Monday, August 03, 2009

Alcoa Razes Rain Forest in Court Case Led by Brazil Prosecutors + Comment

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Alcoa Razes Rain Forest in Court Case Led by Brazil Prosecutors
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By Michael Smith and Adriana Brasileiro

July 31 (Bloomberg) -- For four decades, Edimar Bentes and his family have survived by farming tiny clearings in the jungle near their dirt-floor shack in the state of Para in the Brazilian Amazon.


On this April afternoon, Bentes, 56, squats in the driving rain and dips a glass into what just four years ago was a crystal-clear stream that provided drinking and bathing water. He frowns as the glass fills with brown silt. A thin man with short-cropped dark hair and a tanned, deeply wrinkled forehead, Bentes gazes around his land.


There are no signs of the deer, armadillos and pacas he used to hunt to feed his wife and 10 children.


For Bentes and thousands of others in the Juruti region of Para whose livelihood depends on wildlife and plants, everything changed in 2006. That's when New York-based Alcoa Inc., the world's second-largest primary aluminum producer, started to bulldoze a 56-kilometer (35-mile) swath of the rain forest across hundreds of families' properties to build a railway.


This cleared corridor, 100 meters (109 yards) wide, will lead to a mine that will chew up 10,500 hectares (25,900 acres) of virgin jungle over three decades.


More than half of the mine will lie inside a forest that by Brazilian federal law is supposed to be preserved unharmed forever for local residents. By year's end, Alcoa says, the railway will transport 7,000 tons a day of bauxite, the dark red ore that's used to make aluminum, from the mine to a port on the Amazon River.


'Want to Cry'


"It makes you want to cry when you see this stream," says Bentes, his bare feet sinking into the mud. He views a wasteland of uprooted trees and brown rivulets seeping into the water. "It reminds me of everything bad that Alcoa did to our land."


A growing array of evidence in court documents puts Alcoa among the multinational corporations that prosecutors accuse of destroying or causing destruction of the world's largest rain forest.


Brazilian federal and Para state prosecutors sued Alcoa's Brazilian mining subsidiary in 2005 in an effort to block the Juruti mine, saying the company had circumvented the law by not applying for a federal permit and instead seeking a license from the state of Para.

After four years of legal haggling, the suit is still pending. Alcoa, which denies any wrongdoing, has already completed construction of the railway, port and processing plants. It's now ready to start mining.


"The state agency has no power to give anyone full rights to exploit land, especially in the case of a reserve," state prosecutor Raimundo Moraes says. "Alcoa invaded the area, undeterred. Alcoa has no shame."


'All Necessary Licenses'


In written responses to questions from Bloomberg News, Alcoa says it "has all necessary government licenses to implement the Juruti mining project."


The Amazon, which spans nine countries and is roughly the size of Australia, has for centuries been the lungs of the Earth, its plants and trees absorbing pollution from the air. But that strength is fading. The world's largest inhaler of carbon dioxide is shrinking -- thus aggravating, instead of slowing, global warming.


Every week, federal prosecutors say, people acting outside the law use bulldozers, chain saws or fire to wipe out parts of the jungle to make way for crops, cattle and mines.

The fires men set to clear land for ranches and farms create 6 percent of the carbon dioxide spewed into the air worldwide, according to the Cambridge, Massachusetts-based Union of Concerned Scientists. That equates to half of all the emissions from cars, trucks, planes, trains and ships in the world.


'Amazon is the Key'


Brazil has become the planet's fourth-biggest polluter.

The fires that rage across the Amazon could help increase Earth's average surface temperature by as much as 11.5 degrees this century, says the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, a group of scientists from 194 countries.


Global warming threatens to melt glaciers, raise sea levels and lead to drinking water shortages, the United Nations-sanctioned panel says.


"We are not going to reduce global warming if we don't do something about deforestation in the Amazon," says Doug Boucher, director of the Tropical Forest and Climate Initiative at Concerned Scientists. "It's that simple, and very alarming. The Amazon is a big part -- if not the key part -- of a solution to deal with global warming."

Wal-Mart, McDonald's


To date, companies and individuals have destroyed more than 857,000 square kilometers (331,000 square miles) of the Amazon, an area almost the size of France and England combined, according to the UN Environment Programme.. Cattle ranchers have caused 80 percent of the illegal deforestation, according to Brazil's environment ministry.

They sell steers to Brazil's three biggest beef producers. One of them, Sao Paulo-based JBS SA, is the world's largest; the others are Santo Andre-based Marfrig Alimentos SA and Bertin SA of Lins.


Wal-Mart Stores Inc., the world's biggest retailer; French supermarket chain Carrefour SA; and McDonald's Corp. have purchased beef from those companies, according to Brazilian internal revenue service sales and export records.


Ford Motor Co., General Motors Co. and Daimler AG's Mercedes-Benz have bought leather for car and truck seats from Auburn Hills, Michigan-based Eagle Ottawa LLC, a leather company supplied with materials from illegally deforested ranches, the records show.

These multinationals say they're working to avoid buying products originating in deforested land.


Cargill's Port


Alcoa is the latest company in a decade-long legacy of global corporations that have thwarted Brazil's environmental regulations, federal prosecutors say.


Minneapolis-based Cargill Inc., the largest privately held company in the U.S., spent $20 million to build a grain port on the Amazon River in 2003 that led to farmers illegally destroying thousands of hectares of rain forest to grow soybeans, says Felicio Pontes, a

federal prosecutor who sued to block the project.


In early February, soybeans were piled high in a storage area at Cargill's Amazon port, waiting to be loaded onto a ship bound for Europe. The company ships about 60,000 tons of soybeans a year grown near the town of Santarem. Before Cargill built the port, there was no large-scale soybean production in the area.

'Completely Obvious'


Cargill hired The Nature Conservancy, an Arlington, Virginia-based nonprofit group, to confirm that soybean farmers aren't clearing the Amazon around Santarem. The group says it has certified this year that 155 of 383 farms weren't deforesting.


"It's completely obvious that Cargill's port gave an incentive that led to deforestation," Pontes says.


Both Alcoa and Cargill, prosecutors say, have persuaded local officials to sign off on their plans, flouting federal law. Brazil's constitution says minerals are national resources that should be overseen by tougher federal agencies, says Daniel Azeredo, a federal prosecutor in the Amazon port of Belem, who specializes in environmental lawsuits.


"The problem is that in Brazil we have weak institutions and laws, and companies take advantage of that," he says. "We have laws, but they are impossible to enforce, which gives companies complete impunity to do whatever they want to profit."

Alcoa says it has abided by the law.


'Any and All'


"In Brazil, public attorneys tend to challenge in court any and all major industrial and infrastructure projects," Alcoa wrote in responses to questions from Bloomberg News. Alcoa says it doesn't need federal approval for its mine in Juruti.


Cargill also says it has done the right thing in Brazil. The company won proper state approval to build its river transport center, says Afonso Champi Jr., Cargill's external affairs director in Brazil. He says the company strives to guarantee the soybeans it buys don't come from deforested land.


Alcoa, which mines and produces aluminum in 31 countries, champions itself as a responsible steward of global resources.


"Operating in a manner that protects and promotes the health and well-being of the environment is a core value to Alcoa," the company says on its Web site.


Cargill, whose products worldwide include animal feed, salt, steel and financial services, says, "Being socially responsible as a corporation means that we care about the environment."


EPA Settlement


Alcoa has clashed with regulators and environmentalists in other countries. The University of Massachusetts's Political Economy Research Institute ranks Alcoa as the 15th-most-toxic company in the U.S.


In 2003, Alcoa agreed with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the Justice

Department to pay about $330 million to clean up air pollution at a power plant within an aluminum factory in Rockdale, Texas -- a plant it has since shut down.

Alcoa has received mixed notices in Australia. In 1990, the UN Environment Programme gave the company an award for replanting forests it had destroyed to build a bauxite mine there. Alcoa, which generates electricity to process aluminum, obtained the lowest score in a 2008 review of utilities by the World Wildlife Fund.


The WWF said Alcoa had failed to adopt targets to cut greenhouse gas emissions by its coal-fired power plant in Victoria state.


