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Martial Law was declared in the U.S., and soon will be the Bank Holiday – and your money?

por Marvin Ramírez

Marvin J. RamirezMarvin J. Ramirez

‘If the American people ever allow private banks to control the issue of their money, first by inflation and then by deflation, the banks and corporations that will grow up around them, will deprive the people of their property until their children will wake up homeless on the continent their fathers conquered.’… Thomas Jefferson.

As I said last week, I kept receiving information online stating that something of great magnitude was about to happen before the presidential election. They predicted the economic crises we are living right now, the fall of the dollar to levels never seen before, the collapse of the current financial system, and that Martial Law would be declared in the United States. All this has happened or is happening. Visit this link and see when the Congress declared Martial Law, it also shows President Bush joking about becaming a dictator himself. http://www.republicmedia.tv/index.php?option=com_seyret&task=videodirectlink&id=248.

According to another email, a ‘Bank Holiday’ is about to be declared under the declaration of an economic emergency, which might happen within the next two weeks and possibly before.

The information says that it will be announced that it may last one or two weeks and that all banks and financial institutions will close during that period.

“No access to your deposits will be possible, ATMs will not work, credit cards will not work, and brokerage accounts will not be accessible either,” according to the document.

“This would be done under a state of martial law though troops may not appear on all streets immediately under the faint hope that the populace will simply accept these matters, but the banks and financial institutions will be heavily guarded whether overtly visible or not,” the information reads.

Customers are starting to debate whether they should pull their money out of the bank now. I have heard people in the neighborhood saying that their bank branch’s tellers and managers are telling customers not too worry. But it is my opinion that you should worry about it.

The email says that one of the largest banks in America has already informed their branch managers that a ‘bank holiday’ may take place and that signs for branch windows may already be made telling bank customers that the banks will be closed for a certain period of time and that no deposits or transactions will be possible ’til then. Many local or smaller banks may not yet have any indication of any of this information nor if they did, would they admit it. This crisis may cause civil protests.

For this, if riots or civil upheaval break out, which of course would be expected in many locales, says the document, then you will see troops, law enforcement officers, swat teams, private security contractors, and even federally authorized U.S. government, state government, and local government workers operating under the regional military governors or FEMA continuity of government controllers to attempt to put down the riots and upheaval with sanctioned force if necessary.

In previous information, I read that this coming election might be suspended under emergency powers by Bush, who may continuing being the president as Commander-in-Chief.

According to Toward Freedom, a progressive online publication, in 2006, in a stealth maneuver, President Bush signed into law a provision which, according to Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vermont), will actually encourage the President to declare federal martial law. It does so by revising the Insurrection Act, a set of laws that limits the President’s ability to deploy troops within the United States.

The Insurrection Act (10 U.S.C.331 -335) has historically, along with the Posse Comitatus Act (18 U.S.C.1385), helped to enforce strict prohibitions on military involvement in domestic law enforcement. With one cloaked swipe of his pen, Bush is seeking to undo those prohibitions.

For the current President, “enforcement of the laws to restore public order” means to commandeer guardsmen from any state, over the objections of local governmental, military and local police entities; ship them off to another state; conscript them in a law enforcement mode; and set them loose against “disorderly” citizenry – protesters, possibly, or those who object to forced vaccinations and quarantines in the event of a bio-terror event, says the publication.

The law also facilitates militarized police round-ups and detention of protesters, so called “illegal aliens,” “potential terrorists” and other “undesirables” for detention in facilities already contracted for and under construction by Halliburton. That’s right. Under the cover of a trumped-up “immigration emergency” and the frenzied militarization of the southern border, detention camps are being constructed right under our noses, camps designed for anyone who resists the foreign and domestic agenda of the Bush administration.

All accomplished amidst ongoing U.S. imperial pretensions of global domination, sold to an “emergency managed” and seemingly willfully gullible public as a “global war on terrorism.”

The banking dilemma is even more serious and much larger than is being stated by U.S. government officials, with worldwide implications.

So, take this article as you please. Do what you think is appropriate. But remember, CNN, FOX, Univisión or Telemundo, will not say anything to you about this because their owners do not allow the directors of local news outlets to say a word, since their work is to help keep you out of the reality.

