Sunday, May 5, 2013

2:41 PM 5/5/2013: the forum: Congressmen seek to reinstate SNAP in Puerto Rico | The Latin Times : Top News SUN MAY 5TH, 2013 ‘Latino Americans,’ New PBS Documentary Series, Is First On US Latino History

2:41 PM 5/5/2013


Congressmen seek to reinstate SNAP in Puerto Rico
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Congressman Charles B. Rangel joined Resident Commissioner Pedro R. Pierluisi (Puerto Rico) and Colleagues in introducing legislation today to reinstate the SNAP (formerly the ‘food stamp’) program in Puerto Rico. H.R. 4280, the Puerto Rico Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program Restoration Act, would provide the Island with $457 million in additional federal funding each year to support its food assistance program for low-income individuals.
“Puerto Rico deserves the same food assistance as the rest of the country,” said Rangel. “Our Manhattan Congressional District has many citizens of Puerto Rican descent whose families desperately need our help to meet basic nutritional standards.”
Presently, Puerto Rico receives from U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Food and Nutrition Service (FNS) an annual block grant that is appropriated by Congress in lieu of SNAP.  This block grant limits the amount of assistance available to Puerto Rico’s indigent population in terms of their ability to afford healthy food.
If this bill is enacted into law, Puerto Rico would join the 50 states, the District of Columbia, and two territories—Guam and the U.S. Virgin Islands—as jurisdictions that participate fully in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP).
According to a USDA report, conversion to SNAP would increase the number of households that receive nutrition assistance in Puerto Rico by an additional 85,000 households—consisting of 220,000 individuals. It would also mean an additional $457 million dollars in federal funding for the Island each year.”
“The USDA report confirms that the decision to deprive Puerto Rico of SNAP funds twenty years ago also deprived over 200,000 Puerto Ricans who are in most need of food assistance,” said Rangel. “Meanwhile, the 50 states, Washington, D.C., the U.S. Virgin Islands, and Guam all enjoy access to vital SNAP funds.  This is an inequity that makes no moral sense. The people of Puerto Rico deserve to receive the same financial aid necessary to meet high-quality nutritional standards.”
KEY FACTS REGARDING SNAP IMPLEMENTATION IN PUERTO RICO
  • From FY1974 through FY1982, Puerto Rico participated in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP)—then known as the “food stamp program”—along with, and no differently than, each of the 50 States and D.C.  Guam, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands were each added to SNAP by Congress in 1971.  Although Puerto Rico was later dropped from the program, SNAP coverages continue today in Guam and the U.S. Virgin Islands.
  • In 1981, Congress replaced SNAP in Puerto Rico with an $825 million block grant—appropriated each year as the “Nutrition Assistance Program” block grant for Puerto Rico.  That level of funding represented about 75% of SNAP expenditures in Puerto Rico at that time (which was $1.1 million in FY1982). As a result, the block grant has not adjusted annually to account for changes in economic need or population in Puerto Rico or to keep adequate pace with costs for obtaining a basic, daily nutritional diet on the Island.  The vulnerable U.S. citizens residing in Puerto Rico are treated differently when it comes to federal nutrition assistance than if there they were living in one of the 50 States, D.C., Guam or the neighboring U.S. Virgin Islands.  In 1986, Congress amended the law to index the annual amount for the Puerto Rico block grant going forward for inflation but it is still indexed on an arbitrary base amount.
  • In the 2008 Farm Bill Congress directed USDA to examine the feasibility and effects of restoring SNAP in Puerto Rico in lieu of continuing the block grant arrangement (Sec. 4142 of P.L. 110-246).
  • USDA submitted the required report to Congress in June 2010.  Among the findings about transiting from a block grant to SNAP in Puerto Rico, are—
  • 85,000 additional households in need would receive assistance that they are unable to receive now under the block grant (a 15% participation increase); and
  • Average monthly benefits in Puerto Rico would increase by about 10% or $23 per household narrowing the gap between average benefit amounts received in the rest of the U.S. under SNAP and the amounts currently received under the limited block grant applying to Puerto Rico.

