Sunday, November 01, 2009

Translating finance, in dollars or dinero: By Michelle Singletary

http://tinyurl.com/yf3vlsy

Translating finance, in dollars or dinero

By Michelle Singletary
Sunday, November 1, 2009


No es facil hablar de dinero.

In English: It's not easy to talk about money.


For many people, speaking the language of money is like trying to learn a foreign tongue. It can be frustrating.


Many books seek to help you learn the language. And every month, I search for those I find useful or unique.


For this month's Color of Money Book Club pick, I'm recommending a book that literally translates the language of money.


Lynn Jimenez, an award-winning business reporter for KGO Radio 810 in San Francisco, has written "¿Se Habla Dinero? The Everyday Guide to Financial Success" (Wiley, $19.95). What's so fabulous about this book, which was published last year, is that from the table of contents right through to the index, Jimenez provides side-by-side Spanish and English translations. The Spanish is on the left-side pages, the English on the right.

Although anyone will benefit from this basic personal finance guide, Jimenez wrote this bilingual guide specifically to appeal to multigenerational Hispanic families.


Like the U.S. population as a whole, Latinos are feeling the sting of the economic downturn, reports the Pew Hispanic Center. In a January survey, the center noted that 9 percent of Latino homeowners said they had missed a mortgage payment or were unable to make a full payment.


The survey found that Latinos hold a more negative view of their own current personal financial situation than does the general U.S. population. Seventy-six percent of those polled said their current personal finances are in either fair or poor shape, compared with 63 percent of the population overall.


Despite their financial challenges and concerns, Hispanics are moving into the nation's middle class at a rapid pace, Jimenez wrote.


The fastest-growing portion of the Hispanic market is households earning $50,000 or more a year. Hispanic consumer spending clout will rise from $212 billion in 1990 to $1.4 trillion in 2013, according to a projection by the Selig Center for Economic Growth at the University of Georgia's Terry College of Business.


In her book, Jimenez sticks with the fundamentals. She starts with the mechanics of opening and using bank accounts, then moves on to how to save, use credit, get out of credit card trouble, pay for college, borrow to buy a home or start a business, purchase insurance, and set up a will.


Jimenez customized the book to make her Latino readers feel included. The example characters have Hispanic surnames. Instead of the generic Jones family, there's the Vega family, with parents Maria and Jose and son Pedro. There are tips aimed specifically at Latinos. For example, she reminds some that unlike in their native countries, a notario (notary public in the United States) is not an attorney (Un notario no es un abogado). Law enforcement officials say some schemers call themselves notarios to take advantage of immigrants who are unaware of the distinction.


Jimenez said she envisions the book being passed along from Latino grandparents who don't speak English to their adult children who may speak some English to adult or young grandchildren, born in the United States who may not speak or read any Spanish.


The book "can be used as a quick reference as your family climbs the financial ladder," she writes. "It is designed to encourage conversations about money between generations."


As Jimenez says in the introduction: "El Dinero tiene su propio lenguaje, su propio vocabulario, su propio codigo de palabras. Es fundamental que comprenda el lenguaje del dinero, cualquiera sea el idioma que usted hable."


Or, as she advises in English: "You must speak the language of money to understand how to use it to your own advantage."


If you're looking for a basic money guide for yourself or a young person, "¿Se Habla Dinero?" is a good choice in both English and Spanish.


It's easy to be a member of the Color of Money Book Club. We don't meet -- at least not in person. We come together for a live online discussion. Join me at noon Nov. 19 at http://washingtonpost.com/discussions. Jimenez will be my guest. Also available to answer your personal finance questions will be certified financial planner Randy Gridley, who helped with a section of the book.


Every month, I randomly select readers to receive a copy of the featured book, donated by the publisher. For a chance to win Jiminez's book send an e-mail to colorofmoney@washpost.com with your name and address.


Readers can write to Michelle Singletary at The Washington Post, 1150 15th St. NW, Washington, D.C. 20071.


Comments and questions are welcome, but because of the volume of mail, personal responses are not always possible. Please note that comments or questions may be used in a future column, with the writer's name, unless a specific request to do otherwise is indicated.


http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/10/30/AR2009103004227.html?hpid=topnews

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Education for Liberation! Venceremos Unidos!

