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Mujer y Revolución
por Maité Campillo :: La revolución no hubiera sido posible sin la participación activa de la mujer trabajadora
Posted: 18 Mar 2021 05:26 PM PDT
Lo que sucedió en Bolivia fue “un buen golpe contra los golpistas”. "En un buen paso en Bolivia para eliminar la posibilidad de un golpe más y tenemos que ver qué pasos van a tomar los gobernantes”, dijo el profesor James Petras en @Centenario1250 .https://archive.org/details/2021-03-15-james-petras …
La incertidumbre reina en Ecuador y Perú ante las elecciones presidenciales x Vicky Peláez.
Mientras en Ecuador la Revolución Ciudadana está retomando fuerza, el movimiento progresista en Perú da sus primeros pasos...,
JOIN US FOR A FREE ONLINE DOCUMENTARY FESTIVAL (Saturday, March 20 & Sunday, March 21) IN CELEBRATION OF WORLD WATER DAY
SOA Watch is honored to host a mini-film festival THIS WEEKEND (March 20 & 21, 2021) in partnership with Mutual Aid Media, COPINH, OFRANEH, and dozens of other screening partners. As COPINH marks 5-years of fiercely organizing to bring the intellectual authors of Berta Cácers' murder and OFRANEH leads a legal and media battle to demand the safe return of 4 forcibly disappeared leaders in July 2020 as well as the release of 2 leaders unjustly detained and criminalized earlier this month, our solidarity is critical. The film festival will include the world premiere of the documentary La Lucha Sigue (The Struggle Continues) about the struggles of the Lenca and Garifuna peoples in Honduras as well as amazing discussion panels following each film. If you haven't already, register below -- we look forward to seeing you there!
Help us spread the word online by sharing this festival trailer and the full festival schedule!
This film festival is a celebration of World Water Day and the communities that put their lives on the line to defend it. Each film will be followed by a community specific panel with fierce Indigenous and Black women leaders. A large group discussion with all the women warriors together will close out the festival.
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Join us to hear directly from the visionary frontline leaders that are building a global movement to protect the earth, put health over wealth, and show people that another world is possible. Greed and destruction is not our destiny. Indigenous and Black people know how to survive--they have been surviving genocidal systems that have ravaged their communities for centuries. The film festival and the panels will reflect on what's working, what's not and what we need to do to protect each other and the planet.
If you would like to learn more about ways you can support these community-led movements protecting land, water, and air, then please check out this free digital toolkit and spread the word to your community!
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Ley del valor, militarizacion y guerras justas e injustas
Iñaki Gil de San Vicente - La Haine :: Texto elaborado después del teledebate en Tertulias en Cuarentena del 7-03-2021 sobre la OTAN
Senador Bernie Sanders se enfrenta a CEO de Amazon, Jeff Bezos, y le echa en cara los $78,000 millones que ha ganado por la pandemia...,
Escuche el análisis de la realidad internacional del sociólogo estadounidense, profesor James Petras en CX36.
