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Imagination and music

by Jon Rappoport

 

When Walt Whitman wrote, “I sing the body electric,” and when he wrote his long poems, he was doing a kind of art that also sustained his own physical form and made it more alive. He saw healing everywhere and he created it and he broadcast it. He projected, into the American dream, a lightning bolt of improvisation that carried energy right down into the cells of the body.

If you were to open his book of grace and read out loud, boldly, and with energy, Song of Myself, you would experience a piece of this great unknown territory. It would enter your blood and brain and taste buds and carry a new spring.

There are some people who hear the word CREATE and wake up, as if a new flashing music has begun.

This lone word makes them see something untamed and astonishing.

They feel the sound of a Niagara approaching.

They suddenly know why they are alive.

When people strip away all the hogwash that has been passed off as spiritual enlightenment for centuries, fire IS what they are left with. The creative fire IS the IT they’ve been after. IS the real thing. Finally.

Ninety-nine percent of the world has been trained like rats to adore systems. Give them a system and they’re ready to cuddle up and take it all in. If they have questions, or if they want to argue, it’s about how to tweak the system to make it a little better. And with every move they make, they put another blanket over the Fire Within.

You can’t make THE CREATIVE into a debating society, because people will turn that into another system. You have to go for actual experience.

Imagine you’re suddenly a singer in the middle of a choir. That’s your whole life. This choir has no sheet music and no plan. The choir just sings, all at once. There is no together and there is no leader and there is no imposed harmony. There is just the choir. Everyone sings. It makes no sense. But you do it anyway. It’s chaos. It’s titanic and bizarre. But eventually, out of the chaos and in the chaos you find a wild beauty no one has ever heard before. It happens. And it makes the whole body and the whole mind and the whole consciousness go into a state of ecstasy.

That would be a creative experience. No one would be able to walk away from it and analyze it or label it. No one would be able to devalue it by comparing it to something else. No one would be able to debate the fine points, because there were no fine points.

I’m always amused when people discuss art as if it’s some sort of perfumed and expensive turned-out fruitcake. As if art exists in a room where the initiated are permitted to make a few deft comments in a vacuum. As if art is a few dollars more for something that hangs on a wall.

Art is a word that should be oceanic. It should shake and blow apart the pillars of the foul smug boredom of the soul.

Art is about what the individual invents when he is on fire and doesn’t care about concealing it. It’s about what the individual invents when he has thrown off the false front that is slowly strangling him.

Art is about the end of mindless postponement. It’s about what happens when you burn up the pretty and petty little obsessions. It’s about emerging from the empty suit and empty machine of society that goes around and around and sucks away the vital bloodstream.

Art is about destroying the old order and the new order and the present order, with a glance.

It’s about spearing the old apple on the point of a glittering sword and opening up the whole rotting crust that has attached itself to the tree of life.

It’s about shrugging off the widely praised harmonies of the living dead.

If art is a garden, the garden grows like a hurricane. It fills the heart many times. It marches out to the trees at the edge of the forest and into the canopy. It brings out cactus and rose and iris and magnolia. It erupts and subsides. It explodes after the rain. Like the famous Simon Rhodia, who made serpentine towers in Watts, California, from glass and metal and ceramic castoffs, the author takes his garden into unknown territory.

Like Johnny Appleseed, he goes wherever he can, as far as he can, until whole hillsides and roadsides and riverbanks are absorbed. Re-making the world.

At night he dreams of new countries where he can lead the garden. Where chard and tomatoes and tulips and lilies and turnips and oak and maple and aspen and palm and plum and spinach and gardenias and goldenseal and lilacs and hydrangea and rhododendron and corn and flax and pine can sprint to the horizon.

He is the general of this army and the foot soldier and the drummer and the hero. Stroller in the wind. Engraver, muralist. Titan. A dozer in the desert flower, the sailor along banks of green saplings. The driving rain and the drying sun. A black leopard in miles of forest.

A maker of music who has simultaneously set a hundred orchestras in miles of red reflecting canyons playing a symphony that has no beginning and no end but only an endless middle.

Jon Rappoport is the author of three explosive collections, The Matrix Revealed, Exit From The Matrix, and Power Outside The Matrix

“Solo Mujeres” exhibition at the MCCLA

Compiled by the El Reportero‘s staff

 

The “Solo Mujeres” exhibition has been a tradition at The Mission Cultural Center since 1987. This year we are inviting Artists from across the Bay Area to share their work with MCCLA and the communities we serve. The show will be a collection of work from Artists of all ages and career stages and celebrate the importance of Women’s voices in the Arts.

Exhibition Coordinator: Dr. Martina Ayala.

Thursday, March 24, 2022 from 6.p.m. to 9 p.m. $5 admission fee. Performances by Technicholor Guadalupe and Susana Gómez. DJs: TsarKoshka! and La Santa Diabla

At the Mission Cultural Center for Latino Arts Main Gallery (second floor). Up until May 6, 2022.

