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In the US Civil War’s aftermath, some Confederates fled to Mexico  

A new book looks at Southern generals, governors and others who preferred exile over life under Union rule

 

by Rich Tenorio

 

As the United States’ Civil War ended in 1865 and many defeated Southern cities lay in ruins, a handful of ex-Confederates who ended up leaving their ill-fated secessionist nation opted for a perhaps unlikely destination: Mexico.

The narrative of what happened to members of the Confederate army after the war’s end is addressed in a new book about this period of history: Ends of War: The Unfinished Fight of Lee’s Army after Appomattox by University of Virginia professor Caroline Janney.

“It quickly became clear there were so many unanswered questions and so many unanticipated consequences, questions that other people had not asked,” said Janney of what inspired her book, which took six years to research and write.

In 2022, it won the Gilder Lehrman Lincoln Prize from the Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History.

Janney said her interest began with one question – “what do you do with the Confederate army, a rebel army, after a civil war?” She reflected, “It started as a simple question and blossomed into a whole host of questions.”

“I was most surprised,” she said, “to find out the number of men who didn’t surrender themselves at Appomattox, those who pursued the slim opportunity to continue waging the war.”

Confederate General Jubal Early is perhaps one of the more prominent of these ex-Confederates who ended up in Mexico for a while after the war; he led troops in some of the Civil War’s bloodiest and most famous battles, including Antietam, Fredericksburg and Gettysburg.

Defeated in battle, Early was relieved of his command by General Robert E. Lee in March 1865, just a month before Lee himself surrendered his Army of Northern Virginia to Union Gen. Ulysses S. Grant at Appomattox Courthouse, widely seen as ending the Civil War.

Early and other defeated Confederates, including oceanographer-turned-rebel navy secretary Matthew Fontaine Maury, fled to Mexico in the war’s aftermath. Early decided he would not live under the United States government and fled to Texas on horseback, then on to Mexico.

Maury, who would develop a doomed plan for resettlement of ex-Confederates via land grants from the Mexican government, followed a more circuitous path that included a stop in England.

Most of those who journeyed to Mexico did so via steamship, although others traveled overland to New Orleans, and then to Texas.

Some who reached Mexico included generals and governors invited by Mexico’s Emperor Maximilian, who was a longtime friend of Maury’s. Confederate generals who came to Mexico at Maximilian’s behest included John B. Magruder, Sterling Price, Joseph Shelby and Edmund Kirby Smith.

“They no longer considered themselves U.S. citizens,” Janney explained of ex-Confederates heading across the Rio Grande. “They see [Mexico] as a better alternative to being subjugated by the enemy.”

Another motivation of these men was the possibility of fighting against the U.S. again if war broke out over Mexico between the United States and France. With the Civil War over, the U.S. had sent soldiers to the Mexican border, including members of the U.S. Colored Troops, with the intention of enforcing the Monroe Doctrine against foreign involvement in the Americas.

A war between the two countries didn’t seem out of the realm of possibility.

Even before the war had ended, as things were looking their worst for the South, apparently some were already considering picking up the fight against the Union from elsewhere: Janney’s book quotes a 23-year-old Confederate officer in Robert E. Lee’s army named William Gordon McCabe. He considered fighting against the U.S. under a different flag.

On April 7, 1865, two days before Lee’s surrender, he wrote, “I am willing and ready, if God spares my life, to follow the old battle flag to the Gulf of Mexico. If our men desert it, and I am not killed, I shall be forever an exile.”

On April 25, McCabe had journeyed from Virginia to North Carolina and was considering the possibility of a war between France and the U.S., “when we may probably get something to do in the service of H. S. H. [His Serene Highness] Napoleon III.”

By that point, U.S. president Abraham Lincoln had been assassinated on April 15 by Southern sympathizer John Wilkes Booth, inflaming Northern hostility toward the South. This gave those who fled to Mexico yet another reason to consider leaving.

