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Is this the way Israel defends herself

The true face of the Israeli attacks

No more separation of families, stop the raids, asked demonstrators at the steps of the SF City HallA woman holds a child after the Israeli airfo-rce bombared her neighborhood. At left. children murdered by Israeli bombs.

To understand the why of the attacks of Hamas and of the war that the Palestinians wave against the state of Israel it is necessary to go back to the time of the creation of the country called Is-rael. Since then the Palestinians have been displaced from their land and submitted to unjust and inhuman conditions, and all this with the collaboration of the United States. Israel is nuclear superpower and serves as a base to the U.S. expansionism in her conquest of the Arabe petroleum.

The occupation of Palestinian land is why Hamas won’t quit its attacks to Israel,and only the U.S. can stop the genocide.

Mexican warlock predicts U.S. troops on border

­by the El Reportero’s news services

MEXICO CITY – Mexico’s self-proclaimed “Grand Warlock” says the United States will pull troops out of Iraq in 2009 and send them to the border with Mexico in an attempt to expand its territory.

The prediction from Antonio Vazquez comes with a word of warning though: his record of projecting the future is spotty at best.

Also in Mexico City, Mexican agents are accused of migrant abuse.

Mexican immigration agents allegedly locked a group of Central American migrants in a trailer after they refused to pay a bribe, the country’s National Human

Rights Commission said Wednesday.

The commission is asking for a government investigation into the alleged abuse committed Feb. 14, 2007, against 10 Guatemalans and two Salvadorans, including a minor.

The commission said in a statement that the agents demanded each migrant pay $110 in exchange for being allowed to continue their illegal journey to the United States.

When the migrants refused,the agents allegedly locked them in a tractor-trailer for six hours. The commission said many were at the point of passing out.

Immigration officials could not be reached for comment.

Mexico’s Interior Secretary, which oversees the National Immigration Institute, promised to investigate and take action against the agents if necessary.

Mexico Zapatista leader slams Obama over Gaza silence.

SAN CRISTOBAL DE LAS CASAS, Mexico (AFP) – Mexico’s Zapatista rebel leader “Subcomandante” Marcos slammed U.S. president-elect Barack Obama for failing to speak out on Israel’s bombing of Gaza, in a speech on Friday marking the 15th anniver
sary of his rebellion.

The masked leader of the Zapatista Army of National Liberation — which rose up in arms in Chiapas,southeast Mexico, on January 1, 1994 — also critized Obama’s support for “the use of force” against Palestinian people. Obama has kept a low profile on the Gaza confl ict, stressing that there is only one president at a time ahead of his inauguration on January 20.

Marcos also criticized Mexican President Calderon for his clampdown on drug violence, with the deploy ment of more than 36,000 soldiers countrywide so far failing to stop more than 5,300 deaths in drug-related attacks last year.

Funes in pole position to claim historic win in El Salvador.

The presidential candidate for the left-wing opposition Frente Farabundo Martí para la Liberación Nacional (FMLN), Mau- ricio Funes, holds a commanding lead over his rival from the Alianza Republicana Nacionalista (Arena),Rodrigo Avila, with only three months to go until the presidential elections.

The FMLN has never been in such a good position since it took shape as a political party in 1992 shortly after the end of the civil war. Two separate polls released in mid December show Funes winning the presidential elections on 15 March by a comfortable margin.

Raul Castro says hopes too high for Obama.

U.S. President-elect Barack Obama has awakened “excessive hopes”that the United States will change, Cuban President Raul Castro said in a television interview, reported Reuters.

Obama has said he wants to ease the 46-year-old U.S. trade embargo against Cuba and meet with Cuban leaders as fi rst steps toward normalizing relations with the Communistrun island 90 miles off U.S.shores.

“Because even if he’s an honest man – and I believe he is — a sincere man — and I believe he is — one man alone cannot change the destiny of a country and much less the United States,” said Castro.

Boxing

At TBA, Montreal, Canada

  • NEW Lucian Bute (22-0) vs. Librado Andrade (27-1) (The Ring Magazine #3 Super Middleweight vs. #4) (IBF Super Middle weight belt).

