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Frida Sofía Guzmán, the granddaughter of “El Chapo” who wants to be a singer

by the El Reportero‘s news services

 

The also stepdaughter of Julio César Chávez Jr. seeks to make herself known in the world of music. For now, her platforms are social media, talent shows, and local events.

Although her grandfather is the most famous drug lord in recent years, Frida Sofía wants to make a career in show business, and it seems that it is a project that is serious.

The 16-year-old is the daughter of Edgar Guzmán, son of El Chapo, who was assassinated in 2008 in Culiacán, and Frida Muñoz, who married Julio César Chávez Jr. in 2016.

And although she is pursued by the stigma of her grandfather and the fame of her stepfather, in addition to that of the boxing legend, Julio César Chávez, the Sinaloan seeks to make her own way, as she demonstrated last year on the television program I have talent, a lot of talent from the Estrella TV network.

According to the Californian production, Frida Sofía auditioned like any other participant. “I am of the belief that you start from the bottom and, well, shine for yourself,” said the young woman during her first appearance on the program.

The aspiring Mexican regional music singer has an excellent relationship with her stepfather and her “grandfather” of hers, Julio César Chávez, who she, she says, have always encouraged her to appear in the show. .

After the talent contest, in which she was among the first three places, she began to make small presentations like the one she made known a few days ago, when she performed the National Anthem in a box show. “It feels very cool, it’s like one more achievement in this career that I want to make music,” she said in an interview conducted ringside.

Frida does not deny her origins and has no problem answering questions about her family. She mentioned that she dedicated the song “Eternal Love” to her father, which she always reminds of him. She also mentioned that she is learning to play the guitar, piano, and other instruments along with her high school studies.

She also said that she could not celebrate her 15th birthday due to the pandemic (her mother lives in California), so she stayed with her maternal family in Sinaloa. Frida has two half-siblings, Julio César and Julia, children of Frida Muñoz and world middleweight champion Julio César Chávez Jr, whom she is said to be divorcing.

 

Kiss founder Gene Simmons spotted on garbage truck in Nuevo León

But it was actually a worker dressed up as The Demon

 

A garbage collector who dressed up as a member of the rock band Kiss a year and a half ago has caught the attention of one of the band’s founders.

Gene Simmons retweeted a video on Friday of the worker fully clad in black and white outfit, black and white face paint and long hair in the style of the band calling for trash from the back of a truck in Monterrey, Nuevo León.

The man, who Simmons called Rodrigo, imitated the Kiss on stage persona by sticking out his tongue and pointing up his index and pinky fingers to make a “Rock On” sign. The band’s 1979 hit I Was Made for Lovin’ You from the album Dynasty was played over the top of the video.

“This handsome gentleman works at the Sanitation Company in Monterrey, Mexico … a powerful and attractive man, if there ever was one! Thank you, Rodrigo,” the tweet read. It has received almost 42,000 likes and the video has almost 600,000 views.

The band has been on its End of the Road World Tour since January 2019 and has eight concerts scheduled for Latin America later in 2022, none of which is in Mexico.

With reports from Infobae and Sin Embargo

COVID: Why did mega-corporations accept the lockdowns?

Three men who own corporate America

 

by Jon Rappoport

 

Over the past 38 years working as a reporter, I’ve spoken with many medical people. Doctors, researchers, public health bureaucrats, business executives whose companies supply products to the medical industry, professors, etc.

In every case, these people completely and utterly support conventional medical reality. They are unshakable. A man like Fauci says jump and they jump. To do otherwise would be unthinkable.

As you read on, you’ll see why this is important…

Airlines, hotel chains—you name it, they all folded when the lockdowns were imposed. They closed up shop, they took a knee, they opted for bailouts. Why?

The CEOs of these corporations are supposed to be hard chargers and ruthless operators. Why didn’t they rebel?

I could cite several reasons. Here I want to focus on a little-known and staggering story.

Imagine an employee of a company is motivated to speak out against the lockdowns and go public. Then he thinks about the owner of the company. That owner happens to sit on the board of a large hospital.