“Why were they willing to go to a country where the unknowns were so great?” she asked. “They feared retribution, they feared punishment within the U.S.”

Some former Confederates fled even further abroad than Mexico, refusing to live in a country with emancipated slaves; Mexico had ended slavery before the U.S. did. These men headed to two other Latin American countries where slavery still existed: Cuba and Brazil.

There were some ironies in Confederates fleeing the U.S. for Mexico: some had been there almost two decades earlier, fighting for the U.S. in the Mexican-American War.

“A lot of the [Confederate] officer corps was familiar with Buena Vista,” Janney said, referring to the 1847 battle between the Mexican army of Antonio López de Santa Anna and the U.S. force of Zachary Taylor. “It was not completely foreign to them in that regard.”

Some Confederates fled to Mexico to save their lives: two months after General Lee surrendered, he was indicted for treason on June 7, 1865, a fate shared by 36 fellow Confederates, including Jubal Early.

A treason conviction meant death, which pushed Early to become an expatriate in Mexico.

Some who came to Mexico committed fully to a new life here and planned to live in Maury’s and other settlements for ex-Confederates in a number of states, among them ones in modern-day Coahuila, Tamaulipas, Nuevo León and Morelos.

Others realized that they had clearly made a spontaneous, angry decision to leave the U.S. and didn’t make it past Texas.

“Some of this clearly is a reaction that’s not especially well-thought-out in terms of long-term circumstances,” she said. “Going to Texas, many changed their mind within one month or two. Their immediate response, full of emotion and rage, tempered itself.”

anney said she was struck by those who did make it to Mexico.

“It speaks not just to their devotion to the Confederate cause, but their rejection of the U.S.,” she said.

Rich Tenorio is a frequent contributor to Mexico News Daily.

Farmworker advocates fight to save community garden 

by Suzanne Potter

California News Service

 

July 26, 2022 – A farmworker group in Watsonville is speaking out after a local church terminated the lease on land used for a community garden.

The group, called Tierras Milperas, has grown food for local families for 12 years on property which belongs to the All Saints/Cristo Rey Episcopal Church.

After a community outcry, Bishop Lucinda Ashby recently granted a 90-day extension on the lease.

Hugo Sanchez-Nava, community coordinator for Tierras Milperas, wants a meeting with the bishop to clear the air.

“Rescinding the lease termination and speaking with our members directly will demonstrate her commitment to making sure the church welcomes all the people in the community no matter their race or background or history or culture,” Sanchez-Nava asserted.

In the termination letter, the church said the church property has recently become unsafe, after a church employee was found dead in his car. Police are also investigating an alleged rape and reports someone left drug paraphernalia in the area. The church pastor did not respond to multiple requests for an interview.

Carmen Cortez, member of the Council of Gardeners for Tierras Milperas, said the threat of eviction is unfair to the 46 families who use the community garden, and said they should not be blamed for the incidents.

“These concerns that they’re raising are very serious,” Cortez acknowledged. “And we would have expected them to come to us when they actually happened, if they did happen. However, we are very certain that on our side of the fence where we manage our garden, they have not happened. And so we would like to have that conversation with the bishop.”

The bishop’s office said it will allow the families to harvest the current crop if it receives a contact list of Tierras Milperas’ membership. The office added it will consider a new lease, pending further negotiations.

Louisiana’s near-total abortion ban can take effect, court rules

The ruling will force the state’s abortion clinics to shut down for the third time since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade

 

by Raymond Wolfe

 

Sat Jul 30, 2022 – BATON ROUGE (LifeSiteNews) – A Louisiana appeals court has ruled that the state can once again enforce a ban on abortion throughout pregnancy, in a major victory for pro-lifers in the Pelican State.

The Louisiana 1st Circuit Court of Appeals on Friday granted Attorney General Jeff Landry’s request to let the ban take effect while the state appeals a lower court ruling that blocked it last week.

