Saturday, August 11, 2012

The traveling exhibition of images and documents on immigration, "Spanish in the U.S. and Puerto Rico from 1880 to today" opened at the House of Spain in San Juan.

Archivistica.net: Arrives in Puerto Rico exhibition on the ...

The presence of illustrious Spanish migrants in Puerto Rico, especially after the Civil War (1936-1939), is proven with photographic documents in the sample of Casals, permanently installed on the island from ...

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11/08/2012

Llega a Puerto Rico una exposición sobre la inmigración española en EE.UU. Puerto Rico comes to an exhibition of Spanish immigration in the U.S.

La muestra itinerante de imágenes y documentos sobre inmigración "Españoles en Estados Unidos y Puerto Rico desde 1880 hasta nuestros días" se inauguró en la Casa de España de San Juan. The traveling exhibition of images and documents on immigration, "Spanish in the U.S. and Puerto Rico from 1880 to today" opened at the House of Spain to San Juan.
La exposición cuenta con fotografías y documentos aportados por asociaciones de españoles establecidas en Puerto Rico como la Casa Balear, el Centro Asturiano o la propia Casa de España. The exhibition includes photographs and documents provided by Spanish associations established in Puerto Rico and the Balearic House, the Asturian Center or the House itself in Spain.
La presencia de emigrantes ilustres españoles en Puerto Rico, en especial tras la Guerra Civil (1936-1939), queda constatada con documentos fotográficos de Pau Casals, instalado en la isla definitivamente desde 1956. The presence of illustrious Spanish migrants in Puerto Rico, especially after the Civil War (1936-1939), is proven with photographic records of Pau Casals, permanently installed on the island since 1956.
News / Culture and Varieties

DURANTE EL SIGLO XX DURING THE TWENTIETH CENTURY

Llega a Puerto Rico gran exposición de obras sobre la inmigración española en EE.UU. Puerto Rico comes to major exhibition of works on Spanish immigration in the U.S.

Puerto Rico comes to major exhibition of works on Spanish immigration in the U.S.
Archivo EFE Photo EFE
La muestra itinerante de imágenes y documentos sobre inmigración "Españoles en Estados Unidos y Puerto Rico desde 1880 hasta nuestros días" se inauguró en la Casa de España de San Juan. The traveling exhibition of images and documents on immigration, "Spanish in the U.S. and Puerto Rico from 1880 to today" opened at the House of Spain to San Juan.

La consejera de Trabajo e Inmigración de la Embajada de España en Washington, Elisa Carolina de Santos, dijo que se trata de una exposición que da a conocer mejor el proceso migratorio hacia Estados Unidos, incluido su territorio de Puerto Rico. The Minister of Employment and Immigration, Embassy of Spain in Washington, Elisa Carolina de Santos said that this is an exhibition that gives a better understanding of the process of migration to the United States, including the territory of Puerto Rico.
De Santos señaló que en el caso de Puerto Rico la emigración tuvo unas características especiales, ya que durante el pasado siglo XX llegaron a la isla caribeña renombrados especialistas españoles de diferentes disciplinas que contribuyeron a la formación de generaciones de profesionales en la universidad local. De Santos said that in the case of Puerto Rico emigration had special characteristics, since during the last century came to the Caribbean island renowned Spanish specialists from different disciplines who contributed to the formation of generations of professionals at the local university.
La exposición cuenta con fotografías y documentos aportados por asociaciones de españoles establecidas en Puerto Rico como la Casa Balear, el Centro Asturiano o la propia Casa de España. The exhibition includes photographs and documents provided by Spanish associations established in Puerto Rico and the Balearic House, the Asturian Center or the House itself in Spain.
La muestra recoge fotos de la familia asturiana del propio Santiago en San Juan, del músico catalán Pau Casals o documentos de 1912 del Hospital de la Sociedad Española de Auxilio Mutuo y Beneficencia de Puerto Rico, institución que hoy se mantiene como el primer centro médico de la isla. The exhibition includes photos of Asturian own family in San Juan Santiago, the Catalan musician Pau Casals or documents of 1912 the Hospital of the Spanish Society of Mutual Aid and Welfare of Puerto Rico, an institution which today remains the first medical center the island.
La presencia de emigrantes ilustres españoles en Puerto Rico, en especial tras la Guerra Civil (1936-1939), queda constatada con documentos fotográficos en la muestra de Casals, instalado en la isla definitivamente desde 1956. The presence of illustrious Spanish migrants in Puerto Rico, especially after the Civil War (1936-1939), is proven with photographic documents in the sample of Casals, permanently installed on the island since 1956.
El censo estadounidense de 2010 identifica como españoles a 635.000 personas, siete veces más que los 82.858 de hace solo una década. The 2010 U.S. census identifies as Spanish to 635,000 people, seven times more than 82,858 just a decade ago.
La tendencia creciente de inmigrantes españoles altamente cualificados se refleja en las más de ochenta asociaciones de españoles en Estados Unidos y Puerto Rico que existen actualmente. The growing trend of highly qualified Spanish immigrants is reflected in the more than eighty associations of Spanish in the U.S. and Puerto Rico that currently exist.
Publicado el 10 Agosto 2012 Published on August 10, 2012
Fuentes: EFE Sources: Reuters
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11/08/2012
Puerto Rico comes to an exhibition of Spanish immigration in the U.S.
The traveling exhibition of images and documents on immigration, "Spanish in the U.S. and Puerto Rico from 1880 to today" opened at the House of Spain to San Juan.
The exhibition includes photographs and documents provided by Spanish associations established in Puerto Rico and the Balearic House, the Asturian Center or the House itself in Spain.
The presence of illustrious Spanish migrants in Puerto Rico, especially after the Civil War (1936-1939), is proven with photographic records of Pau Casals, permanently installed on the island since 1956.
Learn more
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Posted in NTN24 ( http://www.ntn24.com )

Home > Get to Puerto Rico major exhibition of works on Spanish immigration in the U.S.
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Puerto Rico comes to major exhibition of works on Spanish immigration in the U.S.
Created 10/08/2012 15:42

DURING THE TWENTIETH CENTURY

The traveling exhibition of images and documents on immigration, "Spanish in the U.S. and Puerto Rico from 1880 to today" opened at the House of Spain to San Juan.
The Minister of Employment and Immigration, Embassy of Spain in Washington, Elisa Carolina de Santos said that this is an exhibition that gives a better understanding of the process of migration to the United States, including the territory of Puerto Rico.

De Santos said that in the case of Puerto Rico emigration had special characteristics, since during the last century came to the Caribbean island renowned Spanish specialists from different disciplines who contributed to the formation of generations of professionals at the local university.

The exhibition includes photographs and documents provided by Spanish associations established in Puerto Rico and the Balearic House, the Asturian Center or the House itself in Spain.

The exhibition includes photos of Asturian own family in San Juan Santiago, the Catalan musician Pau Casals or documents of 1912 the Hospital of the Spanish Society of Mutual Aid and Welfare of Puerto Rico, an institution which today remains the first medical center the island.

The presence of illustrious Spanish migrants in Puerto Rico, especially after the Civil War (1936-1939), is proven with photographic documents in the sample of Casals, permanently installed on the island since 1956.

The 2010 U.S. census identifies as Spanish to 635,000 people, seven times more than 82,858 just a decade ago.

The growing trend of highly qualified Spanish immigrants is reflected in the more than eighty associations of Spanish in the U.S. and Puerto Rico that currently exist.

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 Culture and Varieties
Puerto Rico

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Spanish-American War: Trial Run for Interventionism

Spanish-American War: Trial Run for Interventionism
The New American
Defeated on land and sea, Spain sued for peace. The war lasted less than four months; our fighting forces distinguished themselves with valor; and the United States, acquiring territory from Puerto Rico to the Philippines, emerged as a “world power ...
 

Friday, 10 August 2012 00:00

Spanish-American War: Trial Run for Interventionism

Written by James Perloff    
Spanish-American War: Trial Run for Interventionism 
U.S. Secretary of State John Hay called the Spanish-American War of 1898 a “splendid little war.” Superficially, the description seemed apt. After the battleship Maine mysteriously exploded in Havana Harbor — an incident then blamed on Spain — America went to war, our citizens urged to free Cuba from Spanish rule as well as avenge the Maine. Largely a naval war, an American squadron under Commodore George Dewey destroyed the Spanish squadron at Manila; likewise, the U.S. Navy crushed Spain’s Caribbean squadron off Cuba’s port of Santiago. In each engagement, the United States suffered only one fatality. Things went tougher for American troops in Cuba, where malaria and yellow fever proved as daunting as Spanish bullets. But American schoolchildren would thereafter thrill to tales of Teddy Roosevelt and his “Rough Riders,” and of the famed charge up San Juan Hill. Defeated on land and sea, Spain sued for peace. The war lasted less than four months; our fighting forces distinguished themselves with valor; and the United States, acquiring territory from Puerto Rico to the Philippines, emerged as a “world power.”

However, behind victory’s fervor lay deceptions, and principles of the Founding Fathers were discarded, portending future misery for Americans.

Cuba: Background to a Battleground

In the late 19th century, citizens were increasingly alarmed that monopolistic New York banking interests — represented by such names as Morgan, Rockefeller, Harriman, Carnegie, and Rothschild — were gaining a stranglehold on our economy. This helped inspire the 1891 establishment of the Populist Party, a grassroots movement of dissatisfied voters who perceived increasingly fewer differences between the Democratic and Republican parties, many of whose bosses were beholden to the bankers.

The Wall Street cabal realized that to thwart populism, it would be expedient to remove attention from themselves by inflaming Americans with hatred of another enemy. The enemy chosen was Spain, over the issue of Cuba. The reasons for this choice were as complex as they were sinister.

Spain was Europe’s leading colonial power in the 16th and 17th centuries, occupying much of North and South America. Through treaties and local revolutions, Spain lost much of this territory by the 19th century, but still retained a few possessions — notably Cuba, the world’s wealthiest colony and largest sugar producer by the 1820s.

Also in the late 19th century, a violent revolutionary movement hobbled Cuba’s prosperity. Most Americans considered this an internal Spanish affair. They had always viewed the purpose of our military as self-defense; furthermore, intervening in Cuba would have violated our neutrality laws. Transforming these attitudes required manipulation of public opinion.

Yellow Journalism

Thomas Jefferson said in 1807:
Nothing can now be believed which is seen in a newspaper. Truth itself becomes suspicious by being put into that polluted vehicle. The real extent of this state of misinformation is known only to those who are in situations to confront facts within their knowledge with the lies of the day.
Regrettably, Jefferson’s sentiments were little heeded in the 1890s. And a new media rogue had arrived — William Randolph Hearst, whose name became synonymous with “Yellow (dishonest) Journalism.” In 1895, the wealthy Hearst purchased the New York Journal and battled Joseph Pulitzer’s New York World to achieve the nation’s highest circulation. Hearst won, learning that in journalism, lies can become “truths” for the right price. But he and Pulitzer shared a common goal: war with Spain over Cuba.

Americans were told Cuba’s rebels were like our Revolutionary War soldiers — men yearning for self-government. While genuine patriots were among the Cuban insurgents, their leader, Máximo Gómez, was a Dominican-born revolutionary who could be compared to Fidel Castro, not George Washington.

Gómez avoided confronting Spanish troops, whom he could not hope to defeat. Instead he launched terrorism. Attempting to expel the Spanish economically, he set ablaze millions of sugar cane acres, making the island a virtual torch. Cubans who refused to support him were hanged from trees or hacked to death with machetes as “traitors.” Gómez’s men descended at night, setting small towns on fire after looting them. They stole all available cattle and horses, and at harvest seized farmers’ crops — much like the bandits in the films The Seven Samurai and The Magnificent Seven. Gómez also seized the farmers’ sons, forcing them into his ranks. Within his army, he was feared as ruthless and dictatorial, meting out the death penalty by machete to soldiers without due process.

As a result, rural Cubans fled to fortified towns. But there was little work for them, and with Gómez torching all crops he couldn’t steal, famine began in Cuba. Hearst’s Journal and Pulitzer’s World reported none of this — except the starvation, which they blamed on the Spaniards, who were trying their best to feed the population under devastating conditions.

Hearst and Pulitzer both claimed the problem was Cuba’s Spanish governor, General Valeriano Weyler, ordering “reconcentration” of citizenry into fortified towns. The accusation had a grain of truth. Weyler was sent to Cuba because the leniency of his predecessor, Arsenio Martinez Campos, had emboldened the revolutionaries. Since Gómez refused to fight in the open, Weyler decided to turn the tables — cut him off from his source of food and recruits. Weyler discovered that many Cubans still outside the fortified towns were Gómez sympathizers, acting as suppliers or spies. Weyler ordered them into the towns. This compounded the famine, but didn’t start it.

