Friday, June 21, 2013

Puerto Rico's Congressman Delivers Statement at the United ...by New Yorican Girl

Puerto Rico's Congressman Delivers Statement at the United ...

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If the U.S. Congress and President Obama really want to engage and empower our Hispanic voting block in this country, even if only for their political gain, then they should take immediate steps to resolve Puerto Rico's status...

Governor Writes Misleading Letters on Plebiscite to Members of ... 

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Puerto Rico Report has obtained copies of letters that Governor Garcia Padilla has sent Members of Congress giving results of Puerto Rico's political status plebiscite very different than those determined by Puerto Rico's ...

Latest Food Stamps Story About Puerto Rico Riddled with Ignorance ... 

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Is Puerto Rico a welfare state dump? Seriously? I have to address this one? Ok, I will. Yes, the island has problems, both in crime and unemployment, but I believe that this has to do more with the political status issue that has ...

US Coast Guard helps seize 1500 pounds of cocaine in Caribbean Sea - Jamaica Observer

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US Coast Guard helps seize 1500 pounds of cocaine in Caribbean Sea
Jamaica Observer
“Our local, federal and international partnerships are making a difference to stem the flow of drugsinto Puerto Rico and the US Virgin Islands as far as possible and bring those responsible to justice,” said Coast Guard Captain Drew Pearson, Sector ... 

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US to send more federal agents to help fight drug trafficking in Puerto Rico - Windsor Star 

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US to send more federal agents to help fight drug trafficking in Puerto Rico
Windsor Star
... on drug trafficking in the region. His spokeswoman Dennise Perez says they do not yet know how many agents will be sent to Puerto Rico. The House Appropriations Committee has said data seems to indicate that U.S. Caribbean territories have become a ...

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From hero to accused - Philly.com

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Philly.com

From hero to accused
Philly.com
Instantly, the half-Irish, half-Puerto Rican rookie became Philadelphia's hero cop. It was an unexpected turn for a kid who was a C student at Benjamin Franklin High. "I should have done better, but I didn't apply myself," he told me in an interview ...

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The spectrum crisis is upon us

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The White House recently announced a $100 million initiative on spectrum sharing and a “Spectrum Technology Day” to promote innovations in wireless communications, one of the few successful sectors in a sluggish economy.

This proposal could maintain momentum generated earlier this month, when the Senate Commerce Committee held a hearing to assess the state of the wireless industry—a hearing which revealed a potentially stalled wireless market if spectrum hits capacity.

Stench of hypocrisy permeated the halls of Congress during farm bill debate

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As we finished debate Thursday on the House farm bill, I couldn’t help but recall how as a teenager I was riveted as America debated these very same issues but with oh, such a different outcome.

Caribbean News Now!: La Nacion: Jews of the Caribbean

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By Tanya Lee

A forgotten and remarkable history of a people who band together as one and created an exhilarating tale of the hero’s journey is that of the Jews of the Caribbean. It is a harrowing story that breathes hope into the very souls of people who seek liberty and justice for all. A gripping narrative of mayhem that takes us from the Spanish Inquisition; to the sun filled Caribbean islands, and then onwards to the United States of America where the journey almost proves too much for these freedom fighters. Their perilous journey and their cries for religious freedoms do not, however, fall on deaf ears, and land in the hands of George Washington. 

La Nación (Persons of the Nation) is a term that was used to describe Jamaican Jews and Jews of the Caribbean. These Jews were of Spanish and Portuguese descent and were fleeing the Spanish Inquisition. These Sephardic Jews sought refuge in Jamaica and other Caribbean islands, where they were able to escape from a reign of terror and death (1494-1655). Once on the beautiful island of Jamaica they were able to practice their religion freely. Jamaican Jews attained rights not available to most Jews worldwide for many years to come.

The Windsor Declaration of 1661 granted Jamaican Jewish residents “full citizens of Britain”. Jamaican Jews attained full political rights in 1831, the first British subjects of their faith to do so, 27 years before the same rights were granted in England. In the mid 19th century, the House of Assembly became probably the world’s first legislative body to adjourn for the Jewish high holiday of Yom Kippur. This occurred in 1849, when 8 of the Assembly’s 47 members, including the Speaker, were Jewish. 

La Nación was once so influential that it helped fuel the success of the American Revolution and finance the first synagogues in the United States, located in New York City and Rhode Island. Larger communities looked after the smaller ones throughout Europe, the Caribbean and North and South America. They saw themselves as an extended community. 