Louisiana’s trigger law, enacted in 2006 and revised in June, bans abortion from “fertilization and implantation” except when necessary to preserve the mother’s life or prevent a serious physical injury or if an unborn baby is deemed “medically futile.” Many pro-life advocates argue that there is never a circumstance in which abortion is medically necessary.

Judge Donald Johnson of the 19th District in Baton Rouge had issued a preliminary injunction against the law on July 21 at the request of abortion providers.

“Louisiana’s pro-life trigger laws can be enforced,” Landry tweeted on Friday. “The First Circuit has ordered Judge Johnson to grant our suspensive appeal.”

It’s not yet clear when the ban will go back into effect, as Johnson has not signed the 1st Circuit’s order as of Friday afternoon, according to The Advocate. The three remaining abortion clinics in Louisiana will shut down when he does.

Louisiana’s abortion mills have repeatedly closed and reopened since the Supreme Court’s June 24 decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, which struck down Roe v. Wade and returned regulation of abortion back to the states and Congress.

The Louisiana trigger law took effect immediately upon the reversal of Roe, but state District Judge Robin Giarrusso temporarily blocked it days later.

The Center for Reproductive Rights, a pro-abortion lobby group, and Boies Schiller Flexner LLP, a law firm with ties to the Democratic Party, sued to block Louisiana’s abortion bans on behalf of a Shreveport abortion clinic, arguing that the laws are unconstitutionally vague.

Giarrusso’s order expired in July when another judge declined to extend it, though Judge Johnson again blocked the trigger law the following week.

Nearly 250 abortions have been reported to the Louisiana health department since the Supreme Court overturned Roe, The Advocate noted.

Every other state in the Deep South and all of Louisiana’s neighbors are currently enforcing bans on abortion throughout pregnancy or from around six weeks.

Louisiana’s trigger law makes performing an abortion or intentionally providing a pregnant woman with drugs to kill her unborn baby a felony carrying up to 10 years in prison and $100,000 in fines. Penalties for late-term abortions (after 15 weeks of pregnancy) increase to a maximum of 15 years in prison and fines of $200,000.

The trigger ban allows exceptions for “a medical procedure necessary in good faith medical judgment or reasonable medical judgment” to prevent the mother’s death or avoid a serious, permanent injury to a major bodily function “due to a physical condition.” It also permits the “removal of an unborn child” if at least two doctors deem him or her to be “medically futile.”

For an abortion allegedly to prevent the mother’s death, the law requires a doctor to “make reasonable medical efforts under the circumstances to preserve both the life of the mother and the life of her unborn child.”

Notice: Municipal General Election will be held in the City of Belmont, County of San Mateo

CITY OF BELMONT

NOTICE OF MUNICIPAL GENERAL ELECTION TO BE

CONSOLIDATED WITH SCHOOL DISTRICT ELECTION

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Municipal General Election will be held in the City of Belmont, County of San Mateo, State of California on Tuesday, November 8, 2022 between the hours of 7:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. and 8:00 p.m. for the election of the following officers:

Two (2) Councilors for a period of four years from Districts 1 and 3 and a General Mayor for a period of two years.

Nomination papers and related documents must be obtained in person by the prospective candidate from the City Secretary’s office at One Twin Pines Lane, Suite 330, Belmont, CA beginning Monday, July 18, 2022. All Prospective candidates must make an appointment to meet with the City Clerk to receive nomination papers by calling (650) 595-7413 or emailing jplut@belmont.gov. The last date and time for the submission of nomination papers for any of the above positions is Friday, August 12, 2022 at 5:00 p.m.

All prospective candidates must be registered to vote with the City of Belmont at the time nomination papers are issued.

