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Friday, December 16th, 2011

Minimum Wage in Mexico to Rise in 2012

Minimum Wage in Mexico to Rise in 2012

Minimum Wage in Mexico to Rise in 2012Mexicohas announced that it will be increasing the country’s minimum wage next year, starting on January 1, 2012.  For people with larger incomes, an increase in minimum wage may not be that noticeable; however, for many Mexicans, an increase in minimum wage can make a big difference by providing much-needed additional income.

It is for that reason that the National Commission on Minimum Wages or CNSM, an organization that oversees minimum wage increases and is comprised of representatives from government, business, and labor unions, has decided to approve a minimum wage hike of 4.2 percent, or about 2.51 pesos.

Though a rise in wages is appreciated, the 4.2 percent increase is only a fraction of the 10 percent increase that workers have demanded.  According to spokespeople at the Center of Labor Research and Union Consulting, or CILAS, the 4.2 percent increase is insufficient as usual and almost laughable.  Even for a minimum wage worker for whom the income difference would be most noticeable, the minimum wage increase will do little, if anything, to help them escape the poverty that many of them face.

-Doug Jones
President & Founder
Mortgages In Mexico
http://MortgagesInMexico.com
Doug@MortgagesInMexico.com

Minimum Wage in Mexico to Rise in 2012 Minimum Wage in Mexico to Rise in 2012 Minimum Wage in Mexico to Rise in 2012 Minimum Wage in Mexico to Rise in 2012 Minimum Wage in Mexico to Rise in 2012 Minimum Wage in Mexico to Rise in 2012 Minimum Wage in Mexico to Rise in 2012 Minimum Wage in Mexico to Rise in 2012

Friday, December 16th, 2011

Namini Wijedasa, courtesy of LakbimaNews,  27 November 2011

It has been a slow journey but the government is finally accepting that civilians might have died as a result of military action during the final stages of its war with the LTTE. This change in position is attributable in no small measure to the report of the Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission, which is due to be released shortly. Although its contents are not officially known, it is reported that the LLRC has recommended further investigation of certain incidents that witnesses say happened. The LLRC process has shown that information about the battle–how it was conducted, who did what, when and where–is widely available among people in the North and East. Thirty months after the end of the war, it is no longer viable to maintain a tenuous position of ‘zero civilian casualty.’ Indeed, it  would be foolhardy and dishonest to do so. Speaking at the ‘Inaugural National Conference on Reconciliation’ at the Lakshman Kadirgamar Institute of International Relations and Strategic Studies in Colombo, Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa spoke in more detail about civilian casualties than he has possibly ever done in public.   It was not the first time the government took a tentative step towards admitting to civilian casualties. Earlier this year, its publication Humanitarian Operation Factual Analysis (produced in response to the devastating report of UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon’s panel of experts) admitted: “Despite the clear intent of the Government of Sri Lanka and the numerous precautions taken, it was impossible in a battle of this magnitude, against a ruthless opponent actively endangering civilians, for civilian casualties to be avoided.” But this was all it dared to say on that subject. Last week, the defence establishment edged a bit further. Defence Secretary Rajapaksa said the government has made a proper assessment of the number of civilians killed and missing during the last stages of the conflict. Arbitrary figures of between 10,000 and 40,000, he insisted, had “no basis in reality.” The assessment was done by the Department of Census and Statistics through Tamil public officials in the relevant districts of the North and East. The questionnaire specifically addressed the issue of people who died or went missing during the ‘humanitarian operation.’ The government has identified by name all such persons, Rajapaksa said. The results of the census will be released in the near future. Dead and missing: The defence secretary emphasized, however, that there are several categories of dead and missing in those areas. These are people who died of natural causes and of accidents, those who left the country illegally, those who died whilst fighting as members of the LTTE, those who died as a result of being coerced to fight by the LTTE, those who died as a result of resisting the LTTE and those whose deaths occurred due to military action. “It is only for the deaths of people in this last category that the Sri Lankan military can bear any responsibility,” the defence secretary insisted. In effect, when you take away all those categories of victims, it is possible that only a small number of people will be classified as having died purely due to military action. But this isn’t necessarily the defence establishment’s fault. The reality is that line between civilian and combatant was exceptionally blurred towards the end of the war. The LTTE was in recruitment overdrive. It was a terrible battle where a civilian could turn combatant overnight. The cadres fought predominantly in civilian attire. These realities are often ignored or glossed over by pro-LTTE groups that cry genocide. It is hoped that the questionnaire had also asked whether the dead or missing person was a combatant at the time he or she died or went missing. The defence secretary also maintained that if, in future, any substantial evidence is provided on crimes committed by its personnel, the Sri Lankan military will not hesitate to take appropriate action. This is a positive undertaking but the proof of the pudding really is in the eating. The government must understand that taking action against criminal elements in the armed forces is not a victimisation of war heroes. Instead, prosecuting the bad eggs is tantamount to paying homage to the many good soldiers that fought according to international humanitarian and human rights law.
War crimes trial: But accountability, an official recently told this reporter, is a ‘Western obsession.’ The LLRC report will delve much deeper into the conflict and this is something the West and international human rights organizations will have to accept. If all they want from the LLRC process is a war crimes trial, they will be disappointed. “There is a Western obsession with accountability for what happened only in the last three weeks of fighting and this doesn’t do justice to the whole notion of accountability,” the official said. “We must look back, that is accountability. And we must look ahead, that is reconciliation. Both are important and it is hoped that the report will be multi-dimensional in that sense.”