Uh oh. That owner is SOLIDLY WIRED into official medical reality. He isn’t going to appreciate a naysayer who says the lockdowns are a ridiculous and destructive overreach. Better to stay quiet. Better to fit in and go along.

Well, it so happens that three of the most powerful corporate bosses in America DO have deep connections to major hospitals, and these three men run corporations that OWN CORPORATE AMERICA.

What???

The three men are Larry Fink, Joseph Hooley, and Mortimer Buckley.

Buckley is the CEO of the Vanguard Group. Hooley is the CEO of State Street. Fink is the CEO of BlackRock.

These three companies are titanic investment funds. Financial services companies.

Buckley is a board member of the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. From 2011 to 2017, he was chairman of the hospital’s board of trustees.

Hooley serves on the president’s council of Massachusetts General Hospital.

Fink is the co-chair of the NYU Langone Medical Center board of trustees.

Let’s look at their investment funds: State Street, BlackRock, and Vanguard—known as The Big Three. The reference is an article at theconversation[dot]com, “These three firms own corporate America,” 5/19/17, by Jan Fichtner, Eelke Heemskerk, and Javier Garcia-Bernardo.

“Together, BlackRock, Vanguard and State Street have nearly US$11 trillion in assets under management.”

“We found that the Big Three, taken together, have become the largest shareholder in 40 percent of all publicly listed firms in the United States.”

“In 2015, these 1,600 American firms [the 40%] had combined revenues of about US$9.1 trillion, a market capitalisation of more than US$17 trillion, and employed more than 23.5 million people.”

 

“In the S&P 500 – the benchmark index of America’s largest corporations – the situation is even more extreme. Together, the Big Three are the largest single shareholder in almost 90 percent of S&P 500 firms, including Apple, Microsoft, ExxonMobil, General Electric and Coca-Cola.”

“What is undeniable is that the Big Three do exert the voting rights attached to these shares. Therefore, they have to be perceived as de facto owners by corporate executives.” (emphasis mine)

“Whether or not they sought to, the Big Three have accumulated extraordinary shareholder power, and they continue to do so…In many respects, the index fund boom is turning BlackRock, Vanguard and State Street into something resembling low-cost public utilities with a quasi-monopolistic position.”

If the CEO of a corporation whose main shareholder is The Big Three thinks about rebelling against the official COVID medical consensus…

And he knows that The Big Three bosses are heavily wired into the US medical complex…

That CEO has a HUGE reason to forget about being an old-time hard charger.

He has a reason to swallow his anger when he’s told to lock down and shut down.

He has a reason to knuckle under and play the game.

He has a reason to surrender to a story about a virus and Fauci and Bill Gates.

He has a reason to stand down and stand aside and watch economic devastation sweep over the land.

HIS CORPORATION IS OWNED BY THE BIG THREE, AND THE OWNERS OF THE BIG THREE ARE LOYAL MEMBERS OF THE MEDICAL COMPLEX…THE COMPLEX THAT FORMS THE CURRENT POLICE STATE THAT HAS SUBDUED THE WORLD, UNDER THE FALSE BANNER OF “SAVING HUMANITY FROM THE VIRUS.”

It’s that stark.

I keep telling you we’re now living in a medical civilization.

From the financial side of things, you’ve just read how that is so.

The three men who own corporate America are also medical denizens.

Think it through.

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

Purple potatoes may help prevent colon cancer

by Joanne Washburn

 

01/18/2022 – Sweet purple potatoes may do more than add a pop of color to your plate. These vibrant tubers may also help prevent colon cancer, according to a study by researchers from Pennsylvania State University.

Purple potatoes – a dense and nutty member of the nightshade family (Solanaceae) – are rich in antioxidants, such as phenolic acids and anthocyanins. Past studies have found that these antioxidants possess anticancer potential.

To find out how these tubers affect colon cancer risk, the researchers fed three groups of pigs one of three diets for 13 weeks: a control diet, a high-calorie diet and a high-calorie diet with raw or baked purple potatoes.

At the end of the experiment, they screened the pigs’ colonic tissue for markers of colon cancer. They found that pigs fed the high-calorie diet had higher levels of interleukin-6 (IL-6), a pro-inflammatory protein known to increase colon cancer risk.