 

Brava presents Pachuquísmo Featuring Vanessa Sanchez & La Mezcla

Join Brava! for Women in the Arts for the return of Vanessa Sanchez and La Mezcla’s multidisciplinary performance Pachuquísmo, a rhythmic remembrance of las Pachucas and their stylized power of rebellious resistance, live on our main stage!

Returning after two sold-out shows, Pachuquísmo unveils the forgotten history of Mexican-American female youth during the era of the Zoot Suit Riots and explores the struggles that communities of color continue to face today.

The evening will also feature “Ghostly Labor: a Dance Film,” a short film that explores Vanessa Sanchez’s newest work in-progress, Ghostly Labor. Based on farm worker interviews in California, the dance film honors the sacred hands that feed us, and was filmed on a farm in Half Moon Bay, CA.

Opening Night, March 26 will see DJ Wray Vélez spinning pre-and-post event! So, come early and stay late (the bar will also be open!

 

ICA Cristo Rey Annual Business Lunch

This event brings together the San Francisco community around the common goal of investing in the next generation of our young women leaders. The Business Lunch Appeal will be in person on April 13, 2022.

Award Winners, 2022 CWSP Leader in Co-Education Award, KGO Television, ABC Channel 7 and David Rosati. 2022 Leader in Mission Award, Jenny Novoa ’86, Senior Director of Risk Management and Safety, Gap, Inc. Tickets $32 orchestra, $22 mezzanine.

Wednesday April 13, 2022 at 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Hyatt Regency on the Embarcadero San Francisco, CA.

 

Summer 2022 Student Ambassador Program to Oaxaca, Mexico: The City of Palo Alto’s Sister City organization, Neighbors Abroad, is running its Student Ambassador program this summer to Oaxaca, Mexico.

This program, which has been ongoing for over 50 years, allows students ages 15-18 and studying Spanish to spend 4 weeks living with a family in Oaxaca, and then welcoming a student from that family into their home in Palo Alto. Community Service opportunities in many different areas and professions are available during the time in Oaxaca. For more information, attend their virtual Information Night on Monday, March 28 at 7:30 p.m. or visit the Neighbors Abroad website.

 

Community Listening Session: Police Chief Selection Process

The City Manager has begun a selection process for the next Police Chief and is seeking community feedback. Join the conversation by sharing community priorities for the Police Department and key skills needed for the next Police Chief as the selection effort gets underway.

Thank you in advance for providing input on community priorities for the Palo Alto Police Department and key skills needed for the next Police Chief.

Next date: Thursday, March 31, 2022 at 5:30 p.m. to 7:00 p.m.

“Solo Mujeres” exhibition at the MCCLA

Compiled by the El Reportero‘s staff

 

The “Solo Mujeres” exhibition has been a tradition at The Mission Cultural Center since 1987. This year we are inviting Artists from across the Bay Area to share their work with MCCLA and the communities we serve. The show will be a collection of work from Artists of all ages and career stages and celebrate the importance of Women’s voices in the Arts. Exhibition Coordinator: Dr. Martina Ayala.

Thursday, March 24, 2022 from 6.p.m. to 9 p.m. $5 admission fee. Performances by Technicholor Guadalupe and Susana Gómez. DJs: TsarKoshka! and La Santa Diabla

At the Mission Cultural Center for Latino Arts Main Gallery (second floor). Up until May 6, 2022.

Brava presents Pachuquísmo Featuring Vanessa Sanchez & La Mezcla

Join Brava! for Women in the Arts for the return of Vanessa Sanchez and La Mezcla’s multidisciplinary performance Pachuquísmo, a rhythmic remembrance of las Pachucas and their stylized power of rebellious resistance, live on our main stage!

Returning after two sold-out shows, Pachuquísmo unveils the forgotten history of Mexican-American female youth during the era of the Zoot Suit Riots and explores the struggles that communities of color continue to face today.

The evening will also feature “Ghostly Labor: a Dance Film,” a short film that explores Vanessa Sanchez’s newest work in-progress, Ghostly Labor. Based on farm worker interviews in California, the dance film honors the sacred hands that feed us, and was filmed on a farm in Half Moon Bay, CA.

Opening Night, March 26 will see DJ Wray Vélez spinning pre-and-post event! So, come early and stay late (the bar will also be open!

Community Listening Session: Police Chief Selection Process

The City Manager has begun a selection process for the next Police Chief and is seeking community feedback. Join the conversation by sharing community priorities for the Police Department and key skills needed for the next Police Chief as the selection effort gets underway.

Thank you in advance for providing input on community priorities for the Palo Alto Police Department and key skills needed for the next Police Chief.

Next date: Thursday, March 31, 2022 at 5:30 p.m. to 7:00 p.m.

