Saturday, September 12, 2009

Latinos would prefer to do away with the Celibacy Requirement of Catholic Priests



http://www.prweb.com/releases/2009/09/prweb2843754.htm

EMOCLICK Survey reveals that Latinos would prefer to do away with the Celibacy Requirement of Catholic Priests

The question was: "¿Do you believe the Catholic Church should allow priests to Marry?"


Miami, FL (PRWEB) September 11, 2009 -- A poll conducted by EmoClick among members of the major Faith based Social Networking Site KuMundi.com indicates a considerable majority of the 28,288 Internet users agree the Catholic Church should allow Catholic priests to marry if they so desire.
   
The question was: "¿Do you believe the Catholic Church should allow priests to Marry?"

The results of the poll required reveal a clear divergence of opinion with the requirement of celibacy by the Catholic Church. A total of 18,561 visitors voted in favor of lifting the rule, and only 5,727 voted in favor of preserving the traditional requirement.

El Celibato
El Celibato
For the results visit http://encuesta.elcelibato.com/

The survey, offered in promotion of the release of the new book "El Celibato" received the response of 15,365 visitors who identified themselves as Catholic, and 5,006 who identified themselves as Evangelical (the poll also included the participation of other religious denominations including agnostics and atheists). The countries representing the highest number of participants were México, Colombia, Peru and Venezuela.

El Celibato is the debut novel by Daniel Garza. Audio novel is also available starting September 24th narrated by voice talents Andres Garcia Jr. and Elluz Peraza.

El Celibato is a novel that charms and absorbs the reader from the first page to the very last with its delightful story line and contemporary writing style. Garza is a new voice; his vivid descriptions, fine prose and creative imagination makes the book impossible to put down. The story's point of departure involves four friends who, motivated by different reasons, make a pact to abstain from sexual relationships. They quickly find out that what they set out to accomplish may not be so easy to achieve in today's world of free will independence and" anything goes" dating. The reader will empathize with the characters and their dilemmas of forbidden love, adversity, transformation and absolution. For more information, please visit http://www.ElCelibato.com


EmoClick is an Internet Planning Strategy & Consulting firm based in the United States. EmoClick specializes in building customized solutions such as: Social Networks, E-commerce, News Portals, TV-Radio online, Email Marketing, Online Surveys and Polls using its proprietary software. . For more information, visit http://www.EmoClick.com


Contact: Roberto Masiero, EmoClick, CEO
http://www.EmoClick.com

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Education for Liberation! Venceremos Unidos!
Peter S. Lopez ~aka ~Peta-de-Aztlan~
Sacramento, California, Aztlan
Yahoo Email: peter.lopez51@yahoo.com 
 
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Friday, September 11, 2009

FYI: Peltier: I Am Barack Obama's Political Prisoner Now

>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
http://www.counterpunch.org/peltier09112009.html

Education for Liberation! Venceremos Unidos!
Peter S. Lopez ~aka ~Peta-de-Aztlan~
Sacramento, California, Aztlan
Yahoo Email: peter.lopez51@yahoo.com 
 
Come Together! Join Up! Seize the Time!
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Humane-Rights-Agenda/

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

http://humane-rights-agenda.blogspot.com/
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From: "info@FreePeltierNow.org" <info@FreePeltierNow.org>
To: peter.lopez51@yahoo.com
Sent: Friday, September 11, 2009 9:55:26 AM
Subject: Peltier: I Am Barack Obama's Political Prisoner Now

http://www.counterpunch.org/
September 11-13, 2009


If Only the Government Had Respected Its Own Laws...
I Am Barack Obama's Political Prisoner Now
By LEONARD PELTIER

T he United States Department of Justice has once again made a mockery of its lofty and pretentious title.

After releasing an original and continuing disciple of death cult leader Charles Manson (sic - Lynette Squeaky Fromme) who attempted to shoot President Gerald Ford, an admitted Croatian terrorist, and another attempted assassin of President Ford under the mandatory 30-year parole law, the U.S. Parole Commission deemed that my release would "promote disrespect for the law."

If only the federal government would have respected its own laws, not to mention the treaties that are, under the U.S. Constitution, the supreme law of the land, I would never have been convicted nor forced to spend more than half my life in captivity. Not to mention the fact that every law in this country was created without the consent of Native peoples and is applied unequally at our expense. If nothing else, my experience should raise serious questions about the FBI's supposed jurisdiction in Indian Country.

