Monday, August 16, 2010

Journalist Exposes:Chevron Tried to Recruit Her as Spy to Undermine $27B Suit in Ecuadorian Amazon

http://bit.ly/aNWEfQ
August 16, 2010
Journalist Exposes How Private Investigation Firm Hired by Chevron Tried to Recruit Her as a Spy to Undermine $27B Suit in Ecuadorian Amazon
Chevron

An exposé in The Atlantic magazine reveals how one of the world's largest private investigation firms, Kroll, hired by oil giant Chevron, tried to recruit an American journalist to undermine a massive $27 billion lawsuit against Chevron brought by the residents of the Ecuadorian Amazon. We speak with the journalist, Mary Cuddehe, and with Han Shan, the coordinator for Amazon Watch's Clean Up Ecuador campaign.


Guests:

Mary Cuddehe, independent journalist. Her article in The Atlantic is A Spy in the Jungle  > http://bit.ly/cSS9Zh

Han Shan, coordinator for Amazon Watch's Clean Up Ecuador campaign.

AMY GOODMAN: We begin today with a new twist in the seventeen-year-old legal battle between oil giant Chevron and the residents of the Ecuadorian Amazon, who say decades of reckless oil drilling have taken a deadly toll on their health and their environment. They accuse Texaco, now Chevron, of dumping over 18 billion gallons of toxic waste into the rainforest, and Chevron now faces a $27.3 billion lawsuit.

An article in the latest issue of The Atlantic magazine reveals how a private investigation firm, hired by Chevron, tried to recruit an American journalist to undermine the high-profile lawsuit. According to the first-person account of Mary Cuddehe, the investigative firm Kroll flew her to Colombia and offered her $20,000 to spend six weeks in Lago Agrio, the jungle town in Ecuador where the trial is being held. They wanted her to say she was an independent journalist, while spying for Chevron, and find out if the plaintiffs in the lawsuit had "rigged" a health study that found the community suffered abnormally high cancer rates. But Mary Cuddehe said no. She refused the offer to become a corporate spy. 


The article is called "A Spy in the Jungle," and Cuddehe writes, quote, "There was a reason they wanted me. With one Google search, anyone could see that I was, in fact, a journalist. If I went to Lago Agrio as myself and pretended to write a story, no one would suspect that the starry-eyed young American poking around was actually shilling for Chevron."


Well, we invited Chevron to come on the program, but they declined. Chevron spokesman Kent Robertson did, however, not directly address Mary Cuddehe's claims, but acknowledged hiring Kroll. Robertson said in a statement to Democracy Now! that, quote, "It should come as no surprise that we have hired an outside investigative firm to help document the fraud being perpetrated by the plaintiffs' lawyers and their associates in this case. There are now numerous documented examples of falsified expert reports, fraudulent evidence, unsubstantiated health claims and collusion with court experts," he wrote.


Well, Mary Cuddehe is based in Mexico City. She joins me now via Democracy Now! video stream. We welcome you to Democracy Now!, Mary Cuddehe. 


MARY CUDDEHE: Thanks. It's good to be here.


AMY GOODMAN: We are also joined in the studios in San Francisco by Han Shan, coordinator of the Clean Up Ecuador campaign at Amazon Watch.

But Mary, let's begin with you. Why don't you explain what happened, how you were approached by, well, Kroll, hired by Chevron?


MARY CUDDEHE: Right. Well, you know, as I wrote in my story, I was in Cancún. I'm a freelance reporter, and I was in Cancún working on another story. And, you know, it was kind of the typical thing where I was writing for a magazine that has a low budget, and, you know, I seemed like I was barely going to break even on the story, and I was sort of despairing about the state of journalism. And then I got this phone call. You know, it was kind of like magic. And I found out about this job. And so, I went back to Mexico City, and I got in touch with someone from Kroll. And they didn't want to speak too much over the phone, so they offered to fly me out to Bogotá for the weekend. And so, I was—I showed up at this, you know, kind of luxury hotel and spent a weekend being briefed on the case. And that was how I first found out about the job.


AMY GOODMAN: Who spoke to you? What did they say?


MARY CUDDEHE: Well, they told me about—they spoke about the details of the case. I mean, they gave me the background. You know, when I first found out about it, I knew almost nothing. I basically went to Bogotá sight unseen. And, you know, they just kind of briefed me on the background of the case, and they told me what they would want me to do.


AMY GOODMAN: And what exactly did they tell you?