ICA Cristo Rey Annual Business Lunch

This event brings together the San Francisco community around the common goal of investing in the next generation of our young women leaders. The Business Lunch Appeal will be in person on April 13, 2022.

Award Winners, 2022 CWSP Leader in Co-Education Award, KGO Television, ABC Channel 7 and David Rosati. 2022 Leader in Mission Award, Jenny Novoa ’86, Senior Director of Risk Management and Safety, Gap, Inc. Tickets $32 orchestra, $22 mezzanine.

Wednesday April 13, 2022 at 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Hyatt Regency on the Embarcadero San Francisco, CA.

Summer 2022 Student Ambassador Program to Oaxaca, Mexico: The City of Palo Alto’s Sister City organization, Neighbors Abroad, is running its Student Ambassador program this summer to Oaxaca, Mexico.

This program, which has been ongoing for over 50 years, allows students ages 15-18 and studying Spanish to spend 4 weeks living with a family in Oaxaca, and then welcoming a student from that family into their home in Palo Alto. Community Service opportunities in many different areas and professions are available during the time in Oaxaca. For more information, attend their virtual Information Night on Monday, March 28 at 7:30 p.m. or visit the Neighbors Abroad website.

 

Exit From The Matrix: Your power in a decaying world

by Jon Rappoport

 

These are notes I made prior to preparing my second collection, Exit From The Matrix:

 

“Solutions to private problems and public problems require the ability to think things through, logically, and to reject what is unworkable or biased—but above and beyond that, a person needs to be able to imagine solutions that haven’t been tried before.”

“Propaganda says: defect from your own power. Never find out what it is. Assume it isn’t there. Propaganda says: all life is about the species, not about the individual.”

“When propagandists find a good thing, a message that works, they pound on it, they keep hammering away. Family, group, family, group, community. On and on. They never promote the message called The Individual with the same intensity. That would be counter-productive to what they are trying to accomplish: group identity; and amnesia about being an individual.”

“Civilization continues to erode and decay, as individual power is put on the back burner. But that doesn’t give the individual a license to surrender. If others want to give up, that’s their business. The individual, instead, finds new frontiers for his power, for his capacity to invent reality.”

“There is you, there is your own power. And what is that power? It comes in two forms or venues. First, there is the ability to apply logic to events and information; to think rationally from A to B to C; to analyze. And second, there is imagination, the capacity to conceive and then invent realities that would never otherwise exist in the world.”

“You exercise your creative power to fulfill what you deeply desire; and that process will, in fact, spill over and affect others in a positive way. It will lift them up. It will remind them that they, too, have power.”

“Logic and analysis keep you from being sent down wrong roads, keeps you from buying official reality. Logic also reminds you that you have a mind. Logic is a road that can take you deeper and deeper into more basic fallacies that underpin organized society and its branches of knowledge. Logic tells you there are always more fundamental questions to ask and answer. There are levels of lies. The deeper you go, the more confident you become. The more powerful. Logic also lets you know when you’re projecting basic pre-judgments over a whole landscape and neglecting to look at the details.”

“Passivity is a disease. It spreads and takes over. It makes strong people weak, and weak people demented. The passive life is precisely and exactly a life without power. The cure is a life lived with power.”

“In case there is any misunderstanding, the ability to help others and defend them from oppression is part and parcel of your own power. How could you help them without your power? How could you accomplish anything at all in that direction? How would denying your own power possibly result in a good outcome? And most importantly, it is through imagination that you can devise new ways to expose and reduce oppression, ways that haven’t been thought of before.”

“As society continues to decay, more and people attack individual power and place their faith in a program that reduces every human to a lowest common denominator of dependence on some controlling entity. This article of faith is abject surrender.”

“Some people want to say that power is a neutral object that can be used for good or evil. That isn’t true. Your deepest power is alive. It’s personal. It’s stunningly energetic and dynamic. It connects with your deepest understanding of what is true and good and right. But it never sacrifices itself on the altar of what others insist is good and true and right. It never deserts you for an abstract ideology someone else has devised. That ideology was formulated, in fact, to separate you from your power.”

“It takes great energy for a person to bury his own strength. Why not use that energy to multiply your power?”

The creative power of the individual, which is the key to his future, his happiness, his freedom, flows from his imagination.

For this reason, over the last 20 years, I’ve developed hundreds of imagination exercises, about 50 of which are included in my collection, Exit From The Matrix.

Jon Rappoport is the author of three explosive collections, The Matrix Revealed, Exit From The Matrix, and Power Outside The Matrix.

The International Latino Book Awards

Celebrates Books By & About Latinos

by Yenni Patiño

 

Consider entering your book(s) in the next International Latino Book Awards, the largest competition for books by and about Latinos and become part of our efforts to promote and represent Latinos in Literature.
Empowering Latino Futures (ELF), formerly Latino Literacy Now, was co-founded by Edward James Olmos and established in 1998. Through the book awards, ELF has honored 3,470 authors and publishers in categories such as Latino-focused, fiction, nonfiction, children’s books, poetry, translation, bilingual books, ebooks, Portuguese and more. Please visit www.LatinoBookAwards.org for more details and everything you need to know to participate. You can also see the 2020 and 2021 Awards Ceremony, both held virtually. Submission Deadline April 15, 2022.