However, pigs fed the high-calorie diet with purple potatoes had IL-6 levels that were six times lower than those of the control group. Both raw and baked purple potatoes had similar effects.

IL-6 levels are linked to levels of other proteins that affect the development and spread of cancer, like Ki-67. Ki-67 is a protein that increases as cells prepare to divide. The expression of Ki-67 is strongly associated with the growth and spread of tumors in the colon, breast and lungs.

Further studies are needed to determine whether the results of the study would hold true in humans. That said, the study’s findings are promising, especially considering how colon cancer is the third most commonly diagnosed cancer and the second leading cause of cancer-related death in the United States.

But colon cancer prevention doesn’t and shouldn’t stop at just eating purple potatoes. Eating other foods rich in essential nutrients, such as protein, vitamins and minerals, could alter the IL-6 pathway and slash colon cancer risk.

More benefits of purple potatoes

If you needed any more motivation to add purple potatoes to your diet, know that their phenolic acid and anthocyanin content may help protect against other health problems, such as heart disease and diabetes. That’s because these compounds help fight chronic inflammation, which is at the root of many chronic conditions.

In a 2015 study, researchers looked at how purple potato extract compared with captopril, a blood pressure medication. They found that the extract significantly improved people’s blood pressure. The extract also increased a high blood pressure-fighting antioxidant called superoxide dismutase in people’s blood.

In another study, researchers wanted to find out how eating whole purple potatoes influenced arterial stiffness, which can lead to high blood pressure and heart disease. Participants in this study were given either 200 grams (g) of purple potato (about one medium-sized potato) or 200 g of white potato.

After two weeks, those who ate purple potatoes had much healthier blood pressure levels than those who ate white potatoes.

Beyond antioxidants, purple potatoes have a lot going for them nutritionally. For starters, they are high in fiber and vitamin C, which can help with weight loss and immunity, respectively. They are also packed with potassium, which also aids in blood pressure regulation. Shared from Foods.com

12 Signs that food shortages are already here

12 Signs that food shortages are already here

 

by Arsenio Toledo

 

Thursday, January 20, 2022 – America’s supply chains are already extremely fragile. Port congestions, labor shortages, rampant inflation and pandemic-related economic restrictions are all significantly increasing the likelihood of rampant food shortages in the near future. Here are the 12 signs that food shortages are already here.

Shortage of potatoes and other potato-based products

The world is already experiencing a shortage of potatoes. Late last year, American freight forwarder Flexport Inc. announced that it will fly three Boeing 747s loaded with potatoes to Japan to help deal with the country’s shortage. Japan’s lack of potatoes has gotten so bad that McDonald’s was forced to ration how much french fries it could sell.

More shelves are being stocked with turkey

Turkey is considered to be “the last line of protein” that shoppers will turn to when they have no other option for their main meat. This is a sign that all of the other usual meat products, like chicken, beef and pork, are running low.

Significant increase in the price of citrus products

The price of basically every food product in supermarkets has increased. Citrus products are not unique in this regard, as citrus disease and freak weather patterns have strained America’s supply of oranges and other citrus-based products. The Department of Agriculture expects American orange farmers to produce their smallest crop since World War II.

Shortage of food products that rely on flavorings

Instant food products that use small flavoring packets, such as instant noodles and ramen, rely on very complex supply chains.

“Huge amount of supply chain just in those little tiny packs to get the perfect flavor,” commented food shortage preparedness expert David DuByne. “Those things are missing as well, so you’re gonna see they’re not going to send out something that doesn’t taste the same because they’re going to lose their consumer base. So, they’d rather not sell it than put out a different tasting product and turn everybody off.”

Shortage of non-seasonal food products

It is a given that supermarkets might not have certain products fully stocked all the time because they are seasonal. But when groceries start running low on non-seasonal food products like apples and bananas, it is a clear sign that the supply chains are strained and may soon collapse.

Relatively no difference in the price of organic food items

Regular produce usually costs significantly less than food products labeled “organic.” It is a terrible sign for America’s food systems when the price of regular food products has inflated so much that its cost becomes comparable to that of organic food items.