November 22 (Saturday), 2008 At The Stadthalle, Westerburg, Germany

  • Roman Aramian (25-7) vs. TBA.
  • Mario Stein (19-4) vs. TBA
  • Yakup Saglam (14-0) vs. TBA.

December 6 (Saturday), 2008 At TBA, Las Vegas, NV

  • ­(PPV) Oscar De La Hoya (39-5) vs. TBA (The Ring Magazine #3 Jr. Middleweight vs. Unranked).

Richardson and 49,999,999 other hispanics

by José de la Isla

WASHINGTON, D.C. — That Barack Obama named New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson as Secretary of Commerce-designate hardly comes as a surprise. The announcement was like his calling former Federal Reserve chairman Paul Volcker back into service.

In a role worthy of Richardson’s talents, Obama’s economic team seems to move toward getting the economy’s fuel — credit — flowing again. Richardson’s role will be to transform the old business economy into a new one.

Judging how Richardson led in New Mexico, and the not-so-minor green revolution he sparked, he will bring to the administration a tonic it lacks — success in building coherence.

But this new administration might be creating an insincerity gap. Richardson, the nation’s lone Hispanic governor, is an offering to the nation and not completely a gesture to leaders reciprocating for the role Latinos played in the election.

Even marching out the White House appointments of Cecilia Muñoz, a MacArthur fellow and VP at National Council of La Raza, to head Intergovernmental Affairs and Louis Caldera, former Secretary of the Army, as director of the White House Military Office looked like a clumsy attempt at appearing, instead of being, responsive.

Those Hispanics already doing transition work or identified for possible roles in the new administration have impressive credentials. One in the policy bunch is even a Nobel laureate. But the Obama team seems asleep at the wheel about this, giving the impression snobbery is more important than engagement — pretending they all did not attend the same prestigious schools, and finding difference in sameness.

The naming of Rahm Emanuel as chief of staff was possibly a pragmatic move. But still, he is the guy who warned Democrats to run away from the immigration issue in 2006.

At the time, 104 members of the House anti-immigration reform caucus were running amok and wanted to criminalize undocumented immigrants. Their antics not only slapped 50 million Hispanics in the face, they got us as a nation into a human rights mess promoting values against our own Constitution.

If Obama is going to posture himself as an FDR-type who counsels there’s nothing for the public to fear but fear itself, then we have to recognize that confronted with fear, Emanuel told his colleagues to run.

The people spoke in 2006, and ten of those congressional zealots were defeated.

And in 2008, two of their leaders, James Sensenbrenner and Tom Tancredo, decided not to run. Fourteen hard-line anti-immigration Republicans of that gang were voted out of office.

“Immigration” like “the economy” and “health care” are not just issues. They are bellwether values requiring sustained attention. They are measures by which we judge whether we have a decent, well-run nation. The negative lesson comes from the Bush administration, which went into intellectual and policy bankruptcy before the housing, banking and finance dominos fell.

Senate majority leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) said in late November that his chamber was taking up the difficult immigration and health care issues in the next session. This is sending a message.

So far, the Obama government lists immigration as just one among 24 issue categories on its website. This is not what priority attention looks like. What it needs to heed is 67.

That’s the percentage of Latinos who voted for Obama. It’s not that Obama owes them. It’s that neither he, nor his people, can afford to snub them.

Now, put that ruggula in your pipe and smoke it.

­[José de la Isla, author of “The Rise of Hispanic Political Power” (Archer Books 2003), writes weekly commentaries for Hispanic Link News Service. Email: joseisla3@yahoo.com]. ©2008

The sky is falling but no one seems to be concerned

by Marvin J. Ramírez

Marvin J. RamirezMarvin ­Ramírez­

Merry Christmas?

Should we sing, jingo bell, jingo bell, or Merry, Merry Christmas, and pretend that nothing is happening to the economy?

You may look at Sock It To The Holidays, a cartoon video not very funny, that tells us things we already know, in the form of cartoons.

