Lies, Lies and More Lies from Correa’s Cartel Government

July 19, 2010  We suggest that all Ecuadoreans get to the bottom of the facts about what Sucumbios Province is today, after 4 ++ years of lawlessness.

It is a vermin infested pit of hardened criminals which move around with no arrests, as long as they pay Correa’s goons and deliver more evil.

Do you know how many drug labs, how many Hezbollah, how many FARC and how many Iranian-Mexican passports holders zip around Sucumbios Province of Ecuador? To be sure, they hide behind the “poor”- the victims of man’s evil, sometimes called the downtrodden or local Indigenous, currently taking day pay to make up stories about things that never happened. There was a reason the FARC intel headquarters was safely operating right down the road from the Lago Agrio court house because Correa thinks this is a good thing. Of course the United Nations and US AID  fraudulently calls these thousands of new Sucumbios denizens, real evil doers, as Colombian refugees from violence, a remarkably dishonest analysis since everyone knows that Colombia is patently safer under Santos-Uribe than Ecuador, with far more jobs- secure jobs- than the jobs offered in Sucumbios which include terror training, bomb making, FARC body snatching for poppy cultivation, white slavery, kidnapping, prostitution, illegal weapons and drug running plus murder.  No self respecting Colombian is an asylum seeker in Sucumbios. No self respecting human being of any honor lives in Sucumbios: only hard criminals and those using and abusing this vast untamed stretch of lawlessness, which president Correa calls chock full of law and order when he is, of course, lying.

Here is what happens to a similar zone in Guatemala when governments enjoy taking the criminals’ money:

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July 17, 2010          New York Times

Ranchers and Drug Barons Threaten Rain Forest
By BLAKE SCHMIDT
EL MIRADOR, Guatemala — Great sweeps of Guatemalan rain forest, once the cradle of one of the world’s great civilizations, are being razed to clear land for cattle-ranching drug barons.

Other parts of the Maya Biosphere Reserve, Central America’s largest protected area, have been burned down by small cities of squatters.

Looters and poachers, kept at bay when guerrilla armies roamed the region during the country’s 36-year civil war, ply their trades freely.

“There’s traffickers, cattle ranchers, loggers, poachers and looters,” said Richard D. Hansen, an American archaeologist who is leading the excavation of the earliest and largest Mayan city-state, El Mirador, in the northern tip of the reserve. “All the bad guys are lined up to destroy the reserve. You can’t imagine the devastation that is happening.”

President Álvaro Colom has grand plans to turn the region into a major eco-tourism destination, but if he hopes to bring tourists, officials say, he will have to bring the law here first.

The reserve, about the size of New Jersey, accounts for nearly two-thirds of the Petén region, a vast, jungly no man’s land that juts north into Mexico and borders Belize to the east. Spanning a fifth of Guatemala and including four national parks, the reserve houses diverse ecosystems with niches for jaguars, spider monkeys and scarlet macaws.

Pre-Colombian inhabitants mined limestone quarries here 2,600 years ago to build the earliest Mayan temples. The temples would tower above the jungle canopy before the cities were abandoned as Mayan civilization mysteriously collapsed around the ninth century A.D.

Some sites generate robust tourism. The spectacular Maya city Tikal, which draws up to 350,000 visitors a year, is a relatively well-protected oasis. Only about 3,000 visit El Mirador, which contains what may be the world’s largest ancient pyramid structure.

The threats to the reserve are many and interlocking, legal and illegal. Claudia Mariela López, the Petén director for the national parks agency, said about 37,000 acres of the reserve was deforested annually by poachers, squatters and ranchers.

The squatters are mainly peasants who have come in search of farmland. But the population of Petén has grown to more than 500,000 from 25,000 in the 1970s, according to a Unesco report. Not all of the residents are illegal, and many seek no more than subsistence.

Willingly or not, they often become pawns of the drug lords. The squatters are numerous, frequently armed and difficult to evict. In some cases, they function as an advance guard for the drug dealers, preventing the authorities from entering, warning of intrusions and clearing land that the drug gangs ultimately take over.

A recent State Department report said that “entire regions of Guatemala are now essentially under the control” of drug trafficking organizations, mainly the Mexico-based Zetas. Those groups enjoy a “prevailing environment of impunity” in “the northern and eastern rural areas” of Guatemala, the report said.