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The Puerto Rico Status Debate on the Hill
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COMPILED BY THE NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF LATINO POLICY
CONTENTS
* “Despite Advocates’ Claims, No Clear Consensus on Puerto Rican Statehood” By Sen. Roger Wicker and Rep. Nydia M. Velazquez, Roll Call (January 18, 2013)
* “Time to settle Puerto Rico’s status” By Ricardo Rosselló Nevares, The Hill (January 14, 2013)
* “Measuring support for Puerto Rico statehood” By José A. Hernández, The Hill (January 16, 2013)
* “Congress must step in to resolve Puerto Rico’s future status” By José L. Arbona, The Hill (January 17, 2013)
Despite Advocates’ Claims, No Clear
Consensus on Puerto Rican Statehood
By Sen. Roger Wicker and Rep. Nydia M. Velazquez
Roll Call (January 18, 2013)
Recent calls to press ahead with efforts to make Puerto Rico the newest U.S. state defy the results of the plebiscite on Nov. 6, 2012, when Puerto Rican voters rejected statehood and elected pro-commonwealth candidate Alejandro García Padilla as their new governor.
In a democracy, wishful thinking does not substitute for support.
Even the most fervent statehood advocates must realize that the election results amount to far less than the clear consensus necessary to move the statehood issue forward.
It is important to note the bias in the complex two-vote process as orchestrated by the pro-statehood party in their waning days in power leading up to the referendum on Election Day. Puerto Rican voters were asked first whether they would rather keep the commonwealth’s current political status or preferred an alternative. They could answer either yes or no. The next question then narrowed the field of alternatives to only three options: statehood, independence or sovereign commonwealth.
Without an option representing their political status of choice, many statehood opponents advocated leaving the second question blank.
Indeed, some 498,604 Puerto Rican voters refused to answer.
If the tortured ballot design was an attempt to make statehood appear more popular, the actual election results demonstrated just the opposite.
Of the 1,878,969 Puerto Ricans who made it to the polls, only 834,191 (about 44 percent) showed an interest in becoming America’s 51st state.
Twenty-four percent marked their ballots for sovereign commonwealth, 4 percent for independence, and 27 percent left that part of the ballot blank in protest.
Any way you slice it, roughly 830,000 votes out of 1.9 million does not a consensus make. The 44 percent vote for statehood is similar to the 1993 and 1998 referendums, where statehood earned 46 percent and 47 percent of the vote, respectively.
Other outcomes on Election Day show public support for political leaders who want Puerto Rico to remain a commonwealth. García Padilla belongs to the pro-commonwealth Popular Democratic Party, which was a big winner overall, taking back control of both houses in the legislature and the mayor’s office in San Juan.
Unfazed by their dismal Election Day performance, statehood supporters are laboring vigorously to turn a sow’s ear into synthetic silk. Their argument rests on the assertion that 61 percent of participants in question No. 2 chose statehood as their preferred political status.
Objective observers, however, have realized that the votes do not measure up quite as neatly as statehood advocates claim. Sixty-one percent may appear impressive at first blush, but the number was achieved artificially only by disregarding the ballots from voters who cast blank ballots in protest.
With nearly half a million votes set aside by the Puerto Rico Elections Commission, statehood advocates may look good on paper, but the contrived result fails to reflect actual public opinion. Puerto Ricans are right to demand better.
Puerto Rico’s referendum is non-binding, and any action toward official statehood must go through Congress.
Of course, the election results should not deter Congress from continuing to pursue ways to improve Puerto Rico’s relationship with the United States. As commonwealth residents, Puerto Ricans are American citizens and serve in the U.S. military. They have a non-voting delegate in Congress, pay limited federal taxes, and cannot vote in presidential elections. For commonwealth supporters, the current political status is important to preserving Puerto Rico’s rich heritage and having greater authority over the island’s unique needs.
Until an overwhelming consensus for statehood develops, Puerto Ricans’ satisfaction with being a commonwealth should be respected.
Sen. Roger Wicker is a Republican from Mississippi. Rep. Nydia M. Velazquez is a Democrat from New York.
Congress Blog
Time to settle Puerto Rico’s status
By Ricardo Rosselló Nevares spokesperson, Boricua Ahora Es
The Hill (January 14, 2013)
Ockham’s razor is a principle of logic attributed to medieval philosopher and friar William of Ockham (or Occam), which states that one should not make more assumptions than the minimum needed; that amongst competing hypothesis, the simplest one tends to be the correct one.
In the case of the November 6, 2012 plebiscite held in Puerto Rico, this postulate is evident. Exercising their democratic right, the U.S. citizens living in Puerto Rico voted on two fundamental questions to determine the future of their political status. The first question asked if the islanders wanted to maintain their current status. The second asked if, given a change of status, which alternative they would favor.
When asked if they “agree that Puerto Rico should continue to have its present form of territorial status?” an overwhelming 54 percent voted NO, thus rejecting the current territorial/colonial status. With more than 78 percent of the registered voters casting a ballot, the “NO” won by a margin of 140,000 votes, receiving thousands of votes more than any elected official. It won in all 8 senatorial districts and 39 out of the 40 representative districts.
In the second question, statehood was favored by 61.11 percent of the voters, whereas Free Association received 33.34 percent of the votes, and Independence 5.55 percent.
For the first time ever, the citizens of Puerto Rico have agreed on the status issue above party lines, and have made a definite statement to move away from the current territorial status. The questions were clear, and the answers were clear.
Yet, proponents of the current status are using an alternative hypothesis, centering the conversation on the second question of the plebiscite, in hopes that the results of the first question will be ignored. With blatant disregard for the people’s expressed will, they try to argue that statehood did not actually win 61 percent of the vote because if you consider the ballots left empty and the ballots cast for other options, the sum of these “defeated” statehood. Pardon me? Counting empty ballots? Ockham’s razor has run amuck here. Instead of the simplest explanation or hypothesis being the correct one, they go for a justification dripping with assumptions, fuzzy math and misdirection.
Regardless of these questionable efforts by proponents of the current status, it is really the first question of the Puerto Rico plebiscite that merits most serious consideration. It aims at the key principles that are sewed into the fabric of the United States: democracy, liberty, and freedom. It also strikes at the notion that Puerto Ricans could not “get their act together” on the status question, or that they have never “rejected the current colonial status”.
In an effort to make sure every congressman has the pertinent evidence and elements of judgment, a delegation of more than 130 Puerto Ricans have traveled to the Washington, D.C. to deliver the certified results of the plebiscite, the sample ballot, and a call to action to all 542 offices in Congress. It is noteworthy that, far from being a homogeneous group, the delegation is composed of people that favor different status options, but have all come together to make the will of the people not only be heard, but also acted upon. This fact alone is unprecedented.
So, what should Congress do?
