
Monthly Archive for October, 2004

I Love Ely Guerra’s new CD “Sweet & Sour, Hot Y Spicy” This is the first Ely Guerra CD that I have listened to and I am impressed. I cannot stop listening to the tracks, especially “te amo, I love you” (Ely’s vocals are just awesome on this track), “lucrecia and rigoberto”(My favorite track!) and “mi playa.” I was first attracted to her cool voice when she was a guest vocalist on “El Duelo,” a track on La Ley’s MTV Unplugged album. Ely Guerra’s sound on “Sweet & Sour, Hot Y Spicy, is so unique. I recommend this CD for a lazy Sunday afternoon where you can layback and absorb the sounds alongside your significant other. (I posted this review at Amazon.com)
Californians Vote YES on Prop 72!
Free trade globalization has produced some exceedingly strange phenomena: China, the last socialist power, is glad to provide slave labor to multinationals; a firm in India fills the tax forms of an American corporation that produces vodka in Peru and then sells it to Polish immigrants who are constructing a British-financed building in Madrid; an enterprise which specializes in biotechnology tries to copyright the DNA of an isolated tribe from the Amazon, and George Bush has become the worst Mexican president ever.
Globalization tends to blur or erase all economic, geographic, and cultural boundaries, leaving high technology to coexist with primitive forms of exploitation: Taiwan sells watches to the Swiss; Brazil exports technology to Germany; and all evidence suggests that George Bush has stolen his ruling style from old-fashioned Mexican politicians.
Mexican political culture has very defined features and the president of the United States has absorbed them all: The classical Mexican political boss usually inherits his power from his father. The typical Mexican cacique has a love for guns as well as an inclination toward violence and cruelty; he despises legality and intellectual activity, has a personal history of alcoholism and dissipation, lies systematically and declares himself a faithful servant of God. (Did we miss anything?)
According to Mexican tradition, politicians always reach their positions thanks to a fraudulent electoral process and then surround themselves with a clique which uses its power to conduct “business” on a staggering scale while in office. The Florida electoral thievery and Halliburton’s Iraq contract are classic examples of Mexican corruption.
Based on a complex pyramid of political bosses, a totalitarian presidential regime flourished in Mexico. It was organized around a political party whose name remains a monument to paradox: the Revolutionary Institutional Party (PRI). Names aside, the PRI model was so efficient (for the PRI, of course) that the party was able to hold power for more than seventy years. The Peruvian writer Mario Vargas Llosa called it “the perfect dictatorship.”
This dictatorship was a mark of shame for all Mexicans. Only Mexico’s political cartoonists were able to benefit from it. The profuse manifestations of cynicism and obsequiousness it produced were a delight for us. In the Mexican court, dialogues like the following were not uncommon and completely irresistible:
The President asks: “What time is it?”
His minister replies: “Whatever time you say, Mister President.
Our presidents were almighty creatures, the voices of God on Earth. Not to be with them was to be against them. After them came the final flood or the atomic apocalypse.
In order to maintain its political control, this regime needed to restrain civil rights and limit freedom of the press. While others fell silent, Mexican political bosses, lacking any kind of legal or moral counterweight, spoke with an enviable freedom and without moral scruples, unbounded by reality. They used to say things like: “In the state of Guerrero, the only ones who complain are the poor,” referring of course to 98% of the population; or “I can’t say yes or no, but quite the opposite.”
Undoubtedly, George Bush had these wise men in mind when he insisted that the French weren’t able to understand the United States because they didn’t have a word for “entrepreneur.” Having learned such turns of phrase and so much more from Mexican politicians, he has now scaled the heights of Mexican political achievement, becoming the most notorious cacique of modern times, and he’s done this, without paying his predecessors a cent in royalties.
The creation of “free trade democracies” throughout Latin America has been one of the major political triumphs of globalization. It has been said that the election to the presidency of Vicente Fox, a free trade globalizer if there ever was one, marked the beginning of a new era for Mexico. This put the fear of God into Mexican caricaturists who dreaded the possibility that the fall of the PRI might mean the end of our professional paradise. We shouldn’t have worried. Fox has held onto all the old vices of our former political bosses – except their authority. What he’s added to Mexico’s presidency has been a touch of marketing and plenty of unintentional humor. He’s been like a genetic experiment in which the DNA of an old-style Mexican president has been cloned with Dan Quayle and Jerry Lewis. Free trade democrats love to find new ways of reducing the size and power of the state. Fox has proved an exemplar when it comes to this. Never has a Mexican government been so weak; never have Washington’s decisions carried such unprecedented weight in Mexican life.
Globalization favors chaos theory: a butterfly flaps its wings in the jungle and a hurricane is formed in the Caribbean; in Saudi Arabia, a baby is born with a silver spoon in its mouth, and two towers fall in Manhattan. An American politician acts like a Mexican cacique and war explodes on the other side of the planet.