Slashed Emissions


Alcoa says it gets rapped by environmentalists because its electrical power plants emit carbon. The company says it should get credit for all of the pollution it's preventing by supplying the lightweight aluminum that makes cars and trucks more energy-efficient. Alcoa says it has slashed its greenhouse gas emissions by 36 percent since 1990.


In Brazil, Alcoa is doing business in a political climate that regulators say is favorable to polluters. Luciano Evaristo, a director at Ibama, the federal environmental agency, says forces in the government -- starting at the very top -- promote and finance industries that feed on illegal destruction of the rain forest.


President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva calls himself an environmentalist. In 2003, he introduced a plan to protect the Amazon, creating task forces to raid areas being deforested.


Copenhagen Conference


In December, Lula will join leaders from almost 200 other countries in Copenhagen at a UN-sponsored conference to discuss a successor to the 1997 Kyoto Protocol, the first major international pact on global warming.


"At Copenhagen, we will have to reach a global agreement that will be both just and ambitious if we want to bequeath a viable planet to future generations," Lula said in a July 7 speech. Lula set a goal of reducing deforestation by 80 percent by 2020.


At the same time, Lula has authorized the building of new roads and power plants in the Amazon and has increased funding for ranches and factories in deforested areas. In June, he congratulated people for tearing down trees to create farms spurring economic growth.

"No one can say that someone is a criminal because he deforested," Lula told a crowd of cheering ranchers in the Amazon city of Alta Floresta as he announced plans to legalize almost 300,000 ranches and farms built on illegally cleared land that once was rain forest.


'Schizophrenic Government'


"It's a completely schizophrenic government," says Paulo Adario, who directs the Amazon campaign for nonprofit environmental group Greenpeace. "On one hand, they are combating deforestation. On the other, they are financing it."


Foreigners have been cutting down Latin America's rain forests since the 1600s, when Spanish and Portuguese conquerors cleared jungles from Mexico to Brazil to build ships, farms and cities. In the 1960s and 1970s, Texaco Inc. drilled dozens of oil wells in Ecuador's Amazon, destroying rain forest and polluting the region with poisonous wastes.

Alcoa, which produced the first commercially available aluminum in 1888, has 63,000 employees around the world. The company produces enough sheeting to make 100 billion cans of beer and soda a year.


America's largest aluminum producer sells ingots, sheets, wheels, fasteners and building materials to customers in the aerospace, packaging and automotive industries.

Stock Recovery


The company reported $26.9 billion in revenue last year. Its share price, which peaked at $47.35 in July 2007, slid as low as $5.22 on March 6 during the global economic meltdown. The stock value has since increased to $11.46, as of July 30, up 1.8 percent in the year-to-date.


Brazil has the world's third-largest reserves of bauxite. In 1979, a group led by Rio de Janeiro-based Vale SA built a bauxite mine in Porto Trombetas, 60 kilometers from Juruti. In 1994, Alcoa joined Vale in the venture, whose other members today include Melbourne-based BHP Billiton Ltd. and Rio Tinto Plc of London.


The scarred land and fouled water around Porto Trombetas bears witness to the impact of the mine. Nearby, a lake called Lago Batata still turns bright red from bauxite wastes workers dumped for a decade.


The venture says it stopped polluting the lake in 1989 and now uses sealed holding ponds to contain overflow. The consortium replanted trees on the banks of the lake, but they're low to the ground and brittle. Ademar Cavalcanti, the mine's environmental director, says the cleanup will go on indefinitely.


Revived Project


Alcoa inherited its Juruti mining rights from Reynolds Inc., which it bought in 2000. Alcoa revived the project in 2003, as global economic growth increased demand.

Simao Jatene, the governor of Para, supported the Alcoa project. BNDES, Brazil's national development bank, provided the company with 1.9 billion reais ($1 billion) of financing for construction.


In January 2005, Alcoa requested state permits to build the $1.7 billion mine. Gabriel Guerreiro, who was then Para's environment secretary, says the company submitted an impact study done by an independent firm, Sao Paulo-based CNEC Engenharia SA.

Guerreiro says his agency analyzed Alcoa's proposal and concluded the mine would be modern and efficient. Guerreiro says Para's mineral riches must be explored for the good of the state's 7.1 million residents, 50 percent of whom live in poverty.


'Rich Civilization'


"Nobody is going to build a rich civilization without using the natural resources of the tropics," he says.


Guerreiro gave Alcoa a preliminary license in June 2005 and asked for 35 improvements to the impact study. After Alcoa made adjustments, he recommended the project be accepted by the state environmental council, called Coema, which approved it in August 2005.


A month later, federal and state prosecutors sued Omnia Minerios Ltda., the Santarem-based Alcoa subsidiary running the mine; Para's state government; and Ibama, the federal regulator. The government's civil suit, filed in federal court in Santarem, says Omnia Minerios was required to seek and obtain a federal environmental permit.


Prosecutors say Ibama failed by not taking control of the licensing process. In court filings, Alcoa and the two regulators each say they followed proper procedures.


Court to Court


The case against Alcoa has languished for four years as the participants argue over which level of the Brazilian judicial system -- federal or state -- should have jurisdiction.

Franklin Feder, Alcoa's Sao Paulo-based president for Latin America and the Caribbean, says Ibama advised Alcoa to get state approval for the mine.


Marcus Luiz Barroso Barros, Ibama's president from 2003 to 2007, says no one told him about such a decision. He says he didn't know about Alcoa's project until after the company had applied for licensing with Para. At that point, he decided it would be too complicated for Ibama to get involved -- a position he now regrets.


"Now that I know more about Alcoa's mine, looking at the significant impact it's having in the area, I'd say it's a major project that should have been handled by the federal agency," says Barros, 61, a physician who's now in private practice in the Amazon city of Manaus.


Licensing Guidelines


A government advisory panel called Conama lays out guidelines for when Ibama should get involved in reviewing a project.


"Ibama shall be responsible for the environmental licensing for projects and activities with a significant environmental impact of a national or regional scope," Conama Resolution 237 says.


State regulators aren't as reliable as the federal government, Barros says.


"The main problem with licensing by state agencies is that they are often too close to projects and fall victim more easily to political and economic pressures than Ibama," he says. "They may be more easily manipulated."


The state licensing of the Juruti mine was riddled with irregularities, the prosecutors' suit says. Alcoa's consultants limited their environmental research to two separate one-month periods during the dry season, in a jungle with some of the highest rainfall levels in the world, prosecutors say.


'Comprehensive'


The researchers didn't analyze how the mine, which will consume 505 cubic meters (133,407 gallons) of water per hour from an Amazon River inlet, will affect fishing.. They also didn't study how heavy ship traffic would affect fish populations near the port, prosecutors say.


"All environmental studies, conducted by qualified specialists, were comprehensive, as demonstrated by the fact that all necessary licenses were duly granted," Alcoa said in its responses to questions from Bloomberg News.


Fatima de Sousa Paiva, a nun and community organizer who's spent almost a decade near the Juruti mine area, says Alcoa approached the rain forest community like Portuguese explorers who grabbed Brazil in the 16th century.


"Alcoa offered gifts like plastic sandals, thermoses and bicycles," says Paiva, 48, who teaches at a local elementary school. "To them, we were just some ignorant Indians in the way of their plans to make billions."


In its written response, Alcoa said, "This is a groundless allegation."


'Provide for the People'


In granting Alcoa permission to mine in the Juruti preserve, Para officials clashed with Incra, the federal government's land reform institute. By law, the reserve can be used only by residents to hunt, fish and gather nuts to sustain their families.


"The reserve allows a way to make sure the land is able to provide for the people," the law says. All decisions about land use must be made by residents of the community, according to the law.


"Maybe the state wanted to play Alcoa's game by approving an environmental licensing process that was full of holes, but we didn't," says Luciano Brunet, who runs Incra's office in Santarem.


Brunet says Alcoa told residents that they didn't have a right to stop the mine because they didn't have title to the land.


Public Land


Most of the ground in the Amazon is owned by the government, according to Imazon, a Belem-based nonprofit group. Incra gave descendants of Mundurucu and Muirapinima Indians the right to use the land in 1981 without granting titles to the families. Incra certified the land as a federal reserve in November 2005.


