WAR AGAINST ALL PUERTO RICANS

Guerra Contra Todos los Puertorriqueños – Calendario Julio 18-25 en Puerto Rico

War Against All Puerto Ricans: Revolution and Terror in America’s Colony

 

Por una semana, desde julio 18 hasta 25, el autor de Guerra Contra Todos los Puertorriqueños, Nelson Denis, estará en Puerto Rico para compartir en una serie de eventos con el Partido Independentista Puertoriqueño (PIP).

El PIP y sus Comités de Ponce, Caguas, Mayagüez y San Sebastián, junto a el Comité Pro Conmemoración Natalicio Don Pedro Albizu Campos y la Librería El Candíl, invitan al publico a estas presentaciones desde el 18 hasta el 25 de julio en distintos pueblos de la Isla.

Calendario:

18 de julio de 2015

Hora 7:30 PM

Parque Monumento a Don Pedro Albizu Campos Bo. Tenerías en Ponce. Presentará el libro el Lic. Hugo Rodríguez Díaz, Secretario de Programa y Sub-secretario Asuntos con Norteamérica del Partido Independentista Puertorriqueño.

Conversatorio con Nelson Denis Acto Artístico con Francisco Javier Quiñones Santiago Ese día cumple años Don Rafael Cancel Miranda y lo estaremos celebrando. Organiza el Comité PIP de Ponce en colaboración con el Comité Pro Conmemoración Natalicio Don Pedro Albizu Campos

19 de julio de 2015

Hora 3:00 PM

Salón Eugenio Ma. de Hostos, EDP College, San Sebastián, Puerto Rico

Presentador del libro: Juan Dalmau Secretario General PIP Tertulia con Nelson A. Denis Organiza Comité PIP San Sebastian

Nelson Antonio Denis - El Nuevo Dia

20 de julio de 2015

Hora 7:30 PM

Centro Recreativo, Urb. Villa Criollos de Caguas. Ave. Luis Muñoz Marín, Al lado Casa del Ajedrez de Caguas.

Presentación a cargo del Profesor Luis Domenech Conversatorio con el autor, Nelson Denis Acto Artístico con el cantautor O. Decrem, Organiza Comité PIP de Caguas

21 de julio de 2015

Hora 7:30 PM

El local de la UTIER Boulevard Eudaldo Báez García. A las 7:00 pm Organiza Comité PIP de Mayagüez

23 de julio de 2015

Hora 7:30 PM

Colegio de Abogados de Puerto Rico, Miramar Auspiciada por el Colegio de Abogados

24 de julio de 2015

Hora 3:00 PM

Tertulia con Nelson Denis en El Candil Librería El Candil, Plaza Vilariño en Ponce

25 de julio de 2015

Hora 9:00 AM hasta 12:30 PM

Cerro Maravilla, Villalba,

Compartiendo con los participantes en los Actos del Cerro de Los Mártires. Durante la tarde Nelson estará compartiendo con los jóvenes participantes del Campamento J PIP en casa de Cro. Aníbal Díaz.

En todas las actividades personal de la librería El Candil tendrá libros para la venta y el autor, Nelson Denis, estará firmándolos.

Why Puerto Rico Will Not Become the 51st State

War Against All Puerto Ricans: Revolution and Terror in America’s Colony

Puerto Rico is not a “commonwealth.” It is a colony.

The US governs its economy, currency, international trade relations, import/export quotas, shipping, consumer prices, judicial code, military, postal system, FCC licensing, and the US congress has plenary jurisdiction (veto power) over any law or regulation passed by the insular legislature.

Even José Trías Monge – who was the principal draftsman of the Puerto Rican “Constitution of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico,” and also served as Attorney General of Puerto Rico, Chief Justice of the Puerto Rico Supreme Court, and personal legal advisor to Gov. Luis Muñoz Marín – published a book titled Puerto Rico: Trials of the Oldest Colony in the World (Yale University Press, 1997).

Trías Monge himself admitted that the “commonwealth” was actually a colony.

The island’s chaotic economy, and its crushing $73 billion public debt, are clear evidence that this relationship is dysfunctional and harmful to Puerto Rico.

The two current options are statehood or independence. This article will discuss statehood.

It will never happen…statehood is virtually impossible for Puerto Rico.

