Mike Nova's starred items
via Puerto Rico Heineken Jazzfest - YouTube on 3/9/13
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Ventana Al Jazz llega a Mayagüez el domingo 17 de marzo de 2013
laenegroup28 views
El exitoso evento Ventana Al Jazz esta por cumplir su evento numero 60 en -
Seaplanes in Paradise
Ettractions3 weeks agoNo views
Peacock Bass Fishing in Puerto Ricoby Ettractions 21 views; 344. Watch Later - 131 views
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via Héctor Pesquera - Google News on 3/8/13
Atheist Puerto Rico cop files discrimination suit
The Associated Press Michelle Franco, a spokeswoman for Puerto Rico's police chief, Hector Pesquera, did not respond to a request for comment. One of the supervisors named in the lawsuit, Guillermo Calixto Rodriguez, was appointed police chief for the capital of San Juan ... |
via puerto rico police corruption - Google News on 3/9/13
World News: Vatican Conclave Meets Tuesday to Choose New Pope
WTVY, Dothan SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) -- Federal officials have rescued 71 Haitian migrants found stranded on the shores of a cluster of islands just west of Puerto Rico. U.S. Customs and Border Protection ... The court also acquitted seven police officials for ... and more » |
via carlos cases fbi - Google Blog Search by unknown on 3/9/13
... y vean que los que trabajamos aquí somos como cualquier otro de carne y hueso, es que ellos adquieran el conocimiento para que continúen transmitiendo el mensaje”, explicó el director del FBI en la Isla, Carlos Cases.
via Opinión – Vocero de Puerto Rico on 3/9/13
Domingo 10.03.2013
La novena boricua domina por primera vez a Venezuela para obtener el bolet...
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Alejandro García Padilla indicó que tiene ante sí realizar un análisis ...
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Logra la victoria en un partido marcado por una fea trifulca
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via Opinión – Vocero de Puerto Rico on 3/9/13
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Confiados los boricuas rumbo a la segunda ronda tras eliminar a Venezuela
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via Política - El Nuevo Día on 3/10/13
Liza Fernández ejercerá en el Tribunal de Arecibo
10 de marzo de 2013Por Cynthia López Cabán | cynthia.lopez@gfrmedia.com
La derrotada senadora por San Juan del Partido Nuevo Progresista (PNP) Liza Fernández se desempeñará como jueza superior en el Tribunal de Arecibo, luego de que se dieran a conocer las asignacio...
Domingo 10 de marzo de 2013
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via Opinión - El Nuevo Día on 3/8/13
IMPULSO A LA AGENDA A FAVOR DE LA MUJER
Ante la celebración de hoy viernes del Día Internacional de la Mujer, es preciso tomar conciencia y acelerar acciones sociales ante los retos que aún persisten, algunos agravados, que afectan al colectivo femenino en la Isla, entre ellos un recrudecimiento de los incidentes de violencia de género y el impacto de la crisis económica.Hay espacio...
ue me disculpe el barón Pierre de Coubertin, fundador de los Juegos Olímpicos modernos, pero en el olimpismo sí hay espacio para las mujeres, y no necesariamente en las gradas como65
Yara Liceaga Es que no basta con tener una carga de trabajo que excede cualquier parámetro de pudor profesional; los planes del Gobierno de turno empiezan a limpiar la raíz que, bien pla
Porqué, escrito junto, es sinónimo de causa, motivo. Ejemplo: el porqué de mi alegría.
Si usted está recibiendo hoy mismo un dinerito de retiro siéntase afortunado y no se queje. Usted por ser pensionado del gobierno y tener 65 años o más vive con dos entradas de ingreso: pensión y seguro social (no los maestros y otros que no aportan al seguro social).
Hay miles de personas que solo viven del seguro social y con ese dinerito tiene que vivir. En Nueva York no existe bono de navidad ni de verano para sus pensionados (lo sé porque yo soy uno de ellos), tampoco recibo mi pensión de cada 15 días sino mensual. Lo que está pasando es que se quiere llevar el mismo estilo de vida que gozábamos cuando trabajábamos y esperamos que el gobierno lo pague aunque no tenga los fondos.
Basta ver en Navidad cuando se da el bono, cómo la gente sale a comprar televisores plasma, tabletas, y otros artículos de lujo. Entonces no hay escasez de dinero. Amárrese el cinturón y viva con lo que recibe, pues los tiempos de las vacas gordas se acabaron.
Rafael González Marrero
Hay miles de personas que solo viven del seguro social y con ese dinerito tiene que vivir. En Nueva York no existe bono de navidad ni de verano para sus pensionados (lo sé porque yo soy uno de ellos), tampoco recibo mi pensión de cada 15 días sino mensual. Lo que está pasando es que se quiere llevar el mismo estilo de vida que gozábamos cuando trabajábamos y esperamos que el gobierno lo pague aunque no tenga los fondos.
Basta ver en Navidad cuando se da el bono, cómo la gente sale a comprar televisores plasma, tabletas, y otros artículos de lujo. Entonces no hay escasez de dinero. Amárrese el cinturón y viva con lo que recibe, pues los tiempos de las vacas gordas se acabaron.
Rafael González Marrero
Esta semana se anunció la exaltación de Carlitos “Charlie” Pasarell Matos al Salón de la Fama del Tenis en Estados Unidos. Para quienes no conozcan la estelar carrera de este tenista puertorriqueño, cabe señalar sus múltiples triunfos y campeonatos en las categorías “junior”, que unidos a sus dos campeonatos colegiales lo colocan en un sitial nunca alcanzado por ningún otro tenista que haya nacido en Puerto Rico.
