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Ponce
5th December 2011, 12:43 PM
BEST NEWS THAT I HAVE SEEN IN A LONG TIME :) :) :) ......... who is the boss is no longer the boss.
====================================


Monday, December 5, 2011

Western Hemisphere: 33 Latin American countries to form a New Bloc. U.S. and Canada not invited.

by Timor Zoloyorv via globalresearch.ca

Thirty-three Latin American leaders have come together and formed a new regional bloc, pledging closer economic and political ties. The Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC) pointedly excludes the US and Canada.


On the second day of a summit in the Venezuelan capital, Caracas, all Latin American leaders, both right and left, officially signed into effect the formation of the CELAC bloc. The foundation of the bloc has been praised as the realization of the two-centuries-old idea of Latin American “independence” envisioned by Simon Bolivar.


Analysts view CELAC as an alternative to the Washington-based Organization of American States (OAS) and as an attempt by Latin American countries to reduce US influence in the region.


“As the years go by, CELAC is going to leave behind the old and worn-out OAS,” Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez said at the inauguration of the bloc on Friday.


“It's the death sentence for the Monroe Doctrine,” said Nicaragua's President Daniel Ortega said.


However Washington does not see CELAC as a replacement to OAS. US Department of State spokesman Mark Toner said the US will continue “to work through the OAS as the pre-eminent multilateral organization, speaking for the hemisphere.”


Political analyst Omar Jose Hassan Farinas told RT’s Spanish channel the US views CELAC as a potential threat to its hegemony in the region.


Chavez also read out statement opposing the US trade embargo on Cuba. Havana, which is not a member of the OAS, has joined the new regional bloc.


“No more interference. Enough is enough! We have to take shape as a center of the world power and demand respect for all of us as community and for each one of our countries,” Venezuelan leader said.


The 33 leaders pledged to withstand the financial crisis that has struck Europe and other developed countries.


Brazil’s Dilma Rousseff stressed that the Latin American countries would need to rely more on their neighbors amid the global economic turmoil.


“The economic, financial crisis should be at the center of our concerns,” Rousseff said Friday night. She said Latin America should “realize that to guarantee its current cycle of development despite the international economic turbulence, it means that every politician must be aware that each one needs the others.”


Chilean President Sebastian Pinera, who assumed the initial rotating presidency at CELAC, expressed hopes that the bloc would help build regional cooperation despite the differences between some of the 33 member states.


The leaders also discussed cooperation in the field of drug trafficking and climate change.


CELAC should be a “political union to build a large power center of the 21st century,” the Venezuelan president said, stressing strong regional growth as many countries in the region develop closer ties with Asia or Europe and reduce their traditional reliance on the US.


The formation of CELAC was warmly welcomed by rising global power, China. Chavez read aloud a letter from Chinese President Hu Jintao congratulating the leaders on forming the new bloc.


Hu pledged to deepen cooperation with the CELAC and underlined that in the 21st century the relations between China and Latin America have seen all-round and fast development with expansion of mutually beneficial cooperation, according to Xinhua news agency.


The countries of CELAC have a combined population of nearly 600 million people, and a combined GDP of about US$6 trillion – about a third of the combined output of the US and Canada.

http://poorrichards-blog.blogspot.com/2011/12/western-hemisphere-33-latin-american.html

Horn
5th December 2011, 12:52 PM
Mexico is a member, they are doomed.

http://s2.el-carabobeno.com/public/images/articles/id24425.jpg

Ponce
5th December 2011, 01:04 PM
Crap, crap and triple crap.........you are right........the US will infiltrate their influence by using Mexico to kill any vote that they (the US) don't like.

gunDriller
5th December 2011, 04:32 PM
i think eventually they will get more protective of their mineral rights, including water & gold.

they will tell Barrick, "sorry gringo, we want to keep this gold for ourselves."

Dogman
5th December 2011, 04:36 PM
Wonder how they can count 33 country's. when there are only 20 listed?

Where are the other 13?

Horn
5th December 2011, 04:51 PM
i think eventually they will get more protective of their mineral rights, including water & gold.

they will tell Barrick, "sorry gringo, we want to keep this gold for ourselves."

