A forum for critical analysis of international issues and developments of particular relevance to the sustainable political and socio-economic development of Overseas Countries and Territories (OCTs).
30 January 2016
29 January 2016
Una carta de Puerto Rico para Donald Trump
Llévese el coloniaje, señor Trump
Señor Donald Trump: O es usted un hombre bruto o se hace pasar por serlo, pues América es un continente, no una raza. No hay tal cosa como “la raza americana”, como se refiere usted a su raza. Usted es de la raza caucásica. Dentro de las Américas habitan varias razas. Usted procede de los anglosajones, los que a través de la historia han cometido muchos crímenes contra la humanidad. De ustedes, jamás quiero ser parte.
Ahora voy a lo que quiero decirle, señor Trump. Yo soy puertorriqueño. Ustedes nos impusieron a la cañona su ciudadanía en 1917, pese al rechazo del parlamento puertorriqueño de entonces, tal como le impusieron el apellido de los amos a los esclavos para que se supiera a quién pertenecían. El apellido no los hacía “blancos”, pero los desnaturalizaban arrancándoles sus raíces. Nunca he aceptado la ciudadanía estadounidense, ni la aceptaré. Ustedes no tienen el poder para hacer de mí lo que no soy.
La imposición de la ciudadanía ha costado la vida a miles de jóvenes puertorriqueños (dos meses después de la imposición de la ciudadanía nos impusieron el servicio militar obligatorio) en las guerras de agresión de ustedes contra otros países, incluyendo países latinoamericanos hermanos del pueblo puertorriqueño. A través de la historia, ustedes han asesinando a miles de latinoamericanos y han masacrado en más de una ocasión a mi pueblo.
Ustedes son los causantes principales de la crisis que en estos momentos vive la nación puertorriqueña, a la cual ustedes llaman una “posesión”. Su voceros ha tenido la osadía de expresar que pueden “vendernos” o “cedernos” a otro país si así fuera de su conveniencia.
Así que, señor Trump, que si usted ganara las llamadas “elecciones” allá en su país, no solo llévese la ciudadanía estadounidense que impusieron en mi país, sino que también llévese sus agencias de represión como el FBI, sus llamados tribunales federales y todo lo que apeste a coloniaje. Se le agradecerá. Mientras tanto, ¡lo seguiré combatiendo como sea necesario!
Rafael Cancel Miranda
30 de diciembre de 2015
Rafael Cancel Miranda.
Nacionalista puertorriqueño, ex prisionero político.
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26 January 2016
Obama Administration again confirms Puerto Rico's colonial status
huffingtonpost
Commonwealth officials are not happy about a legal brief the U.S. filed in a little-noticed Supreme Court case.
As the federal government's lead lawyer before the Supreme Court, U.S. Solicitor General Donald Verrilli has an important but relatively narrow role: By design, his views are intended to sway the justices and the justices alone.
But a brief Verrilli filed last week with the court -- for an under-the-radar case in which the U.S. isn't even a party -- made waves far beyond, eliciting a media maelstrom in Puerto Rico, impassioned responses from officials and even an appeal to the U.N. The controversy brings to the fore a longstanding debate about the island's political future, which is already at a tipping point thanks to Puerto Rico's ongoing debt crisis.
The reason for the uproar: Verrilli's brief stressed that Puerto Rico is still only a U.S. territory -- a non-sovereign with limited authority over its affairs.
In a telling passage, the solicitor general told the Supreme Court that Puerto Rico "could become" a sovereign, but "only if it were to attain statehood or become an independent nation."
READ THE FULL STORY HERE.
The U.S. Military Could Wipe Out This Tiny Pacific Island Bird
John R. Platt covers the environment, technology, philanthropy, and more for Scientific American,Conservation, Lion, and other publications.
A planned Defense Department training site in the Northern Marianas threatens to destroy the Tinian monarch’s last bit of habitat.
In 2004, the United States government declared that a tiny and imperiled Pacific island bird called the Tinian monarch had pulled back from the brink of extinction and removed it from the endangered species list.
A little over a decade later, that rare success story appears to be at risk. The new threat? The U.S. government.
The Department of Defense has proposed a major new training site on Tinian, the 39-square-mile Mariana island on which the bird lives. If approved, the live-fire training complex—a place where the military could practice weapons targeting—would remove about 2,000 acres of Tinian monarch habitat and take over one-eighth of the island.