Peter S. López, Jr. aka~Peta

Email: peter.lopez51@yahoo.com 

http://twitter.com/Peta51

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MOVE TO KEEP ILLEGALS OUT OF CENSUS JUST PLAIN DUMB: BY THOMAS D. ELIAS

http://tinyurl.com/yexzkfx

Friday, October 30, 2009

MOVE TO KEEP ILLEGALS OUT OF CENSUS JUST PLAIN DUMB

CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2009, OR THEREAFTER

BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
"MOVE TO KEEP ILLEGALS OUT OF CENSUS JUST PLAIN DUMB"

There's an old saying in politics: "If you don't vote, you don't count."

In short, areas where voting turnout is low lose influence in government and the money and services that come with it.

But there's something even more basic at stake when it comes to getting counted in the federal Census that's conducted every 10 years. If you don't get counted, this principle might read, then you simply won't count - for anything.

That's why a current effort by some Latino clergy to encourage a Census boycott by illegal immigrants makes little sense.

It's not that these ministers and priests, members of the National Coalition of Latino Clergy & Christian Leaders, fear Census takers will report illegals to Immigration and Customs Enforcement, leading to their deportation. This has never happened, and the Barack Obama administration vows to keep that record intact.

Nope, the convoluted reasoning of these religious "leaders" holds that by becoming statistically invisible, the 11 million or so illegals residing in this country will be able to push Congress to move on immigration reform that includes a pathway to citizenship for them. Huh? Becoming invisible will somehow give illegals more clout?

Are these people kidding?

No, they're not kidding, and their effort could lead both illegal immigrants and the states where most of them reside - principally California - down an unprecedented primrose path to disaster.

It's not just that California is so strapped it was forced to issue IOUs earlier this summer. It's not just that the state budget crunch led to serious proposals to cut out all government-funded health care for illegal immigrants and their children. It's not just that the fiscal crunch spurred calls to ban illegal immigrant children from public schools - even though the U.S. Supreme Court has repeatedly forbidden this.

All those areas and more would worsen if illegals refused to be counted, because federal funds (that means tax dollars from California, which already gets back far less than its citizens put into the U.S. Treasury) are allocated on the basis of population. Don't get counted, and the flow of federal money that now funds most health care for poor children here will slow down.

Federal highway funds would also be reduced, along with the subsidies that now pay the bulk of the cost of buses and mass transit rail cars used by illegals and citizens alike. That would mean more potholes, less new pavement, fewer freeway widening projects and cancellation of many bus routes.

But not getting counted would also produce precisely the opposite effect the anti-Census Latino clergy hopes to achieve.

For political district lines are drawn on the basis of population. The more people in an area, the more assembly members, state senators and members of Congress an area will get.

Don't get counted and places like East Los Angeles and the agricultural areas of the Central Valley and parts of San Francisco and its East Bay suburbs will get fewer districts. Fewer districts in those areas would mean fewer Latino faces in Congress and the Legislature, which in turn would mean fewer politicians pushing for the immigration reforms sought by the clergy group.

Because illegal immigrants in California were undercounted by an estimated 750,000 in the last Census, Latino areas are already under-represented. Make the undercount significantly worse and representation will be even lower.

There's some anecdotal evidence the proposed boycott is gaining momentum. It doesn't take much to persuade people already afraid of detection and deportation to keep their heads down.

The only good things that have happened on this question are that other Latinos are fighting to overcome the boycott call. "This would be a phenomenal stride backward in the strides we have made to make sure we are equal," said Arturo Vargas, executive director of the National Assn. of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials, who calls the boycott plan "wildly irresponsible."

He and others point out that the idea of non-cooperation plays directly into the hands of anti-illegal immigrant groups who want the undocumented to enjoy no rights or public services. Outfits like the Washington, D.C.-based Center for Immigration Studies have long contended counting illegals skews the one-person, one-vote principle that controls the shaping of political districts. They argue it should be one-citizen, one-vote. In fact, that's how elections are conducted, but citizenship and immigration status do not now control the preliminary political steps that come before the actual vote.

That's why it takes far fewer actual votes to win a seat in Congress or the Legislature from predominantly Latino districts than in places like coastal Orange County, San Diego or San Francisco.

All of which means the clergy behind this proposed boycott is promoting one of the most self-destructive plans in American political history. One hopes their spiritual advice is more sound than their political acumen.

-30-
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, visit www.californiafocus.net

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Comment: Any thought of boycotting the U.S. Census is plainly a form of social insanity. A true vibrant democracy requires citizen and non-citizen participation and we are all global citizens. Know the difference between a true leader who leads us forward and a false leader or mis-leader who leads us astray.