/s/ Jozi Plut, CMC

City Secretary

Date: July 14, 2022

7/22/22

CNS-3606686#

THE REPORTER

Notice of General and Special Municipal Election will be held in the Town of Woodside

TOWN OF WOODSIDE
2955 Woodside Road
Woodside, CA 94062
NOTICE OF ELECTION
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a General and Special Municipal Election will be held in the Town of Woodside on Tuesday, November 8, 2022, for the following officers:
A City Councilmember to fill the position now held by Brian Dombkowski, from District 2, for a full four-year term that expires in November 2026;
A member of the City Council to fill the position now held by Richard “Dick” Brown, of District 3, for a full four-year term that expires in November 2026.
One member of the City Council to fill a vacancy, from District 5, for a two-year partial term expiring on November 4, 2024.
The nomination period opens on Monday, July 18, 2022 at 8:00 a.m. and closes on Friday, August 12, 2022 at 5:00 p.m. If an incumbent does not submit their nomination by the close of filing on Friday, August 12, 2022 at 5:00 p.m. (the 88th day before the election), the filing period will be extended for five (5) days, ending on Wednesday, August 1, 2022 at 5:00 p.m. (on the 83rd day before the election) to nominate candidates other than the person(s) who are the incumbents for that incumbent’s elective office. This extension is not applicable when there is no designated or elected incumbent eligible to be elected. If no one or only one person is nominated for elective office, appointment to elective office may be made as prescribed by Section 10229, Elections Code of the State of California.
All interested candidates must be registered voters of the Town of Woodside. Nomination papers for the elective office of Woodside Councilmember must be obtained from the City Clerk’s office, 2955 Woodside Road, Woodside, California by appointment. For more information, please contact City Clerk Jennifer Li at jli@woodsidetown.org.
NOTICE IS ALSO GIVEN that Provisional Vote By Mail Ballots for the Election to be held on Tuesday, November 8, 2022, will be posted at the County of San Mateo, Records and Elections Division at 40 Tower Road, San Mateo, CA 94402 The polls on Election Day will be open from 7:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m.
7/22/22
CNS-3606395#
THE REPORTER

Frost Amphitheater presents two amazing events in July

Mon Laferte

Singer and songwriter Mon Laferte is one of the most revered, respected, and beloved musicians in Chile today. Her music brings together the sonic traditions of her native country and that of Mexico, where she lives, with the maximalist punch of globally minded pop, while her lyrics powerfully address the issues facing women, people of color, and the impoverished in Latin America.

Defiantly outspoken, she’s also the winner of four Latin Grammys, including most recently Best Singer Songwriter Album, for her 2021 album Seis. Written in the mountains of Tepoztlán, Mexico, and inspired by both Mexican singer Chavela Vargas—whose songs freely celebrated love between women—and by the 2019 protests against human rights abuses in Chile, the album was also nominated for a 2022 Grammy Award.

Her most recent album, 1940 Carmen, released in October 2021, is a snapshot of her time in Los Angeles, during the first semester of that year.

Sun, July 24, 2022 at 7:30 p.m. at 51 Lasuen St, Stanford, CA. Tickets start at $35.

 

Puerto Rican salsa with the Latin Rhythm Boys at Sushi’s

In 1963, Henry Miranda aka Jr., successfully brought his amazing Puerto Rian Salsa music from Hawaii to California, where he formed Jr. Miranda and His Latin Rhythm Boys. Jr. Miranda’s ability to play the Cuatro was admired by many, he provided young musicians, from all walks of life, mentorship and guidance. His musical legacy and passion for entertainment was then passed on to his sons, Henry Jr. and Earl Miranda.

The modern day version of the orchestra was revived in 2004, by Musical Director, Earl Miranda and Musical Producer, Henry Miranda Jr. Ric Mightone Feliciano’s collaboration began in 2013, as Band Director, Musical Arranger and Writer. Together, the three embarked on a bold direction to record original music, expressing love for the Puerto Rican heritage.

The concept of the high-energy Puerto Rican Salsa comes from the desire to honor their Jibaro roots, with the beautiful sounds of the Puerto Rican cuatro and the Cuban tres to undergrind a driving clave. However, the power of their sound comes from a heavy does of trombones. It’s known as the Trombanga sound, developed by Mon Rivera and Willie Colon.