Touro Synagogue, centered in Newport, Rhode Island, is North America’s First Synagogue. Completed for Chanukah in 1763 by Congregation Jeshuat Israel, this extraordinary synagogue was commissioned by Sephardic Jews who fled religious persecution and were granted religious freedom in the United States. Peter Harrison was the pre-eminent architect of the time, hired by the congregation, and Isaac Touro was the spiritual leader who gave a verbal description of Sephardic Synagogues from Amsterdam. The 12 pillars inside the synagogue represent each of the tribes of Israel. 

In 1790, George Washington sanctioned religious freedom in a letter to the Hebrew Congregation. “For happily the Government of the United States, which gives to bigotry no sanction, to persecution no assistance requires only that they who live under its protection should demean themselves as good citizens, in giving it on all occasions their effectual support.” 

During the time of the American Revolution in 1776, the British captured Newport and most of the 30 Jewish families left for fear of their lives. The synagogue survived the destruction of the British, not because it was a house of worship, but because those members of the Jewish community brave enough to stay behind convinced the British to use it as a hospital. It was later used as a courthouse and in the 1830s- 1850s as a stop (station) of the Underground Railroad for runaway slaves to escape to Canada. 

“Between 1840 and 1860, before the American Civil War, enslaved Africans followed the North Star on the Underground Railroad to find freedom in Canada. It was not an actual railroad but a secret network of routes and safe houses that helped people escape slavery and reach free states or Canada. Sometimes there were guides available to help people find their way to the next stop along the way. Travelling on the Underground Railroad was dangerous and required luck as much as a guide.”

The keys to Touro Synagogue have always remained in the hands of a member of the original Jewish community. 

Isaac Touro moved his family to Kingston, Jamaica, a British colony in 1783. He took on the post as Cantor of Congregation Neveh Shalom. He died within a year of his move to Jamaica. These are only a few interesting facts of Jamaican Jews and Jews of the Caribbean. 

We are celebrating our Jamaican Jewish heritage and history by educating the world through an international art exhibition featuring the work of the acclaimed photographer Wyatt Gallery. Our objective is to educate the world of this spectacular Jamaican Jewish Heritage, La Nación -- Jews of the Caribbean and of our contribution to the Jewish communities wide-reaching.

One of our mandates is to create an inclusive atmosphere through art to help illuminate the full glory of our phenomenal Jamaican Jewish Heritage, that of La Nación-Jews of the Caribbean and keep alive this astounding 520 year old history on the brink of extinction with your help. Wyatt Gallery and Tanya Lee will be travelling with this exhibition to host workshops and talks to engage all-inclusive communities. 

The semi-formal opening night gala will be held at the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto on April 15, 2014. Dignitaries from around the world will be in attendance. Part of the night festivities will be that of a Passover Seder lead by Rabbi Wayne Allen. We will celebrate and commemorate religious freedoms and our continual struggle for equality and freedom for all.

An all inclusive traveling exhibit at respective Jamaican consulates and embassies around the world, Jewish institutions and art galleries is presently being scheduled from April 2014 onwards. Fine Art Photographs taken by the Acclaimed American photographer Wyatt Gallery will be on display.
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Una tradición tributaria fatídica 

Uptick in federal 'emerges' seen on horizon. Read: http://ow.ly/me8IP # caribbeanbu ... by CARIBBEAN BUSINESS