 

LLRC – recommended reading, but…

 

The commissioners (see main story) spent a year coming up with what is hoped are strong observations. It is expected that a range of international humanitarian law issues have been handled. With regard to accountability, it has been reported that violations across the board are addressed – such as disappearances, missing persons, issues in freedom of association, media freedom and governance. Everything now depends on the release of the 400-page commission report and the implementation of its recommendations. Even the LLRC’s five simple interim recommendations were not been carried out fully. Where is the guarantee that many pages of observations and suggestions will not meet the same fate, if not worse? To ignore or disregard the report, in the hope that it will go away like all of Sri Lanka’s other commission reports, would be a grave mistake. “They will be wasting the only insurance policy they have,” said the official quoted in the story.

Rajapaksas inch towards a census of the war dead

Friday, December 16th, 2011

Those who think that inequality is the most important problem  should be cheering this news.
from Powerline
POSTED ON DECEMBER 13, 2011 BY JOHN HINDERAKER IN ECONOMY
HARD TIMES FOR THE ONE PERCENT
The share of income received by the top 1 percent – that potent symbol of inequality – dropped to 17 percent in 2009 from 23 [...] Praying for Hard Times Praying for Hard Times

Friday, November 11th, 2011

Simon Jenkins, courtesy of The Guardian, 19 May 2009 —  with title  David Miliband’s piccolo diplomacy

Blair at least walked the walk. But this foreign secretary can offer only feel good gestures of episcopal concern. I hope President Rajapaksa of Sri Lanka takes time out today to comment on the resignation of Mr Speaker. What the Sri Lankan government has “wanted to see”, he might say in the jargon of the new interventionism, is clean and transparent democracy in Britain. Speaking for all Sri Lankans, he would regard the affair of MPs’ expenses as “unacceptable” and “not living up to their commitments”. A group of Sri Lankan MPs would be visiting Britain to monitor developments.

Ridiculous? Yet those are exactly the words and tone of voice used byBritain’s foreign secretary, David Miliband, in his dealings with what seems like half the globe. The Foreign Office wakes each morning and scans the world’s conflicts to ponder where it might score a quick headline with a call for peace, reform, a ceasefire or “United Nations actionI cannot see the point of Britain telling the world that “what we want to see is Russia on a different course“. It merely infuriates every Russian. Why does Miliband say of Syria’s dictator that “I’ve been talking for over 18 months to him about his responsibilities in the region”, as if he were Lugard addressing a recalcitrant Nigerian chief? Why boast that he is “working on maintaining a ceasefire between Israel and Gaza” when he is doing nothing of the sort?