En 1966 y 1967 este singular jugador ocupó el primer lugar en la clasificación del tenis a nivel colegial sobre su gran amigo, el gran Arthur Ashe y Clark Graebner, entre otros. Además estuvo entre los primeros cinco jugadores aficionado sembrados en Estados Unidos en sencillos. Luego como profesional logró que se le cotizara como jugador de sencillo entre los primeros quince del mundo, junto a jugadores de la talla de Ke Rosewall, Roy Emerson, Rod Laver, Manolo Santana, Richard “Pancho” González, Arthur Ashe y Dennis Ralston, entre otros.
Sin restarle méritos a nuestra Beatriz “Gigi” Fernández y a nuestro Francis González, ningún tenista boricua en sencillos ha obtenido los triunfos y la clasificación de Carlitos Pasarell. Ahora que se le hizo justicia en Estados Unidos, ya es hora que se haga lo propio con él en su patria, Puerto Rico.
Manuel B. Freiría
Guaynabo
En 1966 y 1967 este singular jugador ocupó el primer lugar en la clasificación del tenis a nivel colegial sobre su gran amigo, el gran Arthur Ashe y Clark Graebner, entre otros. Además estuvo entre los primeros cinco jugadores aficionado sembrados en Estados Unidos en sencillos. Luego como profesional logró que se le cotizara como jugador de sencillo entre los primeros quince del mundo, junto a jugadores de la talla de Ke Rosewall, Roy Emerson, Rod Laver, Manolo Santana, Richard “Pancho” González, Arthur Ashe y Dennis Ralston, entre otros.
Sin restarle méritos a nuestra Beatriz “Gigi” Fernández y a nuestro Francis González, ningún tenista boricua en sencillos ha obtenido los triunfos y la clasificación de Carlitos Pasarell. Ahora que se le hizo justicia en Estados Unidos, ya es hora que se haga lo propio con él en su patria, Puerto Rico.
Manuel B. Freiría
Guaynabo
Una vez más damos a demostrar al mundo el nivel de violencia que vivimos en nuestra Isla. Un guardia de seguridad agredió a un joven estudiante en los predios de la UPR-Río Piedras por correr su patineta.
Entonces, ¿cuál es la campaña que el Gobierno promueve en nuestra ciudadanía de un Puerto Rico Verde con menos contaminación y promovemos lo contrario a lo que queremos?
¿No aspiramos a un Puerto Rico con menos dependencia del carro, con el uso de transporte colectivo, bicicletas, patinetas o cualquier medio de transportación que no afecte nuestro ambiente y sin tolerancia alguna el oficial de seguridad le brinda una paliza al joven? Queremos un Puerto Rico con menos dependencia al petróleo, pero incitamos al uso de este y para colmo educamos con violencia.
Tony Sierra
Peñuelas
Entonces, ¿cuál es la campaña que el Gobierno promueve en nuestra ciudadanía de un Puerto Rico Verde con menos contaminación y promovemos lo contrario a lo que queremos?
¿No aspiramos a un Puerto Rico con menos dependencia del carro, con el uso de transporte colectivo, bicicletas, patinetas o cualquier medio de transportación que no afecte nuestro ambiente y sin tolerancia alguna el oficial de seguridad le brinda una paliza al joven? Queremos un Puerto Rico con menos dependencia al petróleo, pero incitamos al uso de este y para colmo educamos con violencia.
Tony Sierra
Peñuelas
La joven Ismari Marín Negrón acaba de sacudir al país con una canción, un cartel y dando y recibiendo abrazos a granel con el fin de combatir la violencia. Resulta que Kathleen Keating, una asesora de salud mental, directora del Servicio de Educación y Relaciones Comunitarias del Hospital Woodview-Calabasas de California regía su vida bajo el lema: “Sentir, conocer y enseñar las muchas dimensiones del amor: el coraje para luchar; la vulnerabilidad para dar y recibir; la sensibilidad a la compasión y al poder del enojo; la apertura al deleite del juego y el intensísimo placer de un cálido abrazo”.
Abrazar es un instinto, una respuesta natural a los sentimientos de afecto, compasión, necesidad y alegría. Es también una ciencia, un simple método de apoyo, curación y desarrollo, de resultados mesurables y notables. Cualquier pediatra puede corroborar el beneficio notable que recibe el bebé prematuro en una unidad de cuidados intensivos con el mero contacto físico con su madre. En este caso el abrazo alcanza la categoría de arte.
El contacto físico no es sólo algo agradable: es necesario para nuestro bienestar psicológico, emocional y corporal, y acrecienta la alegría y la salud del individuo y la sociedad. El abrazo es una forma muy especial de tocar, que hace que uno se acepte mejor a sí mismo y se sienta mejor aceptado por los demás. Sin duda alguna Ismari Marín sería para Keating la primera abrazoterapeuta social boricua, ya que en un mundo de gente solitaria, violenta y agresiva como la que abunda en nuestro país, el abrazo acerca y une. Transmite amor y apoyo.
A Ismari, abrazoterapeuta natural y social, solo me resta decirle: ¡adelante!
Tomás R. Carrera
San Juan
Abrazar es un instinto, una respuesta natural a los sentimientos de afecto, compasión, necesidad y alegría. Es también una ciencia, un simple método de apoyo, curación y desarrollo, de resultados mesurables y notables. Cualquier pediatra puede corroborar el beneficio notable que recibe el bebé prematuro en una unidad de cuidados intensivos con el mero contacto físico con su madre. En este caso el abrazo alcanza la categoría de arte.
El contacto físico no es sólo algo agradable: es necesario para nuestro bienestar psicológico, emocional y corporal, y acrecienta la alegría y la salud del individuo y la sociedad. El abrazo es una forma muy especial de tocar, que hace que uno se acepte mejor a sí mismo y se sienta mejor aceptado por los demás. Sin duda alguna Ismari Marín sería para Keating la primera abrazoterapeuta social boricua, ya que en un mundo de gente solitaria, violenta y agresiva como la que abunda en nuestro país, el abrazo acerca y une. Transmite amor y apoyo.
A Ismari, abrazoterapeuta natural y social, solo me resta decirle: ¡adelante!