The Yellow Press called him “Butcher Weyler,” endlessly inventing atrocities, such as Spaniards roasting Catholic priests. On October 6, 1896, Hearst’s Journal carried this headline: “CUBANS FED TO SHARKS. Cries Heard at Night — They are Taken Outside the Harbor, and the Silent Ferryman Comes Back Alone.” Pulitzer’s World raved: “RAIDED A HOSPITAL — More than Forty Sick and Wounded Cubans Butchered.” But no hospital even existed in the region the World described.

Hearst discovered that tales of atrocities against women struck a special chord with readers. In December 1896 his Journal blared: “BUTCHERED 300 CUBAN WOMEN — Defenseless Prisoners Shot Down by Spanish Soldiers.” Americans were regaled with stories of Cuban “Amazon women” fighting the Spanish with Rambo-like ferocity. The New York Sun carried this headline in October 1896: “SHE SHOT SEVENTEEN SPANIARDS … She did not Retire Before the Attack of the Regulars, But Picked Them Off, Man by Man.”

Newspapers could not reproduce photographs then, so drawings were used. This enabled Hearst to “authenticate” stories with artists’ fabrications. He hired noted painter Frederic Remington. After Remington arrived in Havana in 1897, a famous exchange occurred. Reportedly, he cabled Hearst: “Everything is quiet. There is no trouble. There will be no war. I wish to return.” Hearst replied: “Please remain. You furnish the pictures and I’ll furnish the war.” Although Hearst denied this exchange took place, the words embody the reality.

Perhaps Remington’s most infamous illustration was a naked girl surrounded by three smirking Spanish ruffians, under Hearst’s Journal headline: “REFINED YOUNG WOMEN STRIPPED AND SEARCHED BY BRUTAL SPANIARDS WHILE UNDER OUR FLAG.” In reality, a Cuban woman, who had aided the revolutionaries, was searched by a Spanish matron, in privacy. Remington had not witnessed the event.

Hearst’s reporters rarely ventured outside Havana’s bars. Some never even traveled beyond Florida, where they forwarded tales spun by Cuban émigrés sympathetic to the revolutionaries. And some stories Hearst invented himself in New York.

Reporters telling the truth were few. One was the New York Herald’s George Bronson Rea, who got information first-hand by riding with the rebels for nine months. He summarized his experiences in his book Facts and Fakes About Cuba.

Although Rea favored Cuban independence, he proved that tales of Spanish oppression — beyond singular acts of revenge and counter-revenge one might expect in any war — were fabricated. He wrote: “I lived in Cuba for five years previous to the insurrection, and spent the best part of my time in the country, and I must say that if the Cubans were oppressed, I failed to discover in what manner.”

Rea demonstrated that the Yellow Press grossly exaggerated the number of rebels, invented battles from thin air, knew little of Cuban geography, and eventually claimed the insurgents had captured more towns than existed. At the lunacy’s height, Pulitzer’s World said the rebels possessed a navy and had conquered Havana.

Congress Moves Toward War

Unfortunately, the Yellow Press drowned voices of men like Rea. This impacted not only public opinion, but members of Congress, many having no other information sources about Cuba.

After the Journal’s fake “strip-searching women” piece, Congressman Amos Cummings introduced an angry resolution in response. Deceived by tales of “Americans starving in Cuba,” Congress appropriated $50,000 for their relief, but U.S. consuls in Cuba were hard-pressed finding “starving Americans” to dispense the money to. The belligerently pro-war Senator John T. Morgan, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, quoted extensively from a report in Hearst’s Journal; Morgan’s successor as chairman, John Sherman, also relied on the Journal, calling it “one of the great journals of the country.”

After President McKinley appointed Sherman secretary of state, the latter wrote to the Spanish government, condemning General Weyler’s forcefulness, and urging “conduct of the war in a manner responsive to the precepts of ordinary humanity.” However, Sherman’s brother was Civil War General William T. Sherman, whose “war is hell” tactics made him abominable to Southerners. This irony was not lost on the Spanish foreign minister, whose reply reminded the secretary of “the expedition of General Sherman, that illustrious and respected general, through Georgia and South Carolina.”

According to Ferdinand Lundberg in his classic America’s Sixty Families, President William McKinley was beholden to the Rockefellers and Standard Oil. While governor of Ohio, McKinley went bankrupt, and was secretly bailed out by a syndicate headed by Rockefeller frontman Mark Hanna, who had known John D. since they were high-school classmates. Hanna became McKinley’s political manager. Many considered him the real White House boss; critics called the president “McHanna.” J. P. Morgan was another McKinley backer. Chicago’s Chronicle of April 14, 1898, commented: “The Rothschilds and the Morgans control the White House.”

As American cries for war grew, Spain sought to avoid it. General Weyler was recalled; the “reconcentration” policy was to be substantially reformed; and Cuba was offered semi-autonomy, similar to Canada’s relationship with Britain. Had McKinley and his controllers genuinely wanted peace, this should have placated them. Instead, the battleship Maine was dispatched to Cuba.

Tragedy in Havana Harbor

The Maine’s sinking remains the most enduring mystery of the Spanish-American War. One of McKinley’s riskiest appointments was Teddy Roosevelt, as assistant secretary of the Navy. Roosevelt incessantly pushed for a shooting war. Among his characteristic quotes: “McKinley is bent on peace, I fear.” One afternoon in February 1898, Roosevelt exploited the absence of Navy Secretary John Long to put the Navy on a war footing; he cabled Commodore Dewey in Hong Kong to prepare to attack Manila — even though war had not begun. When Secretary Long learned of this, he didn’t revoke the order, but said of Roosevelt, “the very devil seemed to possess him yesterday afternoon.”

On January 24, 1898, the inflammatory decision to send the Maine to Cuba was made at a White House meeting — of which no minutes were kept. Although the Spanish were advised that a warship would eventually visit, they were not expecting the Maine when it sailed into Havana January 25. This was unknown to the ship’s commander, Captain Charles Sigsbee, who wrote: “It became known to me afterward that the Maine had not been expected, even by the United States Consul General.”

With potential war looming, by what “oversight” did Washington fail to notify both Spanish and American officials in Havana of the battleship’s arrival? However, if anyone hoped shooting would erupt in the harbor, leading to war, they were disappointed. The Spanish, courteously if coolly, welcomed the Maine and permitted her to dock.

William Randolph Hearst now pushed the war buttons harder. He had paid bribes to have the private correspondence of Spanish Ambassador Enrique Dupey de Lôme spied upon. In a private letter to a friend, the ambassador called McKinley “weak and catering to the rabble,” “a low politician” who desired to “stand well with the jingos of his party.” In violation of diplomatic immunity, the letter was stolen and reprinted in Hearst’s Journal under the headline “THE WORST INSULT TO THE UNITED STATES IN ITS HISTORY.”

In reality, the leader of Cuba’s insurgents, Máximo Gómez, had paid far worse insults to America, lambasting George Washington, claiming McKinley and Congress were “in the employ of Spain,” and boasting that his men could lay waste to Florida in under a week. But Americans were not permitted to hear these words — only those of Dupey de Lôme, who resigned in embarrassment. The Spanish government apologized, but Hearst and other “Yellow Journals” had driven anti-Spanish feelings to fever pitch.

Two days later in Havana Harbor, a massive nighttime explosion tore apart the Maine. The horror was unimaginable. Of 355 crew members, 266 perished; only 16 survivors escaped uninjured. The day after the incident, Hearst’s Journal already published artistic renderings of how it was supposedly done — torpedoes, placed under the ship, connected to the shore by electric wires. A Naval Court of Inquiry convened. After hearing testimony from witnesses and divers, it concluded that a submerged mine sank the Maine. However, it fixed no responsibility for the deed.

But the Yellow Press had no reservations. Hearst’s Journal called it an act of “Spanish treachery.” As war cries intensified, a slogan was proclaimed: “Remember the Maine and to hell with Spain!” This was probably intended to arouse the desire for vengeance in the same manner that “Remember the Alamo!” inspired Sam Houston’s troops at the 1836 battle of San Jacinto. There was a glaring difference, however: The Mexican army undeniably slaughtered the Alamo’s defenders, but no proof implicated Spain in the Maine tragedy.

Spanish sailors risked their lives rescuing Maine survivors, who were cared for by Spanish doctors and nurses. The Spanish had no motive to provoke America, and desperately tried to avoid war. Spain still had mostly wooden warships, many in disrepair, which could not match the firepower of America’s increasingly steel navy. Admiral Pascual Cervera, who commanded Spain’s Atlantic squadron, warned his government of “our lack of everything that is necessary for a naval war, such as supplies, ammunition, coal, provisions, etc. We have nothing at all.” Furthermore, land war against American troops would be difficult in Cuba — less than 100 miles from the United States, but over 4,000 miles from Spain.

War Arrives

Spain conceded to every U.S. demand except complete withdrawal from Cuba, and offered to submit the matter of the Maine to arbitration. Nevertheless, demands for war erupted in Congress. To insure against Senate reservations, Senator Redfield Proctor made a quick visit to Cuba. After returning, he consulted McKinley, and that same day made a fiery Senate speech. Describing hunger and disease he had witnessed, Proctor urged Cubans’ “deliverance from the worst misgovernment of which I have ever had knowledge.” His speech strongly impacted the Senate, but Proctor omitted the main reason for the suffering: Cuba’s rebels themselves.

McKinley, now falsely proclaiming he had “exhausted” all diplomatic means of maintaining peace, asked Capitol Hill for authorization to intervene militarily. Congress issued a joint resolution
For the recognition of the independence of the people of Cuba, demanding that the government of Spain relinquish its authority and government in the island of Cuba and Cuban waters, and directing the President of the United States to use the land and naval forces of the United States to carry these resolutions into effect.
Spain could not have accepted this demand. It had ruled Cuba since 1511. All Spanish political parties, liberal and conservative, considered Cuba part of Spain, just as Americans consider Hawaii part of America. If it relinquished Cuba, the Spanish government would have faced revolution at home. Given a choice between revolution and war, the Spanish elected to fight, with honor, a war they could not hope to win. This delighted William Randolph Hearst. With the war in full swing, his newspaper’s headline gloated: “How Do You Like the Journal’s War?”

While America’s military fought with tremendous valor during the war, as much may be said of the hundreds of Spanish sailors who died under U.S. Navy firepower, and of the defenders of San Juan Hill who, outnumbered over 15 to one, held until their ammunition ran out.

Combat Versus Conquest

Although the war was ostensibly over Cuba, U.S. forces attacked Spain’s other colonies. This might be excused as strategically necessary — had not the United States subsequently absorbed these ­territories.

In July, after Santiago had fallen and Spain had already sued for peace, U.S. forces invaded the Spanish colony of Puerto Rico, whose defenders surrendered after token resistance.

In the Pacific, a U.S. cruiser began shelling Guam. The hapless Spaniards on that isolated island did not even know a war was on. They rowed out to the ship and apologized for not having the cannons necessary to return the “salute.”

In August, U.S. troops, supported by naval bombardment, seized Manila after light resistance, unaware that Spain had already signed a peace protocol.

Under the final treaty, Puerto Rico, Guam, and the Philippines became possessions of the United States, which paid Spain $20 million — on a take-it-or-leave-it basis — as compensation. In July, the United States also annexed Hawaii — though not a Spanish colony, it was absorbed during “expansion fever.”

Contradictions

To justify expelling Spain from Cuba, some congressional interventionists invoked the Monroe Doctrine. Declared by President James Monroe in 1823, the doctrine stated that America would view future European interference in the Western Hemisphere as aggression.

However, Monroe did not apply the doctrine to existing colonies like Cuba. Furthermore, the doctrine was intrinsically isolationist, affirming that nations should remain in their own spheres. By what logical consistency, then, could the United States overtake lands as distant as the Philippines? Americans were told we required overseas possessions to “protect our interests,” but why couldn’t Spain have that same privilege?

American soldiers were told they were “fighting colonialism” in Cuba, yet by usurping Spain’s colonies we became a colonial power ourselves. Calling them “possessions” was essentially an exercise in semantics.

Americans were also told we must fight for Cubans’ “self-determination.” But when the Filipinos requested the same right, it was refused. U.S. troops spent four years suppressing a Filipino independence movement. Forty-two hundred U.S. soldiers and 20,000 Filipino insurgents died in the fighting. Ironically, in the Philippines, when American General J. Franklin Bell realized rural people were aiding the rebels, he ordered them into concentrated zones. Thus the United States adapted the same strategy it condemned when employed by the Spanish in Cuba.

A few Americans recognized the hypocrisies. Massachusetts Senator George Hoar stated that “if we are to govern subjects and vassal States, trampling as we do it on our own great Charter which recognizes alike the liberty and dignity of individual manhood, then let us resist this thing in the beginning, and let us resist it to the death.” Delaware Senator George Gray warned that the treaty with Spain “introduces European politics and the entangling alliances against which Washington and all American statesmen have protested. It will make necessary a navy equal to the largest of powers [and] a greatly increased military establishment … multiply occasions for dangerous complications with foreign nations, and increase burdens of taxation.” The newly formed Anti-Imperialist League declared: “We regret that it has become necessary in the land of Washington and Lincoln to reaffirm that all men, of whatever race or color, are entitled to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. We maintain that governments derive their just powers from the consent of the governed.”