A delegation ofSingapore’s MPs might feel equally justified in visiting London to express the “unacceptability” ofBritain’s financial regulation. The Colombian prime minister, recently criticised by Miliband for the “impunity” of his militia, might wonder at the impunity of Britain’s corrupt arms dealers. Pakistan, lectured weekly by London about its army’s performance, might demand an inquiry into discipline at Deep Cut barracks. Beijing might discover a Miliband-style “moral obligation” to defend minority rights in Northern Ireland, given the resurgence of separatist violence. The Swedes might denounce Britain’s care of the elderly on the grounds that they “cannot stand idly by” while welfare state values are traduced by British callousness.

Were any of these things to happen, British politicians and the British media would be outraged. How dare other nations pass judgment on our affairs? What business is it of theirs? Yet this is whatBritaindoes to them. Foreign policy is in 19th-century mode, with a moral gunboat over every horizon. Iran, Colombia,Kenya,Russia, Sri Lanka have all been damned by Miliband with the same fatwa as “unacceptable”.

Regular ceasefire calls are bread and butter to the Foreign Office’s underemployed policymakers. These feel-good gestures of episcopal concern are intended to generate a warm sense of wellbeing in speaker and audience, a jerkily liberal response to “something must be done”. The effect is zero. This is not megaphone diplomacy but piccolo.

Ceasefires usually benefit one side or the other in a running conflict. They are seldom impartial to those embroiled in the theatre of war, any more than are other weapons of soft intervention such as condemnation, boycott and commercial and financial sanction.

In Sri Lanka a rudimentary study of the past three months of fighting would have told Miliband that a ceasefire would be pro-Tamil, not just “pro-humanitarian”. He compounded his demand by damning the “indiscriminate” shelling of Tamil civilians. How he could do this while supporting the bombing of Pashtun civilians along the Afghan border is a mystery.

Yet the consequence of appearing to support the Tamils was to infuriate those same insurgents when Miliband refused to lift a finger to give force to his ceasefire call. It was just words, hypocritical window-dressing. It appeared to support a partitionist movement, but refused to do so in practice.

The outcome has been entirely negative. Miliband is regarded in Colomboas an incompetent neo-imperial ­meddler whose embassy was attacked on ­Monday and whose effigy was burned and tossed into the compound. Meanwhile the Tamils, double-crossed by London’s posturing, reacted with one of the most furious demonstrations seen inParliament Square.

The conflict was not ended by this rhetorical intervention. No lives were saved, no British interest served. Each side has merely been convinced thatLondonwas favouring its sworn enemy. Policy towardsSri Lankamerits a doctoral thesis in diplomatic ineptitude.

Britainhad no dog in this fight, and no capacity to influence events either way. Its platitudes, bromides and ­hectoring were merely patronising, like an NHS advert telling the world to wash its hands and blow its nose. As of today, Britons travelling toSri Lankamust be less safe than any other foreign nationals, whichever side of the divide they happen to encounter.

Such intervention soon falls victim to relativism. The one country that is treated by Miliband with kid gloves is the People’s Republic of China. He recently told the Fabians that “it is important that we don’t treatChina as an errant child” – implying just such treatment for every other moral ­miscreant. Why? BecauseChina is rich.

Such intervention has been as pointless in Sri Lankaas its predecessors in Israel/Palestine, Russia, Georgia, Iran, Burma, Sudanand Zimbabwe. Tony Blair’s 1999 exegesis on so-called liberal interventionism, whatever its justification in the Balkans, has degenerated into a global woe-crying under Gordon Brown and Miliband.