Binational Health Week starts

by the El Reportero staff and Marvin J. Ramírez

De izq-der: Los cónsules (Consuls of) de Perú, Nicolas Alfonso Roncagliolo; Ecuador, vice-cónsul Cecilia Naranjo;: El Salvador, José R. Antonio Carballo; México, Carlos Felix Corona; Guatemala, Ana Patricia Ramírez; Colombia, José Miguel Castiblanco; y de Honduras, Francisco Vanegas. (photos by Marvin J. Ramirez)De izq-der: Los cónsules (Consuls of) de Perú, Nicolas Alfonso Roncagliolo; Ecuador, vice-cónsul Cecilia Naranjo; El Salvador, José R. Antonio Carballo; México, Carlos Felix Corona; Guatemala, Ana Patricia Ramírez; Colombia, José Miguel Castiblanco; y de Honduras, Francisco Vanegas.(photos by Marvin J. Ramirez)

For the eighth consecutive year, citizens of towns across the Americas will be hosting a Binational Health Week, starting on Monday, October 6, one of the largest volunteer mobilizations toward providing services and information to Latino immigrants without health insurance.

Over 140 work teams from México, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua, Colombia and Ecuador will participate. At a press conference held October 1 at the Mexican Consulate in San Francisco, Consuls of Perú, Nicolás Alfonso Roncagliolo; of Ecuador, vice-consul Cecilia Naranjo; of El Salvador, Rafael Antonio Carballo; of México, Carlos Felix Corona; of Guatemala, Patricia Ramírez; of Colombia, José Miguel Castiblanco; and of Honduras, Francisco Vanega, inaugurated the nine-day event.

The Nicaraguan Consul Denis Galeano Cornejo, who originally was not included in the group, announced that he would participate at the last minute; however, he was not present at the press conference. Nicaraguans are one of the largest immigrant groups in the Bay Area, after Mexicans and Salvadorians.

The activities of Binational Health Week will take place in 43 U.S. cities and three Canadian provinces. Jessica López, spokesperson for the Mexican Consulate in San Francisco, said that the event has worked year after year since 2001 to further its goal of improving the health of Latino immigrant families and communities in the United States. She explained that the activities include information on diverse health themes, basic health exams and resources about medical insurance programs. All of the services offered during the week are free.

Binational Health Week, which involved months of preparation, is coordinated by the Health Initiative of the Americas, in which the school of Public Health at UC Berkeley participates, along with the Latin American consulates and the Institute of Mexicans Abroad. Last year, more than 3,941 activities, with the participation of 15,497 volunteers and 6,586 agencies offered services to 301,661 people. This year, it hopes to serve even more people.

“Health is a theme that affects the Hispanic community, there is little preventive medicine,” said Felix Corona. Latinos represent the largest and youngest minority in the nation, at the same time being the group with least access to medical insurance and services. Binational Health Week is part of a movement to distribute information about health care to immigrant populations without medical coverage. This year’s theme is autism, which requires early attention.

Binational Health Week will conclude October 15. Some of the most important actvities in the Bay Area are:

  • Monday, Oct. 7 Health Education 4:00 to 6:00 PM San Mateo Council 2600 Middlefield Rd. Redwood City 94063.
  • Tuesday, Oct. 8 Mental Health and Substance Abuse 9:00 AM to 2:00 PM. Mexican Consulate 532 Folsom St. San Francisco.
  • Thursday, Oct. 9 Obesity Prevention Day 9:00 AM to 2:00 PM Mexican Consulate 532 Folsom St. San Francisco.
  • Friday, Oct. 10 Diabetes Prevention Day 9:00 AM to 2:00 PM Mexican Consulate 532 Folsom St. San Francisco. Also, Latin Health Fair (Tests for diabetes, cholesterol, high blood pressure, and information on autism, breast cancer and obesity, HIV prevention and mental health). ­4:00 PM to 9:00 PM. Mission Vocational and Language School 2929 19th St. San Francisco.
  • Saturday Oct. 11 Senior Adult Day (flu vaccinations for adults and care for diabetes patients) 9:00 AM to 1:00 PM 22331 Mission Blvd. Tiburcio Vásquez Health Center, Inc. San Francisco.

For more information visit: www.semanabinacionaldesalud.com.