Brazil's laws regarding property deeds in the Amazon have always been lax, Brunet says, because until recently no one has challenged them.


"Those people don't own the land," says Alcoa's Tiniti Matsumoto Jr., who has run the mine since 2005 and has worked at Alcoa for 40 years. "That land issue is Incra's problem, not Alcoa's."


Alcoa doesn't own the property either, prosecutor Moraes says.


"Alcoa simply assumed it was authorized to mine an area that is protected, where people live off the land," Moraes says.


Soon after Alcoa received approval from the state to build the mine, Bricio Lima, the company's community affairs director, went from house to house, asking families to cede part of their land. In the end, Alcoa secured the right of way through land where 81 families live.


No Choice


Bentes, the farmer whose stream is now filled with brown silt, says Lima told his family and their neighbors that residents had no choice but to cooperate because Alcoa had approval from the state.


Lima said Alcoa offered the family 23,000 reais, which equals about 17 months of the median income in Brazil, to use 2.5 hectares of their land, Bentes says. He says he agreed to the deal because he had no choice.


"He told us the railroad would go through our land whether we accepted the offer or not," Bentes says, as he prepares to roast half a deer he hunted for two days with a friend.

Alcoa wanted to pay them something, even though it wasn't required by law, Lima says.


"There was nothing forcing us to pay any compensation," says Lima, who confirms Bentes's account of their discussions..


'The Right Thing'


Brunet says his agency plans to grant land titles to local residents, allowing them to request royalty payments from Alcoa's mine production.


Matsumoto, 59, a Brazilian of Japanese descent, says the company is willing to pay people who live in the reserve part of its royalty payments to the government -- 1.5 percent of the mine's revenue -- if that's what officials want.


"We want to be here for at least 70 years, so of course we want to do the right thing," he says.


Alcoa is paying Conservation International, an Arlington- based nonprofit group, $100,000 a year to create a trust fund to finance the preservation of 10 million hectares of parks and preserves around Juruti.


Since 2005, the company has spent 10 million reais to improve roads and build schools, water treatment units, a health-care center and a government building in Juruti, Alcoa says.


Replanting Trees


In 2008, the company commissioned a poll of 600 people in the region, finding that 61 percent said the mine project had improved their lives. Two-thirds of those questioned didn't live close to the mine, Alcoa says.


Matsumoto says Alcoa will replant every tree it destroys. It will send forestry engineers and biologists ahead of the excavators to catalog plants and animals in all of the jungle Alcoa cuts down.


"When we start planting trees at the mine, we want to make it richer than the original forest," Matsumoto says.


Patricia Elias, a forestry expert for the Union of Concerned Scientists, says Matsumoto's goal is impossible to achieve.


"It would take centuries for trees to grow to their original density and height -- and it would never be better than virgin forest," she says. "It's of greater value in combating climate change to avoid deforestation in the first place."


'Just Doesn't Work'


Andre Clewell, a botanist in Ellenton, Florida, who is a consultant on restoration of mines, says it's difficult to quickly restore tropical trees.


"You can try to grow 200-year-old trees in 50 years, but it just doesn't work," Clewell, 75, says. "And some of it never comes back."


About 160 kilometers from the Juruti mine, green fields of soybeans stretch to the horizon near Santarem, flanked by narrow stands of the rain forest that once covered all of the area. Scorched trees lie on the ground at the far end of Edno Cortezia's farm, where workers set fire to the forest to make way for crops.


Cortezia says he's growing soybeans where the jungle once stood because Cargill built a port 30 kilometers away at the confluence of the Amazon and Tapajos rivers.


"We came here because of the port," Cortezia says. Cargill's Champi says the company will remove Cortezia as a supplier if it can confirm the deforestation.


Pot-Holed Highways


Before Cargill built its port, there were no soybean farms near Santarem, says Marcus Bistene, chief of enforcement at Ibama's Santarem office. Pontes, the federal prosecutor, says Cargill bypassed federal environmental law to build a port without properly studying how it would affect the Amazon.


In the mid-1990s, Cargill, the world's largest agricultural company by revenue, was looking for an alternative to trucking grains down pot-holed highways from the fields of Mato Grosso state in western Brazil to the ports of Santos and Paranagua, 2,000 kilometers south.


They set their sights on a highway through the heart of the soybean belt from the Amazon to Santarem, Champi says. At the time, Cortezia farmed land in the state of Mato Grosso, near the southern border of the Amazon. He says Cargill officials came to town, urging farmers to move to Santarem, where it would be less expensive to grow soybeans.

This season, he's harvesting soybeans on his farm near Santarem that he plans to sell to Cargill..


EPA Brushes


Cargill has 160,000 employees in 67 countries and reported $120 billion in revenue in 2008. Founded in 1855 by William Cargill, it's still primarily family owned. It has been in Brazil since 1965, when it started producing and selling hybrid corn seeds. Within two decades, Cargill grew into Brazil's top trader and exporter of soybeans and oilseed.

Like Alcoa, Cargill has had brushes with environmental regulators.


In the U.S., the EPA has cited the company for polluting rivers and killing fish populations. In 2005, Cargill signed an agreement with the EPA and the Justice Department settling charges that the company had underestimated air pollution at corn and soybean processing plants in 13 states.


Cargill agreed to spend $130 million to reduce pollution at 27 plants, pay a fine of $1.6 million and finance $3.5 million in environmental programs.


'Long History'


Cargill standards for protecting the environment are stricter than the EPA's in some cases, spokeswoman Lori Johnson says.


"Cargill has a long history of voluntarily reducing its emissions and other environmental impacts," Johnson says.


In 2000, Pontes filed suit in federal court to halt construction of Cargill's port, arguing that the company hadn't done a proper environmental study. Cargill contested the suit, saying it had approval from Para's environmental agency.


As the case was pending, Cargill finished the port in 2003. In March 2007, a Brazilian federal judge shut down the port until the company did a comprehensive environmental study. Cargill won a reversal of that decision on appeal.


In 2006, Greenpeace reported it had traced soybeans from the port to illegally deforested land. Since then, Cargill has refused to buy soybeans grown on newly deforested land, Champi says. Three days ago, Cargill and other grain exporters in Brazil extended until July 2010 a commitment not to buy soybeans from farms that were cleared from the Amazon since 2006.


74 Million Cows


Ranchers, more than anyone else, have illegally flattened thousands of square kilometers of publicly owned rain forest to create pastures for cattle, Pontes says. More than 74 million cows graze in the Amazon today, covering a combined area larger than Spain.


Ranchers are proud of what they have done to improve the local economy. Ataides Gomes de Oliveira, a foreman on the Itacaiunas ranch near Xinguara, walks among a wasteland of scorched logs and splintered stumps. He stops as cattle appear amid the ragged ferns and saplings.


"There are 6,000 cows here, where there used to be unproductive jungle," he says. Sao Paulo-based Agropecuaria Santa Barbara Xinguara SA, which owns Itacaiunas, says it's not responsible for managing the ranch and has never illegally cleared jungle.

McDonald's gets some of the beef for its Big Macs from a meatpacker supplied by ranches cleared from the Amazon, cattle sales permits show.


Deforesting Fines


McDonald's supplier of hamburger patties in Brazil, Braslo Produtos de Carne Ltda. in Sao Paulo, has bought beef from its parent, Marfrig Alimentos. Four ranchers that supply Marfrig have been fined a total of 13.5 million reais for illegally clearing the rain forest, public records show.


Marfrig has never bought "regularly" from ranches that don't follow Brazil's environmental law, says Ricardo Florence, director of planning and investor relations. The company demands its suppliers follow all laws. It won't buy from suppliers that Ibama has placed on a list of "embargoed" ranches cited for illegal deforestation, Florence says.

The ranchers who were fined aren't on that list, so Marfrig has no way of knowing their background on deforestation, he says.


"The Marfrig Group does not buy from suppliers that contribute to deforestation of the Amazon," Florence says.


McDonald's Policy


Oak Brook, Illinois-based McDonald's, which has had a policy of not buying beef from deforested land since 1989, says it relies on its suppliers to follow the law.


