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¿Wappin? Covers and tributes / Versiones y homenajes

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Bessie Smith, from the Bettmann Archives.

It’s creative work, but all music is derivative.
Es trabajo creativo, pero toda la música es derivada.

Monalisa y Rodrigo – Lejos de Ti
https://youtu.be/x6qeoGkTnvQ

Willie Nelson & Bob Dylan – Pancho and Lefty
https://youtu.be/Fd41cVwl9FY

The Corrs – Little Wing
https://youtu.be/hVq8TtPHYaw

Jimi Hendrix – All Along The Watchtower
https://youtu.be/2ddW7MkKj6c

The Beatles – Roll Over Beethoven
https://youtu.be/Hz5jXwOXgKQ

McCall Brothers Band – Crossroads (Robert Johnson Tribute)
https://youtu.be/F2vMnwhYLMw

María Lavalle – Los ejes de mi carreta
https://youtu.be/IKYZeCL9WE8

Valerie Wellilngton – Wasted Life Blues
https://youtu.be/j_9sZuLnlW58

Rubén Blades – La Rosa de os Vientos
https://youtu.be/RyOmx4Hz1XM

Lady Gaga & Sting – Stand By Me
https://youtu.be/wXOWy3zZq-A

Luis Fonsi & Daddy Yankee – Despacito
https://youtu.be/1Tx_pPB2mU8

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Hightower, Time to fix the US Supreme Court

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supremes
Dark clouds behind the Supreme Court. The justices aren’t even hiding it anymore. Shutterstock photo.

The Supreme Court is corrupt. Let’s fix it.

by Jim Hightower

When public officials get themselves mired in the muck of corruption, they can always count on Senator Ted Cruz to issue a moral judgment: If the offender is a Democrat, he pronounces the corruption inexcusably grotesque; if it’s a Republican, he wails that the offender is the victim.

For example, Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas was recently caught (yet again) butt-deep in judicial immorality, taking hundreds of thousands of dollars’ worth of freebies from a Texas real estate baron who has both a partisan and corporate interest in Thomas’ court rulings.

So, Cruz to the rescue! No judicial impropriety here, he squawks, for this is nothing but a diabolical plot by Democrats to “smear” poor Clarence.

But Thomas is busy smearing himself. From the start of his court tenure, Thomas has been a shameless seeker of personal gain, tucking untold sums from untold sources in the inner pockets of his judicial robes.

He learned to hide his corruption in 2004, when he actually reported taking pricey gifts from a special interest, which got him widely condemned. So, he “reformed.”

No, he didn’t quit taking gimmes — he just quit disclosing them!

Thomas is a supreme grifter, but sadly he’s not alone. Many recent justices have fallen from the pedestal of judicial integrity, cozying up to the moneyed interests. Gifts aside, we now have a hyper-partisan, right-wing Republican majority taking their judicial opinions from those same interests, turning America’s unelected third branch of government into an autocratic, plutocratic political agency.

Then they wonder why their public approval rating – and legitimacy – are in the ditch! Since they won’t reform themselves, we the people must do it for them. To help, go to fixthecourt.com.

 

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Might the high court void Panama City’s tax hike for lack of consultation?

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alcalde
The thing about the mayor, with his artificial beach that would need constant sand replacement, and on a horribly polluted part of Panama Bay; and with his idea to replace a reasonably good seafood market with a traffic nightmare, and so on…. His money-driven projects have been so at odds with both reality and those who would be affected that they tend to come to naught. Photo of Mayor Fábrega by the alcaldia.

Supreme Court to rule on the city’s
tax hike on local businesses

by Eric Jackson

Lemme see, against the traditional trend, and down in the polls — what can PRD politicians pull out of the bag of corny tricks?

Recall last year — a president who’s also a rancher and who had famously resigned as Martín Torrijos’s agriculture minister to protest Panama’s “free trade” deal with the USA got surprisingly “realistic” and neoliberal on his arrival at the Presidencia. The worldwide inflation had its roots in an epidemic and a war in one of the world’s great grain-producing regions but Nito also stood by as the ownership of the Panamanian telecommunications industry concentrated and raised prices. An entrenched drug importers’ cartel gave us the region’s highest medicine prices as an epidemic raged. Fuel prices were way up, especially to the chagrin of those who drove for a living. Many of the public school teachers had not been paid.