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Tenants protest against harassment and intimidation, ask for support for Proposition M

by Marvin Ramírez

Miriam Zamora, del Comité Vivienda San Pedro pide apoyo en la calle 24 y Misión para la Proposición M. Está acompañanda de: inquilinos que han sido acosados y desalojados por arrendatarios. (photo by Marvin J. Ramirez)Miriam Zamora, from San Peter Housing Committee, asks for support for Prop. M, surrounded by tenants who have been harassed or evicted. (photo by Marvin J. Ramirez)

The city of San Francisco is known as the city of the Golden Gate, for the beautiful architecture of his Victorian-style houses. One of his districts, the Mission, is known for having the best climate of the city, his restaurants with food from many parts of the world and comfortable prices, especially Latin American, and the best transportation system. Two BART stations are a part of the serviceability the district offers to its residents and visitors.

Nevertheless, the value of property, in contrast to other cities nearby that have seen their prices go down due to the current economic crisis, in San Francisco remains one of the most expensive cities to live in in the U.S.

Those who have been able to buy properties have faced a disagreeable law that is bad for new housing owners, the San Francisco rent control ordinance, which not only prohibits increasing the rent more than 7 percent per year, but also, if the property was built before 1979, does not allow proprietors to evict tenants unless the proprietor moves in to it. Many buy properties as investment, to rent it and allow the property to pay for itself, or to obtain an extra income.

The situation is chaotic, as proprietors get trapped in mortgages so big that sometimes they choke them, while tenants cannot go away to live somewhere else due to a lack of sufficient affordable housing in San Francisco.

The couple Manuel Corado and María Alvarado are victims of these circumstances.

They have lived for several years in their small apartment on Capp Street, next to 24th Street, and pay very little rent compared to current market price.

Now they claim that the landlord wants to throw them out so she can increase the rent, and for it she is making a hell our of their life.

On Sept. 27, Corado and Alvarado joined San Peter Housing Committee in an act of condemnation against harassment of tenants by landlords, and to gather support for Proposition M, which they say, will help stop these cases of abuse against tenants, many of them undocumented and Latinos. The case was reported to the police, but the tenants complain that they ignore them in the majority of cases.

When the tenants called the police, the one the police handcuffed was Corado, the husband, after Sánchez-Guzman accused him of attacking her, which Corado denied. He was later released.

 

In another case of tenant harassment, a Hispanic man who was serving as apartment manager for an apartment building on 21st Street, harassed Florinda Boch and her husband for several months. It didn’t stop until finally the harasser was caught by the police on Sept. 18, when he was on the verge of attacking the husband.

“He said to me that he was going to mark my face for the rest of my life. He owed the owner two months rent, so he wanted that we pay him (the rent), so he could use the money to pay for his debt. But the owner told us not to give him the money. That angered him,” said Boch to El Reportero.

“He was given 60 days notice to leave, and then he took it against us and threatened us with death,” added Boch.

In San Francisco, approximately 65.5 percent of housing are rental units, and there are approximately 750,000 people.

Bolivian violence postpones Morales’s historic Alaska visit

by the El Reportero news services

Evo MoralesEvo Morales

ANCHORAGE, Alaska – A historic meeting that was to take place between Bolivian President Evo Morales and hundreds of American Indian and Alaska Native tribal leaders in late September was postponed due to violent political upheaval in the South American country set off by right-wing anti-government forces that oppose the indigenous leader’s reform program to distribute the country’s natural resources wealth more equitably among the low-income and poor population.

The Alaska meeting, which was scheduled for Sept. 20, was canceled Sept. 11 by Bolivia’s minister of Foreign Affairs and Cultures David Choquehuanca Cespedes, who said that “due to the circumstances related to the current political situation in Bolivia, it was impossible for President Evo Morales Ayma to visit…”

The letter was addressed to Mike Williams, president of the Alaska Inter-Tribal Council; Kirk Francis, president of the National Tribal Environmental Council; and Joe Garcia, president of the National Congress of American Indians. The meeting was to be co-hosted by the three organizations.

The NCAI issued a statement to the hundreds of tribal leaders who had been planning to travel to Alaska for the special meeting saying that the meeting will be rescheduled “due to important governmental activities recently taking place in Bolivia.”

President Morales felt that it was in the best interest of Bolivia for him to remain in the country right now. Both he and the Embassy of Bolivia send their apologies but look forward to working on international indigenous issues in the close future.