These voices were drowned out as flags waved to speeches about America becoming a “world power,” justified by our “Manifest Destiny.”

Behind the Scenes

One can better understand the war by following actions of National City Bank, forerunner of today’s Citibank. National City was America’s most powerful bank, with a board including representatives of the Rockefeller, Morgan, and Rothschild interests. Historian Ferdinand Lundberg noted: “National City Bank during McKinley’s incumbency was, significantly, more closely involved in Administration affairs than any other bank.”

To finance the war, Assistant Treasury Secretary Frank Vanderlip negotiated a $200 million loan from National City Bank. After the war, the bank made Vanderlip its president. In that capacity he participated in the infamous Jekyll Island meeting, where private bankers secretly plotted creation of the Federal Reserve Bank.

A new tax was announced to fund the war (or, practically speaking, to reimburse National City Bank). Since the Supreme Court had ruled an income tax unconstitutional in 1895, a federal excise tax was levied on telephone service. The tax remained in force for over a century, until it was repealed in 2006.

More than loan interest was at stake. Sugar seems ordinary today, but long ago its profitability earned the nickname “white gold” — much as oil, dominated by the Rockefellers’ Standard Oil, was called “black gold.” Lundberg writes of the Spanish-American War that “the Rockefeller-Stillman National City Bank benefited most directly from it, for Cuba, the Philippines, and, indeed, all of Latin America soon afterward became dotted with National City branches, and the Cuban sugar industry gravitated into National City’s hands.” William Guy Carr affirmed in Pawns in the Game: “National City Bank owned and controlled Cuba’s sugar industry when the war ended.” Mark Twain wrote:
How our hearts burned with indignation against the atrocious Spaniards.… But when the smoke was over, the dead buried and the cost of the war came back to the people in an increase in the price of commodities and rent — that is, when we sobered up from our patriotic spree — it suddenly dawned on us that the cause of the Spanish-American War was the price of sugar.
Hawaii and the Philippines also yielded huge sugar revenues, and were steps toward a larger economic target: China. By 1899, McKinley already proclaimed his “Open Door” policy, demanding that European nations grant the United States equal access to Chinese ports.

Major General Smedley Butler was, at the time of his death (1940), the most decorated Marine in American history. In his book War Is a Racket he revealed:
I have spent 34 years in active service as a member of the Marine Corps. And during that period I spent most of my time being a high-class muscle man for big business, for Wall Street and for the bankers. In short, I was a racketeer for capitalism. I helped make Mexico safe for American oil interests in 1914. I helped make Haiti and Cuba a decent place for the National City Bank to collect revenues.
Nevertheless, the war disabled opposition that had been simmering against Wall Street monopolists. Thanks to press propaganda, “Spain” replaced “Morgan and Rockefeller” as the enemy. The rising Populist Party was neutralized. After the 1896 elections, it ceased to play a significant role in American politics. Distinctions between the Democratic and Republican parties, both of whom supported the war, continued fading.

Correspondingly, the war was exploited to consolidate the North and South, which animosity had divided since the War between the States and Reconstruction. McKinley cleverly appointed ex-Confederate generals such as Joseph Wheeler and Thomas Rosser, along with old Union officer William Shafter, who commanded the expeditionary force to Cuba. Having Southerners fight alongside Yankees would rebuild the cohesiveness needed to make America’s military a world police force.

Birth of the Anglo-American Establishment

Few know that the war inaugurated a U.S.-British alliance that began dissipating the aversion most Americans still held toward their former colonial ruler. Of the European powers, Britain alone sided with America during the war, and provided covert assistance. So strong was the partnership that Germany’s Kaiser Wilhelm II called it “the American-British Society for International Theft and Warmongering.”

In 1896, when Spain sought support from a coalition of the European powers, Britain’s ambassador to Spain, Henry Drummond Wolff, sabotaged the plan by leaking it to the U.S. government. Shortly before war began, Maria Cristina, Regent of Spain, wrote to England’s Queen Victoria (her aunt), imploring British solidarity with Spain. But Victoria politely declined at the insistence of Britain’s powerful prime minister, Lord Salisbury. Before the invasion of Puerto Rico, the land was spied out by U.S. Lieutenant Henry Whitney — disguised as a British officer. When Manila was bombarded in August 1898, British warships positioned themselves between Dewey’s ships and a nearby German fleet.

Before the war, Britain’s Colonial Secretary Joseph Chamberlain declared: “I should look with pleasure to the possibility of the Stars and Stripes and the Union Jack floating together in defence [sic] of a common cause sanctioned by humanity and justice.”And with the war under way, he said that “terrible as war may be, even war itself would be cheaply purchased if, in a great and noble cause, the Stars and Stripes and the Union Jack should wave together over an Anglo-Saxon alliance.” As relations warmed, a new organization formed in July 1898: the Anglo-American League, with branches in the United States and England. The league led to the founding of the secretive Pilgrims Society in 1902.

Students of conspiracy and the “new world order” often hear of the Council on Foreign Relations, Britain’s Royal Institute of International Affairs, the Trilateral Commission, and Bilderbergers. Receiving less attention, though predating them all, is the Pilgrims Society. Ostensibly formed to promote goodwill between the United States and Britain, its membership consists of “upper crust” from government, business, banking, and media in both countries. Members today include luminaries ranging from David Rockefeller to Queen Elizabeth II. Its earliest members included Spanish-American War generals Joseph Wheeler and Leonard Wood, along with a “who’s who” of Wall Street monopolists and Federal Reserve founders — John D. Rockefeller, Jr.; Andrew Carnegie; Paul Warburg; Jacob Schiff; Nelson Aldrich; and Frank Vanderlip. J.P. Morgan was the society’s first vice president. In Britain, early members included Lord Salisbury, powerful financier Nathan Rothschild, Bank of England governor Montagu Norman, world government advocate Philip Kerr, and Winston Churchill (whose 1895 visit to Cuba sparked controversy in England, where he was accused of meddling in non-British affairs). The Pilgrims Society’s motto is “Hic et Ubique” (here and everywhere), an evident complement to “Ubique,” the word on the logo of the Council on Foreign Relations — which many American members of the Pilgrims Society have belonged to.

Legacy

The “splendid little war” wasn’t so splendid. Populism’s threat to the stagnating Democratic and Republican parties was foiled; Wall Street monopolism strengthened. No longer was our military restricted to national defense; instead it became a global policeman, righting wrongs overseas. Many of these “wrongs” would be inventions or exaggerations of the press, which honed its skill at reporting phony atrocities during the Spanish-American War. A new Anglo-American alliance subverted the natural isolationism of transatlantic boundaries, entangling the militaries of both countries in common causes to this day.

Teddy Roosevelt acquitted himself well in combat, and swiftly turned his fame to political advantage. By November 1898, he had already been elected New York’s governor, and three years later became president of the United States. His distant cousin, Franklin D. Roosevelt, followed a hauntingly similar path. Like Teddy, FDR was assistant secretary of the navy during a controversial naval incident (the Lusitania disaster) that helped propel us into war. And like Teddy, FDR became governor of New York and then president.

The ultimate loser of the Spanish-American War was Cuba herself. In the 1950s, Marxist revolutionary Fidel Castro emulated Máximo Gómez in trying to seize the island. The American public had still not grown wise to Yellow Journalism tactics. William Randolph Hearst was succeeded by television’s Ed Sullivan, who praised Castro as “Cuba’s George Washington,” and the New York Times, which lauded his “strong ideas of liberty, democracy, social justice.”

After becoming dictator in 1959, Castro converted the island into a communist prison, and soon aimed Soviet nuclear missiles at the United States. Would Americans have fought in Cuba in 1898, had they known it would ultimately lead to deadly threats against their grandchildren? Today it is not so much the Maine we must remember, but history’s true meaning.
Sidebar: What Sank the Maine?
The original Naval Court of Inquiry, headed by Captain William Sampson, concluded that the Maine sank when a mine detonated, causing the ship’s forward magazines to explode. The court of inquiry based this on eyewitness testimony of two explosions, as well as inward bending of part of the hull. However, it did not fix responsibility for the mine.

The Spanish wanted to undertake a joint investigation with the United States. When refused, they conducted their own inquiry, which attributed the explosion to a fire in a coal bunker adjacent to the Maine’s munitions stores. They cited lack of evidence for things normally seen in mine detonation, such as a column of water, dead fish, etc.

In 1911, the Maine’s wreckage was raised and subjected to a new court of inquiry headed by Rear Admiral Charles Vreeland. It confirmed Sampson’s conclusion of an external device; the wreck was subsequently taken out to sea and scuttled.

In 1974, Admiral Hyman Rickover conducted a private investigation, finding that a coal bunker fire caused the explosion. In 1998, National Geographic commissioned a study using computer models that blamed a mine. In 2002, the History Channel produced a documentary in which scientists reconstructed part of the hull. Their verdict was an accidental coal bunker fire, concluding that the hull’s inward bending resulted from inrushing water.

None of these investigations seem totally satisfying, as they explore how rather than who. Although coal bunker fires did occur on some U.S. warships of that era, none blew up. By what coincidence was the Maine the only ship to so explode, while in Havana Harbor, and just when cries for war peaked? The bunker in question had working fire alarms, and the Maine had a competent crew.

With a crew of 355, a bomb would have been difficult to plant unnoticed. As the explosion occurred after nightfall, it is possible someone used the cover of darkness to float an external mine to the Maine. Who had motive? Spain’s actions and internal documents prove it wished to avoid war at all costs. The primary beneficiaries were the Wall Street establishment and Cuba’s revolutionaries. The latter were using dynamite to destroy trains and bridges. They surely knew that if the ship met disaster, America would likely win their war. In Who Sank the Maine? historian Thomas Fleming noted that 50 to 100 pounds of dynamite, exploding externally, could have sufficed to detonate the Maine’s munitions.

Police stops in NYC stirs safety vs. rights debate - Wall Street Journal


Police stops in NYC stirs safety vs. rights debate
Wall Street Journal
Five years later, he sat with other Hispanic and black teenagers with similar stories at Make the Road, a community organization in a Brooklyn neighborhood of taco trucks, coconut ice cream vendors, and Puerto Rican flags peeking from grimy windows ...

and more »

Rare Genetic Disease That Mostly Affects Puerto Ricans Is Topic Of Film


courant.com/health/connecticut/hc-hps-disease-20120808,0,2883728.story

Courant.com

Rare Genetic Disease That Mostly Affects Puerto Ricans Is Topic Of Film

Documentary To Be Shown Saturday At Discovery Museum In Bridgeport

By INGRID ADAMOW, iadamow@courant.com
The Hartford Courant
5:09 PM EDT, August 8, 2012
At birth, Yeida Soto says, she was "slapped with a label" — albinism.
Growing up, she experienced issues with bleeding, but doctors never connected them to her skin disorder, she said, because "doctors didn't know much about albinism to begin with, and besides, who would?"
It wasn't until she was researching information about albinos' impaired eyesight that Soto, 34, found information about Hermansky-Pudlak Syndrome, a rare genetic disease whose most common symptoms are albinism, bleeding disorders, gastrointestinal difficulties and sometimes fatal pulmonary fibrosis.
"When I read it, I'm like, this is me to a T," Soto said.
Soto, who lives in New Britain, said her doctor initially dismissed her suspicions, but she perservered, and seven years ago at age 27, Soto was diagnosed with HPS.
"I had to be my own advocate because so little was known about it," she said.
The syndrome — which occurs in one in 500,000 to one in 1 million people worldwide — is the subject of a documentary film that will be shown Saturday in Bridgeport.
Soto said knowledge about HPS is still "in its infancy." Patients are sometimes diagnosed with albinism and other unrelated illnesses, or, because they don't fit a certain image of what a person with albinism might look like, they go under the radar entirely.
"People think of white hair, red eyes — the way an animal with albinism would look," she said. "But we have dark-skinned, black-haired people."
The disease is most prevalent in people of Puerto Rican descent, and one in every 1,800 Puerto Rico natives carries the HPS gene. Both Soto's parents are from Puerto Rico.
Heather Kirkwood, vice president of the nonprofit Hermansky-Pudlak Syndrome Network, said, "Even in areas where there's a big Puerto Rican community, you'd think they'd have known about it, but they don't."
As of 2010, Connecticut had the highest percentage of Puerto Rican-American residents of any state, at 7.1 percent, and the city of Hartford has a thriving Hispanic population — about 45 percent — many of whom are Puerto Rican-American.
Soto, who is actively involved in the HPS Network, said that "four or five" people from Connecticut with HPS are currently connected through the organization. Because of underdiagnosis and misdiagnosis, she said, other people in the state probably have the disease.
Kirkwood, an HPS patient whose great-grandfather was Puerto Rican, said that based on the network's research there "definitely" are people in Connecticut who "don't know they have it."
The network will screen "Rare," a documentary about three HPS patients, including Kirkwood, and their experiences in a drug trial to treat some of their symptoms, Saturday at 6 p.m. at Bridgeport's Discovery Science Museum.
The HPS Network advocates testing to identify people who are undiagnosed or misdiagnosed and uses the Internet and social media to unite and inform those who are already aware of their disease.
"We're unique because we're so rare," Soto said. "We're sprinkled all over the world. It's nice to be able to keep in touch over the Internet."
The network also presents yearly conferences in New York and Puerto Rico, where doctors who have studied the disease present the latest research and answer questions.
The network's members face the challenges and successes of navigating the uncharted territories of a rare disease together.
"For a number of us, it can be deadly. Unfortunately, we've lost several people and that's hard," Soto said. But, there are also the stories of successful lung transplants, which, she added, "gives you hope for your situation."
"Rare" will be shown Saturday at 6 p.m. at the Discovery Science Museum, 4450 Park Ave., Bridgeport. For information about the screening, call 203-522-3599. For information about the Hermansky-Pudlak Syndrome Network and HPS, go to hpsnetwork.org or call 800-789-9HPS.