The president, ailing with a rare blood cancer, went up to the United States for special treatment and left is banking lawyer VP with the fake smile in charge. The better of the teachers’ unions walked out and a great many other working people — including the agricultural produce truckers — joined them. The traditional form of popular protest against government policies — blockage of the roads — ensued for a chaotic July.

So promises, even decrees, were made. A “national dialogue” was convened. The Catholic Church pulled out of the “dialogue” in disgust. Promises, even decrees, were broken. Nearly a year later teachers’ unions are talking about what to do about their unpaid members.

But last August, as the national crisis was easing and people were paying attention to the national dialogue, politicians in the capital were pulling a fast one. With little notice, no formal hearings and the reporters looking at other things, Mayor Fábrega and 19 of the city’s 23 representantes passed a tax hike on Panama City businesses.

A few people did notice and question. So assurances and excuses were forthcoming.

Who are the vast majority of people doing business in the city? It’s the informal sector, which nationwide comprises about half of Panama’s work force. The guy who sells fruit at the traffic intersection. The lady who does pedicures and toenail painting on a sidewalk adjacent to Avenida Central. The man who plays his instrument for what people toss in the hat. The woman who roasts and sells meat on a stick. The photographer, the writer, the courier who isn’t on anybody’s payroll. Mayor José Luis Fábrega Polleri, a mechanical engineer by training and a legislator before he got to city hall, assured THOSE folks that he didn’t intend to tax THEM. The mechanics of extracting blood from stones, you see, don’t especially work.

When businesspeople who were expected to pay noticed, they were blown off by a classic from the multi-partisan bag of Panamanian political tricks. They didn’t NEED to be consulted, you see, because this was not a tax increase but a tax “reorganization.” It was hidden in a resolution about a moratorium on tax and interest payments in the wake of the COVID disaster, the ticket to which the reporters paid their attention. (Ye olde “camarón,” they call this oft-pulled stunt in Panamanian politics.) Citing God, city council president Yoira Perea said she was surprised that anyone would complain.

PLUS, in the absence of anything recognizable as public hearings, the city’s PRD pols pulled out a new requirement — to register an objection someone had to do so in writing through the municipal treasury department. Is there a form for that? They didn’t say, and certainly didn’t publish that.

One of the nation’s business leaders, Panamanian Business Executives Association president Temístocles Rosas, put it this way: Resolution 142 of August 2, 2022 was presented “in a very particular way, highlighting the moratorium but concealing the tax hike.”

One guy who wasn’t long fooled was one of Panama’s activist “people’s lawyers,” Ernesto Cedeño. But even then it took him much time and effort to gather such facts as were allowed to be known and file his lawsuit. That happened this past February 7, and he was soon joined by the heads of the Chamber of Commerce (CCIAP) and the business execs’ association (APEDE). Two of the key witnesses were dissident Panameñista representantes, Ricky Domínguez from Bella Vista and Willie Bermúdez from Don Bosco.

Just a party-line thing? Where was the upwelling of support for the tax hike from the PRD’s Entrepreneurial Front, an important part of the torrijista donor base? And are there actually any Omar Torrijos fans out there, in the city’s PRD rank-and-file, or perhaps more importantly among the Cortizo appointees to the high court? The general actually did have something to say about the matter of consulting people. It’s one of his more celebrated sayings: 

“He who consults more errs less.”

In next year’s elections the PRD is likely to be fragmented at the presidential level, with former PRD president Martín Torrijos — the general’s son — in an alliance with the former Christian Democratic Partido Popular and PRD legislator Zulay Rodríguez running as a neofascist independent. It’s not a stretch to imagine such divisions down at the municipal level as well. This time, with an unpopular tax increase during hard times to bludgeon the incumbents.

On a global level, the PRD, like Spain’s Socialist Workers Party, the British Labour Party, Canada’s New Democratic Party, the German Social Democrats and so on, is a member of the Socialist International. But the Panamanian left has long complained that the Democratic Revolutionary Party isn’t very revolutionary, nor very democratic, nor for that matter committed to any sort of socialist principles. Yet sprinkled among the base, there are many who believe in the stated principles. 

The lawsuit

Cedeño’s lawsuit to nullify the tax hike was promptly accepted by Magistrate Carlos Vásquez. That action was supposed to stay any city action on the tax hike, but some business owners complain that after the measure’s suspension while the matter was before the court, city tax collectors demanded, or collected, the increased amount.