“Dow, 401k might all go, and while you and I get squats, billionaires get help, strippers on a yacht, and banks want a pass, then the tab comes to me and you… the economy is crap, so I would rather take a nap. We were promised change and opportunity. When you gonna knock, in the coming year? As of today, Merry, merry, merry Christmas!

How many stores, GM is broke, the other two as well, welcome to hell, where will it end, but we still have Angie and Brad for the middle class, Britney is back!” ­http://www.brasschecktv.com/page/493.html.

We see them on ET, at the supermarkets. North American people love entertainment.

So much they don’t care when someone tells them to wake up from their dream. They respond with a, “that’s a conspiracy theory.” And this is because they expect CNN and Fox News to say it first. Otherwise then won’t hear what you want them to hear.

The sky is falling, but no one seems to care, because, as long as the soap operas and football games keep showing on their TV screen, what’s falling is the hair from your head.

Read The Revolution, A Manifesto, by Ron Paul, who retells us how much is true and how much we have been lied to. A great book for those who care.

Politicians ask for more cops, while the jails ask for more space. The schools ask for more teachers, but students don’t make money to the state, so they hire more police instead. As our youth find themselves without a proper training and nothing to do, they find amusement in the flicks Hollywood makes. They teach themselves how to reenact crime scenes from the screen, to practice it in the real life. So politicians ask for more cops, because the more inmates are trapped, a bigger dividend will come back to the city’s banks.

The government is expanding, taxes are increasing, more senseless wars are being planned, inflation is ballooning, and our basic freedoms are disappearing, Paul explains in his book.

I also read about the out of control foreign debt, enriched bankers and big business…made it easy to loot the country…and turned a rich country into a poor one, wiping out its middle class in the process. Sound familiar?

The corruption of the Banks(ters), controlled by the World Bank/IMF, is all over the world, now we are living it here in the united States of America.

And all this economic mess that we are seeing now, was all done on purpose, according to internet sources. The following is one of those excerpts I found, and it explains some of it.

“When George W. Bush was named president by the Supreme Court in December 2000, the stock market had begun to decline with the bursting of the dot.com bubble.

­“Signs of recession had begun to show in early 2001. The stock market crashed after 9/11. The U.S. invaded Afghanistan in October 2001 and Iraq in March 2003.

“Mortgage banks begin falsifying mortgage applications to show more borrower income than borrowers actually possessed.

“Mortgage brokers fed the growing bubble by telling people they should buy now because housing prices would keep going up. State and local governments began to cut budgets and jobs.

“Crash of the U.S. financial system hit by September 2008. The crash of the U.S. economy began to reverberate around the world with bankers and the IMF warning of an onrushing global recession.”

Wake up people, there is no time to waste. Get educated to free yourself. Marry Christmas and Happy New Year!

Going outside – even in the cold – improves memory, attention

by the University of Michigan

ANN ARBOR, Mich. — Go outside. It helps improve your focus– even when it’s cold outside.

University of Michigan psychology research in the December issue of Psychological Science explored the cognitive benefits of interacting with nature and found that walking in a park, no matter whether it’s warm outside or a cold winter’s day, or even viewing pictures of nature can help improve memory and attention.

U-M psychology researchers Marc Berman, John Jonides, and Stephen Kaplan found memory performance and attention spans improved by 20 percent after people spent an hour interacting with nature by simply going for a walk in a park.

Researchers think the findings could have broader impacts in terms of helping people who may be suffering from mental fatigue. Interacting with nature has also been shown to improve cancer patient recovery time, memory and attention as well.

“Interacting with nature can have similar effects as meditating,’’ Berman said.

In addition, “People don’t have to enjoy the walk to get the benefi ts. We found the same benefi ts when it was 80 degrees and sunny over the summer as when the temperatures dropped to 25 degrees in January. The only difference was that participants enjoyed the walks more in the spring and summer than in the dead of winter.”

The distractions and bustle of the city streets from traffi c lights, to people crossing streets and coming out of buildings all stimulate people but seem to eat up attention and memory while the peaceful ease of nature seems to have a calming, regenerative effect on people.

