Tuesday, November 10, 2009

The vision of Walesa on The Fall of The Berlin Wall "

..when I look back and see all the missed opportunities, I am not satisfied.
...cuando miro atrás y veo todas las oportunidades perdidas, no me siento satisfecho.
Lev Walesa says in an interview in the newspaper "El Pais", Madrid, Spain, that the first collapse of the USSR were the Polish trade unions for several reasons:
Gorbachov, Merkel y Walesa1) were more able to mobilize the masses while recognizing that the Communists who fought against have their own achievements or interests as workers, they, the union figth against his own rigths at that time and they don't recover anymore in Poland when they became in a free democracy.We have the impresion that Walesa recognized this contradiction in the interview.
2) The elderly Russian leaders were dying one after another in power, creating destabilization in the areas of power.
3) He call Gorbachev a "weak political" without free will. To read the full interview, click here:http://www.elpais.com/articulo/internacional/Estuvo/bien/Gorbachov/fuera/politico/debil/elpepuint/20091110elpepiint_4/Tes
INTERVIEW: Twenty years after the fall of the Wall Former President Lech Walesa of Poland
"Estuvo bien que Gorbachov fuera un político débil" "It was good that Gorbachev was a weak" by CHARLES HAWLEY (DER SPIEGEL) 10/11/2009 10/11/2009


The world looks to Berlin when the city celebrates the 20th anniversary of the fall of the Wall. Pero Lech Walesa, el hombre que lideró el sindicato polaco Solidaridad, afirma que el colapso del comunismo empezó en los astilleros polacos, y que los "desertores" de la Alemania del Este pusieron en peligro su éxito final. But Lech Walesa, the man who led the Polish trade union Solidarity, said that the collapse of communism began in Polish shipyard, and that "deserters" of East Germany threatened their ultimate success.(...)

Filmmaker views Haiti revolution through leader’s eyes



Published: Thursday, November 5, 2009

Updated: Friday, November 6, 2009

Correction appended.

At a screening of his 2007 documentary about the Haitian revolution at the Watson Institute for International Studies last night, filmmaker Noland Walker discussed the implications of the momentous event in the context of human rights and slavery.

Walker’s film, “Egalite for All: Toussaint Louverture and the Haitian Revolution,” chronicles the events of the Haitian revolution through the eyes of one of its most important leaders, an educated former slave named Toussaint Louverture , whom one historian interviewed in the film dubbed “black George Washington,” and another termed a “genius.”

As a member of Haiti’s plantation-owning elite, Louverture became secretary for the rebel slaves when fighting broke out between them and the white landowners in 1791. He acted as liaison to the white planters and originally tried to design a peace settlement that would push blacks back into slavery — a “stark recognition of 18th-century realities,” the film’s narrator says. The struggle lasted for about a decade until by 1804 the French revolutionary government had freed nearly a million slaves across the empire, and Haiti had won its independence.

“The Haitian revolution raises the most fundamental question in the Americas in the 19th century: slavery,” Professor of Africana Studies Barrymore Bogues said at the screening. Bogues served as a commentator throughout the film along with Walker and fielded questions on Haiti’s history.

Historians debate whether to idolize Louverture for his leadership and intellect or to condemn him for the military power that he gained after the revolution — the aftershocks of which can still be felt in Haiti’s militaristic society today, Bogues said.

Walker said that although shooting the movie in the Dominican Republic with a mix of Dominican and Haitian actors and crew caused some racial tensions (the film relied heavily on historical re-enactments), the film still accomplished its main goal.

“We wanted to get across that the Haitian revolution was not just Haiti’s revolution,” he said. “It was an inclusive human rights struggle”

“In the midst of the most absolute form of domination — racial slavery — there is hope,” Bogues added. “That hope is important for all people who suffer from domination. That, to me, is the real story behind the Haitian revolution.”

Wednesday night’s lecture was the second in a two-part series on Haiti co-sponsored by Watson’s Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies, the C.V. Starr Lectureship and the Department of French Studies. The first lecture, on Vodoun religion and culture, took place Oct. 30 — All Hallow’s Eve, a day when Haitians celebrate the passing of ancestors.
“Without the Vodoun religion, we wouldn’t have had the Haitian revolution,” said Visiting Lecturer in Latin American Studies Patrick Sylvain, who organized and moderated both events.