MARY CUDDEHE: They told me—everything that's in my story is basically, you know, what I was told. I was told about this health study that Chevron suspected had been done, that there was fraud in this health study, and they wanted me to go down to Lago Agrio and kind of investigate who had done the interviews and whether there had been collusion between the Spanish human rights activists who had conducted the health study and the plaintiffs in that study.


AMY GOODMAN: And you were to say you were who?


MARY CUDDEHE: I was to say that I was myself. And that was ultimately the reason that I couldn't do it. You know, I didn't think that I was being asked to do anything illegal at any point. I just felt that if I went down to Lago Agrio and was, you know, investigating, doing an investigation for Chevron, and, you know, acting as a journalist, I felt that I was walking into territory, as a journalist, I wouldn't be able to come back from. And that was ultimately why I had to say no.


AMY GOODMAN: The person who recruited you, Mary, you called him "Sam" in the piece?


MARY CUDDEHE: I did.


AMY GOODMAN: Tell u who he was and how he identified with you.


MARY CUDDEHE: Well, you know, it's—I—he—as I wrote in the story, you know, the people that I met from Kroll were very friendly and upfront, and we kind of all got along. They were very nice, and, you know, we went out to dinner. We went dancing the first night I was there. And it was a kind of, you know, very kind of warm and welcoming atmosphere. And, you know, I didn't feel at any time that I was being—I wasn't being lied to, or, you know, nothing like that happened. I felt that they were totally upfront with me. But that was pretty much the extent of it.


AMY GOODMAN: We're talking to Mary Cuddehe, the American journalist who was approached by Kroll—actually, Mary, tell us the significance of Kroll, what Kroll is.

MARY CUDDEHE: Well, Kroll bills itself as a risk management company, and I think that it's a company—it has, you know, offices all over the world. And at least in the capacity that I was going to be working for them, they do—it was going to be as a private investigator.


AMY GOODMAN: And were they very clear on exactly how they wanted you to identify yourself when you went down?


MARY CUDDEHE: Yes.


AMY GOODMAN: What did they say exactly?


MARY CUDDEHE: Well, I would be—and, you know, these were kind of, you know, preliminary talks, so—but I was going to go down there and be myself, you know, and just say that I was a reporter and, you know, just kind of ask questions and do the investigation under that premise.


AMY GOODMAN: Did you meet anyone there, or did they tell you about anyone, who's doing what they were asking you to do?


MARY CUDDEHE: No.


AMY GOODMAN: So you would be their first spy posing as a journalist?


MARY CUDDEHE: As far as I know, yes. And I—


AMY GOODMAN: Let's—go ahead, Mary.


MARY CUDDEHE: I did want to mention, you know, I noticed the way that the plantiffs' attorneys have kind of seized on my story. And, you know, I didn't believe that I was asked to do anything illegal. And I mention that because it was a tough decision to make, honestly, because $20,000 is a lot of money for someone in my position, and it did seem like an interesting case. But, you know, ultimately, I had to say no, because I just didn't feel that as a journalist it was something that I could do, ethically, and then return to journalism.


AMY GOODMAN: Now, Sam, as you described him, the person who was your contact, said, "There is no other Mary Cuddehe. If you don't do this job, we'll have to find another way." What does that mean?


MARY CUDDEHE: It's unclear.


AMY GOODMAN: What has been Chevron and Kroll's response to your piece in The Atlantic, "A Spy in the Jungle."


MARY CUDDEHE: I've had no response. There's been no—as far as I know, the response that you just read is the first that I've heard from Chevron or Kroll.


AMY GOODMAN: Mary Cuddehe, anything else you would like to add on this case and your reflections on it since they asked you to work for them, for Kroll, working for Chevron, in the Amazon rainforest in Ecuador?


MARY CUDDEHE: Well, you know, it was interesting. You know, I was—the story that was published in The Atlantic was originally a proposal. And, you know, I wanted to go down to Ecuador and actually do the investigation myself. You know, I felt that that was the way that I could kind of have the best of both worlds. I could still good down to Ecuador and still—and be a journalist and, you know, do the investigation transparently. And so, you know, I sent this proposal to The Atlantic, and they came back and said, you know, "You might see this as a proposal, but we see this as a story." And so, at that point, I just said, "OK, you know, let's publish it." And, you know, obviously, it's not in the cards for me to go down there right now.


AMY GOODMAN: Mary Cuddehe, thanks for joining us. She's an American journalist living in Mexico City. Her piece in The Atlantic is called "A Spy in the Jungle." When we come back, we'll talk to Han Shan, the coordinator of the Clean Up Ecuador campaign at Amazon Watch. Stay with us.

