Saturday, March 15, 2014

I tend to agree with the USA's perspective. Someone has to stop, otherwise, there will be no end.

Don't give angry young men a reason to be angry. That is not a new point of view for me.

Oops, there goes another police motorcycle. Hugo. Call on the spirit of Hugo. What is wrong with this president?

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Friday, March 14, 2014, 12:25 AM

...Also killed Wednesday (click here) in another part of Valencia was National Guard Capt. Ramzor Ernesto Bracho.

In Washington, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry told a congressional committee Thursday, "We are trying to find a way to get the Maduro government to engage with their citizens, to treat them respectfully, to end this terror campaign against his own people and to begin to, hopefully, respect human rights in an appropriate way."

But U.S. Marine Gen. John Kelly, commander of the U.S. Southern Command, offered a dimmer view to a Senate committee.

"It is a situation that is obviously just coming apart in front us, and unless there is some type of a miracle that either the opposition or the Maduro government pulls out, they are going down catastrophically in terms of economy, in terms of democracy," he said....

Here ya go, how about a national free showing of the film about the Late Hugo Chavez. Offer free popcorn, it'll bring them in and they'll love the film. I could not be more serious.

American filmmaker Oliver Stone, (click here) who became a close confidante of late Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, is marking the one-year anniversary of the former leader’s death with the premiere of his latest documentary.
The film, “Mi Amigo Hugo” (“My Friend Hugo”), will be aired at 9 p.m. Wednesday on Venezuela's government-owned Telesur network.
“The movie… provides a human portrait of the leader of the Bolivarian Revolution,” the Venezuelan News Agency said Tuesday.
Stone, the controversial leftist director known for films such as “Platoon” and “Wall Street,” described his new Chavez film on Twitter as “a documentary commemorating the first anniversary of Chavez’s death.”...

You thought I was joking, huh? Not. Valencia's first ever film festival. I mean it. It is guaranteed to be the most popular film festival in South America. Does everyone realize the love so many in South America had for Hugo Chavez? A lot. The people of South America would come from all over to Valencia to see this film. No lie. That is how much he was loved.

Here is some more good news. It is a pilot program destined to increase the economic growth in South America.

Eighty percent of Venezuela's economy revolves around petroleum. With a large amount going to China to pay debt, the country needs new exports and new markets. There is no reason why Venezuela can't emphasize the idea of growing more produce for its domestic and export markets. 

The Late President Chavez participated heavily in the Millennium Development Goals. This is from the September 2010 meeting/assessment. There is also a 2013 assessment. Now, the assessment recognized the turbulence created by the 'exclusion of concern' on a social level. If the country is in turbulence it cannot succeed. If one recalls the presidency of Hugo Chavez, he was at the center of the concern of his people. The new president needs to take a lesson.

IV. COOPERATION, COMPLETENESS, AND UNION SOLIDARITY AS ELEMENTS TO MEET ODM (click here)
 
The phenomenon of integration is not new, however, has traditionally been characterized by an emphasis commercial, trying to satisfy the interests of small privileged groups and accentuating every day levels of poverty and exclusion in our society. integration that came amid a world first bipolar, and then unipolar, leading to scenarios where organizations and leaders guided by this, subsumed to Latin America and the Caribbean integrationist a sphere of failed attempts, according to geographical, institutional, customs criteria commercial and physical, but leaving relegated the human side of integration and true union of our peoples....


BY JOHN BUCHANAN

Published:

Federal and state agricultural officials (click here) will soon begin a policy assessment that could allow more imports into Florida of fresh produce from South American countries. Such shipments from certain countries have previously been banned because of pest and disease risks.

The decision to be made by Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services and USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service will be based on the results of a six-month pilot program launched last October 1 that has allowed small shipments of blueberries and grapes from Peru and Uruguay to enter the U.S. via the Port of Miami and Port Everglades in Broward County.

The pilot program resulted from an initiative by the Florida Perishables Trade Coalition, (click here) founded in January 2012 to increase trade in perishable products through Florida’s seaports and airports. Although FPTC has support from some domestic shippers and wholesalers, it primarily represents the interests of South American growers and distributors....

Published:
Federal and state agricultural officials will soon begin a policy assessment that could allow more imports into Florida of fresh produce from South American countries. Such shipments from certain countries have previously been banned because of pest and disease risks.
The decision to be made by Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services and USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service will be based on the results of a six-month pilot program launched last October 1 that has allowed small shipments of blueberries and grapes from Peru and Uruguay to enter the U.S. via the Port of Miami and Port Everglades in Broward County.
The pilot program resulted from an initiative by the Florida Perishables Trade Coalition, founded in January 2012 to increase trade in perishable products through Florida’s seaports and airports. Although FPTC has support from some domestic shippers and wholesalers, it primarily represents the interests of South American growers and distributors.
- See more at: http://suncoastnews.com/su/list/pasco-press/ag-officials-to-review-policy-on-south-american-fresh-fruit-imports-20140314/#sthash.WxYynrI8.dpuf