“Vodoun remains very much centered in the history of the ancestors, and it remains very much centered around the whole aspect of freedom,” he said. “By the way that Catholicism was imposed on the slaves, in addition to slavery, Vodoun became the vehicle to which all of these tribes became unified.”

He said one of the major events leading up to the revolution was a religious ceremony in 1791, in which the slaves formed a pact of unity to achieve freedom, a central tenet of Vodoun.

The talk featured Marie Evans, a high priestess in the Vodoun religion. Sylvain said the priestess described the roots of the religion in the area of Vodou, West Africa, and its emphasis on its followers’ ancestry in order to “demystify” the religion.

“In Hollywood, they call it Voodoo, but the term is Vodoun,” he said. “Vodoun means spirit, or spiritual world, whereas Voodoo is an American invention, in a sense, that portrays this negative aspect of pins and needles, and so forth.”

Evans’ talk was followed by a short dance by Jean Appolon, a professional Haitian dancer, about whom Sylvain is producing a documentary.

The recent events exploring Haiti fit well on Brown’s campus, where the John Carter Brown Library houses a world-renowned collection of Haitian artifacts.

“I believe it’s the largest collection of Haitian documents written at that time in American and the second largest in the world, after the National Library of France,” said the library’s director, Ted Widmer, who said he seeks to raise the library’s profile as a center for Haitian research.

The library hosted a conference and exhibit on Haiti in 2004 in honor of the 200th anniversary of the country’s revolution. Widmer said the library is about to undertake a project to digitize many of its rare Haitian documents in an effort to make them available to institutions in Haiti.

“I’m trying to build up our collection, digitize our collection and take what we’ve got and make it available to the people who care about it the most: the Haitians themselves,” he said.

A caption on page 1 in Thursday’s paper (accompanying “Filmmaker views Haiti revolution through leader’s eyes,” Nov. 5) incorrectly identified the man speaking as the filmmaker, Noland Walker. The man pictured in the photograph is Professor of Africana Studies Barrymore Bogues.

Medical association backs health system reform

"The message is that the House of Delegates met, and in a very democratic process, voted to support the AMA continuing to work with Congress for a reform of the health care system to make it better for patients and the physicians who take care of them," said the AMA's President-elect Cecil Wilson.



By MONICA RHOR and LINDSEY TANNER (AP) – 12 hours ago
HOUSTON — The American Medical Association on Monday rebuffed dissident members and voted to stick with support for ongoing health reform efforts, while reiterating wariness over proposals that threaten doctors' pocketbooks and independence.
The action at the group's semiannual meeting in Houston could be seen as a vote of confidence for AMA leaders who voiced support for the $1.2-trillion, 10-year bill the U.S. House passed Saturday.
Several dissident doctor organizations within the AMA had urged the group to reverse its position and come out with a strong statement opposing Democrat-led reform efforts. Some urged the AMA's 544-member House of Delegates to vote to oppose any health overhaul that includes a public insurance option and Medicare payment cuts to doctors, and that excludes tort reform.
Discussions about the proposed resolutions spurred a lengthy debate Sunday that went on for more than eight hours.
However, during a two-hour discussion Monday, delegates — physician members who set AMA policy — voted instead to follow the more moderate path chosen by AMA's leaders including its president, Dr. James Rohack. Delegates adopted a health reform statement similar to one approved at their annual meeting in June, after President Barack Obama came to Chicago to seek AMA approval for his health reform agenda.
"The message is that the House of Delegates met, and in a very democratic process, voted to support the AMA continuing to work with Congress for a reform of the health care system to make it better for patients and the physicians who take care of them," said the AMA's President-elect Cecil Wilson.
The measures adopted Monday say AMA will support health overhaul that is consistent with AMA policies, including freedom to choose health insurance and universal access for patients. Any health insurance options should not require physicians to participate, or restrict patients' access to out-of-network doctors, the measure says.
The measures also say reform must include a Medicare physician payment system that keeps pace with the costs of running a medical practice. One resolution spelled out the group's opposition to cuts in Medicare payments.
One of the most spirited debates Monday came while discussing a proposed resolution calling for the AMA to actively oppose "any new public health insurance option, which is defined as a federal government backed and/or funded insurance plan."
"My strong concern is that a public option as defined in the resolve would become the only option for patients," said Michael Greene, a representative of the Georgia delegation who introduced the resolution.
Lori Heim, president of the American Academy of Family Physicians, was one of several speakers opposing the resolution. "Despite dire predictions of what may occur, we don't know that. There may be a public insurance option that provides the criteria we are looking for," Heim said. "It's important to keep our options open, to keep the discussion going."
The resolution was voted down by a 315-199 margin, and the AMA's position — neither opposing nor supporting any specific public option — stayed unchanged.
Another resolution stating that the AMA should oppose the just-passed House bill also was soundly defeated by a 350-167 vote, again showing delegate support for a previously-stated AMA stand. Last week, the organization expressed support for the bill, but did not give a full endorsement saying the bill was not a perfect fit.
"I would much have preferred to come out strongly against a public option, but I think we also made positive changes," Greene said following the vote.
Tanner reported from Chicago.