[break]

AMY GOODMAN: Han Shan is our guest, coordinator of the Clean Up Ecuador campaign at Amazon Watch.

Han Shan, can you respond to the recruiting of Mary Cuddehe, a freelance journalist, on behalf of Chevron, by the largest private security firm, by Kroll?


HAN SHAN: Well, first of all, I'm gratified, and I think all the people who have followed this case for a long time and want to see justice in the case are glad that Mary did the right thing. But what's disturbing is that this is just the latest revelation in a pattern of activity of very shady, very corrupt and increasingly, it looks like, illegal activity by Chevron to undermine the rule of law in Ecuador and and deny justice to people who have already suffered for an awful long time because of the company's neglect. And, you know, we want to see transparency. We would invite Mary to go back, if she can, and investigate, as a journalist, and dig up the truth, because that's the one thing that Chevron is so afraid of.


AMY GOODMAN: I said Kroll was a security firm. It's actually an investigative firm. She referred to the man named Sam and described him, though didn't give his full name. You have been writing about who you believe he is.


HAN SHAN: Yeah, I think Mary left a number of details, a number of clues throughout the article that point very clearly to Sam Anson, a former freelance writer. She spoke about him writing about race and hip-hop in the early '90s, struggling and writing—or early 2000s—writing for various kind of alternative magazines. And we found it's pretty clearly Sam Anson who's the head of their Latin American bureau based out of Miami. It fits the profile perfectly. And, you know, we've tried to send a message to Sam that, you know, he has an opportunity to step back from the dark side.


And, you know, what Chevron has tried to do in Ecuador around this case is basically battle absolutely everything but the evidence, everything but the truth of the matter. They've tried to attack the plaintiffs' lawyers. They've tried to impugn the motives of the plaintiffs, saying it's a giant shakedown. I've just returned from the Ecuadorian Amazon, where the evidence of Chevron's massive contamination throughout the rainforest, affecting the health and the well-being and the economic livelihood of tens of thousands of people, is bubbling up, you know, from beneath the surface of the ground everywhere you look, and it's still there for anyone to see. And I'm sure if Sam Anson traveled and if his Kroll associates traveled where I did and met the people that I did, he'd be thinking twice about helping Chevron undermine the rule of law in the way that they're trying to.


AMY GOODMAN: Give me some history, Han Shan. It was Texaco that was involved with the polluting. Explain what happened.


HAN SHAN: Well, Texaco first arrived in Ecuadorian Amazon in 1964. And from 1964 'til 1992, they operated, but they operated in a way that they would have never gotten away with almost anywhere else. They deliberately dumped over 18 billion gallons of sludge and crude, toxic waste water, into rivers and streams relied upon for bathing and drinking by tens of thousands of people. They abandoned more than 900 toxic waste pits throughout the region filled with crude and sludge that continued to seep into the groundwater, and they still have not cleaned that up. And in the '90s, they basically used fraudulent testing methods to induce a release from the Ecuadorian government, which they point to as releasing them from liability. But the truth of the matter is, it doesn't release them from the responsibility that they have for the massive contamination that continues to this day. And they didn't actually clean it up. If you go and see the sites that Chevron claims it remediated, just beneath the surface, there is crude, there is toxic waste. And copious testing that's been done, evidence from the trial, one of the most litigated cases in history, shows that toxic contamination still remains persistent throughout the region. And it was left there by Texaco, which, of course, now is Chevron.


AMY GOODMAN: You know, it's interesting, on the one hand, they're trying to get Mary to say she's a freelance journalist, but actually act as a corporate spy paid by Kroll, which is hired by Chevron. On the other hand, they are going after an independent journalist, who we had on Democracy Now!, Joe Berlinger, to get his tape of the film he was making called Crude, to use it, his outtakes.


HAN SHAN: Indeed. You know, Chevron has basically been employing what I would call a kitchen sink strategy. There's a mountain of incontrovertible evidence showing that they are responsible for massive contamination, poisoning tens of thousands of people who continue to suffer. And they have done absolutely everything that they can do to evade accountability in this case—forum shopping, trying to take this case to arbitration at The Hague, trying to, you know, depose expert witnesses on the plaintiffs' side, and trying to corrupt the trial in Ecuador. This is, as I said, just the latest revelation in a disturbing trend, a pattern of activity.


AMY GOODMAN: Han Shan, we only—we have less than a minute to go, but I wanted to ask where the case stands right now.