Unusual country of origin for fresh food products

The countries the United States relies on for food imports are fairly dependable – countries such as Canada, France, Italy and the United Kingdom provide regular imports of thousands of tons of food to America every year.

According to DuByne, when food products start getting sourced from other countries, it is a sign that many of the countries America regularly sources food from are having problems with their food systems. (Related: Huge number of food shortages predicted for 2022 by a variety of experts.)

Shortage of grain derivative products

Food products based on wheat and grain are some of the most widely consumed foods in the world. If the world’s largest producers of these products report shortages, it is not a great sign for the world’s food systems.

This is the case for pasta makers, who are already reporting that the recent harvest of durum wheat is not enough to meet global demand.

Fewer products from big brands

Only a handful of megacompanies own and manufacture almost every single food product that makes it to supermarket shelves. When these massive megacompanies start running out of products to sell, it means that they are also facing difficulties sourcing food.

Shortage of pet foods

The ongoing supply chain crisis is also affecting the processed foods people buy for their pets. Supermarkets are increasingly unable to find substitutes for the regular pet food products on their shelves. Many pet owners have already reported experiencing difficulty buying food for their beloved cats and dogs.

Shortage of complex blended products that rely on a lot of ingredients

Supermarkets are home to a variety of products that require a lot of ingredients, such as soups. These products require complex supply chains. If the supply chains break down, these products will be some of the first to disappear from supermarket shelves because of the many ingredients required to make them.

Shortage of milk and milk-derived products

The dairy industry provides the world with a whole host of different products like milk and cheese. Many other food industries rely on dairy products, like ice cream and baby formula. A shortage of dairy products will have a domino effect on these industries, resulting in shortages all across the board.

The best thing people can do when they see the signs of a looming massive food crisis is to prepare. This can involve, among other things, stockpiling, learning how to produce food, and relying on local food sources.

Watch this episode of “Adapt 2030” with David DuByne as he talks in detail about the signs of the coming food shortages.

Fortune.com

Edition.CNN.com

Reuters.com

FoxBusiness.com

Survivopedia.com

Parents’ advocates cheer CA deal on COVID paid sick leave/Feds slam credit-reporting agencies for failure to correct errors

by Suzanne Potter

 

Parents’ rights groups are praising a plan to extend paid sick leave for many California workers, which is now on a fast track to pass.

Gov. Gavin Newsom announced a deal with legislative leaders Tuesday on a bill to require businesses with 26 employees or more to offer two weeks of paid sick leave to recover from COVID or care for a sick family member.

Matthew Kijak, director of programs at the nonprofit Raising the Future, part of Parents Anonymous, which runs the California Parent Youth Helpline, said people should not lose their pay if they or their kids test positive.

“So it’s really, really important that we respect the role that parents play who are basically the heroes of this entire pandemic,” Kijak asserted. “And honor that by allowing them to stay home to take care of their children who may be suffering from coronavirus.”

A similar extension of sick leave during COVID expired last September. The proposal would be retroactive to cover sick days taken since Jan. 1 and would come to an end on Sep. 30. Full-time workers would qualify for 40 hours of leave, plus another 40 if they show a positive COVID test. Part-timers would get the number of hours off they normally work.

Opponents complain the extended sick leave will be borne entirely by businesses, many of which still are struggling after the pandemic shutdowns. To help soften the blow on companies, the deal would restore some tax deductions and expand some tax credits.

Kijak argued workers’ health must be the priority.

“Business is important,” Kijak acknowledged. “But compared to having employees come to work with coronavirus, and, God forbid, die, it’s not a comparison at all. Whatever we have to spend to keep Californians safe needs to be spent.”

Without the change, workers in California would only have three state-mandated days of paid sick leave. The bill is expected to be written and sent to a vote in the coming weeks.

 

Feds slam credit-reporting agencies for failure to correct errors

 

by Suzanne Potter

 

January 26 – When people complained about errors on their credit reports last year, the big three credit-reporting agencies provided relief in just 2 percent of cases monitored by the feds – compared with 25 percent in 2019, according to the latest report from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

The report said Equifax, Experian and Transunion often failed to respond substantively to an error, especially if the consumer hired a third party, such as a credit-repair company or law firm. John Heath, directing attorney at Lexington Law, specializes in credit cases and said unresolved errors can keep people from buying their first home or car – and even from getting a job.