Here we invoke Ockham’s razor again, as well as the Declaration of Independence, which states that “Governments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed”. Congress can choose to ignore the will of the people in Puerto Rico by elaborating some as-of-yet hypothesis, or by borrowing arguments from the proponents of the status quo. Alternatively, they can abide by the simple and elegant way in which the people of Puerto Rico have come together, have chosen to move away from the current status, and are therefore primed to accept a Congress-implemented self determination process with valid non-territorial options.
It is time to act and show the world why the U.S. is the standard-bearer for democracy in the world. It is time to respond immediately to the will of the citizens of Puerto Rico, having Congress lead the way with viable status options for this American territory.
The world is watching… the power is in your hands.
Nevares is assistant professor of Bioengineering and spokesperson for Boricua ¡Ahora Es!, a movement that sponsors a final non-colonial, non-territorial solution to the political status of Puerto Rico.
Congress Blog
Measuring support for
Puerto Rico statehood
By José A. Hernández, Popular Democratic Party of Puerto Rico
The Hill (January 16, 2013)
Has support for statehood in Puerto Rico suddenly swelled to a historic 61 percent high as its supporters claim or has it receded to a 20 year low of 44.4 percent as its opponents propound? You be judge.
The specific claim made by the 61 percent salesmen as published in a full-page ad the other day is that: “over 75 percent of registered voters came to the polls, and 61 percent voted for statehood.” Fact-checking that is simple. According to Puerto Rico’s Elections Commission there are 2,402,941 registered voters of which 1,878,969 cast ballots in the November 6 plebiscite. That is a 78 percent voter participation. As to that, the ad is truthful. But what about the 61 percent claim?
The Commission certified that 834,191 of those participating voted for statehood. Do the math. I have divided 834,191 by 1,878,969 several times and with different calculators made in various countries and it always comes out the same: 44.4 percent. That is about two percentage points less than the 46.3 percent statehood vote in the 1993 plebiscite and materially lower than the 61 percent claimed.
So what is all this fuzz about 61% for statehood? They get to that number by excluding the 498,604 blank ballots when calculating the statehood proportion, a dishonest maneuver when you realize that in the immediately preceding phrase they included those ballots when boasting about voter participation. Of those “over 75 percent of registered voters that came to the polls,” only 44.4 percent, not 61 percent, voted for statehood.
So many left their ballots blank because the island’s commonwealth status was not included as an option, forcing its supporters to vote either for a second preference or to seek a means of protest. The pro-statehood majority that legislated this plebiscite devised an unusual two question vote that never put statehood in direct competition with commonwealth, thus concealing if commonwealth is preferred over statehood. Significantly, those who legislated this convoluted process were swept out of office on that same election day, and the pro-Commonwealth party that asked voters to leave the ballots blank won the governorship and both houses of the legislature.
Puerto Rico’s Supreme Court recently stated that a blank ballot “expresses an inconformity with the presented proposals.” The Court feels that while we can never be certain what those votes are for, we can be pretty damn sure what they are against.
So this ends with a paradox. While the pro-statehood crowd refuses to accept that only 44.4 percent voted for statehood, they have to admit that 55.6 percent voted against it.
Hernández is mayoral secretary of Federal Affairs for the Popular Democratic Party of Puerto Rico.
Congress Blog
Congress must step in to
resolve Puerto Rico’s future status
By José L. Arbona, vice president, Puerto Rican Alliance for Sovereign Free Association
The Hill (January 17, 2013)
A delegation exceeding 100 Puerto Rican citizens recently visited Washington D.C., calling upon members of Congress to respond to the results of a political status plebiscite held in Puerto Rico in November 2012. The delegation included representatives from all status options: statehood, independence, and sovereign free association. Their common plight: to convince Congress that based on the democratic majority of Puerto Rican voters, the time for decolonization is now.
Puerto Rico has been a non-incorporated territory of the United States since 1898. In 1952 the island gained a certain degree of self-government through the creation of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, but its colonial nature went unchanged. Of course, the country has not been idle. In the second half of the 20th century it transformed itself from an agricultural-based economy into an industrial nation, but it has always lagged the continental USA. In fact, since the late 1970s Puerto Rico has actually stopped growing in real terms.
To cope with the economic problem, the local government has resorted to extreme public debt. Also, federal transfers to Puerto Rico have increased to an unprecedented level, now estimated to be 20 percent of the Puerto Rico’s total budget. As a result, two conflicting paradigms have emerged. One looks upon continued U.S. aid as a necessity, the other seeks self-sufficiency through the exercise of sovereign powers. This, in essence, is the political status problem of Puerto Rico.
Until very recently the U.S. could cope with the problem by arguing that the majority of Puerto Ricans actually favor the status quo. Not anymore. On November 6, 2012, Puerto Rico held a plebiscite posing two questions related to its political status. The first required the voter to state if he or she was satisfied with the territorial condition. The second asked voters to state their preference for a non-colonial alternative.
On the first question, 54 percent said NO. In fact, many more would have voted NO had it not been because the Popular Democratic Party (PPD) – which actually won the recent general elections – was against the plebiscite and asked the voters to vote YES. The PPD also favored leaving the second question unanswered, since their favored alternative, enhanced commonwealth, was not included as an explicit option. Some pro-independence groups were also in favor of boycotting the plebiscite.
Statehood obtained 61 percent of the vote; sovereign free association, 33 percent; and independence 6 percent. It would seem that statehood was the clear victor. However, 26 percent of the plebiscite voters left the second question blank, and there is overall agreement that these voters are not in favor of statehood. Therefore, when the blank/protest votes are factored in, the absolute majority (55 percent) is actually against statehood.
Naturally, statehood supporters argue otherwise. Their contention is that blank votes cannot or should not be taken into account. Nevertheless, a status change is of such a fundamental nature that an alternative cannot be implemented until an absolute majority in its favor is non-dubious. Clearly, this is not the case when referencing the second plebiscite question.
But the first question – Do you favor the present territorial status? – has been answered and its interpretation is straightforward. The people rejected the territorial nature of the Commonwealth. Thus, another plebiscite is required, with but one question: Which non-colonial status do you favor? It should be a federally sponsored plebiscite with clear alternatives defined by Congress. This is an absolute necessity since, contrary to independence which is an undeniable right, statehood and sovereign free association are both dependent on the willingness of the USA to concede them.
In conclusion, Congress should step in and speak clearly and truthfully to the people of Puerto Rico as to what the USA is willing to offer as a political solution. Puerto Rico’s call for decolonization is clear. Will the USA respond as a nation true to its beginnings or is it still stuck in the outdated paradigms of colonialism?
Arbona is retired chancellor of the University of Puerto Rico at Aguadilla and author of the book “Rompiendo el cerco: nuevos paradigmas sobre el estatus politico de Puerto Rico” (“Breaking the Fence: New Paradigms on Puerto Rico’s Political Status”).