Do we get out of Panamanian law’s favorite realm, the intricacies of procedure, and take a more gringocentric look at economic realities? This is the main reason why Fábrega, and his party’s representantes — those of which entertainer, activist and commentator Rubén Blades describes as a “political patronage party” — so badly need to collect more taxes at the moment:

(A chart of the growth of the municipal payroll under Mayor Fábrega.)

First reports, however, are that in the initial investigative phase of the Supreme Court case the plaintiffs are being grilled about when they learned about the tax hike and if or when they filed some written objection. Does it mean an inclination to rule for the city on some procedural ground? We shall see.

In any case, the tax hike is suspended until a decision is announced, and if that upholds the tax increase it will be a campaign issue for next year’s elections, surely not just at the municipal level.

 

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Last night’s town hall farce: it’s one medium, several media

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Wikimedia graphic adapted from a work by Ymnes.

They’re all the same? Hardly

 

Editor’s note: CNN, with its audience selection and what that audience did, really piled on last night. But the original sin is that this large medium, with its international reach and millions of viewers, groveled before and gave a platform to a notorious liar. Truth is the first principle in worthy journalism, and CNN violated it in that fashion.

 

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Links about aspects of gun violence not usually considered

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It’s real — bullies will notice and take advantage, lives will get warped

by Eric Jackson

It makes for compelling television. Videos and stills of people fleeing in terror from the latest mass shooting.

However, these spectacular events are but a tiny corner of the enormous reality of gun violence and the wake it leaves among the people amidst whom it has passed. In the USA, most firearms deaths are suicides, often accompanied by assaults to drive away anyone who might intervene. Then consider why the law makes armed robbery such an aggravated crime, far more than mere theft but the pointing of a weapon that in that instant leaves the victim uncertain of living to see the next instant.

The worst journalism treats it as ‘Bang Bang You’re Dead’ and those unpunctured by bullets are not counted. The worst politics deny funds to those who would study the depth and breadth of gun violence’s effects — the gun sellers don’t want people to know.

Click on these links, read what’s there, and begin to understand. Or perhaps you have survived and DO know, yet might know better from a more systematic and scientific framework.

https://www.ncoa.org/article/older-adult-and-gun-violence-trauma-tips-for-the-aging-network

https://jjie.org/2023/03/29/gun-violence-trauma-young-shooting-victims-and-witnesses-face-higher-risks-of-ptsd-addiction-being-desensitized-to-gun-violence/

https://www.asanet.org/footnotes-article/society-survivors-survivor-society-examining-gun-trauma-us/

https://namica.org/advocacy/criminal-justice-advocacy/the-truth-about-mental-health-and-gun-violence/

https://www.mindbodygreen.com/articles/my-experience-with-trauma-after-being-held-at-gunpoint

at https://www.verywellmind.com/shooting-ptsd-from-a-shooting-2797200# :

PTSD Symptoms That May Arise Following a Shooting

In the aftermath of a shooting, a person may experience a number of symptoms that would be considered part of an acute stress disorder response (or if they persist beyond one month, a PTSD response). Some of these symptoms may include:

• Frequent and intense nightmares about the event
• Intrusive thoughts or memories about the shooting that are easily triggered by things in your environment (for example, newspaper articles, television shows, movies, conversations about the shooting)
• Attempts to avoid situations or places that remind you of the shooting or places where you feel you could be in danger of experiencing a similar event again (for example, unfamiliar or crowded places)
• A high level of fear and anxiety upon hearing sounds that are similar to a gunshot, such as a car backfiring or fireworks
• Feeling constantly on edge or always on guard, almost as if there is danger lurking around every corner
• Having difficulties sleeping or staying asleep

 

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Lula meets Sunak, calls for him to free Julian Assange

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Lula and Sunak
British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak hosts Brazilian President Lula da Silva at No. 10 Downing Street. Brazil’s leader spoke to both Sunak and the press corps about the Assange case while in London: “The press, which defends freedom of the press, does nothing to free this citizen,” Lula lamented. Photo by Simon Walker — No. 10 Downing Street.

Brazilian President Lula da Silva calls
for freedom for Julian Assange

by the Common Dreams staff

Brazil’s President Luiz Inacio “Lula” da Silva has called for freedom for Julian Assange and denounced the lack of concerted efforts to free the journalist.

Lula spoke to a group of reporters in London Saturday while in town to attend the coronation of King Charles III.

Assange, the WikiLeaks founder, has spent four years in Britain’s Belmarsh Prison while fighting extradition to the United States.