https://archive.org/details/el-analisis-de-james-petras-en-cx-36-08mar-21 …
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March 20: Day of Action in Solidarity With Bessemer Amazon Workers, Against Union-Busting & Racism...,
Find a full and up to date listing, or submit your action or endorsement at our website here...,
Arizona
TUCSON, AZ
10am Picket
Whole Foods, 3360 E Speedway Blvd, Tucson, AZ 85716
Contact Pima Area Labor Federation at trishmuirpalf@gmail.com or 520-548-9510
California
BRISBANE, CA
9:30am Picket
Amazon Fresh, 455 Valley Dr, Brisbane, CA 94005
Contact Western Movement Assembly at withjusticepeace@gmail.com or 707-857-6455
MONTEREY, CA
10am – 12pm Picket
Whole Foods, Gather in front of Del Monte Shopping Center on Munras
Contact Progressive Democrats Chapter – Monterey Area at gary.karnes@comcast.net or 831-402-9106
OAKLAND, CA
1pm Car Caravan & Rally
Oscar Grant Plaza/Frank Ogawa Plaza, 14th and Broadway, Oakland, CA
Contact Support Amazon Workers – Bay Area at bayarea@supportamazonworkers.org or 510-813-4687
SAN DIEGO, CA
2pm Picket & Rally
Whole Foods, 711 University Ave, San Diego, CA 92103
Contact Socialist Alternative San Diego at sdsocialistalternative@gmail.com or 619-346-2156
SAN FRANCISCO, CA
10am Picket & Speak-Out
7th & Berry Street, San Francisco, CA
Contact United Front Committee for a Labor Party at committeeforlaborparty@gmail.com or 415-533-5642
Canada
TORONTO
11am – 3pm Informational Picket, Speakers at 2pm
Whole Foods, 81 Avenue Rd, Toronto
Contact Toronto – Democratic Socialists of Canada at toronto@democraticsocialists.ca
Colorado
COLORADO SPRINGS, CO
12pm Picket
Whole Foods, 7635 N Academy Blvd, Colorado Springs, CO 80920
Contact Colorado Springs Local Chapter of Democratic Socialists of America at cospringsdsa@gmail.com
Georgia
ATLANTA, GA
12pm Rally
Gather at the intersection of N. Commerce and Camp Creek Parkway (across from Camp Creek Mall), East Point, GA
Initiated by ATL Amazon Workers Solidarity Network, Atlanta-N. Georgia Labor Council, Atlanta Coalition of Black Trade Unionists
Contact ATL Amazon Workers Solidarity Network at atlanta@supportamazonworkers.org
Idaho
NAMPA, ID
10am Car Caravan
BOI2 Amazon Fulfillment Center, 5319 E Franklin Rd, Nampa, ID 83687
Contact Nampa Education Association at coffeyidaho@gmail.com or 208-559-3883
Illinois
CHICAGO, IL
1pm Rally & March
Federal Plaza, S. Dearborn St, Chicago, IL
Contact Chicago Socialist Alternative at chicago.socialistalternative@gmail.com or 508-868-9243
Michigan
ANN ARBOR, MI
1pm Picket
Whole Foods, 3135 Washtenaw Ave, Ann Arbor, MI 48104
Contact Coalition for Workers Rights at carrollz@umich.edu or 734-662-6036
LANSING, MI
*March 17* 11am Rally for unemployment extension and solidarity with Amazon workers
State Capitol Building, 100 N. Capitol Ave, Lansing, MI 48933
Contact IATSE Local 26 at mail@iatse26.org
New Jersey
NEWARK, NJ
2pm Rally
Whole Foods, 633 Broad Street, Newark, NJ
Contact Peoples Party New Jersey at peoplespartynewjersey@gmail.com or 973-487-8218
New York
HARLEM, NY
2pm Demonstration
Whole Foods, 125th St & Malcolm X Blvd, Harlem, NY
Contact December 12th Movement (718-398-1766), NY Coalition of Black Trade Unionists (646-523-8484), or Workers Assembly Against Racism (waarnyc@solidaritymail.org or 646-470-4667/917-825-2302)
BROOKLYN, NY
5pm Rally
Barclays Center, 620 Atlantic Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11217
Contact Socialist Alternative at ny@socialistalternative.org or 347-457-6069
North Carolina
KERNERSVILLE, NC
5:30pm Rally
Amazon Warehouse, 1656 Old Greensboro Rd, Kernersville, NC 27284
Contact Winston-Salem DSA at taramccomb@gmail.com or 734-709-3411
Ohio
CINCINNATI, OH
5pm Picket
8660 Jacquemin Dr., West Chester, OH
Contact Cincinnati Socialist Alternative at cincinnati@socialistalternative.org
CLEVELAND, OH
12pm Picket
Across from Amazon Facility, Gather at Euclid Transit Center, 23900 St. Clair Ave, Euclid, OH 44132
Contact Support Alabama Amazon Workers – Cleveland at grevatt.m@gmail.com or 216-534-6435
Pennsylvania
PHILADELPHIA, PA
2pm Rally & March
Morgan Lewis, 1701 Market St, Philadelphia, PA
Contact Scott Williams at thescott0730@gmail.com or 919-794-1429
Texas
HOUSTON, TX
1pm Rally & Picket
Amazon Delivery Station, S Lockwood and Munger St, Houston, Texas 77019
Contact Socialist Alternative Houston at socialistalternativehouston@gmail.com or 281-635-5286
HOUSTON, TX
*Sun, March 21* 12pm Picket
Whole Foods, 701 Waugh Drive, Houston, Texas 77019
Contact Workers World Party – Houston at houston@workers.org or 713-503-2633
SAN ANTONIO, TX
12pm Picket
Whole Foods @ the Quarry, 255 E Basse Rd, San Antonio, Texas
Contact Teresa Gutierrez at teresalatejana@gmail.com
Cifra histórica: $27 millones pagarán a familia por muerte de George Floyd a manos de la policía..., |
El caso generó múltiples protestas y reformas policiales el año pasado en todo EE.UU. |
Leer más>> |
De la "escasez" como principio terrible de la vida x Mario Casalla.
