Sunday, February 3, 2013

Gay, Latino Groups Look For A More Comprehensive Immigration Reform - via Latino Voices on HuffingtonPost.com by AP


via latino - Google News on 2/3/13

Yahoo! News (blog)

Latino, Gay Groups Look For A More Comprehensive Immigration Reform
Huffington Post
SAN FRANCISCO -- As a gay Mexican immigrant living in the United States illegally, Alex Aldana acutely understands his double-minority status. Not only does he fear deportation, he can't seek citizenship by marrying a partner because the federal ...
Gay, Latino groups forge immigration allianceYahoo! News (blog)

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SAN FRANCISCO -- As a gay Mexican immigrant living in the United States illegally, Alex Aldana acutely understands his double-minority status. Not only does he fear deportation, he can't seek citizenship by marrying a partner because the federal government doesn't recognize same-sex marriages.
He and other gay activists are hoping the new immigration debate at the top of Washington's agenda will change that, and they are betting on a newly forged but still fragile alliance between a pair of voting blocs considered critical to President Obama's re-election: Latinos and the gay community.
The gay rights movement is working to make sure bi-national same-sex couples are included in immigration reform legislation making its way toward Congress, a tricky task for a constituency at the nexus of two hot-button social issues. So far, it has done so with strong backing from its liberal Latino partners.
Groups such as the League of United Latin American Citizens, the National Council de la Raza and the Mexican American Legal Defense and Education Fund – all of which endorsed same-sex unions last year – reiterated this week that married gays should be part of a reform plan that provides a pathway to citizenship for the 11 million illegal immigrants in the U.S.
Both Obama and the Congressional Hispanic Caucus have included bi-national gay couples in their immigration reform blueprints. The framework that eight leading Democratic and Republican senators unveiled this week did not.
Republicans John McCain of Arizona and Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, two of the senators working to hammer out a bipartisan immigration bill, already have rejected the idea that gay immigrants have a place in the coming debate.
"I'm telling you now, if you load this up with social issues and things that are controversial, then it will endanger" the endeavor, said McCain, whose wife and daughter support marriage rights for same-sex couples. He does not.
Aldana, 26, is torn. He encourages Hispanic groups to include gay rights in their struggle, but reminds gay activists that immigration rights go far beyond just fighting for legal residency for foreigners in same-sex marriages.
"The reality is that immigration is not just about married couples. That's a middle-class concern. It's a privilege I support, but it's not something that will benefit all our immigrant communities," Aldana said.
Rep. Mike Honda, a California Democrat and vice-chair of the Congressional LGBT Equality Caucus, plans to reintroduce stand-alone legislation next week in hopes of getting its provisions incorporated in any overarching immigration bill that reaches the Republican-controlled House.
"In the bow of the ship is immigration reform, and the big iceberg out there is reuniting families with bi-national couples," Honda said. "They cannot be excluded from the definition of family. Otherwise, we can't call it comprehensive."
Another factor is the U.S. Supreme Court's consideration in late March of the federal law that currently bars U.S. citizens in same-sex marriages from sponsoring their foreign-born partners for permanent legal residency. If justices uphold the Defense of Marriage Act, gay-friendly lawmakers would have less leverage to press the issue.
Gay rights leaders have focused attention on building strategic coalitions with ethnic and racial minority groups since the passage in 2008 of California's constitutional ban on same-sex marriages. Exit polling showed that about seven of 10 black voters and more than half of Latinos supported Proposition 8 on the same day Obama first won the White House, revealing a gap between gay groups that were seen as white and privileged and minority communities that were viewed as inherently anti-gay.
Ari Gutierrez, chairwoman of the Latino Equality Alliance, a Los Angeles-based group of gay, lesbian and transgender Hispanics, said important inroads have been made since the election. Gay contingents now participate in the immigrant rights marches held every May Day. Last week, the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force sponsored the first daylong workshop at its annual organizing conference devoted to working in Latino communities.
"There is work that still needs to be shored up, but I think it's pretty much understood that, if it's legal for one, it should be legal for the other," Gutierrez said.
A survey by the Pew Hispanic Center and the Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life released in October, just before Latino and gay voters were credited with key roles in Obama's re-election, found support for gay marriage rising quickly among Latinos, with 53 percent favoring allowing gay and lesbian couples to wed. When the same survey was conducted in 2006, 56 percent of Latinos opposed same-sex unions.
Ultimately, though, decisions about whose needs are addressed and whose are left for another day lies with lawmakers and the White House, not the good intentions of advocacy groups, said Frank Gilliam, dean of the Luskin School of Public Affairs at the University of California, Los Angeles.
"If I were a Democratic Senate aide and this (issue) was a discussion in our staff meeting, I would tell our member that this is something you better be prepared to give up," Gilliam said. "We are talking politics. We are not talking about what the right thing to do is."
 