“It is an embarrassment that a journalist who denounced trickery by one state against another is arrested, condemned to die in jail and we do nothing to free him. It’s a crazy thing,” Lula told reporters. “We talk about freedom of expression; the guy is in prison because he denounced wrongdoing. And the press doesn’t do anything in defense of this journalist. I can’t understand it.”

“I think there must be a movement of world press in his defense. Not in regard to his person, but to defend the right to denounce,” Lula told the reporters. “The guy didn’t denounce anything vulgar. He denounced that a state was spying on others, and that became a crime against the journalist. The press, which defends freedom of the press, does nothing to free this citizen. It’s sad, but it’s true.”

Also, Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said on Friday he too was frustrated over the continued detention of Julian Assange: “enough is enough.”

“I know it’s frustrating, I share the frustration,” Albanese told the Australian Broadcasting Corp. from London for the coronation of King Charles III.

“I can’t do more than make very clear what my position is, and the U.S. administration is certainly very aware of what the Australian government’s position is. There is nothing to be served by his ongoing incarceration.”

“Enough is enough, this needs to be brought to a conclusion, it needs to be worked through,” said Albanese.

Assange has battled for years to avoid being sent to the U.S., where the journalist faces 17 charges of espionage because of WikiLeaks’ publication of a trove of classified documents in 2010.

US prosecutors allege he published 700,000 secret classified documents which exposed the United States government and its wrongdoings in Iraq and Afghanistan. Wikileaks received the documents from Chelsea Manning.

Albanese said Australians cannot understand why the US would free the source who leaked the documents, Chelsea Manning, while Assange still faces life in prison.

President Joe Biden has been accused of hypocrisy for demanding the release of journalists around the world, while he actively seeks the extradition of Assange to face American espionage charges.

Assange faces a sentence of up to 175 years in a maximum security prison if extradited to the United States.

 

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Editorials: Environmental health; and Death squad boys

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Cerro Patacon on fire in a major way for at least the 10th time in the past four months. Photo by the Bomberos.

A health crisis that’s here and will get worse

We are told: “The Ministry of Health recommends the use of face masks in case of high smoke concentrations.”

Gee, thanks. If we have violent neighbors, do they also tell us to keep a supply of band-aids handy in the event that we are hacked with a machete or shot?

People with chronic skin and breathing problems are already observably affected by all the garbage fire, but for years to come there are going to be more cancer cases and more respiratory ailments coming into Panama’s public and private health care facilities because of all the toxic smoke to which people in the metro area have been exposed. Add to that similar situations here and there around the country.

When there is clearly someone to blame, prosecute that person. But that doesn’t fix very much.

Yes, we need a state-of-the-science solid waste management system to replace the Cerro Patacon dump and its smaller cousins. Not a new contract replete with bid rigging and kickbacks, but viable solutions.

Panama also needs to adjust its health care system to meet a known need. Heavy on the expertise in the clinics and hospitals, light on the consulting fees and jobs for relatives and those politically connected. The sorts of things to come are not a huge medical mystery.

It’s way past time that Panama institutionalized, structured and funded environmental health. If proper public health advice would impose difficult burdens on the public treasury, let’s talk about that as a nation and make the best informed responses that we can.

Is kicking the throwaway lifestyle harder than kicking a heroin addiction? Painful but vital either way. Worse if we pretend that there is no problem.

 

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Proud Boy Jeremy Bertino’s Right Wing Death Squad (RWDS) patch among his regalia. The guy pleaded guilty to seditious conspiracy and flipped to state’s evidence against his fellow gangsters. Cropped from a Wikimedia photo by Anthony Crider.

We made that mistake with Colombia’s right-wing paramilitaries and got infiltrated by the Clan del Golfo

Mauricio Garcia, the gunman who shot 15 people, eight of them fatally, at a store in Allen, Texas was Hispanic – by definition he must not be one of those white supremacists. So goes the theory circulated in Republican circles of the USA these days.

All moot by now because the gunman is dead, but we don’t want to give refuge to dark-skinned Cuban-American Proud Boys leader Enrique Tarrio either. And Augusto César Pinochet was also a Latino, and Seko Sese Mobutu was a black man.

Foreigners here are deportable by Panamanian law if they preach racial, ethnic or religious hatred. Although it’s usually white folks with colonial mentalities, the law here doesn’t go by the twists of US race relations.