Tomás R. Carrera
San Juan
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via Puerto Rico Report by hadeninteractive on 3/7/13
Science literacy is an issue across the United States. The need for skilled workers in the fields of science, technology, and engineering regularly outstrips the supply of graduates in those fields, and most high school graduates don’t have sufficient background in math and sciences to be able to major in those fields.
The Coalition for the Public Understanding of Science (COPUS) works to improve science literacy. One of their initiatives is the Paul Shin Award, honoring individuals whose passion for science has led them to share their love of science in a way that helps get more people involved in and aware of science in daily life.
The most recent honoree is Mónica I. Feliú-Mójer, Ph.D., Vice-director and News Editor for Ciencia Puerto Rico. Ciencia Puerto Rico had its start as an initiative of the Council for the Advancement in Puerto Rico for Innovation and Scientific Research (CAPRI). The goal of the organization is to encourage scientific study of Puerto Rico, to encourage scientists in Puerto Rico, and to support “the next generation of Puerto Rican scientists.”
Ciencia Puerto Rico maintains the world’s largest database of Puerto Rican scientists, including both scientists from Puerto Rico and those who study phenomena within Puerto Rico. The group has prepared teaching materials for K-12 designed to enhance interest in science careers. Above all, Ciencia Puerto Rico serves as a hub for the community of individuals and organizations interested in promoting science literacy and awareness in and about Puerto Rico.
Feliú-Mójer was honored in recognition of both her work as Vice-director and for her generous unpaid hours in support of Ciencia Puerto Rico.
The Coalition for the Public Understanding of Science (COPUS) works to improve science literacy. One of their initiatives is the Paul Shin Award, honoring individuals whose passion for science has led them to share their love of science in a way that helps get more people involved in and aware of science in daily life.
The most recent honoree is Mónica I. Feliú-Mójer, Ph.D., Vice-director and News Editor for Ciencia Puerto Rico. Ciencia Puerto Rico had its start as an initiative of the Council for the Advancement in Puerto Rico for Innovation and Scientific Research (CAPRI). The goal of the organization is to encourage scientific study of Puerto Rico, to encourage scientists in Puerto Rico, and to support “the next generation of Puerto Rican scientists.”
Ciencia Puerto Rico maintains the world’s largest database of Puerto Rican scientists, including both scientists from Puerto Rico and those who study phenomena within Puerto Rico. The group has prepared teaching materials for K-12 designed to enhance interest in science careers. Above all, Ciencia Puerto Rico serves as a hub for the community of individuals and organizations interested in promoting science literacy and awareness in and about Puerto Rico.
Feliú-Mójer was honored in recognition of both her work as Vice-director and for her generous unpaid hours in support of Ciencia Puerto Rico.
Mike Nova's starred items
via Puerto Rico Report by KG on 3/7/13
Last night, the Daily Show with Jon Stewart took on the issue of statehood for Puerto Rico. The mock report featured “journalist” Al Madrigal attempting to convince demonstrators pushing for Puerto Rican statehood in a rally on Saturday, March 2nd that they would be better off without it.
Madrigal’s efforts – while humorous – were not successful. The people who attended the rally in front of the White House were committed to pushing for Puerto Rico’s entry as a new state of the United States.
To the Daily Show’s credit, they did cover the rally, exposing its viewers to the fact that there are many people – in Puerto Rico and the rest of the U.S. – who seek statehood for Puerto Rico. Many other news outlets ignored the news. And Madrigal effectively made the point that no matter how badly off the United States appears to be right now, people in Puerto Rico still want to live in a state.
But we are also left wondering what clips are on the cutting room floor. When asked about what Puerto Rico can offer to the rest of the U.S., did any of the demonstrators talk about the extraordinary rate of military participation by Puerto Ricans? Did someone note that Puerto Rico is already a part of the United States, and that the demonstrators were also there to celebrate the anniversary of their U.S. citizenship? It seems a bit late to ask Puerto Ricans what they bring to the table now.
The closing piece of the segment was also insightful. Madrigal tried to convince a demonstrator that having Senate representation wouldn’t matter because Senators could be filibustered. But having Senate representation also means that your Senator could conduct the filibuster. And that is power that Puerto Rico does not have.
Madrigal’s efforts – while humorous – were not successful. The people who attended the rally in front of the White House were committed to pushing for Puerto Rico’s entry as a new state of the United States.
To the Daily Show’s credit, they did cover the rally, exposing its viewers to the fact that there are many people – in Puerto Rico and the rest of the U.S. – who seek statehood for Puerto Rico. Many other news outlets ignored the news. And Madrigal effectively made the point that no matter how badly off the United States appears to be right now, people in Puerto Rico still want to live in a state.
But we are also left wondering what clips are on the cutting room floor. When asked about what Puerto Rico can offer to the rest of the U.S., did any of the demonstrators talk about the extraordinary rate of military participation by Puerto Ricans? Did someone note that Puerto Rico is already a part of the United States, and that the demonstrators were also there to celebrate the anniversary of their U.S. citizenship? It seems a bit late to ask Puerto Ricans what they bring to the table now.
The closing piece of the segment was also insightful. Madrigal tried to convince a demonstrator that having Senate representation wouldn’t matter because Senators could be filibustered. But having Senate representation also means that your Senator could conduct the filibuster. And that is power that Puerto Rico does not have.
via FOX News on 3/9/13
Don't expect any protests Chávez at Calle Ocho this year, but do expect tons of sangria.
via NBC Latino by The Associated Press on 3/9/13
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) — Lawyers filed a lawsuit Friday against some of Puerto Rico’s top police officials, accusing them of discriminating against an officer for being an atheist and not adhering to the separation of church and state.
It is one of the first cases of its kind filed in the deeply religious U.S. territory, where 85 percent of the people consider themselves Roman Catholic and a large minority is Protestant.