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NPRC LETTER TO PRESIDENT OBAMA ON GRAVE SITUATION IN VIEQUES
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Posted February 11th, 2013 by rafael
February 11, 2013
The Honorable Barack Obama
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue
Washington, D.C. 20500
Dear President Obama:
As the premier non-profit non-partisan Hispanic organization representing the voice of the Puerto Rican community, the National Puerto Rican Coalition, Inc. (NPRC) is gravely concerned with the lack of meaningful progress of the Administration in addressing key concerns among the people of Vieques, Puerto Rico.
We understand that you and others in the Administration are aware of the toxic legacy left by the U.S. Navy in Vieques and the alarmingly high rates of cancer and other serious illnesses suffered by Viequenses as a result of the Navy’s military activities with toxins and chemicals ranging from depleted uranium and napalm. As a presidential candidate you wrote to then Governor of Puerto Rico Aníbal Acevedo Vilá on February 12, 2008 that “We will closely monitor the health of the people of Vieques and promote appropriate remedies to health conditions caused by military activities conducted by the U.S. Navy on Vieques.”
That pledge was made five years ago. As you enter your second term and as we are about to celebrate the tenth year anniversary of the U.S. Navy’s departure from Vieques, that pledge remains unfulfilled. The people of Vieques can no longer wait for those appropriate remedies.
Congressional hearings and scientific studies have shed light on the health crisis in Vieques and the neglect the federal government has so far shown with regard to this crisis. Your Administration needs to act now so that the situation that affects the lives and health of thousands of Viequenses is not further exacerbated. And in so doing, the concomitant situation of environmental and ecological damage left by the military in Vieques must also be addressed fully and adequately now. We hope that we move beyond task forces recommending the creation of other task forces to recommend consideration of possible recommendations, etc. The time for action is now and the solutions are clear.
The harm to the health and well-being of the people of Vieques as a result of over six decades of military exercises and bombings by the U.S. Navy with everything from depleted uranium to napalm is well documented. Numerous tests and studies show the disproportionately high rates of serious illnesses such as cancer, lupus, diabetes, and heart diseases among the people of Vieques. Little has been done to address this health crisis in one of Puerto Rico’s poorest municipalities. Many Viequenses live in abject poverty, with 73 percent of the residents living be low the Federal poverty level. The median household income is $5,900, and Vieques has an unemployment rate of 22 percent. The people of Vieques have a 30% higher rate of cancer, a 95% higher rate of cirrhosis of the liver, a 381% higher rate of hypertension, and a 41% higher rate of diabetes than those living on the main island of Puerto Rico.
The disparity between the serious and widespread medical situation among Viequenses and the deficiencies in their health care system and health care facilities is simply staggering. Viequenses have to travel to the main Island for treatment for serious and expensive conditions such as cancer. Many simply cannot afford their treatment or give up due to the onerous obstacles they face. The federal government in general -and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) in particular- should assist in remedying this situation. One of many steps HHS should consider is having the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) get actively involved in Vieques, particularly since its mandate is to act as the primary federal agency for improving access to health care services for people who are uninsured, isolated or medically vulnerable.
We are aware that the Administration has convened a “Vieques Sustainability Task Force”, a collaboration of federal, Commonwealth, and local government recommended in a March 2011 report by the “President’s Task Force on Puerto Rico”. We are glad that there are federal government officials discussing Vieques. However, many Viequenses and their allies, including the NPRC, remain concerned about the slow progress made by the task force concerning the health situation among Viequenses and the clean-up and remediation of the island, among others. For instance, the stated task force objectives of assisting Puerto Rico’s Department of Health in exploring options and exploring the feasibility of a “section 330” health center application, do not suffice and are not the kind of direct and comprehensive solution that the people of Vieques deserve. Medical facilities remain inadequate and serious health problems remain untreated. The task force recommendations fall way short of the “appropriate remedies” you promised five years ago.
Aside from helping improve the existing facilities and help build new ones, your Administration should provide resources in Vieques as soon as possible to help with diagnosis, prevention, and treatment. In addressing the health crisis among Viequenses and providing the necessary resources for full and prompt clean up and decontamination of the island, your Administration would finally be not just fulfilling a long overdue pledge, but would finally provide relief to the U.S. citizens of Vieques, who have borne too heavy a burden for too long.
Sincerely,
Rafael A. Fantauzzi
President & CEO
National Puerto Rican Coalition
Cc:
Honorable Kathleen Sebelius
Secretary
Department of Health Human Services
Honorable Lisa Jackson
Administrator
Environmental Protection Agency
Ms. Judith A. Enck
Regional Administrator – Region 2
Environmental Protection Agency
Honorable Alejandro Garcia Padilla
Governor of Puerto Rico
Honorable Eduardo Bhatia
President, Senate of Puerto Rico
Honorable Jaime Perelló
President, House of Representatives for Puerto Rico
Honorable Pedro Pierluisi
Resident Commisioner, Puerto Rico
Mr. Juan Eugenio Hernández Mayoral
Director, Puerto Rico Federal Affairs Administration (PRFAA)
Cecilia Muñoz
Director, The White House Domestic Policy Council
Mr. Hector Sanchez
Chair, National Hispanic Leadership Agenda