Education for Liberation! Venceremos Unidos!

Peter S. López, Jr. aka~Peta

Email: peter.lopez51@yahoo.com 

http://twitter.com/Peta51

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Come Together! Join Up! Get Involved! Seize the Time!

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

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

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Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Examining Yolo County Gang Claims~via davisvanguard.org

http://tinyurl.com/yzzah4x

Examining Yolo County Gang Claims

ganginjunction_catby Eric Alfaro

According to statistics obtained from the Yolo County District Attorney, 1,088 validated gang members currently reside in Yolo County.  Additionally, the  D.A has confirmed the presence of ten active gangs in the County:

Gangs operating in Yolo County:

  • Norteno
  • Crips
  • Vagos
  • Nazi Low-Riders
  • 1-80 Boys
  • Surenos
  • Tiny Rascals Gang (TRG)
  • AUSA Skinheads
  • Mara Salvatrucha (Ms-13)
  • F***ed Up Punks (FUPS)

The gang members in Yolo County have all been validated through a gang validation process outlined by the California Gang Node Advisory Commission

2.18. Criteria To Determine Gang Profile: A subject can be entered into the CALGANG® database when two of the following criteria are found through investigation, coupled with the officers training and expertise. The only single criteria approved for entry is an in-custody jail classification interview:

  • 2.18.1. Subject has admitted to being a gang member.
  • 2.18.2. Subject has been arrested with known gang members for offenses consistent with gang activity.
  • 2.18.3. Subject has been identified as a gang member by a reliable informant/source.
  • 2.18.4. Subject has been identified as a gang member by an untested informant.
  • 2.18.5. Subject has been seen affiliating with documented gang members.
  • 2.18.6. Subject has been seen displaying gang symbols and/or hand signs.
  • 2.18.7. Subject has been seen frequenting gang areas.
  • 2.18.8. Subject has been seen wearing gang dress.
  • 2.18.9. Subject is known to have gang tattoos.
  • 2.18.10. In custody Classification interview. (All others require two criteria).

Although the Yolo County District Attorney's office has been able to provide some statistical information on gangs; the office has not been able to substantiate those numbers.

Under the California Public Records Act (CPRA), the public has the right to inspect public records when those records do not hinder on current investigations or on sensitive confidential materials.

A gang validation list serves two main purposes for law enforcement officials. First, it allows the county to gauge the degree of gang activity in the region. Secondly, they facilitate the District Attorney's gang enhancements on criminal convictions. With this universal way to identify gang members, conviction punishments can be increased, sometimes greatly, with a gang enhancement added to a criminal conviction.

The Yolo County District Attorney's Office has never released demographic or age records related to gang members in Yolo County. The Office claims that since certain records have never been compiled by any Yolo County law enforcement agency—they have not been able to provide them to the public.

The District Attorney's office can identify 1,088 validated gang members in Yolo County, and according to them, no gang validated inmates are currently being kept in the Yolo County Jail.

Either convicted criminal gang members are receiving heavy prison time, and thus bypassing county jail or Yolo County has no criminal gang problem. The question daunts on many people; How can the Yolo County Jail hold no validated gang members when Yolo County allegedly has 1,088 of them on the loose?

This clear discrepancy with being able to identify 1,088 gang members, and not being able to retrieve their age or demographic information has many people asking questions.

Transparency in the Yolo County justice system has reached a very unfortunate roadblock.

The "gang problem" in Yolo County must be approached holistically. Many low socioeconomic communities run the risk of being considered "gang areas". People in rough neighborhoods run the risk of being seen "affiliating" with documented gang members.

Sooner or later kids from areas that have become marginalized, with enough association, run the risk of becoming validated gang members themselves.

Objective claims cannot be made about Yolo County's gang problem when important facts have yet to be compiled by the D.A's, Yolo County Gang Task Force.

How is it that information like the age and demographic of gang members has never been archived by the Yolo County District Attorney?

UC Davis recently discovered that forcible sex offenses from 2005-2007 had been significantly over-reported. The over-reporting was uncovered with the help of the Clery act, which requires publications of yearly reports containing specific campus crime statistics.

In Yolo County,  gang statistics have never been completely validated. Without a paper trail confirming statistical claims, a degree of doubt will always surround Yolo County's gang problem.