The lawsuit names the island’s police chief and three supervisors. It was filed by the American Civil Liberties Union in Puerto Rico and the Washington-based ACLU Program on Freedom of Religion and Belief.
The case involves police officer Alvin Marrero Mendez, 38, who repeatedly refused to participate in Christian prayers held at his precinct because he is an atheist.
In one case, attorneys say his supervisors held a prayer in the parking lot of a shopping mall prior to an intervention. Marrero objected and his supervisors ordered him to abandon the formation, yelling, “He is standing there because he doesn’t believe in what we believe in,” the lawsuit states.
After Marrero filed a complaint, lawyers said, supervisors demoted the 14-year veteran, stripped him of his gun and made him wash patrol cars and act as a messenger.
The ACLU is seeking a court judgment stating that forced prayer in a government workplace violates the doctrine of separation of church and state as well as the officer’s freedom. Puerto Rico’s constitution specifically states there needs to be complete separation of church and state.
The ACLU also requested a court order to stop the alleged retaliation.
“Government employees should never be forced to pray with the boss,” said Daniel Mach, director of the ACLU Program on Freedom of Religion and Belief.
Michelle Franco, a spokeswoman for Puerto Rico’s police chief, Hector Pesquera, did not respond to a request for comment.
One of the supervisors named in the lawsuit, Guillermo Calixto Rodriguez, was appointed police chief for the capital of San Juan in January. He could not be reached for comment.
The lawsuit highlights how church and state are often intertwined in Puerto Rico, a conservative island of 3.7 million people.
A couple years ago, officials with the Treasury Department organized a Catholic Mass in the building’s lobby, complete with an altar.
Prayer circles have been held at the Supreme Court.
And in March 2012, former Police Chief Emilio Diaz Colon promoted more than 470 officers at a ceremony held at a church, saying at the time, “We are very grateful that God is with us at the Puerto Rico Police Department.”
Diaz was criticized at the time for his comments and for using the church, but he said the location was provided at no cost and was large enough to accommodate everyone who attended.
“This has always been a problem in Puerto Rico,” said William Ramirez, the ACLU’s local director. “It’s very divisive and it’s unconstitutional. … Government is sending a message, ‘This is what we believe, and we believe you should be believing.’”
Tagged: Alvin Marrero Mendez, atheist, catholics, Hector Pesquera, lawsuit, Puerto Rico, religious, san juan
It is one of the first cases of its kind filed in the deeply religious U.S. territory, where 85 percent of the people consider themselves Roman Catholic and a large minority is Protestant.
The lawsuit names the island’s police chief and three supervisors. It was filed by the American Civil Liberties Union in Puerto Rico and the Washington-based ACLU Program on Freedom of Religion and Belief.
The case involves police officer Alvin Marrero Mendez, 38, who repeatedly refused to participate in Christian prayers held at his precinct because he is an atheist.
In one case, attorneys say his supervisors held a prayer in the parking lot of a shopping mall prior to an intervention. Marrero objected and his supervisors ordered him to abandon the formation, yelling, “He is standing there because he doesn’t believe in what we believe in,” the lawsuit states.
After Marrero filed a complaint, lawyers said, supervisors demoted the 14-year veteran, stripped him of his gun and made him wash patrol cars and act as a messenger.
The ACLU is seeking a court judgment stating that forced prayer in a government workplace violates the doctrine of separation of church and state as well as the officer’s freedom. Puerto Rico’s constitution specifically states there needs to be complete separation of church and state.
The ACLU also requested a court order to stop the alleged retaliation.
“Government employees should never be forced to pray with the boss,” said Daniel Mach, director of the ACLU Program on Freedom of Religion and Belief.
Michelle Franco, a spokeswoman for Puerto Rico’s police chief, Hector Pesquera, did not respond to a request for comment.
One of the supervisors named in the lawsuit, Guillermo Calixto Rodriguez, was appointed police chief for the capital of San Juan in January. He could not be reached for comment.
The lawsuit highlights how church and state are often intertwined in Puerto Rico, a conservative island of 3.7 million people.
A couple years ago, officials with the Treasury Department organized a Catholic Mass in the building’s lobby, complete with an altar.
Prayer circles have been held at the Supreme Court.
And in March 2012, former Police Chief Emilio Diaz Colon promoted more than 470 officers at a ceremony held at a church, saying at the time, “We are very grateful that God is with us at the Puerto Rico Police Department.”
Diaz was criticized at the time for his comments and for using the church, but he said the location was provided at no cost and was large enough to accommodate everyone who attended.
“This has always been a problem in Puerto Rico,” said William Ramirez, the ACLU’s local director. “It’s very divisive and it’s unconstitutional. … Government is sending a message, ‘This is what we believe, and we believe you should be believing.’”
Tagged: Alvin Marrero Mendez, atheist, catholics, Hector Pesquera, lawsuit, Puerto Rico, religious, san juan
via Latino Voices on HuffingtonPost.com by AP on 3/9/13
CARACAS, Venezuela -- Venezuelans will vote April 14 to choose a successor to Hugo Chavez, the elections commission announced Saturday as increasingly strident political rhetoric begins to roil this polarized country.
The constitution mandated the election be held within 30 days of Chavez's March 5 death, but the date picked falls outside that period. Critics of the socialist government already complained that officials violated the constitution by swearing in Vice President Nicolas Maduro as acting leader Friday night.
Some people have speculated Venezuela will not be ready to organize the vote in time, but elections council chief Tibisay Lucena said the country's electronic voting system was fully prepared.
Lucena announced the date on state television, appearing in a small inset as the main picture showed people filing past Chavez's coffin at the military academy in Caracas, where his body has lain in state since Wednesday.
Chavez's boisterous state funeral Friday often felt like a political rally for his anointed successor, Maduro, who eulogized him by pledging eternal loyalty and vowing Chavez's movement will never be defeated. Maduro is expected to become the candidate of Chavez's socialist party.