The drug organizations have bought vast cattle ranches in the Petén to launder drug profits, as well as to conceal a trafficking hub, including remote, jungle-shrouded landing strips. Cattle ranching in the Petén has quadrupled since 1995, with herds totaling 2.5 million cattle, according to Rudel Álvarez, the region’s governor.

“Organized crime and drug traffickers have usurped large swaths of protected land amid a vacuum left by the state, and are creating de facto ranching areas,” Mr. Álvarez said. “We must get rid of them to really have conservation.”

Deforestation has led to soil erosion at Yaxchilán, a Mayan city across the border in Mexico, which in turn has swollen rivers that erode limestone temples, said Norma Barbacci, regional director for the World Monument Fund. Ash from the squatters’ burns to clear fields for planting cause acid rain that wears at temples.

Fires, tree poaching and ranchers are encroaching in parts of the Laguna del Tigre national park in the western part of the reserve, threatening a sanctuary for 250 endangered scarlet macaws, the country’s last, said Roan McNab, country director for the Wildlife Conservation Society. Jaguars, crocodiles, river turtles and monkeys are also losing their habitat, he said.

The road to El Mirador, a five-day mule trek from the town of Carmelita that involves occasional bushwhacking with a machete, passes countless ditches where looters have ripped out Mayan graves. A wild toucan rockets down and then disappears off into the canopy. The remote dirt road that leads to the reserve is lined with newly razed cattle ranches, and the persistent buzz from a logging company drowns out the rain forest’s more subtle cacophony.

A local trail guide, galumphing along ancient limestone freeways buried beneath the forest, chain-smokes marijuana cigarettes rolled in notebook paper.

This rapidly deforesting mini-narco-state is a far cry from President Colom’s vision of a lush Mayan-themed vacationland.

His ambitious Cuatro Balam plan, named for the four main figures in the Mayan creation myth, would divide the reserve into an archaeological park in the north and an agricultural zone in the south. It was ostensibly intended to stem the northward migration of farmers and ranchers. Through a combination of public and private financing, he hopes to build an $8 million electric minitrain to shuttle tourists through the reserve and a Maya studies center for scholars.

The goal is to attract one million tourists a year to the reserve by 2023.

Guatemalan authorities have made some progress. Soldiers have blasted craters in secret landing strips and kicked squatters off protected lands. The government says it has retaken 269,000 acres of protected land in the Petén.

But the government remains hopelessly outgunned. The entire Petén, nearly 14,000 square miles, is patrolled by 600 soldiers, police officers and park guards, Mr. Álvarez said. Isolated and underpaid, the security officials are also susceptible to corruption.

Governor Álvarez himself is under investigation for money-laundering, charges he says are false and intended to intimidate him for supporting Mr. Colom’s crackdown on squatters and traffickers.

The park guards at El Mirador are expected to monitor up to 12,000 acres of jungle each.

“We have nothing,” said one guard, who asked to remain anonymous so as not to antagonize drug lords. “How are we supposed to stop drug gangs trying to run this place?”

To Mr. Hansen, an Idaho State professor of archaeology, the risks of not protecting the region are obvious in every stone he unearths. The Maya, he said, largely sealed their fate through deforestation and erosion.

“The Maya destroyed their environment,” he said. “They cut down their jungle” and it ruined them forever. “And we’re doing the same thing today.”
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ECrisis can only reject Correa’s lies about his great anti drugs work with one simple demand: show us real facts, not your propaganda.

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Poder360
ECUADOR - Correa Says No Illegal Crops in Ecuador

Correa Says No Illegal Crops in Ecuador
The leader's claim is substantiated by a report submitted by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime

President Rafael Correa said that his country is the "only" Andean region "which does not have drug crops" and is the "most efficient" nation in controlling drug-trafficking. "We're the only country in the Andean Community which does not have drug crops," while "Colombia is the principal producer and Peru is second or third," two nations with which Ecuador shares borders, the leader said in statements to a local media outlet.
14-Jul-2010
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As for the lawless cartel called Rafael Correa’s Cuban ALBA land, previously known as Ecuador, we reviewed this odd story from The Latin Business Chronicle by an American lawyer who says he represents Chevron Texaco. He writes to Correa’s man-minder Pesantez who has crafted Correa’s rise from destitute Marxist student on Belgium on the make to destitute nation leader now legalizing Cuban Marxist-communism in Ecuador, even arranging Correa’s show only marriage to a willing Belgian, like a marriage mart for EURO reds, as are all Belgian brides in Ecuador. Nonetheless, Pesantez is written as if he is a person who cares one iota about Ecuador’s reputation. Pesantez, always a liar and manipulator, only cares about Pesantez. Pesantez could care less that the writer tells him that he will move inside U.S. justice.