La pandemia dejó al descubierto el rostro más real y despiadado del capitalismo, no sólo por la actual "guerra por las vacunas", sino por las mezquindades cotidianas...,
Chile. El MIR y un balance crítico de un año muy difícil...,
Chile.Presentan«Mireya»,la revista del MIR...,
Chile. El MIR y un balance crítico de un año muy difícil...,
Chile.Presentan«Mireya»,la revista del MIR...,
Chile
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Chile. La Armada ¿enseñando formación ciudadana?
Por Felipe Vergara Lasnibat, Resumen Latinoamericano, 18 de marzo de 2021. La Armada, la institución mas clasista de las FFAA de Chile instalando un modelo...
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Chile. Ramiro nuevamente causando furia en la clase política
Resumen Latinoamericano, 17 de marzo de 2021 Mauricio Hernández Norambuena, el comandante Ramiro, causa la furia y el llanto de la clase política, particularmente de...
PARA L@S MALA MEMORIA Y MANIPULADORES DE LAS INFORMACIONES.???
Surge in Migrants Defies Easy or Quick Solutions for Biden
The administration expects more apprehensions at the border this year than at any point in the past two decades. Enacting policy to deal with the problems faces deep-rooted political and logistical challenges.
Michael D. Shear and Zolan Kanno-Youngs – The New York Times
March 16, 2021
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/03/16/us/politics/biden-immigration.html
WASHINGTON — The Biden administration warned on Tuesday that the United States expected to make more apprehensions along the southwestern border this year than at any time in the past two decades, underscoring the urgency for the White House to develop solutions for the chronic problems with immigration from Central America.
The grim prediction by Alejandro N. Mayorkas, the secretary of homeland security, came as President Biden was being assailed for his handling of a surge at the border involving thousands of unaccompanied children and teenagers from the region — with attacks coming from the right for not being tough enough and from the left for not being humane enough.
The president has pleaded for time and patience, blaming his predecessor for dismantling the immigration system in his zeal to keep foreigners out. But even Mr. Biden’s top advisers acknowledge that after unwinding President Donald J. Trump’s harsh policies, there is no easy or quick fix for a problem that has been a recurring crisis.
“We have no illusions about how hard it is, and we know it will take time,” Mr. Mayorkas said in a statement on Tuesday as the House prepared to vote this week on several immigration measures and the administration rushed to provide more housing for the young migrants arriving at the border. But, he added, “We will get it done.”
The approach being developed by the administration involves steps that it can take relatively quickly and others that will take longer and require agreement from Congress or cooperation from the governments of Central American nations. And it will have to deal with several categories of people, including the unaccompanied minors who are overwhelming the system now and eventually asylum-seeking families and those trying to slip past border agents.
In the short term — as warmer weather invites even more people to migrate north — Mr. Biden’s administration must find a way to temporarily care for the thousands of migrant children who are arriving at the United States border without a legal guardian.
That includes expanding facilities where the children can be held legally for up to 72 hours in the custody of the Border Patrol. And it means finding more residential places where the migrant children can live for weeks or even months while the government searches for a relative or friend to take care of them while officials decide whether they must return to their home countries.
The Biden administration is struggling to quickly ramp up capacity. But the longer-term challenges are even more daunting.
Mr. Biden’s advisers have said they want to establish systems in Mexico that would provide a way for migrants to file applications to seek refuge to the United States in an orderly, safe manner, without coming to the border. But doing so will take months, and it is not yet clear whether migrants will use them.