Videos: Puerto Rico Statehood Video | HIDDEN BEACHES In Puerto Rico | OLD PUERTO RICO LA PERLA

via Videos matching: puerto rico by PrinciplesinAction on 1/29/13
Video supporting statehood for Puerto Rico played before a January 29th LPCP conference
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via Videos matching: puerto rico by Maximilian Imaging on 12/23/12
www.maximilianimaging.com blog.maximilianimaging.com Taken Dec. 15, 2012 Puerto Rico hidden beaches off of Rt 87 on the north-east part of the island. San Juan, the capital of Puerto Rico is the oldest city on US territory (St. Augustine, Florida the oldest city in the continental). Founded in 1521 by Juan Ponce de León, who named it City of Puerto Rico ("Rich Port"). The history of San Juan begins a logn time before its official foundation, in 1493, during his second voyage, Christopher Columbus landed in Puerto Rico. He named the island "San Juan Bautista", in honor of John the Baptist. But was not until 1508, that the Spanish government appointed Juan Ponce de León as the first governor of the island. He founded the original settlement in Caparra, now known as Pueblo Viejo, behind the almost land-locked harbor just to the west of the present metropolitan area and the city quickly became Spain's most important military outpost in the Caribbean. A year later, the original settlement was relocated to a nearby coastal islet (to the site of what is now called Old San Juan) and named Puerto Rico (Rich Port). Sometime during the 1520s, confusion over the names led to a switch, the island took the name of Puerto Rico and the town became San Juan. Today, San Juan is known as "La Ciudad Amurallada" (the walled city) and is one of the biggest and best natural harbors in the Caribbean and is the second oldest European-founded city in the Americas (after Santo Domingo, which was <b>...</b>
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via Videos matching: puerto rico by CIBOYPRODUCT on 12/26/12
This building was built outside the city walls it has been here since the time of the Pirates. its located in La PERLA This is the real thing not fake Hollywood stuff .Tourist are not allowed in this area of secrets , so please enjoy the rare footage , land is not for sale it is protected by the ILLUMINATI MEDIA CO,
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Study: People who had sex three times a week or more looked 10 years younger - by Caribnews

via Caribnews's Facebook Wall by Caribnews on 2/2/13
Study: People who had sex three times a week or more looked 10 years younger
http://ow.ly/1ROoXM
 
 

The Dow closed above 14,000 on Friday for the first time in more than ...

via Caribbean Business on 2/1/13

Dow ends above 14,000 for 1st time since 2007

NEW YORK — The Dow closed above 14,000 on Friday for the first time in more than ...

 
 
Puerto Ricans will see their water bills rise sharply by at least $20 starting t ...
 

Juan Manuel Lopez stopped Aldimar Silva Santos in the ninth round Saturday night ...

via Caribbean Business on 2/3/13

'Juanma' wins by TKO in return to ring

Juan Manuel Lopez stopped Aldimar Silva Santos in the ninth round Saturday night ...