Hermansky-Pudlak Syndrome - Google Search

Friday, August 10, 2012

8/10/2012

  • Puerto Rico the 51st state? Not likely. - World - Macleans.ca - Thursday, August 09, 2012 - Mika Rekai


  • On Nov. 6, Puerto Rico is holding a referendum on the territory’s tricky political status with the United States. Puerto Rican support for formal statehood has been growing steadily in recent years, with polls showing 41 per cent want the island to become the 51st state.
    Yet on the mainland, the issue makes for toxic politics. The status of Spanish—which is spoken by 95 per cent of Puerto Ricans—as an official language is unpopular with conservative Republicans. And recession-weary Americans are unlikely to be enthused about any extension of national entitlement programs such as medicare and social security to an island plagued by poverty and joblessness.
    President Barack Obama has admitted that a majority vote would not be enough to start the process of bringing Puerto Rico into the union. Congress, he says, will wait for a “stronger inclination” before taking action.
    Few Americans are tuning in to Puerto Rico’s debate, and the Caribbean protectorate is largely deciding its future without mainland influence. But should they vote to join the union, Puerto Ricans, who have U.S. citizenship but no U.S. political representation, may find they are not as welcome as some U.S. political leaders would have them believe.








    The Inconvenient Truth about Privatization of Correctional Health Care Revealed
    Physician uncovers what happens behind the walls of private health care facilities

    St. Augustine, FL (PRWEB) August 10, 2012
    Xlibris, the print-on-demand self-publishing services provider, announced today the release of Greed Versus Love: An Inconvenient Truth About the Privatization of Correctional Health Care, a book by Raquel Sanchez-Castro, made available through Xlibris.
    This book narrates the experience of a physician working in the correctional system. It describes the difference in the modus operandum and the attitude of the two types of administrative personnel (public and private correctional health care). With true clinical cases, the author uncovers the sad reality of the corruption existing in the private correctional facilities, where the main priority is the profit and not the patient.
    A gripping journey of a young Puerto Rican girl with a proclivity for healing to a practicing physician in an American penal system, Greed Versus Love: An Inconvenient Truth About the Privatization of Correctional Health Care will find readers thinking about those who suffer from illnesses and diseases that are too often left with a pill, when they need surgery, or an aspirin, when they need a more powerful medication. For more information on this book, interested parties may log on to http://www.Xlibris.com.
    About the Author
    Raquel Sanchez-Castro, MD was born in San Juan, Puerto Rico, on January 28, 1971. In 1995, she completed her BS in Natural Sciences with a Major in Biology. At the age of twenty-nine, she graduated from medical school in Dominican Republic. She worked one year in a HIV clinic and five years in the emergency room. From 2005 to 2006, she completed a training program in Chinese medicine and acupuncture and migrated to Florida. Since 2007, she has been working in the correctional system as a physician.
    Greed Versus Love * by Raquel Sanchez-Castro
    An Inconvenient Truth About the Privatization of Correctional Health Care
    Publication Date: July 14, 2010
    Trade Paperback; $15.99; 72 pages; 978-1-4535-1236-4
    Trade Hardback; $24.99; 72 pages; 978-1-4535-1237-1
    eBook; $9.99; 978-1-4535-1238-8
    Members of the media who wish to review this book may request a complimentary paperback copy by contacting the publisher at (888) 795-4274 x. 7879. To purchase copies of the book for resale, please fax Xlibris at (610) 915-0294 or call (888) 795-4274 x. 7879.
    For more information on self-publishing or marketing with Xlibris, visit http://www.Xlibris.com. To receive a free publishing guide, please call (888) 795-4274.


    Puerto Rico, Drug Corridor to the Mainland United States

    Published August 09, 2012
    | Fox News Latino
    On the western coast of Puerto Rico, it’s wheels up for yet another night of high-tech hunting. Hunting, for cocaine smugglers.
    “This boat looks interesting,” says officer Creighton Skeen, as he sits onboard a specially designed US Customs and Border Protection airplane. He and his partner typically sit alone, dimly lit in green, staring at and analyzing their wide-screens, which show the boats below.

    On these routine missions, officer Skeen uses infra-red cameras, radar and one-the-ground intelligence to alert CBP 4 engine fast boats on the water when and where to interdict. This night, they’re focused on the 60 mile stretch between Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic.
    "Before, we didn't' see as many mother ships coming to Puerto Rico,” says Skeen. “Now, they're becoming ordinary."
    And almost as ordinary, enormous busts like the one this week along the coast of Ponce. So much cocaine, it took a production line of people to haul heavy bag after heavy bag from the police cargo van to the table. Some of the cocaine bricks were labeled with a sticker showing a drawing of a threatening tiger, to discern which drug dealing organization supplied the coke, and who is to be paid the $20,000 for the kilo. By the time it arrives in the states, that kilo sells for $25,000.
    This bust in total, “approximately 1000 kilos,” says Pedro Jasner, Agent in Charge for the Drug Enforcement Administration, “with a street value of 80-million dollars."
    The US Commonwealth is booming as a trans-shipment point for the South American drug cartels. Because once the drugs get here, they’re much more easily smuggled into the US mainland as “domestic cargo,” with far fewer inspections.
    But the eyes of US law enforcement are watching. CBP officers also operate in the bowels of the San Juan Post Office Processing Center, where the x-ray and cut open suspect parcels headed from the US Virgin Islands to the US, and vice versa. These mail inspections reveal the multi-billion dollar drug trade there, as well. In one box destined for South Carolina, three tightly-wrapped “burritos,” a package, within a package, within a package. Masked with laundry detergent, the chemical test confirms the inner package’s white powder is indeed cocaine. Another package, once cut open, immediately engulfs the room in a distinctive aroma.
    “Most of the time it’s marijuana, cocaine and weapons,” says CBP Supervisor Carlos Morell.
    But the bulk of the explosion in smuggling is coming in via boat, like the 1000 kilos captured off Ponce. Most of the drugs, agents say, are destined for the US East Coast, mainly entering the states through the Miami and New York City regions.
    “We need more resources and this is the proof,” says Hector Pesquera, Puerto Rico Police Superintendent.
    "We're not just saying it, we're showing it. 80% of this, 800 kilos, would have been going to the northeast corridor."
    What Puerto Rico’s police and Governor have been calling for is initiating the Caribbean Border Initiative, more money and resources dedicated to reducing the flow of drugs from South America to the US Mainland. The Southwest Border Initiative along the Mexican border resulted in a doubling—if not tripling—of officers there. But due to apparent funding issues, the White House—which didn’t comment for this story--hasn’t committed.
    The consequence of the drug trade locally is surging crime, 70% of which is directly connected to drug gangs, according to police. Last year there were more than 1100 murders in Puerto Rico; this year, more than 500. The Puerto Rican murder rate is now 6 times higher than in the states.
    And for officer Skeen, flying above the boat traffic at midnight, for the time being, he sees no imminent change.
    "As long as there's a need--a demand--for Cocaine, we'll be seeing this. It's not going away."
    Phil Keating is national correspondent for Fox News Channel out of the Miami bureau.


    Read more: http://latino.foxnews.com/latino/news/2012/08/09/puerto-rico-drug-corridor-to-united-states/print#ixzz238oLzKRU


    Wednesday, August 8, 2012

    Link: Mike Nova: SWEET MANAHATTA - Very Short Stories

    Mike Nova: SWEET MANAHATTA - Very Short Stories: SWEET MANAHATTA - Very Short Stories ______________________________________________________________________________    Sweet ...

    8/8/12 - Puerto Rico police arrest 2 after finding 1,000 kilograms of cocaine in tanks on disabled boat | ACLU lawsuit targets new Puerto Rico penal code | Tropical Storm Ernesto strengthened into a hurricane | Five More Speakers Announced for Republican National ...| Puerto Rico: The Language Issue 2012

    Today Headlines


    By Associated Press, Published: August 7
    SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — Police in Puerto Rico have seized 1,000 kilograms (2,205 pounds) of cocaine aboard a boat that became disabled off the island’s south coast.
    Authorities say they discovered the drugs after a private boat owner called police and said he was towing the disabled boat when someone aboard a speedboat tried to stop him.
    A Tuesday statement from police says officers arrested two men aboard the 33-foot (10-meter) boat that had broken down. The statement says the cocaine was found in 32 gasoline storage tanks.
    Huffington Post
    SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — The ACLU has filed a lawsuit against Puerto Rico's police chief and justice secretary, saying the island's new penal code violates the constitutional right to freedom of expression. The lawsuit comes a week after Gov. Luis ...

    CaribBusiness: Tropical Storm #Ernesto strengthened into a hurricane and headed toward landfall near Mexico's border with Belize... http://t.co/9iTpr1Dv
    El Comité Nacional Republicano destacó que se centraría en el tema económico 

    Fortuño participará en convención republicana

    8 de agosto de 2012- Política, Puerto Rico-
    Será orador en actividad que se llevará a cabo en Tampa

    EL VOCERO / Archivo
    El gobernador Luis Fortuño participará de la Convención Republicana en Tampa como uno de los oradores especiales, anunció el presidente del Comité Nacional Republicano (RNC), Reince Priebus.
    Priebus indicó que Fortuño se ha ganado el reconocimiento y respeto dentro del Partido Republicano mediante su política económica y administración fiscal responsable.
    Por su parte, Fortuño agradeció al Comité Nacional Republicano porFortu tomar en cuenta a Puerto Rico. “Para mi es un gran honor haber sido elegido y poder ser parte de tan importante evento. Estoy convencido que junto a Mitt Romney y todo el liderato republicano, continuaremos aunando esfuerzos para lograr más y mejores beneficios para todas las familias puertorriqueñas”, indicó el Gobernador.
    Añadió a su vez que “Mitt Romney tiene la experiencia y un sólido plan que creará empleos y ayudará a los negocios a tener éxito en una economía reenergizada. Ofreceré ese mensaje a mi partido y al mundo en la convención nacional republicana de Tampa”, indicó Fortuño, quien cuenta con el sólido apoyo de los republicanos y de su candidato a la Presidencia.
    Asimismo, Fortuño aprovechó la oportunidad para destacar la importancia de que todos salgamos a votar el 6 de noviembre en contra del estatus territorial. “Es hora de que una vez y por todas resolvamos el problema de desigualdad en relación al estatus que vive nuestra Isla y logremos el crecimiento y progreso que todos nos merecemos como ciudadanos americanos”.

    Five More Speakers Announced for Republican National ...

    Tonight on FOX News, Reince Preibus announced five more names of speakers at the upcoming RNC: Gov. Scott Walker (WI); AG Pam Bondi (FL); AG Sam Olens (GA); Gov. Luis Fortuno (PR); Senate Nominee Ted Cruz (TX) ...


    Puerto Rico: The Language Issue 2012 This is an investigation on the issue of language in Puerto Rico and its relationship with statehood. From: aaher03 Views: 59 2 ratingsTime: 06:06 More in People & Blogs
    _____________________________________________________________________________

       El Vocero de Puerto Rico   Maunabo (Foto:boriken365.com)
     
       El Vocero de Puerto Rico   Vocero.com/impreso   Www.Vocero.com/printed

     _____________________________________________________________________________

    Mike Nova's starred items





    Puerto Rico police arrest 2 after finding 1000 kilograms of cocaine in tanks ...
    Washington Post
    Puerto Rico police arrest 2 after finding 1000 kilograms of cocaine in tanks on disabled boat. Smaller Text Larger Text Text Size; Print · E-mail · Reprints. By Associated Press, AP. Authorities say they discovered the drugs after a private boat owner ...