Here is why:

American Public Opinion

When the US first occupied the island in 1898, this is some of what the best and brightest had to say about Puerto Ricans:

They’re a heterogeneous mass of mongrels…savages addicted to head-hunting and cannibalism.”   (Senator William B. Bate )

God made us adept at government so that we may administer amongst savages and senile people.” (Senator Albert J. Beveridge)

Puerto Ricans are uneducated, simple-minded and harmless people who are only interested in wine, women, music and dancing.” (New York Times, 2/22/1899)

Now in 2015, when someone won a Powerball ticket in Puerto Rico, the racist insults lit up the internet.

A few weeks later Ann Coulter published Adios, America, which portrays Latinos as rapists, murderers and welfare cheats – and the book is a New York Times Best Seller.

A few weeks after that Donald Trump announced his candidacy for US president, trashed Latinos, recited portions of Coulter’s book – and is now the leading GOP candidate.

After 117 years, on the most basic levels, the US has not come very far. Significant numbers of “patriotic Americans” still view Puerto Ricans as foreigners, and somehow inferior. They won’t come out and say it: they’ll just read Ann Coulter, vote for Trump, and quietly resent us. When the issue of statehood for Puerto Rico comes up, that resentment will express itself with two words: Hell, No!

Economic Incentives

Puerto Rican debt instruments have been popular on Wall Street because they are “triple tax exempt.” Bondholders and investors don’t have to pay any federal, state or local taxes on them. This tax benefit would disappear if the island were to become a state: so Wall Street has no interest in Puerto Rican statehood. Thanks to Citizens United v. FEC, it will hire lobbyists and give unlimited sums of money – over and under the table – to congress persons who will oppose it.

Controlled Foreign Corporations (CFCs) who use Puerto Rico as a tax shelter – allowing them to pay a 2 percent tax rate, rather than the US corporate rate of 35 percent – will also hire lobbyists and pay congress persons to oppose Puerto Rican statehood.

The unions in Jacksonville, the four Jones Act carrier companies (Horizon, Crowley, Sea Star, Trailer Bridge) and the American Maritime Partnership will also hire lobbyists and buy congress persons to oppose Puerto Rican statehood, since that could eventually lead to Jones Act reform and an end to the Cabotage Law in Puerto Rico.

Political Reality

With a population of 3.6 million, Puerto Rico would send two US senators and four or five congresspersons to Washington, D.C.  All of them would be Democrats.

Do you think the Republican Party will allow that?

So the only time a “Statehood for Puerto Rico” bill would pass is during a perfect alignment of all the following:

  1. a referendum in Puerto Rico which expresses a clear majority for statehood
  2. a Democratic majority in the US congress
  3. a Democratic majority in the US Senate
  4. a Democratic president

Even then – with opposition from Wall Street, Jones Act carrier companies, the Jacksonville Chamber of Commerce, the American Maritime Partnership, and the Teamster and Longshoreman’s unions – this “perfect political alignment” would still not guarantee a congressional consensus for statehood.

In addition to all this fierce lobbying (and money exchanging hands) there will be no “congressional consensus” because congressional seats are a zero-sum game. There are always a fixed number of congressional seats: 435.  If five new congressional seats are created for Puerto Rico, five seats will be taken away from five other states. This would be accomplished through congressional re-districting after the next decennial US Census.

If you were a member of the US Congress, would you risk losing your own seat – losing your political career – in order to make room for Puerto Rico?

No, I don’t think so.

The Early Words of Ruben Berríos

Thirty-five years ago Rubén Berríos, the president of the Independence Party of Puerto Rico (PIP) did something alarming: he told the world that the two major parties in Puerto Rico (PPD and PNP) were a complete fraud…because all their campaigns, and all their candidates, were based on whether or not Puerto Rico should be the 51st state of the United States.

Ruben Berrios

But since the leadership of both parties knew that this was a practical impossibility (for all the reasons discussed in this article), then both the PPD and PNP were lying to the Puerto Rican people, with a fake issue, in order to get elected.

In the words of La Lupe, it was all “Puro Teatro.”

Rubén Berríos was right. The “statehood question” is often used by people with no qualifications, political program or personal ethics, in order to get elected and put their entire family on the government payroll. This is part of the reason that Puerto Rico has 78 mayors, and a $73 billion public debt.

Here is that original speech from Rubén Berríos, as given in 1980:

War Against All Puerto Ricans: Revolution and Terror in America’s ColonyBuy the book

Obama to Puerto Rico: Drop Dead

War Against All Puerto Ricans: Revolution and Terror in America’s Colony

 

In October 1975, US President Gerald Ford told Mayor Abe Beame that he would extend no assistance to the City of New York, and that he’d veto any congressional bailout funds for New York City. On October 30 the New York Daily News published one of its most famous headlines:

Now 40 years later, Pres. Obama is telling Puerto Ricans the same thing, with one major difference.