For those who do apply for asylum, Mr. Biden’s team has said it will shorten the review process, which currently can take years to reach a final decision. Mr. Mayorkas has said asylum cases should be decided in weeks, one way or the other. But making that happen will require investing money and hiring people to process huge backlogs of cases.
Finally, Mr. Biden has vowed to vastly increase support for places like Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala so that Central Americans no longer feel the need to flee their homes. But even with the $4 billion that the president has proposed, rebuilding societies wracked by violence, gangs and stagnating economies will take years or decades — if it works at all.
All of the solutions Mr. Biden is considering have been under discussion for decades, often included in comprehensive immigration legislation that has repeatedly failed to get through Congress, falling victim to deep partisan divisions.
For now, Mr. Biden has left in place a Trump-era pandemic emergency rule that empowers agents to rapidly turn away most migrants other than unaccompanied minors without providing them the chance to have their asylum claims heard.
Mr. Mayorkas’s prediction about the scale of apprehensions this year includes migrants who will be detained in border facilities, as well as those rapidly turned away under the pandemic rule. It does not include those who managed to avoid border agents when crossing into the country.
“The administration, they’re asking for patience, but that only goes for so long when you’re looking at these kind of numbers. And what happens after patience?” said R. Gil Kerlikowske, a commissioner of Customs and Border Protection under President Barack Obama. “What is the plan for dealing with this? What is the plan going forward?”
Short-Term Solutions
During the current fiscal year, which started Oct. 1, Customs and Border Protection has recorded more than 396,000 migrant crossings, including at official ports of entry, compared with about 201,600 during the same period last fiscal year.
A majority of those crossings involved single adults, who under current rules are often quickly expelled back to Mexico or their home countries. But unaccompanied children are taken by a border agent first to a detention facility, where they are then supposed to be transferred within 72 hours to a shelter managed by the Department of Health and Human Services.
Those shelters were operating until recently with restricted capacity because of the coronavirus pandemic, leaving thousands of minors stuck in the jails along the border, including some who have been left to sleep on mats with foil sheets, according to lawyers who visited a facility in Texas.
But even before the pandemic, the shelter system had often been pushed beyond capacity.
The Biden administration this month directed the shelters to return to their normal capacity, allowing the government to increase the number of available beds in those shelters by about 40 percent.
With the number of minors at the border climbing, the administration is now scrambling to find additional space, including at a convention center in downtown Dallas; at a former camp for oil field workers in Midland, Texas; at a NASA site in California; and at a tent encampment in Arizona.
Mr. Biden said during an interview with ABC News on Tuesday that the administration could have enough shelter space by next month for the unaccompanied minors stuck in border facilities.
The government is also trying to reduce the amount of time it takes to transfer a child from border facilities to the shelters by streamlining a system that sends them through three different bureaucracies: the Border Patrol, the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency and the Department of Health and Human Services. Coordination between the three agencies has often broken down and resulted in delays.
The Biden administration has started placing officials from the Department of Health and Human Services in border facilities to accelerate the process of finding a relative or other sponsor in the United States who can take the migrants in.
While the administration continues to invoke the emergency pandemic rule to turn away most adults and migrant families, senior homeland security officials have acknowledged that they will be able to use the emergency rule only for so long as vaccination becomes more widely available.
In the meantime, the president and his top border officials have issued statements about the perilous journey to the United States, hoping to discourage migration to the border.
The administration held a series of private calls with pro-immigrant groups and advocates last week to discuss Mr. Biden’s immigration agenda. David Shahoulian, a top immigration official at the Department of Homeland Security, said that the messaging to discourage migrants from coming had not been working and that the administration would need to be clearer in the future, especially given that smugglers continue to encourage migrants to travel to the United States, according to people familiar with the discussion.
Mr. Mayorkas had said this month that the administration’s message was not “don’t come” but rather “don’t come now.” Roberta S. Jacobson, a special assistant overseeing border issues, initially said mistakenly in Spanish during a news briefing that the border was not closed, but then corrected herself to say it was closed.
By Tuesday, the president had an even more direct message: “I can say quite clearly, ‘Don’t come over,’” Mr. Biden said on ABC News, adding that the administration was working on creating opportunities for migrants to apply closer to their homes for asylum. “Don’t leave your town or city or community.”