Right, they will make some advancements right to the point of getting somewhere, than Mexico and some one or other will pull a fade.

The way to put together a partnership is to get two or three majors together for a while agreeing on things, then have the little guys join in. Not start with 33 that will have trouble agreeing on anything fully.

So Chavez got his Gold, and is now working towards globalist sovreignty slaughter.

if he even knows that much :)

monty
5th December 2011, 05:28 PM
BEST NEWS THAT I HAVE SEEN IN A LONG TIME :) :) :) ......... who is the boss is no longer the boss.
====================================


Monday, December 5, 2011

Western Hemisphere: 33 Latin American countries to form a New Bloc. U.S. and Canada not invited.

by Timor Zoloyorv via globalresearch.ca

Thirty-three Latin American leaders have come together and formed a new regional bloc, pledging closer economic and political ties. The Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC) pointedly excludes the US and Canada.


On the second day of a summit in the Venezuelan capital, Caracas, all Latin American leaders, both right and left, officially signed into effect the formation of the CELAC bloc. The foundation of the bloc has been praised as the realization of the two-centuries-old idea of Latin American “independence” envisioned by Simon Bolivar.


Analysts view CELAC as an alternative to the Washington-based Organization of American States (OAS) and as an attempt by Latin American countries to reduce US influence in the region.


“As the years go by, CELAC is going to leave behind the old and worn-out OAS,” Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez said at the inauguration of the bloc on Friday.


“It's the death sentence for the Monroe Doctrine,” said Nicaragua's President Daniel Ortega said.


However Washington does not see CELAC as a replacement to OAS. US Department of State spokesman Mark Toner said the US will continue “to work through the OAS as the pre-eminent multilateral organization, speaking for the hemisphere.”


Political analyst Omar Jose Hassan Farinas told RT’s Spanish channel the US views CELAC as a potential threat to its hegemony in the region.


Chavez also read out statement opposing the US trade embargo on Cuba. Havana, which is not a member of the OAS, has joined the new regional bloc.


“No more interference. Enough is enough! We have to take shape as a center of the world power and demand respect for all of us as community and for each one of our countries,” Venezuelan leader said.


The 33 leaders pledged to withstand the financial crisis that has struck Europe and other developed countries.


Brazil’s Dilma Rousseff stressed that the Latin American countries would need to rely more on their neighbors amid the global economic turmoil.


“The economic, financial crisis should be at the center of our concerns,” Rousseff said Friday night. She said Latin America should “realize that to guarantee its current cycle of development despite the international economic turbulence, it means that every politician must be aware that each one needs the others.”


Chilean President Sebastian Pinera, who assumed the initial rotating presidency at CELAC, expressed hopes that the bloc would help build regional cooperation despite the differences between some of the 33 member states.


The leaders also discussed cooperation in the field of drug trafficking and climate change.


CELAC should be a “political union to build a large power center of the 21st century,” the Venezuelan president said, stressing strong regional growth as many countries in the region develop closer ties with Asia or Europe and reduce their traditional reliance on the US.


The formation of CELAC was warmly welcomed by rising global power, China. Chavez read aloud a letter from Chinese President Hu Jintao congratulating the leaders on forming the new bloc.


Hu pledged to deepen cooperation with the CELAC and underlined that in the 21st century the relations between China and Latin America have seen all-round and fast development with expansion of mutually beneficial cooperation, according to Xinhua news agency.


The countries of CELAC have a combined population of nearly 600 million people, and a combined GDP of about US$6 trillion – about a third of the combined output of the US and Canada.

http://poorrichards-blog.blogspot.com/2011/12/western-hemisphere-33-latin-american.html

Ponce, my wife is Chilena. She does not share your enthusiasm. She says the new bloc is communist. I believe, unless the Latin American

nations can dissociate themselves from the IMF and return to a sovereign national currency that is not fiat, they will be no better off than today.