It is much more unjust.

Unjust because Puerto Rico is not the financial and media capital of the world.

Unjust because Puerto Rico is a US colony.

Unjust because by 1930, Puerto Rico was already a factory worked by peons, fought over by lawyers, bossed by absent industrialists, and clerked by politicians – Uncle Sam’s second-largest sweatshop.

Unjust because the US controls Puerto Rico’s shipping, banking, currency, international trade, consumer prices, currency, import/export quotas, judicial code, and legislative authority.

Unjust because, unlike every state in the US, Puerto Rico is specifically prohibited from any Chapter 9 bankruptcy or debt re-structuring.

Unjust because for 95 years, since passage of the 1920 Merchant Marine Act (the Jones Act), Puerto Rico has not been able to develop a shipping industry, or establish any control over the price of consumer goods that pour in from the US ships.

Unjust because Wall Street demanded “fiscal responsibility” from Puerto Rico in order to avoid “Junk Bond” downgrading of its public debt. Then after 33,000 workers were fired, and water rose by 67%, and electricity hiked to 29 cents per kilowatt, and property taxes spiked, and gasoline taxes rose twice in one year, and SBC (small business corporation) taxes rose by 39%, and teacher pensions were cut, and 120 schools shut down…Wall Street still designated the island’s debt as “Junk Bonds.” In other words: Wall Street lied, then hiked the premium payments, and now they want to collect.

Unjust because AIG and half of Wall Street engineered the Mortgage Crisis of 2007. They profited trillions of dollars from their white collar crimes, no one went to jail, millions of Americans lost their homes…and the US government gave AIG a $182 billion bailout.

http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2014/10/15/remember-the-182-billion-aig-bailout-it-just-wasn-t-generous-enough.html

Despite all these injustices, Pres. Obama will do nothing for Puerto Rico. Perhaps he’ll entertain everyone with a little salsa.

But when all the dancing is done, Obama will not want to upset the municipal bond markets. He will hide behind the courts, the bankruptcy laws, and the US Congress.

The stakes are very high…too high for a lame duck president with waning influence and a “legacy” to burnish.

No, the fight against this injustice will be a lonely one. But it can be won.

Fighting in one corner: Wall Street revenue, the Oppenheimer Fund, broker’s fees, trader’s commissions, churned accounts, and year-end bonuses.

Fighting in the other corner: the human rights of an entire island, the last colony on earth.

A Marshall Plan for Puerto Rico…Angelo Falcón Gets it Right

War Against All Puerto Ricans: Revolution and Terror in America’s Colony

 

Some people talk forever and do nothing. Others quietly move the world. 

At 1:34 this morning, Angelo Falcón e-mailed me a letter which he’d sent to the National Hispanic Leadership Agenda (NHLA). Here it is:

To: National Hispanic Leadership Agenda

I would like to suggest that it is important for the NHLA to weigh in immediately on the need for federal support of Puerto Rico’s efforts to address its current fiscal crisis involving its massive $72 billion debt. This would be especially important coming from the NHLA because it would represent a strong pan-Latino position calling on the White House and the Congress to address this problem in a timely and comprehensive manner. The NHLA may already be planning to address this issue, but I wanted to suggest ways that it can be approached in terms of federal policy.

A NHLA position on Puerto Rico’s fiscal crisis should involve at least the following elements:

  1. Congressional action to allow Puerto Rico to apply for bankruptcy protection. This would start by passing he Puerto Rico Chapter 9 Uniformity Act of 2014 that would empower the government of the U.S. territory of Puerto Rico to authorize certain government-owned corporations to restructure their debt obligations under Chapter 9 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code.
  2.  Congressional repeal of The Merchant Marine Act of 1920 (P.L. 66-261, also known as the Jones Act) that deals with cabotage (i.e., coastal shipping), freeing Puerto from the requirement that all goods transported by water between U.S. ports be carried on U.S.-flag ships, constructed in the United States, owned by U.S. citizens, and crewed by U.S. citizens and U.S. permanent residents.
  3.  Congressional adoption of legislation like what was Section 936 of the Internal Revenue Code that gave mainland United States companies an exemption from Federal taxes on income earned in Puerto Rico, whether it came from operations or interest on local bank deposits, with provisions calling for significant reinvestment within Puerto Rico tied to job creation.
  4.  Congressional adoption of legislation mandating parity in the federal budget of Puerto Rico with the states.
  5.  Congressional adoption of a Marshall Plan-like Puerto Rico Recovery Program. The original Marshall Plan involved funding devastated European economies $13 billion in 1948, which is the equivalent of $120 billion in current dollars. Unlike the European countries supported in this way, the residents of Puerto Rico are U.S. citizens.
  6.  The creation of a comprehensive economic development plan by the White House Task Force on Puerto Rico. 