"Every McDonald's beef supplier has signed and affirmed its compliance with this policy," says Bob Langert, McDonald's vice president of corporate social responsibility. "They are aware that McDonald's will immediately cease accepting raw materials from any facility that is found to source cattle for McDonald's from within the Amazon."


Marfrig complies with McDonald's policy, Florence says.


JBS, the world's biggest meat company, has purchased cattle from fined ranchers. JBS owns Swift & Co. and part of Smithfield Foods Inc. in the U.S. and has nine plants in the Amazon. Kraft Foods Inc.'s division in Italy and a unit of H.J. Heinz Co. have bought beef from JBS, according to sales and export records.


The number of slaughterhouses in the Amazon has tripled to 87 since 2004, as international meat exporters expanded into the rain forest, prosecutors say.

'It's the Meatpackers'


"If you want to know who is financing the deforestation, it's the meatpackers," Ibama

director Evaristo says.


Angela Garcia, director of environmental affairs at JBS, says the company counts on government enforcement records to ensure cattle come from land that wasn't illegally deforested.


"We're not in enforcement," she says. "We don't have the resources. I hope the ranches are complying with the law, but I cannot say whether they are."

Evaristo says virtually all Amazon ranchers built pastures on land that was illegally deforested.


"These are people who operate with 100 percent illegality," he says. "They steal public land, destroy the rain forest, plant grass and let the cows graze until they're fat enough to sell."


In Sao Felix do Xingu, the municipality in the Amazon with the most cattle, only one ranch out of hundreds has a license. On June 1, Ibama and federal prosecutors filed suit against 21 cattle ranches, accusing them of illegally deforesting 150,000 hectares of rain forest.

Stopped Buying Beef


Prosecutors say that meatpacker Bertin sold beef from cattle that had been raised on illegal ranches to 41 of its customers --including Carrefour and Wal-Mart. Prosecutors sent a letter to all Bertin customers recommending they stop buying meat that comes from deforested land.


By June 19, Carrefour, Wal-Mart and 33 other buyers had told Azeredo that they had stopped buying from Bertin and other meatpackers named in the lawsuit.


Bertin says it stopped buying from 14 ranches named in the suit and signed an agreement with prosecutors to develop tighter controls to ensure cattle suppliers follow the law.

"We've suspended cattle purchases from deforested ranches and will help ranchers stop deforesting the Amazon and replant areas that have been devastated," Bertin spokeswoman Simone Soares says..


'A Matter of Cost'


Bentonville, Arkansas-based Wal-Mart says it wants to buy only beef raised on ranches that follow the law. The company had suspected that ranchers were destroying the Amazon, says Daniela De Fiori, Wal-Mart's vice president for sustainability in Brazil.


"The truth is, Brazil's retail sectors rely on these companies," De Fiori says. "And it's a

matter of cost."


On July 17, Wal-Mart launched a global initiative to urge all of its suppliers to assess and label the environmental impact of all their products, going back to the source of raw materials.


Spokespeople for Carrefour, Heinz, Kraft and car companies Ford, GM and Mercedes say they have policies against buying products from deforested land and requiring suppliers to assure them they follow the law.


Leather producer Eagle Ottawa, which is a unit of Whitehall, Michigan-based Everett Smith Group Ltd., says it's satisfied with Bertin's agreement with prosecutors to stop buying from illegally deforested ranches.


Shrinking Amazon


In Juruti, where Alcoa has its bauxite mine, the jungle is dotted with mahogany, Brazil nut trees and marble-textured angelin-pedra trees. These hardwoods can grow to almost 50 meters.


Under the thick canopy of that timber are giant ferns and palms. This Amazonian vegetation, which has long absorbed the world's carbon dioxide, is now shrinking at a rate of 163 square kilometers a week, exacerbating the global warming that threatens to wreak havoc worldwide.


Lima, Alcoa's community relations manager, a heavyset man with thinning hair, drives a pickup truck on the freshly cleared land for the mine. The rain forest gives way to a 700- meter-wide muddy pit that steams in the sun after a cloudburst.


Jungle topsoil and clay have been stripped away, exposing bauxite 15 meters down. Dump trucks are lined up, waiting for work to begin.


Lima points to the pit, saying that beginning in late August, excavators will fill trucks with 90-ton hauls of bauxite once mining starts. Bulldozers will move ahead, clearing the rain forest to make way for heavy machinery to advance in a mining trench 50 meters wide.


Train Sits Empty


In a clearing a few kilometers away, conveyor belts lead to a tower where clay and other waste material will be washed from the ore. Not far from the pit, a train sits empty, ready to be loaded with bauxite.


Alcoa has already torn down 900 hectares of rain forest, Lima says. Within 30 years, the mine will consume more than 10 times that much jungle, according to the company.

Bentes and his family show where Alcoa workers strip the rain forest.


"We don't know many things, and we are very simple people," Bentes says, adding that he does understand the value of economic development in Brazil. "But they should find a way to do that without destroying the rain forest," he says. "That is not right."


Editor: Jonathan Neumann, Gail Roche

To contact the reporters on this story: Michael Smith in Santiago at Mssmith@bloomberg.net or Adriana Brasileiro in Rio de Janeiro at abrasileiro@bloomberg.net.

Last Updated: July 30, 2009 23:00 EDT
 
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Comment: I post this key article widely because it has a lot of revealing
facts about big corporate
interconnections with the exploitation of Brazil,
the oppression of Brazilian people and
the need for us all to see the vital
importance of looking at the big picture on a global
level. All of us are
interconnected as one level or another in one way or another.. What
we do
or do not do here now inside the United States can have global repercussions.


We must raise our cosmic consciousness far above narrow nationalist interests
 and see
the connections, interconnections and linkages between what goes on
in Brazil and other
so-called Third World countries. We should closely examine
what our role is in all this mass misery, economic poverty and human suffering:
either because of our blind actions in what we buy from capitalist profit-drive
corporations or our passive non-actions as global citizens.
Read the product
labels in your kitchen shelves and in your refrigerators. Eat consciously!


I first and foremost identify myself as a humane being before any racial,
nationalist or ethnic
identity. Fathom our common survival interests as one
and the same people upon Mother Earth.  Come together and unite as one
in our lifetime! We are a self-destructive endangered species!


Education for Liberation! Venceremos Unidos!
Peter S. Lopez ~aka: Peta
Sacramento, California,Aztlan
Yahoo Email: peter.lopez51@yahoo.com

Related Links: Join Up!
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Humane-Rights-Agenda/

http://humane-rights-agenda.blogspot.com/


http://humane-rights-agenda-network.ning.com/

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NetworkAztlan_News/
c/s

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Tuesday, July 21, 2009: The Year 2012 - An Essay in Honor of Today's Solar Eclipse

07-21-2009 ~ Western Time: 10:26 PM / PST
Gracias Hermano ~ Sharing is caring, as I wrote before. These are times of great transition

and great transformation. Surely events are not unfolding simply on a flat line linear way.
Some events are happening exponentially, time is an extremely relative measurement of
the expansion of cosmic consciousness. New Age stuff is actually ancient wisdom foretold
millenniums ago. Old dogmas are driveling into dust. New ways of being, of doing, of seeing
make ordinary experiences refreshed in extraordinary ways.

I take it all one eternal moment at a time in the here now of existential experience with a cosmic consciousness that does not sink in the sands of time but is born ever anew with each new breath in this lifetime. Ancient echos reverberate throughout all the passing generations. Breathe, drink water, save the children and travel a path with heart.