READ THE FULL REPORT IN TAKEPART.
25 January 2016
Argument analysis: Puerto Rico — special no more?
SCOTUSblog
Independent Contractor Reporter
It doesn’t happen often, but there are times when the very last words spoken by a lawyer during a Supreme Court argument sum up very clearly what the whole hour has been about. That happened on Wednesday, when a lawyer’s closing, plaintive comment was: “Please do not take the constitution of Puerto Rico away from the people of Puerto Rico.”
Actually, there does not seem to be any real risk of that, but the entire argument in Puerto Rico v. Sanchez-Valle had the rather morose quality of suggesting that Puerto Rico was about to slide back into the nineteenth-century status of a mere colony, not a proud Caribbean master of its own destiny. If it is true that Congress has as much power over the island as was suggested, especially by a federal government lawyer, the island’s dependent status is clearer than it has ever been for more than six decades.
That prospect was entirely opposite of what the current government leaders of Puerto Rico had sought in taking their case to the Supreme Court. They wanted a declaration that, at least up to a point, Puerto Rico was entitled to the dignity of “sovereignty.”
Part of the problem in achieving “sovereignty,” it appeared, is that the Court was not exactly sure what that word means. Justice Sonia Sotomayor, whose parents grew up in Puerto Rico, tried a definition, and others attempted some definition. Justice Stephen G. Breyer brought out the fact that the U.S. government stopped making reports to the United Nations about Puerto Rico as a dependent territory after it achieved its current, semi-autonomous status.
But the exploration of that basic political concept was so meandering that, fairly late in the argument, Justice Anthony M. Kennedy suggested that the Court just forget that, and find an alternative approach to deciding this case.
Kennedy was getting at the fact that the case, in some ways, is not at all about sovereignty. That comes up only because Puerto Rico’s basic goal in this particular case (although the larger implications are enormous for the island) is to be able to put on trial, under its own criminal law, two men whom it has charged with illegal gun possession.
The Puerto Rico Supreme Court has forbidden it to stage that prosecution; because the two men have already been convicted of the same crime in federal court, Puerto Rico cannot separately pursue its own charges without violating the constitutional ban on “double jeopardy.” According to that court, only separate “sovereigns” can prosecute the same person for the same crime, and Puerto Rico is not a sovereign, in that sense.
Kennedy noted that the Court has issued a series of decisions spelling out the “dual sovereignty” concept in a series of cases, and it is not about to overrule those. So, he asked, have any analysts suggested an alternative approach to deciding when to apply sovereignty notions to multiple prosecutions? He put it this way: “Has there been any suggestion by commentators, and so forth, that this whole inquiry of sovereignty and source of power is a little bit misplaced?”
Puerto Rico’s lawyer in the case, Washington attorney Christopher Landau, is relying on several precedents for his basic argument that the source of power to prosecute for crimes in Puerto Rico is the island’s own constitution, which went into effect in 1952 when Congress invited the island into a relationship — new for a U.S. territory — with a large measure of self-governing autonomy, including the right to have its own constitution and to have its own legislature pass criminal laws.
Despite Kennedy’s doubts about the sovereignty aspect of “double jeopardy,” when Landau and another attorney — Adam G. Unikowsky of Washington, D.C., who represented the two accused men — were at the lectern, almost all of the back and forth with the bench was about what to make of sovereignty.
Landau repeatedly insisted that the Puerto Rican constitution went a long way to give the people the power of self-determination, not full sovereignty in a formal international sense but something short of that. Unikowsky insisted, however, that what Congress had done was simply to give it a measure of autonomy while delegating its powers to the island, perhaps only temporarily. His two clients, of course, want Puerto Rico to be treated as lacking in sovereignty, and sharing only in the sovereignty of the U.S. government, so that they could not be tried by each government separately.
But it remained for a federal government lawyer, Nicole A. Saharsky, an assistant to the U.S. Solicitor General, to go the furthest to diminish Puerto Rico’s current constitutional status. For all of her fifteen minutes at the lectern, she repeatedly cited authorities and history which suggested that Puerto Rico has never had anything like sovereignty.
The Court, she said, “has been very careful to guard who is a sovereign under the Constitution and who is not,” and has done so especially in deciding who could conduct multiple prosecutions without violating the ban on “double jeopardy.” For her main authority, though, she relied upon the Constitution’s sweeping grant of power to Congress to adopt laws and regulations to govern U.S. territories.
