Leonardo DiCaprio Endorses Kamala Harris, Bashes Trump on Climate Change

Leonardo DiCaprio has endorsed Kamala Harris for president.

In a video posted to Instagram, the Oscar-winning actor discussed the damage of recent hurricanes Helene and Milton, saying “these unnatural disasters were caused by climate change.”

Source: Leonardo DiCaprio Endorses Kamala Harris, Bashes Trump on Climate Change

Virginia’s Obviously Illegal Voter Purge Was Illegal, Court Rules – Mother Jones

On Friday, a Virginia judge ruled that Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s recent purge of close to two thousand voters from state rolls—within 90 days of November’s election—was illegal. Now, with that election less than two weeks away, the state must reinstate all 1,600 revoked registrations.

Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals Judge Patricia Giles found that Youngkin’s purge violated the National Voter Registration Act, a federal law that prevents states from removing ineligible voters from the rolls within 90 days of the election.

Source: Virginia’s Obviously Illegal Voter Purge Was Illegal, Court Rules – Mother Jones

What’s this man selling? – Cartier bought some of it, did you, too? | Barbara Crane Navarro

Pedro Pérez Miranda, alias “Peter Ferrari”

Anyone who is considering buying or wearing gold should see the “Dirty Gold” episode of Netflix’s extraordinary documentary anthology series, “Dirty Money”! It’s a real life version of “Narcos“!

Ferrari was one of the principal culprits involved in a monumental scheme to smuggle gold illegally mined in Peru to Miami, a focal point of the gold and jewelry business as well as the business of money laundering.

Not only gold jewelry, watches and accessories corporations like Cartier were unintentionally buying this illegal gold, it was also bought by Apple for their phones and by automobile companies for electronic components. Could money you spent on something you purchased have subsidized Ferrari’s yacht or cars?

Did Ferrari receive your inadvertent contribution to his business and leisure activities?

Netflix’s “Dirty Gold” traces the hidden functioning of Miami’s nebulous gold trade which helps powerful organized crime groups in Latin America whitewash their criminal profits.

The Miami Herald published an extensive investigation of the international drug trade they titled: “How drug lords make billions smuggling gold to Miami for your jewelry and phones.

photo: Dirty Gold Clean Cash – Miami Herald Illustration

“A large part of the gold that’s commercialized in the world comes stained by blood and human rights abuses.

One big difference between cocaine and gold? Cocaine is obviously illegal. With gold, it’s hard to tell. Papers can be forged. The metal can be melted and remelted until its origin is impossible to pinpoint.

Here’s how gold fits in: Drug-cartel associates posing as precious-metals traders buy and mine gold in Latin America. Cocaine profits are their seed money. They sell the metal through front companies — hiding its criminal taint — to refineries in the United States and other major gold-buying nations like Switzerland, Italy, England and the United Arab Emirates. Once the deal is made, the cocaine kingpins have successfully turned their dirty gold into clean cash. To the outside world, they’re not drug dealers anymore; they’re gold traders. That’s money laundering.

Mining regions in the rainforest have become epicenters of human trafficking, disease and environmental destruction, according to government officials and human rights investigators. Miners are forced into slavery. Prostitutes set up camps near the miners, fueling the spread of sexually transmitted infections. One human rights group found that 2,000 sex workers, 60 percent of them children, were employed in a single gold mining area in Peru. Meanwhile, strip mining and the indiscriminate use of mercury to ferret out gold are turning swaths of the world’s most biodiverse ecosystems into a nightmarish moonscape.

Peru declared a temporary state of emergency over widespread mercury poisoning in Madre de Dios, a jungle province rife with illegal mining. Nearly four in five adults in the area’s capital city tested positive for dangerous levels of mercury…”

 Photo: gold miner using his body to mix mercury with ore and water  / “Dirty Gold” – Netflix

As much as 75% of the gold extracted each year is used for jewelry, watches and other vain and futile status symbols sold by Cartier and other corporations in the luxury and discount gold jewelry industry worldwide.

photo: screenshot from Dirty Gold / Netflix

Tens of thousands of rainforest trees must be uprooted, hundreds of tons of soil excavated and mixed with dozens of tons of toxic environmental pollutants that contaminate Indigenous lands for that one special gold ring…

photos: screenshots from “Dirty Gold” / Netflix

Organized crime, drug cartels, refineries and banks are complicit and the criminals in charge of the gold industry’s real “chain of custody” will simply smuggle it through neighboring countries if a government attempts to crack down. The details are illustrated in this report: report from NGO Instituto Escolhas. “What they don’t tell you about Gold” (Excellent graphics with text in English and Portuguese).

Photo: Gold mining destruction in Peru’s Madre de Dios region seen from space – NASA

Here are excerpts from a recent article in Reuters:

« …even the central bank does not know if the gold it buys is legal or illegal.