A humane social revolution would be a quantum leap in human evolution. The ice caps
are melting down and out. All is not as it should be and there is no turning back. Only forward thrusts onward, yonder! Venceremos Unidos! ~Peta-de-Aztlan~

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/jul/22/longest-total-solar-eclipse-21st-century

Asia swathed in darkness with the longest total eclipse of the century
The eclipse was first sighted at dawn in eastern
India near the town of Guahati before moving north and east to Nepal, Myanmar, Bangladesh, Bhutan and China

solar eclipse asia

Solar eclipse is seen in Yinchuan, capital of northwest China's Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region, at 8:33 a.m. on Wednesday, July 22, 2009. Photograph: Wang Peng/AP

--- On Tue, 7/21/09, Hueteotl Lopez <wed2012@yahoo.com> wrote:
From: Hueteotl Lopez <wed2012@yahoo.com>
Subject: Fw: The Year 2012 - An Essay In honor of today's Solar Eclipse
To: dope_x_resistancela@yahoogroups.com
Date: Tuesday, July 21, 2009, 8:19 PM

http://elmachete2012.blogspot.com/2009/07/blog-post.html

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

The Year 2012 - An Essay in Honor of Today's Solar Eclipse

*The following essay was written directly to a group of men in my family whom i deeply care for. It was written on December 21, 2008 and has been edited for your reading. i hope that you'll receive it with understanding for all of the struggles that i face in life and in solidarity with our human family. i chose to publish it today because tomorrow, July 22, 2009, is my eldest son's birth-day and i was even more inspired to share it with you because we are right now in the midst of a Solar Eclipse.

December 21, 2012
-Winter Solstice-

With respect I ask that you please take the time to read this document. You will want to know about this and take it into consideration without setting it aside to get to it later or throwing it away if it becomes to challenging to your current awareness. I write today not only with you in mind but with our entire human family in my heart. Most importantly, this letter will be available to my two sons Kinan & Illimani in the future as a way of reaching out to them through writing to their family and community. With this letter and many of the others I have or will write to you over the years my children and all of our future generations will have firsthand knowledge from one who loves them on the issues we face and how I feel about all of the many complexities in our lives that they will face. They will have my thoughts and hopefully my example to measure up to other experiences and ways of seeing things that are or will be related to them. This is extremely important to me as their Father. I want them to know that through it all I did not use silence to try to protect me or our family. Silence will not protect any of us. They must know that I risked it all to pursue clarification. That by challenging our way of thinking with knowledge and some morality I summoned enough courage to be able to stand open and bare to criticism, being wrong, accused, judged, or even worse attacked, abandoned, and hated. All of these things can be damaging but nothing is more so than silence. Our measure will be in where we stand in moments of challenge and discomfort and our children should always know that we hold fast to all the principles of light during these times. I for one do not wish to fail them. With this in mind, I write not to destroy but to share in the wonderful tradition of all the great writers and thinkers in history who have used the pen to communicate to one another the need for continuous growth, change, and rebirth. Let's evolve!

I open with a prayer:
CREATOR
I do not ask to travel the easy road, but for courage to endure the road I am on.
I do not ask for fulfillment but for humility to accept what is in my path.
I do not ask for perfection in all I do, but for the wisdom not to repeat my mistakes.
I do not ask for these gifts before saying thank you for all you have given me.
Mitakuye Oyasin – All our relations – Aho

On this Winter Solstice – the longest night of the year – our psychological tolerance for darkness is profoundly being challenged. It is a visionary time. It is a time that represents not only the pitch black of night, but also a seed of something that will unfold in the coming year. In this time, we pray for a future as great as our ancestors give to us, for their wisdom to see the prison we are constructing for ourselves, the graves we are digging. To be able to look around at all of the artificial constructs that separate us from nature and know that in the years to come they will be multiplied a hundredfold. A world without direct sunlight, with no fresh air, water, or natural food, can our spirits survive in such a world? The challenge and opportunity that is now is unprecedented. Being the leaders that we are I know that we can rise to the challenge and make the choice to respond appropriately.

December 21, 2012 is four years away and I'd like to take this moment to ask you if you have heard of or have been able to set time aside to study the book, "Maya Cosmogenesis 2012"? I ask this and write about this date because it is so important and connected to our lives and behavior. 2012 is fast becoming commercialized and becuase of this in ways many people are being misled as to the deep and profound meaning of our "date with destiny". One good thing though is that people are asking questions. They want to know more. I hope that you take the time to read Maya Cosmogenesis 2012 by John Major Jenkins and any other books you will encounter on 2012. (There is a list at the end of this) Read them all. Take in every perspective because so many people are talking about it, writing about it, and attempting to find out exactly what it means and it would benefit you greatly to study and come to your own conclusions.

As for myself, in 1998 I was fortunate to have stumbled upon the work of John Major Jenkins. I was up very late listening to the radio and changing the dial when I heard the words "Mayan" and "calendar". I tuned in and could barely hear over the static just enough to catch the end of an interview with the author. It was new and amazing information he was sharing about an end date, cosmology, calendrics, pyramids, and our Sun being reborn. I listened intently and then was absolutely astonished when he spoke of the Mayan Sacred bible the "Popol Vuh" because just the day before I had finished reading it in its entirety. It took me a good month to study this text, one of the last 3-4 holy scriptures the murderous Spanish priests didn't destroy. I had much trouble understanding the text at the time because it was the very first real study I had made of our ancestral literature that uses mythological story form to relate and teach us all about astronomical phenomenon. But when Jenkins spoke that night everything became clear. All of the information I had taken in became understandable. He spoke of the Popol Vuh as the book, the sacred text written in the 1500's that is the code or piece of many puzzles that tells about the date December 21, 2012.

The Popol Vuh is one of our creation stories. It is a piece of our biblical texts that encompasses the written form of our spiritual knowledge. How is it related to the Mayan Calendrical end date and Winter Solstice on December 21, 2012? You'll have to study deeply both the Popol Vuh and Maya Cosmogenesis 2012 to know but it's important in this letter to tell you that both teach us that we are in the midst of a universal change that is so profound that you would never believe what is taking place if you don't make an attempt to study it. I'll do my best for you here though with the hope that you'll trust in what I've learned and my ability to be honest.

We are talking about nothing less than revolution. According to Maya science, prophecy, Maya time philosophy, cosmology, astronomy, architecture, mythology, and calendrics we are in the midst of the end of a 5,125 year time cycle. What's more, is that our ancestors discovered this world age end date while observing and mapping a slow celestial cycle or cosmic shifting called the "precession of the equinoxes" which is the big word used to describe how the earth wobbles on its axis. While spinning, moving around the Sun, and wobbling, the earth through precession has been causing the celestial position of the December solstice sun to slowly approach the center of our galaxy better known among many names as: THE MILKY WAY- THE DARK RIFT- NUCLEAR BULGE – THE ROAD TO THE UNDERWORLD (OUR UNCONCIOUS) OR "XIBALBA BE" IN THE POPOL VUH – THE GALACTIC CENTER – THE WOMB OF OUR MOTHER – THE BIRTH CANAL – OUR GREAT SKY MOTHER – THE GOAL RING IN THE BALLGAME "TLAXTLI" – THE THRONE – OUR HEART.

This is a very rare astronomical process/ alignment that culminates in 2012. And it's an alignment that happens only once in every 26,000 years! This 26,000 year cycle or world age represents a cycle of spiritual unfolding for humanity. It is in a sense a process of human spiritual gestation. As stargazers we were very in tune and interested in our orientation to the larger cosmos. We were/are Galactic Cosmologists who have developed a science and philosophy that exceeds anything yet encountered by western science. It is a science of cycles of time that we learned about by tuning in to and observing nature cycles, plant growth, the human life cycle, and the cycles of the planets. Through this we come to understand profound things about the processes that created beings go through. And we learn that the processes in the heavens reflect all of the processes on earth and the other way around too. It is the principal of – AS ABOVE SO BELOW or THE MICROCOSM REFLECTS THE MACROCOSM. This principal lies at the heart of and is the foundation of our worldview as INDIGENOUS THINKERS.