While not exhaustive, these ideas for Puerto Rico’s recovery through federal government intervention are perhaps illustrative of what a comprehensive approach to more long-term solutions to Puerto Rico’s fiscal problems.

The National Hispanic Leadership Agenda needs to address this issue aggressively in representing the interests of the 3.6 million residents of Puerto Rico and close to 5 million Puerto Ricans stateside. It would be a way to show that the problems faced by Puerto Ricans are of deep concern to the broader Latino community.

Un abrazo,

Angelo

This letter is vintage Angelo Falcón. He has been speaking truth to power for thirty years – and his letter is realistic, precise, and politically nuanced.

He offers clear recommendations in an active voice, urging congress to “act, repeal, adopt,” not to “consider, confer, discuss.”

He understands the importance of a shipping industry in Puerto Rico, and how the Jones Act has inflated consumer prices for the past 95 years.

He sees a role for corporate incentives comparable to IRS Code 936, so long as they’re linked to “significant reinvestment within Puerto Rico tied to job creation.”

He signals the need for a real White House Task Force on Puerto Rico. The current one consists of little more than a website, and even the website is a bit tragic: with four-year old documents, five-year old videos, and photos of generic “Latinos.”

https://www.whitehouse.gov/administration/eop/iga/puerto-rico

WHITE_HOUSE_TASK_FORCE_ON_PR

This archaic website shows how drastically and urgently, the U.S. needs to re-calibrate its relationship to Puerto Rico.

A Few Small Suggestions

As Angelo Falcón wrote, this plan is not exhaustive. Accordingly I will offer a few small points.

1) Consider making Jones Act Reform a condition to repayment of the $73 billion. They should be linked as part of the re-structuring negotiation. The debt is our greatest leverage.  Once it’s paid, no one gives a damn about us.

2) The “public-private” partnerships in the Krueger Report are a poison pill. They are code language for selling off the only revenue-generating assets in the PR public sector: bridges, highways, tolls, airport concessions, public utilities…the IMF and the hedge funds would love to extend “loan forbearance,” or a new round of credit, in exchange for taking these assets as collateral. Then when the PR government defaults (which is highly possible) they will have permanent ownership of the last few vestiges of public sector revenue.

If that happens, the US will outright own the island’s infrastructure (even more than it does) in perpetuity. So no sale, lien or encumbrance of any public utilities (PREPA, gas and water) domestic transport (bridges, highways & tolls), or international transport (airport concessions and franchises).

3) The current tax structure is wrong. It is hypocritical, through Act 22, to extend a 20-year tax abatement on all dividend, interest and capital gains income to hedge fund billionaires like John Paulson…while a lethal mix of regressive taxes forces hundreds of thousands of Puerto Ricans to flee their homeland. This double-standard tax structure, if unchecked, will produce the “gentrification” of Puerto Rico within the next 20 years.

4) To show good faith, we might consider streamlining the 78 mayors. Each mayor makes an average $68,000 per year for an average population of 46,000. That’s before you add the family, friends, mistresses and gigolos that they pad onto the public payroll.  78 mayors is a horrible mess.

Puerto Rico has the Moral High Ground

As a general principle, we must never concede the high ground throughout this process. 

History and common sense are on our side. 

The U.S. invaded Puerto Rico and appropriated its farms. By 1930 it was already a factory worked by peons, fought over by lawyers, bossed by absent industrialists, and clerked by politicians – Uncle Sam’s second-largest sweatshop. 

A century later, Wall Street demanded “fiscal austerities” from Puerto Rico in order to avoid “Junk Bond” designation of its public debt. Then after 33,000 people were laid off, and water rates rose by 67%, and electricity spiked to 29 cents per kilowatt, and property taxes rose, and gasoline taxes rose twice in one year, and SBC (small business corporation) taxes rose by 39%, and pensions were cut, and 120 public schools shut down…Wall Street still declared Puerto Rico’s debt to be “Junk Bonds.”  In other words: Wall Street lied, then hiked the premium payments, and now they want to collect.