When Justice Sotomayor said that, when Congress allowed Puerto Rico to set up a self-governing constitution in 1952, it had given up the congressional power to veto laws passed by Puerto Rico’s legislature, Saharsky said she did not think that was right.
Justice Breyer asked her pointedly whether “Congress can take back” what it had given Puerto Rico in 1952, and she did not hesitate to say that it could. She went on: “Could Congress revise the arrangements it has with Puerto Rico? We think the answer is yes, and that that follows from the structure of the Constitution and its history.” It is, she said almost mechanically, it is a territory.
The island’s attorney, Landau, had a few minutes for rebuttal, and framed the issue he thought central to the case this way: “What happened in 1950 to 1952, and is that constitutional?”
“It is shocking,” he said, that the lawyer for the two accused men and the United States government “are using the territorial clause as a restriction on power, a limitation on power of government.” Congress, he said, can use its power to come up “with inventive solutions,” including alternatives to the dependent status of a colony. Puerto Rico’s constitution, written by its own people, reflected just such a solution.
And, in a moment, he finished: “Please do not take the constitution of Puerto Rico away from the people of Puerto Rico.”
SEE ALSO:
SEE ALSO:
- Argument analysis: Puerto Rico -- special no more? (Lyle Denniston)
- Court will question its power to decide Puerto Rico case (Lyle Denniston)
- Argument preview: A lofty issue for Puerto Rico (Lyle Denniston)
- U.S. opposes new role for Puerto Rico (Lyle Denniston)
23 January 2016
¿Por qué Estados Unidos le miente al mundo sobre Puerto Rico? / Why the US lies to the world about Puerto Rico?
Compañeros Unidos para la Descolonizaciónde Puerto Rico
En el 1953, el gobierno de Estados Unidos le dijo a la ONU que a través del nuevo gobierno de Puerto Rico, elEstado Libre Asociado, ella había alcanzado gobernó propio. Y por tal razón, EEUU le solicitó a la ONU que removiera a Puerto Rico de su lista de colonias. Desde ese momento, Puerto Rico no aparece en la lista de colonias de la ONU.
En el 2008, el gobernador de Puerto Rico Aníbal Acevedo Vila participó en la vista anual de la ONU sobre la descolonización de Puerto Rico, porque estaba muy molesto con el informe de la Casa Blanca de George W. Bush sobre Puerto Rico. Ese informe dijo que el gobierno de Estados Unidos pudiera vender a Puerto Rico a cualquier país si así lo quisiera. Él también le preguntó a la ONU, como lo hace ahora el presente gobernador de Puerto Rico, o el gobierno le mintió a la ONU en el 1953, o miente en el informe del Presidente Bush. Pero los embustes continúan.
Nuestro prisionero político Oscar López Riveraha estado 34 años en la prisión por “conspiración sediciosa para derrocar el gobierno de Estados Unidos en Puerto Rico”. ¡Eso también es otro embuste!
Esa ley se hizo durante la Guerra Civil de Estados Unidos para criminalizar la sesión del Sur de la Unión. Esta ley es para los ciudadanos estadounidenses de primera clase. Después de la guerra, esa ley nunca se volvió a usar hasta que se volvió a usar en los casos de los independentistas puertorriqueños.
El gobierno de Estados Unidos invadió a Puerto Rico militarmente en 1898. Después de la Insurrección Nacionalista de 30 de Octubre de 1950, cuando ese acto llamó la atención del mundo de que Puerto Rico es una colonia de Estados Unidos, EEUU decidió inventarse otro embuste más para enmascarar ese hecho. ElEstado Libre Asociado de Puerto Ricodel 25 de noviembre de 1952 fue ese embuste.
A pesar de que Oscar López Rivera es el que está preso, es el gobierno de Estados Unidos el verdadero criminal. EEUU está violando la ley internacional (UN 1514XV) de 1960 que prohíbe el colonialismo por entenderse que la misma amenaza la paz mundial. De hecho, el colonialismo se considera un crimen en contra de la humanidad. El Presidente George W. Bush preguntó, ¿Por qué nos odian? Los odian porque el gobierno de Estados Unidos se pasa cometiendo crímenes en contra de la humanidad alrededor de mundo. ¡Por eso también, el mundo considera al gobierno de Estados Unidos como la amenaza principal a la paz mundial! Oscar tiene el derecho bajo esta ley de usar todos los medios necesarios para descolonizar a Puerto Rico.
