new technologies is inexorably

fermenting the “Second American Revolution.”

However widespread and emotionally charged, had the tax rallies, tea parties and healthcare reform protests occurred in years past, they might have been covered by the local media, but might not have made national headline news and thus would have died stillborn.

Now, with the ubiquitous camera-equipped cell phone, universal access to YouTube, and millions of twitters and tweets, the uprisings cannot be ignored, contained, managed, spun or edited down.

The revolutionary fervor will prove contagious.

Can anything stop it?

Trend Forecast: Before the momentum of the “Second American Revolution” becomes unstoppable, it could be derailed through some false flag event designed to deceive the public, or a genuine event or crisis capable of rallying the entire nation behind the President. In a worst-case scenario, according to Trends Research Institute Director, Gerald Celente, “Given the pattern of governments to parlay egregious failures into mega-failures, the classic trend they follow, when all else fails, is to take their nation to war.”

A false flag attempt, a genuine crisis, or a declaration of war, may slow the momentum of the “Second American Revolution,” but nothing will stop it.