Berman has worked closely with U-M psychology researcher Stephen Kaplan, who has developed a theory that if people interact with nature, it allows them to rest and deliberate and aids their cognitive processes.

Kaplan and his wife, Rachel, also a psychology researcher, argue that people are far more likely to be satisfied with their lives when their environment supports three basic needs: the ability to understand and explore, to feel they make a difference, and to feel competent and effective. Berman decided to test that theory by sending study participants on walking routes around Ann Arbor.

Participants walked on an urban route down Huron avenue and also on a route in U-M’s Matthaei Botanical Gardens and Nichols Arboretum, taking in nature.

When participants walked in the Arboretum they improved their shortterm memory by 20 percent, but showed no improvements when walking down Huron avenue.

The researchers also tested the same theory by ­having subjects sit inside and look at pictures of either downtown scenes or nature scenes and again the results were the same: when looking at photos of nature memory and attention scores improved by about 20 percent, but not when viewing the urban pictures.

For more on Berman, visit: http://www.lsa.umich.edu/psych/people/directory/profiles/?id=bermanm.

For more on the U-M Psychology Department, visit: http://www.lsa.umich.edu/psych/flash.asp.

For more on the journal Psychological Science, visit: http://www.psychologicalscience.org/.

Meeting with the new supervisor of District 9

by Garrett McAuliffe

Mayor Gavin Newson up turns the first dirt at the site of the Transbay Transit Center. He stands among supporters of the project: . The Transbay Transit Center will be a new home for 2,600 families, it will serve more than 100,000 transit passengers per day, and will have parks and a retail main street. (Photo by DaniaPatriciaMaxwell)Mayor Gavin Newson up turns the first dirt at the site of the Transbay Transit Center. He stands among supporters of the project. The Transbay Transit Center will be a new home for 2,600 families, it will serve more than 100,000 transit passengers per day, and will have parks and a retail main street. (Photo by Dania Patricia Maxwell)

Despite his seeming accessibility, strong grassroots support and involvement in a highly visible, competitive election, many residents of the Mission District and Bernal Heights still consider the newly elected member to the Board of Supervisors David Campos, a relatively unknown figure politically.

“Whereas (Eric) Quezada and (Mark) Sánchez had strong ties as community organizers, Campos seems to have come out of nowhere,” said Steven Pazarek, who has lived on the south side of Bernal Heights for the past six years, referring to the other two strong contenders who ran against Campos to fill the supervisor seat for District 9.

­Many in the neighborhood can outline his inspiring biography: After entering the country from Guatemala with his family at the age of 14, undocumented and speaking only Spanish, ­Campos eventually earned scholarships to study at Stanford and then Harvard Law, before becoming involved with local politics as a city attorney and, more recently, as a police commissioner and member of San Francisco’s Democratic Central Committee.

But beyond background facts, some in the neighborhood still wonder exactly where he fits along the city’s left-leaning political spectrum.

“City government has to work for everyone, including those who have the least, and I think oftentimes those are the people who are forgotten,” Campos said to El Reportero. “That’s how I see the essence of the progressive movement, and I feel I am a part of that and proud to be a part of that.”

He elaborated, “That said, I think, especially in these tough budget times, you have to transcend the labels while remaining true to your core principles. We need to reach out to people who may not agree with us and figure out a way of working together to really address what we are facing, which is a crisis, an economic crisis, that is now affecting San Francisco. We have to figure out a way how we, as an elected family, can work together to collectively address that.”

The worsening state of our economy also adds concern to one of David Campos’ priorities, improving public safety.

“We know that crime can increase during tough economic times,” he explained. In Campos’ opinion, understanding the systemic causes of crime, social and economic, is vital to addressing this issue.

“I think why people get in trouble, especially young people, is that they don’t have much going on in their lives,” he said. “If you give them something to do, I think that that will go a long way to keeping that person out of the criminal justice system. That’s why we need to invest in programs that give, especially young people, job opportunities, internship opportunities.”

Campos highlights the need for community involvement and connection in any proposed programs, an emphasis that extends to his vision of a more engaged, receptive police force.

But some residents have expressed doubts regarding any belief that police can have a significant role in improving public safety.