And it wasn't primarily a sky/earth connection that sewed together our mind and body but also all of the inner dreams and visions of spiritual unfolding that happens on our planet is reflected in the outer universe in the cycles of the planets. This is one reason why we built our pyramids, temples, homes, and lodges oriented to the skies in very specific and mathematical ways. We were making a statement about the relationship between our architecture, our inner reality, and the larger universe.. We designed to reflect the cosmic order and project our love of GOD within. In effect, we are the cosmos! Know that this is relationship. Not ego. It is self-sacrifice for power in terms you or I have been indoctrinated by Western minds to look down upon because it does not lead to the false power and status so many of us seek in our daily lives dressed up in a suit and tie mimicking the white Capitalist authoritarian patriarchal CEO who serves money and greed. These are the megalomaniacs whose ego has run rampant with extreme selfishness such that it blinds him/her to having a real connection and relationship to our true selves and others. The true self is an eternal/infinite source consciousness. So the struggle plays out: Limited consciousness vs. the eternal divine self from which we all spring. Which do you choose to work towards? How do we balance? How do we come back into right relationship with ourselves and decolonize our minds? We must reclaim our indigenous minds. Not annihilate but sacrifice the ego to make it transparent so that the eternal wisdom of the true self reflected in the cosmos can shine through. This is a core teaching embedded in the Mayan creation mythology and all Native original teachings. This is power. This is decolonization.
The colonizers changed our tribal perception of reality. They changed and altered the spiritual perception of reality and turned it into a religious perception of reality. Religious perception is about submission and obedience and authoritarianism. For example, they put our physical bodies on reservations and in Missions to break the mind and used curfews, fences, and slave labor to break the body. They disallowed us to live on our traditional diets of fruits, seeds, grains, and introduced the Cow, Pig, and Goat, alcohol, milk and other putrefying fast food substances that have created diabetes, heart disease, and cancers in all of our families today. Through their populare culture glamorized in the media they have created fashionable watches to wear and made us believe that the Gregorian calendar and method of keeping time was/is superior to our balanced and in sync cosmological sacred and solar calendars. They separate your head and body, make you believe that matter comes before energy, and that spirit is non-existent effectually shattering your heart and they call this power. But we know according to our original teachings that power is not a man made device or structure. Power is not a political, religious, or social system. That's not power. These are systems of authority that lead to destruction and disunity. The reality of power is an entirely different reality, and that reality is US – human beings…the power of highly evolved human beings. And to be a human being, we have to connect to the reality of our relationship to power. We have to transform and renew and we are indispensable participants in this process of transformation. Free will! Can we live up to the responsibility of reclaiming our cosmological birth right? December 21, 2012 is upon us and the previous world age along with all of its behaviors are coming to an end. This chapter in the human experience is terminated. A great cycle comes to completion and challenges us to seize the opportunity to establish right relationship with the true self. It is our duty.

On December 21,2012 the cosmic solar father and the Galactic center, the heart of the cosmic mother will be united. We align with the alignment. We will be restored if we choose to sacrifice and surrender our attachment to limitation and the illusion of security, contentment, progress, or success under the Devil's forms of unity and organization in its structures of false reality. We speak here of the Satanist's because they are the historical roamers over land and sea who bring destruction and chaos. They are the atomic bombers, the mass murderers whose purpose in this plane of existence is to and has been to attempt to disrupt and destroy the earth and all love. They are the drugs and arms dealers, creators of private property, massive prisons, and The Corporation. They are the invaders of our DNA and cell structures, and the negative energy workers who profess that their reality of fear is the only reality. Their existence is a crime and they too are in touch with the astronomical fact that their time is up. They have always been in a crisis of connection with the eternal energy, the cosmic mother, the solar father, the galactic womb because of their way of acquiring and promoting the non-intuitive approach to acquiring knowledge. Their approach is external and based on satisfying their taste, touch, sight, smell, and hearing through the collection of data, graphs and charts, suits and ties, banks and land deeds. This is their relationship to the world and to power. It is this relationship to existence that has caused them to want to control and own everything they can. They are vain and extremely uncompromising. They are false rulers, controlling and deceiving humanity. They are the descendants of darkness whose egos try to rule and who create a backward upside down world. This is the ego believing it is the true center of the world. It is the story of the Fallen One.

Our prophecies tell us that this is an expected and predicted development that happens at the end of every great cycle or world age. The perennial teachings of all of the world's great spiritual traditions teach us that at the end of the cycles vain egoism is the dominant paradigm ruling and ruining everything and almost everyone on the planet. Each forgets his/her true nature and eternal consciousness loses itself in the vicissitudes of mortal life disconnected from being in contact with the source. But, in the great mythic structure of time the lost consciousness comes around to remember itself with all of the help from the cosmos and gets reinitiated back into an awareness that instead of being lost in the limited state of egoism actually arrives in a deeper essence that is rooted in the eternal and infinite. This is redemption, salvation, rebirth, evolution! Unless, we refuse in our cemented minds, reactionary and stale emotions, and handicapped visions to humble ourselves and eliminate ego consciousness we will not survive or be truly at peace and connected in balance and love in 2012.

This is not some arbitrary belief system of a forgotten people. What we find through INDIGENOUS philosophy is the key to our holistic health. Our responsibility now is to remember and ultimately ACT. And after committing to remembering what we have been taught to forget and be ashamed of we must stay dedicated and honest in our attempt to be a new individual, community, parent, friend, lover, and reborn warrior organizing not for money, fortune, fame, microphone time, camera shots, or shallow recognition, but for true freedom and the return to the path of the true self our ancestors exemplified.

At this point you may be a bit dismissive of what I'm relating to you especially if you see the world through the Colonizers lenses. If you've even convinced yourself over many years and through adolescent rebellion that you're an Atheist and call yourself one you may laugh at the thought of human behavior and existence being shaped and molded by cosmological energy and the position, motion, vibration, and weight of the planets. It's okay. You don't have to believe or confirm for it all to be taking place. You only have to look at the condition of your life and all of the relationships you have come into on this planet. Are you connected? Are you trying to be in touch with others in a real way and more importantly with your own soul, your pain and anguish, and with your past? In turn, are you in touch with our Mother Earth? Do you protect and honor her by planting trees, cultivationg love by growing food, saving water, reducing everything you consume and throw away? Do you wholeheartedly defend her right to exist? Can you work in unison with her or do you cement and build over her flesh, destroy her lungs by killing trees, pollute her womb by not recycling, reusing, and conserving? Do you use her plant medicine to prevent and cure sickness and dis-ease or do you vaccinate, swallow pills, and cut body parts out that speak to loud for your soul to hear? Do you make a ritual and ceremony with others using alcohol to feel good? What relaxes your unbalanced emotions and stress? Can you hunt in time of need to find your own food and properly use an entire animal for sustenance? Can you find your own water to quench your family's thirst? What will you do when that inevitable day arrives under the Colonizer's control when the stores close, banks shut down, police take to the streets, curfew's are imposed, and all of the state provided energy to your home is cut? Will you remain an Agency Indian begging for hand-outs and rations, working within the structure and framework they establish to petition and redress grievances or will you rebel and encourage others to do the same? Can you fix things, use tools, and most importantly improvise or do you depend on and hire others to fix your leaky and lazy habits? Can you truly say today as leaders, role models, organizers, teachers, and community activists that your personal life reflects your public life and persona…(The microcosm/macrocosm – as above so below Maya/Indigenous time philosophy)? Or do you feel like you're living 2,3,&4 lives?

It has been said that the true measure of a community is in the condition of its women. How are your daughters? Your wives, what men are in their lives and are you in touch with yourself enough as men to know and acknowledge that their relationship to and with men is a direct reflection of their feelings toward and for you? How are they able to get your attention as your offspring, negatively or positively? How are all of your grandchildren?
"Indigenous people love children above all else, they are the hope of the future and justification for all of the trials and tribulations we face in life as parents. Kids guarantee the perpetuation of our family and continuous upholding of our honor. They are the focus of very much of our time – or should be – and almost all of our attention so that the future is guaranteed as for the majority successful. Most importantly is the time they spend with their grandparents, as these have both the most time to devote to their care and wisdom to pass on to the next generation. If we're too busy as parents our most important sense of self and continuity come from the very old, who are kind, gentle, considerate, and wise with us, particularly as children." (Taken from the book: "The Spirit of Indian Women" by Judith Fitzgerald)

Is this your feeling or do you look upon your grandchildren/children as a burden, an income, a punishment for your own parental shortfalls with your own children? Do you strive to use gentleness and all of the other positive techniques you are happy to use with others in public and at work? Or do you strike your grandchildren/children with belts, your fists, your feet, your words, and overt power? Do you seek to punish, be vengeful, manipulative, or create guilt dependency in your relations?