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‘Latino Americans,’ New PBS Documentary Series, Is First On US Latino History
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Actor Benjamin Bratt will narrate the comprehensive series on "Latino American" identity, which will lean heavily on chronicles of individuals.

Comcast Fires Reporter After 'Sex' Flub [VIDEO]
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Only two days after her on-air "sex" slip, reporter Susannah Collins was fired by Comcast, though the mass media giant is denying any connection between the two events.

Scientists Seek To Take The Measure of Antimatter
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In 2011, researchers at CERN found a way to trap and hold particles of antihydrogen for about 15 minutes at a time. Jeffrey Hangst, spokesman for the ALPHA project at CERN, describes how scientists are trying to measure basic properties of the particles, such as their mass.
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The GOP Must Seize the Center or Die
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2012 was a disappointing year for Republicans. The failure to win key swing states in the presidential election and surprising losses in the House and Senate have prompted some reflection. Was their embrace of small government, low taxes, and a strong conservative stance on social issues at odds with shifting American demographics? Or did the GOP embrace the right platform, but the wrong candidates?




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Peeling Away The Layers In A 'Portrait Of Jason'
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In her classic '60s documentary, Shirley Clarke profiles a loquacious 33-year-old gay hustler who dreams of having a nightclub act. Her subject could hardly be more complex — and in examining him, she raises important questions about the relationship between fact and fiction.



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Two Indie Directors Go Confidently Mainstream
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Jeff Nichols and Ramin Bahrani made names with small, low-budget movies: Nichols with Take Shelter and Bahrani withMan Push Cart. Both have now directed big-budget films with big stars: Nichols' Mud features Matthew McConaughey, and Bahrani's At Any Price stars Dennis Quaid and Zac Efron.



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Criminologist Believes Violent Behavior Is Biological
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In a new book, The Anatomy of Violence, Adrian Raine argues that violent behavior has a biological basis just like depression or schizophrenia. This raises questions about treatment, accountability and punishment, including the death penalty.



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Fresh Air Weekend: Maron, Violent Minds And A Classic Documentary
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The comedian turned his life around when he started "WTF with Marc Maron" out of his garage in 2009. InThe Anatomy of Violence, Adrian Raine argues that violent behavior has a biological basis just like depression. In her classic '60s documentary, Shirley Clarke profiles a 33-year-old gay hustler.



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Surveillance After The Marathon Bombing, The Kill Team and More
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Bob looks at the risks and promise of surveillance after the Boston marathon bombing, a new documentary looks at war crimes and whistleblowing in the theater of war and an Onion-like satire site tries to bring military humor to the civilian masses.




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Puerto Rican Nationalism and Statehood - by Arienna Grody - July 27, 2009


NiLP FYI: Puerto Rican Nationalism and Statehood


Note: The Natural Resources Committee approved the Puerto Rico Democracy Act of 2009 on the future political status of Puerto Rico last week. This bill was submitted by the island’s resident commissioner, Pedro Pierluisi, who is a member of the pro-statehood New Progressive Paty (PNP). The other three Stateside Puerto Ricans in Congress have not endorsed this bill.
According to this proposal, voters would choose between keeping the island’s commonwealth status, adopted in 1952, or to opt for something different. In the latter case, a second plebiscite would let them decide whether they wanted statehood, independence or independence with a loose association to the United States.
Two of the island’s main parties oppose the proposal as having a pro-statehood bias, and a similar bill that the committee approved in October 2007 has since died. Last week’s committee debate marked the 68th time that the House has debated a bill related to Puerto Rico’s status. Puerto Ricans voted to maintain the island’s current status and rejected statehood in nonbinding referendums in 1967, 1993 and 1998.
Residents of the U.S. Caribbean commonwealth are barred from voting in presidential elections, and their Congressional delegate cannot vote.
We have reprinted below an interesting analysis supporting the statehood position that we thought would be helpful in promoting further debate on this status issue. The views expressed do not necessarily reflect the views of NiLP on this subject and we will seek disseminate commentaries on the other status options.
—Angelo Falcón

Puerto Rican Nationalism and the Drift Towards Statehood
by Arienna Grody, Research Associate
Council on Hemispheric Affairs (July 27, 2009)

Is Puerto Rico Joining The Pot Legalization Parade Too? - by Allen St. Pierre, NORML Executive Director - April 25, 2013


  • by Allen St. Pierre, NORML Executive DirectorApril 25, 2013
    With little media attention stateside, Senator Miguel Pereira has introduced legislation that would legalize marijuana in the US territory of Puerto Rico. Also, activists for marijuana law reform took to the streets of San Juan this past 4/20 weekend to show public support–one of the first public rallies ever in Puerto Rico for marijuana law reform.
    Dozens of people marched Saturday through Puerto Rico’s capital amid growing support for a recent bill filed by a former police chief that aims to legalize marijuana for personal use, unleashing an unprecedented debate in this conservative U.S. territory.
    The crowd marched to the seaside Capitol building, where Sen. Miguel Pereira filed a bill this week stating it should be legal for those 21 and older to possess up to one ounce of marijuana. The former federal prosecutor and corrections secretary said possession cases are costing the government money, noting that 80% of inmates are serving time for non-violent crimes.
    His comments have polarized the island, with some legislators demanding his resignation.
    “It’s outrageous that someone who was elected by the people tries to use his position to cause addiction, sicken and destroy Puerto Rican society,” Sen. Itzamar Pena said.
    Critics say the proposal would further fuel violence on an island of 3.7 million people that reported a record 1,117 killings in 2011, with police saying that 70% of killings are drug-related. Others expressed concern that police, teachers and doctors would smoke while working.
    “This measure has to be studied extremely carefully,” Sen. José Perez Rosa said. “It’s not like alcohol, where acceptable levels (of use) exist.”
    Currently, those charged with marijuana possession can face up to three years in jail and a $5,000 fine.
    Justice Secretary Luis Sánchez Betances did not say whether he favored Pereira’s measure, but he said the government should find alternatives to the current law.
    “This opens a public debate,” he said.
    Gov. Alejandro Garcia Padilla echoed a similar sentiment in a press conference this week.
    “I don’t have a problem with an open debate about the possibilities, benefits or drawbacks of such a measure,” he said, adding that the issue is not a priority for his administration.
    Last year, Colorado and Washington became the first states to legalize marijuana for those over 21. The law, however, bans the public use of marijuana.
    Puerto Rico joins a handful of other Caribbean islands, including Jamaica and St. Lucia, where there has been a push to legalize marijuana use.
    In Jamaica, government officials previously reviewed recommendations to decriminalize possession of small amounts of marijuana. The proposal has the backing of several church leaders, but it has not gained traction on an island that remains the Caribbean’s largest pot exporter to the U.S.
    In St. Lucia, supporters also have spent more than a decade lobbying the government without success to endorse a commercial hemp project.

Obama and Peña Nieto Reaffirm Joint Cooperation - LAHT

Obama and Peña Nieto Reaffirm Joint Cooperation

May 3,2013

Obama said at a joint press conference after his meeting with Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto that the two leaders agreed to continue the countries’ tight security coordination

MEXICO CITY – U.S. President Barack Obama said on Thursday that he supports the Mexican government’s efforts to reduce violence in this country and emphasized that the bilateral relationship is “dynamic.”