Where the fine talk led to military action, at least it walked the walk. Labour’s early decision to move from the Tories’ policy of humanitarian relief inYugoslaviato threatened, then actual, aggression against the Serbs represented a coherent policy. By rewarding each separatist movement in turn it achieved Nato’s covert objective of Balkan fragmentation. The same outcome will probably follow intervention inIraq,Afghanistanand evenPakistan.

Such policies may be disagreeable but at least they are understandable. Miliband’s piccolo diplomacy is a mystery. He seems to crave a role above his station, howling at the moon as if saying so made it so. He has summoned the ghost of Palmerston from aWhitehallattic, but confined him to the press office, to write endless speeches full of words such as unacceptable and disappointed.

At this very moment someone in the Foreign Office must be drafting a memorandum for his boss, welcoming the agreement of both sides inSri Lankato Miliband’s demand that they cease ­hostilities and behave like sensible chaps. How good of them to do so. Cucumber sandwiches, anyone?

Simon Jenkins pulverized Miliband’s assinine foreign interventions in 2009

Friday, November 11th, 2011

Nissan Plans To Invest New Plant In Mexico

Nissan Plans To Invest New Plant In MexicoMexico is rapidly becoming a hot spot for international-based automakers. Nissan Motor Company, one of the top automakers in Japan, is planning to invest $2 billion in building a new plant in the country.

The world-renown automaker plans to increase its growth opportunities in Mexico, targeting larger cities in the country as key markets. Nissan already has a plant in the city of Cuernavaca, south of Mexico City, and will be planning to add another plant in other major states.

Although six states are up for candidacy for the new location of the plant, a Nissan spokesman in Mexico said that there are still no announcements concerning the proposed project.  It is expected that Nissan will be announcing their decision as to the exact state where the new plant will be built on November 18, 2011.

The state government of Aguascalientes is proud to have been selected as the next state in which Nissan will be building its newest plant.  According to the government of Aguascalientes, the plant will be able to bring about 10,000 more jobs into the state. In fact, state Governor Carlos Lozano de la Torre had been encouraging Carlos Ghosn, CEO of Nissan Motors, to invest in the state of Aguascalientes as he believes it will be the best option for company growth in Mexico.

Aside from Nissan Motor Co., there are other well-known automakers that plan to expand their assembly plants into Mexico including Mazda Motor Corp. and Honda Motor Corp.

-Doug Jones
President & Founder
Mortgages In Mexico
http://MortgagesInMexico.com
Doug@MortgagesInMexico.com

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Friday, November 11th, 2011

Money is the barometer of society’s virtue.  When you see that trading is done, not by consent, but by compulsion- when you see that in order to produce, you need to obtain permission from men who produce nothing- when you see that men get richer from graft and by pull than by work, and your [...] A Noble Medium A Noble Medium

Monday, November 7th, 2011

I am guilty of associating freedom with democracy.  Thomas Sowell writes in his book The Thomas Sowell Reader that there is a distinct difference in the chapter ‘Freedom Versus Democracy.’
Democracy and Freedom are too often confounded.  Britain itself did not have anything cloze to democracy until the Reform Act of 1832.  But it had freedom [...] Two Wolves and Sheep Two Wolves and Sheep

Monday, November 7th, 2011

Greg Sheridan, courtesy of the Australian Weekend, 5-6 November 2011, under a different title

THE criticism of Sri Lanka’s President Mahinda Rajapaksa, when he visited Australia for the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in Perth, left the key Sri Lankan villain out of the story. The criticism was that the Sri Lankan government engaged in serious human rights abuses, shelling areas where civilians were present, at the end of its civil war with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, in May last year. Both sides committed atrocities in this war, but the defeat of the Tamil Tigers was a decisive defeat of perhaps the bloodiest and most murderous terrorist group the world has seen. Alexander Downer, Australia’s foreign minister for 11 years of the war, tells me: “I know the Sri Lankan government played very hard ball and committed some human rights abuses, but it’s a wonderful thing the Sri Lankan government won that war. I have always regarded the Tamil Tigers as absolutely a terrorist organisation.”