In essence, what I am asking is are you ready and preparing for the completion of the circle, the galactic alignment, harmonic convergence, and REBIRTH! Are you on linear time or a circular thinker? Are you reaping well sown seeds in the evolutionary process of becoming or growing old, stale, burdened, spiritually handicapped, Godless, cemented and unmoving, reactionary, illogical, and a slave to your 5 senses? Let us pray together:

"Grandfather, Grandmother,Great Spirit...
You have been always, and before you no one has been.
There is no other to pray to but you.
Everything has been touched by your soul.
The star nations universe wide you have finished.
The four quarters of the earth, the day, and in that day,
everything you complete.
Great Spirit, lean close to the earth so you may hear the voice I send.
Where the sun goes down, behold your son; Thunder Beings, behold me!
Where the white giant lives in power and lightening, behold your creation.
Where the sun shines continually, whence the day-break star and the night,
I stand before you in humbleness where summer lives, in the depths of the heavens,
An Eagle of Power.
And Mother Earth, our provider, you have shown mercy to your children."

Fe, Amor, Y Paz.
Inlakech,
Hueteotl Lopez
– 2012 –
*This essay can also be found along with other's at my blog:
http://elmachete2012.blogspot.com/
* Here is a list of books that you will most definately like to read if you are interested in learning more:
1. The Mayan Factor - Jose Arguelles - This is one of the greatest most important life changing books i have ever read that brought to me the beginning of the understanding of HARMONICS. That is, the vibratory nature of the universe and how our indigenous ancestors were in tune mathmatically with God's cosmological music. I recommend this book to everyone for a deep and slow study of 2012.
2. Time and the Technosphere - Jose Arguelles ....same as above.
3. The Mystery of 2012 - Predictions, prophecies, & possibilites...a wonderful collection of work by many authors that gives different but balanced points of view on the idea of Maya cosmology and thought.
4. Galactic Alignment - John Major Jenkins...another fantastic book by Jenkins that builds on all of his work in his book Maya Cosmogenesis 2012.
5. The Mayan Calendar and the Transformation of Consciousness - Carl Johan Calleman, Ph.D. with a forward by Jose Arguelles. This is an absolutely fantastic read!
6. The Mayan Code - Time Acceleration and Awakening the World Mind By: Barbara Hand Clow. Please read this book and especially her wonderful work on all the people in the world who believe in the "End Times" philosophy. Her book is aptly entitled "Catastrophobia". An amazing book that puts to rest all of the fear and loathing over the world coming to an end and all the professors of that idea.
7. The Hopi Survival Kit - The Prophecies, Instructions, and Warnings Revealed by the Last Elders. By: Thomas E. Mails. PLEASE READ THIS BOOK. i cannot stress this enough. This book shook me to the core and will always be a classic read in my library.
8. Return of the Bird Tribes - Ken Carey . Absolutely deep reading when you have already read all the basic material on indigenous thought processes.
9. Mitakuye Oyasin - "We are all Related" By: Dr. A.C. Ross...This book was given to me in the year 2000 by a person who i consider one of my spiritual mentors. He knew that it would help decolonize my mind and open up the path for me to begin my journey on the Red Road. I met Dr. Ross many years later and had a wonderful conversation with him about how his writings affected my soul. This book is a must for all young people.
10. Ancient Americas - Maya, Aztec, Inka & Beyond. By: Nicholas J. Saunders. This book and the next two i will list go good together.
11. Day of Destiny - John Mini. If you want an amazing understanding of the deep intracies and math of the Mexica Sun Stone, the cosmos, your body, electricity, medicine, chemistry, physics, etc. then find this book and you won't put it down!
12. The Aztec Calendar Math & Design - Charles William Johnson.
13. Breaking the Mayan Code - Michael D. Coe. This and any of Coe's books are a great starting point and always good reference forever on Mayan culture..
14. 2012 and the Galactic Center - The Return of the Great Mother. By: Christine R. Page, M.D. You'll really enjoy this little story that connects Mayan/Egyptian thought.
15. And...for the Athiest's i leave you with the last two recommendations among so many other books:
*Time and Reality in the Thought of the Maya - By: Miguel Leon-Portilla
*The Natural History of the soul in Ancient Mexico - By: Jill Leslie McKeever Furst. These books will decolonize!
**Almost forgot one of tha bible's of decolonization:
The Wretched of the Earth - By: Frantz Fanon -

1 Comments:

At July 21, 2009 10:29 PM , Blogger Peta-de-Aztlan said...

Gracias Hermano ~ I will take the liberty to share this with others. ~Peta-de-Aztlan!
Yahoo Email: peter.lopez51@yahoo.com

ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ
P.Ssss..How did I post that comment on your blog earlier yet the time being what it

is now?!? No matter. Everything is relative and only ancient truth absolute!


Education for Liberation!
Peter S. Lopez ~aka:
Peta
Sacramento
, California,Aztlan
Yahoo Email:
peter.lopez51@yahoo.com
http://anhglobal.ning.com/profile/peta51

Join the
Alliance for a New Humanity!
http://anhglobal.ning.com/

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

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NetworkAztlan_News/



Monday, July 20, 2009

2 Panels to Miss Deadline on Detainees: New-York Times

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/21/us/21gitmo.html?hp

July 21, 2009

2 Panels to Miss Deadline on Detainees

WASHINGTON — An Obama administration panel will miss a Tuesday deadline to report on its efforts to meet President Obama's directive to close the detention center at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, by January, administration officials said on Monday.


The officials said that a task force reviewing detention policy would need another six months to complete its report and a second group, reviewing interrogation policy, would need two more months to finish its report to Mr. Obama.


Senior administration officials said at a briefing for reporters that the missed deadlines did not mean the administration was bogged down in its effort to close the prison, which now holds 229 men suspected of terrorism.


Still, the missed deadlines seemed to underscore the gravity and complexity of the legal, political and policy problems confronting the administration as it tries to put into place new interrogation rules and figure out what to do with the detainees.


The Tuesday deadline was set by executive orders signed by Mr. Obama shortly after taking office that gave the two panels six months to report on their progress. The administration has started work on important parts of the new system. The interrogation committee is thought to be nearing completion of its work since Mr. Obama has largely abandoned the use of harsh techniques allowed by the administration of President George W. Bush.

But some elements of Mr. Obama's plan are unresolved, including whether the administration will adopt hotly debated steps like indefinite detention for some high-risk detainees. These would be a small category of detainees who the government determines are a significant security threat but cannot be tried because of the lack of usable evidence.

Administration officials said on Monday that there was no decision on such a step but that if it were proposed, it would include Congressional and judicial review as well as periodic review by federal authorities.


The administration is also backing a newly designed military commission model to try some detainees who cannot be tried in civilian criminal courts; a measure that has bipartisan support is now pending in the Senate.


At a briefing on Monday, Obama administration officials blamed the Bush administration, saying it had left them with unsolved problems.


The official, and several others, spoke at the briefing on the condition that they not be identified by name.


The Obama administration officials said they were reassessing "fundamental policy issues," and had concluded that some of those policies required "fundamental change."


The goal, one senior administration official said, is to build a "durable and effective" framework for dealing with the detainees at Guantánamo and future detainees captured in the fight against terrorists. The officials said they were on track to review the current detainees' cases to determine who could be transferred overseas and who could be tried in military or civilian courts in the United States.


In an interim report released Monday by the detention policy committee, officials described for the first time how they would decide whether to send detainees to a military or civilian court.


The government will attempt to try detainees in civilian courts if possible, but some of the factors that could affect the decision include "the nature of the offenses to be charged," the seriousness of the conduct underlying the offense, the identity of victims and the location in which the offense occurred.


More than 50 detainees have been approved for transfer overseas, the officials said, expressing optimism about the process. But some countries have been reluctant to accept detainees, and the task is complicated by requirements that foreign governments provide assurances that they be treated humanely and subject to security procedures.