La ONU en 34 resoluciones le ha pedido al gobierno de Estados Unidos que inmediatamente descolonice a Puerto Rico. Como no quiere hacerlo, y para perpetuar su relación ilegal, el gobierno de EEUU quiere seguir haciendo plebiscitos para supuestamente saber lo que desea los puertorriqueños. Esto es aún otro engaño. No importa lo que queramos los puertorriqueños. ¡El colonialismo es ilegal y Puerto Rico se tiene que descolonizar! Después de descolonizada, Puerto Rico podría hacer lo que le dé la gana.
EEUU miente, porque quiere mantener a Puerto Rico como su colonia para siempre. Es tiempo que entendamos eso para que empecemos hacer protestas pacífica y permanentemente hasta que Puerto Rico se descolonice. ¡Estas protestas son necesarias, porque los que mienten para mantener sus colonias, no creen en la JUSTICIA PARA TODOS!
The governor of Puerto Rico Alejandro Garcia Padilla recently wrote a letter to the secretary general of theUnited Nations (UN) Ban Ki-moon about the White House’s position regarding the Puerto Rico v. Sánchez Valle case where it said that Puerto Rico is a colony of the United States (US). The governor said in his letter that either the US lied to the UN in 1953, or it is lying now.
In 1953, the US told the UN that Puerto Rico had obtained self-government in 1952 through its new government called the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico. The US petitioned the UN to remove Puerto Rico from its list of colonies. Since then, Puerto Rico does not appear in the UN’s list of colonies.
In 2008, the then governor of Puerto Rico Anibal Acevedo Vila spoke before the UN’s annual hearing on Puerto Rico decolonization, because he was upset about President Bush’s report on Puerto Rico. The report said that the US government could sell Puerto Rico to any country it wants, if it desires. He also asked the UN the same question. Either the US lied to the UN in 1953, or it is lying in President’s Bush’s report. Still, the US lies some more!
Our Puerto Rican political prisoner Oscar López Rivera has been in prison for 34 years for “seditious conspiracy to overthrow the US government in Puerto Rico”. This is yet another lie!
This law was made during the US Civil War to make it a crime for the South to secede from the Union. The law is for first class US citizens. After the war, it was never used again until it was used against Puerto Ricans who fought for Puerto Rico independence.
The United States invaded Puerto Rico militarily in 1898. After the October 30th, 1950 Nationalist’s Insurrection that focused the world’s attention to the fact that Puerto Rico was a colony of the United States, the US decided to create another lie to mask that fact. The Commonwealth of Puerto Rico was that lie.
Despite the fact that Oscar is the one in jail, it is the US government that is the real criminal. The US is violating the 1960 international law (UN Resolution 1514 XV) which prohibits colonialism, because it is a threat to world peace. In fact, colonialism is considered by the international community as a crime against humanity. President Bush asked, why do people hate us? People do because the US government goes around committing crimes against humanity all over the world! This is also why the world believes that theUS government is the biggest threat to world peace! The fact of the matter is that Oscar has the right under this law to use any means necessary to decolonize Puerto Rico.
The UN in 34 resolutions has asked the US to immediately decolonize Puerto Rico. Since it refuses, in order to perpetuate its illegal relationship, it promotes plebiscites, supposedly so that Puerto Ricans could decide what they want. This is, once again, another lie. It doesn’t matter what Puerto Ricans want. Colonialism is illegal, and Puerto Rico must be decolonized. Once she is, Puerto Rico could do what she wants.
The US government lies, because it wants to keep Puerto Rico as its colony forever. It’s time that we realize this, so that we could protest peacefully and permanently for Puerto Rico decolonization. The protests are necessary, because those who lie to keep their colonies don’t believe in JUSTICE FOR ALL!
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21 January 2016
How Hedge Funds Are Pillaging Puerto Rico
By David Dayen
The American Prospect
Vulture investors have descended on the commonwealth, taking advantage of a debt crisis that has impoverished citizens and created massive unemployment.
his is a distress call from a ship of 3.5 million American citizens that have been lost at sea,” Puerto Rico Governor Alejandro García Padilla said on December 1, begging the Senate Judiciary Committee to help protect his homeland from an unspooling disaster.