When a cop ended Garcia’s rampage with a bullet, he was wearing one of those RWDS patches, too.

The sorts of US citizens who sport patches like that – and vandalize black churches, and attack the US Capitol, and brawl with people who oppose fascism or believe that the lives of black citizens matter, and threaten people online – are every bit as threatening to Panama as their Colombian counterparts who impress them so.

Migracion should be put to the task of keeping such people out of this country, and rooting out and expelling those who have slipped through. Nobody should be allowed to bring their foreign wars to our shores.

 

3
Ambassador Eleanor Roosevelt with the Spanish draft of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. UN photo.

Learn from the mistakes of others. You can’t live long enough to make them all yourself.

Eleanor Roosevelt

Bear in mind…

     Few people can see genius in someone who has offended them.

Robertson Davies     

     Man is a clever animal who behaves like an imbecile.

Albert Schweitzer     

     God gives every bird his worm, but he does not throw it into the nest.

Swedish Proverb     

 

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Rozdilsky, Appreciating Gordon Lightfoot

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Liberian bulket in Toronto
A bulk cargo carrier transporting sugar docked in downtown Toronto in October 2022. Phoro by J. Rozdilsky.

Gordon Lightfoot’s music raised awareness of Great Lakes maritime disasters

by Jack L. Rozdilsky, York University, Canada

On May 1, the 84-year-old Canadian folk music icon Gordon Lightfoot died at Toronto’s Sunnybrook Hospital. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau commented that Lightfoot’s legacy will live on in the dynamic Canadian soundscape he helped to shape.

In his over 500 songs, Lightfoot was one of Canada’s most beloved chroniclers. Upon his death, we can reflect on Lightfoot’s many impacts on Canadian culture and society.

Music chronicles

One small aspect of Lightfoot’s broader impact was his skill as a purveyor of the popular culture of disaster through music.

One of his most recognized songs was the Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald. That 1976 folk ballad was a six-minute documentarian’s song about a tragic 1970s Great Lakes shipwreck disaster.


‘Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald,’ by Gordon Lightfoot.

Lightfoot’s work popularized the Great Lakes bulk cargo shipping transport disaster through song, bringing the story of the wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald to millions of music fans. Without the song, that specific maritime disaster would not be as well known and might have faded into obscurity.

Lightfoot’s disaster music

Lightfoot is one of many Canadian musicians, albeit the most popular, who has carried forward the tradition of Canadian folk music providing a reliable narrative about disasters. Lightfoot’s contributions to disaster music include a well known and a lesser known ballad about contemporary shipwrecks, along with a song about a civil disturbance.

On Nov. 13, 1965, the SS Yarmouth Castle caught fire and sank, killing 90 people while en route from Florida to the Bahamas. The passenger ship — built in 1927 — had a wood superstructure making it dangerously susceptible to fire. In 1969, Lightfoot’s the Ballad of Yarmouth Castle detailed that maritime tragedy.


‘Ballad of Yarmouth Castle,’ by Gordon Lightfoot.

In June 1967, a police raid on an unlicensed bar triggered a series of racial grievances, leading to the Detroit Uprising. From the Canada side of the international border along the Detroit River, Windsorites lined the waterfront and watched the riot from afar as Detroit burned.

In his 1968 song, Black Day in July Lightfoot memorialized the civil disturbance with his music.


‘Black Day in July,’ by Gordon Lightfoot.

On Nov. 10, 1975, the SS Edmund Fitzgerald broke apart during a Lake Superior storm killing 29 sailors. Lightfoot was inspired to write the Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald after reading an article in Newsweek called “Great Lakes: The Cruellest Month.”

This song was by far Lightfoot’s most popular disaster song. While he took some artistic licence describing the shipwreck, the song was factual and timely.

A special role

Lightfoot had a special role in contributing to the legend of the Edmund Fitzgerald. In a 2010 interview, he said of the hundreds of songs that he has written, he was most proud of that 1970s shipwreck song.

The Great Lakes Shipwreck Museum at Whitefish Point, Mich., holds artifacts retrieved from depths of the Canadian portion of Lake Superior, including the Edmund Fitzgerald’s bell. The museum’s director stated that if it was not for Lightfoot’s song, awareness of the Edmund Fitzgerald would not be what it is now.

There is scant public awareness that historically 6,000 vessels have sunk in the Great Lakes, causing an estimated 30,000 deaths.