    Puerto Rico police find cocaine on disabled boat
    Huffington Post
    SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — Police in Puerto Rico have seized 1000 kilograms (2205 pounds) of cocaine aboard a boat that became disabled off the island's south coast. Authorities say they discovered the drugs after a private boat owner called police and ...

    via Puerto Rico News - Archive Links's Facebook Wall by Puerto Rico News - Archive Links on 8/8/12

    PUERTO RICO NEWS: 8/8/12
    prnewslinks.blogspot.com
    Comprehensive collection of newslinks to Puerto Rico, The Caribbean and The Latino Culture - Amplia colección de newslinks a Puerto Rico, el Caribe y la Cultura Latina

    MayagüezHome of the only Zoo in the island
    PonceSecond largest city
    BayamónThe island's second most populous city
    Wednesday, August 08, 2012

    This post has been generated by Page2RSS

    via Financial Times's Facebook Wall by Financial Times on 8/8/12
    Read for free on ft.com: more people now access the web on mobile phones than PCs in China, home to the world’s largest population of internet users. North America and Europe are not far behind in making that digital switchover. This presents a big challenge to today’s internet leaders – Google and Facebook, as well as Yahoo and Microsoft – that emerged when most of their customers typically used the web while sitting in front of a large, static screen. http://on.ft.com/OQZgpH



    _______________________________________________________________________________

    OPTIMISMO Y REtoS AL INICIO DE CLASES

    OPTIMISMO Y REtoS AL INICIO DE CLASES

    El nuevo curso escolar, que en el sistema público comienza hoy, se perfila lleno de retos y nuevas propuestas educativas que pondrán a prueba una vez más la voluntad y la capacidad operacional del Departamento de Educación y que precisan del compromiso entusiasta de padres y maestros.

    Fianza, racismo y derechos fundamentales

    VÍCTOR RIVERA HERNÁNDEZUno de mis cursos preferidos en los seminarios que imparto, es el de “Discrimen en el empleo”. La realidad objetiva es que este tipo de discrimen refleja otro de mayor alcance que

    Ciberodio

    Raúl J. Feliciano OrtizNo podemos decir categóricamente que Internet ha democratizado el mundo. Después de todo, el 67% de la población mundial no tiene acceso a esta tecnología. Sin embargo, no se pued

    El LUNES DI vueltas con Tommy, corrí con Wesley, tiré puños con Verdejo, volví a correr y a saltar con Culson, y lloré con Félix. Ya bajé revoluciones y estoy súper contenta con el logro de todos los atletas, en especial con los nuestros.
    Pero, -sí, hay un pero- a pesar de la alegría también siento decepción. Todo ese orgullo de ser boricua se transformó en vergüenza ajena al ver y escuchar cómo en cuestión de segundos se bajó al ídolo del pedestal. Se humilló y criticó. Se habló de lo que perdió, no de todo lo que ganó. Si eso es con un atleta, no quiero imaginar cómo será el ambiente familiar de esas personas en momentos de crisis.
    Tantas veces escuché: “Dios ayuda a Culson para que gane esa medalla de oro que tanto necesita Puerto Rico”. No, Puerto Rico no necesita “esa medalla” para salir a flote. Es cierto que por un ratito la euforia nos hace olvidar la realidad en la que vivimos, pero y luego, ¿qué?
    Se necesitan personas que sigan el ejemplo de Culson; que den el máximo. Personas responsables, disciplinadas, comprometidas, esperanzadas, positivas, trabajadoras, honradas, solidarias, con valores y unidas en comunidad para que nuestro orgullo como pueblo se haga notar.
    Que el peso de ganar una medalla no caiga solamente sobre los hombros de estas estupendas personas que sacan la cara por el país, sino que cada uno de nosotros haga lo que nos corresponde para ganar medallas todos los días.
    Representar a un país es un orgullo. Hacerlo con responsabilidad, esmero, amor y sacrificio tiene mucho más valor.
    Ana Carolina Reyes
    Cada vez que se habla de la doble vara en el sistema de justicia a mí se me hierve la sangre. No tengo dudas que personas con dinero tendrán una mejor defensa. De eso no hay duda. It’s all about money!
    Lo que no dicen es que las personas que usan asistencia legal, en su mayoría, no trabajan, cogen cupones, no pagan casa, tienen subsidio de luz, agua, internet y hasta celular gratis.
    El que trabaja y paga impuestos no tiene derecho a eso. En este país el 40% mantiene al otro 60%.
    ¿Dónde está la doble vara? Por favor, si van a opinar de una doble vara que sea en todos los aspectos. Es muy fácil tener una opinión de esa manera.
    En este país las personas opinan de todo sin tener la pericia necesaria y algunos, hasta creen que saben más que el que estudió de esa materia.
    Que se haga justicia. Si usted tiene libertad, dele las gracias a un soldado.
    Alfonso Serrano, MD
    Gurabo
    El lunes vi el programa “Juntos y revueltos”, que transmite a las 9:00 p.m., América CV Network (canal 24). En el programa participan Jorge Castro, Frankie Jay y Haydeé Rosario junto al joven Marcos Brenes, quien es hijo del periodista Ramón “Papo” Brenes y estará a cargo de la producción y presentación de historias con un ángulo investigativo sin ser amarillista.
    Felicito a este excelente programa que tuvo la capacidad de informar, hacer comedia sin caer en lo chabacano ni ser sensacionalista. Jorge Castro nos ha demostrado, una vez más, lo talentoso que es y ahora en esta nueva faceta de presentador se nota que vienes de la Academia La Providencia, en Cupey, cuna de campeones.
    Le deseamos éxitos en esta producción puertorriqueña no enlatada.
    Félix Daniel Torres Quiles
    San Juan
    El boricua ponceño ganó. Ganó al llegar a una competencia de tan alto nivel; al poder correr venciendo obstáculos. Al mantener serenidad en los ‘heats’ anteriores.
    Su triunfo está en el Pueblo que lo supo admirar, respetar y seguir su trayectoria. En el terreno de juego ante millones de espectadores lució su capacidad para saltar los obstáculos. Ganó.
    Se comenta que rozó o tumbó la séptima valla, eso conlleva atraso en tiempo que pudo hacer la diferencia. Independientemente, de que no haya ganado la medalla de oro -creo que se exageró la nota en afirmar que estaba segura- ganó la admiración y respeto de todo un pueblo, Puerto Rico.
    Al hermano quisqueyano, mis respetos. Eres del Caribe, eres latino.
    Prof. José A. Giovannetti Román
    Yauco
    Ad hoc significa ‘apropiado especialmente para un fin’.
    2047
    4006
    1984
    2319

    ¿Crees que existe doble vara en la la administración de la justicia?

    Sí, porque las personas de alto nivel económico tienen influencias para lograr trato favorable
    No, porque la justicia está mal administrada y perjudica a todos por igual.
    Sí, porque las personas de clase alta pueden gastar más dinero en abogados y recursos legales
    No, porque el Departamento de Justicia y sus fiscales son profesionales que tratan a todos del mismo modo

    This post has been generated by Page2RSS

    _____________________________________________________________________________

    Puerto Rico - Google News


    "Puerto Rico - Google News" bundle created by Mike Nova








    Puerto Rico police arrest 2 after finding 1000 kilograms of cocaine in tanks ...
    Washington Post
    Puerto Rico police arrest 2 after finding 1000 kilograms of cocaine in tanks on disabled boat. Smaller Text Larger Text Text Size; Print · E-mail · Reprints. By Associated Press, AP. Authorities say they discovered the drugs after a private boat owner ...

    Puerto Rico police arrest 2 after finding 1,000 kilograms of cocaine in tanks on disabled boat
     By Associated Press, Published: August 7
    SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — Police in Puerto Rico have seized 1,000 kilograms (2,205 pounds) of cocaine aboard a boat that became disabled off the island’s south coast.
    Authorities say they discovered the drugs after a private boat owner called police and said he was towing the disabled boat when someone aboard a speedboat tried to stop him.
    A Tuesday statement from police says officers arrested two men aboard the 33-foot (10-meter) boat that had broken down. The statement says the cocaine was found in 32 gasoline storage tanks.







    Puerto Rico police find cocaine on disabled boat
    Huffington Post
    SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — Police in Puerto Rico have seized 1000 kilograms (2205 pounds) of cocaine aboard a boat that became disabled off the island's south coast. Authorities say they discovered the drugs after a private boat owner called police and ...

    via puerto rico - Google Blog Search by Rider Magazine on 8/7/12
    Sometimes you just need to take a ride. Even if circumstances aren't optimal and those around you react with, “You want to do what?” That's how I found myself on Puerto Rico Route 191.










    Puerto Rico police find cocaine on disabled boat
    Huffington Post
    SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — Police in Puerto Rico have seized 1000 kilograms (2205 pounds) of cocaine aboard a boat that became disabled off the island's south coast. Authorities say they discovered the drugs after a private boat owner called police and ...










    Puerto Rico police find cocaine on disabled boat
    KCAU
    SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) - Police in Puerto Rico have seized 1000 kilograms (2205 pounds) of cocaine aboard a boat that became disabled off the island's south coast. Authorities say they discovered the drugs after a private boat owner called police ...










    Puerto Rico police find cocaine on disabled boat
    Huffington Post
    SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — Police in Puerto Rico have seized 1000 kilograms (2205 pounds) of cocaine aboard a boat that became disabled off the island's south coast. Authorities say they discovered the drugs after a private boat owner called police and ...










    ACLU lawsuit targets new Puerto Rico penal code
    WBOC TV 16
    One of China's biggest murder trials in years starts Thursday but local residents have no idea that a courtroom in this grimy industrial city is about to become the center of China's political universe.More. One of China's most politically charged ...

    and more »










    3 Puerto Rico reggaeton singers under DEA scrutiny
    San Jose Mercury News
    Silicon Valley Community Newspapers: Campbell Reporter · Cupertino Courier · Fremont Bulletin · Los Gatos Weekly Times · Milpitas Post · Pacifica Tribune ... SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico—Three Puerto Rican reggaeton stars have come under U.S. scrutiny after ...
    Arcangel, Jowell y Randy Under DEA Investigation for Ties With Drug TraffickerFox News

    all 84 news articles »

    via Gov. Louis Fortuño - Google Blog Search by guguki515 on 8/7/12
    “I expect the people of Puerto Rico will decide like [Governor Luis Fortuno] feels, to become a state, and I can tell you that I will work with him that if that vote comes out in the favor of statehood we will go through the process in Washington to ...










    ACLU lawsuit targets new Puerto Rico penal code
    Huffington Post
    SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — The ACLU has filed a lawsuit against Puerto Rico's police chief and justice secretary, saying the island's new penal code violates the constitutional right to freedom of expression. The lawsuit comes a week after Gov. Luis ...

    CLEVELAND - Chanting "O-BA-MA, O-BA-MA," a feisty contingent of the recently formed Latinos for Obama marched in the front of the annual Puerto Rican Parade here Sunday, right behind Congresswoman Marcia Fudge ...

    ... looking at the Illegal vote or the Black vote? Ryan or Rubio under any other situ would be great but we are trying to get rid of BHO who is a “Faux Bro” and the black community hasn't been convinced as yet. ... US has a. “Terra firma” policy towards Cubans. If Cubans reach US soil, they are automatically granted asylum Refugee status,due to Communist Cuba. Cubans and Puerto Ricans cannot be illegal. Its all about MEXICO. Marco Rubio (Cuban American) and ...

    via puerto rico politics - Google Blog Search by Political Blog Editor on 8/7/12
    Jorge Bonilla, who edits the “El Tercer Riel” blog about Hispanic politics and has his pulse on politics in Central Florida, told Breitbart News that the prospect of a Puerto Rican-American Republican as an opponent scares ...