After issuing bonds for over a decade on everything not nailed down, Puerto Rico now carries $73 billion in debt, a sum that García Padilla had termed “not payable” in June. Successive governments have enacted punishing austerity measures to service the debt, despite a stubbornly depressed economy and poverty rates near 50 percent.
Now, after defaulting on smaller loans, it’s likely that much of the $957 million due January 1 will go unpaid, bringing more chaos and suffering at the hands of Puerto Rico’s creditors.
In many ways, the Puerto Rico situation is sui generis, resulting from a patchwork of laws and obligations on an entity that is not really a country and not really a U.S. state. But looked at another way, Puerto Rico is just the latest battlefield for a phalanx of hedge funds called “vultures,” which pick at the withered sinews of troubled governments.
In Greece, Argentina, Detroit, and now Puerto Rico, vultures have bought distressed debt on the cheap, and then used coercion, threats, and legal action to secure a massive windfall, compounding the effects on millions of citizens.
The legal wrangling masks an irony: As creditors demand that Puerto Rico pay back everything it owes, hedge fund managers have used the island as a tax haven to avoid their own responsibilities. Wealthy investors don’t just want to make money in Puerto Rico; they want to use their leverage to effectively buy an island playground.
Puerto Rico has labored under colonial rule since Christopher Columbus arrived in 1493 and claimed it for Spain. After the Spanish-American War in 1898, the United States acquired Puerto Rico in the Treaty of Paris, and ruled it as a territory. Since then, Puerto Ricans are considered natural-born citizens, but must abide by U.S. laws without a voting member in Congress.
READ THE FULL ARTICLE IN RSN .
20 January 2016
New Argentina Government remains firm to sovereignty over Malvinas
Argentina enforces supremacy over Falklands, inviting UK to resume negotiations
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On January 3, the 183 anniversary of the British occupation of the Falkland Islands, the Argentine Government reiterated their claims regarding the sovereignty of the archipelago, located in the South Atlantic – but the UK has not been swayed and remain stuck firmly to their guns.
It comes as Argentina’s new president Mauricio Macri demanded the UK enter talks over the “unlawful” Falklands occupation as he slighted David Cameron’s call for a “more mature relationship”.
Relations between the two countries have been strained by former president Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner, and it had been hoped that Macri’s presidency would inspire in a period of improved relations.
“On January 3, 1833, the Falkland Islands were occupied by British forces that evacuated the population and the Argentine authorities legitimately established there and replaced them by subjects of the occupying power”, recalled the Argentine Foreign Ministry in a statement.
“The Republic of Argentina immediately protested this act of illegitimate force that is still without consent at any time,” it continued.
The executive also said that the Argentina Constitution, “enshrines the permanent and inalienable objective of recovering the full exercise of sovereignty over these territories and maritime areas, in accordance with the principles of international law and respecting the way of life of the inhabitants of the Falkland Islands”.
United Nations laws
The statement also noted that 2015 marked the 50th anniversary of the adoption of the United Nations clause that recognized the case of the archipelago as one of colonialism, and that “for decades” the international community has urged Argentina and the UK “to find a peaceful and lasting solution” to bilateral negotiations “as soon as possible”.
“Argentina renews its firm commitment to the peaceful settlement of disputes, international law and multilateralism and invites the United Kingdom to resume negotiations to resolve the matter as soon as possible, and fairly and definitively dispute sovereignty “, concluded the Foreign Ministry.
What does Britain say?
In the Prime Minister’s Christmas message to the Falkland Islands, David Cameron expressed hope that Mr Macri’s election would “allow us to move towards a more mature relationship”.
“We are very clear that the sovereignty of the Falkland Islands should be determined by the Islanders and they expressed their view very clearly in the recent referendum,” said a Downing Street spokesperson on Tuesday, January 5.
Asked if the Prime Minister was disappointed by the Argentine government’s statement, she added: “The statement talks about how our countries should work together to address a range of issues, not just the Falklands Islands but in the broader region.
“We need to now see what those talks lead to … where we can develop a constructive relationship.
“The Prime Minister spoke to the new president at the end of the year.
“They agreed they want to look at ways we can have a more constructive relationship.”
Argentina and Britain fought a war over the sovereignty of the islands in 1982 when Argentine troops landed on the islands.
In the conflict, which ended with the surrender of Argentina in June of that same year, 255 British, 649 Argentine and three islanders died.
In March 2013 a referendum was carried out on the island which was not recognized by the Argentine government. The population of the Falklands decided by a large majority – 99.8% to be exact- to remain a British overseas territory.