Ramon Guillermo Aveledo, coordinator of the opposition coalition, immediately followed the election announcement by offering his bloc's presidential candidacy to Henrique Capriles, the governor of Miranda state who lost to Chavez in October. A Capriles adviser said the governor would announce his decision Sunday.
Mariana Bacalao, a professor of public opinion at the Universidad Central de Venezuela, said the passion on both sides just hours after Chavez's funeral raised fear of far worse to come in the weeks ahead.
"You can expect during the campaign that these rages will be unleashed," she said.
In his speech after his swearing-in, Maduro took shots at the United States, the media, international capitalism and domestic opponents he often depicted as treacherous. He claimed the allegiance of Venezuela's army, referring to them as the "armed forces of Chavez," despite the constitution barring the military from taking sides in politics.
The opposition has denounced the transition as an unconstitutional power grab, and Capriles has said his side was studying its strategy for the vote, which will be held in the shadow of the government's efforts to immortalize Chavez. Since his death, the former paratrooper has been compared to Jesus Christ and early-19th century Venezuelan liberator Simon Bolivar, and the government announced that his body would be embalmed and put on eternal display.
Edith Palmeira, a 47-year-old Caracas resident at a park Saturday in central Caracas, said she would vote for Maduro, but made clear her allegiance was based purely on her love of Chavez.
"Imitations are never as good as the original," Palmeira said. "But I think he must have grown as a person during so much time at the president's side. He must have learned to be a president."
Elvira Orozco, a 31-year-old business owner, said she planned to sit out the vote to protest Maduro's swearing-in Friday.
"What they want is to say that here there's a democracy, but here they violate the constitution and there's no authority who says anything," Orozco said.
Observers voiced mounting concern about the deep political divide gripping Venezuela, with half of it in a near frenzy of adulation and the other feeling targeted.
"Everything that happened yesterday (with the funeral and Maduro's speech) are outward signs of a fascistic aesthetic, complete with armbands," said Vicente Gonzalez de la Vega, a professor of law at Caracas' Universidad Metropolitana. "It is the cult of the adored leader, an escape from reality. ... They are trying to impose on the rest of the country a new pagan religion."
He said the ruling party was playing with fire with its strong nationalistic rhetoric and the implication that a vote against Maduro was somehow subversive.
Capriles, too, has used emotionally charged language in his public comments. On Friday he denounced Maduro as a shameless liar who had not been elected by the people, and condescendingly referred to him as "boy."
Opposition figures have said they are concerned about the election's fairness, particularly given the public vows of allegiance to Chavez from senior military officials. Capriles lost to Chavez in Oct. 7 elections, but he garnered 45 percent of the vote, which was the most anyone had ever won against the late president.
A boycott of 2005 legislative elections was widely seen as disastrous for the opposition, letting Chavez's supporters win all 167 seats and allowing him to govern unimpeded by any legislative rivals.
___
Associated Press writers Jorge Rueda and Vivian Sequera contributed to this report.
___
Paul Haven on Twitter: www.twitter.com/paulhaven
The constitution mandated the election be held within 30 days of Chavez's March 5 death, but the date picked falls outside that period. Critics of the socialist government already complained that officials violated the constitution by swearing in Vice President Nicolas Maduro as acting leader Friday night.
Some people have speculated Venezuela will not be ready to organize the vote in time, but elections council chief Tibisay Lucena said the country's electronic voting system was fully prepared.
Lucena announced the date on state television, appearing in a small inset as the main picture showed people filing past Chavez's coffin at the military academy in Caracas, where his body has lain in state since Wednesday.
Chavez's boisterous state funeral Friday often felt like a political rally for his anointed successor, Maduro, who eulogized him by pledging eternal loyalty and vowing Chavez's movement will never be defeated. Maduro is expected to become the candidate of Chavez's socialist party.
Ramon Guillermo Aveledo, coordinator of the opposition coalition, immediately followed the election announcement by offering his bloc's presidential candidacy to Henrique Capriles, the governor of Miranda state who lost to Chavez in October. A Capriles adviser said the governor would announce his decision Sunday.
Mariana Bacalao, a professor of public opinion at the Universidad Central de Venezuela, said the passion on both sides just hours after Chavez's funeral raised fear of far worse to come in the weeks ahead.
"You can expect during the campaign that these rages will be unleashed," she said.
In his speech after his swearing-in, Maduro took shots at the United States, the media, international capitalism and domestic opponents he often depicted as treacherous. He claimed the allegiance of Venezuela's army, referring to them as the "armed forces of Chavez," despite the constitution barring the military from taking sides in politics.
The opposition has denounced the transition as an unconstitutional power grab, and Capriles has said his side was studying its strategy for the vote, which will be held in the shadow of the government's efforts to immortalize Chavez. Since his death, the former paratrooper has been compared to Jesus Christ and early-19th century Venezuelan liberator Simon Bolivar, and the government announced that his body would be embalmed and put on eternal display.
Edith Palmeira, a 47-year-old Caracas resident at a park Saturday in central Caracas, said she would vote for Maduro, but made clear her allegiance was based purely on her love of Chavez.
"Imitations are never as good as the original," Palmeira said. "But I think he must have grown as a person during so much time at the president's side. He must have learned to be a president."
Elvira Orozco, a 31-year-old business owner, said she planned to sit out the vote to protest Maduro's swearing-in Friday.
"What they want is to say that here there's a democracy, but here they violate the constitution and there's no authority who says anything," Orozco said.
Observers voiced mounting concern about the deep political divide gripping Venezuela, with half of it in a near frenzy of adulation and the other feeling targeted.
"Everything that happened yesterday (with the funeral and Maduro's speech) are outward signs of a fascistic aesthetic, complete with armbands," said Vicente Gonzalez de la Vega, a professor of law at Caracas' Universidad Metropolitana. "It is the cult of the adored leader, an escape from reality. ... They are trying to impose on the rest of the country a new pagan religion."