Drugs in South America: A changing picture

The drug trade in South America is changing. Although cocaine remains the main illegal drug exported from the region, the market for it is no longer predominantly the U.S. Europe is now at least as important a market for cocaine produced in Peru and Bolivia as the U.S. Even from Colombia, increasing amounts of cocaine are going back to the Old World. This change has major implications for U.S. policy towards the region. The other big development over the past decade is that local markets have become larger. They are still not as lucrative as export markets, but, especially in Brazil, are profitable enough for gangs to fight over.

Ecuador ready for referendum

On Sept. 5, the electoral campaign for the country’s proposed new constitution closed ahead of the public referendum on Sept. 28. It is no coincidence that both ‘yes’ and ‘no’ lobbies chose to close their campaigns in Guayaquil. The city is Ecuador’s largest and wealthiest and is also the main political opposition stronghold (led by the city’s mayor, Jaime Nebot). The campaign, which has been marked by a high level of political polarization, and even some minor violent incidents, has been at its fiercest in Guayaquil.

Latin America lashes out at U.S. for not practicing what it preaches

Several Latin American heads of state took aim at the U.S. government for its hypocrisy in attempting to avert a financial meltdown by means of massive state intervention in the free market, the concept of which it has always upheld as sacrosanct. Argentina’s President Cristina Fernández, representing a country still bearing the wounds of its own financial crisis when the U.S., World Bank and IMF advocated painful, free-market prescriptions, was the most outspoken. Speaking at the UN general assembly in New York this week, she denounced “a casino economy, where it was thought that only capitalism can produce money.”

Why the U.S. financial crisis is good for Latin America

The near panic by U.S. policymakers over the state of the U.S. financial system is causing more than wry amusement in Latin America. Ardent leftwingers, such as President Hugo Chávez of Venezuela and President Cristina Fernández of Argentina can barely stop themselves from gloating. What is more significant is that more sober citizens such as Alejandro Foxley, now Chile’s foreign minister, argue that the U.S. deserves what is happening.

Sergio Romo to visit McKinley Elementary

by Juliana Birnbaum Fox

Giant's Sergio Romo throws the ballGiant’s Sergio Romo throws the ball. (photo by Tony Dejak)

Giants Pitcher, Sergio Romo is scheduled to address the faculty and provide inspiration to the students at McKinley Elementary School. He will sign autographs and present collectibles in commemoration of Hispanic Heritage Month. Sergio Romo was drafted in the 25th round of the 2005 Amateur Draft by the Giants. He was awarded the Minor League Pitcher of the Year Award in 2007, where he dominated the league to the tune of a 106 Strikeouts in 66.1 innings pitched. This event will take place on Friday, Sept. 26, at 10: 30 a.m. For more information or to attend this event, please contact Phil Isaac at 617- 233-2633.

San Francisco Arts Commission Unveils New Public Artwork

Luis R. Cancel, Director of Cultural Affairs of the San Francisco Arts Commission is pleased to announce the installation of a new public art project, Sun Spheres, three mosaic sculptures by artist Laurel True, at the intersection of Ocean and Granada Avenues in the OMI District of San Francisco. The artwork dedication will take place from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 27 at the Ingleside Community Center, 1345 Ocean Avenue.

Strides for Life Colon Cancer Foundation 5K Walk/Run

Strides for Life Colon Cancer Foundation and Sequoia Hospital invite families and friends to come together and participate in the 5th Annual Walk/Run to raise money and join the fight against colon cancer. The 5K Walk/Run takes place on Sunday, Oct 5th at Lake Merced in San Francisco. ‘Strides for Life’ is a non-profi t organization dedicated to the prevention and early detection of colon cancer.To register or learn more about Strides for Life, please visit www.stridesforlife.org.

CIPC presents its annual regional trainings

Annual regional trainings will take place on Oct. 7 in Oakland and on Oct. 16 in Los Angeles. You are invited to register for a daylong training sponsored by CIPC for service providers, immigrant advocates, and others who work with immigrants in California.

Learn from, and strategize with experts and peers about current issues, including health care, language access, immigration law and enforcement issues, media messaging, assistance to domestic violence and trafficking survivors, and more.To register please visit www.caimmigrant.org.