Their most recent album release titled Celebrando (Label:  CDBABY) featuring beautiful performances by Grammy Award Winning artists such as jimmy Bosch, Willy Torres, Chino Nunez, Art Webb and Louie Romero.

At 510 Embarcadero West, Oakland, (510) 238-9200. Doors: 7:00 PM   Show: 7:30 p.m. Sat July 30, 2022.

 

Los Tigres del Norte

Initially formed in 1967, this six-piece Mexican phenomenon band who immigrated from Sinaloa, Mexico to San Jose, have brought the musical genre of norteño to the worldwide stage, and have sold over 37 million records.

Boasting several Grammys, Latin Grammys as well as their own star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, Los Tigres del Norte have become one of the most influential Latin groups of all time.

Sun, July 31, 2022 at 7:30 p.m. at the Frost Amphitheater. Tickets start at $40.

Momochtli, aka popcorn, the Mexican food in the mouth of the world

Popcorn was consumed in what is now Mexico even before tortillas, tamales and pozole, we tell you all about the origin of this snack

Shared from/by Mexico Desconocido

 

It is certain that in different parts of the world there are people who have never eaten an omelette or an exquisite pozole in their lives, moreover, surely there are those who do not even know about the existence of a country called Mexico, but that they have tried the popcorn of corn, boy have they done it.

To gloat with pleasure that popcorn, our popcorn, is in the mouths of the entire planet, it is convenient to talk about its history. To begin with, and for those who do not know, popcorn occupies seven of the 59 native corn races existing in Mexico, which in its case is identified with the scientific name of Zea mays Everta.

9000 years of popcorn

Which began to be cultivated, like so many other species, nine thousand years ago, according to archaeological references. In other words, its cultivation began with the beginning of agriculture in this part of the planet that we now call Mexico.

Even, listen to this, it is believed that popcorn was consumed by our ancestors in its popped form, long before tortillas or tamales.

The Spanish discover popcorn

Already in more recent times, during the conquest stage, the friar Bernardino de Sahagún narrated in the invaluable book, historically speaking, General History of the Things of New Spain, his amazement at seeing grains of roasted corn that opened in the fire. flower-shaped that people called momochtli.

The religious said that the women adorned their heads with this popped corn during the festivities in honor of Tezcatlipoca: “the women maidens danced, shaved and feathered with red feathers, all their arms and all their legs, and they wore compound capillejos on their heads. instead of flowers with toasted corn that they called momochtli, where each grain is a very white flower”.

Without popcorn there is no cinema

Of course, in those years, the natives never imagined that nine centuries later some Americans, during the Great Depression (1923-1933), would make the momochtli fashionable in something that would be called movie theaters, because it was cheap and helped the people will forget their sorrows by watching moving pictures and eating a cheap snack.

And since we are out there, the Encyclopedic Dictionary of Mexican Gastronomy tells that in the time before the arrival of the Spaniards to these lands, the corn in question was placed on the comal so that after bursting it was smeared with maguey honey, so caramelized popcorn is not a modern invention at all.

Today’s caramelized popcorn grannies

In fact, in Chiapas, popcorn has been eaten since ancient times with piloncillo honey. A candy they call puxinú, well known in Tuxtla Gutiérrez and Chiapa de Corzo.

As a final fact is that January 19 is known as “Popcorn Day” in the United States. What the Americans fail to mention is that the momochtli with all its seven races called chapalote, palomero toluqueño, arrocillo, nal-tel, reventador and palomero de Jalisco, would not exist were it not for the fact that the ancient Mexicans domesticated them.

Millions awarded to help students overcome learning loss due to the pandemic

L.A. schools, nonprofits get millions to help students overcome pandemic learning loss

 

by Suzanne Potter

California News Service

 

July 20, 2022 – Multiple studies have confirmed students across the country experienced significant learning loss during the pandemic.