The parole commission's phrase was lifted from soon-to-be former U.S. Attorney Drew Wrigley, who apparently hopes to ride with the FBI cavalry into the office of North Dakota governor. In this Wrigley is following in the footsteps of William Janklow, who built his political career on his reputation as an Indian fighter, moving on up from tribal attorney (and alleged rapist of a Native minor) to state attorney general, South Dakota governor, and U.S. Congressman. Some might recall that Janklow claimed responsibility for dissuading President Clinton from pardoning me before he was convicted of manslaughter. Janklow's historical predecessor, George Armstrong Custer, similarly hoped that a glorious massacre of the Sioux would propel him to the White House, and we all know what happened to him.

Unlike the barbarians that bay for my blood in the corridors of power, however, Native people are true humanitarians who pray for our enemies. Yet we must be realistic enough to organize for our own freedom and equality as nations. We constitute 5% of the population of North Dakota and 10% of South Dakota and we could utilize that influence to promote our own power on the reservations, where our focus should be. If we organized as a voting bloc, we could defeat the entire premise of the competition between the Dakotas as to which is the most racist. In the 1970s we were forced to take up arms to affirm our right to survival and self-defense, but today the war is one of ideas. We must now stand up to armed oppression and colonization with our bodies and our minds. International law is on our side.

Given the complexion of the three recent federal parolees, it might seem that my greatest crime was being Indian. But the truth is that my gravest offense is my innocence. In Iran, political prisoners are occasionally released if they confess to the ridiculous charges on which they are dragged into court, in order to discredit and intimidate them and other like-minded citizens. The FBI and its mouthpieces have suggested the same, as did the parole commission in 1993, when it ruled that my refusal to confess was grounds for denial of parole.

To claim innocence is to suggest that the government is wrong, if not guilty itself. The American judicial system is set up so that the defendant is not punished for the crime itself, but for refusing to accept whatever plea arrangement is offered and for daring to compel the judicial system to grant the accused the right to right to rebut the charges leveled by the state in an actual trial. Such insolence is punished invariably with prosecution requests for the steepest possible sentence, if not an upward departure from sentencing guidelines that are being gradually discarded, along with the possibility of parole.

As much as non-Natives might hate Indians, we are all in the same boat. To attempt to emulate this system in tribal government is pitiful, to say the least.

It was only this year, in the Troy Davis, case, that the U.S. Supreme Court recognized innocence as a legitimate legal defense. Like the witnesses that were coerced into testifying against me, those that testified against Davis renounced their statements, yet Davis was very nearly put to death. I might have been executed myself by now, had not the government of Canada required a waiver of the death penalty as a condition of extradition.

The old order is aptly represented by Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, who stated in his dissenting opinion in the Davis case, "This Court has never held that the Constitution forbids the execution of a convicted defendant who has had a full and fair trial but is later able to convince a habeas court that he is 'actually' innocent. Quite to the contrary, we have repeatedly left that question unresolved, while expressing considerable doubt that any claim based on alleged 'actual innocence' is constitutionally cognizable."

The esteemed Senator from North Dakota, Byron Dorgan, who is now the chairman of the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs, used much the same reasoning in writing that "our legal system has found Leonard Peltier guilty of the crime for which he was charged. I have reviewed the material from the trial, and I believe the verdict was fair and just."

It is a bizarre and incomprehensible statement to Natives, as well it should be, that innocence and guilt is a mere legal status, not necessarily rooted in material fact. It is a truism that all political prisoners were convicted of the crimes for which they were charged.

The truth is the government wants me to falsely confess in order to validate a rather sloppy frame-up operation, one whose exposure would open the door to an investigation of the United States' role in training and equipping goon squads to suppress a grassroots movement on Pine Ridge against a puppet dictatorship.

In America, there can by definition be no political prisoners, only those duly judged guilty in a court of law. It is deemed too controversial to even publicly contemplate that the federal government might fabricate and suppress evidence to defeat those deemed political enemies. But it is a demonstrable fact at every stage of my case.

I am Barack Obama's political prisoner now, and I hope and pray that he will adhere to the ideals that impelled him to run for president. But as Obama himself would acknowledge, if we are expecting him to solve our problems, we missed the point of his campaign. Only by organizing in our own communities and pressuring our supposed leaders can we bring about the changes that we all so desperately need. Please support the Leonard Peltier Defense Offense Committee in our effort to hold the United States government to its own words.