La Peña’s immigration series continues

The Immigrant Experience with MamacoAtl, Paul Flores, & Los Nadies is coming up. Better known as The Border Crossing Diosa, MamacoAtl is a singer, spoken word artist and the descendant of Yaqui Warriors. ‘You’re Gonna Cry’, is a new spoken word performance telenovela written and performed by Flores. Los Nadies bring a keen mix of politics, poetry, street party and musicianship.The show takes place on Saturday, Oct. 11. Cover is $10 in advance or $12 at the door. The show starts at 8 p.m. at La Peña Cultural Center, 3105 Shattuck Ave. Berkeley. Call510-849-2568 or visit ­www.lapena.org to preorder tickets.

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Ay Chihuahua with many known starts

Una escena de la película Beverly Hills Chihuahua que saldrá al público el 3 de octubreUna escena de la película Beverly Hills Chihuahua que saldrá al público el 3 de octubre

Chloe (voice of DREW BARRYMORE), a diamond-clad, bootie wearing Beverly Hills Chihuahua enjoys her luxurious lifestyle so much, she hardly notices Papi (voice of GEORGE LÓPEZ), a hilarious Chihuahua who happens to be crazy for Chloe.

But when the most pampered pooch gets lost in Mexico with only a street-wise German Shepherd (voice of ANDY GARCIA) to help her find her way home, Papi heads south of the border — joining forces with a motley crew: three dogs (voices of PLÁCIDO DOMINGO, LUIS GUZMÁN and EDDIE “PIOLÍN” SOTELO), two humans (PIPER PERABO, MANOLO CARDONA), a sly rat (voice of CHEECH MARIN) and a nervous iguana (voice of PAUL RODRÍGUEZ) to rescue his true love.

Directed by Raja Gosnell from a screenplay by Analisa LaBianco and Jeff Bushell, and a story by Bushell, this live-action adventure also features actors JAMIE LEE CURTIS as Aunt Viv, JOSÉ MARÍA YAZPIK as baddie Vasquez, MAURY STERLING as Rafferty, JESÚS OCHÓA as Officer Ramirez, and EUGENIO DERBEZ as the store owner. EDWARD JAMES OLMOS is the voice of the menacing Doberman El Diablo, LORETTA DEVINE is the voice of snooty Toy Poodle Delta, and MICHAEL URIE is the voice of pompous Pug Sebastian. Rated PG. Opens in theaters October 3, 2008.

VOICE OF SNOOPY: Bill Meléndez, the animator and cartoonist who produced all of the Peanuts TV specials died Sept. 2 in Santa Monica, California. He was 91. Born José Cuauhtemoc Meléndez in Hermosillo, Mexico, he at~ tended the California Institute of the Arts in Los Angeles and worked as a Disney and Warner Bros. animator. In 1959 he worked on a Peanuts commercial and befriended the strip’s creator Charles M. Schulz. He went on to form his own company, Bill Meléndez Productions, and created the 1965 Emmy~and Peabody winning TV special A Charlie Brown Christmas.

Meléndez also voiced the Snoopy and Woodstock characters on several Peanuts specials; his company also animated the Cathie and Garfield strips.

Cheech MarínCheech Marín

“CHE’ OPENS: The first of two films about the Argentine hero of the Cuban Revolution from the Oscar-winning team of director Steven Soderbergh and actor Benicio del Toro had its commercial premiere in Spain last week.

Puerto Rican actor del Toro plays Ernesto Guevara in Che, el argentino and in Guerrillero. Both films by director Soderbergh screened as one title at the Cannes Film Festival in May.

Che, el argentino was met with lukewarm reviews in Spain, the only country where the Spanish-language films have secured distribution. Guerrillero is expected to open later this year.

ONE LINERS: director Patricia Riggen (La misma luna) and playwright, composer

and actor Lin-Manuel Miranda (In the Heights) was feted Sept. 9 at the National Hispanic Foundation for the Arts’12th annual Noche de Gala dinner in Washington, D.C. and nominees for the 9th annual Latin Grammy Awards are to be announced Sept. 10 in Los Angeles. Hispanic Link and news services.

Congress urged to pass fast-track paper ballot legislation

­by Juliana Birnbaum Fox

Resolutions urging immediate passage of emergency electoral legislation were endorsed last week by the Sonoma County Democratic Party and the Sonoma County Chapter of Progressive Democrats of America. The goal is to require that paper ballots replace any paperless electronic voting systems in time for the upcoming November election.

“Paperless, electronic touch-screen (DRE) voting machines have been documented losing or miscounting significant numbers of votes in hundreds of reports all across the country,” said spokesperson Dan Ashby, cofounder and director of Election Defense Alliance, a multipartisan citizens’ action organization devoted to election integrity.