The most recent (September 2009) California Department of Justice (DOJ), Death in Custody report , fails to reflect the death of Luis Gutierrez, a Woodland native killed on April 30th, 2009 by undercover gang suppression sheriff deputies.

Questions as to whether the Yolo County Justice system is accurately reporting records to the public and state have encouraged many concerned citizens to organize around the Yolo County District Attorney.

*Yolo County Gang Statistics 2008

Comments (8)Add Comment
merixcoatl20

10/28/09 - 11:47 AM
...

This clear discrepancy with being able to identify 1,088 gang members, and not being able to retrieve their age or demographic information has many people asking questions.


The discrepancy is obvious, but the reasons might not be. This means that Officers are going around detaining individuals, without arresting them, and classifying them as gang members.

The classification serves as a "strike" against those individuals the day they enter a court room and get a "gang enhancement" slapped on.
3doorsdown

10/28/09 - 01:12 PM
...

I have recently had the unfortunate experience of learning the critia first hand. I found it was quite detailed but it's application conviluted. In a court room experience, via a "gang expert" I was disturbed to learn I could possibly be classified as a "gang affilitate or associate". Based on having continued contact with someone that is suspected of being a gang member.

As much as I hate it, there are a few people that are either relative, close family friends, or persons that have lost there way. I may have even I suspected gang involvement. I do not nor have I ever condoned gang activity making it known I have no tolerance. Be that as it may, if for some reason I happened to hear something or witness something, my credibility could be questioned. My point is, although it looks good on paper, it doesn't make it a sound practice.

Rich Rifkin

10/28/09 - 01:44 PM
...

This means that Officers are going around detaining individuals, without arresting them, and classifying them as gang members.
Who are the gang members victimizing? Are the people they are harrassing, beating up, shooting, stabbing, vandalizing, threatening and so on all other gang-bangers? Are victims of gang-bangers helped by knowing who it is who is terrorizing them?
merixcoatl20

10/28/09 - 01:54 PM
...

Who are the gang members victimizing? Are the people they are harrassing, beating up, shooting, stabbing, vandalizing, threatening and so on all other gang-bangers? Are victims of gang-bangers helped by knowing who it is who is terrorizing them?


Who says they are gang members? Just because they happen to live in a "gang areas".

If they are victimizing people why aren't they in county jail? ZERO gang members in county jail.

What if Demographic details show that a majority of the alleged "gang members" are exclusively from certain ethnic groups and young middle school kids?

What is wrong with asking questions?
Rich Rifkin

10/28/09 - 02:04 PM
...

What is wrong with asking questions?
I asked you two questions, but got no answers. So apparently my asking questions served no purpose.
merixcoatl20

10/28/09 - 03:12 PM
...

I asked you two questions, but got no answers. So apparently my asking questions served no purpose.


Do you have the courage to ask the District Attorney those questions? He is the only one that can give you concrete answers.

Your clever maneuvering around semantics is the true mark of a political infant. The Davis enterprise has some soul searching to do.

I won't dignify your comments anymore.
Rich Rifkin

10/28/09 - 03:41 PM
...

Your clever maneuvering around semantics is the true mark of a political infant.
Your calling me an infant still fails to answer my questions, big boy.
I won't dignify your comments anymore.
You seem to lack dignity in your answers, big boy.
David M. Greenwald

10/28/09 - 03:51 PM
...

Okay guys don't prove this registration system unworthy in its first few days.



http://davisvanguard.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=3063:examining-yolo-county-gang-claims&catid=74:law-enforcement&Itemid=100

>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

Education for Liberation! Venceremos Unidos!

~Peta-de-Aztlan~

Email: peter.lopez51@yahoo.com 

http://twitter.com/Peta51

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Come Together! Join Up! Get Involved! Seize the Time!

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

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Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Aztatl > Re: [NetworkAztlan_News] Editorial: Knowing When to Leave Public Office in Latin America: via the LA Times

10-27-2009 ~ @12:30 PM/PST
Gracias Hermano Aztatl~ Latinos in Amerka {with a k' in reference to the United States of AmeriKa} are certainly in the ideal geographical location for having a huge impact on social, political AND military matters but alas in so many ways we are still a divided scattered out people.

Once united, mobilized and educated we can have a huge impact on the course of potential world history!

After centuries of poor, oppression and exploitation we cannot even fully agree on a common term with which to identify ourselves! Latinos will do for now, though being an ol' Chicano I still have a fondness for the term La Raza Cosmica.