 

"No Comments": www.prdailysun.com - Local News


www.prdailysun.com - Local News



スイーツ ストレス

 

スイーツ 食べ放題には行きたくない

火曜日, 11月 27, 2012 | 10:18 amスイーツ食べ放題など、一体なぜ企画するのだろう。そんなに参加者は多いのであろうか。参加する人たちの気がしれない。そもそも食べ放題と言ってもスイーツなどそんなに食べられるものではないように思う。カロリー過多にもなりがちだろう。私の場合甘いものだけでは一食の代わりには到底ならない。行ってみようと思ったこともないが、一度だけ知人に誘われ、断れなくて近くのホテルに「スイーツ食べ放題」行ったことがある。もっとも1000円で食べ放題なので大変安くはあったのだが。行ってみて、やはりあまり行きたくないと実感した。そこはフルーツなども置いていたが、新鮮さも今ひとつだったし、スイーツも値段なりか、あまり美味しいものがなかった。同じ1000円を出すのであれば、普通のケーキセットの方はよほど良いという印象だった。ここのコーナーでは「食べ放題」というテーマがよくあるが、そんなに食べ放題に惹かれる人が多いのであろうか。私は香港で食べたアフタヌーンティはとてもよかったし、リゾート地ホテルの朝食のバイキングはよいと思うがそれ以外はサラダバーしか積極的に行こうと思わない。結局のところ、そんなには食べられないからだ。それでも若い年代の人たちは男性でも女性でも「食べ放題」に惹かれるのであろうか。まあ、いく種類もある料理の食べ放題ならともかく、例えば「ラーメン食べ放題」とか「麻婆豆腐食べ放題」とかひと種類の食物をそんなに食べ続けられるものだろうか。「スイーツ食べ放題」は、ただならば行かないこともないであろうが、自分からお金を出して積極的に行こうとは決して思わない。
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(posted in スイーツ)

スイーツ食べ放題はストレス解消

土曜日, 11月 24, 2012 | 6:18 pmわたしにとって、スイーツの食べ放題に行くことは、ストレス解消になります。イライラすると、無性に甘いのもが食べたくなります。甘いものを食べれば、イライラも忘れられるんです。以前、テレビを見ていたときに、女の人は甘いものを食べると、幸せを感じるホルモンが出るといっていました。男性よりも、女性の方が、ホルモンが出る量が多いそうです。だから、女の人は、スイーツが好きな人が多いのかもしれません。わたしも甘いものを食べるとすごく幸せです。


東京にいたころ、スイーツの食べ放題をやっている、あるお店にハマりました。有楽町にあるお店なのですが、月に1回は通っていたと思います。そこのお店は、スイーツだけでなく、軽食も置いてあって、飲み物とケーキバイキングのセットで、1500円くらいだったと思います。ケーキがすごくおいしくて、感動しました。パサパサになっているお店もありますが、そこは、作りたてがどんどん運ばれてくるんです。一つ一つが小さいので、何種類も食べられます。


最近は、歳をとったせいか、食べ放題に行こうという気があまり起こらないのですが、そのお店のスイーツの食べ放題は、今でも行きたいと思います。スイーツの食べ放題をうたっているお店は、たくさんありますが、質のいいお店は、少ないと思います。どうせ食べるなら、少し値段が高くても、おいしいものを食べたいと、わたしは思います。ケーキをホールで食べることが夢な女性にとって、スイーツ食べ放題は、とても魅力的だと思います。
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(posted in スイーツ)

私のスイーツ食べ放題の思い出

水曜日, 11月 21, 2012 | 11:17 amスイーツが好きな人なら男女問わず一度はスイーツの食べ放題のお店に行ったことがあると思います。私も昔は何度か行きました。チェーン店やホテルなど様々なところでやっていますが、だいたい一回の料金も規模によって違いはあるものの、平均して2000円前後といったところでしょうか。また場所によっては時間制限が設けてあるところも少なくないようです。それでもスイーツ好きにとっては夢のような空間で、何度でも挑戦したくなります。