Caregivers strike to improve quality of care for residents at Windsor Nursing Home chain

Dozens of religious and community leaders joined nursing home workers on Sept. 16 for a candlelight vigil at Country Drive Care Center in Fremont to urge Windsor CEOs Lee Samson and Lawrence Feigen to adopt proposals that would improve the care of residents and the rights of caregivers at their nursing homes. Since July 2007, more than 360 violations of health and safety regulations were documented at Windsor facilities during regular federal surveys. Over the same period, 58 patient complaints against Windsor were verifi ed by the Department of Health and Human Services on issues ranging from short-staffing to fire hazards.

To address these conditions, more than 650 nursing home workers have been in contract negotiations with Windsor for more than a year in four facilities and several months at four others.

State Latino group charges Labor Secretary with hiding scandal

The California League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC) is accusing Secretary of Labor Elaine Chao of engaging in “lulling tactics” to keep the lid on a scandal that has been brewing in her offi ce since 2005.According to Argentina Dávila Luevano, State Director of California LULAC, Secretary Chas assured National LULAC President Rosa Rosales that the threatened termination of Dr. Alberto Rocha, Assistant Bay Area District Director, would be “taken care of” at the highest levels.

Ironically, the OFCCP is charged with enforcing anti-discrimination laws in federal contracting, yet Rocha has fi led a complaint against the department, charging that he has been harassed and retaliated against for his participation in efforts to fight discrimination. According to Rocha, his troubles started when he began taking a leadership role in a national non-profi t active in the fi elds of employment, education, civil rights and other issues which impact the Hispanic community.

Organizations file lawsuit seeking implementation of language access

Four community groups filed a lawsuit against the City of Oakland for failing to fulfi ll its obligations under the “Equal Access to Services Ordinance,” a groundbreaking language access ordinance passed in 2001. Public Advocates Inc. and civil rights attorney Luz Buitrago represent the groups. The ordinance, based on basic civil rights laws, requires translation of key documents and sufficient bilingual staff available in public contact positions for languages reaching a 10,000 threshold, currently including Spanish and Chinese.

New SFO Terminal designs are unveiled

San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom and Airport Director John L. Martin today unveiled the designs for the remodel of San Francisco International Airport’s (SFO) old international terminal, vacant since 2000, into a new domestic terminal that will emphasize customer service and sustainability practices.

“This design reflects a completely different way of thinking about air travel, environmental stewardship, and fi nancial responsibility,” said Mayor Newsom. “Our goal is to make this the fi rst LEED Silver certifi ed terminal in the country.”

Arizona is driving out immigrants, but at what cost?

by Jonathan Higuera

José de la IslaJosé de la Isla

It doesn’t take a genius to figure it out: if you want to get undocumented Mexicans to move out of your community, take away their ability to work. It’s happening here in Arizona, where the employer sanctions passed into law last year is having the effect sought by its proponents.

Thousands of residents are picking up stakes and getting the hell out of this so-called desert paradise. Formerly teeming malls and food courts in blue-collar neighborhoods are no longer teeming. They may not be deserted but they aren’t bustling either. Enrollment at many elementary schools has dropped precipitously. When school officials visit those homes to find out where the children are, they are finding row after row of empty houses. Calls to landscapers, maids, nannies and cleaning crew members are going unanswered.

Although it’s difficult to quantify, anecdotal evidence is clear: these people are not staying in a state that has taken away their ability to earn a living.

They could probably withstand the demonization they have been subjected to from anti-immigrant bigots, or even the so-called “Crime Suppression Sweeps” by the local sheriff’s department, which has been terrorizing residents in areas where they believe undocumented residents live. They probably could even withstand the hotlines encouraging neighbors to report on neighbors they suspect are here illegally. All those actions have poisoned the atmosphere; probably much like Proposition 187 did in California years ago.

But Latinos in my native state have dealt with heavy-handed police tactics and racist rhetoric that blames them for all that ails the community.

This time, however, it is this singular act of taking away their ability to work that has made leaving their only choice.

In case you’re unfamiliar with the state’s employer sanctions law, it was signed by Arizona Gov. Janet Napolitano last year. It was based on the premise that the state had to act, given that the federal government had not reached a comprehensive immigration bill that would have dealt with the estimated 12 million people in this country without proper documents. It requires fines and suspensions for employers caught hiring undocumented workers. A second offense results in the firm having its business license revoked.