See the Falkland Island historical account here.
19 January 2016
Argentina on 1833 Usurpation of the Malvinas Islands
Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Worship of
Argentina on the occasion of the 183rd anniversary of the usurpation of the
Malvinas Islands by the United Kingdom
marked on 3rd January 2016
"On 3 January 1833, the Malvinas Islands were occupied by British forces,
which evicted the Argentine population and authorities lawfully established there
and replaced them with subjects of the occupying Power.
The Argentine Republic
immediately protested that illegitimate act of force, which continues today and to
which it never consented.
Since its beginnings as an independent nation, the Argentine Republic has,
through government acts, publicly expressed its political resolve to exercise its
effective sovereignty over the southern territories and maritime areas which it
inherited from Spain.
Today, 183 years after the start of that illegal occupation, which is still
continuing, the Argentine people and Government reaffirm once again the
inalienable sovereignty rights of the Argentine Republic over the Malvinas Islands,
South Georgia Islands and South Sandwich Islands and the surrounding maritime
areas.
The permanent and unrenounceable objective of recovering the full exercise of
sovereignty over these territories and maritime areas, in accordance with the
principles of international law, while respecting the way of life of the inhabitants of
the Malvinas Islands is enshrined in the first transitional provision of the national
Constitution.
This objective is a State policy and reflects the collective desire of the
entire Argentine people.
Last year marked the fiftieth anniversary of the adoption of United Nations
General Assembly resolution 2065 (XX), the first resolution to refer specifically to
the question of the Malvinas Islands, which was endorsed in all subsequent
resolutions on the matter adopted by the Assembly and its Special Committee on
decolonization.
For decades, the international community has singled out the question of the
Malvinas Islands as one of the forms of colonialism that must be brought to an end
and has urged Argentina and the United Kingdom to find, as soon as possible, a
peaceful and lasting solution to the sovereignty dispute, through bilateral
negotiations.
Our region has unanimously rejected the British military presence in the South
Atlantic and has expressed its concern through a variety of pronouncements at the
presidential summits of the Southern Common Market (MERCOSUR) States parties
and associated States, of the Union of South American Nations (UNASUR) and of
the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC), and at the Ibero -
American Summit. Other regions have also expressed their support for the
resumption of negotiations at forums such as the South American and Arab
Countries Summit and the Africa-South America Summit.
Additionally, the Group of 77 and China has expressly recognized the right of
the Argentine Republic to take legal action, with full respect for international law
and relevant resolutions, against unauthorized hydrocarbon exploration and
exploitation activities in its maritime areas, which include the continental shelf.
Fifty years after the adoption of General Assembly resolution 2065 (XX), the
Argentine Republic renews its firm commitment to the peaceful settlement of
disputes, international law and multilateralism. It invites the United Kingdom to
resume negotiations in order to find, as soon as possible, a just and definitive
solution to the sovereignty dispute over the Malvinas Islands, South Georgia Islands
and South Sandwich Islands and the surrounding maritime areas, taking the path of
dialogue, peace and diplomacy in line with the calls of the international
community.”
18 January 2016
Martin Luther King - Beyond Vietnam (1967)
"A true revolution of values will lay hands on the world order
and say of war: This way of settling differences is not just." - Martin
Luther King
Rev.
Dr. Martin Luther King
April 4, 1967
Riverside Church
New York, N.Y.
Mr. Chairman, ladies and gentlemen, I need not pause to say how very delighted I am to be here tonight, and how very delighted I am to see you expressing your concern about the issues that will be discussed tonight by turning out in such large numbers. I also want to say that I consider it a great honor to share this program with Dr. Bennett, Dr. Commager, and Rabbi Heschel, some of the distinguished leaders and personalities of our nation. And of course it’s always good to come back to Riverside Church. Over the last eight years, I have had the privilege of preaching here almost every year in that period, and it is always a rich and rewarding experience to come to this great church and this great pulpit.
I come to this magnificent house of worship tonight because my conscience leaves me no other choice. I join you in this meeting because I am in deepest agreement with the aims and work of the organization which has brought us together, Clergy and Laymen Concerned About Vietnam. The recent statements of your executive committee are the sentiments of my own heart, and I found myself in full accord when I read its opening lines: "A time comes when silence is betrayal." That time has come for us in relation to Vietnam.