“Potential employers are looking at credit reports as a way to determine whether somebody is going to be a good fit,” he said.

Heath would like to see Congress change the Fair Credit Reporting Act to require credit-reporting agencies and companies that offer credit terms to respond to third-party inquiries. The three credit-repair agencies did not respond by deadline to a request for comment.

The Rev. Andre Chapple, senior pastor at Faith Church Los Angeles and chief executive of the African American Empowerment Coalition, said problems with credit block many people from building wealth as homeowners, and many aren’t sure where to turn for assistance.

“We help people to understand that whole ecosystem of credit and credit responsibility,” he said. “We help them get free credit repair for three months. As a result, their credit scores are increasing significantly.”

Consumers submitted more than 700,000 complaints to the CFPB about the credit-reporting firms from January 2020 to September 2021, which is more than half of all complaints the bureau received.

One man’s lonely journey through California’s plan to end homelessness

by Jackie Botts

 

January 17, 2022 – Researchers, advocates and officials running the systems meant to help Maya agree that his struggle to transition indoors is common. At the same time, Maya’s experience reveals a number of problems the state faces in ramping up permanent supportive housing quickly.

Here are five key challenges — as well as potential solutions:

1. Understaffing and turnover

What’s the problem: Understaffing and turnover plague permanent supportive housing, experts said, due to burnout, low pay, lack of training for challenging work and few opportunities for professional advancement. Caseloads in permanent supportive housing often far exceed federal recommendations.

Working with burnt out and transitory staff can fracture trust, impeding a person’s recovery after homelessness, said Suzanne Wenzel, a University of Southern California professor who studies health and homelessness. “Because of the way one has had to survive on the street,’ Wenzel said, “trust is not a commodity that’s very plentiful.”

What are some solutions: State officials and researchers agreed that solutions must combine a variety of long-term strategies, including more recruitment of behavioral health workers, more training opportunities and more funding to provide better pay and benefits.

What’s the state doing: The state has been trying to grow the behavioral health and medical workforce for years. It has a $60 million five-year plan to increase the mental health workforce, and provides scholarships for students of healthcare and adjacent fields, including occupational therapists and social workers, in exchange for working in underserved communities for a year. To boost those efforts, Gov. Gavin Newsom proposed this month to spend $1 billion over three years to increase the number of community health workers, social workers, psychiatrists and substance abuse counselors.

2. Treatment remains siloed

What’s the problem: People who experience chronic homelessness often deal with complex and interrelated health challenges, ranging from physical ailments to serious mental illness to substance use disorder. While homeless services increasingly adopt a collaborative approach, experts said treatment remains siloed. Patients often navigate multiple health systems, with providers who treat their issues in isolation and don’t coordinate with each other — even when they work in the same building.

What are some solutions: In a study of LA’s permanent supportive housing programs, Wenzel’s research team found that staff struggled to coordinate and communicate with contracted service providers. The researchers recommended that permanent supportive housing programs consider hiring or training in-house staff to deliver some services rather than contracting with outside providers.

What is the state doing: The state is pushing for greater health care collaboration from the top down. Since 2016, 25 programs launched statewide to pilot the “whole person care” model, which emphasizes coordinated treatment of people with complex health issues and encourages providers to collaborate. Soon California will launch the next step: CalAIM, a statewide Medi-Cal upgrade for the highest-need patients. CalAIM will cover nontraditional services, like a personal care coordinator, food and housing assistance, and sobering centers.

3. Beyond medication management

What’s the problem: Government-funded mental health services often begin and end at medication management. But people recovering from homelessness also need intensive counseling and opportunities that help them find purpose and a sense of belonging, said Dr. Jonathan Sherin, a neuroscientist who directs the Los Angeles Mental Health Department.

“We really have to be thinking about models where we’re incorporating all aspects of the human condition into healing,” said Sherin.