食べ放題に行く人の考えることは皆さん同じだと思いますが、いかに元を取るかということです。たくさん食べるのはもちろんですが、実際食べてみるとなかなか思うように食べられなかったりします。でも、たくさんの美味しそうなものを目の前にすると、やっぱりどうしてもあれもこれもと欲張ってしまうのが人間。ついつい取り過ぎてしまって、最後の方は無理して頑張って食べなくてはなりません。


定番のショートケーキ、チョコレートケーキ、チーズケーキ、フルーツケーキ、プリン、ゼリー、それに甘い物だけではなくて、サンドウィッチなどを置いてあるお店も多いよです。これらを自分のお腹と相談しながら時間内にひとつでも多く食べる、これがスイーツの食べ放題の醍醐味と言っても過言ではありません。そしてたくさん食べて満足して帰るのはいいけれど、満腹になり過ぎてもうスイーツの食べ放題は当分なくてもいいと思ってしまうのが私の悪い癖です。
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(posted in スイーツ)

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Puerto Rico's Police Force Considers Reforms - Puerto Rico Report | The Justice Department gave the Puerto Rican government until Apr. 15 to implement the accord - Puerto Rico - WNU



Puerto Rico's Police Force Considers Reforms | Puerto Rico Report



4 Jan 2013 by hadeninteractive
Puerto Rico's police force is the second largest in U.S. states and territories, second in size only to that of New York City. The Puerto Rican police force includes more than 17,000 officers. Puerto Rico has a high level of violent ...
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Puerto Rico’s Police Force Considers Reforms







Puerto Rico’s police force is the second largest in U.S. states and territories, second in size only to that of New York City. The Puerto Rican police force includes more than 17,000 officers.
Puerto Rico has a high level of violent crime, largely as a result of its position as a largely undefended border used in the drug trade with the United States.
Unfortunately, Puerto Rico also has a history of problems within its police force. The U. S. Department of Justice (DOJ) issued a report in September that identified a pattern of civil rights violations, and followed up last week with a lawsuit.
Former Governor Fortuno did not contest the lawsuit and instead created an agreement with the Justice Department that gives new Governor Padilla time to review the recommendations and make any changes his government requires.
The agreement calls for extensive reforms, as well as improved training for law enforcement officers in Puerto Rico.

_________________________________________



Puerto Rico: Government and US Agree on Police Reforms


The government of Puerto Rico and the US Justice Department signed a 106-page agreement on Dec. 21 for reforming the island’s 17,000-member police department. The reforms are intended to address numerous police abuses detailed in a September 2011 Justice Department report; the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) issued its own report on abuses in June 2012 [see World War 4 Report 9/10/11 and 6/25/12]. The Justice Department also filed a lawsuit requiring the Puerto Rican government and police department to comply with the Justice Department’s earlier directives, but this was considered a legal formality, since the agreement apparently represents the compliance the US was seeking.

The Justice Department negotiated the agreement with Puerto Rican governor Luis Fortuño and Police Superintendent Héctor Pesquera, but Fortuño will not be implementing it. Alejandro García Padilla, who defeated Fortuño in a Nov. 6 election [see Update #1151], will start his four-year term on Jan. 2, and he has hinted that he may replace Pesquera. The Justice Department gave the Puerto Rican government until Apr. 15 to implement the accord in order to give the new administration time to review its provisions. (El Nuevo Día (Guaynabo) 12/21/12, 12/23/12; Associated Press 12/22/12 via Arizona Daily Star)

WNU - Weekly News Update on the Americas
Issue #1157, December 23, 2012

________________________________________


puerto rico police department - GS


puerto rico police - GS


puerto rico police corruption - GS



Puerto Rico Police - YouTube

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The Puerto Rico Police —also known in Puerto Rico as La Uniformada — is the state police of Puerto Rico. The Puerto Rico Police is also one of two investigat...