Obama said at a joint press conference after his meeting with Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto that the two leaders agreed to continue the countries’ tight security coordination.

He also promised “strong cooperation” from the U.S. as Mexico moves to reduce internal violence, particularly as it relates to organized crime, adding that Washington will work to “meet our responsibilities to reduce the demand for illegal drugs and reduce the southbound flow of guns and cash.”

For his part, Peña Nieto said that “the new strategy in the area of security in our country has a clear intent: fighting organized crime of whatever kind,” whether it be drug trafficking, kidnapping, extortion or anything else.

He also said that he had agreed with Obama to take joint measures to create a “more secure border,” albeit one that facilitates the passage of persons and goods.

Obama thanked Peña Nieto and the Mexican people in Spanish for their hospitality and he went on to express his support for the reforms undertaken by the Mexican leader’s government.

“What I have been impressed with is the president’s boldness in his reform agenda,” Obama said. “He’s tackling big issues, and that’s what the times demand. We live in a world that’s changing rapidly. ... We can’t be flat-footed as the world advances.”

If Mexico is successful in that effort, that will be good for the United States, the U.S. leader emphasized.

Obama and Peña Nieto, in a joint statement issued after their meeting, announced the creation of a high-level economic dialogue – the first meeting of which will take place this year – to promote competitiveness, productivity and connectivity, along with fostering economic growth and innovation.

“As Mexico works to become more competitive, you’ve got a strong partner in the United States because our success is shared,” Obama said, noting that annual bilateral trade now exceeds $500 billion.

The United States is Mexico’s largest customer and Mexico is the second-largest market for U.S. exports.

The two presidents also reconfirmed their commitment to concluding the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) with Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Malaysia, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore, and Vietnam.

With regard to immigration reform, Obama said that he is “optimistic” that the U.S. Congress will pass a comprehensive reform package. “If we’re going to get that done, now is the time to do it,” he said.

The majority of foreign-born immigrants in the United States are Mexicans, and many of them are undocumented.

The two leaders also spoke about the importance of working together with Canada with an eye toward making North America the world’s most dynamic and competitive region.

Obama and Peña Nieto also concluded agreements in the educational area and reaffirmed their commitment to act as jointly responsible partners in the area of public safety.

Obama arrived in Mexico on Thursday on an official visit that will focus on economic issues.

After his meeting with Peña Nieto, he returned to a hotel in the exclusive Polanco neighborhood, where he is scheduled to meet with local U.S. Embassy personnel and on Thursday evening Obama will attend a dinner in his honor hosted by the Mexican president. EFE

Immigration Overhaul Tests Mexican Partnership By COLLEEN MCCAIN NELSON - WSJ


  • The Wall Street Journal

U.S. image

Agence France-Presse/Getty Images
US President Barack Obama delivering a speech at the Anthropology Museum in Mexico City Friday.
MEXICO CITY—President Barack Obama directly addressed the Mexican people on Friday in a televised speech, but on the issue of immigration, he appealed to distinct audiences in two different countries.
The president walked a careful line as he sketched his ideas for an immigration overhaul. He told his Mexican audience that legislation would provide a pathway to citizenship, but underscored that many in the U.S. want to see immigration laws aggressively enforced.
"We are a nation of laws, but we're also a nation of immigrants. Like every nation we have a responsibility to ensure that our laws are upheld," Mr. Obama said. "But we also know that, as a nation of immigrants, the immigration system we have in the United States right now doesn't reflect our values."
Mr. Obama's three-day trip to Mexico and Costa Rica, lasting through Saturday, could have implications for his domestic agenda. While administration officials have tried to elevate economic issues this week, immigration has remained prominently in the foreground.
On Friday, the president worked to build good will across the border, crediting Americans from Mexico and those of Mexican descent with helping to elect him and reminding listeners of his efforts to allow immigrants who were brought to the U.S. as children to stay in the country.
Mr. Obama drew cheers as he predicted that new immigration laws would be enacted.
Back home, though, Mr. Obama will return to a divided Congress where an immigration bill still faces uncertain prospects and has limited support among Republicans. A bipartisan group of eight senators collaborated on legislation, but not all of the architects of the plan are confident it can win approval.
Sen. Marco Rubio (R., Fla.), a key conservative voice, wrote in an op-ed in The Wall Street Journal on Friday that the proposal he helped craft still can be improved, opening the door to even more-stringent border-security measures and a tougher road for those who immigrated illegally, among other possible changes.
image
In Costa Rica on Friday night, Mr. Obama reiterated his support for an amendment granting equal immigration benefits to same-sex couples. But he also said at a news conference that he wasn't likely to get everything he wants in the legislation. He added that additional changes could be made later date.
Before Mr. Obama's trip to Mexico, administration officials noted the caution necessary in discussing new immigration laws while in Mexico, and said they expected Mexican officials to leave the issue to U.S. leaders to resolve.
Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto appeared to hew to that guidance at a news conference on Thursday, offering few words on immigration.
Still, Mr. Obama came to Mexico seeking cooperation on securing the border, while saying that the long-term solution to illegal immigration is a growing and prosperous Mexico where more people can work.
In Mexico, pressure to emigrate to the U.S. has eased, in part due to a tough labor market in the U.S. and steady growth in Mexico. More than 11 million Mexicans already live in the U.S.
"The pull factors stimulating emigration to the U.S. have changed," said Tony Payan, a visiting scholar at Rice University in Houston, who also credits improved border security for reducing emigration.
Immigration from Mexico, the home country of a majority of newcomers to the U.S., declined 3% in January from the previous year, the Inter-American Development Bank reported in a recent study.
Mexico's statistics agency also has documented the steady decline. Immigration from Mexico during the fourth quarter of last year was 29.4 people per 10,000 inhabitants, compared with 78.5 in the fourth quarter of 2006.
The recent dip in Mexican emigration to the U.S. may be only temporary.
"Structurally, Mexico still has high levels of insecurity," Mr. Payan said.
Many middle-class Mexicans see greater professional opportunities and better quality of life in the U.S. An improving job outlook in the U.S. could also boost emigration in the near future, said Jorge Bustamante, a sociologist and co-founder of the Tijuana-based think tank El Colegio de la Frontera Norte.
—Laurence Iliff and Juan Montes contributed to this article.
Write to Colleen McCain Nelson at colleen.nelson@wsj.com
A version of this article appeared May 4, 2013, on page A8 in the U.S. edition of The Wall Street Journal, with the headline: U.S. Immigration Overhaul Tests Mexican Partnership.