HAN SHAN: No problem. Well, we're absolutely in the final lap of a seventeen-year marathon. But Chevron has been very adept at delay tactics and diversions. And I think we just need to keep a focus on where the real heart of this matter is, and that's 30,000 people who have suffered now for decades and nonetheless have, you know, not given up and won't give up until Chevron does the right thing, cleans up its mess, and compensates them for the horrific health impacts that they continue to suffer.


AMY GOODMAN: Han Shan, coordinator of the Clean Up Ecuador campaign at Amazon Watch, thank you very much for being with us.


HAN SHAN: Thanks for having me.


http://www.democracynow.org/2010/8/16/journalist_exposes_how_private_investigation_firm
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Unidos Venceremos! United We Will Win!
~Peta-de-Aztlan~ Sacramento, California, Amerika
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"An invasion of armies can be resisted, but not an idea whose time has come."
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Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Legendary Activist Dolores Huerta Celebrates 80th Birthday with Call for "Weaving Movements Together

http://bit.ly/9alRPH

Legendary Activist Dolores Huerta Celebrates 80th Birthday with Call for "Weaving Movements Together"

Dolores-huerta

The legendary activist Dolores Huerta, co-founder of the United Farm Workers of America with César Chávez, is celebrating her eightieth birthday this year. A veteran of the labor, civil rights, immigrant rights, and feminist movements in this country, she was instrumental in passing the Seasonal Agricultural Workers Bill, which resulted in the legalization of 1.3 million farm workers. To celebrate her birthday, Huerta is holding a benefit concert in Los Angeles Friday with guests including the guitarist Carlos Santana and Zack de la Rocha of Rage Against the Machine. Calling the event "Weaving Movements Together," Huerta says she wants to join up immigrant rights, LGBT, feminist, environmental and labor activists.

Guest:

Dolores Huerta, Civil rights activist and co-founder of the United Farm Workers of America with César Chávez. She is president of the Dolores Huerta Foundation for Community Organizing.

AMY GOODMAN: That's Carlos Santana performing Tito Puente. Yes, Carlos Santana will be performing this week at the celebration of Dolores Huerta's eightieth birthday, the legendary activist Dolores Huerta who co-founded the United Farm Workers of America with César Chávez, celebrating eighty years. A veteran of the labor, civil rights, immigrant rights, and feminist movements in the country, Dolores Huerta was instrumental in passing the Seasonal Agricultural Workers Bill, which resulted in the legalization of 1.3 million farm workers as part of the Immigration Reform Act of 1986.

Well, to celebrate her eightieth birthday, this lifelong activist is holding a benefit concert at the Greek Theater in Los Angeles Friday night titled "Weaving Movements Together." As the name suggests, the event aims to bring together immigrant rights, LGBT, feminist, environmental and labor activists. Dolores Huerta is joining us now from Los Angeles.

We welcome you, and happy birthday, Dolores Huerta.

DOLORES HUERTA: Thank you, Amy.

AMY GOODMAN: Can you talk about what you consider your greatest achievement?

DOLORES HUERTA: Well, I think you mentioned the legalization bill of 1986, which really helped a lot of people get their legal status, as has, as you know, every immigrant that's come to this country has acquired legal status at one time or the other. Then, of course, I think many, many pieces of legislation, getting the ballots in the Spanish language for people to vote, taking away citizenship requirements so that people could get public assistance, and on and on, you know, forming the Farm Workers union with César Chávez, and now, forming my own organization, the Dolores Huerta Foundation for Community Organizing. And when we look back and see how many people have been organized, how many—you know, building a volunteer base, and laws that have been passed, and—you know, this is the kind of work that I want to continue to do for the rest of whatever life I have left, and this is why I started this foundation.

And I want to mention, this whole idea of bringing movements together is important, because it seems like each one of our movements has a different path. You know, we have our Greens over here, labor over here, the feminists, the LGBT movement. And I believe that in order to really get the progressive agenda that we are all looking for and searching for, that we've got to come together and, you know, kind of unite our forces. We are a—you know, we are the majority in this country, but if we don't come together, well, then we're not going to be able to win our progressive agenda.

AMY GOODMAN: Dolores Huerta, go back in time. Go back to the early 1960s and talk about how you got involved with the farm workers' movement and helped found the United Farm Workers. What were the conditions then? Where did you come from?