Scant due diligence reveals that Pesantez, himself part of Correa’s Pink triad of pervs and perps, is impervious to any societal strictures of even the essentials of The Ten Commandments. Pesantez simply cares nothing about law and order and routinely designates tens of thousands of Ecuadoreans as criminals when the mood capriciously suits him and on no basis of fact, all engineered to assist the cover up of he and Correa’s criminal juggernaut in Ecuador.

Read it here . This is the nation of Ecuador, still committing fraud against Chevron Texaco by teaming with the fraud perps on the so called lawsuit, being addressed.

Latin Business Chronicle

Thursday, July 15, 2010      
 
Letter to Ecuador's Prosecutor General Washington Pesantez from Chevron attorney Thomas F. Cullen, Jr. Dear Dr. Pesántez:

My law firm represents Chevron Corporation, and I am writing to share certain evidence that recently has been uncovered in connection with the ongoing civil case pending against Chevron in Lago Agrio. This evidence demonstrates that the plaintiffs’ representatives and consultants colluded with the court-appointed, supposedly independent expert, Richard Stalin Cabrera Vega, to illicitly pass off their work product as the work of Mr. Cabrera. Through this scheme, the plaintiffs’ representatives and Mr. Cabrera violated the expert’s obligations of transparency and impartiality, and they committed a fraud on the court, on Chevron, and on the public. We are sharing this evidence with you because of its potential criminal implications.’

In 2007, the Lago Agrio court appointed Richard Stalin Cabrera Vega to a unique role as an “auxiliary” to the judge. Mr. Cabrera’s appointment came after the partial completion of the judicial-inspection process originally ordered by the court for specific sites. He was appointed as the court’s sole expert to conduct a global assessment of environmental impacts in the concession area in which Texaco Petroleum Company and Petroecuador have operated, causation of such impacts, and remediation needs. In accordance with Articles 251 and 256 of the Code of Civil Procedure, the court ordered Mr. Cabrera to act independently of the parties and with complete transparency. The court stated that “the role of the expert is one of complete impartiality and transparency with respect to the parties and their attorneys,” and it required that Mr. Cabrera “shall observe and ensure the impartiality of his work, and the transparency of his activities as a professional appointed” by the court. The court also ordered that the individuals appointed to assist Mr. Cabrera must be “independent from the litigating parties” and that “[t]he activity of the assistants is included in the oath sworn by the expert Richard Cabrera, who was appointed as the sole expert.”

Mr. Cabrera repeatedly acknowledged that the court charged him with conducting an investigation independent from the parties, and repeatedly represented to the court that he adhered to the court’s order. Similarly, the plaintiffs’ representatives have repeatedly characterized Mr. Cabrera’ s role as that of a “special master.” See, e.g., 12/1/08 Press

Release (enclosed as Exhibit E). They have made the Cabrera Report the centerpiece of their public-relations and lobbying campaigns to injure Chevron. And, like Mr. Cabrera himself, the plaintiffs’ representatives have insisted that Mr. Cabrera maintained his independence from them in performing his work. When Chevron challenged Mr. Cabrera’s independence, the plaintiffs’ public-relations firm issued a press release accusing Chevron’s management of “lying to shareholders,” and they avowed that “Chevron’s claim that Professor Cabrera is cooperating with the plaintiffs is completely false.” 4/3/08 Press Release (enclosed as Exhibit F); see also 12/1/08 Press Release (enclosed as Exhibit E) (“A lawyer for the plaintiffs blasted Chevron for putting out false information about the latest findings, and rejected allegations the plaintiffs improperly influenced the report.”).

The recently uncovered evidence includes the following indicia of misrepresentation,  concealment, and fraud:

Stratus Consulting LLC (“Stratus”), a U.S.-based environmental consulting company, has worked for plaintiffs for many years. Despite initial denials, mounting evidence shows that Stratus personnel and contractors had extensive dealings with Mr. Cabrera and are the true authors of much of the Cabrera Report. A Stratus contractor produced in a United States federal court action an electronic database used by the plaintiffs’ consultants. Forensic analysis has shown that substantial portions of the same database were incorporated into the Cabrera Report virtually verbatim, without attribution or disclosure of the source. Counsel for Stratus have now admitted to the U.S. court that Stratus personnel recognize their work in the Cabrera Report and that at least two Stratus representatives communicated directly with Mr. Cabrera. Plaintiffs admitted to the same court that they had secret, “exparte dealings” with Mr. Cabrera and that the Cabrera Report “is based, in part, on information prepared by Plaintiffs’ litigation team.” And plaintiffs recently admitted to the Lago Agrio court that they gave Mr. Cabrera “findings,” “analyses,” and “conclusions” that were adopted in total into the Cabrera Report. 