He said the ruling party was playing with fire with its strong nationalistic rhetoric and the implication that a vote against Maduro was somehow subversive.
Capriles, too, has used emotionally charged language in his public comments. On Friday he denounced Maduro as a shameless liar who had not been elected by the people, and condescendingly referred to him as "boy."
Opposition figures have said they are concerned about the election's fairness, particularly given the public vows of allegiance to Chavez from senior military officials. Capriles lost to Chavez in Oct. 7 elections, but he garnered 45 percent of the vote, which was the most anyone had ever won against the late president.
A boycott of 2005 legislative elections was widely seen as disastrous for the opposition, letting Chavez's supporters win all 167 seats and allowing him to govern unimpeded by any legislative rivals.
___
Associated Press writers Jorge Rueda and Vivian Sequera contributed to this report.
___
Paul Haven on Twitter: www.twitter.com/paulhaven
via Latino Voices on HuffingtonPost.com by AP on 3/9/13
CARACAS, Venezuela — Venezuelans will vote April 14 to choose a successor to Hugo Chavez, the elections commission announced Saturday as increasingly strident political rhetoric begins to roil this polarized country.
The constitution mandated the election be held within 30 days of Chavez's March 5 death, but the date picked falls outside that period. Critics of the socialist government already complained that officials violated the constitution by swearing in Vice President Nicolas Maduro as acting leader Friday night.
Some people have speculated Venezuela will not be ready to organize the vote in time, but elections council chief Tibisay Lucena said the country's electronic voting system was fully prepared.
Lucena announced the date on state television while a small inset in the picture showed people filing past Chavez's coffin at the military academy in Caracas, where his body has lain in state since Wednesday.
Chavez's boisterous state funeral Friday often felt like a political rally for his anointed successor, Maduro, who eulogized him by pledging eternal loyalty and vowing Chavez's movement will never be defeated. Maduro is expected to run as the candidate of Chavez's socialist party.
Ramon Guillermo Aveledo, coordinator of the opposition coalition, immediately followed the election announcement by offering his bloc's presidential candidacy to Henrique Capriles, the governor of Miranda state who lost to Chavez in October. A Capriles adviser said the governor would announce his decision Sunday.
David Smilde, an analyst with the U.S.-based Washington Office on Latin America, said the opposition needs to run a candidate in the presidential election even though he believes it will almost certainly lose.
Smilde said he wasn't sure Capriles will accept the candidacy.
"If he says he doesn't want to run I could totally understand that," Smilde said. "He is likely going to lose, and if he loses this election, he's probably going to be done."
In that case the opposition would be wise to run someone such as Caracas Mayor Antonio Ledesma or Henry Falcone, governor of Lara state and one of just three opposition governors, he said.
That would give the opposition an opportunity to clearly articulate its platform and vision.
"Really what this campaign would be about is allowing the opposition to put themselves in position for the future, to show that they have some ideas for the country," Smilde said.
In his speech after his swearing-in Friday, Maduro took shots at the United States, the media, international capitalism and domestic opponents he often depicted as treacherous. He claimed the allegiance of Venezuela's army, referring to them as the "armed forces of Chavez," despite the constitution barring the military from taking sides in politics.
The opposition has denounced the transition as an unconstitutional power grab, while the government moves to immortalize Chavez. Since his death, the former paratrooper has been compared to Jesus Christ and early-19th century Venezuelan liberator Simon Bolivar, and the government announced that his body would be embalmed and put on eternal display.
Edith Palmeira, a 47-year-old Caracas resident at a park Saturday in central Caracas, said she would vote for Maduro, but made clear her allegiance was based purely on her love of Chavez.
"Imitations are never as good as the original," Palmeira said. "But I think he must have grown as a person during so much time at the president's side. He must have learned to be a president."
Elvira Orozco, a 31-year-old business owner, said she planned to sit out the vote to protest Maduro's swearing-in Friday.
"What they want is to say that here there's a democracy, but here they violate the constitution and there's no authority who says anything," Orozco said.
Observers voiced mounting concern about the deep political divide gripping Venezuela, with half of it in a near frenzy of adulation and the other feeling targeted.
"Everything that happened yesterday (with the funeral and Maduro's speech) are outward signs of a fascistic aesthetic, complete with armbands," said Vicente Gonzalez de la Vega, a professor of law at Caracas' Universidad Metropolitana. "It is the cult of the adored leader, an escape from reality. ... They are trying to impose on the rest of the country a new pagan religion."
He said the ruling party was playing with fire with its strong nationalistic rhetoric and the implication that a vote against Maduro was somehow subversive.
Capriles, too, has used emotionally charged language in his public comments. On Friday he denounced Maduro as a shameless liar who had not been elected by the people, and condescendingly referred to him as "boy."
Opposition figures have said they are concerned about the election's fairness, particularly given the public vows of allegiance to Chavez from senior military officials. Capriles lost to Chavez in Oct. 7 elections, but he garnered 45 percent of the vote, which was the most anyone had ever won against the late president.
A boycott of 2005 legislative elections was widely seen as disastrous for the opposition, letting Chavez's supporters win all 167 seats and allowing him to govern unimpeded by any legislative rivals.
___
Associated Press writers Frank Bajak, Jorge Rueda and Vivian Sequera contributed to this report.
___
Paul Haven on Twitter: www.twitter.com/paulhaven
The constitution mandated the election be held within 30 days of Chavez's March 5 death, but the date picked falls outside that period. Critics of the socialist government already complained that officials violated the constitution by swearing in Vice President Nicolas Maduro as acting leader Friday night.
Some people have speculated Venezuela will not be ready to organize the vote in time, but elections council chief Tibisay Lucena said the country's electronic voting system was fully prepared.
Lucena announced the date on state television while a small inset in the picture showed people filing past Chavez's coffin at the military academy in Caracas, where his body has lain in state since Wednesday.