Doctors in pain.Frustrating, heart-rending working conditions force many to improvise.

"You often have patients that you know what to do but you just cannot because you don't have the wherewithal or the equipment to help," said Dr Dane Miller public relations officer of the Jamaica Medical Doctors Association (JMDA).
Medical Association of Jamaica (MAJ)19A Windsor Avenue,Kingston 5, Jamaica W.I.Tel: (876) 946-1105-7Fax: (987) 946-1105Email: majdoctors@cwjamaica.com
News
Doctors in pain
Frustrating, heart-rending working conditions force many to improvise
By INGRID BROWN Observer senior reporter browni@jamaicaobserver.com
Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Public sector doctors yesterday highlighted extremely difficult and frustrating conditions under which they are required to work and that force them, in many instances, to improvise in order to save lives and, in a few cases, to employ triage.
"You often have patients that you know what to do but you just cannot because you don't have the wherewithal or the equipment to help," said Dr Dane Miller public relations officer of the Jamaica Medical Doctors Association (JMDA).


Public sector doctors yesterday

Dr Shane Alexis (right), president of the Jamaica Medical Doctors Association (JMDA), highlights the conditions under which public sector doctors have to work as he addresses the weekly Observer Monday Exchange meeting of reporters and editors at the newspaper's Beechwood Avenue headquarters yesterday. Beside him are Dr Vincent Riley, first vice president of the JMDA and Dr Romayne Edwards, editor of JMDA publications. (Photo: Lionel Rookwood)
highlighted extremely difficult and frustrating conditions under which they are required to work and that force them, in many instances, to improvise in order to save lives and, in a few cases, to employ triage.
"You often have patients that you know what to do but you just cannot because you don't have the wherewithal or the equipment to help," said Dr Dane Miller public relations officer of the Jamaica Medical Doctors Association (JMDA
).
According to Dr Miller, a junior surgical resident at the University Hospital of the West Indies (UHWI), doctors get things done under very challenging circumstances only because they are the "masters of improvisation".
Dr Miller and other members of the JMDA executive - president Dr Shane Alexis, first vice president Dr Vincent Riley, publications editor Dr Romayne Edwards, and secretary Dr Twesige Mugisa-Malcolm - were guests at the weekly Observer Monday Exchange meeting of reporters and editors at the newspaper's Beechwood Avenue headquarters.
Dr Miller, unable to camouflage the pain he felt at working in conditions that he described as "extremely frustrating and heart-rending", said that only last weekend he had to decide which of the three patients under his care needed more immediate attention since one was an emergency patient on the ward, another was in the Accident and Emergency (A&E) department and the condition of the third was deteriorating.
"I can't split myself into three, so I had to triage. go to A&E, sort that one out, and decide where to go next," Dr Miller said.
Triage is the action of sorting casualties according to priority. It is often used in hospital emergency rooms, on battlefields and at disaster sites when limited medical resources are available.
Dr Miller said that sometimes doctors are forced to use equipment which would normally have been replaced in a first-world setting.
Pressed about a worst case scenario resulting from the lack of equipment in hospitals, Dr Miller said he has been in a situation where the power went out in the middle of a surgery and the standby generator was not working.
"Nurses had to hold flashlights for us to continue," he said. However, he pointed out that similar situations have occurred in first-world settings. A mandate of the JMDA, he said, will be to identify ways to improve the conditions.
"We cannot continue along the path we are on," he stressed.
He argued that while health care has been made free, infrastructure and staffing have not caught up with the increased demand.
Dr Alexis, in his contribution to the discussion, said policies regarding free health care have to be revisited, given the new set of economic conditions facing the country.