In addition, the website of the Amazon Defense Front—the plaintiffs’ designated beneficiary of any judgment in the case—contains an alleged English “translation” of the Cabrera Report. Expert forensic analysis has concluded that the English “translation” is the original text, and that the Spanish version of the Cabrera Report filed with the Court is a translation from the original English text. However, neither Mr. Cabrera nor any of his named team members are native English speakers. Additional English versions of the Cabrera Report produced by Stratus in the U.S. court action further indicate that the involvement of plaintiffs’ team in drafting the Cabrera Report was extensive.

Furthermore, at least two of Mr. Cabrera’ s assistants did not have the independence mandated by the law. Juan Cristóbal Villao Yepez is one of the disclosed assistants whose work product appears in the Cabrera Report. Mr. Villao works for Uhl, Baron, Rana & Associates, Inc., (“UBR”) another U.S. environmental consulting firm. Plaintiffs have admitted that UBR “was retained by Plaintiffs to serve as a consulting expert in the Lago Agrio Litigation.” A United States federal court has concluded that Mr. Villao’s undisclosed dual role as a Cabrera assistant and an employee of plaintiffs’ consulting firm demonstrates “a fraud on the [Lago Agrio] tribunal.”

Another disclosed Cabrera assistant was Carlos Martin Beristain. Mr. Cabrera relied on Mr. Beristain’s work in recommending the assessment of $9.5 billion in damages for alleged “excess cancer deaths.” A version of the film “Crude” shows Mr. Beristain meeting and working with plaintiffs’ lawyers Steven Donziger and Pablo Fajardo, and with plaintiffs’ associates Emergildo Criollo, Adolfo Maldonado and others. The filmmaker has admitted to a United States federal court in New York that he edited his movie to remove the evidence of Mr. Beristain’s presence at the meeting and that he did so at the request of plaintiffs’ lawyers. The United States federal court addressing this matter called this manipulation “a fact suggestive of an awareness of questionable activity.”

The information set forth in this letter and in the attachments hereto shows that the Cabrera Report is a fraud and that the plaintiffs’ representatives and Mr. Cabrera worked in concert to perpetrate that fraud. Both Mr. Cabrera and the plaintiffs’ representatives have made repeated misrepresentations to conceal their collusion, which violated Mr. Cabrera’s obligations of transparency and impartiality. This fraud has been perpetrated as part of plaintiffs’ efforts to obtain an unfounded judgment against Chevron in Lago Agrio, and to injure Chevron through their public-relations and lobbying campaigns. As such, the evidence has serious implications for the integrity of the Lago Agrio proceedings and for the possible criminal liability of Mr. Cabrera and the plaintiffs’ representatives.

We hope that you will give this evidence your highest and most serious attention.

Because of the implications for U.S. law, we are taking steps to inform the appropriate U.S. authorities as well.

Very truly yours,
Thomas F. Cullen, Jr.

EDITOR'S NOTE: This letter was delivered to Ecuadorian Prosecutor General Washington Pesantez on July 14, 2010. Mr. Cullen is a partner at Jones Day.
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ECrisis does not dispute the facts in this letter to Pesantez, reprinted above. We consider Pesantez as Correa’s brain and know well that the two are inseparable.

What we do not comprehend and consider as a tragedy is that the Pesantez appeal tells Pesantez, “Because of the implications for U.S. law, we are taking steps to inform the appropriate U.S. authorities as well.”     This letter makes no mention of the current Chevron request to dismiss the shockingly dishonest case in Lago Agrio- Sucumbios Province. This Letter makes no request to end this stupidity, this fraudulent trial now. Because Correa controls all justice, every court and every judge by dint of his 9-08 constitution, no one should be fooled that Correa wants this ridiculous show trial to not proceed in Lago Agrio when any sane or just person would shut it down for the fraud case that it is. How did the dead woman’s family do by appealing to Pesantez for justice over Pesantez’s bride’s killing of an innocent pedestrian? How did that work out? How has justice worked out for the tens of thousands of Ecuadoreans now on the Correa-Pesantez Hate List, all for crimes they never committed? What does this tell us about Pesantez and Correa?