“I don’t think increased police presence alone has ever had much effect in reducing violent crime in a neighborhood,” said Antonio Román-Alcala, an urban gardener with a background in community organizing and youth projects, who grew up and continues to live in the Mission.

While recognizing that public safety is not just a policing issue, Campos does advocate increased foot patrols and closer connections and understanding between police and the community.

Campos remains particularly proud of his efforts while police commissioner to implement more cultural competency programs for officers.

“We had police talk with someone who was undocumented and explain the experience of being someone undocumented in the Mission, and the language barriers that go with that,” he explained, adding, “I think new officers are receptive.”

While training in cultural diversity is important, Campos ­emphatically believes city resources should not be devoted to enforcing federal criminalization of undocumented workers.

“Our status as a sanctuary city helps to make our city safer,” he said.

“It’s an issue that I think can define who we are as a city and I think we need to protect our sanctuary status. That’s going to be a priority for me, making sure that the rights and interests of immigrants in this city are respected and are addressed.”

One such right, which Campos supports, would allow undocumented immigrants to become eligible for driver’s licenses.

In response to questions regarding the continued confiscation of vehicles in the city for the sole offence of not holding a license (an infraction that calls for a 30-day impound and often costs upwards of $1500 to retrieve), Campos cited the unfairness of such a policy that regularly targets immigrants.

The law regarding vehicle impounds, which El Reportero has been focusing on for the past month, has also faced increasing scrutiny recently over objections of unreasonable seizure.

In light of these objections, Los Angeles and a few counties in the state have placed a moratorium on confiscations.

“That’s one issue I’m going to look into,” Campos said. “We feel that it’s consistent with the spirit of the sanctuary ordinance for us to place a moratorium as well. To the extent there’s any legal room, we should do that.”

This subject will be covered more deeply in a series of articles over the next few weeks. El Reportero will continue to engage David Campos and other supervisors, sharing statistics and working towards a more reasonable and just policy regarding the local enforcement of this law.

Ecuador crisis takes new turn

by the El Reportero’s news services

President Rafael Correa made a series of announcements on Dec. 12 and 13, which suggests that his government will become even more unpredictable. Until this series of announcements Correa had seemed to be shaping political developments. Now he looks less in control and perhaps less assured of having a congress elected.

A dose of realism

Brazil under the centre left administration of President Lula da Silva has positioned itself as the voice of the developing world and a force for the common good on the international stage.

However, the country’s growing economic and, by extension, political power may force the next president to adopt a more realistic approach to international relations, as Brasilia inevitably must begin to take a more hardnosed look at its future foreign policy priorities. It may not have to look too far to see that a tougher approach may be required sooner rather than later: a recent diplomatic spat with Ecuador has already prompted a tactical revision of Lula’s so-called “Diplomacy of Generosity”, which has long been criticised by the traditional centre-right opposition.

Medvedev works on Latin American links beyond Chávez and his allies

The media devoted considerable attention in late November to a visit by Russia’s President Dmitri Medvedev to Venezuela, timed to coincide with the arrival of a Russian naval task force in the Caribbean Sea.

The fleet was due to begin planned joint manoeuvres with the Venezuelan navy, its first ever joint exercise with a Latin American country in western hemisphere waters. While Venezuela’s President Hugo Chávez presented the event as a strengthening of his ‘strategic alliance’ with Moscow, Medvedev spent less than two of his nine day tour of the region in Venezuela.

Latin American countries more connected

Most Latin American countries increased their roles in the world economy through trade, foreign investment, Internet penetration and other measures in 2007, according to a new report released by Miami-based Latin Business Chronicle.

In the Latin Globaliza­tion Index, which analyzed 18 countries, Panama was ranked as the most globalized nation in the region, followed by Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Chile and Paraguay. Latin America’s two largest economies, Brazil and Mexico, were ranked last and in 10th place, respectively, but both improved from last year’s ratings.

The globalization index uses six elements to measure a county’s globalization level: exports, imports, foreign direct investment, tourism receipts, remittances and Internet penetration. All factors except Internet penetration are calculated as a percent of Gross Domestic Product.