The International Latino Book Awards introduces the Rising Star Honorees.

The four categories that Rising Star Honorees will be presented in include Children’s, NonFiction, Fiction, and Poetry books. The Rising Stars will be chosen from authors who are not yet making a full-time living as an author and are Gold Medal winners in the appropriate categories for each of the four Awards. A secondary judging process will determine the four winners.
Each winner will receive a $3,500 package including a check for $1,000, distribution of an article about their book to over 625 Latino media outlets, a press release focusing on the four 2022 Rising Stars, receive a special award, and be featured for the press and elsewhere as representing the next generation of ‘Must Read’ authors.
ELF has permanently named 11 of the Awards for people who have both opened the path for writers in the Latino community overall.

The Rudy Anaya Best Latino Focused Fiction Award in honor of the late great Padrino of Chicano literature; The Isabel Allende Best Inspirational Fiction Award in honor of the best selling Latina author; The Alma Flor Ada Best Latino Focused Children’s Picture Book Award for luminary of children’s literature; The Juan Felipe Herrera Best Poetry Book Award for the first Latino U.S. Poet Laureate; The Dolores Huerta Best Community Service Book Award for the woman who has inspired millions; The Victor Villaseñor Best Latino Focused Nonfiction Award for the trailblazing author; and all of them are International Latino Book Award Winners! Winners have also included many literary luminaries from Paulo Coelho, and Gabriel García Márquez to Oscar Hijuelos, Jose Luis Orozco, and Luis Rodriguez. Major winners from other fields have included Gloria Estefan, Cheech Marin, Linda Ronstadt, and Carlos Santana to Henry Cisneros, Oscar de la Hoya, Jorge Ramos, and Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor. Just as important, the Awards have honored hundreds of authors, illustrators, translators, and others. These professionals are the future of books by and about Latinos.

The Award Winning Authors Tour gives winners the opportunity to participate in educational, and Latino community events around the USA like the American Library Association, CABE, UnidosUS, and our Latino Book and Family Festival.
The Award Winning Author logo is being recognized as a mark of quality in publishing for Latinos and others. The awards continue to grow every year in the number of entries, winners, and recognition. As one of the 10 most cited book awards in the USA, last year’s press releases of winners were downloaded 1,275 times in the US and Latin America.

The International Latino Book Awards Ceremony recognizing the winners and the ISLA Latino Publishing University, a three-day informational workshop event, will both take place at Los Angeles City College on August 19-21, 2022.

The International Latino Book Awards entry package is available at www.LatinoBookAwards.org. Thanks for being a part of literature efforts to improve our communities.

Why a plant-based diet is good for your heart

Following a plant-based diet can boost “good” bacteria in the gut and prevent heart disease

 

by Joanne Washburn

 

03/10/2022 – The gut is home to trillions of bacteria that are involved in many key metabolic processes, like nutrient absorption and the regulation of energy levels.

Gut bacteria produce a metabolite called trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO) when they digest nutrients typically found in animal products, such as choline and carnitine. Previous studies have shown that high TMAO levels increase the risk for atherosclerosis, or the hardening or narrowing of the arteries. Atherosclerosis is a major cause of coronary heart disease, a common type of heart disease that can lead to heart attack.

In fact, atherosclerotic coronary heart disease is a leading cause of death in the United States and around the world.

As if that wasn’t bad enough, the amount of TMAO-producing bacteria in your gut goes up as your intake of red meat increases. In other words, the more red meat you eat, the more TMAO-producing gut bacteria you have. This could end up changing your gut microbiome for the worse and put you at risk for chronic health issues.

However, studies have shown that the opposite seems to be true for those eating a vegan or a vegetarian diet. These people tend to have fewer TMAO-producing gut bacteria than those who like to eat red meat.

To determine whether changes in TMAO levels are associated with the incidence of coronary heart disease, the researchers examined 760 women enrolled in the Nurses’ Health Study, a prospective cohort study of more than 121,000 female registered nurses between the ages of 30 and 55.

In particular, they analyzed the women’s dietary patterns, smoking status and physical activity, among other demographic data. The women also provided two blood samples taken 10 years apart.

The researchers found that women who developed coronary heart disease within a 10-year period had much higher amounts of TMOA in their blood than those who didn’t develop the disease.

Women who developed coronary heart disease also had a high body mass index (BMI) and a family history of heart attacks. They also followed a relatively unhealthy diet that included a lot of animal products.

After the researchers controlled for demographic variables, they found that women with the highest levels of TMAO in their blood at the end of the study had a 67 percent higher risk for coronary heart disease than women with the lowest TMAO levels.