I thank you all who have stood by me all these years, but to name anyone would be to exclude many more. We must never lose hope in our struggle for freedom.

In the Spirit of Crazy Horse,

Leonard Peltier
Leonard Peltier #89637-132
USP-Lewisburg
US Penitentiary
PO Box 1000
Lewisburg, PA 17837

Time to set him free... Because it is the RIGHT thing to do.

Friends of Peltier
http://www.FreePeltierNow.org
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This message was launched into cyberspace to peter.lopez51@yahoo.com

Wednesday, September 09, 2009

Sacramento: Barrio Art Program and community help center

http://media.www.statehornet.com/media/storage/paper1146/news/2009/09/09/Features/Barrio.Art.Program.And.Community.Help.Center-3765863.shtml

This mural is currently the most recent one finished by the Barrio Art Program during the Spring 2009 semester.


Barrio Art Program and community help center

By: Vanessa Garibaldi

Posted: 9/9/09

Despite facing hard economic times, the Washington Neighborhood Center, in downtown Sacramento, is still one of the main sites for Sacramento State's Barrio Art Program.

The Barrio Art Program was established in the early 1970s by a retired Sac State art professor emeritus, Jose Montoya.

Jose created the program to give Sac State art students an opportunity to design curriculum and to teach in the community hands-on while earning their 40-hour teaching prerequisite for the Sac State credential program.

Tomas Montoya, Jose Montoya's son and president of the Washington Neighborhood Center, said the course is a 40-hour commitment to one of the program centers focusing on linking the university and the community. He said that nearly 40 years later, the Barrio Art Program continues to open doors for Sac State students who want to experience an urban, multicultural and multilingual teaching environment.

Gia Moreno, senior art education major, said the Barrio Art class is more than a three-unit class.

"It is a class that impacts the community on many different levels and teaches students how to teach in different environments," Moreno said.

Students participating in the Barrio Art Program have been teaching at the center, a non-profit organization and community-run center.

Tomas Montoya said funds for the center are provided through private donations and United Way Worldwide, a leadership organization.

The center, which has been struggling financially, has been required to make staff cuts to avoid shutting down. Board members and community volunteers have taken on the staff's previous responsibilities including running the office, teaching classes, and maintaining the center.

The center's financial standing, however, has not limited what it offers, including tutoring sessions, English classes, dance classes, and boxing. The center also provides many educational and athletic opportunities taught by Sac State students from previous Barrio Art Programs, UC Davis students and community organizations.

Recently, the center has hosted various fundraisers - one including the hip-hop artist KRS-One who participated in a benefit concert.

"We are struggling, but the community has come together by picking up the slack and we will not be shutting down," Tomas Montoya said.

Moreno, who was involved in the Barrio Art Program for more than a year and taught Barrio Art for one semester, said the Barrio Art Program has not felt the financial trouble. In fact, it helps the center by donating a portion of a grant that was given to the program. The grant helps the center pay for electricity bills. The program also leaves unused art supplies for the center to use during summer or winter breaks.

The center's board members said Jose's focus when creating the Barrio Art Program was to create access to art for the Hispanic residents in the barrio.

"A barrio is a largely Latino and immigrant-populated neighborhood," Moreno said.

Catherine Turrill, assistant chair of the art department at Sac State, said that throughout the years, the barrio has evolved into a multicultural environment and now all cultures benefit from the program.

The four components of the Barrio Art Program show the different age groups Sac State serves during the semester.

The Children's Component serves children from kindergarten to sixth grade. The Anciano Component supports adults and senior citizens. The Cultural Component is Danza Azteca, that teaches the community about pre-Colombian indigenous and cultural dances. The mural project component centers on mural paintings in the tradition of the Mexican Mural Movement. One example of the mural project is the mural at Sac State on Lassen Hall by Ed Rivera, according to the Barrio Arts Program website.

Beginning this fall, faculty member Steven Ciampaglia will teach the Barrio Art course for the first time.

"I am honored to be part of a program that has a long tradition at Sac State," Ciiampaglia said. "I hope I can live up to the standards set by previous instructors of the course as we take this program into the future."

The Barrio Art Program gives art classes to the community from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays at the Washington Neighborhood Center.

Moreno said children from the community who do not receive art education at school are receiving it at the center. Their mothers and fathers also have an opportunity to learn several artistic styles.