A fateful tax tradition 

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ireland1808
By Deepak Lamba-Nieves
Although it is hard to believe, especially in these times of turmoil and unrest socioeconomic time ago Puerto Rico was a role model for many countries seeking a route to development. According to the memories of the old guard, at the height of the Cold War transformation of the island served as an antidote to the communist threat, it also showed that under capitalism could be recorded wild turns positive in the future of territories afflicted. At that time, researchers, bureaucrats and diplomats they turned on our shores to learn from our experience, confident that something good was taking shape in our land.
Among those who visited us were also consultants and American academics interested in testing hypotheses and conduct social experiments arrojasen light on the most efficient techniques for modernizing backward societies ravaged by colonialism and old-fashioned. Renowned economists like John Kenneth Galbraith and Arthur Lewis, who defined the modern debates on the idea of ​​development-roamed the halls of the University of Puerto Rico, and organizations like the International Basic Economy Corporation (IBEC) sent specialists willing to offer advice and decoding solutions. Duly filled tropical experiences journals and technical reports which then served to articulate practices to follow.
For more or less the same time, the Irish were seeking to decipher the way to rebuild its economy after World War II. Leveraging historical juncture, and U.S. funding of European reconstruction plan, commissioned a study to figure out how to make the leap from a livestock economy towards industrialization. The report, entitled Industrial Potentials of Ireland: An Appraisal was written by IBEC Technical Services and was presented the same year that the Commonwealth was born. Addressed to political leaders and government technocrats, in a hundred pages the text summarized the economic pitfalls and raised a number of specific recommendations to seize the assets of a country that had failed to define a clear path to progress. The government did not assume an active role in promoting and industrial management, and lacked incentives to encourage business investment.Ireland faced a critical identity problem: they were not enough decidedly capitalist nor socialist.According to the consultants, in addition to better gauge public policy, they had to use their livestock capacity to generate foreign exchange and raise the capital necessary to assist them to promote manufacturing.
Interestingly, in the final chapter of the report, almost hidden between paragraphs precise and full of suggestions, is an example that proved revealing and possibly controversial: Puerto Rico. In half a page, IBEC specialists They reported how the island had attracted Northern companies and erect a light manufacturing enclave advantage of its relationship with the United States, the availability of cheap labor and competitive tax rates. Although it was a key piece of analysis, the Caribbean case struck a chord in the imagination of the Celts and the Puerto Rican model became the paradigm, especially the issue of tax rates.
In Ireland it took time out of the postwar economic quagmire while Puerto Rico looked like the soap opera heartthrob until the mid seventies. However, with the passage of time and with the increasing globalization of business, the recipe island of Bootstrap became second fiddle. Trying to stay afloat, we returned to the fray with the tax benefits under Section 936, but we were rivals. As good learners, the Irish developed their own scheme and Puerto Rico competing for attention and business of multinational companies.
By the eighties, a leading company that eventually challenged consumers to " think differently ", devised a strategy that took advantage of the tax benefits in Ireland and in other jurisdictions, to evade their tax responsibility but within the framework blatantly of the law. Using abusive arrangement known as a " Double Irish Dutch Sandwich with a "which sounds more gastronomic phenomenon statutory scheme-Apple Inc. achieved without the payment of billions of dollars a year in taxes to the United States, according to a recent survey by the Senate U.S.. As in the nineties, when they accused us of promoting corporate and knocked keep the racket of 936 American lawmakers seeking to correct loopholes walk. More than a tax matter, Apple's gross evasion is discussed as a moral issue: what they fail to pay, we cover the ordinary people who have no creative accounting, and barely make hearts guts.
Our model ossified foreign capital attraction, based on evasion and negotiating preferential rates, which spread like wildfire and unfortunately we became trend setters disreputable-North had as the breakdown of the relationship between the state and the society, despite its harmful results.According to some theorists, the key to this tactic is learning. Persuasion global companies should lead to new knowledge, linkages and opportunities to improve local capacities. It is assumed that after 60 years of praying and giving everything to attract investment, we have accumulated the skills necessary to build a robust indigenous manufacturing enclave. However, this is not our industrial reality, although we have many skilled professionals who solve problems and advise factories worldwide. On the other hand, many of the countries that followed the path we trace the postwar learned to manufacture opportunities today are not within our reach.
Given this situation, it pays to question why we continue to pursue the same tactic expecting a different result. While we were cutting edge at a time, today it is a legacy perpetuate insane.

The author is Director of Research at the CNE. This column was originally published in the newspaper El Nuevo Dia on June 16, 2013.

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The Nation: Jews of the Caribbean

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Making sense of the 'Internet of Everything'. Read: http://ow.ly/mdOs8 # caribbea ... 

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Making sense of the 'Internet of Everything'. Read: http://ow.ly/mdOs8 # caribbeanbusiness

# High court strikes down anti-prostitution pledge. Read: http://ow.ly/mewCK # car ... 

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# High court strikes down anti-prostitution pledge. Read: http://ow.ly/mewCK # caribbeanbusiness

Uptick in federal 'emerges' seen on horizon. Read: http://ow.ly/me8IP # caribbeanbu ... 

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Uptick in federal 'emerges' seen on horizon. Read: http://ow.ly/me8IP # caribbeanbusiness

A panel decolonization: PR plebiscite rejected 'current political

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A panel decolonization: PR plebiscite rejected 'current political subordination'

The United Nations Special Committee on Decolonization is again calling the Unit ...

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