Police Abuse In Puerto Rico



Police Brutality Against Journalists in Puerto Rico



ACLU REPORT SAYS 1700 PUERTO RICAN POLICE OF…


Thumbnail0:18Police open fire on Students in Puerto Rico



Topic - Puerto Rico Police - YouTube


Puerto Rico Police - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


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Jump to Security and Protection Office‎: This unit is the Dignitary Protective Services Division of the Puerto Rico Police Department. They have been ...



Island of Impunity: Puerto Rico's Outlaw Police Force | American ...

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A report released by the ACLU in June 2012 concludes that the Puerto Rico Police Department is plagued by a culture of unrestrained abuse and impunity.



Puerto Rico's outlaw police force - Opinion - Al Jazeera English

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Jun 26, 2012 – Police in the US territory have been accused of civil rights abuses and overzealous crackdowns on peaceful protests.



DOJ Takes Action Against Puerto Rico's Police Force | Politic365

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Dec 26, 2012 – Back in September of 2012, the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) issued a scathing report on Puerto Rico's Police Department (PRPD), ...






Muere camuyano al caerle un árbol encima http://ow.ly/hnvtG

Die camuyano dropping you a tree over http://ow.ly/hnvtG (Translated by Bing)

Like · · · 11 minutes ago ·
 

Puerto Rico: Government and US Agree on Police Reforms



The government of Puerto Rico and the US Justice Department signed a 106-page agreement on Dec. 21 for reforming the island’s 17,000-member police department. The reforms are intended to address numerous police abuses detailed in a September 2011 Justice Department report; the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) issued its own report on abuses in June 2012 [see World War 4 Report 9/10/11 and 6/25/12]. The Justice Department also filed a lawsuit requiring the Puerto Rican government and police department to comply with the Justice Department’s earlier directives, but this was considered a legal formality, since the agreement apparently represents the compliance the US was seeking.

The Justice Department negotiated the agreement with Puerto Rican governor Luis Fortuño and Police Superintendent Héctor Pesquera, but Fortuño will not be implementing it. Alejandro García Padilla, who defeated Fortuño in a Nov. 6 election [see Update #1151], will start his four-year term on Jan. 2, and he has hinted that he may replace Pesquera. The Justice Department gave the Puerto Rican government until Apr. 15 to implement the accord in order to give the new administration time to review its provisions. (El Nuevo Día (Guaynabo) 12/21/12, 12/23/12; Associated Press 12/22/12 via Arizona Daily Star)

Puerto Rico - WNU


Venezuela without Chavez: A Possible Scenario
http://venezuelanalysis.com/analysis/7588

Venezuela’s 2012 State Election: Lessons for Chavismo and the Opposition
http://venezuelanalysis.com/analysis/7564

Venezuela's Uncertain Future
http://venezuelanalysis.com/analysis/7560


Obama signals four more years of bad relations with Latin America (US/policy)
http://upsidedownworld.org/main/news-briefs-archives-68/4032-obama-signals-four-more-years-of-bad-relations-with-latin-america


Monday, August 13, 2012

WNU #1140: New Puerto Rican Law to “Intimidate” Activists

Weekly News Update on the Americas
Issue #1140, August 12, 2012

1. Puerto Rico: New Law to "Intimidate" Unions and Students
2. Chile: High Students Occupy Schools to Demand Reform
3. Dominican Republic: Residents Protest New Barrick Gold Mine
4. Mexico: Did Romney Donor’s Casino Launder Drug Money?
5. Links to alternative sources on: Latin America, Mercosur, Argentina, Paraguay, Brazil, Bolivia, Peru, Colombia, Venezuela, Honduras, Mexico, Haiti

ISSN#: 1084 922X. Weekly News Update on the Americas covers news from Latin America and the Caribbean, compiled and written from a progressive perspective. It has been published weekly by the Nicaragua Solidarity Network of Greater New York since 1990. It is archived at http://weeklynewsupdate.blogspot.com. For a subscription, write to weeklynewsupdate@gmail.com. Follow us on Twitter at http://twitter.com/WeeklyNewsUpdat.