We need to arm ourselves HERE NOW in all ways possible. What good is a mind if we are not mentally free of the mass psychology of Amerikan Fascism? What good is a gun without the courage to pull the trigger? An expensive club? What good is a spirit without a profound revolutionary consciousness?

Related Links for us to brush up on the History of U.S. Military Inventions in Latin America:


http://third-world-news.blogspot.com/2009/10/history-of-amerikan-interventions-in.html

http://www2.truman.edu/~marc/resources/interventions.html

http://www.zompist.com/latam.html

http://www.smplanet.com/imperialism/teddy.html

In reference to LA Times Editorial ~
http://tinyurl. com/yj9yme2


It does not matter who is in office anywhere in the Americas as long as the central federal government of the United States is still under the power of the corporate state hierarchy. The U.S. government has no moral authority over how long any President wants to remain in office IF he or she has the mass support of the people of a given region. The U.S. government cannot use the prestige of power to dictate the forms of democracy in Latin America! The U.S. economy itself is bankrupt and its mis-leaders are spiritually bankrupt!

A people who are not armed with a profound liberating education that boldly exposes evildoers, a people who are not united with a sound strategy and set of flexible tactics, a people who do not have a high level of social consciousness ~ will never be liberated!

Collectively we have the potential power to change the world! Ya basta!

>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

Education for Liberation! Venceremos Unidos!

Peter S. López aka:~Peta-de-Aztlan~

Email: peter.lopez51@yahoo.com 

http://twitter.com/Peta51

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Come Together! Join Up! Seize the Time!

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From: Aztatl Garza <aztatlxikano@gmail.com>
To: intexile@iww.org; nm_raza_unida@yahoogroups.com; todoslibre@egroups.com; vrodrig5@csulb.edu; Alb Peace & Justice <mail@abqpeaceandjustice.org>; Alb. IWW <abq@iww.org>; Albuquerque IWW email list <abq-iww@lists.riseup.net>; Allen Cooper <ac611@msn.com>; Aztatl Garza <aztatlxikano@gmail.com>; Bianca Encinias <msbianca@sneej.org>; Bob Anderson <citizen@comcast.net>; CJ Levine <claytonlevine@gmail.com>; Confed.delAguila y elCondor <Kozkakuautli@gmail.com>; Darcy H Brazen <dbrazen@unm.edu>; "davidsanchezphd@webtv.net" <davidsanchezphd@webtv.net>; Ebustill <Ebustill@aol.com>; Edna Casman <ecasman@yahoo.com>; Elena Herrada <Elenaherrada@comcast.net>; Enrique Cardiel <magonista66@yahoo.com>; Food Not Bombs <fnb_505@yahoo.com>; FRANK SIFUENTES <conzafos@msn.com>; Greg s.texas Rodriguez <leftovergreg@yahoo.com>; HanaClay Li <hanali@gmail.com>; International Contacts 2 <organizateraza@hotmail.com>; James Marquez <latino_thinker@yahoo.com>; Jane Yee <jane.cambio@yahoo.com>; Janet <hootaway@comcast.net>; Javier Rodriguez <bajolamiradejavier@yahoo.com>; Jeanne <stopthewarmachine@comcast.net>; Jesse Enriquez (Lipan) <NDeLipanje@yahoo.com>; John Salazar <Salazarl8@aol.com>; JorgeDanzante GarciaSundancer <jgarcia@istec.org>; José Cuello <josecuello@wowway.com>; Joy Soler <solerjoy@hotmail.com>; Julie England <jengland745@hotmail.com>; KarenDowntownLib. K. Schmiege <kschmiege@cabq.gov>; LaloXikano AlcarazCartoonist <laloalcaraz@yahoo.com>; Lisa Burns <solas@unm.edu>; Marc Page <lovarchy@gmail.com>; Maria Cecilia Gallegos <xicaguerillera@hotmail.com>; Mary(Poet) Oishi <poetoishi@yahoo.com>; Maurus Chino <mauruschino@yahoo.com>; Mazatzin AZTEKAYOLOKALLI <zemazatzin@hotmail.com>; MEChA Unm <mechaunm@yahoo.com>; Network Aztlan News <NetworkAztlan_News@yahoogroups.com>; ourania tserotas <ourania_tserotas@hotmail.com>; PatriciaSan Jose Juarez <pjuarezg@yahoo.com>; Phil Indig. Konstantin <philkon@rocketmail.com>; renee wolters <rrwolters@aol.com>; ROLANDO GARCIA <rjesusgarcia@gmail.com>; Ruth Millan <rutholivarmillan@sbcglobal.net>; Santiago ObispoVenezuela <sobispo@gmail.com>; "SF, CA" <info@freedomarchives.org>; "sparrow@iww.org IWW Editor" <sparrow@iww.org>; StopTheWarMachine <swm-d@swcp.com>; Teresa Marquez <andaluz@unm.edu>; Terry Schleder <tschleder@gmail.com>; "tlacayaotzin@aol.com" <tlacayaotzin@aol.com>; tochtli Califas <tochtli@berkeley.edu>; Todd Mireles <mirelese@msu.edu>; Tony Herrera <therrera1550@yahoo.com>; Tupac Enrique Acosta <chantlaca@tonatierra.org>; "Vanessa Maracaibo, Venz Di Domenico" <van3hijos@yahoo.com>; Viola Wilkins <violawil@bigpond.net.au>; Virginia Hampton <vhampton@cnm.edu>; Zap Mex <loszapatistasnoestansolos@yahoo.es>
Sent: Mon, October 26, 2009 10:34:45 PM
Subject: [NetworkAztlan_News] Editorial: Knowing When to Leave Public Office in Latin America: via the LA Times