They claim that Puerto Rico is “too deeply in debt,” but consider the following: 

With an $18.7 trillion national debt, the U.S. federal Debt-to-GDP ratio is 105%. The Puerto Rico ratio ($73 billion debt, $104 billion GDP) is 70%.  In other words, Puerto Rico’s debt ratio is one-third less than that of the U.S. 

The U.S. federal Debt per capita is $58,125.  The Puerto Rico Debt per capita is $20,278. Once you add the layer of average state debt, the U.S. Debt per capita is over $70,000.  

Using these criteria, Puerto Rico should create a Financial Control Board to manage the U.S. economy.

Not only compared to the United States…but compared to the entire world, Puerto Rico’s public debt is nothing to be ashamed of.

In this month’s Harvard Magazine (July-Aug. 2015, pp. 10-12), in an article titled “Dealing With Debt,” managing editor Jonathan Shaw writes: “Today, the debt levels in many advanced economies exceed 100 percent of gross domestic product (GDP). In the United States, for example, government debt is currently 105 percent of GDP.”

http://harvardmagazine.com/2015/07/dealing-with-debt#article-images

Harvard Magazine then provides a helpful graph, to show this level of rapidly mounting debt, all  around the planet:

PUBLIC_DEB-GDP_RATIO_GRAPH

The sloppy horizontal line on the right was drawn by me – to show where Puerto Rico’s “External debt as a percentage of GDP” falls, in relation to the other 22 “advanced economies.”

As you can see, Puerto Rico’s 2015 debt level is less than one-third of the debt levels in 22 other “advanced economies.”  These economies include the US, Japan, Germany, United Kingdom, Australia, France, and Canada.

Numbers do not lie.

What is Really at Stake

The integrity, and perceived security, of the nationwide municipal bond market will be affected by any precedents set by Puerto Rico’s debt negotiation.

If any “leniency” is extended to Puerto Rico, fifty other states will immediately demand that same leniency.

For that reason, Pres. Obama will maintain a “nuclear submarine radio silence” throughout this process.  He will insulate himself as much as possible. He will avoid making this decision, and will not expend any behind-the-scenes political capital on it.

Obama will hide behind the courts, the bankruptcy laws, and the U.S. Congress.

The stakes are very high…too high for a lame duck president with waning influence.

Fighting in this corner:  Wall Street revenue, pension funds, broker’s fees, commissions, churned accounts, and year-end bonuses.

Fighting in this corner: the human rights of an entire island, with 3.6 million people.

Thank you, Angelo Falcón, for joining this fight.

We certainly expect that the National Hispanic Leadership Agenda will join him, with a minimum of parliamentary procedure.

Panic in New York: The New York Stock Exchange Shuts Down

War Against All Puerto Ricans: Revolution and Terror in America’s Colony

 

A strange set of events hit New York City yesterday. 

The New York Stock Exchange had to shut down – to suspend all trading activity – because its entire computer system mysteriously stopped working.

http://gawker.com/the-new-york-stock-exchange-has-suspended-all-trading-f-1716504239

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3153716/New-York-Stock-Exchange-halts-trading.html

Then United Airlines was forced to ground every one of its airplanes worldwide – because its entire computer system mysteriously stopped working.

http://money.cnn.com/2015/07/08/news/companies/united-flights-grounded-computer/

Immediately after that, the Wall Street Journal website mysteriously stopped working.

http://www.ibtimes.com/wall-street-journal-homepage-wsjcom-down-nyse-stops-trading-computer-glitch-1999756

At this same moment, over 2,500 people in Washington, DC mysteriously lost power.

http://www.borderstan.com/2015/07/08/thousands-lose-power-in-adams-morgan/

http://www.rochesterhomepage.net/story/d/story/widespread-power-outages-hit-washington-dc-area/20104/uu3XuwKY20GQT1T5noDWaA

Also at this time, the New York City subway system suffered an unexplained shutdown – with trains stranded inexplicably, for long periods of time. 

These strange incidents did not go unnoticed. They were reported in major media outlets.

http://www.people.com/article/new-york-stock-exchange-wall-street-journal-united-airlines-shut-down

http://www.salon.com/2015/07/08/bizarre_new_york_stock_exchange_wall_street_journal_and_united_airlines_downed_by_technical_glitches/

Rumors circulated about a cyber attack on our nation’s infrastructure

Something obviously happened but no one – least of all the U.S. government – will give a public explanation. 

Whether it was a cyber attack, a system linkage, or mere “coincidence” is not the main point. 

The point is that the U.S. is not “invincible.”   It is not the ultimate “power.”  It may not even be the safest nation to be allied with. 

Puerto Rico should take note of this, when it considers its own political future.