In all, the findings of the study provide further proof for the role of TMAO as a biomarker for coronary heart disease. Such findings should encourage us to adopt healthier eating patterns and diets.

Plant-based diet can reduce risk of death from heart disease

In another study, researchers found that adding plant-based foods to your diet might just decrease your risk of dying from causes of premature death, such as heart disease.

They used data from 47,983 women with an average age of 64 who participated in the Nurses’ Health Study, as well as 25,737 men of the same average age who participated in the Health Professionals Follow-Up Study, a prospective cohort study of more than 51,000 male health professionals. None of the participants had a history of cancer or heart disease when they entered their respective studies.

The researchers looked at changes in the participants’ diets over a 12-year period and devised three separate scales to measure how much plant-based foods people incorporated into their daily diets. The scales were overall plant-based diet, healthy plant-based diet and unhealthy plant-based diet.

They found that those with the largest increase in an overall plant-based diet had an eight percent lower risk of dying from all causes. Meanwhile, those who had a healthy plant-based diet had a 10 percent lower risk of death from heart disease. This diet involved replacing one serving each day of refined grains with whole grains. The diet also added one serving each day of fruits and vegetables and limiting sugary drinks to just one serving each day.

On the other hand, those who followed an unhealthy plant-based diet had an 11 percent higher chance of death. This diet included a lot of unhealthy food items, such as processed fruit juices, refined grains, sweets and potatoes, despite being plant-based.

So if you’re looking to live a long, healthy life, you may want to start incorporating more fruits, vegetables, nuts, whole grains and other plant-based foods into your diet. It would also help to cut back on unhealthy foods, such as refined grains, sweets and sugary drinks like processed fruit juices.

Attorney General puts city of Pasadena on notice for violating state housing laws

Submitted by the State Attorney’s Office

 

OAKLAND – California Attorney General Rob Bonta on Tuesday, March 15 notified the City of Pasadena that its urgency ordinance restricting implementation of Senate Bill (SB) 9 violates state law. SB 9 is critical to combat California’s statewide housing crisis by promoting supply and affordability.

The law, which went into effect on Jan. 1, 2022, allows homeowners to build up to four residential units on a single-family lot. On Dec. 6, 2021, Pasadena adopted Urgency Ordinance No. 7384, which among other things, would allow the City to broadly exempt existing areas from SB 9 requirements by declaring the areas “landmark districts.” Pasadena extended the ordinance on Jan. 10, 2022. In today’s letter, Attorney General Bonta warns the City that the ordinance is invalid and must be repealed.

“Pasadena’s urgency ordinance undermines SB 9 and denies residents the opportunity to create sorely needed additional housing, under the guise of protecting ‘landmark districts.’ This is disappointing and, more importantly, violates state law,” said Attorney General Bonta. “Right now, California is facing a housing crisis of epic proportions, and it’s going to take all of us, doing our part, to alleviate its worst effects. At the California Department of Justice, we’re in this fight for the long haul. I urge cities to take seriously their obligations under state housing laws. If you don’t, we will hold you accountable.”

In the letter, Attorney General Bonta warns Pasadena that its effort to sidestep SB 9 and restrict housing production violates the law. Specifically, the letter highlights that:

– The ordinance attempts to broadly exempt from SB 9 compliance any areas that the City chooses to designate as “landmark districts” despite no such exemption existing within SB 9. To qualify for an SB 9 exemption, an individual site must be part of a (1) landmark, (2) historic property, or (3) historic district. Such designations cannot be arbitrary or capricious, and they must be supported by substantial evidence. While individual properties may be landmarks exempt from SB 9, the phrase “landmark district” does not appear in SB 9, and Pasadena’s criteria for designating areas “landmark districts” are extremely broad and untethered to historic resources so as to potentially encompass large swaths of the City. To the extent that there is any ambiguity around the exemption for “historic districts,” it must be read narrowly so as to not undermine the objectives of SB 9; and

– The ordinance does not include the requisite findings to justify adopting new SB 9 development standards by an urgency ordinance. Pasadena provides no evidence that SB 9 projects would have a significant adverse impact on public health or safety, let alone the substantial evidence of a significant, quantifiable, direct, and unavoidable impact that is required to adopt new standards.

Last month, Attorney General Bonta notified the Town of Woodside that its memorandum declaring the entire town a mountain lion sanctuary violated SB 9. The town subsequently revoked the memorandum.

European lawmakers call for restraint in rhetoric against media; AMLO calls them sheep

Resolution criticizing president draws swift and unsubtle attack

 

by Mexico News Daily

 

The European Parliament (EP) condemned the harassment and killing of journalists and human rights defenders in Mexico Thursday, drawing an extraordinarily blunt reply from the president’s office that likened European lawmakers to sheep.