 

Poppy cock & propoganda~
Interference by United States interests around the globe seek to replace popular presidents  through the use of violent military coups. The question is not that presidents in Latin America don't know when to leave, attempting to block or do away with democracy. The question is how to do away with interference from outside sources that threaten the security of the region. Prime examples, the military coups in Honduras & Chile, the occupations of Vietnam, Panama & Iraq, the isolation of Cuba. All were preyed upon by outside influences. It is in the nature of colonialism that exists today as neo-colonialism, but is not afraid to use the police or the army when they feel they are threatened by the power & organization of the people.
Enlighten us, LA Times. When will you write an editorial about how the right wing, suported by the CIA, spies & interferes with the democracy of citizens here in their own back yard; branding their own U.S. citizens as national security risks, interfering with our livelihoods.  The opposition & control over freedom of speech, freedom of assembly on our streets, the freedom of ideas in our writings has occured in our "democracy" since the early days of the founding of the country. A founding that was based on genecide of indigenous people from Canada to Argebtina. What kind of founding of a nation is it, based upon denying women, & people of color, the right to vote, or own property. We have been struggling for justice since that beginning. Have folks already forgotten the McCarthy era in the 1950's, when citizens were persecuted, black balled by ball-less politicians who hid behind lies & fear mongering about the Red Menace & today terrorism?
Somebody, please cut me some slack, jack so we can talk back & gain the confidence we seem to lack. He or she who resides in a glass ceiling house should not be tossing stones, nor innuendo, nor their arbitrary interpretations regarding how to conduct our lives. What psycological  malady explanation is given for the obssesion named greed, that prevalant deviant desire to be rich & create monopolies & financial dictatorships? How is the cost of an election campaign placing the process out of the reach of common folks? Does not this approach to elections endanger the democracy of our own region?
Why does the mass media, owned & controlled by right wing moneyed interests, think that we are ignorant about what goes on around us? How can there exist lasting peace in the world when justice is missing?
Sisters & Brothers, co-conspirators, lovers of freedom & democracy, these are the questions we should be asking of the powers that rule over our daily lives & the lives of millions upon millions of people around the world.  We should be demanding justice, accountability, & out of Latin America, now.
 
Aztatl, Wobbly, Albuquerque, NM
 
On Mon, Oct 26, 2009 at 7:00 AM, PETER S LOPEZ <peter.lopez51@ yahoo.com> wrote:
 

http://tinyurl. com/yj9yme2

Editorial: Knowing when to leave in Latin America

Leaders who circumvent term limits undermine the region's democratic progress.

October 26, 2009

As Latin America's military dictatorships fell one by one in the late 20th century, incipient democracies across the region sought to stamp out caudillo caudillo culture with constitutions that limited their newly elected leaders to one term in office.......

Copyright © 2009, The Los Angeles Times


>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Education for Liberation! Venceremos Unidos!
Peter S. López aka:~Peta-de- Aztlan~
Email: peter.lopez51@ yahoo.com
http://twitter. com/Peta51

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++
http://groups. yahoo.com/ group/NetworkAzt lan_News/

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