Chavez's boisterous state funeral Friday often felt like a political rally for his anointed successor, Maduro, who eulogized him by pledging eternal loyalty and vowing Chavez's movement will never be defeated. Maduro is expected to run as the candidate of Chavez's socialist party.
Ramon Guillermo Aveledo, coordinator of the opposition coalition, immediately followed the election announcement by offering his bloc's presidential candidacy to Henrique Capriles, the governor of Miranda state who lost to Chavez in October. A Capriles adviser said the governor would announce his decision Sunday.
David Smilde, an analyst with the U.S.-based Washington Office on Latin America, said the opposition needs to run a candidate in the presidential election even though he believes it will almost certainly lose.
Smilde said he wasn't sure Capriles will accept the candidacy.
"If he says he doesn't want to run I could totally understand that," Smilde said. "He is likely going to lose, and if he loses this election, he's probably going to be done."
In that case the opposition would be wise to run someone such as Caracas Mayor Antonio Ledesma or Henry Falcone, governor of Lara state and one of just three opposition governors, he said.
That would give the opposition an opportunity to clearly articulate its platform and vision.
"Really what this campaign would be about is allowing the opposition to put themselves in position for the future, to show that they have some ideas for the country," Smilde said.
In his speech after his swearing-in Friday, Maduro took shots at the United States, the media, international capitalism and domestic opponents he often depicted as treacherous. He claimed the allegiance of Venezuela's army, referring to them as the "armed forces of Chavez," despite the constitution barring the military from taking sides in politics.
The opposition has denounced the transition as an unconstitutional power grab, while the government moves to immortalize Chavez. Since his death, the former paratrooper has been compared to Jesus Christ and early-19th century Venezuelan liberator Simon Bolivar, and the government announced that his body would be embalmed and put on eternal display.
Edith Palmeira, a 47-year-old Caracas resident at a park Saturday in central Caracas, said she would vote for Maduro, but made clear her allegiance was based purely on her love of Chavez.
"Imitations are never as good as the original," Palmeira said. "But I think he must have grown as a person during so much time at the president's side. He must have learned to be a president."
Elvira Orozco, a 31-year-old business owner, said she planned to sit out the vote to protest Maduro's swearing-in Friday.
"What they want is to say that here there's a democracy, but here they violate the constitution and there's no authority who says anything," Orozco said.
Observers voiced mounting concern about the deep political divide gripping Venezuela, with half of it in a near frenzy of adulation and the other feeling targeted.
"Everything that happened yesterday (with the funeral and Maduro's speech) are outward signs of a fascistic aesthetic, complete with armbands," said Vicente Gonzalez de la Vega, a professor of law at Caracas' Universidad Metropolitana. "It is the cult of the adored leader, an escape from reality. ... They are trying to impose on the rest of the country a new pagan religion."
He said the ruling party was playing with fire with its strong nationalistic rhetoric and the implication that a vote against Maduro was somehow subversive.
Capriles, too, has used emotionally charged language in his public comments. On Friday he denounced Maduro as a shameless liar who had not been elected by the people, and condescendingly referred to him as "boy."
Opposition figures have said they are concerned about the election's fairness, particularly given the public vows of allegiance to Chavez from senior military officials. Capriles lost to Chavez in Oct. 7 elections, but he garnered 45 percent of the vote, which was the most anyone had ever won against the late president.
A boycott of 2005 legislative elections was widely seen as disastrous for the opposition, letting Chavez's supporters win all 167 seats and allowing him to govern unimpeded by any legislative rivals.
___
Associated Press writers Frank Bajak, Jorge Rueda and Vivian Sequera contributed to this report.
___
Paul Haven on Twitter: www.twitter.com/paulhaven
via latino - Google Blog Search by Sandra Lilley on 3/9/13
Thomas Perez, the Assistant Attorney General for the Department of Justice Civil Rights Division, is President Obama's top choice for Secretary of Labor, according to a person familiar with the selection process, reports the ...
via latino - Google Blog Search by Steve Ralls on 3/8/13
Washington, DC – A new Immigration Equality/Latino Decisions poll of Latino voters shows strong support for immigration reform legislation that includes lesbian and gay binational couples. Support for ending the separation ...
via crime in puerto rico statistics - Google Blog Search by The Huffington Post News Editors on 3/8/13
Al Madrigal's got a question for Puerto Rican statehood supporters: what do you want with this mess? ... One staffer viewed the status vote as a "statistical fiction." Contribute to this Story: Send us a tip; Send us a photo or video ...
via crime in puerto rico - Google News on 2/7/13
'Don't Give Up On Us': Puerto Ricans Wrestle With High Crime
WUSF News Puerto Rico's population is declining. Faced with a deteriorating economy, increased poverty and a swelling crime rate, many Puerto Ricans are fleeing the island for the U.S. mainland. In a four-part series, Morning Edition explores this phenomenon ... and more » |
Mike Nova's starred items
via BBC News - Latin America & Caribbean on 3/8/13
The people of the Falkland Islands are heading to the polls on Sunday and Monday for a referendum on whether they wish to remain a British Overseas Territory.
via caribbean - Google News on 3/10/13
Jamaica Observer |
The Caribbean after Chavez
Jamaica Observer Seventeen countries of the Caribbean face a heightened period of economic uncertainty now that Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez has died. Twelve of the 17 Caribbean countries are members of the Caribbean Community (Caricom). They have become ... The Caribbean's debt to Hugo ChávezJamaica Gleaner Celebrating Chavez—Caricom's 'friend'Trinidad & Tobago Express all 3 news articles » |
via Fotos de Hoy on 3/9/13
Viene no lo dejen caer q la sere sigue 😊 #tendidoselectricos #electricalsky @ar0n @pernoctar
via Puerto Rico News on 3/10/13
In San Juan, Puerto Rico , a police officer who claims he was punished for refusing to participate in compulsory Christian prayers has filed a lawsuit alleging discrimination .