DOLORES HUERTA: Well, actually, I had a very comfortable life. I have sort of a middle-class background. But after joining an organization called the Community Service Organization—and this is where I met César—then we saw the conditions of the farm workers that were so desperate at that point in time that then that's when we started the United Farm Workers of America. And, you know, we worked together for many years, until César passed away. I left the union about six years ago. And things for the farm workers, you know, are somewhat better in California, although many—most of the farm workers right now are not covered by union contracts. And in other states, of course, things are even worse, because many farm workers, they don't have unemployment insurance. They have a very poor workers' compensation, if they have any at all. And they don't have disability insurance. We were able to get laws passed that gave all farm workers cold drinking water and toilets in the fields, rest periods, things of that nature. But there's still a long way to go for the farm workers.

But with my organization, actually, we go into the communities. And we organize our immigrant population, primarily, but this, of course, could apply to anyone. And we basically raise money to hire and train organizers. Then, when the people come together, then they can make a lot of changes. And some of the changes are absolutely miraculous. Some of our people have been able to get swimming pools in their communities. We have one community that actually had a gymnasium built at their middle school. You know, we've got another community that's getting sewer drains for twenty-seven homes that didn't have any kind of a sewer drain. And we have a youth group, who are doing teen pregnancy prevention programs, financial literacy, the first micro-lending program for farm workers in the Central Valley of California. And the great thing about this is that the people are doing this themselves. On the Census, we knocked on 3,000 doors in one day. And then, of course, we had to do a lot of pressure on our Blue Dog Congress people to get them to vote for the healthcare bill that we were trying to get passed recently.

AMY GOODMAN: Dolores Huerta, so many of the people you work with are immigrants, and the battle over immigration reform, immigrants in this country, is raging. Just some figures on the number of deportations. According to figures from the immigration enforcement acgency, ICE, the Obama administration accelerated the pace of deportations, overall. In 2009, authorities deported close to 390,000 people, which was 20,000 more than in 2008, the final year of the Bush administration. Your comments?

DOLORES HUERTA: Well, we know that this is the big issue in the Latino community—I guess the number one issue at this point in time—and that it really means that we've really got to push to get immigration reform. Unfortunately, I mean, I heard your report about the elections, and we still have a very large anti-immigrant caucus in the US Congress. And, you know, we've got to focus on these Congress people and on the elections and take some of these people out of office. In California, we have the head of the anti-immigrant caucus, a congressman, a Republican named Bilbray, and these are the people that we've got to get out, and we've got to get good people elected. And my fear is that so many people are so disillusioned with what's going on right now that they're not going to vote in November. And I think that's going to be just a huge disaster.

I worked the last immigration bill in 1986, and I just have to tell people that Reagan was president then, but he didn't lift a finger to pass that immigration bill. It was the Congress. And, of course, we had a different Congress, because we didn't have all of these extremists that we have in the Congress as we have now. And I think that our side has got to do a lot more work. You know, we've really got to get in there. And I know it's going to be difficult, because of the Supreme Court decision that people—you know, the corporations can spend as much money as they want to get people elected, which means that our side has to get a lot busier, and we've got to really organize. We've got to organize, and we've got to get good people to run, because at the end of the day, the votes are going to count more than the money. But we have to do the legwork. We've got to get out there and educate people and make them understand what's going on and why we need to get involved. And this is why I'm committing the rest of my life, as I have all of my adult life, to organizing, because I do believe that we do have the power. Democracy can only, only work if people take power. And we do have the numbers, but we've got to get involved. We've got to listen to your program, Amy, to, you know, find out what's going on, and the other progressive media, so we can get the right information.

AMY GOODMAN: The discussion we just had before, we were talking about primaries in various states. But this issue of the struggle between progressives and President Obama—now, you first supported Hillary Clinton, then you switched over to President Obama—what are your thoughts right now on that tension?

DOLORES HUERTA: Well, I think that it's part of political life. And I know that we're not totally happy with what the administration has done, but I think, at the same time, we know we don't want to go back to that kind of a fascist government that we had under the Bush administration, as was, you know, stated by your previous speakers that were talking about going after the librarians, right? And so, I think, you know, we are the ones that have to take control, but we have to do it through our Congress also. We saw what a difficult time the President had to pass healthcare reform. And, of course, I was for the public option and single payer, like a lot of us were, but, you know, we got two of our Blue Dog Congress people to vote for the healthcare bill, and we had to put a lot of pressure on them. I mean, we did postcard campaigns. We picketed their fundraisers. We did fasts. But it's got to come from the bottom. And the President, he's not, unfortunately, a magician, right? And he can only sign the laws that are passed. And the Congress is the one that makes the laws. And so, I think we've got to do a lot more work at the base to get our progressive agenda passed.