The truth of these words is beyond doubt, but the mission to which they call us is a most difficult one. Even when pressed by the demands of inner truth, men do not easily assume the task of opposing their government’s policy, especially in time of war. Nor does the human spirit move without great difficulty against all the apathy of conformist thought within one’s own bosom and in the surrounding world. Moreover, when the issues at hand seem as perplexing as they often do in the case of this dreadful conflict, we are always on the verge of being mesmerized by uncertainty. But we must move on.
READ THE FULL ADDRESS AT THE LINK ABOVE.
SEE ALSO:
SEE ALSO:
Newly Discovered 1964 MLK Speech on Civil Rights, Segregation & Apartheid South Africa
15 January 2016
Catalonia takes steps to implement plan for secession from Spain
BARCELONA – The Parliament of Catalonia elected Carles Puigdemont on Sunday as its new regional president, backed by groups that support the separatist agenda, in a plenary where he made clear his determination to achieve independence for this region of Spain.
Puigdemont was elected with an absolute majority of 70 votes in favor – 62 from the coalition Junts Pel Si (JxSi) and eight from radical leftist party CUP – and 63 votes against.
Two members of the radical CUP (10 MPs) party abstained from voting.
Puigdemont’s investiture was held Sunday, two hours from the expiry of the deadline for new elections to be convened automatically, following the resignation of former regional president Artur Mas and an agreement in extremis signed Saturday between JxSi and CUP.
The Jxsi coalition, formed by heterogeneous political groups, was the most voted in regional elections but needed the votes of the CUP to push their candidate and proceed with the separatist agenda.
The government presented Sunday by Puigdemont during his investiture traces back to the one presented by Mas in a failed plenary few months ago, and provides for the creation of Catalonia’s own Treasury, a central bank of Catalonia and even its own customs.
Leader of the opposition, Citizens party’s Ines Arrimadas accused the new Catalan executive of heading an illegal project, while the Socialist Miquel Iceta lashed out at Puigdemont saying “No to independence, illegality and his investiture.”
Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy responded to Puigdemont’s election with a promise to comply with his obligation to ensure the law and Constitution faced with the separatist challenge, warning, he “won’t allow a single act that could harm the unity and sovereignty of Spain.”
“We have more tools than ever to defend our unity, we, the main political forces agree on this,” said Rajoy, who received the backing of socialist opposition leader Pedro Sanchez, and Citizens party president, Albert Rivera, who heads the fourth political force in the Spanish Congress.
This new chapter has stoked the national debate over the formation of a new Spanish Executive, where the Catalan issue is one of the “red lines” for the possible pacts to form a government, in a political atmosphere marked by uncertainty and lack of parliamentary majority.
Puigdemont was elected with an absolute majority of 70 votes in favor – 62 from the coalition Junts Pel Si (JxSi) and eight from radical leftist party CUP – and 63 votes against.
Two members of the radical CUP (10 MPs) party abstained from voting.
Puigdemont’s investiture was held Sunday, two hours from the expiry of the deadline for new elections to be convened automatically, following the resignation of former regional president Artur Mas and an agreement in extremis signed Saturday between JxSi and CUP.
The Jxsi coalition, formed by heterogeneous political groups, was the most voted in regional elections but needed the votes of the CUP to push their candidate and proceed with the separatist agenda.
The government presented Sunday by Puigdemont during his investiture traces back to the one presented by Mas in a failed plenary few months ago, and provides for the creation of Catalonia’s own Treasury, a central bank of Catalonia and even its own customs.
Leader of the opposition, Citizens party’s Ines Arrimadas accused the new Catalan executive of heading an illegal project, while the Socialist Miquel Iceta lashed out at Puigdemont saying “No to independence, illegality and his investiture.”
Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy responded to Puigdemont’s election with a promise to comply with his obligation to ensure the law and Constitution faced with the separatist challenge, warning, he “won’t allow a single act that could harm the unity and sovereignty of Spain.”
“We have more tools than ever to defend our unity, we, the main political forces agree on this,” said Rajoy, who received the backing of socialist opposition leader Pedro Sanchez, and Citizens party president, Albert Rivera, who heads the fourth political force in the Spanish Congress.
This new chapter has stoked the national debate over the formation of a new Spanish Executive, where the Catalan issue is one of the “red lines” for the possible pacts to form a government, in a political atmosphere marked by uncertainty and lack of parliamentary majority.