We agree that Chevron is doing a good job to expose the multitude of Correa-Pesantez fraud schemes. The Chevron case is one of the worst among many.

We will not pick apart the above reprinted letter as a service to our readers and in fear that the gaping holes therein will over-ride the basics which is….the anti-Chevron fact-free case in Lago Agrio is a fraud and is built on a fraud and sold fraudulently. Pesantez has made a career selling fraud and considers this a great life skill, as do most manipulation credo-enhanced Ecuadoreans. Decrying FRAUD! to Pesantez only makes him feel better about his effectiveness to manipulate and defraud.

Pesantez and Correa do appear and act thusly as criminally entwined on the anti Chevron case in Lago Agrio since they control every facet of this jiggered scam. While we comprehend the ruse that one and all must play the game that Correa and Pesantez do not control or jigger Ecuadorean justice and never ever politically sway nor imbalance anything, the facts of the Correa-Pesantez fake justice do not bear this out at all for they control every facet of Ecuadorean law and order, such as it is. What we do not understand is what this letter writer thinks will come of his 7-14-10 Letter which appears to fail to comprehend the Correa-Pesantez Cuban cartel mindset while leaving un-detailed what Pesantez’s laughable response, if any will be. It is a fools’ errand to assume responsible responses from this team of perps and pervs who only do one thing and they do it very well: manipulate and lie.

Perhaps the writer would be better served in his inchoate efforts to “inform”  Pesantez by analyzing just what the dishonest Cuban ALBA cartels are doing viz a viz their extra-judicial support for the dishonest anti-Chevron case  and better serve a winning strategy which, we assume, is what he is hired to achieve. It seems bizarre to “inform” Pesantez of his utter corruption when Pesantez is so addicted to his own manipulation and corruption that he cannot even comprehend being honest about his own wide-in-name-only murder of a local pedestrian and their cover up. It is almost laughable except that it is sad. Sort of like writing to the devil to tell him that he is acting badly. But that is OK- the devil should get such notes. Failing to comprehend Correa, who is Pesantez’s Frankenstein creature in an unholy Faustian pact of the two for power and cash is to fail to understand matters on the table. And you think Correa’s Ecuador deserves an ATPDEA extension? Utterly laughable.

The Wall Street Journal analysis of the Cuban-FARC Sandinistas, moving quickly in to the ALBA cartel now, brings forward the vast corrupting scam that is Ecuador under Alexis Mera, Pesantez and Rafael Correa.
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The Wall Street Journal THE AMERICAS

JULY 19, 2010

Ortega Squeezes, the OAS Is Silent
Nicaragua's president subverts its constitution.
By MARY ANASTASIA O'GRADY

In remarks to the local Nicaraguan press in mid-June, Vice President Jaime Morales celebrated Iranian plans to boost cooperation with his country. "I understand that there are many [Iranian] projects being studied and developed" for Nicaragua, Mr. Morales said. He added that "it is encouraging" that Tehran is in a position to "increase that aid."

Nicaragua, violently torn apart in the 1980s by the Soviet-Cuban sponsorship of Sandinista strongman Daniel Ortega, is back in play. This time it is Iran that covets a foothold on the isthmus. It is courting Mr. Ortega, who is again in power and determined not to repeat the mistake that dislodged him years ago.

While Mr. Ortega seems eager to take the money from Iran, he is long past relying on foreigners to ensure his tenure. He no doubt recalls that so many Kremlin "investments" 20 years ago were no match for a fair election. When Nicaraguans went to the polls in 1990, they gave Mr. Ortega the boot. The lesson he learned was that the key to a lifetime presidency is to see that no such election is held again.

This is what now occupies much of Mr. Ortega's calendar. Using the power of his presidency he is systematically dismantling the institutional checks and balances that might thwart his plan. On July 6, the Spanish daily El País, which is hardly a right-wing publication, published a report headlined "Daniel Ortega Goes After All the Power." The story said that he had "crush[ed] provincial autonomy" with the "irregular dismissal of five mayors and a dozen vice-mayors and elected councils, setting off alarms in the Central American country." The paper further explained that "according to analysts, the maneuver is designed to take political control and guarantee the permanence of the government of the former Sandinista guerrilla."

This is the same path that Venezuela, Ecuador and Bolivia have traveled. In those countries civil liberties have been destroyed, the press is harassed and political adversaries are routinely imprisoned without due process.