I mean, I have been doing political work now for—gosh, since I was twenty-five years old, and I'm eighty this year, and, you know, during that period of time, passed a lot of legislation, you know, for farm workers to have unemployment insurance and, you know, to get Spanish ballots and to get farm workers the right to organize. And in all of this, we always did it with farm workers and with friends of farm workers to make things happen. And this is what we have to do, Amy. And people have got to make a lot more commitment, so that we can give—we have to get a progressive Congress. Right now, we may have a Democratic Congress, but we've got a lot of Blue Dogs—I call them yellow dogs, actually—that don't really support the administration. And so, we've just got to do a lot more work. And I think the President is with us, but we've just got to do a lot more work.

And I just want to say this, too, that our concert with Carlos Santana and Zack de la Rocha, who's going to be performing, also Lila Downs, Culture Clash, Pete Escovedo. Danny Glover's going to be with us, Jodie Evans, Ed Begley, Jr. Van Jones is going to be with us. And we're going to be broadcasting this. And also the Secretary of Labor Solis is taking a day off of her vacation also to come to join us. Alfre Woodard is going to be there. So we want to—we're going to webcast this to Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Salt Lake City, Utah, Ohio, Miami and New York City. And the whole message is organize, organize, bring our movements together. We can do it, folks. We are the majority, but we've got to get together.

AMY GOODMAN: Finally, Dolores Huerta, for young people who don't know about, for example, the grape boycott—and we just have a minute, but if you could share that story and how you bring that organizing to today, what, so many decades later?

DOLORES HUERTA: Well, this is building a social justice network. This is what we're trying to do with the Dolores Huerta Foundation, and just like we did in the grape boycott. We had farm workers that went out to all the cities. At the end of the day, we had 17 million Americans that stopped eating grapes. And we brought the growers to the negotiating table. And this is what we can do, too. We've got to get good people elected, but we've got to go out there and do that hard, door-to-door kind of work to educate people, because right now, unfortunately, not everybody has your program, Amy. Not everybody listens to you. But we have to get your message, and we have to take it to their doorstep and give it to them, person to person, and make people understand that we have the power, but we've got to take responsibility, and we've got to take action. And this is how we can get the kind of a government that we want.

AMY GOODMAN: Well, I want to thank you very much for being with us. And again, happy birthday. Your real birthday in April, but Friday night, the big event in Los Angeles. Dolores Huerta, civil rights activist, co-founder of the United Farm Workers of America, president of the Dolores Huerta Foundation for Community Organizing. Thanks so much for joining us.


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Unidos Venceremos! United We Will Win!
~Peta-de-Aztlan~ Sacramento, California, Amerika
Email: peter.lopez51@yahoo.com 
http://help-matrix.ning.com/
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"Those who make peaceful revolution impossible,
make violent revolution inevitable."
~ President John F.Kennedy ~ Killed November 22, 1963
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Tuesday, August 10, 2010

House approves $600 million for border: How will it be spent?

http://bit.ly/buvCR2

House approves $600 million for border: How will it be spent?

About half the money in the House plan goes toward 1,500 new border personnel. Not in the plan: money for any border fences. President Obama could sign a version of the bill in September.

A Border Patrol agent is reflected in the mirror as he and another agent patrol near the U.S.-Mexico border in Nogales, Ariz., July 27. The House approved some $600 billion in border-security funding, about half of which will go toward new personnel.

Jae C. Hong/AP

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By Andrew Heining, Staff writer / August 10, 2010

Los Angeles

Just what does $600 million buy for border security these days – and is it more money the US needs to help tackle illegal immigration?

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Half of the funds approved Tuesday by the US House after weeks of political back-and-forth will pay for 1,500 new border agents. Another chunk – nearly $200 million – goes to the Justice Department-supported efforts of the US Marshals and other law enforcement agencies. Two surveillance drones ring up another $32 million.

The payout the House authorized Tuesday is an answer to President Obama's request that more be done to help secure the southern border, but it also represents a shift in strategy – a return to more traditional security techniques for the border.


IN PICTURES: The scene at the US/Mexico border

In March, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano froze funding for a "virtual fence" begun under President Bush in 2006. The string of towers was intended to catch illegal border-crossers using cameras, radar, and ground sensors, but it was "plagued with cost overruns and missed deadlines," Secretary Napolitano said. The program had burned through some $2.4 billion between 2005 and 2009.


Border patrol officials expressed frustration at the technology, and wished for more personnel. "We already detect more traffic of illegals than we can apprehend, so we feel the money is better spent putting more boots on the ground than in looking at more technology," National Border Patrol Council president T.J. Bonner told the Monitor in March.