Although few if any employers have been prosecuted, they are reluctant to hire or keep workers who can’t prove they have a legal right to work here. I know of one employer who had repeatedly put off letting go any workers. But the sanctions law proved too much and it finally let go of those who could not document their status, including one who had worked her way up to shift manager. The outmigration couldn’t come at a worse time for the state’s economy.

It’s been reeling for a couple of years as the housing crisis has taken its toll. For decades, the residential construction industry has been a major engine in the local economy. It’s currently at a standstill.

Local businesses envisioned this scenario long before it came to pass. It’s one reason they fought the law so vociferously, only to be overwhelmed by those who called them greedy employers.

Now the end result is hitting them in their pocketbook. Sales and revenues are down at retail establishments ranging from Wal Mart to car dealerships to State Farm insurance offices. Labor at many establishments has also been lost and in many cases, not readily replaced.

Not long ago many big-city mayors, among them-New York’s Rudy Giuliani, threw open their doors to all immigrants. They understood that, regardless of status, the newcomers brought a vitality that had long fallen into decay. In Arizona. strip malls way past their prime, dying neighborhoods and dormant commercial districts had new life injected into them by the mostly Mexican newcomers seeking a better life. Their children, if not the parents, were beginning their ascent into the mainstream U.S. workforce, bringing energy and intellect to critical endeavors as they followed a path blazed by countless groups before them.

It seems like a faded memory now. Sure, some immigrants are still clinging to what they can do to stay here and survive. But those who came here to work are moving on. I’ve heard talk about moving to places such as Wisconsin, New Mexico or back to Mexico.

Make no mistake: Arizona has plenty of need for the labor they bring. The notion put forth by proponents that those jobs will be filled by U.S. citizens isn’t panning out either. Funny how few people really want to work in the Arizona sun for $8 an hour. Or clean a house for less than $100.

Time will tell if and when Arizona’s economy will pull itself out of its downward spiral. But let it be clear that driving off an embedded segment of its workforce wasn’t a smart move for a slumping economy. Hispanic Link.

Where is our country heading to, oh my God! Have we become a totalitarian nation?

by Marvin J. Ramirez

Marvin J. RamirezMarvin J. Ramirez

As much as I try to think that this is not possible, that how can a so powerful nation cease being the greatest nation on Earth overnight, I keep seeing the signs that in fact is happening, that an ugly future is unveiling to replace the good life in the U.S. when I go online.

News not shown on CNN, Fox News, the San Francisco Chronicle, the New York Times, you name it, keeps coming at my direction via the Internet every day. The recently coming of the worst financial fall down of the U.S. economy in history that has hit the country, was anticipated early this year pretty clearly.

I kept receiving information online stating that something of great magnitude was about to happen before the presidential election.

Every time I had the chance to spread the message to other people about it, sometimes their response was, “Oh! Another conspiracy theory.” And I believe they respond this way because most people want to believe in the government, and most importantly, they really believe the traditional media will tell them the truth of the day.

I have heard that before this November elections, coinciding with a prospect bombing of Iran, the President may declare marshal law. Iran has repeatedly stated that if they are attacked, they will block ships navigation in the Persian Gulf, in doing so they will abruptly halt oil supply to most parts of the world.

Can you imagine our future? If marshal law is declared, there won’t be elections, and Bush will keep running the country under emergency powers as Commander-in-chief of the armed forces. There will be massive protests and looting on the streets because the supermarkets will run out of food in 48 hours. I suggested in previous editorials that we all should start storing food because a food crisis of great proportions never seen before is approaching.

We don’t have or grow food in the cities. Not in San Francisco, not in Daly City, not in San Mateo. Most of our food comes in trucks, but without oil, there won’t be food delivered, hence protests on the street will surge, and consequently, there will be repression – possibly by the U.S. Army.

The Army Times, an independent weekly newspaper serving active, reserve and retired United States Army and United States National Guard personnel and their families, reported on Sept. 6, that an Army unit will be deployed in October for domestic operations in our own United States streets.

According to the article, beginning in October, the Army plans to station an active unit inside the United States for the fi rst time to serve as an on-call federal response team in times of emergency. http://www.armytimes.com/news/2008/09/army_homeland_090708w/.