NEW YORK, May 3 (Reuters) - Top investment firms such as Franklin Templeton and Oppenheimer have funds that still hold significant amounts of high-yielding Puerto Rican municipal bonds, despite risks inherent in the Caribbean island's economy.


Fri May 3, 2013 2:36pm EDT
By Sam Forgione
    NEW YORK, May 3 (Reuters) - Top investment firms such as
Franklin Templeton and Oppenheimer have funds that still hold
significant amounts of high-yielding Puerto Rican municipal
bonds, despite risks inherent in the Caribbean island's economy.
    The Franklin Double Tax-Free Income Fund had 66
percent of its assets invested in Puerto Rican municipal bonds
according to an April 30 analysis by Lipper, a Thomson Reuters
company. Five of Oppenheimer's Rochester muni funds had over 20
percent exposure to the debt.
    Puerto Rico, a U.S. territory, pays the highest rates of any
major tax-free borrower in the $3.7 trillion U.S. municipal
market, given fiscal challenges such as the commonwealth's large
structural budget gap, unemployment rate of 14.2 percent, and
underfunded public pension system.
    All three major credit ratings firms have recently
downgraded Puerto Rico's bond ratings to just above junk-bond
status in the wake of a six-year recession that ended in 2012.
    "Despite the credit risk, demand for yield has been pretty
strong, helping to drive prices higher on Puerto Rico's general
obligation municipal debt," said Domenic Vonella, analyst at
Municipal Market Data.
    Yields, which move inversely to prices, on Puerto Rico's
10-year general obligation municipal bonds have fallen from 5.04
percent on April 10 to 4.81 percent as of Thursday, according to
MMD data. 
    Those patently higher yields, combined with the price gains
since April, have made them more compelling to some investors
than their triple-A rated U.S. counterparts. The U.S. bonds
offer a lower yield of 1.66 percent as of Thursday, and have
seen less price gains since yielding 1.74 percent on April 10.
    While municipal debt is generally free from federal income
taxes, Puerto Rico's municipal bonds are also exempt from state
and local taxes in all 50 states on their interest payouts,
which is an added perk for investors.
    The Franklin Templeton fund, for example, has earned a
return of 2.45 percent so far this year, above the 1.56 percent
return on the Barclays Municipal Bond Index, according to
Lipper. The fund had $692 million in assets at the end of March.
    The fund's managers were not immediately available to
comment. 
    Even with those advantages, the risks of holding Puerto
Rican municipal debt may outweigh the rewards.
    "This is a good time to get out of Puerto Rico's municipal
debt," said Jeff Tjornehoj, head of Americas research at Lipper,
in light of the island's tepid economic recovery and the recent
price gains.
    The following are the top 20 mutual funds and
exchange-traded funds that invest in Puerto Rican municipal
bonds, according to Lipper:

200,000 Trees Reported Felled in Valuable Puerto Rico Forest 05/05/13 13:25 from Latin American Herald Tribune | Latino Unemployment Rates Hit Record Low, But This Might Not Necessarily Be ... - Huffington Post | Publicist: Rappers Wisin & Yandel not breaking up 05/05/13 12:12 from MiamiHerald.com: Home Page

» 200,000 Trees Reported Felled in Valuable Puerto Rico Forest
05/05/13 13:25 from Latin American Herald Tribune
An environmental organization reported the cutting of close to 200,000 trees on Monte Barinas, an area on the southwest coast of Puerto Rico whose subtropical dry forest is of great ecological value for its now-endangered native vegetation ..

» Latino Unemployment Rates Hit Record Low, But This Might Not Necessarily Be ... - Huffington Post
05/05/13 12:23 from latino - Google News
Latino Unemployment Rates Hit Record Low, But This Might Not Necessarily Be ... Huffington Post The U.S. employment report released Friday shows the Latino unemployment rate in April dropped to 9.0 percent, down from 9.2 in March. The late..


» Publicist: Rappers Wisin & Yandel not breaking up
05/05/13 12:12 from MiamiHerald.com: Home Page
The publicist for Puerto Rican reggaeton stars Wisin & Yandel says the Grammy-winning duo has no intention of breaking up, dismissing comments made by another performer that the pair were splitting. 


Emboldened, Mexican Cartels Put Down Roots in U.S. Heartland - By Maria Peña - LAHT

May 4,2013

Emboldened, Mexican Cartels Put Down Roots in U.S. Heartland

By Maria Peña

WASHINGTON – The Mexican cartels that are the principal source of illicit drugs coming into the United States have managed to extend their tentacles to the U.S. heartland, where they represent a significant threat to public safety, a senior Drug Enforcement Administration agent told Efe on Friday.

The battle against drug traffickers and organized crime was a major theme of President Barack Obama’s just-concluded visit to Mexico.

Mexican cartels have a presence in more than 1,000 U.S. cities, according to the Justice Department.

“Obviously those numbers present some issues ... in some sense, certainly that’s going to provide some security issues in places where they probably haven’t had to think about it yet, but on the strong side of that ... we’re in a much better position to share information and intelligence,” Jack Riley, the head of DEA operations in Chicago, told Efe.

“We’ve been able to attack those criminal Mexican organizations, stopping the way they operate here (Chicago) and that, in a very distinct way, has really made a difference in terms of the violence of the street gangs,” he said in a telephone interview.

The success, Riley said, is largely due “to great intelligence and information originating from the border region and in some cases from Mexico.”