What are some solutions: One such framework is a community-based mental health system pioneered in Trieste, Italy, in the 1960s and 1970s. There, treatment focuses on holistic wellbeing, emphasizing community building and work training. Sherin also believes that people in permanent supportive housing could benefit from greater access to occupational therapists, who help people develop skills needed for daily living and working.

Sherin hopes to demonstrate that the Trieste model can work in California. In 2019, he proposed a pilot program in Hollywood, which would reform how providers treat patients, track their outcomes and bill for services. Instead of focusing on illness, mental health providers would focus on helping patients improve physical health, achieve housing stability, and find love, belonging, and purpose. Approved for 2020 but stalled by the pandemic, the pilot remains in planning stages.

What’s the state doing: While recent rounds of state funding for permanent supportive housing for people with serious mental illness specify that projects must provide mental health care and encourage them to provide employment services, there’s no further guidance about mental health strategy.

4. Allowing people to move

What’s the problem: The housing first philosophy emphasizes consumer choice, meaning formerly homeless people choose where they live and what services they receive. Researchers and officials said this means residents should be able to move if their initial apartment isn’t a good fit. In practice, homeless agencies and housing providers don’t always prioritize moving because they’re trying to get other people off the street.

What are some solutions: One solution comes from a permanent supportive housing program aimed at the most frequent chronically homeless users of Santa Clara County’s emergency rooms, jails and acute mental health facilities. According to Abode Services, the Bay Area permanent supportive housing provider, they kept multiple units vacant throughout the year, so that people would be able to move if needed. A multiyear study found participants stayed housed 93% of the time, and 70% moved at least once.

What’s the state doing: The state requires permanent supportive housing programs to submit regular reports showing they are complying with housing first policies, which are supposed to include the opportunity for transfers.

5. Tracking why people return to homelessness

What’s the problem: The U.S. homeless services system is divided into local jurisdictions, known as Continuums of Care, which receive federal funding to address homelessness. However, their data systems don’t always keep track of who returns to homelessness and why, making it hard to understand why interventions aren’t working.

What are some solutions: Built for Zero, an initiative of the national nonprofit Community Solutions, partners with local governments to redesign homeless data systems around shared goals of reducing homelessness and collaboration among homeless service providers. Co-director Jake Maguire said that a robust data system allows local governments to detect poor housing retention rates, and then drill down to individual experiences to figure out what’s not working.

What is the state doing: California is trying to build more local government accountability. The most recent round of local homelessness aid requires that counties establish action plans, including tracking and reducing the number of permanent housing residents who return to homelessness.

Dr. Mark Ghaly, the state health and human services secretary, said he hopes that the state’s new homeless data dashboard can aggregate housing retention data, allowing the state to study the impacts of permanent supportive housing programs.

“Housing alone, we’re not going to be surprised, won’t be enough,” said Ghaly, who co-chairs the California Interagency Council on Homelessness. “But when you enrich it with sophisticated, smart, available, clinical services, does that help somebody become safe and self-sufficient?”

This article is part of the California Divide project, a collaboration among newsrooms examining income inequality and economic survival in California.

 

 

Longtime Congressman Esteban Torres dies at 91 after life devoted to public service

by El Reporter‘s wire services

 

Former Rep. Esteban Torres, a union leader who helped found the East Los Angeles Community Union, worked for President Jimmy Carter and represented the San Gabriel Valley and Whittier area in Congress from 1983-99, has died.

Torres, of West Covina, died of natural causes two days before his 92nd birthday on Tuesday on Jan. 25, according to his family.

Former Rep. Esteban Torres, a union leader who helped found the East Los Angeles Community Union, worked for President Jimmy Carter and represented the San Gabriel Valley and Whittier area in Congress from 1983-99, has died.

Torres, of West Covina, died of natural causes two days before his 92nd birthday on Tuesday on Jan. 25, according to his family.

Torres rose through the ranks of the UAW, serving as an organizer for the western region of the United States, as the union’s international representative in Washington, D.C., and from 1964 to 1968 he was the UAW’s Inter-American Bureau for Caribbean and Latin American Affairs.

In 1968, Torres founded TELACU, a community development corporation, serving as its executive director until 1974 when he decided to run for the House of Representatives but lost.