*1. Puerto Rico: New Law to "Intimidate" Unions and Students
On July 30 Puerto Rican governor Luis Fortuño signed into law a new Penal Code that he and legislators said would counter a recent rise in crime [see Update #1111] by imposing much stiffer prison sentences for a wide range of crimes. The new law, which replaces the Penal Code of 2004, also defines the seduction of minors through the internet as a criminal offense and gives the government the power to fire any public employee who commits a crime while carrying out a public function. “We’re not going to let the criminals take over Puerto Rico,” Fortuño said at the signing ceremony.

Fortuño insisted that the new code wouldn’t limit rights of free expression. But Puerto Rican legal experts noted that the revisions dramatically increased penalties for civil disobedience. For example, participating in a protest on the steps of the Capitol building that impedes the work of Puerto Rico’s legislature—like one carried out by students in June 2010 [see Updates #1039, 1100]--could now be punished with three years in prison, while in the 2004 Penal Code the penalty only applied if legislative work was interrupted through “intimidation, violence or fraud,” language which was removed in the new law.

Attorney César Rosado, a human and civil rights specialist who represents several unions, told the Puerto Rican daily El Nuevo Día that the new law “tries to intimidate the unions and other pressure groups—like the student movement—which historically have distinguished themselves by presenting resistance to any measure they consider unjust. Establishing a three-year sentence is a big deterrent for protest.” Activists have frequently used nonviolent civil disobedience as a form of protest in Puerto Rico, most famously in the mass arrests that led to the removal of the US Navy proving grounds from the small island of Vieques in 2003. “In democracy it’s important to allow activism,” constitutional law professor Hiram Meléndez Juarbe told the newspaper, “even if at times it’s inconvenient for the government.” (END 7/30/12, 7/31/12)

In the US the maximum penalty for interrupting a session of Congress is six months in prison and/or a $500 fine. El Nuevo Día noted that the punishment for six Puerto Rican independence activists who interrupted Congress by singing patriotic hymns on May 6, 2009, was a fine. (END 7/31/12)

The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) filed a lawsuit on Aug. 7 challenging the new law. The challenge was presented as an amendment to a complaint the ACLU filed against the Puerto Rico Police Department on June 27 alleging that the department violated the rights of protesters [see World War 4 Report 6/28/12]. (Jurist 8/8/12)
 
 

Monday, January 28, 2013

Review: Bill Penalizes Use Of The American Flag In The Absence Of A Puerto Rican Flag - Huffington Post | Puerto Rico's Brain Drain Problem - Politic365 | Puerto Rico to have new hate crime laws to protect gays - Gay Star News


Hispanically Speaking News




Bill Penalizes Use Of The American Flag In The Absence Of A Puerto Rican Flag
Huffington Post
A second question on the same ballot asked whether voters preferred to see Puerto Rico become a U.S. state, an independent country, or a freely associated state in a close alliance with the United States. Some 61 percent of those who answered the ...
Puerto Rican Party Wants to Bar Raising the US Flag Without PR FlagHispanically Speaking News

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Puerto Rico's Brain Drain Problem - Politic365







Puerto Rico's Brain Drain Problem
Politic365
Puerto Rico has a massive drainage problem. Close to 176,000 Boricuas left the Island from 2005 to 2010. In 2011 alone, Puerto Rico lost 76,000 citizens, of which 21,611 landed in Florida. An Island that boasted close to four million inhabitants in ...



via Gay Puerto Rico's Facebook Wall by Gay Puerto Rico on 1/27/13
Puerto Rico to have new hate crime laws to protect gays - Gay Star News

Gay Star News

Puerto Rico to have new hate crime laws to protect gays
Gay Star News
Puerto Rico's LGBT community may be a step closer to being protected from killings, assaults …


Puerto Rico to have new hate crime laws to protect gays - Gay Star News






Puerto Rico to have new hate crime laws to protect gays

Outgoing Secretary of Justice promises new rules and new Governor Alejandro Garcia Padilla pledges to tackle anti-gay violence


The new Governor of Puerto Rico, Alejandro Garcia Padilla, has promised to tackle anti-LGBT violence.