The only visible advantage Mexican politicians ever offered the rest of us was their limited ability to damage the world. George Bush has overcome this obstacle. After all, he has access to the sort of technology and to an arsenal that Mexico’s local tyrants could only dream of. When he says he’s blessed, it’s because we’re damned.
Under the nuclear umbrella of his free-trade empire and incipient world government, his clique of petty political bosses can dictate the economic agendas of dozens of third world countries. In recent years, the priorities of the Mexican economy have been defined by the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, Wall Street, and Washington; they establish our oil quota, the levels of our external debt payments, and the minimum wages we can offer. Vincente Fox acts as what he’s always been: a Coca Cola CEO, a multinational middleman, while the true president of Mexico is George Bush, that cacique of caciques.
According to Mexican tradition, politicians are judged depending on how they take care of their people and how they make them prosper … and by such standards, George Bush is the worst Mexican president ever.
We are told that American democracy still works, but if so, it’s the only aspect of the U.S. that’s not globalized; which means millions of citizens around the world won’t have the right to vote in this election, even though their futures too are at stake. For Mexicans this a particularly bitter pill to swallow. After all, shouldn’t we have a right to express our opinions on the last cacique?read / Alternet
Monday, Oct. 18, was officially the end of an era. An era when the Oakland Raiders restored meaning to “Pride and Poise” and “Commitment to Excellence” — phrases that had run hollow for the better part of a decade. On Monday afternoon, quarterback Rich Gannon — suffering from a broken vertebra in his neck — stated the obvious. His season is over. He wouldn’t announce that his career is over, but that’s clearly the safe bet. Gannon’s signing was the smartest player acquisition by the Raiders in the free-agent era. It went against all Raiders traditions — he didn’t have a big gun, didn’t throw the long ball, wasn’t flashy, hadn’t been the MVP of a Super Bowl. But he was smart and mobile, could understand Gruden’s offense and could execute it. Gannon worked hard to wring every ounce out of his potential. Gannon’s hard work turned him into the league MVP. It landed him in a Super Bowl, though that game is something he would prefer to erase. He was the most successful Raiders quarterback since Jim Plunkett. Ken Stabler praised the man who did justice to jersey No. 12 once again. Gannon could rub his teammates wrong. He didn’t tolerate laziness or excuses — trademarks of mid-1990s Raiders teams. He demanded a lot from his teammates, but even more from himself. After his shoulder injury last season, he worked hard to come back. But Monday, encased in a giant white neck brace, he was forced to fold his hand. “I have prepared every game as if it was my last game,” he said. “I take a great deal of pride in my preparation and performance. This can be a very tough business. People can be very critical. But the one thing people cannot question about me these last six years in Oakland is the way I prepared.” He was criticized, especially after the Super Bowl loss. But what has happened to the Raiders since has proved that Gannon was not the problem. “I have no regrets,” he said. “I did everything I possibly could.”
The one thing people cannot question about me these last six years in Oakland is the way I prepared, just how serious this game has meant to me,” said Gannon, who led the league in passing yardage (4,689) in 2002, most 300- yard passing games (10) and set an NFL record with 418 completions. “So I have no regrets if, in fact, that Sunday night was my last performance, that I did everything I possibly could and tried to accomplish everything I possibly could for this football team. I’m very comfortable with that.
The U.S. Army has launched an investigation into reports that members of an Army Reserve unit in Iraq refused to carry out a convoy supply mission this week, military officials said Friday.
The incident came to light when relatives of the soldiers under investigation declared that the troops disobeyed orders to drive in the convoy because they considered it a “suicide mission.”
The troops believed that the poor condition of their fuel trucks and the lack of armored vehicles to escort them meant that the mission would be too dangerous, the family members said.
read / LA Times
So much for supporting our troops!
An Israeli platoon commander accused of firing a full clip of ammunition into the body of a Palestinian schoolgirl after she was lying on the ground dead or wounded has been suspended from duty pending investigation, the military said Wednesday.
In and of itself, the girl’s death would have been unlikely to prompt an inquiry. But the case caused an outcry when soldiers told Israeli journalists that after she had already been wounded, perhaps mortally, the commander approached her and “verified the kill” — army parlance for firing at close range at downed combatants to make sure they are incapacitated or dead.
“We were in shock — we grabbed our heads in disbelief. We couldn’t believe what he was doing,” a soldier who was present told the Yediot Aharonot daily earlier this week, speaking on condition of anonymity. “Just a little girl; how do you spray a child with bullets from zero range?”
The girl was shot about 20 times, according to Palestinian medical officials and Israeli military sources.
read / LA Times