The federal government responded by accusing European lawmakers of “corruption, lies and hypocrisy” and describing them as misinformed sheep following the lead of its adversaries.

With an overwhelming majority of lawmakers voting in favor, the EP approved a resolution Thursday that said that attacks against journalists and human rights defenders, including environmental defenders and indigenous people and communities, are “dramatically rising” in Mexico.

It noted that Mexico has long been the most dangerous and deadliest place for journalists outside an official war zone, and that it was the most dangerous country in the world for journalists for a third consecutive year in 2021, according to Reporters Without Borders.

In a bloody start to 2022, eight media workers have been killed, at least six of whom were practicing journalists.

In that context, the EP called on authorities to investigate the murders of journalists and human rights defenders “in a prompt, thorough, independent and impartial manner.”

It also noted “with concern the systematic and tough critiques used by the highest authorities of the Mexican government against journalists and their work” and called on authorities to “refrain from issuing any communication which could stigmatize human rights defenders, journalists and media workers, exacerbate the atmosphere against them or distort their lines of investigation.”

The EP specifically called out President López Obrador, saying that he has “frequently used populist rhetoric in daily press briefings to denigrate and intimidate independent journalists, media owners and activists.”

“… The rhetoric of abuse and stigmatization generates an atmosphere of relentless unrest towards independent journalists,” it said.

It is the first time that the EP has passed such a resolution directed at a foreign government. United States Secretary of State Antony Blinken has also expressed concern about violence against journalists in Mexico, although he didn’t directly criticize the president.

The federal government responded with a statement issued by the president’s office late Thursday.

“To the members of the European Parliament, enough corruption, lies and hypocrisy,” it began, adding that it was regrettable that the lawmakers have “joined like sheep the reactionary and coup-mongering strategy of the corrupt group opposed to the fourth transformation,” the government’s self-anointed nickname.

“… Mexico has ceased being a land of conquest and, like few times in its history, libertarian principles of equality and democracy are being enforced. No one is repressed here, freedom of speech and the work of journalists is respected. The state doesn’t violate human rights as occurred in previous governments, when you, by the way, maintained complicit silence,” the government told the European parliamentarians.

“… If we were in the situation you describe in your pamphlet, our president wouldn’t be supported by 66% of citizens,” it said, citing a new opinion poll.

“… Inform yourselves and read the resolutions presented to you well before you cast your vote. And don’t forget that we’re no longer anybody’s colony. Mexico is a free, independent and sovereign country. Evolve, leave behind your meddlesome obsession disguised as good intentions. You’re not the world’s government,” the statement said.

López Obrador on Friday called the EP resolution “libelous” and “completely false,” and revealed that he, communications coordinator Jesús Ramírez and “other colleagues” wrote the response on their way to Tapachula, where the president’s Friday morning press conference was held.

He also said that arrests have been made in all but one of the murders of journalists this year, although he only acknowledged five.

On Thursday, López Obrador asserted that his government is protecting journalists before claiming that his adversaries are using the murders of such people to “weaken” his administration.

“We have special protection for journalists,” he said, referring to the government program designed to prevent violence against those deemed to be at risk.

“… Those being murdered are humble journalists doing their work in different parts of the country, the journalists at the service of the magnates don’t have any risk. … There is a campaign against the government I represent taking advantage of this regrettable situation; they’re looking for a way to weaken us,” López Obrador said.

With reports from El País, El Universal.

California is expanding Medi-Cal — but hundreds of thousands of immigrants will still be left behind

by Ana B. Ibarra

 

Lucia Marroquin knows what it’s like to wait out pain in hopes that it will go away on its own. She is suffering from kidney stones and may need surgery. But because she lacks health coverage, her first question when she falls ill is always “how much will that cost me?”

So when California officials announced plans to extend Medi-Cal coverage to more undocumented adults, the Fresno County resident was hopeful that she would finally qualify for health insurance.

But her farmworker husband’s annual income of $35,000 puts the couple over the limit to qualify for Medi-Cal, which is reserved for low-income residents. So even under Gov. Gavin Newsom’s planned expansion, she’ll likely be left with no health insurance.

Experts say allowing people to sign up for comprehensive Medi-Cal coverage regardless of their immigration status is the single biggest step California can take to insure as many people as possible in the current system. Newsom called his latest planned expansion “universal access to coverage.”

But the expansion would still leave several hundred thousand undocumented immigrants like Marroquin uninsured. They are unable to qualify because they have jobs where they earn above Medi-Cal’s annual income thresholds for most adults: $17,609 for single people, $23,792 for a couple and $36,156 for a family of four.

That leaves many low-income immigrants with few viable options for health coverage. While most Californians who earn over the Medi-Cal limit can get subsidized coverage through Covered California, undocumented people are not allowed to buy insurance through the marketplace under the federal Affordable Care Act.