Look at the plight pf Argentina, a country that has the potential to be a world leader in wealth and a sound economy. The IMF has bled them to

death. The Southern Hemisphere needs to stay far from China and Europe too. Yes they have been exploited by the Anglo-American banking

cartel. My 2 cents.

Ponce
5th December 2011, 06:50 PM
Monty? sorry about your wife being a Latina, you must be walking around her like walking on glass hahaaahhahhah.

Now then, Chaves is for his people and has been taking care of the for a long time with free medical, school and in partial payment of food and housing........if that's to be a Commie then the US should also be a Commie nation.

Take Cuba, every one lives in a house, some food is provided by the governmnet, free medical and education.......of course I know from first experience that NOT ALL IS TRUE, for example......when my dad was in the hospital we had to buy him a medical bed and also food every day and when he went home a wheel chair...........when he needed new glasses he was told that it wold take about six months for the doctor to see him, it so happen that the doctor was walking by and I told him "I would like you to check out my dad right now" and shaking hands with him I gave him $50.00 (which is equal to a two months salary), he examined my dad right away and 2 days later we went back for his glasses.

For their natural resourses Latin America doesn't need the rest of the world but the rest of the world needs them.....and in the coming future more than ever......................................now then, the reason that I am so glad that they are now one is that the US will think twice about "liberating" any of those countries, I know that at this time the US have their sites on Venezuela.

learn2swim
5th December 2011, 10:27 PM
Chavez is a Rockefeller tool, and always has been. The Rockefellers are the largest landowners of S. America (including Venezuela). They are centralizing power, and promoting the Same BS the EU is doing. They also promote the war on drugs and climate change, and who is the brain child of that? Who does it benefit? The little commie in Cuba has always been a Rockefeller tool too. His troops were busy guarding petroleum plants in Africa for Gulf Oil during the 1980's. A commie working for the hated capitalist, ha ha. If anyone thinks TPTB couldn't take Castro and Chavez out in less than a day, you are a stupid SOB. They took out the President of the United States in broad daylight without much trouble at all.

A confession made by David Rockefeller in his memoirs circulates endlessly through the Internet:


For more than a century ideological extremists at either end of the political
spectrum have seized upon well-publicized incidents such as my encounter with
Castro to attack the Rockefeller family for the inordinate influence they claim
we wield over American political and economic institutions. [1].


This refers to some allegations about the encounter occurred in the Harold Pratt House in New York, the headquarters of the Council on Foreign Relations, during the of 50 anniversary celebration of the UN in 1995. This time, instead of the principal characters of world democracy, representatives from terrorist movements and the most anti-American totalitarian governments were invited; among others, Yasser Arafat, Jiang Zemin and Fidel Castro.

Castro, in particular, was invited by Rockefeller to his family home in Westchester County. Here, he was introduced to the social elite of Manhattan, representatives of the jet-set, the intelligentsia and the U.S. financial and political power. [2]

However, this was neither the first nor the last time that Rockefeller honored the Cuban dictator.
Fidel Castro has been the Latin American leader who more often has been presented at the Council on Foreign Relation (CFR) under the direction of David Rockefeller. [3]

As we shall see, Fidel Castro had been received by David Rockefeller at the CFR at least two previous occasions: in 1955, while preparing his expedition against the de facto regime of General Batista, and in 1959, shortly after the revolutionary triumph. (On both occasions, the master of ceremonies was a CFR agent named William Wieland, about whom we will talk in due course.)

With the collapse of the Soviet Union and the communist bloc in 1991, the Castro government ran out of suppliers or any trading partner. In these precise moments, Peggy Dulany, the daughter of David Rockefeller, invited several U.S. business-school professors and organizational experts to travel with her to Havana, where they held discussions with their academic counterparts and with Cuban officials in charge of heavy and light industry. [4]

For her part, since the sixties, Abby, the rebellious marxistoide sister of Peggy Dulany, has been an ardent admirer of Castro . [5]

Moreover, the father of Abby and Peggy Delany, David Rockefeller, is the current chairman of Americans for Humanitarian Trade with Cuba ( AHTC), which was founded in 1998 and is the main lobbyist group at the U.S. Congress for the lifting of the embargo against Cuba. [6]

Also, David Rockefeller has promoted the Cuban Studies' Program of the Center for Latin American Studies of the David Rockefeller Center of Harvard University. [7]

Through the curriculum of the Rockefeller Center, hundreds of professionals and scientists from the Cuban government institutions have benefited from scholarships and free courses at the elitist Harvard University. As a result, Castro's scientific institutions are in the best position to develop either the AIDS vaccine or weapons of mass destruction for terrorists and radical movements.