Despite its size, Brazil ranked lower then other nations in the globalization index — mainly because factors like exports and imports are less important relative to its large internal economy.

Overall, 13 of the 18 countries studied improved their ratings from the previous year while five — Bolivia, Honduras, Venezuela, Ecuador and Paraguay — slipped in their rankings.

The index also measures the biggest winners and losers in foreign direct investment. Those showing the best gains in foreign investment were Panama, Chile, El Salvador, Costa Rica and Honduras.

The biggest losers were Venezuela, Ecuador, Bolivia, Paraguay and Guatemala. (Latin Briefs and Miami Herald contributed to this report).

‘Change’ – 2,500 unite to convert word into action

by Jackie Guzmán

More than 2,500 community leaders from 32 states gathered Dec. 4 in Washington D.C., to help move the Obama presidential campaign theme of “change” into an agenda for government action.

White House advisors Valerie Jarrett, Melody Barnes and recent appointee Cecilia Muñoz, designated White House director of intergovernmental affairs, were among participants outlining reform proposals.

The one-day session was framed “Realizing the Promise: A Forum on Community, Faith and Democracy.”

Sponsors included the Center for Law and Social Policy, National Council of La Raza, Smart Growth America, AFL-CIO, Service Employees International Union, UFCW, Policy Link, USAction, and Wider Opportunities for Women. Most frequently stressed as priorities the new administration should commit to address within its first 100 days were the economic crisis, health care and immigration reform.

“We have just begun. We need our mission fulfilled in this administration,” NCLR president Janet Murguía set the tone. Jarrett, the president-elect’s senior adviser, reminded the gathering that Obama “started his campaign with the spirit of an organizer. He understands when ordinary people come up together with a common vision, we can create extraordinary things.”

Miguel Díaz, who heads the day-worker efforts of CASA de Maryland, gave testimony from his wife’s experience when she was taken into custody in 2007 by immigration officers at a time when he was trying to legalize her status.

U.S. Rep. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.), responded “We are going to make sure Miguel’s family passed through.” “We need reform that brings our brothers and sisters out of the shadows,” said Deepak Bhargava, Center for Community Change executive director.

Hollen and Bhargava were joined by U.S. Rep. Luis Gutiérrez (D-Ill.) who emphasized that immigration reform can come with worker reform, referring to how immigrants are often accused of precipitating the economic crisis.

“It’s easy to blame others,” he said many jobs go begging unless done by imported workers. “Farm workers picking fruit is not going to affect a worker in the city.”

María Socorro Pesqueira, president of Mujeres Latinas en Acción/Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights, said Obama can stop the raids that are leading to deported family members.

“We still have families living in fear,” hi said.

Throughout the day, com­munity representatives and members of Congress encouraged all present to continue organizing. “Obama is going to be successful only if the voices of the people are heard,” said Rep. Donna Edwards (D-Md.).

Bhargava and Ana García-Ashley, a director of the Gamaliel Foundation, said their objective is to gather as many people as possible in concensus forming meetings as they can before Jan. 21, the first day of work for President Barack Obama. Obama is a former Gamaliel community organizer. Hispanic Link.

Boxing

Saturday, Dec. 20 — at TBA, Switzerland

  • WBA heavyweight title: Nikolay Valuev vs. Evander Holyfield.

Friday, Jan. 9 — at Primm, NV (ESPN2)

  • Odlanier Solis vs. TBA Yuriorkis Gamboa vs. TBA

Friday, Jan. 9 — at Key West, FL (ESPN2)

  • Carlos Quintana vs. Eromosele Albert.
  • Darrel Madison vs. Sherman Williams.

Saturday, Jan. 17 — at New York, NY (HBO)

  • WBC welterweight title: Andre Berto vs. Luis Collazo.
  • Interim WBC light middleweight title: Sergio Martinez vs. Joe Greene Vivian Harris vs. Edgar Santana

Saturday, Jan. 24– at Los Angeles, CA (HBO)

  • ­WBA welterweight title: Antonio Margarito vs. Shane Mosley.