Now in Los Angeles, 108 community organizations and local agencies are sharing $7.8 million in grant money to help kids catch up. The California Community Foundation just announced the grants, as the final installment of a three-year program.

Victor Domínguez, president and CEO of the YMCA of Metropolitan Los Angeles, said the funds help support 45 summer camps across the region.

“We’ve been able to engage more than 20,000 kids and teens in safe, high-quality sports, arts, fitness, civic engagement, and STEM summer enrichment activities,” Dominguez outlined.

The rapid response grants will also help the mayor’s office, Los Angeles Unified School District and the County Office of Education forge partnerships with community-based organizations going forward. The initiative is expected to help 86,000 kids, ages 5 to 17, right away, and reach another 136,000 in after-school activities this fall with tutoring, STEM classes and mental health programs.

Valerie Cuevas, director of education for the California Community Foundation, which oversees the grants, said the goal is to help restore some of what was taken away by the pandemic.

“Our major effort was to make sure that youth maintain connection to learning, connection to school; find a way to maintain joy, connection to peers, despite the heaviness of everything that was happening around us,” Cuevas explained.

She added the summer learning initiative was made possible by huge donations from multiple charitable organizations, including $3.3 million from the Ballmer Group.

 

Oakland nonprofit fills community fridges to combat hunger

July 18, 2022 – Local nonprofits in the Bay Area are tackling hunger in low-income neighborhoods by stocking corner stores and “community fridges” around town with free healthy meals.

The HOPE Collaborative in Oakland has received a $5,500 grant to help with this effort, from the Health, Environment, Agriculture and Labor Food Alliance – known as HEAL.

Elizabeth Esparza – interim project director at HOPE Collaborative – said people think that hunger needs went down as the pandemic has eased, but that isn’t the case.

“There were a lot of increased supports in 2020,” said Esparza. “And a lot of those started to drop off before the end of 2020 when the pandemic was at its worst. And so, that need is still there.”

HOPE Collaborative has teamed up with nonprofits Cocina del Corazon and Third Eye Soul Kitchen to stock community fridges placed around town and launched the Community Food Distribution Project with their Healthy Corner Store partners in March.

Navina Khanna, executive director of the HEAL Food Alliance, said the group is awarding $52,000 in rapid-response grants to food justice organizations that work with communities of color.

“We were seeing that to go through a whole funding process is often very, very cumbersome,” said Khanna, “in terms of an application and reporting requirements, and things like that. And that, by creating a pool of funds and getting that out to our communities, our communities could do what they need to do.”

The grants are designed to be flexible and can be used for many things – including repairs to a broken fridge, transportation, food and more. They have benefited eight grassroots, BIPOC-led organizations across the country.

What the Marvel movie ‘Avengers’ can teach us about the globalist depopulation agenda

History shows that megalomaniacal ideologues do not care how many millions of people die in pursuit of their failed ideologies. Thus emerges one of the universal lessons in the Avengers’: When the plans of the powerful fail, it is the powerless who pay the price

 

by Laura Hollis

 

In the Marvel film “Avengers: Infinity War,” Thanos, a super-being from another planet, is seeking six gems – the Infinity Stones – to put into the Infinity Gauntlet, a weapon which, when completed, enables the one who wears it to extinguish half of all life in the universe with just a snap of his fingers.

Thanos is cast as a super-villain, but he thinks of himself as an altruist. He explains to another Marvel character, Dr. Steven Strange, that he witnessed the destruction of his own planet, Titan, and that his motives for using the Infinity Gauntlet are purely beneficent:

“Titan was like most planets – too many mouths and not enough to go around. And when we faced extinction, I offered a solution … I could simply snap my fingers and they would all cease to exist.”

Thanos dismisses Strange’s accusation of genocide. “I call that ‘mercy,’” he says. “The hardest choices require the strongest wills.”

Here in the real world, we have our own class of self-appointed deities trying to run the planet, including Bill Gates and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, Klaus Schwab and his World Economic Forum (WEF), the army of WEF minions who have made their way into national governments across the globe, and the World Health Organization (WHO).