via puerto rico - Búsqueda de blogs by miguelsumaran@netjoven.com (NetJoven S.A.C) on 3/8/13
Recibo con polémica frase / Foto : Huffingtonpost.com En Puerto Rico, un cajero automático imprimió un recibo con la frase 'we hate fags' (odiamos a los maricones). Las críticas no se hicieron esperar y arremetieron contra ...
via puerto rico - Búsqueda de blogs by desconocido on 3/8/13
San Juan, 8 mar (EFE).- Puerto Rico marcó tres anotaciones en la primera entrada, las cuales fueron suficientes para derrotar vía blanqueada a España 3-0 en su debut del Clásico Mundial de Béisbol como parte de la ...
via puerto rico - Búsqueda de blogs by SinUniforme on 3/8/13
08 mar, Carlos González Lovito (SU).- Puerto Rico debutó con triunfo 3 carreras por 0 sobre España y acompaña a República Dominicana en la cima del grupo C. Con un estadio a media capacidad la selección boricua hizo ...
Mike Nova's starred items
via The New York Times's Facebook Wall by The New York Times on 3/9/13
"My father came from Ireland and he had the gift of the gab. Part of the reason the Irish developed the gift of the gab was simple. They lived on an island. They had to get along. Not that they did get along. But they had to try," writes John Patrick Shanley, a playwright and the author of "Doubt: A Parable."
In the Opinion Pages, Mr. Shanley shares "how all hell broke loose" when he visited his Aunt Mary and Uncle Tony in Ireland in 1993.
The Darkness of an Irish Morning
www.nytimes.com
My eccentric, boisterous relatives told me everything — almost.
In the Opinion Pages, Mr. Shanley shares "how all hell broke loose" when he visited his Aunt Mary and Uncle Tony in Ireland in 1993.
The Darkness of an Irish Morning
www.nytimes.com
My eccentric, boisterous relatives told me everything — almost.
via Puerto Rico News - Archive Links's Facebook Wall by Puerto Rico News - Archive Links on 3/9/13
"Lorenzo, gracias por ser mi amigo"
"Lorenzo, gracias por ser mi amigo"
11:01 a.m.A tres años del asesinato del niño, ciudadanos visitaron la tumba; entre ellos, un amiguito que vestía el uniforme de su equipo de fútbol
Expertos analizan el mal de …
"Lorenzo, gracias por ser mi amigo"
"Lorenzo, gracias por ser mi amigo"
11:01 a.m.A tres años del asesinato del niño, ciudadanos visitaron la tumba; entre ellos, un amiguito que vestía el uniforme de su equipo de fútbol
Expertos analizan el mal de …
"Lorenzo, gracias por ser mi amigo"
via The Wall Street Journal's Facebook Wall by The Wall Street Journal on 3/9/13
As social media changes the way we experience vacation photos, there's no better time to improve the shots themselves. Lesson one: Focus on the details. How to take better travel photos: http://on.wsj.com/Z8KCzh
What photography tips have you found most helpful?
Photo by Diane Cook and Len Jenshel.
What photography tips have you found most helpful?
Photo by Diane Cook and Len Jenshel.
via Videos matching: puerto rico by a GirLwithaPlaN on 3/7/13
Hi boys and girls! Been away in Puerto Rico this week on vacation with family. I will uploaded more videos of my adventures whilst on vaca. Hope you guys are having an awesome week too! :D Subscribe Here: www.youtube.com Tweet me here: twitter.com
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From:a GirLwithaPlaN
Views:546
35ratings
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Time:02:41 | More inPeople & Blogs |
via Videos matching: puerto rico by woltersworld on 3/8/13
www.woltersworld.com Visiting Puerto Rico and not sure what to expect? Jocelyn from Wolters World goes through her 5 things she loves and hates annoyed by when visiting Puerto Rico. An amazing island with fantastic people and food and weather but hectic traffic. Copyright Mark Wolters 2013 Filmed in Puerto Rico Visit Puerto Rico, Travel Puerto Rico, Puerto Rico Tourism Advice
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From:woltersworld
Views:146
12ratings
| |
Time:05:33 | More inTravel & Events |
via Puerto Rico News - Archive Links's Facebook Wall by Puerto Rico News - Archive Links on 3/9/13
Oposición venezolana estudia su estrategia
Oposición venezolana estudia su estrategia
Arrestan a hombre por herir a otro en Guayanilla
Reclaman fin de la violencia infantil
Instalan chimenea en la Capilla Sixtina para el cónclave
La chimenea de …
Oposición venezolana estudia su estrategia
Oposición venezolana estudia su estrategia
Arrestan a hombre por herir a otro en Guayanilla
Reclaman fin de la violencia infantil
Instalan chimenea en la Capilla Sixtina para el cónclave
La chimenea de …
Oposición venezolana estudia su estrategia
via Puerto Rico Videos & Songs's Facebook Wall by Puerto Rico Videos & Songs on 3/9/13
Obama Pride: Ricky Martin
Obama Pride: Ricky Martin
Share this: OFA.BO Tweet this: OFA.BO Ricky Martin shares why he's standing with President Obama and what you can do to make sure he's re-elected for a second term. As Ricky shares: "As a parent, …
Obama Pride: Ricky Martin
Obama Pride: Ricky Martin
Share this: OFA.BO Tweet this: OFA.BO Ricky Martin shares why he's standing with President Obama and what you can do to make sure he's re-elected for a second term. As Ricky shares: "As a parent, …
Obama Pride: Ricky Martin
via Puerto Rico News on 3/9/13
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico Federal officials have rescued 71 Haitian migrants found stranded on the shores of a cluster of islands just west of Puerto Rico.
via Puerto Rico Newswire on 3/9/13
... In honour of International Women's Day, here's a look at the often difficult working lives of women. SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico - Federal officials have rescued 71 Haitian migrants found stranded on the shores of a cluster of islands just west of Puerto ...
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