Wednesday, March 25, 2009

U.S. to blame for much of Mexico violence: Clinton

http://www.reuters.com/article/newsOne/idUSTRE52O5RF20090325?sp=true

U.S. to blame for much of Mexico violence: Clinton

Wed Mar 25, 2009 7:54pm EDT

By Arshad Mohammed

MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - An "insatiable" appetite in the United States for illegal drugs is to blame for much of the violence ripping through Mexico, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said on Wednesday.


Clinton acknowledged the U.S. role in Mexico's vicious drug war as she arrived in Mexico for a two-day visit where she discussed U.S. plans to ramp up security on the border with President Felipe Calderon.


A surge in drug gang killings to 6,300 last year and fears the violence could seep over the border has put Mexico's drug war high on President Barack Obama's agenda, after years of Mexico feeling that Washington was neglecting a joint problem.


"Our insatiable demand for illegal drugs fuels the drug trade. Our inability to prevent weapons from being illegally smuggled across the border to arm these criminals causes the death of police officers, soldiers and civilians," Clinton told reporters during her flight to Mexico City.


"I feel very strongly we have a co-responsibility."


Clinton said the Obama administration strongly backed Mexico in its fight with the drug cartels and vowed the United States would try to speed up the transfer of drug-fighting equipment promised under a 2007 agreement.


"We will stand shoulder-to-shoulder with you ... Our relationship is far greater than any threat," Clinton said at a news conference in Mexico City.

Crushing the drug cartels, who arm themselves with smuggled U.S. weapons and leave slain rivals, sometimes beheaded, in public streets, has become the biggest test of Calderon's presidency as the bloodshed rattles investors and tourists.


Washington plans to ramp up border security with a $184 million program to add 360 security agents to border posts and step up searches for smuggled drugs, guns and cash.


The Obama administration will spend $725 million to modernize border crossings and provide about $80 million to help Mexico purchase Black Hawk helicopters, Clinton said.


It was unclear whether this would be new money from the United States or whether the Obama administration had already requested the funds from Congress.


In Washington, Senator Joseph Lieberman said Obama's plans were not enough and he would seek $385 million more from Congress to pay for 1,600 more Customs and Border Patrol agents and bolster law enforcement centers in border areas.


"The danger here is clear and present. It threatens to get worse," Lieberman said.


CHALLENGES


Clinton will use her visit to address a trucking dispute with Mexico and long-running trade and immigration issues.


She said the trading partners were making headway on a spat which saw Mexico slam high tariffs on an estimated $2.4 billion worth of U.S. goods after the U.S. Congress ended a pilot program to let Mexican trucks operate in the United States.


"On the trucking dispute, we are working to try to resolve it. We are making progress," she said, adding that she expects Congress will be receptive to the administration's ideas.


Clinton, whose includes a stop in the northern business city of Monterrey on Thursday, said the thorny issues on the table did not mean that U.S.-Mexico relations were in trouble.


"I don't see it that way," she said. "I think that we have some specific challenges ... but every relationship has challenges in it."


Mexico has felt slighted by a delay in the arrival of drug-fighting equipment pledged by former President George W. Bush, as U.S. officials have sought assurances that the aid would not end up in the hands of corrupt officials or police.


The U.S. Congress this month trimmed the amount of drug aid money it will set aside this fiscal year to $300 million from $400 million last year, under a pledge of $1.4 billion to Mexico and Central America over three years.


Since taking office in December 2006, Calderon has spent more than $6.4 billion on his drug war and sent 45,000 troops and federal police to trouble spots around the country.


Mexico has repeatedly said, however, that its efforts will come to nothing if the United States does not clamp down on the smuggling of U.S. guns used in 90 percent of drug crimes south of the border.


Clinton described the violence Mexico is grappling with as "horrendous" and said cartels were alarmingly well equipped.


"It's not only guns. It's night vision goggles. It's body armor. These criminals are outgunning the law enforcement officials," she said. "When you go into a gun fight, where you are trying to round up bad guys and they have ... military style equipment that is much better than yours, you start out at a disadvantage."

(Additional reporting by Catherine Bremer; Editing by Kieran Murray)


Comment: Once again, we need to always link up the connects, connections and interconnections. People in the USA are the biggest consumers of all forms of drugs on a worldwide scale. It is the economic law of supply and demand in operation.

Instead of providing FREE DRUG TREATMENT PROGRAMS for recovering drug addicts who want to get into progressive recovery the U.S. Drug Policy is so insane as to focus on drug enforcement and prisons (of course it is all about the BIG MONEY for the prison guard unions, prison construction companies etc. etc.). This whole Mexican connection can lead many astray up dead end roads. It could mushroom into a military-political alliance that could spell disaster for all parties involved. Does the USA with its high-tech military surveillance capacities really want to stop the drug traffic?