Morover, in February 2001, David Rockefeller visited Cuba with a delegation of 19 CFR important American personalities financial, political, media and academic. [8]

As in his travels to the former USSR, which prepared the fall of the communist bloc, and to China, which opened the door of international finances to Beijing, Rockefeller's visit to the island was decisive for the future the Castro regime.

Following David's visit to Havana, through his work from the AHTC and with the help the committee of his partner Kissinger, U.S. has become again the main supplier and trading partner of Cuba.

Thanks to Rockefeller, the trade between U.S. and Cuba has surpassed one billion dollars, despite the dispute with the island, the so called trade embargo and pressure from Cuban-American congressmen and senators. This has definitely prevented the collapse of the Castro regime. [9]

The Fidel Castro's attraction over the Rockefeller may be seen as a millionaire eccentricity, but, in light of the facts disclosed, it is absolutely incomprehensible.

Nobody knows why, in the early 50's, the big U.S. oil companies installed four refineries in Cuba to process crude from Venezuela, instead of installing them in that country. They had a capacity of 300 thousand barrels per day, tenfold the future needs of the island in moments of full develop. [10]

The two most important refineries of Cuba was owned by Standard Oil of Cuba, one of the largest investments of the Rockefeller in Latin America during the 50s, if we don't take in consideration their vast possessions of the United Fruit Co. in the northern region of Cuba's easternmost.

Despite having lost all their properties in Cuba because of Castro´s government confiscations, the Rockefellers always had expressed their affections for Fidel Castro.

In August 1959, despite the confiscations, Nelson Rockefeller said in admiration: "I think Fidel Castro is doing a great job." Already, on December 24, 1958, Rockefeller had given toasts for Castro when he made a party at the Waldorf Astoria called "Fiesta Cubana" in which he express his hopes of a new government for Cuba [11].

The Rockefeller family is not only one of the rich and famous celebrities, but one of the most influential and powerful clans in the world. Perhaps, as we shall see, the most influential and powerful. Nothing that do or say any of the Rockefeller, can be taken lightly.

In fact, as we shall see in future entries, Rockefeller's affection for Castro goes beyond mere whim but is rather the result of a long relationship that involves the particular interests of the clan and the long term plans of the global financial elite.

REFERENCES

[1] Quotes from David Rockefeller's Memoirs (Random House, New York, 2002) Chapter 27, pages 404 and 405. Cited by Dr. Dennis Cuddy. http://www.crossroad.to/Quotes/brainwashing/rockefeller-mind-control.htm
[2] Castro's true legacy is a bloody trail, by Jeff Jacoby, The Boston Globe, January 1, 2007 http://www.jeffjacoby.com/278/castros-true-legacy-is-a-bloody-trail
[3]http://diglib.princeton.edu/ead/getEad?id=ark:/88435/bv73c042z&kw=cfr#bioghist
[4] Will Cuba's revolutionary hero share the fate of other Communist leaders? by Katherine Ellison http://www.theatlantic.com/past/docs/issues/90jun/castro.htm
[5] All the Money in the World: How the Forbes 400 Make--and Spend--Their Fortunes By Peter W. Bernstein, Annalyn Swan. En: http://books.google.com/books?id=Fk3ucyrGbnwC&pg=PA240&lpg=PA240&dq=Abby+Rockefeller+%2B+Castro&source=bl&ots=7wnMCxkr2N&sig=XDZ2WoVUay2b20TmgRMi6WpiAJk&hl=en&ei=s4CXTOzALJDAsAO24eW_Cg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=10&ved=0CFEQ6AEwCTgy#v=onepage&q=Abby%20Rockefeller%20%2B%20Castro&f=false
[6] A Bailout for Castro Too? By Humberto Fontova. http://www.americanthinker.com/2009/01/a_bailout_for_castro_too.html
[7]http://www.drclas.harvard.edu/cuba
[8] Rockefeller-led u.s. delegation cozies up to Castro. http://www.cubanet.org/CNews/y01/feb01/23e11.htm
[9] http://www.cfr.org/publication/11113/uscuba_relations.html#p2
[10] CUBA'S ENERGY CHALLENGE: A SECOND LOOK. http://lanic.utexas.edu/project/asce/pdfs/volume15/pdfs/pinon.pdf
[11] http://www.trivia-library.com/c/biography-of-famous-cuban-leader-fidel-castro-part-3.htm