In 1977 President Carter appointed Torres as the U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization in Paris, France and later served as White House Special Assistant for Hispanic Affairs.

Then in 1992, he was elected to the House of Representatives in the newly drawn 34th Congressional District that included the cities of Artesia, Baldwin Park, Industry, La Puente, Norwalk, Santa Fe Springs, Pico Rivera, South El Monte, West Covina and Whittier.

While in Congress, Torres focused on environmental challenges, including the BKK Landfill contamination, water systems in the San Gabriel Valley and reclaimed wastewater, said Jamie Casso, Torres’ son-in-law and chief-of-staff.

Torres, a veteran himself, also helped folkd who served in the armed forces in getting benefits they were owed and medals they were due, Casso said.

In retirement from elective office, Torres served on the California Transportation Commission, the Board of Directors for Fannie Mae, as chair of the East Valley Development Authority for the Cabazon Band of Mission Indians, the Board of Directors for Entravision Communications, the Oversight Board for Industry’s Successor Agency and he was a visiting professor at Whittier College and UCLA.

In 2006, the Los Angeles Unified School District named a high school in East Los Angeles after Torres. The Esteban E. Torres High School, home of the Toros, opened on Sept. 13, 2010.

Torres is survived by his wife Arcy and their children Carmen, Rena, Camille, Selina, and Steve; grandchildren Tanya, Kati, Bianca, Koby, Xavier, Nazaria, Diego, Steven, Carina Tobias, Heidi, Amber; and seven great grandchildren.

With reports from SGV Tribune.

REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS at the Peralta Community College District (PCCD)

REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS
The Peralta Community College District (PCCD) is seeking proposals from qualified firms to provide Laney College Food and Supplies Services (RFP No. 21-22/18). Proposals are to be submitted electronically (via Vendor Registry), until 12:00 Noon on February 17, 2022.
Scope of work
PCCD is seeking a vendor who can:
• Supply both food and other supplies necessary for the operation of its Cafeteria and Bistro
• Deliver supplies within 24 hours of order
• Provide monthly reports of spending on food and supplies
A Mandatory Pre-proposal zoom meeting will be held on January 25, 2022, at 9:00A.M. via Zoom: Conference Meeting ID 972 4872 6743. Register in advance for this meeting:
https://cccconfer.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJMvc-GvrD0tHtePWp6YEwzL3eZnRGkA0T_V
After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting.
Copies of the proposal documents may be obtained by clicking on the following link: https://build.peralta.edu/vendorregistry
Governing Codes:
GC 53068
EC 81641
Publication Dates: January 21, 2022 – El Reportero

Border Communities Focus of New Exhibition at San Francisco Main Library

Submitted by the SFPL

 

SAN FRANCISCO, January 14, 2022 – For photographer David Bacon, the border region between the United States and Mexico is a land marked by life and death. Each year, at least 300-400 people die trying to cross into the U.S. in search of a better future for themselves and their families. The border is also bustling with life. The once-small towns of Ciudad Juárez and Tijuana are now home to millions of people, many of whom make up the industrial workforce of Southern California, South Texas and New Mexico. Taken over a period of 30 years, Bacon’s photographs and accompanying text panels, which are presented in English and Spanish, in San Francisco Public Library’s exhibition More Than a Wall explore all aspects of the border region and its vibrant social history. Continuar leyendo en español.

The photographs trace the social movements in border communities, factories and fields. According to Bacon, “These photographs provide a reality check, allowing us to see the border region as its people, with their own history of movements for rights and equality.  By providing this, the exhibition seeks to combat anti-immigrant and anti-Mexican hysteria, and develop an alternative vision in which the border can be a region where people live and work in solidarity with each other.”

The photographs were taken in collaboration with Binational Front of Indigenous Organizations (FIOB), the Coalition for Justice in the Maquiladoras and California Rural Legal Assistance. They are featured in a new bilingual book, More Than a Wall, published by the Colegio de la Frontera Norte in Tijuana.  Bacon’s photographic work is housed in the David Bacon Archive in the Special Collections of the Green Library at Stanford University.