It is easy to forget how bloody the Tamil Tigers were. In their 2 1/2-decade campaign, perhaps 70,000 people died. The Tamil Tigers pioneered the suicide bomber, conducting hundreds of such attacks and using a woman with a suicide vest to murder India’s prime minister Rajiv Gandhi in 1991. They also murdered a Sri Lankan president. Rohan Gunaratna, an authority on terrorism based in Singapore, tells me the Tamil Tigers also pioneered suicide attacks at sea. The sinking of the USS Cole was an imitation of a Tiger operation.

 Garlanding with the suicide vial at passing out ceremony for Tiger fighters– from BBC documentary 1991 in web editor’s possession courtesy of Chris Morris

The Tigers were authoritarian under the leadership of Vellupillai Prabakaran. They murdered Tamil and Sinhalese civilians, within the areas they controlled and within Sri Lanka generally. They used civilians as human shields, engaged in forced recruitment, routinely bombed civilian targets, used child soldiers and refused to let civilians leave the combat zone. They also engaged in sectarian attacks against Muslims.

They were connected with Islamist terror groups, having received early training from Palestinian extremists and became involved in the illicit arms trade. They got funds from Tamil Tiger support networks across the world, especiallyCanada, the US, Britain and Australia. Downer says: “I have no doubt the Tamil Tigers raised a lot of money in Australia.”

Gunaratna says: “After the conflict ended and the LTTE was decimated in Sri Lanka, they still had a presence overseas. They have been involved in bank fraud and people-smuggling to get their members overseas, especially to Canada and Australia. “Australiashould not permit anyone who is connected to any terrorist organisation to settle in Australia because that will affect Australia’s security.” Gunaratna stresses, no doubt rightly, that the vast majority of Tamils are law-abiding people.

Since Labor changed border protection policy in 2008, more than 1400 Sri Lankans have arrived, unauthorised, by boat, though the rate has declined this year. There is no reason to assume any particular individual has a connection with the Tigers and each case must be judged on its merits. But membership of the Tamil Tigers is not just support for Tamil self-determination. By any measure, the Tamil Tigers were as deadly, unscrupulous, murderous and committed to terrorist attacks on innocent civilians as al-Qa’ida or the Taliban are.

In 2007, several Sydney and Melbourne men were arrested for providing funds to the Tamil Tigers. They were charged with terrorism offences but, becauseCanberrahad not listed the Tigers as a terrorist organisation, the charges were downgraded to supplying funds to a UN-proscribed organisation. The courts heard evidence that more than $1 million had gone to the Tigers fromAustralia, and electronic components that were used in terrorist bombings had also come from here.

The men were convicted of the lesser charges and given suspended sentences. The prosecutions occurred as similar charges were laid against other men of Tamil background in several other Western nations. The Sri Lankan government in 2005 provided Western governments with intelligence and urged them to act to stop the flow of funds to the Tigers. These funds, though billed as humanitarian relief, were essential to the Tigers’ ability to continue their terrorist campaign.

The inside story of the Howard government’s failure to get the Tigers proscribed under Australian legislation has never been told. The Tigers were on a list of terrorist organisations proscribed by the UN. It was because of this that it remained a crime to supply funds to them. More than 30 countries explicitly banned the Tigers and listed them as a terrorist organisation under their own laws.Australiafailed to do this.

This is not because the Howard government did not regard the Tigers as terrorists. But the inside bureaucratic story is complex and reflects poorly on Australia as an episode where ethnic politics impeded serious counter-terrorism. Initially, the bureaucracy was hesitant about designating the Tigers as a terrorist organisation because it might lead to retaliation against Australians in Sri Lanka. It was important to upgrade security for the Australian High Commission in Colombo.