Also familiar is the international silence surrounding these antidemocratic actions. Especially noteworthy is the failure of Organization of American States' Secretary General José Miguel Insulza to stand up for Nicaraguan democracy after the stink he made in Honduras last year. Though the U.S. issued a statement last fall criticizing Mr. Ortega's power grab and has since expressed disapproval, its response has been timid compared to the howl it too raised about Honduras.

The urgency of Nicaragua's constitutional crisis is no secret. Hugo Barquero, in the city of Boaco, is the latest mayor to be kicked out. The city council claimed that it dismissed him for failure to comply with public accounting procedures. Yet no proof was presented, according to El País. There was merely a majority vote followed by forcible removal by police amid a throng of protests. Among the other mayors similarly removed, one was a Sandinista who dared dissent from orteguismo.

Mr. Ortega already controlled 105 of the country's 153 municipalities. That majority was won thanks to fraud in the 2008 elections that was so blatant the U.S. and Europe Union pulled bilateral aid in protest. The effort now to do away with those mayors who managed to prevail in 2008 is a sure sign of Mr. Ortega's determination to wipe out all dissent.

Equally troubling is his assault on judicial independence. As I reported in February during a visit to Managua, he wants the electoral-council judges who blessed the 2008 election fraud to be reconfirmed. Opposition congressmen have refused to comply so Mr. Ortega has decreed that his judges' terms are extended indefinitely.

He also orchestrated an illegal "vote" by three Supreme Court judges and three "alternate" judges to lift the constitutional ban on his re-election. And now he is threatening to fire, and replace with alternates whom he favors, the judges opposing his power play.

The president is engaging in a coup against the country's constitution. That's where Mr. Insulza comes in. Article 20 of the OAS's Democratic Charter gives him "the power to request the immediate convocation of the permanent council" where there is "an unconstitutional alteration of the constitutional regime." So I asked his office about claims by the opposition that he is waiting for an invitation from the Nicaraguan government to do something and why he has not invoked Article 20.

After berating me for daring to pose these questions, OAS spokesman Patricia Esquenazi denied the opposition charges and told me that the secretary general "has so far [not] considered that a severe alteration of the democratic order has occurred in Nicaragua." In a May 17 letter to the opposition, which Ms. Esquenazi declined to give me, Mr. Insulza said that he is waiting for an OAS member to raise the issue. In the meantime, according to his spokesman, he is pursuing "silent diplomacy." No wonder the OAS is no longer taken seriously as a defender of constitutional democracy.

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It can readily be proven that Rafael Correa’s removal of liberty in Ecuador followed the above, widely known road map of disgrace. Correa retains power by extortion, fear mongering, lying and threats. Correa already staged a coup against Ecuador and now holds his very pernicious constitution. The OAS and the UN will not act against these fabulous avatars of criminality securing a global crime underbelly because George Soros loves them and considers them useful idiotic proxies for his newest scheme called cap and trade. But you knew that. What you should know is that the facts about Correa and Pesantez, however easy to have in hand, are officially denied by the Obama team to shelter that which should not be sheltered and should instead be factually analyzed.

The JOURNAL states honestly, “the maneuver is designed to take political control and guarantee the permanence of the government of the former Sandinista guerrilla… This is the same path that Venezuela, Ecuador and Bolivia have traveled. In those countries civil liberties have been destroyed, the press is harassed and political adversaries are routinely imprisoned without due process.  Also familiar is the international silence surrounding these antidemocratic actions.” 

In other words, justice has ended in Ecuador under Correa and democracy hasn’t got a chance. But the above article reports mostly on Nicaragaua, following a parallel track. It is no surprise that Correa’s own consigliere, Mr Paul Reichler – also of Soros activists- is also long term consigliere to the Cuban-ALBA perv Danny Orgeta. Same counsel, same goals, same fraudsters. Know your facts is always good advice especially when death and bankruptcy are on the line.

With no facts, justice is neutered and made irrelevant. Any responsible lawyer recalls the old line, “just the facts” or the cry for “the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth, so help me God.” While God may not be within 5 million miles of the Cuban ALBA scamsters acting on their own bizarre druggie head shop polytheism of Pachamama and Cuban-Haitian santaria cults as official state religion, if fraud is to end and sanity restored, all facts must be on the table, not the Correa-Chavez state mandated and practiced perversion of  normative religion to assure their blessed criminal manipulative mindset which is the ultimate perversion.

-Pedro Camargo for ECrisis

 

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