"It is very family-based at the center," Moreno said.

Tomas Montoya said the center could always use more help from the community.

Volunteers do a variety of things from seeking donations, tutoring, teaching, outreach, and more.

For questions, call the Washington Neighborhood Center at (916) 444-6833.

Vanessa Garibaldi can be reached at vgaribaldi@statehornet.com
 
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Education for Liberation! Venceremos Unidos!
Peter S. Lopez ~aka ~Peta-de-Aztlan~
Sacramento, California, Aztlan
Yahoo Email: peter.lopez51@yahoo.com 
 
Come Together! Join Up! Seize the Time!
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NetworkAztlan_News/

c/s



Bolivian man acted alone in Mexico hijacking, official says

http://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/americas/09/09/mexico.hijacking/

Bolivian man acted alone in Mexico hijacking, official says

Emergency vehicles stand ready near a hijacked Aeromexico jet after it landed Wednesday in Mexico City.

Emergency vehicles stand ready near a hijacked Aeromexico jet after it landed Wednesday in Mexico City.

MEXICO CITY (CNN) -- A 44-year-old Bolivian drug addict and alcoholic who describes himself as a church minister was the sole person responsible for the brief hijacking Wednesday of a commercial jetliner, a Mexican official said.


The suspect -- Josmar Flores Pereira -- told authorities he hijacked the Boeing 737 jet because the date -- September 9, 2009, or 9/9/9, and 666 reversed -- held some significance for him, said Genaro Garcia Luna, the secretary for public safety.

"He said that because of that divine reference he wanted to alert Mexico City of an earthquake," Garcia told reporters.


Flanked by two police officers, the suspect -- wearing a white shirt and blue jeans -- was then paraded in front of the news media. Chewing gum, he smiled.


"Christ is coming soon," he told reporters before being escorted off.


The hijacker took control of Aeromexico Flight 576 as the jet it flew from the resort town of Cancun, telling a flight attendant he was one of three hijackers, Garcia said. VideoWatch CNN's Rick Sanchez report on the hijacking as it unfolded »


He said a cardboard box he had contained a bomb, and threatened to blow it up if his demand to speak to President Felipe Calderon was not met, Garcia said.


Calderon was in the presidential hangar in the airport preparing to depart when the incident began, leading him to cancel his planned flight, CNN affiliate TV Azteca reported.


The hijacking apparently went unnoticed by many of those aboard the plane, which landed five minutes ahead of scheduled and was moved to a remote area of the airport. Passengers, clutching their hand luggage, walked from the plane and down a moveable stairway onto the tarmac, where they got into buses.


Moments later, the suspect -- and several other people -- were taken into custody, TV Azteca said. The package turned out not to contain explosives, the station said.

Garcia said the other people who were detained turned out not to be involved. VideoWatch Aeromexico passengers being released »


A U.S. law enforcement official familiar with the situation said preliminary information indicated there were 112 passengers aboard the plane, all from Mexico, the United States or France.


"The flight was very tranquil," said Marisa Lopez, a passenger who was seated in Row 24 with her baby.


She said the only thing that caught her attention was the large number of emergency vehicles that were lined up along the tarmac when they arrived, five minutes ahead of schedule.


"Really, it was all very peaceful," she said. "We saw nothing."


Others were more aware of what was going on.


"It was very difficult, but the pilot told us to remain calm," said another passenger, who added that many of the passengers were families returning from vacation in Cancun.


The woman said the hijacker never spoke to them during the 45 minutes they were held.


"We were scared," said another woman. "But it seemed like things got under control when we came down. We were immediately surrounded, when we landed, by federal police."


The woman, who had been seated in the middle of the plane, said the incident occurred in the front of the plane. It began at 1:40 p.m. as Flight 576 was arriving in Mexico City and ended more than an hour later, slightly before 3 p.m.

 
 

 
Find this article at:
http://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/americas/09/09/mexico.hijacking
 
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Education for Liberation! Venceremos Unidos!
Peter S. Lopez ~aka ~Peta-de-Aztlan~
Sacramento, California, Aztlan
Yahoo Email: peter.lopez51@yahoo.com 
 
Come Together! Join Up! Seize the Time!
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Humane-Rights-Agenda/

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

http://humane-rights-agenda.blogspot.com/
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NetworkAztlan_News/

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

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