Lightfoot’s song also highlighted the role of Great Lakes shipping, which is taken for granted. Even in present day downtown Toronto, one can witness the unexpected sight of a bulk sugar carrier arriving from South America.

Bulk cargo carriers — servicing the North American industrial and agricultural heartland via the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence Seaway System — contribute to the $45 billion in economic activity from water transportation activities.

Increased awareness

While shipwreck disasters in the Great Lakes are not frequent, bulk transport by lake is not risk-free. Lightfoot’s ballad highlights the fact that Great Lakes shipwrecks are not only events of the distant past, but they also can have significant human costs in modern times.

In addition to artistic merit, entertainment value, or adding to the list of Canadian disaster songs, Lightfoot’s contribution to increased public awareness of Great Lakes maritime disaster risk is invaluable.

So significant was his contribution that, upon his death, Detroit’s Maritime Church rang its bell in memorium. In the ceremony, the bell rang 30 times: one chime for each of the 29 sailors lost on the Edmund Fitzgerald, and one additional chime to honour the life and legacy of Lightfoot.The Conversation

Jack L. Rozdilsky, Associate Professor of Disaster and Emergency Management, York University, Canada

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

 

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¿Wappin? Music for a full work day / Música para una jornada laboral completa

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IJD, one of many events
Kurt Elling and band on International Jazz Day.

Melodías para volver al trabajo
Back to work tunes

Harry Belafonte in Ravensburg, Germany 1988
https://youtu.be/_ddH9eQ06Ag

Ruben Blades y Seis del Solar – Concierto Todos Vuelven
https://youtu.be/GToCmiNfPH0

Björk at Coachella 2023
https://youtu.be/FldIKb0oqs4

Concierto Dia del Son Cubano
https://youtu.be/d_siG4dY6qs

David Gilmour – Live in Gdańsk 2006
https://youtu.be/XkQp5L4h1Vg

Rosalía – Lollapalooza Chile 2023
https://youtu.be/W3H-HUlB_tc

Herbie Hancock et al – International Jazz Day 2023
https://www.youtube.com/live/w5fpnf2htQo

Contact us by email at / Contáctanos por correo electrónico a fund4thepanamanews@gmail.com

 

To fend off hackers, organized trolls and other online vandalism, our website comments feature is switched off. Instead, come to our Facebook page to join in the discussion.

Para defendernos de los piratas informáticos, los trolls organizados y otros actos de vandalismo en línea, la función de comentarios de nuestro sitio web está desactivada. En cambio, ven a nuestra página de Facebook para unirte a la discusión.  

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Jackson, Scenes and impressions from a day trip into the city

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Paitilla sky
Paitilla sky. Photo by Eric Jackson.

Fleeting impressions by a guy who takes the bus

There are all of these obvious things that led to inferences as I lack or lacked anything close to full knowledge:

– Were the colegiales buses on strike or being hassled by authorities? Waiting at the caseta starting about six in the morning, at least a dozen regular route buses passed by, not stopping because they were jammed full of students. Didn’t see any of the yellow school buses, which are the privately owned colegiales. It took almost an hour to get a bus in to Anton.

– Outdoor advertising is severely depressed, with beer and food billboards the main exceptions. Does Ricky Martinelli still control much of that sector? Is the housing market that bad that developers don’t see the use of marketing at the moment? LOTS of little owner-installed ‘THIS farm, house, plot of land, business locale for sale’ stuff. But generally, the most empty billboards since the COVID lockdown, maybe ever.

– Plenty of unpaid PRD campaign signs along the way. Get into the city and Gaby stuff on upscale condo towers and Crispiano stuff on the backs of buses. Where is the Pedro Miguel González stuff?

– In Arraijan especially, hillsides along the road blighted by the combination of illegal burning and illegal dumping. Are they still doing that ‘you gotta pay to get your garbage picked up’ stuff in that crowded bedroom community for the capital? Will that place with its extremist capitalist dogma be the next source of Panama’s next locally-generated epidemic?

– Business seems generally slow in the city, more so than in Anton, which is also not totally thriving.

– There have been spritzes of rain and there are little patches of green, but it’s still pretty brown out in the fields. Delayed farm planting? I think there is a bunch of that.

– Some of what was once upscale and still in a way is has been allowed to get a bit ratty.

Add a layer of dry season burning to this thing that Telemetro reported earlier, and it’s what I saw on the Pan-American Highway going through Arraijan:

 

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