http://havanaschooleng.blogspot.com/2010/10/cuban-conspiracy-two-castro-rockefeller.html

Horn
6th December 2011, 04:32 AM
The Southern Hemisphere needs to stay far from China and Europe too. Yes they have been exploited by the Anglo-American banking

cartel. My 2 cents.

They've always had to worry about their neighbors getting over on them (which is still a big worry) so they saught outside alliances to back them up, still do.

Problem is Venezuela being the main catalyst for a change, they're as you stated a commune, and is more of the same old problems when thats the case.

Argentinia would have been a good leader, but remind me of a larger Portugal which would need a new religion to save it. Brazil has zero intent.

Nope, the only way to a united S.A. is through Colombia and a massive propaganda campaign, leaving out Mexico...

Maybe its better they never become United, Colombian royalty is one scary idea. ;D

monty
6th December 2011, 08:29 PM
Monty? sorry about your wife being a Latina, you must be walking around her like walking on glass hahaaahhahhah.

Now then, Chaves is for his people and has been taking care of the for a long time with free medical, school and in partial payment of food and housing........if that's to be a Commie then the US should also be a Commie nation.

Take Cuba, every one lives in a house, some food is provided by the governmnet, free medical and education.......of course I know from first experience that NOT ALL IS TRUE, for example......when my dad was in the hospital we had to buy him a medical bed and also food every day and when he went home a wheel chair...........when he needed new glasses he was told that it wold take about six months for the doctor to see him, it so happen that the doctor was walking by and I told him "I would like you to check out my dad right now" and shaking hands with him I gave him $50.00 (which is equal to a two months salary), he examined my dad right away and 2 days later we went back for his glasses.

For their natural resourses Latin America doesn't need the rest of the world but the rest of the world needs them.....and in the coming future more than ever......................................now then, the reason that I am so glad that they are now one is that the US will think twice about "liberating" any of those countries, I know that at this time the US have their sites on Venezuela.

Ponce, I do walk around her like walking on glass on occasion, but we do have a good relationship.

I agree that the Latin American nations have the resources that the rest of the world needs. I am fearful they are about to enter into agreements with the Chinese and suddenly China will control those resources.

I remember reading somewhere on the internet that Venezuela is one of the countries whose central bank is not under the control of the Rothschild-Rockefeller cartel. If that is true and Chaves is bringing Venezuela's gold home he and Venezuela may suffer the same fate as Libya and Gaddaffi.

For the nations of South America and the nations of the world for that matter to have a secure future . . . if i might quote Adrian Salbucci from Buenos Aires, Argentina:

"It starts with each country taking back their central bank so that it will provide the necessary amount of interest-free money to meet the needs of the Real National Economy, so that all the powerful funny-money bankers can be routed. That means freeing your central bank from global banker control. Former Argentine president Juan Domingo Perón did just that 60 years ago and the Powers That Be bombed him out of power. Muammar Gaddafi did that much more recently, and look at what happened to him…."

Ponce
6th December 2011, 08:34 PM
Well, that would make Venezuela, Cuba and North Korea that have nothing to do with that asshole...the trick in surviving what is to come is to be able for you to sustain yourself without the aid of the government because once you are you then will have to obey them.......get ready today for the way that you want to live tomorrow for tomorrow it will be to late