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The TRUTH will set you FREE.
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Michael Hertz: Is Obama setting us up for another Gulf of Tonkin situation? Our soldiers go into Syria, they get attacked by ISIL, and suddenly we are told that we must defend our country's honor and defeat ISIL.
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I’m somewhat paranoid. I don’t trust the military. If they crack down they will start with whom they know.
“On the first day, I was stripped down to my underwear. I was 120 pounds.”
“Aguinaldo’s arm was as big as my thigh. He rolled up a magazine. A body building magazine. He hit my balls with it repeatedly.”“What’s your course,” Aguinaldo asked Fred.“Zoology,” Fred replied.“You know what will happen if I continue doing this,” Aguinaldo told Fred as he steadily slapped Fred’s balls with the rolled-up magazine.Aquinaldo did not like it that Fred did not call him “Sir”.Aguinaldo told him, “When you answer me, you say Sir.”“Yes Sir,” Fred replied, mimicking an army private.“I see, you’re sarcastic,” Aguinaldo said.Fred said, “He grabbed my head with his right hand then punched my ear and temple repeatedly with his left.“I will make you stupid,” Aguinaldo told him.“It was good my skull didn’t crack because his arms were sooo big,” Fred said.And fortunately, too, the torture didn’t last days.Decades later, Fred happened to talk to Aguinaldo. “I wanted to tell him – you mauled me.”But he didn’t. Fred said he was afraid that many in the military continue to be “incorrigible.”
I should close, but there is a memory locked in my heart that begs to be shared. It is the memory of a young couple, not yet in their thirties, whom I saw some months ago in a large hall that had been converted into a military courtroom, waiting for the case to be called, in which they stood accused with some 90 other young people.I had met the young man before martial law. He was a university student – brilliant, articulate, involved. That day in the courtroom he sat in a rattan chair, almost motionless, staring blankly ahead, his mouth half open, totally oblivious to the people and the chatter around him. He had been detained under martial law, punished so repeatedly and so brutally and subjected to such a large dose of what the military call the truth serum, that his mind had cracked. He is confined, to this day, in the mental ward of a military hospital.Behind him stood his wife, straight and proud, one hand lightly resting on the crown of his head, the other touching his shoulder, tenderly yet defiantly, ready to spring on anyone who might still wish to hurt her husband.As I looked at the couple, I saw in them the face of every Filipino and I knew then that martial law could crush our bodies, it could break our minds but it could not conquer our spirit. It may silence our voice and seal our eyes but it cannot kill our hope nor obliterate our vision. We will struggle on, no matter how long it takes or what it costs, until we establish a just community of free men and women in our land, deciding together, working and striving together, singing and dancing together, laughing and loving together.That is the ultimate lesson.
Posted: 30 Oct 2015 08:56 AM PDT
The server hosting company we've been using for the past three years has become less and less functional in recent months, with crashes, lost images, lost articles, and the like. Despite the pay raise we gave ourselves last month, this all-volunteer crew has reached it limit with the extra workload. We're only human after
Therefore, the San Diego Free Press will be moving to a new host over the weekend. You won't see much activity on our site on Saturday and Sunday. We'll be back in full force on Monday, November 2.
We apologize for any inconvenience this may cause when trying to post comments or read an article. We've done a lot of research, and believe this move will help make the San Diego Free Press more reliable and efficient for everyone.
We will be posting updates and any news items that can't wait on our Facebook page, so feel free to head over there this weekend.
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Posted: 30 Oct 2015 08:37 AM PDT
By Brent E. Beltran Juanito held the rock firmly in his hand—almost too firmly, as his knuckles turned white from the pressure. He stood there shaking, and tears slowly fell from his reddened eyes. A wheezy cough escaped his tight lungs as the eleven-year-old stood on Harbor Drive facing the towering cranes that loomed over this toxic barrio. Every breath he took was a challenge. The setting sun cast a powerful glow of purples and oranges across the radiant, polluted sky. He had grown up on these neglected streets, a Barrio Logan native in more ways than one. He stood there with rock in hand as semi trucks rumbled past, hauling bananas picked by people that looked just like him. The vehicles added more pollutants into the atmosphere as they traveled to various points north and east. That rock, smooth from centuries of ocean water beatdowns, weighed heavy in his trembling hand. [Read more...]
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Posted: 30 Oct 2015 08:35 AM PDT
By Matt Valenti I trust, Dear Reader, that you will forgive me if the tale I am about to repeat frightens you more than it ought, but this is a tale that insists upon being told. Though I had good reason to doubt the veracity of the story when first I heard it, nevertheless, it has left me with a sensation of nagging anxiety that, like a perverted old roommate from college who has overstayed his welcome on your sofa bed, simply won’t go away. Therefore, I beg of you, by all means keep this story well hidden away from the eyes and ears of the more impressionable and naïve among us in this fair city of San Diego—including small children, foreign tourists, and members of the city council. [Read more...]
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Posted: 30 Oct 2015 08:33 AM PDT
Got to wonder if my family has a contact high when they call out of purple haze to ask if I'm a marijuana farmer Hydroponically speaking I don't have a pot to piss in not that I'm opposed to organic chemotherapy or the buzz of tax revenues instead of drug wars [Read more...]
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Posted: 30 Oct 2015 08:31 AM PDT
By Barbara Zaragoza / South Bay Compass The community group Crossroads II reported that the City of Chula Vista received a letter from the United States Olympic Committee (USOC) that said they would like to turn the Olympic Training Center (OTC) over to Chula Vista. It has been costing the USOC $8 million a year to operate the OTC. Crossroads II weighed in: “The City and the USOC drew up a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) about what the basic agreement would be. To make a long story short, the MOU makes it clear that the OTC must remain a training site for for the Olympics. The USOC will continue to control certain of the facilities, including the gift shop, but most importantly, the City will not be able to make any significant changes without the approval of the USOC. However — while the USOC will contribute $3 million, the City is responsible for all the rest of the financing and management of the rest of the OTC site — BUT, it must be maintained as a training site for elite athletes. [Read more...]
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HOT PURSUIT
DUTY OF LAW ENFORCEMENT ENTITIES
SHELL SWINDLING OF RETIREMENT PAY 5TH YEAR
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