Another border security measure with a high price tag but not many supporters: the 600 miles of fence erected along the border since 2005. A 2009

Government Accountability Office audit found that the fence – still unfinished – had cost $2.4 billion to build, and would require another $6.5 billion to maintain over the next 20 years.


Mr. Obama's answer was to send National Guard troops to the border to bolster intelligence and surveillance in May. At the time, Arizona Sen. John McCain (R) said the troops – and the proposed payout – were appreciated, but "simply not enough."

The package approved Tuesday is an addition to this. It funds 1,000 new border patrol agents, 250 customs and border protection officers at points of entry along the border, and 250 special immigration enforcement agents, investigators, and intelligence analysts, Reuters reported. Funding for the package would come from raised visa application fees for certain companies that bring workers to the US.


Vacations and technicalities got in the way of the bill. The appropriations package, which passed easily Tuesday in a voice vote, was held up in Congress for weeks. An identical version of the bill passed the Senate before its summer recess, but had to be sent back to the House because of an arcane law that says appropriations bills must originate there.


Unless the bill is passed on "consent" by party leaders, it must wait until Sept. 13 when the Senate returns from its summer recess before it can be sent to Obama.

IN PICTURES: The scene at the US/Mexico border

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Comment: I do question the insanity of the U.S. Government now spearheaded by POTUS Obama. It can be a very thin line between insanity and actual evilness in a given situation. I do question the sanity of people who are opposed to any kind of amnesty for so-called illegal immigrants who are already inside the continental U.S.A. at a rough estimate of 12 Million people ~ that's 12 Million human beings!

Any humane immigration legislation must consider the logic of allowing those who are already here in the U.S.A. to remain as naturalized citizens, after a background check to determine if any are hard core criminals.

Unidos Venceremos! United We Will Win!

~Peta-de-Aztlan~ Sacramento, California, Amerika
Email: peter.lopez51@yahoo.com 
http://help-matrix.ning.com/
http://twitter.com/Peta_de_Aztlan
http://www.facebook.com/Peta51
"Those who make peaceful revolution impossible,
make violent revolution inevitable."
~ President John F.Kennedy ~ Killed November 22, 1963
c/s


Monday, August 09, 2010

Response: MISSION STATEMENT of NAOTAC by Peta_de_Aztlan

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Gracias Hermanos Aztatl & Henry & All! I wish the Mission Statement had more meat in it, though it is a good general statement about humane rights related to indigenous peoples.

I no longer even consider myself an American, not when U.S.A. refuses to recognize the natural rights of indigenous peoples to be upon their own native lands, as it wages unjust wars in the Middle East.

Logically I am not going to renounce my U.S. citizenship and make it easier for the fascist pigs. I am not hiding. If I was hiding I would certainly not be posting on the Internet when authorities can easily locate my ISP (Internet Service Provider) Number.


Remember you can use Bcc: in your Emails to keep others anonymous. I myself have no fear of self-exposure. I am convinced we are living under the boot of the Amerikan Empire and there really are no independent nations, including Native-American nations. Who can stop the Amerikan Warlords from crossing any border it chooses?!! Nada mas ahora. Join Up Today~
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NetworkAztlan_News/

If certain professionals or lurkers do not want to openly join our Groups then they can just stay in the shadows of their fears.
Root Website: http://www.networkaztlan.com/

Unidos Venceremos! United We Will Win!

~Peta-de-Aztlan~ Sacramento, California, Amerika
Email: peter.lopez51@yahoo.com 
http://help-matrix.ning.com/
http://twitter.com/Peta_de_Aztlan
http://www.facebook.com/Peta51
"Those who make peaceful revolution impossible,
make violent revolution inevitable."
~ President John F.Kennedy ~ Killed November 22, 1963
c/s