The drug industry is a multi-billion dollar industry! When we examine these issues we should automatically ask: Who profits from these activities? We should be concentrating on the DEMAND side from this side of the long US-Mexican border! That means local community education programs, re-orientating suffering addicts into honest means of livelihood ~ that means decent jobs ~ and offering tangible alternatives to those whose ADDICTION DEMANDS MORE AND MORE DRUGS!!!

How many law-biding citizens are strung out on their legalized medications? How many in your family do pharmaceutical drugs now that have addictive qualities to them? Is this drug addiction or not? There are a lot of related issues and questions involved here. Don't blame the Mexican side of the border alone! I am glad Secretary of State Clinton brought this up in the whole debate and actually kind of surprised at her bold honesty.

It will take a whole new fresh approach in order to really win the drug war instead of making war on drug addicts!

How many parents even monitor their own drug cabinets in the bathrooms and speak to their young ones about the evil effects of drugs ~ whether they are legal or not? Addiction is addiction is addiction!

Forgive my verbosity, but the way U.S. Drug Policy is going now only leads to more dead people suffering various forms of death!
 

Education for Liberation! Join Up!
Peter S. Lopez aka: Peta
Email: peter.lopez51@yahoo.com

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Humane-Rights-Agenda/

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/THIRD-WORLD-NEWS/

http://www.NetworkAztlan.com


Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Latino foundation honors a granddaddy of philanthropy

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/blogs/nov05election/detail?&entry_id=37364

Latino foundation honors a granddaddy of philanthropy

It's fitting that San Francisco's Latino Community Foundation should be honoring Herman Gallegos at its gala this week. The foundation is cultivating a new generation of Latino philanthropists. And Gallegos, who is 78, is really the abuelo of Latino philanthropy.


A pioneer who helped start a number of national and local Hispanic civil rights groups, Gallegos also was one of the first U.S. Latinos to serve on some heavy-weight corporate and foundation boards. Not only that, he wrote the book (literally) on Hispanics and the nonprofit sector (way back in 1991).


The foundation's gala evening con sabor Latino is as much about generating fun and buzz and a sense of community as it is about charitable giving. The Thursday event at the Westin St. Francis will feature Brazilian dancers, Mexican vintners and cuisine from Cuba and Puerto Rico.


But the group is serious about fundraising. It's attracting youthful Latinos to a "young professional giving circle." And it's making $250,000 in grants this year, the most ever. With three out of 10 Bay Area children Latino, the foundation has focused on the health and well-being of kids. Last year's grants went to: community health centers in Oakland and San Francisco: pre-school and afterschool programs in Berkeley, San Francisco, Morgan Hill and Novato; and parenting education projects in San Rafael, San Francisco, Oakland, Richmond and San Jose.


The foundation is still small. But Gallegos, who's been in on the ground floor of small and large organizations, is quick to point out that size isn't everything. As he told The Melting Pot: "If they can stimulate our community to give and volunteer, then it becomes part of the American fabric that gives this country strength."


Posted By: Tyche Hendricks (Email) | March 23 2009 at 04:03 PM

Listed Under: Latinos and politics

Comment: Bien hecho! Congratulations to the Latino Community Foundation. All White-Americans need to be thinking in cosmic terms and wrap their minds about the scientific face that America is a multi-cultural country, go beyond old black and white bi-polar thinking and comprehend the connected realities of connected reality. The only actual dominant race of people is the human race. We are a country of wide and vast diversity with many tongues and flavors. We should be open, positive and progressive in our relations with all peoples. Latinos are about a lot more than fast tacos and Mexican beer.


Education for Liberation! Join Up!
Peter S. Lopez aka: Peta
Email: peter.lopez51@yahoo.com

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Humane-Rights-Agenda/

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/THIRD-WORLD-NEWS/

http://www.NetworkAztlan.com


Obama Nominates ODEP Asst. Secretary Kathy Martinez: By Zayda Rivera

http://www.diversityinc.com/public/5565.cfm

Obama Nominates ODEP Asst. Secretary Kathy Martinez
By Zayda Rivera

Keywords: Barack Obama, Kathy Martinez, disability, people with disabilities, Latina, Latinos, assistant secretary for disability employment, nominations

 

Internationally recognized disability-rights leader Kathy Martinez was nominated for assistant secretary for the Office of Disability Employment Policy (ODEP) by President Barack Obama on March 20.

 

Martinez, who has been blind since birth, specializes in employment, asset building, independent living, international development, and diversity and gender issues from her work as executive director of the World Institute on Disability (WID).. Her impressive résumé includes Proyecto Visión, WID's National Technical Assistance Center to increase employment opportunities for Latinos with disabilities in the United States, and Access to Assets, an asset-building project to help reduce poverty among people with disabilities.

 

She was also responsible for leading the team that produced the acclaimed international webzine Disability World (www.disabilityworld.org) in both English and Spanish.

 

Click here to read "What's the One Word Preventing More Hiring of People With Disabilities?"


Click here to read "'But You Look So Good!' and 7 Other Things NOT to Say to a Person With a Non-Visible Disability."