    Puerto Rico comes back, earns Colt World Series final berth
    Journal and Courier
    That knack will set up a second consecutive CWS championship game between Los Gatos, Calif., and Puerto Rico after the Caribbean Zone champions rallied late Tuesday night for a 12-8 victory against North Zone champion Ottawa, Ill., in front of 1309 fans.
    CWS title game matchup setWLFI.com

    all 3 news articles »










    Puerto Rico comes back, earns Colt World Series final berth
    Journal and Courier
    That knack will set up a second consecutive CWS championship game between Los Gatos, Calif., and Puerto Rico after the Caribbean Zone champions rallied late Tuesday night for a 12-8 victory against North Zone champion Ottawa, Ill., in front of 1309 fans.
    CWS title game matchup setWLFI.com

    all 3 news articles »










    MLB to host amateur tourney in Dominican Republic
    MLB.com
    Major League Baseball announced on Tuesday that it will host a four-day tournament that will feature amateur teams from the Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico and USA Baseball in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, starting Sunday. The eight-game ...

    and more »










    Heritage Global Partners to Conduct Telephonic and Online Auctions of Bumble ...
    MarketWatch (press release)
    MAYAGUEZ, Puerto Rico & SAN DIEGO, Aug 07, 2012 (BUSINESS WIRE) -- Heritage Global Partners ("HGP"), a global leader in asset advisory and auction services and a wholly owned subsidiary of Counsel RB Capital (otcqb:CRBN), today announced that ...
    Heritage Global Partners To Conduct Telephonic And Online Auctions Of ...TheStreet.com (press release)

    all 5 news articles »










    Puerto Rico comes back, earns Colt World Series final berth
    Journal and Courier
    That knack will set up a second consecutive CWS championship game between Los Gatos, Calif., and Puerto Rico after the Caribbean Zone champions rallied late Tuesday night for a 12-8 victory against North Zone champion Ottawa, Ill., in front of 1309 fans.
    CWS title game matchup setWLFI.com

    all 3 news articles »










    MLB to host amateur tourney in Dominican Republic
    MLB.com
    Major League Baseball announced on Tuesday that it will host a four-day tournament that will feature amateur teams from the Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico and USA Baseball in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, starting Sunday. The eight-game ...

    and more »










    Heritage Global Partners to Conduct Telephonic and Online Auctions of Bumble ...
    MarketWatch (press release)
    MAYAGUEZ, Puerto Rico & SAN DIEGO, Aug 07, 2012 (BUSINESS WIRE) -- Heritage Global Partners ("HGP"), a global leader in asset advisory and auction services and a wholly owned subsidiary of Counsel RB Capital (otcqb:CRBN), today announced that ...
    Heritage Global Partners To Conduct Telephonic And Online Auctions Of ...TheStreet.com (press release)

    all 5 news articles »


    Lexington Herald Leader









    Fla. Puerto Ricans could play a key election role
    Lexington Herald Leader
    "The days where a presidential candidate could afford to ignore the Puerto Rican community are long gone - respect and attention are the new normal," said Andres W. Lopez, an attorney from the island and an Obama campaign adviser. Both candidates have ...

    ______________________________________________________________________________

    8/8/12 - Mike Nova's starred items

    via puerto rico news - Google Blog Search by unknown on 8/7/12
    Police in Puerto Rico have seized 1000 kilograms (2205 pounds) of cocaine aboard a boat that became disabled off the island's south coast.

    via YouTube Videos matching query: puerto rico by dannytux84 on 7/24/12
    Some pictures that show the beauty of Puerto Rico and why tourists don't have to be afraid to travel here. Marc Anthony singing "Preciosa (beautiful)"
    Views:302
    1ratings
    Time:05:32More inEntertainment

    via YouTube Videos matching query: puerto rico by VictorDeLeonII on 7/31/12
    Our Puerto Rico Trip
    Views:62
    2ratings
    Time:13:23More inPeople & Blogs

    via YouTube Videos matching query: puerto rico by RicosBrain on 8/4/12
    Inbox, S-IRL, Puerto Rico trip pictures, and channel guidance!
    Views:18532
    929ratings
    Time:09:50More inPeople & Blogs

    via The Wall Street Journal's Facebook Wall by The Wall Street Journal on 8/7/12
    Marvin Hamlisch wrote the music for "A Chorus Line," "The Sting," "The Way We Were," "Sophie's Choice" and many other classics. Today we got word he passed away, at 68. http://on.wsj.com/Rx1TS5

    Share your memories of the stories he brought to life, and his legacy.

    Photo: The Everett Collection


    via The Wall Street Journal's Facebook Wall by The Wall Street Journal on 8/7/12

    Wall Photos
    Grandma's new problem may be student debt. The U.S. is increasingly shrinking Social Security checks for retirees who fall behind on student loans:
    http://sm.wsj.com/QB6MIl

    This year, the government reduced the size of about 115,000 retirees' S.S. checks on those grounds. Many of the retirees are in debt because of their children or grandchildren's tuition payments.



    Mike Nova's starred items

    via The Wall Street Journal's Facebook Wall by The Wall Street Journal on 8/7/12
    Playing a musical instrument could make you smarter and improve your memory: http://sm.wsj.com/MhIF0S

    Adults ages 59 to 80 who played an instrument when they were younger performed better on memory tests and cognitive ability. Music appeared to enhance reasoning skills and counteract the effects of aging.

    Have you ever played a musical instrument? Do you think it affected your brain?

    Photo: Shutterstock.com


    via The Wall Street Journal's Facebook Wall by The Wall Street Journal on 8/7/12
    New telemedicine websites link people to a licensed doctor via phone or video chat: http://on.wsj.com/OX1Oog

    The “visits” cost between $10 and $40. Some services offer free follow-ups and referrals as part of a more comprehensive treatment.

    Have you ever used one of these sites? Would you?

    Illustration by Keith Negley


    via The Wall Street Journal's Facebook Wall by The Wall Street Journal on 8/7/12
    The pay-TV industry lost about 400,000 subscribers in the second quarter, the latest sign that cord-cutting, or dropping pay-TV in favor of online options, may be under way. http://on.wsj.com/NhRd5E

    Shalini Ramachandran (left) has details on The News Hub.

    Have you considerd cutting the cord on pay-TV? Tell us why or why not.


    via The Wall Street Journal's Facebook Wall by The Wall Street Journal on 8/7/12
    More than 1 in 10 adults globally are affected by migraines, which can be incapacitating, according to the World Health Organization. The hunt is intensifying for new treatments: http://on.wsj.com/MuQKkc

    Illustration by Bernard Maisner


    via The New York Times's Facebook Wall by The New York Times on 8/7/12
    In the 38 years since the Hungarian architecture professor Erno Rubik invented his cube, it has alternately been regarded as an object of fun, art, mathematics, nostalgia and frustration.
    What other child’s toy could so befuddle an M.I.T. grad student?


    Rubik’s Cube Twists Back Into Limelight
    www.nytimes.com
    In a world increasingly run by engineers and algorithms, the familiar Rubik’s Cube has found a new relevance, engaging a new generation of puzzlers, many born decades after its initial heyday.

    via The New York Times's Facebook Wall by The New York Times on 8/7/12
    See the Pictures of the Day from the London Games: http://nyti.ms/S1j0r8

    Sally Pearson, a 25-year-old from Australia, celebrating after winning the women's 100-meter hurdles with a time of 12.35 seconds. Read more: http://nyti.ms/OXDToL (Photo: Jed Jacobsohn for The New York Times)


    via The New York Times's Facebook Wall by The New York Times on 8/7/12
    See the Pictures of the Day from the London Games: http://nyti.ms/S1j0r8

    “That was the best routine I’ve ever done,” said U.S. gymnast Aly Raisman after winning the gold medal in the floor exercise. “To have that come the day of the Olympic final, that’s what you work for your whole life.”

    Read more: http://nyti.ms/NimLbl (Photo credit: Josh Haner/The New York Times)


    via The Guardian's Facebook Wall by The Guardian on 8/7/12
    No pain, no games: China's Liu Xiang sits up after falling while competing in the men's 110m hurdles heats

    Photograph: Olivier Morin/AFP/Getty Images

    As these pictures show it's not always plain sailing and gold medals for Olympians.

    http://gu.com/p/39hkc/?CMP=SOCNETTXT6965


    Photos

    via The Guardian's Facebook Wall by The Guardian on 8/7/12
    From Comment is free: "I must have missed the declaration of war on pubic hair.

    "It must have happened sometime in the last decade because the amount of time, energy, money and emotion both genders spend on abolishing every hair from their genitals is astronomical. The genital hair removal industry, including medical professionals who advertise their speciality services to those seeking the "clean and bare" look, is booming."


    Pubic hair has a job to do – stop shaving and leave it alone
    www.guardian.co.uk
    Emily Gibson: Shaving pubic hair only removes a cushion against friction, leaves microscopic open wounds and exposes you to infections


    Mike Nova's starred items

    via The Guardian's Facebook Wall by The Guardian on 8/8/12
    Remembering the 2011 riots one year on - some of our readers share their experience of the unrest that affected cities in England


    The 2011 riots: readers remember
    www.guardian.co.uk
    A year after unrest spread through cities in England, readers recall how they first heard about the riots in August 2011 and how they saw and reacted to the disorder, from organising the riot clean-up to witnessing looting

    , News Is My Business, 8/4/2012

    , News Is My Business, 8/4/2012

    via Puerto Rico Report by KG on 7/30/12
    On July 25, Univision mistakenly aired an advertisement wishing Puerto Rico a happy independence day. The company apologized for its mistake the next day by posting an announcement on Twitter.
    Puerto Rico is a territory of the United States. It is not independent. The Island has local autonomy, which was granted by Congress and began on July 25, 1952. But it is still a territory.
    Univision is not alone in its mistake. Confusion over Puerto Rico’s political status has plagued the Island ever since Congress approved the 1952 Puerto Rican constitution entitled, “The Constitution of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico.” Upon enactment, people in Puerto Rico and throughout the broader U.S. began to refer to Puerto Rico as a “Commonwealth.”
    While the “Commonwealth” label is technically correct, it is also meaningless. Puerto Rico is a territory. Congress was explicit when it enacted legislation in the 1950’s that Puerto Rico’s new power was limited to internal self-government. The U.S. House of Representatives and Senate were both clear that the new constitution “would not change Puerto Rico’s fundamental political, social, and economic relationship to the United States.” Upon signing the 1952 legislation, President Truman stated that “local self-government will be vested in the people of Puerto Rico,” not expanded national powers.
    Unfortunately, the “Commonwealth” label has taken on a second meaning that is as incorrect as Univision’s independence day mistake. Under this second meaning, Puerto Rico has power beyond anything granted in the U.S. Constitution. In fact, a Puerto Rican “Commonwealth” has more power than any State.
    This enhanced “Commonwealth” status has been declared unconstitutional and impossible to implement by authorities throughout the U.S. government, over successive presidencies and Congresses. Yet it is this “Commonwealth” definition – and not a territorial “Commonwealth” – that has been placed on the ballot of Puerto Rico’s past referenda (leading to inconclusive results) and is even found in the “Commonwealth”/PDP platform today. (This platform explicitly calls for “sovereignty of the people of Puerto Rico, to which is not nor should be subject to the plenary powers of the United States Congress.”)
    Univision’s mistake was just the latest and most obvious in a series of mischaracterizations about Puerto Rico’s “Commonwealth” political status that has plagued the Island for six decades. If this incident can advance public education and clarify confusion over the “Commonwealth” option it will have served a valuable purpose, particularly as we approach the referendum in November.

    via Puerto Rico Report by KG on 8/1/12
    Puerto Rico is proud of Tommy Ramos, a Bayamon-born gymnast who has qualified for the Olympic men’s gymnastics rings final to be held on August 6th in London.
    As a native-born Puerto Rican, Tommy Ramos is a U.S. citizen. He could have participated in the Olympics as a member of the U.S. team. Had he done so, he would have been the top qualifier in the rings trial for the United States, just as he was for Puerto Rico.
    There are many reasons why Ramos may have chosen to compete on behalf of Puerto Rico instead of the U.S. team. The support back home is certainly passionate. Not every Olympic athlete has the option of playing on two teams; certainly Ramos’s choice was one that most residents of the fifty states simply don’t have.
    Yet the question must be asked: Is there a downside to Puerto Rico having its own Olympic team? More broadly, are there drawbacks for Puerto Rico, as a territory, being treated differently from the fifty states? After all, the federal U.S. government has never stopped Puerto Rico or its other territories from competing in the Olympics or even in a beauty pageant – historic sources of pride for the idyllic Island.
    But the U.S. federal government could end Puerto Rico’s Olympic participation because it is a territory. This power is explicit under the Territory Clause of the U.S. Constitution, which states, “The Congress shall have Power to dispose of and make all needful Rules and Regulations respecting the Territory or other Property belonging to the United States.” Even though Congress has statutorily provided Puerto Rico with local independence and autonomy, Congress could pass another law or otherwise claim its Constitutional power to govern Puerto Rico.
    This power may seem hard to believe in 2012, but it is well established. In fact, Secretary of State Colin Powell relied on the Constitution’s Territory Clause in 2003 when members of Puerto Rico’s ruling Commonwealth Party (also known as the Popular Democratic Party or PDP) contacted numerous Caribbean countries in an attempt to conduct international diplomacy. In a memorandum to the Belize Embassy, Secretary Powell forcefully explained:
    The Department is aware that Puerto Rican government officials have approached a number of countries . . . seeking treatment normally only accorded to a sovereign state. . . . The department reiterates that the U.S. federal government is responsible for Puerto Rico’s foreign affairs.
    Puerto Rico is an unincorporated territory of the United States with commonwealth status. The U.S. federal government has full responsibility for the conduct of foreign relations of all areas subject to United States jurisdiction, including all U.S. states, territories, and possessions. Accordingly, the Department reviews any proposed participation by a U.S. territory or possession in international bodies, or signing of documents (including agreements) with other nations [.]