http://yhoo.it/cFG8lg

From:
Aztatl Garza <aztatlxikano@gmail.com>
To: nm_raza_unida@yahoogroups.com; vrodrig5@csulb.edu; Ada Ocampo <ahocampo@stanford.edu>; Allen Cooper <ac611@msn.com>; Antonio Velasquez <aavtonio2@yahoo.com>; Assoc.RazaEducators <razaeducatorslosangeles@yahoo.com>; Bob Anderson <citizen@comcast.net>; claude SF/CA <claude@freedomarchives.org>; Clayton Levine <claytonlevine@gmail.com>; Confed.delAguila y elCondor <Kozkakuautli@gmail.com>; Darcy H. Brazen <dbrazen@unm.edu>; Diana Solorio <dsolorio@stanford.edu>; "Ebustill, RPMA" <Ebustill@aol.com>; Elena Herrada <elenamherrada@gmail.com>; Enrique Cardiel <magonista66@yahoo.com>; Henry <aztecs5463@yahoo.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 Pahls <jeannepahls@comcast.net>; Jeanette Soriano <Jeannette_Soriano@post.harvard.edu>; John Ross <johnross@igc.org>; JorgeDanzante GarciaSundancer <jgarcia@istec.org>; LatinoSolidarityNetwork <lasnet.latinosolidarity@gmail.com>; Lee Siu Hin <SIUHIN@aol.com>; luis pena <luispena505@yahoo.com>; Marc Page <lovarchy@gmail.com>; Maria D. Dominguez <mujerpolitica@yahoo.com>; Maurus Chino <mauruschino@yahoo.com>; Mazatzin AZTEKAYOLOKALLI <zemazatzin@hotmail.com>; Network Aztlan News <NetworkAztlan_News@yahoogroups.com>; Peter S. Lopez <peter.lopez51@yahoo.com>; Renee Wolters <rrwolters@aol.com>; Ruth Millan <rutholivarmillan@sbcglobal.net>; StanfordLaborAction <StanfordLaboraction@gmail.com>; Teresa Marquez <andaluz@unm.edu>; "tlacayaotzin@aol.com" <tlacayaotzin@aol.com>; tochtli Califas <tochtli@berkeley.edu>; Tony Herrera <therrera1550@yahoo.com>; Tupac Enrique Acosta <chantlaca@tonatierra.org>; Viola Wilkins <violawil@bigpond.net.au>; Virginia Hampton <theatrewhore2010@yahoo.com>
Sent: Sun, August 8, 2010 10:29:15 PM
Subject: MISSION STATEMENT

p.s.
Henry, please do not use my mailing list for mailings or pass these email addresses along. They will respond to you if they are interested. If we keep peoples privacy in tact we form a wall of security among ourselves by de-centralizing, and we gain people's respect and trust.
Thanks for the info,
let us stay in touch,
aztatl
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Henry Villalobos <aztecs5463@yahoo.com>
Date: Sun, Aug 8, 2010 at 11:47 PM
Subject: Fw: MISSION STATEMENT
To: fuerzamundial@gmail.com, aztatlxikano@gmail.com, tony <eltonyg@earthlink.net>
----- Forwarded Message ----
From: Henry Villalobos <aztecs5463@yahoo.com>
To: aztecs5463@yahoo.com
Cc: aztecyaqui@comcast.net
Sent: Sun, August 8, 2010 9:39:19 PM
Subject: MISSION STATEMENT

NATIVE AMERICANS OF THE AMERICAS COMMITTEE, (NAOTAC) is an educational organization for the purposes of the fundamental rights and recognition of all of the Indigenous Nations of the Americas.
 
FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS AND RECOGNITION FOR NATIVE AMERICANS
 
(1.) Human Rights.
 
(2.) International Issues.
 
(3.) Federal Law.
 
(4.) International Law.
 
(5.) American Indian Law.
 
(6.) Constitutional Rights.
 
(7.) Jurisprudence=Science of Law.
 
(8.) Culture and History.
 
(9.) Civil Rights.
 
(10.) Indigenous Languages.
 
(11.) English, Spanish, Chinese, and many more.
 
(12.) International Treaties.
 
(13.) Elimination of Racial Discrimination.
 
(14.) To endorse the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.
 
(15.) To support the American Indian Movement (AIM).
 
In 1978, Archie Fire Lame Deer, Lakota medicine man, was my first spiritual teacher.
 
The founder/President of Native Americans of the Americas Committee, has 32 years of Knowledge of American Indian Law, Federal Law, Constitutional Law, and International Law.
 
By: Henry Guzman Villalobos (Aztec-Yaqui Native American) Founder/President of Native Americans of the Americas Committee (510) 363-3052, E-mail:aztecs5463@yahoo.com,    aztecyaqui@comcast.net
 
cc: Native Americans Nations of the Americas, United Nations, Media, General Public, Renee Saucedo, Civil Rights Attorney, Patrick J. Maloney, Attorney at Law Roberto Dr. Cintli Rodriguez, Ph.D, Patrisia Gonzales (Kickapoo-Macehual) Ph.D, Patricia Hibbeler, CEO of Phoenix Indian Center, Inc., American Indian Movement, 
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NetworkAztlan_News/message/42161