 

"As a Latina who is blind, I have first-person experience with the low expectations and assumptions of the majority culture," Martinez says. "I have seen many disabled Latinos live down to these diminished expectations. They become overwhelmed by isolation, are disconnected from the service-delivery system and don't have disabled Latino professionals to look up to or network with. Unfortunately, even those who do access resources often are not receiving appropriate service."

 

Martinez's nomination came the day after President Obama made his controversial comment comparing his 129 bowling score to that of Special Olympians on "The Tonight Show with Jay Leno." (Click here to read "You Said Something Stupid … Now What?")

 

Latinos are the fastest-growing ethnic group in the United States, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. At the same time, Latinos have lower levels of educational attainment and higher dropout rates than other groups. Also more likely to be living in poverty, Latinos' health issues often go unchecked because of a lack of access to health/medical insurance. According to Proyecto Visión's web site, unabated health concerns, vocational injury and disability caused by violence all contribute to Latinos acquiring disabilities at elevated rates.

 

No stranger to the White House, Martinez was appointed by former President George W. Bush in 2002 as one of 15 members of the National Council on Disability, an independent federal agency advising the president and Congress on disability policy.

 

Martinez did not face diminished expectations even though she and a sister, Peggy, both are blind. In a radio interview, Martinez said, "My mom did not want [us] to go away from the family to go to the school for the blind. So Peggy and I were [two] of the first disabled kids to go to our public school, and we had teachers that expected a lot of us. And they were tough. One of the biggest battles that disabled children and young people face is low expectations. If you expect someone to do well, very often, they will."


Education for Liberation! Join Up!
Peter S. Lopez aka: Peta
Email: peter.lopez51@yahoo.com

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Humane-Rights-Agenda/

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/THIRD-WORLD-NEWS/

http://www.NetworkAztlan.com


Congressman says current immigration rules hurt families

http://www.jsonline.com/news/milwaukee/41664032.html

Stories of deportation find an ear

Congressman says current immigration rules hurt families

MaryJo Walicki
Religious leaders offer a blessing to U.S. Rep. Luis utierrez (left) after he spoke Sunday about deportation at St. Adalbert's Catholic Church. Standing next to him is Rep. Gwen Moore of Milwaukee.

Rosa Bautista broke into tears as she told a standing-room-only crowd of nearly 1,000 who filled St. Adalbert's Catholic Church on Sunday afternoon about how the father of her four children had been deported to Mexico City.

She's a U.S. citizen, and her children are, too, but the day before Good Friday last year, the man in their lives was deported, she said. He had been here nine years and worked as a roofer, Bautista said.

"I ask you, if you were in my shoes, would you like to see your family separated as we are?" she asked the crowd.

Edward Ike of Nigeria told of how he and his wife could bring only two of their four children with them because their U.S. sponsor couldn't afford the other two. That was in 2003. The 6-year-old son and 8-year-old daughter they left





The stories were part of a "Families United" rally and prayer service sponsored by the Milwaukee Inner-city Congregations Allied for Hope and Jewish and Muslim leaders.

Milwaukee is the 12th stop in five-week, 20-city listening tour led by U.S. Rep Luis V. Gutierrez (D-Ill.), who said he wants others to hear the stories of what's happening to families and to influence President Barack Obama to bring about comprehensive immigration reform.


Two protesters stood outside the church. Nate Beck carried a sign that read, "No Amnesty. Stop Illegal Immigration. Enforce the law." Next to him, Jason Vaught waved an American flag.


"They want to change the laws, but they need to enforce the laws," Beck said. He said his wife, who is from Laos, had waited in a refugee camp before entering the country legally, and others should do the same.


At a similar gathering Saturday at a Catholic church in Chicago, Gutierrez said Cardinal Francis George called on the Obama administration to stop workplace immigration raids and deportations and to push for passage of immigration reform "that is fair and compassionate."


In San Francisco, he said, Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi attended and called the raids and deportations "un-American."


"One voice and one leader at a time, we will build and build to get immigration reform," Gutierrez told the crowd at St. Adalbert's, 1923 W. Becher St.


The listening tour is sponsored by faith groups and held in church sanctuaries because "churches are the places where immigrants are welcomed, cherished and defended," he said.


Gutierrez said an estimated 5 million children who are U.S. citizens have a parent who has been deported, is awaiting deportation or is threatened by deportation.


U.S. Rep. Gwen Moore, a Milwaukee Democrat, also attended the St. Adalbert's event and lent her support to efforts to overhaul the immigration system.


"The centerpiece of that has to focus on family reunification," she said.

Last week, Gutierrez and the Congressional Hispanic Caucus met with Obama on immigration reform.


Education for Liberation! Join Up!
Peter S. Lopez aka: Peta
Email: peter.lopez51@yahoo.com

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Humane-Rights-Agenda/

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/THIRD-WORLD-NEWS/

http://www.NetworkAztlan.com