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struggle4progress Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Apr-17-08 01:48 AM
Original message
(Florida) House backs trade pact with Colombia
... The vote was 83-27.

"You vote against this resolution, you're voting with Hugo Chavez," said Rep. Juan Zapata, a Miami Republican ...

It was introduced on the floor Wednesday and pushed through by the House leadership the same day.

"Candidly, I don't know why you would want to rush something, particularly if you believe it's so important, through a chamber whose primary purpose is not to debate trade policy," said the top House Democrat, Rep. Dan Gelber, of Miami.

http://blogs.news-journalonline.com/politics/2008/04/house_approves_trade_pact_with.html
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Mika Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Apr-17-08 10:46 AM
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1. A vote for this resolution was a vote for corporate terror, corporate oppression, and hegemony.



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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Apr-17-08 02:50 PM
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2. Not surprisingly, Rep. Juan Zapata does look like a pig.


or even silent screen monster, Lon Cheney.

"You vote against this resolution, you're voting with Hugo Chavez."
Yours truly, Rep. Juan Zapata.


You vote against the resolution, you're actually voting against death squad murders of union workers. PERIOD.

How can anyone get so dirty he'd try to play politics over the evil supported by the Uribe government? He had to be born corrupted, and then really work on it.

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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Apr-18-08 03:06 AM
Response to Original message
3. Take stand against Colombia trade pact
Take stand against Colombia trade pact
By Natalie Danielle Camastra
Article Launched: 04/17/2008 05:56:35 PM PDT


HOUSE Democrats' decision last Friday to delay consideration of the U.S.-Colombia Free Trade Agreement until the next administration represents a move to protect the rights of the Colombian indigenous communities and U.S. national security interests. The decision comes after President Bush sent the controversial trade agreement to the House, which under presidential "fast track authority" requires an up or down legislative vote after 90 days. "Free trade" has most recently been a thorny topic, especially among Democrats, with Hillary Rodham Clinton's recent dismissal of a top advisor, Mark Penn, for his work on the Colombia deal. Although the White House claims that the trade pact will "enhance national security" by "strengthening a key democratic ally" in the region and "bring economic gains to both sides," the reality of the situation is quite another matter.

So what do indigenous rights in Colombia have to do with U.S. national security? A great deal. I argue that the two are more connected than one would have thought. In Colombia, agriculture is the third most important sector, employing more than twice as many as the industrial sector. However, since the passage of the Andean trade preference program in 1991, the trend has been to export food rather than to provide for local markets. In 2006, 40 percent of Colombia's population was food insecure. Under the U.S.-Colombia Free Trade agreement, Colombia will be forced to open its markets to U.S. agricultural goods, which are highly subsidized thanks to aggressive U.S. farm policy. Colombian agricultural products, especially from small- and medium-sized farms, cannot compete with the heavily subsidized U.S. agricultural goods such as corn and rice. And who owns and works these small to medium farms? Typically women, indigenous and Afro-Colombians: all members of the population that historically have been marginalized. The competitiveness of U.S. agriculture will drive these farmers from their land as they no longer find market access for their goods. In 2005, the Colombian Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs concluded in a report that full liberalization would lead to a 35 percent decrease in employment.

Decreased employment in small and medium farms means those farmers will seek employment in other sectors, threatening food sovereignty and increasing internal displacement. Colombia has the world's second largest internally displaced populations (IDPs) of 38 million, second only to Sudan. However, this displacement is not only due to paramilitary violence, but also expropriations from large landholding elites and unemployment on small and medium farms. Many of the displaced will work on the very plantations that displaced them: large agro-business plantations, often environmentally and socially destructive. Others will seek employment in the more profitable coca plantations, exacerbating the cocaine drug trade. One contributor to the Washington Post opinion page said it best when they stated, "If farmers can't grow rice, they are more likely to grow coca." (February 17, 2006, p. A18)

Even more yet will migrate to the cities in search of manufacturing jobs, where the destitution and isolation will put them at risk for joining left or right wing paramilitary groups. The Washington Office on Latin America, a Washington based NGO, contends, "that there is not a national security rationale for passing the trade agreement with Colombia and that a strong argument to the contrary can be made." It is the cycle of economic liberalization, displacement, inequality and drug production that reinforces the proliferation of the paramilitary groups. The Colombian Minister of Agriculture even admitted the prevalence of this vicious cycle in 2004 when he stated, that the FTA would give small farmers little choice "but migration to the cities or other countries (especially the U.S.), working in drug cultivation zones, or affiliating with illegal armed groups."

More:
http://www2.sgvtribune.com/opinions/ci_8963906

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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Apr-18-08 05:17 AM
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4. British Government promises to discuss new death threats in Colombia
British Government promises to discuss new death threats in Colombia
17 Apr 2008 14:36:00 GMT

British Government promises to discuss new death threats in Colombia

The British Government has promised to discuss new death threats against priests and members of development and human rights organisations in Colombia.

The Foreign and Commonwealth Office has agreed to meet aid agency CAFOD after the so-called paramilitary group, the Black Eagles (Águilas Negras), threatened to assassinate members of CAFOD's partner organisations in the north of Colombia.

The email from the Black Eagles said CAFOD's partner, the Development and Peace Programme of Magdalena Medio, human rights group SEMBRAR, the Federación de Agricultores y Mineros (Farmers and Miners Federation) and priests and parishioners in the region were all "military targets" in an "annihilation plan" and "will be exterminated one by one".

It continued: "We are watching you every minute...The plan to annihilate you will begin at any point. We are not joking about assassinating you, so go and warn your relatives so they can prepare your burial."

CAFOD has already met the new Colombian ambassador in London, Noemí Sanín, and conveyed its concerns about these threats and continued paramilitary intimidation in the South American country - where a conflict has been raging for four decades. aramilitary g Clare Dixon, head of CAFOD's Latin America and Caribbean Department, said: "This latest threat is another sign that the notorious paramilitary groups are still active, despite the Colombian government's demobilisation process.

"The continued activity of these groups and their influence in politics is undermining Colombia's claim to be a democratic state providing security for its citizens. People have a right to live in peace.


More:
http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/fromthefield/217426/120844325395.htm
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Texano78704 Donating Member (215 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Apr-18-08 04:27 PM
Response to Original message
5. Jeepers
Did he also advocate we round up all the commies too? I bet he has a "better dead than red" bumper sticker.
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