The attorney-general at the time, Philip Ruddock, declines to discuss the matter. However, sources tell Inquirer that Ruddock required the agreement of state governments to proscribe the Tigers. He wrote to state governments seeking that agreement. But withinAustraliathe Tamils were a well-established lobby, with strong support from numerous non-government organisations and some human rights lobbies. The Sri Lankan community is politically divided: the Sinhalese vote Liberal, the Tamils vote Labor.

Sources tell Inquirer that at least one Labor state refused to agree to the Tigers being listed as a terrorist organisation. This was against Ruddock’s assessment, the assessment ofAustralia’s security agencies and the assessments and actions of the UN and dozens of foreign national governments, including friends and allies of Australia. Later, the court case itself inhibited proscription. Gunaratna says: “Australia’s response was not very decisive.”

 Pic of Tamil youth Organisation personnel, including Meena Krishnamurthy–from Ministry of Defence

The Tamil war in Sri Lanka is over for the moment. Overwhelmingly, the priority for foreign governments should be to assist Sri Lankain economic development, which is the dynamic most likely to aid reconciliation. At the Perth demonstrations against Rajapaksa, some Tamil Tiger flags were displayed. It would be poor policy for Australia to allow the development of a Tamil Tiger network on its shores.

Sheridan on skewed perspectives that ignore LTTE threat then and now

Monday, November 7th, 2011

Former Mexican President Vicente Fox and TCU Team Up in Leadership Campaign for Children

Former Mexican President Vicente Fox and TCU Team Up in Leadership Campaign for ChildrenFormer Mexican President Vicente Fox is teaming up with Texas Christian University to help create future leaders in young children through enhanced academic programs.  Fox will be holding several forums at TCU, involving different world leaders, and speaking to young people to inspire them to become part of the global community.

The Vicente Fox Forum of World Leaders is a collaboration of partners, including Fox, TCU, the World Affairs Council of Dallas/Fort Worth, and the Hispanic Leadership Alliance. The first event will be held on November 30 in the Brown-Lupton University Union Ballroom of TCU and will be hosted by Fox.

Students who attend TCU, as well as other universities and high schools, are encouraged to join in on the forum. It will be free for all. According to Victor Boschini Jr., Chancellor of TCU, the forum will help educate attendees on how to become ethical leaders and responsible citizens of the world. Learning from world leaders and the challenges they face is a wonderful learning experience for students.

In addition to Fox, other world leaders are scheduled to speak in 2012, including the former Spanish Prime Minister Jose Maria Aznar, the former Canadian Prime Minister Jean Chretien, Prime Minister Shimon Peres, and the former Polish President Lech Walesa.

-Doug Jones
President & Founder
Mortgages In Mexico
http://MortgagesInMexico.com
Doug@MortgagesInMexico.com

Former Mexican President Vicente Fox and TCU Team Up in Leadership Campaign for Children Former Mexican President Vicente Fox and TCU Team Up in Leadership Campaign for Children Former Mexican President Vicente Fox and TCU Team Up in Leadership Campaign for Children Former Mexican President Vicente Fox and TCU Team Up in Leadership Campaign for Children Former Mexican President Vicente Fox and TCU Team Up in Leadership Campaign for Children Former Mexican President Vicente Fox and TCU Team Up in Leadership Campaign for Children Former Mexican President Vicente Fox and TCU Team Up in Leadership Campaign for Children Former Mexican President Vicente Fox and TCU Team Up in Leadership Campaign for Children

Sunday, November 6th, 2011

Tại Sao Logo Đầu Tiên Của Hãng Canon Lại Thất Bại Thảm Hại Ở Châu u Và Châu Mỹ?Năm 1934, một công ty Nhật Bản đã tung ra thị trường một dòng sản phẩm máy ảnh mới có tên Kwanon. Tên này được đặt theo tên của Quan thế âm bồ tát nghìn tay nghìn mắt với mong muốn đây sẽ là một dòng sản phẩm máy ảnh thực sự có ích cho [...]