Puerto Rico’s LGBT community may be a step closer to being protected from killings, assaults and other hate crimes.
The departing Secretary of Justice, Guillermo Somoza has said new rules would be put in place for hate crimes and said these result from meetings with LGBT groups in recent years.
At least 18 members of the gay, bi and trans community were murdered in 2010 and 2011 alone on the archipelago that is a territory but not a state of the US.
The new rules proposed by Somoza will define what counts as a hate crime and tell investigators how to identify evidence.
But Pedro Julio Serrano, from the US-based National Gay and Lesbian Task Force said outgoing Governor Luis Fortuño should have acted before and this was ‘too little, too late’.
‘We’ve been trying to get this protocol in place for over three years and finally, in the last month of their tenure, they finally unveil it,’ Serrano said.
But the greater hope of change stem not from the last-minute actions of the departing Fortuño administration but from his successor.
Governor-elect Alejandro Garcia Padilla beat Fortuño in the elections in November and has pleged to combat anti-LGBT violence in his coming term.
He will be sworn in on 2 January.
Speaking before the election Padilla promised the LGBT community to fight injustices. And he even paraphrased Harvey Milk, the first openly gay official in the US – whose life and death were made into the biopic Milk.
Speaking in Spanish he said: ‘My name is Alejandro Garcia Padilla. And I'm here to recruit you.’








via NYT > Editorials by on 1/21/13
The Inaugural Address for his second term makes a forceful argument for a progressive agenda.

Russia anti-gay law to outlaw 'homosexual propaganda' and ban public events ... - Daily Mail 

 
 
U. of *Puerto Rico* to Eliminate $800 Fee That Sparked Protests - The *...*
via puerto rico - Google Blog Search by Scott Smallwood on 1/26/13
Two years ago, protests over a tuition surcharge at the University of Puerto Rico turned violent, leading the police to take over the campus and prompting the resignation of the president. The Associated Press reported on ...

Grover Norquist to push for statehood for *Puerto Rico* | The Daily *...*
via puerto rico - Google Blog Search by Alex Pappas on 1/25/13
Anti-higher taxes activist Grover Norquist is joining an effort to convince conservatives to support statehood for Puerto Rico.



Sunday, January 27th, 2013
via Caribbean Business on 1/27/13

UPR to eliminate $800 per student fee

via Caribbean Business on 1/26/13


UPR to eliminate $800 per student fee
The University of Puerto Rico will eliminate an $800 per student fee that had sp ...
 

Anita role in West Side Story a joy for Puerto Rico native - NWAOnline (subscription)

via puerto rico - Google News on 1/27/13
 



NWAOnline (subscription)




Anita role in West Side Story a joy for Puerto Rico native
NWAOnline (subscription)
Anita role in West Side Story a joy for Puerto Rico native. By Eric E. Harrison. Posted: January 27, 2013 at 2:28 a.m.. Michelle Alves (center) plays Anita in the touring company of West Side Story, onstage Tuesday-Thursday at Little Rock's Robinson ...





U. of Puerto Rico to Eliminate $800 Fee That Sparked Protests - Chronicle of Higher Education (subscription) (blog)

via puerto rico - Google News on 1/26/13

 



WLTX.com




U. of Puerto Rico to Eliminate $800 Fee That Sparked Protests
Chronicle of Higher Education (subscription) (blog)
Two years ago, protests over a tuition surcharge at the University of Puerto Rico turned violent, leading the police to take over the campus and prompting the resignation of the president. The Associated Press reported on Saturday that the university's ...
Puerto Rico's largest public university to drop $800 fee that had sparked ...Fox News
New boardwalk planned for Puerto Rico's Old San JuanWindsor Star

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