"In other words, it is time for the policy makers, doctors and stakeholders to sit down and revisit our health sector and try and make the necessary improvement," Dr Alexis said.
He said the per capita expenditure for a country like the United States is upward of US$4,000 per year to treat a patient compared to Jamaica's US$400.
"What we have to look at is not developed versus developing but humans versus humans,"
he said, adding that there is a need to look at how much resource is dedicated to health care in Jamaica.
"The question we have to ask ourselves is how much is a man worth in Jamaica," he said.
Dr Alexis pointed to shortages of basic equipment such as lights, proper treatment and examination rooms, resuscitation sets, among other implements in critical areas.
Doctors, he said, do not even have a desk on the hospital wards and so all documentation has to be done standing either at the bedside or at the central administrative area.
"Sometimes sharing sensitive information, for example a patient who is HIV positive, you have to go into the storeroom sometimes to break the news to them," Dr Alexis said.
Dr Riley concurred, and added that working conditions at public hospitals are the same islandwide as there are too many patients with too few doctors and supplies.
Dr Riley, who works at the St Ann's Bay Hospital, said it is always a struggle to find bed space for patients.
He told the Observer that another grave problem is lack of diagnostic services at public hospitals.
There are only two CT scanners and no MRI services except at the UHWI, which is not considered to be a full public hospital, he revealed.
Simple machines like those used to measure oxygen concentration in the blood and do ECG (echocardiogram) often do not work.
"When that happens you have to make a decision based on clinical assessment to determine if persons can afford to have it done privately," he said.

Another concern, according to Dr Riley, is the issue of getting patients to another hospital to do tests, since there is an acute shortage of ambulances, many of which are out of service.
This affects other health care services as when patients arrive late at another facility for an appointment it throws off the schedule of others.

Monday, November 9, 2009

Mayors' Feed the Hungry Program,Sarasota, Florida.


Wayne PostonBradenton Mayor
Click on Make a Donation or contact Joel Swallow, Chairman, at 941-364-7440.
Be A VolunteerYour contribution is deeply appreciated.


Hal LenobelLongboat Key Mayor

Jane W. Von HahmannChair, Manatee CountyCommission
Shannon Staub Chair, Sarasota CountyCommission
Lou Ann R. PalmerSarasota Mayor
Ed MartinVenice Mayor

Welcome
Wondering where our next meal is coming from is something most of us never have to worry about. However, for many in Sarasota and Manatee counties, it's a constant concern. Thanks to the continued support of schools, religious organizations, corporate sponsors and individual members of our community, we have helped thousands of hungry children and adults who rely on assistance from programs like the Mayors' Feed the Hungry Program.
There is an immediate need in our own communities and we need your help - right now - more than ever before.
A contribution to this all-volunteer program means your money goes to feed the hungry! The only administrative expenses are for the production of printed materials and mailing costs. All money collected stays in our communities and is used for food vouchers that are distributed throughout the year by local churches, civic groups and social services agencies. (See About Us for more information.)
Last year your generosity provided over 12,000 meals - over 35% went to children, over 16% went to the handicapped and over 15% went to the elderly - however more than 40,000 requests were left unfilled!
We already know the need this year will be even greater because of current economic conditions.
Even the smallest contribution - combined with others - will help feed the hungry.
As we launch our campaign this year, we are asking you all to lend a helping hand once more. Remember, every dollar counts - please feed as many as you can.