 

ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ
Education for Liberation!
Peter S. Lopez ~aka:
Peta
Sacramento
, California,Aztlan
Yahoo Email:
peter.lopez51@yahoo.com
http://anhglobal.ning.com/profile/peta51

Join the
Alliance for a New Humanity!
http://anhglobal.ning.com/

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

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NetworkAztlan_News/


Mexican Midterm Elections: The Reemergence of the PRI

http://www.coha.org/2009/07/mexican-midterm-elections-the-reemergence-of-the-pri/

Mexican Midterm Elections: The Reemergence of the PRI

"PRI crushes the President," declared Mexico City's Milenio newspaper following the midterm elections on July 5. Mexico's conservative President Felipe Calderón endured a significant setback when his Partido Acción Nacional (PAN) was unseated by the Partido Revolucionario Institucional (PRI) in the House of Deputies (the lower house of Congress) and suffered losses in gubernatorial elections. Despite Calderón's 69 percent approval rating in May, the victories for the PRI are seen as the result of voter disenchantment with the PAN, and overall public frustration with increasing drug-related violence and the global economic crisis. The PAN will now have to fight an uphill battle to win the 2012 presidency and even will be hard-pressed to have its budget passed by the House of Deputies without making significant compromises.


Reshuffling Power


Overall, the PRI won 36.6 percent of the vote, while the PAN earned 28 percent in municipal, gubernatorial and federal elections. The left-leaning Partido de la Revolución Democrática (PRD), Mexico's third major party, earned only 12 percent of the vote. This was largely due to internal divisions within the party and former presidential candidate Andrés Manuel López Obrador's past divisive campaign and his move to support the Partido del Trabajo. Although the PRI doubled its number of seats in the 500-member House of Deputies, it still does not have an outright majority. By forming alliances with smaller parties like the Nueva Alianza (PNA) and Verdes (PVEM), however, the PRI is expected to be able to push its agendas through the legislature. The PRI also won five out of six gubernatorial races, including two in presumed conservative states that historically were supportive of the PAN. In response to the election results, PAN President Germán Martínez resigned, taking personal responsibility for the party's inability to achieve its electoral goals.


The recently-elected 61st legislature closely parallels the makeup of the 59th under former PAN President Vicente Fox from 2003-2006, which was the most bipartisan and productive legislature in Mexico's history. In the 60th legislature, the PRI and PAN voted together 95.5 percent of the time, suggesting that, barring a dramatic leftward swing by the PRI, one should still expect a high degree of cooperation in the just-elected legislature. Despite historic hostilities between the PRI and PAN, neither party ran campaigns that were so insular that they would breed increased polarization or enhanced divergence in their political agendas. However, the PAN is significantly debilitated because its 28 percent in the lower house is not enough to provide the one-third majority needed to sustain a Presidential veto. This will prove especially onerous during the drafting of the budget, likely Mexico's most important piece of legislation in the next several years.


Fortunately for the PAN, however, the Senate is not up for reelection until 2012. The party currently controls an "effective vote" of 49.6 percent in the senate compared with 25 percent for the PRI and 14.9 percent for the PRD, allowing the former to act as a virtual majority party. This will allow it to veto certain parts of the budget such as oil revenue and general spending limits, allowing Calderón's veto to be sustained in the Senate should the need arise.


On the day of the election, 43 percent of voters went to the polls, which was slightly higher than the last mid-term election turnout in 2003 and higher than election officials expected in many districts. However, high numbers of voided votes were cast by constituents affiliated with the controversial campaign called Voto en Blanco. This campaign initiative promoted writing giant X's on the ballots or filling in all of the candidate choices to render the ballot null as a form of protest against the political direction the country was taking. Election officials estimated that about one in twenty votes turned out to be void, with as many as one in ten in Mexico City. The millions of voided votes were the result of a lackluster campaign and are representative of widespread voter disenchantment with Mexico's political and economic direction.


PRI Revival?


The PRI campaigned on a platform that depicted the reinvention of an old brand. It did this with a new slogan that read: "PRI, proven experience, new attitude." The PRI dominated Mexican politics for 71 years, until PAN candidate Vicente Fox won the presidency in 2000. The nationalistic party of Mexico is nominally centrist, but its legacy is riddled with corruption, fraud and economic mismanagement. The PRI is trying desperately to revamp its image and prove that its days of overextended authoritarian rule throughout the 20th century are long gone. In comparison with the 2006 Presidential election, the PRI experienced a net turnout gain of more than 2 million voters while all of the other parties together experienced a decrease of nearly 7 million. This shift is due, in part, to a return of many PRI voters who cast ballots for Obrador in 2006 and to the disenchantment of PAN supporters. The PRI earned significant popular support with a grassroots approach that depicted the party as modern and clean, while focusing especially on the economic well being of Mexican families.


The midterm election has provided a promising opportunity for the PRI, but it was not a landslide victory and the party does not yet have a strong enough popular mandate at its disposal. The delicate balance of power among the parties indicates that the PRI cannot afford to revert back to the corruption and repression of the opposition parties that characterized its 20th century political control. The PRI has been striving to reform its image to reflect a new, open and more democratic political entity. The midterm elections place the PRI as the frontrunner vying to recapture the presidency in the 2012 elections.


Economic Implications and Domestic Security


With industrial and oil production down, unemployment rates up and decreasing remittances from the United States, economic woes weighed heavily upon the Mexican electorate. The results of the July 5 elections will likely hamper Calderón's plans to revitalize the Mexican economy, which is currently in its deepest recession since the 1994 economic crisis. The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development has forecasted that the economy could retract almost 8 percent in 2009. Calderón's proposals to overhaul the county's economic performance include tax increases and reduction of Mexico's dependence on its diminishing oil revenues.


Pushing its fiscal and political agendas will prove to be more difficult now that the PRI dominates the House of Deputies. While the 61st Legislature will perhaps allow for at least the appearance of the bipartisanship efforts of previous legislatures, gridlock is to be expected on the more contentious issues such as budget formation and tax reforms. The PAN has indicated that tax hikes should be implemented to boost public revenue, but the PRI has been reluctant to introduce any new tax hikes, especially since the party is eagerly eyeing the 2012 presidential ballot. There is also a pressing need to reduce dependence on dwindling oil revenues. Lower revenues are the result of decreasing oil production, which has been down 6.5 percent in May from a year earlier. Oil provides 37 percent of Mexico's revenue. Such a large dependence could deepen the economic crisis unless revenue reforms are established and the economy is diversified.


Security also remains a significant concern among Mexican voters and the PRI could hinder Calderón's offensive against drug cartels and organized crime. Since Calderón declared a war against drug cartels in 2006, there has been a dramatic increase in drug violence and casualties. In total, there have been an estimated 10,500 drug-related deaths, with a record of 800 casualties just in the past June. The PRI's campaign has strongly criticized Calderón's hardline approach, and the party has pledged to launch policies to curb the violence and quell the tension. The violence in Mexico has escalated into a significant humanitarian crisis and a contentious issue that has resulted in frustration with the current regime. Yet neither the PRI nor other parties have proposed tangible alternative solutions. The PAN, however, insisted to voters that Calderón's policies were necessary to bring down violence in ungovernable areas racked by organized crime and causalities. Mexicans of all political persuasions are impatient for economic reforms and domestic security, and if the PRI uses its newly acquired control in the lower house to block reforms, it is in danger of alienating voters by representing itself as a politically manipulative and stalemate party prior to the crucial 2012 elections.


Mexico's Immediate Future The victory of the PRI in the 2009 midterm elections has drastically changed the political landscape of the remaining three and a half years of the Calderón presidency. Without controlling a one-third segment of the House of Deputies, the PAN will not be able to defend Calderón's veto on the budget and will be forced to make significant compromises. Not only will this tone down Calderón's anti-narcotics crusade, it will increase the funds available to PRI governors for campaigns in the 2012 election, further strengthening its prospects for a return to executive power.


At the same time, the electoral results have historical precedent, and congressional coalitions will likely mirror those from the 59th legislature from 2003-2006. Though high-profile projects like the upcoming budget may produce gridlock, one can expect continuing agreement on most policies. Furthermore, though a shift of power clearly has taken place within the Mexican political process, it should be remembered that the popular vote was nearly even for the PRI and PAN, and Calderón's veto can in part be defended in the Senate. The real challenge for the PAN will be to regain the confidence of the Mexican people before the 2012 elections which, barring rapid economic recovery and a sudden anti-corruption streak, appears unlikely.

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This analysis was prepared by Research Associates Lincoln Wheeler, Nick Elledge, Mo Wong
July 20th, 2009
Word Count: 1700

 

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