These puny gods, and the countless others who preach their dogma, demand that we worship at the altar of “climate change,” implementing policies they espouse without question, allegedly to save us all from destruction.

In keeping with the Marvel metaphor, here are six “gems” of our lives over which the mad titans of “climate change” seek control: energy, food production, housing, currency, laws/law enforcement, and governance. In each, they are demanding the implementation of policies they insist will “save the planet.”

These elites display the kind of arrogance that always precedes catastrophe. They assume that they are so brilliant and omniscient that they can anticipate every eventuality, every possible snag. Any student of history should be able to debunk that claim, but very recent events offer yet another pointed example.

In 2018, the government of Sri Lanka imposed agricultural regulations driven by the WEF’s “climate change” agenda. All non-organic fertilizer was banned. Within two years, agricultural production collapsed. Then, the overall economy. This past week, riots in the capital city drove the government leaders to flee the country.

Other nations don’t seem to be getting the message. England is trying to prompt farmers to “retire.” The government of the Netherlands has announced a plan to close a certain number of farms and ranches to help ameliorate the effects of “climate change.” (Rumor has it that the WEF plans to buy up Dutch farmland. This isn’t far-fetched; WEF devotee Bill Gates is now the single-largest farmland owner in the United States.) Dutch farmers and citizens have taken to the streets in protest. Similar protests have erupted in Germany, Italy, Spain, Poland, and Armenia.

There is plenty of reason to believe that housing and energy policies driven by “climate change” will produce equally dismal results. Even more ominously, the other three “stones” are tied to enforcement of whatever policies our “climate change” titans manage to implement. A digital currency can be manipulated by those in control of it, and actual wealth frozen or taken from those who oppose the regime.

As we’ve already seen in other contexts here in the United States, law-abiding citizens can be targeted by law enforcement for defending themselves or their property, and are characterized as “insurrectionists” or “domestic terrorists” for protesting what they believe to be illicit or ill-advised government actions. And the sovereignty of independent nations is the ultimate impediment to global implementation of the goals being advanced by the “climate change” demigods.

Then again, maybe policy failure is part of the plan. An outgrowth of environmentalism generally, the “climate change” movement has adopted many of environmentalism’s more extreme tenets, including population reduction. Despite the spectacularly wrong predictions of his 1970 bestseller “The Population Bomb,” author Paul Ehrlich is still considered the granddaddy of population-themed environmentalism. Ehrlich maintains that the ideal population of Earth is less than 2 billion people, an attitude that science writer Alex Berezow has described as “openly misanthropic (and) vaguely genocidal.”

Toward the end of “Infinity War,” it becomes clear that Thanos’ plans have not played out as he envisioned. He, like all megalomaniacs, blames not himself but his victims, who refuse to be suitably thankful to Thanos for the unfathomable losses his actions have inflicted. In response, Thanos decides to double down on his methods.

“I thought that by eliminating half of life, the other half would thrive,” Thanos complains to the surviving Avengers. “But you’ve shown me that’s impossible. As long as there are those that remember what was, there will always be those that are unable to accept what can be. I know what I must do. I will shred this universe down to its last atom, and then, with the stones you’ve collected for me, create a new one … a grateful universe.”

History shows that megalomaniacal ideologues – consider Pol Pot, Mao Zedong, and Josef Stalin – do not care how many millions of people die in pursuit of their failed ideologies. Thus emerges one of the universal lessons in Thanos’ story arc: When the plans of the powerful fail, it is the powerless who pay the price.

Thanos and the Infinity Gauntlet are fiction, but the threats we are facing are real. Those who want global control over our nations and our lives must never get it.

Reprinted with permission from WND News Center.

Consume foods rich in omega-3s to support brain and heart health

by Zoey Sky

 

07/06/2022 – Omega 3-fatty acids are fatty acids that function as bioactive lipids. Omega-3s have been shown to improve heart health by promoting healthy blood pressure, triglyceride and HDL, or “good” cholesterol, levels.