    Fortunately for Puerto Rican Olympic enthusiasts, Congress is unlikely to end the territory’s Olympic participation any time soon. So why can’t Puerto Rico have its own special Olympic team and celebrate its uniqueness? What would be the harm?
    Puerto Rico’s Olympic team exists because of its status as a territory, and no one wants Puerto Rico to be a territory. People may wish for Puerto Rico to be an “enhanced” territory, often referred to as a ”Commonwealth,” but past plebiscites have demonstrated that voters do not want to live in a territory with second class U.S. citizenship. For every Olympic athlete, there are many more Puerto Ricans who fight to promote democracy abroad as members of the U.S. military while lacking the right to vote for their Commander-in-Chief. Puerto Rico does not have full representation in Washington, and this lack of representation has consequences. The territory is inadvertently left out of legislation and purposefully excluded from federal laws that directly impact it. Returning veterans to Puerto Rico are denied access to the same level of health care given to their fellow soldiers in the fifty states. There are national laws and policies that could help Puerto Rico’s economy and security, but as a territory Puerto Rico has no access to them. It’s sole, non-voting Resident Commissioner cannot do the work of the six Members of Congress and two Senators Puerto Rico would have as a state.
    Penn State is also proud of Tommy Ramos, who is an alumnus of the school. A six-time All-American, Ramos is credited with helping Penn State achieve its NCAA-record setting 12th national championship in 2007 and Big Ten title in 2008.
    The word “Commonwealth” has caused a great deal of confusion. The state where Ramos went to college – Pennsylvania – is often called a Commonwealth. But its legal status is that of a state. It will have 20 electoral votes in the upcoming Presidential election and all the national attention that flows from this influence. Puerto Rico is also referred to as a Commonwealth, but its legal status is that of a territory. It has no electoral votes.
    As a Pennsylvanian, Ramos could not participate in a Pennsylvanian Olympic team. As a Puerto Rican, he can participate in a Puerto Rican team. But he is not a full participant in his country’s proud democratic tradition, which is now on display for the world to see.




    Mike Nova's starred items

    via Puerto Rico Report by hadeninteractive on 8/3/12
    Puerto Rico has fielded a team at the Olympics since 1948 but has never won a gold medal. The U.S. territory has won silver and bronze medals, but only in boxing, not in any other sport.
    This year all that may change.
    Javier Culson was the top qualifier in the 400 meter hurdles with a time of 48.33 seconds, just ahead of the United States’ Kerron Clement (48.48 seconds). The Puerto Rican Athlete of the Year in 2010, Culson also competed in the 2008 Olympics. The final 400 meter hurdles Olympic competition will be held on Monday, August 6th.
    With 25 athletes in the games, Puerto Rico may have more headliners before the end of the London Games. Puerto Rican Olympic athlete Tommy Ramos came in 6th in the qualifying rounds for men’s gymnastics on the rings, with a score of 15.50. His teammate Melissa Mojica beat the first-ever female Saudi Olympic competitor in judo in just 82 seconds, leaving with no medal but with a certain place in history.
    Puerto Rican athletes can compete for the United States as well as for the Puerto Rican team. In fact, the only Puerto Rican athlete to take home a gold medal from the Olympics is Gigi Fernandez, who won the women’s tennis doubles competition in both 1992 and 1996 with partner Mary Joe Fernandez.
    The presence of Puerto Rico in the Olympic games is stirring up controversy — in comments if not in the news reports. Puerto Rico at the Olympics 2012 author “Casals” started it in the comments on his/her own articles, responding to a remark about the “entities” in the Olympics with, “You are saying my country is not a country? Wow! Puerto Rico has the right to exist! We are a country even if you do not like it! 515 years of history and counting!”
    A spirited discussion followed. Puerto Rico, which is is sometimes referred to as a commonwealth, is in fact a territory of the United States.

    via Puerto Rico News - Archive Links's Facebook Wall by Puerto Rico News - Archive Links on 8/7/12
    Miércoles 08.08.2012

    Miércoles 08.08.2012
    Miércoles 08.08.2012 Entra a segunda fase campaña a favor del “sí”El evento de recaudación será en Nueva York el próximo 22 de agosto Puerto Rico se queda sin medalla en boxeo Jeyvier Cintrón se convierte en el último eliminado de la escuadra de cinco púgiles que estuvieron activos en Londres Abandona a sus hijos para tener sexo con el vecino El hombre fue acusado por tres varones, quienes habían caído en un profundo sueño, y cuando despertaron tenían al hombre practicando la felación. Municipio de San Juan celebra con la comunidad Sobre 125 líderes comunitarios participaron logrando movilizar a miles de ... 25 59 Puerto Rico acepta el reto El 'Huracán Azul' comienza su preparación para el amistoso con el campeó... 2 22 This post has been generated by Page2RSS

    via Puerto Rico News - Archive Links's Facebook Wall by Puerto Rico News - Archive Links on 8/7/12
    Alerta del DACO a progenitores que no han podido comprar libros


    Alerta del DACO a progenitores que no han podido comprar libros
    Alerta del DACO a progenitores que no han podido comprar libros de texto 7 de agosto de 2012 08:44 p.m. El secretario de Asuntos del Consumidor (DACO), Omar Marrero Díaz, instó a las madres y a los padres de alumnos de escuelas privadas que no hayan podido comprar los libros de texto para el grado de su... 08/07/12 08:44 p.m. Alerta del DACO a progenitores que no han podido c... Miércoles 8 de agosto de 2012 08:44 pm Alerta del DACO a progenitores... Fortuño no renominará a fiscales que no ... Sancionarían a representantes populares Multa y un voto de censura contra repres... Acevedo Vilá exhorta a votar No contra l... Carmen Yulín Cruz anuncia plan para revi... Pipiolos se preparan para el referéndum 2001 3922 1946 2264 ¿Crees que existe doble vara en la la administración de la justicia? Sí, porque las personas de alto nivel económico tienen influencias para lograr trato favorable No, porque la justicia está mal administrada y perjudica a todos por igual. Sí, porque las personas de clase alta pueden gastar más dinero en abogados y recursos legales No, porque el Departamento de Justicia y sus fiscales son profesionales que tratan a todos del mismo modo This post has been generated by Page2RSS

    via Puerto Rico News - Archive Links's Facebook Wall by Puerto Rico News - Archive Links on 8/7/12
    Guaynabo, Puerto Rico - 08/08/12

     

    Guaynabo, Puerto Rico - 08/08/12
    Guaynabo, Puerto Rico - 08/08/12 Última Actualización 1:46:27 AM This post has been generated by Page2RSS

    via Puerto Rico News - Archive Links's Facebook Wall by Puerto Rico News - Archive Links on 8/8/12
    Dinosaurios

    Dinosaurios
    Dinosaurios AGP denuncia inacción contra Wys En una entrevista con este rotativo, la presidenta cameral Jenniffer González reiteró que las expresiones de Wys fueron hechas en su “carácter personal” y dijo que le “exigió” una disculpa Nueva pugna por la Educación Especial Se extiende vista de causa contra ex de Yexeira Buscan versión de hija mayor Para efectos de la investigación Paredes Cintrón estaba sin automóvil a su disposición en su hogar en la urbanización Tierra Alta. Ondea sola la monoestrellada (Opinión) El ‘Huracán Azul’ comienza su preparación para el amistoso con el campeón España Desarrollan su lado filantrópico Cordialidad entre las guapas Katiria Soto ya tiene una oficina para ejercer su nueva faceta de abogada Se impone el turismo local A remover barco encallado Se espera que la próxima semana la Guardia Costanera remueva la embarcación cerca de la Isla de Mona Se impone el turismo local Circo Toys abre primera tienda fija La empresa puertorriqueña planifica establecer otros locales alrededor de la Isla Apoyo con límites Aunque alegó que se trata de un asunto no ideológico, Acevedo Vilá dejó... 0 Firma ley de Tus Valores Cuentan El programa inició en el 2010 e impactó a cerca de 500 escuelas y sobre 1... 0 Víctima de una ‘setiadora’ Relación de mujer con comerciante asesinado pudo ser un ‘pescaíto’ pa... 0 Todo listo para los cuartos de final Estados Unidos sale como favorito, con Brasil vs. Argentina como plato prin... 0 Desarrollan su lado filantrópico El 9 de septiembre se llevará a cabo el Telemaratón Sentimientos 2012 en ... 0 This post has been generated by Page2RSS

    via Puerto Rico News - Archive Links's Facebook Wall by Puerto Rico News - Archive Links on 8/8/12
    Fortuño será orador de la convención presidencial del GOP


    Fortuño será orador de la convención presidencial del GOP
    Fortuño será orador de la convención presidencial del GOP 8 de agosto de 2012 00:17 a.m. por José A. Delgado jdelgado@elnuevodia.com WASHINGTON – El gobernador Luis Fortuño ofrecerá un mensaje durante la convención presidencial republicana de finales de este mes en Tampa, Florida.El presidente del Comité Nacional Republicano (RNC),... 08/08/12 00:17 a.m. Fortuño será orador de la convención presidencial ... 81 00:17 am Fortuño será orador de la conv... 2006 3946 1951 2274 This post has been generated by Page2RSS










    Puerto Rico tries tougher sentences in crime fight
    Kansas City Star
    Luis Fortuno said. "These penalties are both fixed and more severe and that's what we are looking for," the governor, surrounded by half a dozen people who lost family members to violent crime or were themselves victims. "We want to bring peace of mind ...

    and more »










    MLB: Padilla Goes After Teixeira, Ruiz & Soriano Hold Out Hope & Latinos Miss ...
    Fox News
    St. Louis catcher Yadier Molina also will miss the All-Star Game after leaving the team and going to Puerto Rico on Friday due to the death of his wife's grandfather. Molina made the NL .... Puerto Rico Primary Gives A Push To Luis Fortuno's Statehood ...

    and more »










    ACLU lawsuit targets new Puerto Rico penal code
    CBS News
    The lawsuit comes a week after Gov. Luis Fortuno approved the new code that restricts certain types of protests and establishes a three-year prison sentence for violators. "The statute is evidently intended to suppress speech, to stop people from ...

    and more »


    Mike Nova's starred items

    via Gov. Louis Fortuño - Google Blog Search by HOLA - La Nueva Ola on 7/17/12
    SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (Associated Press) — Puerto Rico's governor has signed another package of tax breaks aimed at luring more Hollywood film crews to the Caribbean island. Gov. Luis Fortuño says the additional ...

    via Gov. Louis Fortuño - Google Blog Search by Candice Leigh Helfand on 8/2/12
    Unlike John McCain in 2008, Romney campaigned there in March, touring with the island's popular Republican leader, Gov. Luis Fortuno. Obama and Romney have also expressed support for the November referendum in ...

    via Gov. Louis Fortuño - Google Blog Search by Nancy French on 8/3/12
    Whom will Gov. Romney select as his running mate? Chris Cillizza gives his top five most likely options. 5. Chris Christie: Oddly enough, the incredibly high profile New Jersey governor may not be getting the respect he is due in the veepstakes. We have it on ... I love Louis Fortuno and he is Mitt's latin counterpart – a govern of a left leaning state (territory) who used his success in business and leadership skills to save Puerto Rico from ever rising debt and corruption.

    via Gov. Louis Fortuño - Google Blog Search by Mike Nova on 8/2/12
    Fault Lines - Puerto Rico: The fiscal experiment Dozens of university students are arrested for demonstrating against a tuition hike. But Puerto Rico Gov. Luis Fortuno remains steadfast in charging students more to help close a ...

    via Gov. Louis Fortuño - Google Blog Search by y2u0x4ds1x on 8/7/12
    ... if you have an LTV of between 50% and 60% on a French property and you increase this to 80% by remortgaging, you could bring back that 20% to the UK The subject of the interview was Luis Fortuno who is the current governor of Puerto ...

    via Gov. Louis Fortuño - Google Blog Search by guguki515 on 8/7/12
    “I expect the people of Puerto Rico will decide like [Governor Luis Fortuno] feels, to become a state, and I can tell you that I will work with him that if that vote comes out in the favor of statehood we will go through the process in Washington to ...

    via Global Voices » Puerto Rico (U.S.) by Alfredo Richner on 8/3/12
    The Internet and its social networks have a peculiar way of introducing new distractions to our timelines. Reading the constant stream of status updates and tweets generated by friends, strangers, and peers can be similar to the experience of channel surfing. Too much information, not much of it particularly useful or striking.
    Then something catches your eye and opens up new worlds to explore. Such was the case when I spotted a couple of Twitter users talking about Reyerta TV [es] (Brawl TV), a short story collection written by Puerto Rican writer and blogger Juanluis Ramos. I had met Juanluis thanks to our passion for music (we both run our own music blogs, his is “El Cassette Grabao” [es] or “The Mixtape”) and had even collaborated on some blog posts, as well as appeared in local radio as part of a music panel together. But I didn't know about his book before that tweet, and it was just a few days after it caught my eye that I sat down and read it.