The 3rd Infantry Division’s 1st Brigade Combat Team has spent 35 of the last 60 months in Iraq, but now the unit is training for domestic operations. The unit will soon be under the day-to-day control of U.S. Army North, the Army service component of Northern Command.

The Army Times reports that this new mission marks the fi rst time an active unit has been given a dedicated assignment to Northern Command. The paper says the Army unit may be called upon to help with civil unrest and crowd control. The soldiers are learning to use so-called non-lethal weapons designed to subdue and contain unruly or dangerous individuals and crowds.

The government knows and so is preparing to stop anyone who plans to stop the course of their plan, and the media is not investigating or covering the real news. They are keeping us entertained with the bailout issue, in which the government will be borrowing $700 billion from the Federal Reserve Bank to bailout a group of corrupt private bankers on the back of the taxpayers. What’s really happening is best described in the following statement.

“These are dark times while you were sleeping the cockroaches were busy about their work, rummaging through the U.S. Constitution, and putting the finishing touches on a scheme to assert absolute power over the nation’s financial markets and the country’s economic future,” wrote Mike Whitney, in his online blog this month, which was published on dozens of websites. (­http://www.smirkingchimp.com/author/mike_whitney).

“Industry representative Henry Paulson (Secretary of the U.S. Treasury) has submitted legislation to congress that will finally end the pretense that Bush controls anything more than reading the lines from a 4’ by 6’ teleprompter situated just inches from his lifeless pupils. Paulson is in charge now, and the coronation is set for sometime early next week.

Paulson rose to power in a stealthily-executed Bankster’s Coup in which he, and his coterie of dodgy friends, declared martial law on the U.S. economy while elevating himself to supreme leader. All Hail Caesar!” The days of the republic are over,” Whitney said.

Unless we start communicating among ‘We the People’, our little freedom that is still in existence, will be gone forever. We are weeks away from becoming a dictatorial, totalitarian nation, we should unite to stop the destruction of our country. The one who has ears listen.

NHLA directs candidates to six concerns of highest import

by Soraya Schwanz and Grazia Salvemini

Gabriela LemusGabriela Lemus

A series of Hispanic public policy proposals, packed into a quadrennial report endorsed by the National Hispanic Leadership Agenda, were released by the coalition Aug. 21 in Washington D.C. The NHLA is made up of 26 leading Hispanic national and regional organizations.

It submitted detailed recommendations on education, civil rights, immigration, economic empowerment, health, end government accountability as its guide to both Democratic and Republican presidential candidates for addressing the 2008 Hispanic electorate responsively.

The document’s education highlights include early childhood, secondary and higher education. The off-proposed Dream Act, which would provide promising undocumented students access to higher education, is strongly supported. Civil rights actions are proferred to curb hate crimes and hate speech in the media. Attention is called to measures in employment discrimination and worker employment protection. Decreasing racial profiling in the criminal justice system is also addressed.

The immigration agenda strongly advocates enacting comprehensive reform and suggests ways to go about It. The report opposes employment verification systems that fail to meet set accuracy rates, as well as immigration enforcement raids which compromise public health and safety.

The United States should strengthen ties with other countries, extend job training and education programs to increase worker capacity as part of economic empowerment.

The recommendations were introduced by NHLA chairman John Trasviña, president of the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund, and articulated in detail at an hour-long news conference by representatives of participating organizations at the National Press Club.

John TrasviñaJohn Trasviña

No one from the campaigns of either Barack Obama or John McCain attended, nor were they directly invited, Trasviña said in response to a Hispanic Link reporter’s question. The campaigns, Congress members and other appropriate parties would receive copies of the report, which would be also shared at the Democratic and Republican conventions, he explained.

“It is important for the NHLA to release the Hispanic platform at: both conventions,” said Gabriela Lemus, Labor Council for Latin American Advancement executive director, “to ensure that the presidential candidates and our lawmakers take into account the very critical needs of the Latino community.’,

The NHLA has produced similar agendas every four years since it was created in 1991. Its policy recommendations reflect a consensus from which candidates are asked to respond to Latino concerns and needs. Trasviña described it as the group’s “2020 vision.”

To view the complete 2008 Hispanic report and NHLA proposals go to www.maldef.org/puf/NHLA.2008.Hispanic.Policy.Agenda.pdf.