On May 1, about 235,000 undocumented people aged 50 and older will gain new access to Medi-Cal under a law signed last summer. A second proposal, unveiled in Newsom’s January budget, would include another 700,000 undocumented adults in the 26 to 49 age group, starting as early as 2024, if approved in this year’s final budget. Children and young adults are already eligible.

“This is a great achievement and it is absolutely amazing, but there will still be some who will remain uninsured,” said Arturo Vargas Bustamante, health policy professor at the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health. “It’s not universal health care, but the situation for many immigrants in California will be much better.”

In 2023, after Medi-Cal expands to cover undocumented immigrants 50 and older, about 3.2 million people will remain uninsured in California, according to researchers at the UC Berkeley Labor Center and the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research. Of those, 1.16 million will be unauthorized immigrants.

Even if Newsom’s next step is approved — covering undocumented adults 26 to 49 years old as early as 2024 — that would still leave roughly 450,000 undocumented people under 65 with no health coverage. (The difference between 1.16 million people and the 700,000 who would gain access.)

‘Doesn’t have to be free. Just a fair price’

The governor’s latest proposal would help Virginia Moscoso, a 29-year-old mother of two in Yolo County who is undocumented. She is enrolled in restricted-scope Medi-Cal, which is limited to emergencies and pregnancies, but hopes she would obtain full benefits if the proposal is approved in the final budget.

Full-scope benefits allow people coverage for routine, preventive care, long-term care and in-home supportive services.

Moscoso is especially interested in dental care. A few months back, she had a toothache that she alleviated with home remedies, but she is overdue for a checkup.

In the past, Moscoso has worked seasonal jobs in farm fields, but her family of four mostly relies on her husband’s earnings of about $35,000, which means they would likely qualify — just barely — for Medi-Cal under Newsom’s expansion. Her children are already enrolled in Medi-Cal, and that’s a huge help, she said.

She’s grateful that apart from her pregnancies, she hasn’t needed to use her emergency Medi-Cal. But if she qualified for primary care, it would make a lot more sense than waiting until she’s ill in the hospital.

“For me it would be a great blessing,” Moscoso said. “Because when you go to the doctor it’s never just the one visit — you need tests and medication, and it adds up.”

Many people without health insurance seek care at community clinics where services may be offered on a sliding fee scale, so what they pay is based on their income.

That’s how Marroquin, 55, usually gets care. Each visit to the clinic costs her about $40. A recent ultrasound for her kidney stones cost her $200.

Marroquin has applied for emergency Medi-Cal in the past but was denied because her husband’s income of $35,000 was too high.

“It’s very difficult to be without coverage,” Marroquin said. “It doesn’t have to be free, just at a fair price. As my husband says, we can get car insurance, why can’t we buy health insurance?”

For most adult enrollees, the limit to qualify for Medi-Cal is 138% of the federal poverty level. Eligibility takes into account income and household size. (Certain groups like pregnant women qualify at slightly higher incomes.)

People like Marroquin with wages near that threshold are considered to be among the working poor: They are not earning a living wage in California. Most Californians in that situation can buy subsidized plans from Covered California. But undocumented immigrants cannot, and while they can purchase coverage directly from insurance companies, it is often unaffordable. For instance, premiums for a couple in their 50s could cost more than $1,000 a month, said Alex Hernandez, a health insurance agent in Merced.

“I think some people, especially if they have an illness, see the value of having insurance despite the cost. But it’s tough,” Hernandez said. Facing such high premiums, “most people are going to say forget it.”

In 2016, California applied for a waiver from the federal government to allow undocumented people to buy from Covered California. But the state withdrew the application at the request of the Legislature when former President Donald Trump took office.

Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara, who spearheaded legislation for the waiver application when he was a state senator, said the request was rescinded because of concern that the Trump administration would use immigrants’ information against them.

The waiver application has not been resubmitted by the state, but it’s still an option, Lara said.

Even if a waiver were approved, undocumented residents would still have to purchase insurance without federal subsidies. The state could, in theory, provide some financial assistance, health advocates say.

Lara said Newsom made Medi-Cal expansion for undocumented immigrants a priority in this year’s budget, which shows just how much attitudes around the issue have changed.

“Back in the day this was an issue that people thought would cost you the election or cost you grief. It’s a tremendous shift in attitude toward the undocumented community,” Lara said.

But to truly get to universal coverage, California will need to continue innovative approaches and drill down on affordability, Lara said. He authored a single-payer bill in 2017 and thinks that type of system is inevitable, but will take time. In the meantime, he said the state should keep expanding coverage where it can.

Last month, the Legislature’s latest version of a bill that would have created a state-funded single payer system died on the Assembly floor. It didn’t have enough votes, according to its author, Assemblymember Ash Kalra of San Jose.

Lack of access because of immigration status is just one piece of the remaining uninsured. Many other Californians forgo coverage despite being eligible, likely because of the cost. According to the UC Berkeley and UCLA study, 2 million uninsured people qualify for Medi-Cal, employer coverage or Covered California.