Medium-Term Solutions
The Biden administration is working with Central American countries to reduce pressure on the border, Mr. Shahoulian said on one call. And it is examining options for expediting the processing of asylum cases.
“We will shorten from years to months the time it takes to adjudicate an asylum claim,” Mr. Mayorkas said in his statement on Tuesday, adding that the administration would soon introduce a regulation to improve the system. He said that the administration was working to establish processing centers in Central America so that they could be screened and “brought to the United States if they qualify for relief under our humanitarian laws and other authorities.”
Mr. Biden said in his campaign platform that he would increase the number of judges and immigration officers to combat a backlog that nearly doubled during the Trump administration to more than 1.2 million cases.
Mr. Biden has already begun to restart the Obama-era Central American Minors program, which was intended to allow some children to apply in their home region for permission to live in the United States with a parent or other relative. When Mr. Trump ended the program, about 3,000 Central American children had been approved for travel to the United States.
It will take time to ramp up the program, which has strict vetting requirements, in order to verify the relationships of the children and their relatives.
Now, the administration is eager to examine even broader efforts to consider asylum applications remotely.
It is already testing a system where migrants, who were told by the Trump administration to wait along the border in squalid camps in Mexico, can use an app on their cellphones to apply for asylum and track their cases. That kind of system might be expanded more broadly, officials said.
“This is the road map going forward for a system that is safe, orderly and fair,” Mr. Mayorkas said.
Many of the changes Mr. Biden wants are included in comprehensive immigration legislation he sent to Congress on his first day in office. But that bill is a long way from becoming law, especially with Mr. Trump and other Republicans again using immigration to stoke their partisan base.
Long-Term Solutions
Mr. Biden’s most ambitious — and difficult — goal is to use the United States’ wealth and diplomatic power to reshape the region in the hopes of diminishing the root causes of migration from Central America, starting with poverty and violence.
It is an effort that has been tried before. Mr. Obama and members of Congress from both parties agreed to invest several hundred million dollars into Central America with the hope of improving the courts, diminishing the cartels and improving economic conditions.
Mr. Trump cut that spending, arguing that it was a waste of money, before restoring some of it. But Mr. Biden’s team is betting that even more investment will produce results. In Honduras, for example, the country’s coffee production has been hurt by hurricanes and slumping prices for coffee beans, driving many people into poverty.
But helping to reverse those kinds of economic trends could take years.
“When the president talks about ‘root causes,’ some of this is immediate humanitarian aid, but a lot of it is policy and aid together, making sure that you tackle the root causes of migration,” Ms. Jacobson said. “Otherwise, what you see is continued cycles.”
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A diferencia de EE. UU., Cuba no interfiere en ningún proceso electoral de otro Estado (+Video)
Carentes de argumentos reales y huérfanos de ideas sanas y constructivas, recurren a la difamación con el fin de enrarecer cualquier contacto positivo entre ambas naciones
RESUMEN. CEDEMA.
19 DE MARZO 2021.
Documentacion.
Apartado de Correos 512
46080
Valencia
ESPAÑA
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CENTRO DE DOCUMENTACION DE LOS MOVIMIENTOS ARMADOS
19 DE MARZO 2021.
Una gota intensa
Que será de ti con tanta lluvia
Cómo hacer que ya no llueva
y que te seques las lágrimas
de los zapatos
para no resfriarse el alma
Cómo tener seguridad
que pasarás el puente
Quizás poco a poco
ten calma
Detente en la cuerda
de nuestros brazos
Cuenta bien los pasos y llega
acá te seguimos esperando
tus amigos de terca pasión intrépida
y tus compañeras humildes que mejor resisten
Ambos besan cantando esperanzas y futuros
al cielo estrellado a los lagos y tierras yermas
para que no te llueva soledad
para que no te llueva sol
para que no te llueva
para que no
para que
para
par
a.
REGIONES INDIAS
Marzo 19, 2021
AIPIN / Comisión de Asuntos Indígenas
NOTA: Perdón por no enviar durante varios días Regiones Indias, la Computadora desde donde se realizan los Monitoreos sufrió un percance y recién con un diablito medio funciona.
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