     

    A wonderful collection of grainy, technicolored, pop-culture inspired windows into fully realized worlds that revel in television's classic tropes. Juanluis imbues his stories with the heavy heart of a child that has taken everything in without having the chance to sort it all out: a town's sanity rests on the secret identity of its butcher, the most hated wrestler known to the sport; a woman with no cooking skills lives out the plot of a telenovela, trying to win a man's heart with a single meal; a retired detective becomes his nemesis's closest ally as his world view unravels. CLICK-CLICK-CLICK. Each story a satisfying slice of literary fiction bent on reworking our memories from sitting in front of the TV.
    Intrigued with what I had just experienced, I sent Juanluis a few questions about Reyerta TV and his experience publishing the book.
    GV: I just finished Reyerta TV a few days ago. So… How do I subscribe to this? Is it like Cable TV or more like Netflix? Tell us a bit about what it is and how it works.
    Juanluis Ramos: Sometimes you'd wake up on a Saturday morning, there was only one television set in the house, so you couldn't turn on the Nintendo. On top of that, it was pouring outside, so you couldn't go out and ride your bike either. The only option was to sit down in front of the television and watch whatever your dad was watching.
    He was nice and would let you watch Ninja Turtles, and would even watch them with you, but once that show was over and a soap opera would begin (I don't know why local channels always have to broadcast soap operas) - then it was your mother who sat down to watch. Once that was over, it was the wresting superstars that everyone in the family sat down to watch. And afterwards a movie with karate or guns - and you would get really pumped because you loved to see some kicking and shooting. Then the news, and you'd watch even if you didn't know much about what was going on. Your mother would call you for dinner and after you'd eaten, then you could turn on the Nintendo.
    That's more or less Reyerta TV. But in the end, it is just a book.
    GV: The collection was published first in 2010 and now enjoys a second edition. It is not only surprising that it exists, but that its design shows great care in what must have clearly been a labor of love. When did you decide to publish Reyerta TV and how many people did the process involve?
    JR: The idea to publish the book came after an earlier version of it came in second place in a literary competition sponsored by the University of Puerto Rico. Several publishers expressed interest in publishing the book, but nothing came out of it. Until a new publisher Libros AC [es] (AC Books) was born, offering Reyerta TV as one of its first two titles.
    And yes, it is a labor of love. It is so because it was made between friends. It was designed by Samuel Medina with artwork by Cristian Guzmán Cardona.
    GV: You also received the National Story Award handed out by Puerto Rico's PEN Club. What's been the general reaction to Reyerta TV?
    JR: Overall it has been good. I was reviewed in a couple of local newspapers, various blogs, a few radio shows with a focus on culture, and it even showed up in Venezuela's national television just the other day. Also, several University of Puerto Rico professors have assigned the book to their students, and tell me that they enjoy it, plus they send me essays they've made in school about my book. Sometimes these teachers invite me to class so I can talk with their students and their reaction has always been positive - they have shown much interest.
    GV: Which one's your favorite story within Reyerta TV?
    JR: I'm not really sure, but the one I have most affection for is the chronicle that ends the book, “Ficción Aparte: Boletín de Última Hora” (Fiction Aside: Breaking News). Why? Because everything in that text happened to me. It's really intense, to have been robbed in front of your house, for someone to hold a gun to your head and steal your computer - with the book's manuscript in it. They stole the book weeks before I took it to the press. Then, I had to do it all again.
    GV: Since we both met through our music blogs, and could very well be considered music geeks, I wanted to ask you: What's the soundtrack to Reyerta TV?
    JR: A difficult question! It's something I've thought about since the book came out and I've never been able to come close to a satisfying answer - but let's see…
    Black Flag - TV Party
    The Minutemen - This Ain’t No Picnic
    Mima - Como en un anuncio [es] (Like in an advertisement)
    Alexander Ebert - Truth
    Pedro Piedra - Vacaciones en el más allá [es] (Far Away Vacations)
    What do you think? Which songs would you add?
    GV: Excellent. I would add “De mí enamórate” [es] (Fall in love with me), written by Juan Gabriel and sung by Daniela Romo, and “Watching the Detectives” by Elvis Costello & The Attractions. I think we just might have made one of the greatest literary mixtapes ever.
    Reyerta TV is available through the Libros AC Online Store[es]. You can follow Juanluis Ramos through his Twitter account: @jey_elle.
    This interview is edited for length and context. The full interview was published (in Spanish) in PuertoRicoIndie.com and can be read here.
    Written by Alfredo Richner · comments (0)
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    via Global Voices » Puerto Rico (U.S.) by Chellsy Alis Manning on 8/7/12
    This post is part of our special coverage London 2012 Olympics.
    The Olympic athlete Javier Culson (@JavierCulson) has made history by winning the bronze medal in the 400 metre hurdle event in the London 2012 Olympic Games. This is the first Olympic medal ever to be won by an athlete from Puerto Rico in an event other than boxing. With Culson's medal, Puerto Rico now has a total of seven Olympic medals: six bronze and one silver. This is also the first medal won by an athlete from Puerto Rico since the 1996 Olympics. The Caribbean region was jubilant as the Dominican Félix Sánchez “Super Félix” won the gold medal in the same event.
    Culson was one of the favorites to win the gold medal in the 400 metre hurdle event. In second place, and winning the silver medal, came Michael Tinsley from the United States of America.
    Javier Culson won the bronze medal in the 400m hurdles in London (archive photo). Photo by Quique Aparicio, courtesy of the Olympic Committee of Puerto Rico.
    The bronze medal was something of a bitter-sweet victory for Puerto Ricans. Although their athlete was unable to win the much coveted gold medal for the country, they were far from disappointed and expressed their joy at Culson's medal via Twitter:
    @hiramart:¿Falló Culson? Yo lo ví en el podio y tenía una medalla, que hasta donde sé, es la única de Puerto Rico.
    @hiramart: A failure for Culson? I saw him on the podium and he was wearing a medal, which as far as I know is the only one for Puerto Rico.
    @Flamencole: @JavierCulson como quiera que sea hiciste historia!
    @Flamencole: @JavierCulson however you did it, you have made history! #PuertoRicoEstaContigo (Puerto Rico is with you)
    @adriibabiix3: Estoy mas q.orgullosa qk @JavierCulson puso a PR en.alto. Lograste unir nuestra.isla por algo positivo de pura sepa
    @adriibabiix3: I am more than proud that @JavierCulson has put Puerto Rico on the map. You have united our nation through something positive, a true Puerto Rican.
    @hilda920: Gracias Culson! “@csantarrosa: ¡Orgulloso de nuestro @JavierCulson, pa’ lante caballo!! Gracias por poner el nombre de Puerto Rico en alto!”
    @hilda920Thank you Culson! “@csantarrosa: Proud of our @JavierCulson, keep going strong!! Thank you for putting Puerto Rico on the map!”
    @exorKshii58_PR: @JavierCulson orgulloso de tu logro y de poner nuestra islita en lo mas alto…para nosotros si t ganastes la de #ORO caballete exito :)
    @exorKshii58_PR: @JavierCulson proud of your achievement and of showing off our little island…for us it's as if you won the #ORO (gold) well done! :)
    The Puerto Rican basketball player José Juan Barea also showed his support for Culson:
    @jjbareapr: @JavierCulson felicidades tremendo trabajo voy a ti siempre …coqui
    @jjbareapr: @JavierCulson congratulations tremendous work supporting you always …coqui
    Another historic event for Puerto Rico
    The gymnast Tommy Ramos (@TommyRamos_pur) became the first Puerto Rican to compete in the rings event, finishing with a score of 15.6. Although he did not win a medal (he finished in sixth place), never before has a Puerto Rican progressed so far in a gymnastics event.

    This post is part of our special coverage London 2012 Olympics.
    Written by Ángel Carrión · Translated by Chellsy Alis Manning · View original post [es] · comments (0)
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    Miércoles 8 de agosto de 2012
    81
    2005
    3942
    1951
    2271

    ¿Crees que existe doble vara en la la administración de la justicia?

    Sí, porque las personas de alto nivel económico tienen influencias para lograr trato favorable
    No, porque la justicia está mal administrada y perjudica a todos por igual.
    Sí, porque las personas de clase alta pueden gastar más dinero en abogados y recursos legales
    No, porque el Departamento de Justicia y sus fiscales son profesionales que tratan a todos del mismo modo

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    ABANDERADO DE LA INMORTALIDAD

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    El insularismo en nuestra juventud

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    Maratón

    Rosa MercadoVictoria fue, según el mito, la única palabra del guerrero Filípides que corrió de Maratón a Atenas y murió de fatiga tras anunciar el triunfo de Grecia sobre el ejército pers

    LA ENMIENDA NO SIRVE DE NADA

    María Isabelle Pagán Altieri (Periodista y abogada)Somos un pueblo al que se le está incitando a quitarse sus propios derechos a través de una ola de violencia manipulada para engañarnos. Se resalta la actitud despreocupada de los

    Hoy es el mejor día para cambiar la campaña de “tus valores cuentas” por la de “mis valores cuentan”. Mis valores cuentan debe estar incluida en la plataforma política de todos los partidos inscritos, principalmente los que tienen mayores oportunidades de salir victoriosos.
    Hoy es el mejor día para definir qué código de valores vamos a implementar en el gobierno, en las agencias públicas y cuasi públicas, la legislatura, la judicatura, las alcaldías, las escuelas, las redes de comunicación y todo el componente de nuestra sociedad.
    Hoy es el mejor día para comenzar a dar el ejemplo de lo que podemos lograr como pueblo. Es un magnífico día para comenzar a sembrar semillas de valores, cuidarlas y ver si podemos tener una mejor cosecha en el mañana.
    Hoy es un gran día para implementar mis valores cuentan como consigna para un Puerto Rico mejor. Mis valores cuentan porque yo voy a dar el ejemplo y espero contagiarte para que tú hagas lo mismo.
    Víctor Santiago
    Cataño
    ¿En qué asesora Heydi Wys a la presidenta de la Cámara, Jenniffer González? ¿En prejuicio, racismo y ceguera fanática republicana?
    Da vergüenza que sus expresiones racistas en contra del presidente Barack Obama hayan recorrido el mundo y que la asesorada, que ha pagado por dichas asesorías $600 mil en tres años no la ha despedido. Además la justifica diciendo que esas expresiones fueran hechas en su carácter personal.
    El único trabajo que puede estar realizando la señora Wys es uno de politiquería partidista y no debe ser pagada con dinero del pueblo, y menos con esta exorbitante cantidad.
    Por favor, investiguen estos contratos, encuentren la ilegalidad; la inmoralidad ya está establecida.
    Rose Andreu
    Guaynabo
    Ya basta del abuso de los sueldos de los asesores de los legisladores. Es absurdo que mientras un pueblo carece de empleo, oportunidades de salir adelante, los asesores continúen la saga de desangrar los fondos públicos.
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    Le sugiero a El Nuevo Día que realice un reportaje investigativo sobre los asesores. Me parece que en el 2008 publicaron algo sobre las asesorías y el desangre de las arcas gubernamentales.
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    Monsy Ramírez
    Toa Alta
    ADN es la sigla de ácido desoxirribonucleico.
    Claro que me hubiera gustado que Javier Culson ganara la medalla de oro. De eso no hay duda. Y quien diga lo contrario, miente.
    No ganó el primer lugar, pero sí un honroso y destacado tercer lugar. El nuestro, Javier Culson, subió al podio en compañía de un hermano caribeño, el dominicano Félix Sánchez, quien se alzó con el oro. Establecido queda el poderío del Caribe en el atletismo olímpico.
    No olvidemos, boricuas, que el deporte es unión, hermandad. En lugar de renegar y de hablar lo que no es y de minimizar el triunfo de Sánchez, es momento de regocijo.
    Culson no alcanzó la medalla de oro, pero sí logró unir a un pueblo que hasta hace unos días se lamentaba por la alta incidencia criminal.
    Le inyectó a los puertorriqueños ese afán de ver la monoestrellada danzar en el aire.
    Hace unas semanas, leí, precisamente en esta sección, la carta de un puertorriqueño que escribió lo siguiente: “Hermanos boricuas, con la canción “Soy boricua” de fondo gritaré hasta más no poder por el mío. Pero, si mi gallito no gana medalla, eso no lo hará menos. Seguirá siendo el gran Culson”.
    Coincido con él. La esperada presea dorada no es sinónimo del tesón y entrega del nuestro. Esa medalla de bronce, la primera de Puerto Rico en estos Juegos Olímpicos para mí es tan valiosa como el oro.
    Porque el mío, Javier Culson, seguirá siendo el mejor. Boricuas, hay Javier Culson para rato.
    ¡Qué viva Puerto Rico! ¡Qué viva Culson!
    Julio Ortiz
    1679
    3359
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    ¿Qué sensación te dejó la medalla de bronce de Javier Culson?

    Frustración
    Entusiasmo
    Indiferencia
    Orgullo

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