The consumerist paradise happy that permeates social discourse has little to do with everyday perception of the majority.

Younger vets entering ranks of the homeless


Jake Saltzman, an Air Force veteran of the Iraq war, lives in his car, parked here on Santa Rosa Avene. The former medic says he has a 90 percent veterans disability because of post traumatic stress syndrome
By JEREMY HAYTHE PRESS DEMOCRAT
Published: Monday, November 9, 2009 at 6:34 p.m. Last Modified: Monday, November 9, 2009 at 6:34 p.m.

At the Veterans Northeast Outreach Center in Haverhill, Andre Gaumont pauses for some hot soup while checking out the services available to him.
At the Veterans Northeast Outreach Center in Haverhill, Andre Gaumont pauses for some hot soup while checking out the services available to him. (Suzanne Kreiter/Globe Staff)

The red flag for psychiatrists is that these homeless, specially the army veterans, without medical care and attention, are exposed to dementia due to the constant harassment and social exclusion they are subjected in american society. Gualterio Nunez Estrada, Sarasota, Florida, 34233.

.Discharged to the streets
Armed forces veterans account for up to 25 percent of the homeless in AmericaHome from war, but homeless There are about 131,000 homeless veterans today, about a quarter of the total US adult homeless population. Twice as many veterans are homeless at some point during the course of a year. There were 196,000 in 2007 and 154,000 in 2008 . The number of homeless Vietnam-era veterans - about 80% of the total - exceeds the number that died in the war (58,148) . About 70% of homeless veterans suffer from alcohol or drug abuse problems; 45% have mental illness. There are an estimated 1,750 homeless veterans in Massachusetts. There are 62 transitional housing units in the region for veterans: 47 in Haverhill, 15 in Lynn. Sources: US Dept. of Veterans Affairs; VA Boston Healthcare System, Veterans Northeast Outreach Center, Lynn Shelter Assoc. STORIES BY STEVEN ROSENBERG / GLOBE STAFF






This is not the paradise that promise the wild capitalism after The Fall of The Mure of Berlin.
Woman and child suffering from Acute Water Diarrhea, Wanleweyn district, Somalia, April 5, 2009


Millions will starve as rich nations cut food aid funding, warns UN
Aid agencies fear global disaster as support for World Food Programme hits 20-year low


Source: BBC Mundohttp://translate.google.com/translate?tl=en&sourceid=ie8-activity&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.bbc.co.uk%2Fmundo%2Finternacional%2F2009%2F11%2F091109_muro_capitalismo_mj.shtml

El paraíso del consumo feliz que impregna el discurso social tiene poco que ver con la percepción cotidiana de las mayorías.
La crisis económica mundial ha contribuido decisivamente a poner al desnudo esta discrepancia.


http://www.bbc.co.uk/mundo/internacional/2009/11/091109_muro_capitalismo_mj.shtml

American vietnamese Congresist:Cao’s Health-Care Vote Puts Endangered Republican ‘On the Map’



Cao said he “listened to the countless stories” from constituents “whose health-care costs are exploding -- if they are able to obtain health care at all. Louisianans need real options for primary care, for mental health care, and for expanded health care for seniors and children. I have always said that I would put aside partisan wrangling to do the business of the people.”


Cao website:http://josephcao.house.gov/News/DocumentSingle.aspx?DocumentID=154007
Health care bill

http://josephcao.house.gov/UploadedFiles/HealthcareBill.pdf


By Jonathan D. Salant
Source:http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601103&sid=a7bihcw8Bjwk#
Nov. 9 (Bloomberg) -- Representative
Anh “Joseph” Cao has spent his first year in the U.S. House being the Democratic majority’s most reliable Republican. He underscored that role when he became the only member of his party to vote for the health-care bill the chamber passed.
The plan to overhaul the nation’s health-care system was approved 220-215 late on Nov. 7, with 39 Democrats crossing party lines to oppose it.
Cao, the first Vietnamese American to serve in Congress, has cut against the grain throughout his political career.