Mexico’s powerful Sinaloa cartel, led by fugitive Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman, boasts such a strong presence in the Windy City that the Chicago Crime Commission has labeled him “Public Enemy No. 1,” an epithet first bestowed on Al Capone.

During a joint press conference Thursday with the visiting Obama, Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto announced some changes in the mechanics of bilateral cooperation on crime.

“Everybody’s still waiting to see how that will play out,” Riley said Friday. “I’m personally very optimistic that we will be able to continue that great relationship we’ve developed” with Mexican authorities.

“The fundamental relationships that I think have evolved during the last years I think are going to be there and I’m optimistic we’re gonna continue to do the work that we’ve been doing,” the DEA veteran told Efe. EFE

COURTS BESET BY MONEY WOES ARE PUTTING PARADISE ON HOLD - sftimes.com

COURTS BESET BY MONEY WOES ARE PUTTING PARADISE ON HOLDPDFPrintE-mail
Written by DAVID MCFADDEN — Associated Press   
Thursday, 02 May 2013
jamaica-flag-1-web.jpgKINGSTON, Jamaica – Claudette Johnson still has a hard time sleeping at night a decade after her son was fatally shot in a confrontation with Jamaican police and 15 years after her taxi driver husband was murdered by gunmen.
Year after year, both cases have collected dust in the island’s gridlocked court system, leaving her in limbo. Meanwhile, she’s grimly tracked the men she believes are responsible for the killings of her loved ones, even as witnesses have vanished and memories have grown murky.
“Lord, it hurts. You can wait forever for justice here,” Johnson said in an outdoor Kingston market where she ekes out a living selling second hand clothing from a sun-baked wooden stall.
Johnson’s exasperation with the sluggish pace of Jamaican justice reflects what many say is a regional crisis.
Homicide rates
While the Caribbean is known to most visitors as a vacation paradise, the backlog in overburdened courts has soared as crime statistics show homicide rates nearly doubling in several countries since 1995.
At the same time, underfunded and inefficient courts have failed to keep up with the punishing caseloads, stalling lives and even acting as a disincentive for foreign investment.
In some countries, thousands of defendants have languished in decrepit lockups for years without trial.
Perhaps nowhere is the problem more marked than in Jamaica, which is struggling to whittle down a crushing number of old criminal cases. With even basic statistical data on the flow of cases lacking, most officials have long put the court backlog at over 400,000 in a country of 2.7 million people, although some justice officials now say the number is closer to 200,000.
 Whatever the full tally, authorities uniformly agree that the sprawling backlog is a big problem, with opposition leader and former Prime Minister Andrew Holness likening it to a “cancer in the core of the nation.”
Dire consequences
The consequences are dire. In its 2013 International Narcotics Control Strategy Report, the U.S. State Department said Jamaica’s sluggish criminal justice system contributes to “impunity for many of the worst criminal offenders and gangs, an abnormally high rate of violent crimes” and other social costs.
The conviction rate for murders is five percent. As a result, Jamaicans believe killers routinely go unpunished in a country with some of the world’s highest murder rates and deadly vigilante justice against people suspected in crimes is a fairly regular occurrence.
In countries such as Haiti and the Dominican Republic, prisons are filled with inmates who have not been convicted of a crime, often waiting years for their trials to start or be dismissed.
In Haiti, dismal facilities have no toilets or proper plumbing and holding cells are so crowded that many inmates take turns sleeping at night because of lack of space.
Chronic delays
The delays have hit justice systems in even relatively wealthy Caribbean nations such as the Bahamas and Barbados. Experts say postponements are often granted by judges for the flimsiest of reasons and there’s no shortage of defense lawyers who benefit. Officials complain that a culture of delay has become chronic in courtrooms. 
Wayne Munroe, a prominent attorney and former head of the Bahamas Bar Association, said some Bahamians have spent a decade waiting for trials and he estimated the criminal case backlog at around 10,000, with up to 500 open murder cases.
``There is an impact on lawlessness. A lot of people go out and think they will not be caught and if they are caught they won’t face trial,’’ Munroe said.
In Trinidad & Tobago, homicides grew by 488 percent between 1999 and 2008, the U.N. Development Program says. And, according to the U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime, the murder rate in Jamaica was 52.2 per 100,000 inhabitants in 2012, compared to 4.8 per 100,000 in the United States.
Violence has also rocked Puerto Rico, where the National Guard was activated in 2010 to fight soaring violent crime rates.
Narco-trafficking
Since the 1980s, drug traffickers have helped drive up crime by introducing narcotics with a street value exceeding the size of the Caribbean’s legal economy.
Even with drug seizures diminishing by 71 percent between 1997 and 2009, as contraband shifted to Central American routes, lethal violence increased, partly due to frenzied competition for turf in a diminished illicit market.
Exacerbating the problem are court systems that already barely functioned before they were hit by the drug cases.
Judges and prosecutors blame staff shortages and underfinanced courts, while citizens cite incompetence, corruption, tardy forensic and ballistic reports and archaic courts relying on paper and ink instead of computers.
Even impaneling juries can be a challenge in Jamaica, where many people will feign illness to avoid jury duty and the paltry daily subsistence allowances that come with it.
Complicating matters further, a large number of randomly selected jurors never even get their summons to appear, in the first place. The Jamaican police unit responsible for serving the notices says it has only one car to do its work.
Seeking solutions
Officials in Jamaica and Trinidad & Tobago are trying to speed up justice by pushing for legislative amendments to eliminate preliminary inquiries, which determine if the state has enough evidence to justify a trial, and reduce the number of matters that require trial by jury, a hallmark of British common law and the basis for many countries’ justice systems.
For Johnson, government pledges to improve the system ring hollow. Like many other impoverished Jamaicans, she’s convinced that the system is rigged against her.
“In this country,” she said, holding a photo of her slain 21-year-old son, “justice is never for the poor.”
AP writers Trenton Daniel in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, and Jeff Todd in Nassau, Bahamas, contributed to this report.

349 results for "puerto rico" - MH

349 results for "puerto rico" - MH