However, an often overlooked benefit of omega-3s is their effect on blood flow and circulation.

Omega-3s have a role in proper blood flow, which is important for your heart health and brain function.

Why are omega-3s important?

Omega-3s are polyunsaturated fatty acids that come in three main forms:

  • ALA (alpha-linolenic acid)
  • DHA (docosahexaenoic acid)
  • EPA (eicosapentaenoic acid)

Omega-3s are needed for different critical biological pathways in the body, but you need to consume these fatty acids through diet and supplementation to reach optimal levels since ALA is not produced organically in the body.

Meanwhile, EPA and DHA are converted from ALA. However, the process is inefficient so the consumption of EPA and DHA is essential for your well-being.

Omega-3s have a role in several bodily processes:

  • Omega-3s support growth and development from pregnancy through adolescence.
  • Omega-3s are also crucial later in life because they help keep you sharp as you age.
  • Omega-3s help boost the health of your brain, eyes and nervous system.

Omega-3s also support your well-being by facilitating circulation. According to research, omega-3s help promote blood flow and healthy triglyceride levels.

Omega-3s also ensure that your blood vessels remain clear by reducing platelet aggregation. This is important because your blood delivers bioactives, hormones, nutrients, oxygen and more to your whole body.

This is also why optimal blood flow is crucial for proper heart and brain function. (Related: Anti-inflammatory omega-3 fatty acids may help stave off conditions linked to aging like Alzheimer’s and heart disease.)

Blood flow and heart health

Omega-3s support cardiovascular health in two main ways: by helping maintain healthy levels of “good” HDL (high-density lipoprotein) cholesterol and triglycerides.

Omega-3s are also shown to support normal endothelial function, or the proper dilation of blood vessels, and arterial compliance, a measure of arterial elasticity. Both factors also contribute to proper blood flow and pressure.

By supporting these cardiovascular functions, omega-3s help to improve circulation and your overall heart health. Because of this, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) recently issued a health claim related to marine omega-3s EPA and DHA and their ability to reduce high blood pressure (hypertension) and coronary heart disease risk.

Blood flow and brain function

Proper blood circulation helps improve heart health and supports optimal brain function.

Proper blood flow provides your brain cells with a constant supply of oxygen and glucose, which they need to function optimally. This increased blood flow to the brain is linked to many mood and cognitive health benefits, like improving cognitive function and memory as you age.

Omega-3s also have antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties, which are essential for fighting oxidative stress in the brain and throughout your body.

Both oxidative stress homeostasis and cerebral circulation are key indicators of cognitive function, and omega-3s support both to promote various dimensions of brain health.

Dietary sources of omega-3s

The following foods are full of omega-3s:

  • Anchovies
  • Herring
  • Lake trout
  • Mackerel
  • Salmon
  • Sardines
  • Striped bass
  • Tuna

Higher-fat fish have some of the highest concentrations of omega-3s, particularly EPA and DHA. According to the American Heart Association, you should eat fatty fish at least twice a week to get adequate levels of omega-3s.

Unfortunately, at least 90 percent of Americans are not getting enough omega-3s.

If you are vegan, here are some of the best plant-based sources of omega-3s:

Hemp and flaxseeds are rich in ALA. Meanwhile, cashews are the best nut source of omega-3s.

Another option is to take omega-3 supplements to ensure you achieve healthy omega-3 levels. Fish oil and other omega-3 supplements full of DHA are also a great option for pregnant women because DHA has a crucial role in fetal growth and development.

To maximize cardioprotective benefits, consume one gram or more of EPA and DHA per day. That’s equivalent to eating an omega-3-rich fish daily.

Improve blood flow and overall brain function and heart health by consuming foods rich in omega-3s or taking supplements.

Watch the video below to know more about the health benefits of omega-3s.

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