…called on the government to take steps to break a network that launders illegal gold through the financial system for sale to buyers in countries like Switzerland and Britain.

Currently, gold is sold with paper receipts based on the ‘good faith’ of the seller, making it impossible to trace its origin. »

« Accounting for gold »

Huge quantities of gold flow around the world every year. Behind this insatiable appetite is a dark truth of money laundering, illegal mining, environmental damage and human misery.

image: Insight Crime

Recent estimates show that illegal gold extraction accounts for 28% of gold mined in Peru, 30% in Bolivia, 50% in Brazil, 77% in Ecuador, 80% in Colombia, & 80–90% in Venezuela. It is estimated that the value of illegal gold exports is comparable to the value of cocaine exports.

If your watch is not only telling you what time it is, but also indicating that you are a status seeker because of the gold (and diamonds?) it features, it’s time to rethink your values and realize that nature is far, far more valuable than gold.

Please consider not upgrading your phone as long as it’s working properly. Resist the advertising that wants you to believe that newer is better!

Please help end the cycle of deforestation and devastation for the sake of nature, wildlife and Indigenous peoples!

The consumption of gold, this unnecessary, environment-ravaging product fueled by publicity that attempts to convince the gullible that owning gold confers glamor or worth must end!

The power and responsibility lies with us consumers. If we purchase gold or other products from deforestation, we’re complicit.

Please boycott ALL products from deforestation; gold, palm oil, gemstones, exotic wood, soy, beef, etc. !!!

Source: What’s this man selling? – Cartier bought some of it, did you, too? | Barbara Crane Navarro

In the Amazon, the World’s Largest Reservoir of Biodiversity, Two-Thirds of Species Have Lost Habitat to Deforestation! – InsideClimate News | Barbara Crane Navarro

In the Amazon, the World’s Largest Reservoir of Biodiversity, Two-Thirds of Species Have Lost Habitat to … – InsideClimate News https://ift.tt/3DCVYWb In the Amazon, the World’s Largest Reservoir of Biodiversity, Two-Thirds of Species Have Lost Habitat to …  InsideClimate News Superforest via “deforestation” – Google News https://ift.tt/2tI2HiE

In the Amazon, the World’s Largest Reservoir of Biodiversity, Two-Thirds of Species Have Lost Habitat to … – InsideClimate News —

Source: In the Amazon, the World’s Largest Reservoir of Biodiversity, Two-Thirds of Species Have Lost Habitat to Deforestation! – InsideClimate News | Barbara Crane Navarro

Debajo de la hojarasca – Santiago Galicia Rojon Serrallonga

Derechos reservados conforme a la ley/ Copyright

Debajo de la hojarasca otoñal quedaron los tréboles, plantas y flores de la primavera, con sus colores y sus perfumes diluidos y perdidos, igual que las alas de las libélulas y de las mariposas que eran tan libres y plenas; también permanecen, desoladas, tristes y solitarias, las gotas diáfanas de la lluvia del verano y los charcos límpidos que retrataban las frondas de los árboles, las siluetas de las montañas, el vuelo de las aves, las formas cambiantes de las nubes y la profundidad del cielo. Debajo de la hojarasca, la gente deja sus ayeres y sus recuerdos, sus vivencias y sus sueños, sus ilusiones y sus desencantos. Debajo de la hojarasca existe un escenario que pulula, un compendio de historias, incontables motivos, biografías de los de entonces y de uno también, porque están reunidos el ayer, el hoy y probablemente el futuro, acaso porque el tiempo solo es la medida de un lapso. Debajo de la hojarasca quedó lo que, de cierta manera, tú, yo, ellos, nosotros, ustedes, vivimos en otras estaciones ya irrecuperables -el tiempo, lo he repetido tantas veces, no tiene apegos y es indiferente a todo-, y quizá, si alguno permanece sentado en la banca de hierro o de piedra, indudablemente descubrirá que está rodeado de una alfombra amarilla, café, naranja, rojiza y violeta que el aire barrerá y llevará de un lado a otro, sin una dirección clara, y con el riesgo de que el frío del invierno, con su nieve blanquecina, llegue pronto y modifique el paisaje. Incontables pasajeros se refugian en el interior de la estación, en espera, quizá, de un tren que los traslade a otros rumbos; pero no se dan cuenta de que las rutas no están diseñadas para satisfacer necesidades, gustos, intereses o caprichos, porque es uno quien debe incorporarse del asiento inmóvil, en la sala de espera, con la decisión e idea de buscar y conquistar su propio camino, su itinerario existencial, su destino temporal e inmortal, antes de quedar atrapado y yerto debajo de la hojarasca.

Derechos reservados conforme a la ley/ Copyright

Source: Debajo de la hojarasca – Santiago Galicia Rojon Serrallonga