“The most common reason that people eligible for employer coverage remain uninsured is that they can’t afford the premium contributions,” said Laurel Lucia, director of the Health Care Program at UC Berkeley’s Labor Center.

People eligible for Medi-Cal may go without it for a number of reasons. A report from the California Health Care Foundation found that people may be deterred from applying because of misinformation or a negative perception of the Medi-Cal program. Some who tried applying reported having a hard time navigating the enrollment process.

Similarly, people eligible for Covered California may go without it because they either don’t know they are eligible for financial aid or may still not be able to afford it even with the help.

Covered California officials last month announced that because of a temporary boost in federal subsidies, two-thirds of enrollees in its most recent sign-up period were eligible to get coverage for $10 or less a month. This year’s enrollment period closed with a record 1.8 million Californians signed up for health insurance through the marketplace.

To further aid with affordability, the chairs of the Legislature’s health committees recently introduced bills that aim to reduce deductibles and copays for people enrolled through Covered California.

Comcast Invests $1 Million to Bring High Speed Broadband to Rural Community of Biola, California in Fresno County

by Corporate News

 

Comcast today announced it invested $1 million to bring high speed broadband to Biola, Cali., a rural community in Fresno County. As part of its larger digital equity initiative in California, Comcast will also open three new Lift Zones in the Central Valley region, donate more than $100,000 to community organizations for digital literacy programs, and provide free laptops to 250 families.

Biola residential customers will now have access to all Xfinity services, including Internet Essentials, which provides high speed Internet at home for $9.95 per month (plus tax) for qualified families/individuals. Businesses in the area also will now be able to get the full suite of Comcast Business products and services.

In addition, Comcast announced it will open three new WiFi-connected community centers, called Lift Zones, one at the Biola Community Services District and two at Reading & Beyond located in Southeast Fresno. Each location will provide free WiFi access to students, families, seniors, and community members. With these three additions, Comcast now has established 13 Lift Zones in Fresno County—and a total of 150 Lift Zones throughout our California footprint. Last year, Comcast launched Lift Zones at 10 Boys & Girls Clubs locations. Through these overall investments, and by providing reliable WiFi service at multiple educational and community spaces — as well as to homes and businesses — Comcast has helped thousands in the Central Valley get online and more fully participate in the digital economy.

In addition to providing free WiFi service at the new Lift Zone locations, Comcast donated $102,000 to community partners — Fresno State Parent University received $77,000 to help residents with digital literacy training and work readiness skills and $25,000 to Reading & Beyond to provide digital literacy training to students, families, seniors, and community members.

“Access to high-speed broadband is a game changer for the residents and business owners in Biola,” said Fresno County Supervisor Brian Pacheco. “Our world has become even more dependent on the internet to learn, teach, work, find healthcare services and so many other aspects of daily life. Comcast’s new high-speed internet services, combined with these sizable financial contributions to our community, will help so many individuals, families and businesses in our region. I’m thankful to everyone who worked so hard to make it a reality.”

“The need for fast, secure internet service has never been greater than it is today, and I’m glad to see Comcast continue to invest in rural areas such as Biola to help our underserved communities,” said California State Assemblymember Dr. Joaquin Arambula. “Bold investments like these from Comcast have a significant impact. Helping families gain affordable and reliable internet access opens numerous areas of opportunity, maximizes potential, and creates lasting change.”

“I am greatly appreciative of the efforts taken by Comcast’s significant investments in our rural communities and the expansion of broadband access,” said, Executive Director of the San Joaquin Broadband Consortium Eduardo Gonzalez. “Continuing to support public private partnerships, such as Comcast and the community of Biola, to create digital equity solutions can be a model of what can be accomplished together. These partnerships will help create vital educational opportunities, workforce development skills and overall quality of life for our residents and families in the region.”

Expanding its network and broadband services to rural areas is an important part of Comcast’s overall effort to increase digital equity. Another critical element is Comcast’s Internet Essentials program, which has helped connect more than 10 million low-income people to the Internet at home. This includes more than 1.4 million residents across California, which is the number one state in terms of overall participation in the Internet Essentials program. Today’s donation is part of Project UP, Comcast’s $1 billion commitment to reach 50 million people over the next 10 years with the tools, resources, and skills needed to succeed in a digital world. For more information about Comcast’s comprehensive connectivity program for low-income Americans visit https://corporate.comcast.com/values/internet-essentials.

Lastly, Comcast is making the federal government’s Affordable Connectivity Program (ACP) available for all speed tiers of Xfinity Internet service including Internet Essentials. ACP is a federal program that provides eligible customers up to a $30 per month credit toward their Internet and mobile services for the duration of the program. New and existing Xfinity Internet or Internet Essentials customers can visit www.xfinity.com/free or call 844-389-4681 for more information, to determine eligibility, and sign up.