Gaspar Rivera-Salgado, Mixtec professor at UCLA and co-founder of the FIOB, says, “David organically integrates his photographic work with the testimonies of the actors themselves, and provides thorough analysis of critical points in the lives of workers and communities on both sides of the border. The effect is shocking.  But he also describes a future with full sharpness that seems complex and full of possibilities – possibilities we may still not fully imagine.”

The exhibition opens on February 12 in the Main Library’s Jewett Gallery, which is located on the lower level. The public is invited to the opening event, The Media, Art and the Border, which will feature Bacon in conversation with San Francisco artists and photographers about the way the border is represented in media and the arts.

February 12, 1 p.m., Main Library, 100 Larkin Street, Latino/Hispanic Community Room. Per the City’s Health Order, masks are required at all times in the Library.

On view at the Main Library, Jewett Gallery, Feb. 12 – May 22, 2022.

The cathedral in Mexico that is full of Nazi symbols and baffles everyone

In Mexico there is a temple that disconcerts its visitors due to the presence of Nazi symbols We tell you where it is and what its history is

 

Shared from/by Mexico Desconocido

 

Being the Nazi swastika the most censored symbol by all of humanity, it is not surprising that all those who enter the Tampico Cathedral for the first time are frozen when they see that the floor of the temple is engraved with 141 swastikas. What is the link of the Nazis with this building?

And in the absence of explanations, visitors begin to speculate about the reason why such an infamous insignia related to Hitler, hatred of Jews, racial supremacy and death, is in the most important church in the state. The most common is that the construction of the enclosure was financed by a supporter of the National Socialist German Workers’ Party, could it be?

History of the Tampico Cathedral, before the Nazi symbols

According to the documents, the Tampico Cathedral began to be erected in 1841 under the design of Lorenzo de Hidalga and the supervision of the San Carlos Academy. It was completed in 1872. So far, by the dates, we can see that the temple was not made thinking of showing sympathy with the Nazis, since this ideology, with everything and swastika, began to be established from 1920.

But let’s not get ahead of ourselves because strong doubts come. In 1917 the central nave of the Tampico Cathedral collapsed, as if that were not enough, a few years later a lightning bolt caused the west tower to fall, both events ended up leaving the temple in ruins. It was then that the controversial oil tycoon from the United States, Edward Doheny, came to the rescue with his money.

With money from Edward Doheny, the floor with Nazi symbols is installed in the Tampico Cathedral

The millionaire financed the construction of new domes, vaults, walls, columns, and of course the floors that are preserved to date, including the one with the 141 swastikas that would have finished being installed in the central corridor of the temple between 1926 and 1931, dates in which the advance of Nazism and fascism was a burning issue in the world.

A few years ago, the former administrator of the Tampico Cathedral, Monsignor Elías Gómez Martínez, denied that the swastikas were placed to pay homage to Adolf Hitler’s National Socialism, but rather that they were placed because the symbol has older positive meanings. And you’re right.

Before Hitler the swastika was better seen by humanity

The swastika was used at least 5,000 years before Hitler did it on his Nazi flag. It comes from the Sanskrit svastika which means “good fortune”. It is also a sacred symbol for Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism and Odinism.

There are indications that the swastika made a strong comeback in the late 19th century after archaeologist Heinrich Schliemann found it on pottery inside ancient Troy, thereby ascertaining that it was an important religious symbol of the ancient ancestors. Germans.

When they decided not to remove the swastikas from the floor of the Tampico Cathedral

Returning to the case of the swastikas in the central aisle of the Tampico Cathedral, these had the possibility of being removed in the mid-1990s with the permission of the National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH). However, the priests responsible for the temple decided not to do it, as Monsignor Elías Gómez Martínez explained, but why?

On this mystery Edgar González Ruíz, a researcher specialized in the political right in Mexico, offers some light. He explains that the then bishop Rafael Gallardo García did not want to keep the symbols because of his relationship with Nazism, however those who opposed it were the members of the “ultra-Catholic” sector of Tampico society.

It seems that we will have to live with the doubt of whether the 141 swastikas that go from the door to the atrium of the Tampico Cathedral were placed with or without the intention of sympathizing with one of the most hated characters in universal history.