Posts Tagged ‘Honduras’

Chavez says Obama did “nothing” to deserve Nobel.

Monday, October 12th, 2009

It is really bad when even your new friends don’t support you!

First SNL turns on The Obama and now Hugo Chavez! What is next?  The previously unaccomplished President has continued his past record. But you don’t need to achieve and accomplish anything when you are the new poster boy for global socialism. Plus we are sure The Obama has the full support of dictator Wannabe former Honduran  President Manuel Zelaya who sneaked back into Honduras.

Costa Rica’s president Óscar Arias Sánchez recently commented on Obama’s latest accomplishment. Arias was quoted by the local press, stating that Obama “looks good” accepting the 2009 Nobel Peace Prize, although he “has not achieved anything concrete in the field of world peace.” 

The Obama is not about  accomplishment, he is about selling The Obama. How can a myth who was handed the Peace prize for 11 days of hope and change not be worshipped.  Not since James T Kirk has the world had a fighter and supporter for the new world order like The Obama, unless of course it was Spock.  It has only been a few months since The Obama ascended to the role of leader of the future socialist America.  Please lets give The Obama a chance. Maybe someone could even right a song about it… You know it is to bad John Lennon isn’t around.  You know it could be:

all we are saying is give The Obama a chance all we are saying is give The Obama a chance all we are saying is give The Obama a chance. How is that for a start? Just get those lyrics into any school singing program and we are all set.

http://www.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idUSTRE59A1MU20091011

In Honduras–Micheletti is expected to allow members of the Organization of American States to enter the country.

Wednesday, October 7th, 2009

Micheletti is expected to allow members of the Organization of American States to enter the country this week to attempt to mediate a solution to the crisis. Meanwhile, Hondurans grow increasingly indifferent about the coming election.

 Only 43 percent of eligible voters say they will cast ballots and almost half believe the elections will be fraudulent. One of Central America’s most unpopular presidents — second only to Nicaragua’s Daniel Ortega, another of Chavez’s pals by the way Zelaya knows he can’t win a presidential election any time soon.

 Making things even worse, President Barack Obama’s administration, which correctly criticized Venezuela and Brazil for letting Zelaya into Honduras, says it won’t recognize the scheduled November election unless the political crisis is resolved. That gives carte blanche to Zelaya. The more turmoil Zelaya creates, the closer to civil war the country will be. (Alexandre Marinis, political economist and founding partner of Mosaico Economia Politica, is a Bloomberg News columnist. The opinions expressed are his own.)

Obama still looking to punish Honduras for resisting Presidental advice from Obama.

Tuesday, September 22nd, 2009

Why is it no one is telling the Central and South American  Dictators and Barack Obama to get out of and stay out of the business of the peaceful Honduras. The Honduran interim President, Roberto Micheletti, says the U.S. has revoked his diplomatic and tourist visas.   

President Micheletti, who came to power in June through orders from the supreme court in Honduras, said the move was a “sign of the pressure the US government was exerting” on Honduras.    The US has condemned the coup and demanded the return to power of the deposed president, Manuel Zelaya.   President Micheletti said he was not pleased that the US Consulate addressed him as president of Congress – his prior role.

Left-leaning President Zelaya was ousted from power and forced to leave the country on 28 June.Last week, the US halted all non-humanitarian aid to Honduras – about $30m (£18.4m).

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said on Monday ousted Honduran President Manuel Zelaya and the de facto government must find a way to talk and to avoid violence following his return to the Central American nation.

We should be supporting  our friends in Central America and siding with freedom for the people and NOT trying to install a new Dictator. Let Honduras decide what it’s future is.

United States Should be Supporting the People of Honduras

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009

Just maybe the United States should be supporting the people of Honduras and not a Chavez want to be.  Look at the situation and what happened and you might not believe the state run American media reports of a coup.

Read this report from http://www.hondurasthisweek.com/

The Constitution of Honduras contains 379 articles, all which can be reformed or removed except for seven of them. These seven articles are known in Spanish as “articulos petreos”, meaning that they cannot be altered or reformed in any way; they define the form of government, the national territory, and the extent and limit of presidential terms. So, 372 or 98.15% of the articles in the Constitution of Honduras can be legally reformed. So then, why did Mr. Manuel Zelaya so desperately insist on summoning a National Constituent Assembly to draft a new constitution? The answer is simple; he wanted to change the 7 irreformable articles and extend his presidential term, imitating Presidents such as Hugo Chavez of Venezuela and Rafael Correa of Ecuador. These irreformable articles or “articulos petreos” exist as the necessary consequence of the historical political instability in Latin America, where throughout its history many leaders have sought to stay in power indefinitely.

Now we move on to the question on everyone’s mind. Was Mr. Manuel Zelaya the victim of a coup d’état? Let’s see, contrary to what was first said by the International Media (whose only source of information at the time was Mr. Zelaya himself) the military is not in power in Honduras or controls any of the three branches of government or ever did for that matter, so that discards coups 1, 2, 3 and 5 (breakthrough, veto, guardian, and bloodless coup d’état); as they require that the military at one point control one or more of the branches of government. Next up we have the Pronouncement, which clearly states that after the coup d’état the military must establish a new civil government. In Honduras the Legislative Branch is composed of the same 128 congressmen/ congresswomen elected almost four years ago, and the Judicial Branch is composed of 15 Supreme Court judges elected by Congress on January of 2009, six months before the so called “coup d’état” occurred. So this also discards candidate number 6 the Pronouncement, and that only leaves candidate number 4, a self coup d’état, and this my friends is where the plot gets thicker than grandma’s good old gravy.

We must now proceed to breakdown the definition of a self coup d’état, so the reader may see that it fits like a glove. A Self coup d’état is usually enacted by the country’s democratically elected leaders, usually its Head of State. -In this case President Manuel Zelaya himself.

And aimed at dissolving one or more of the three branches of government (legislative, judicial, and executive).-In this case the Legislative and Judicial branches who opposed his illegal electoral vote. Remember how he refused to approve a National Budget, refused to ratify or veto more than 96 bills over a three year span, and refused to provide the National Congress with the disbursements they were legally entitled to; remember him saying, “I will only give them enough for their cups of coffee.” Remember how he repeatedly chose to ignore and not abide by the rulings and judicial notices issued by the Supreme Court. Surely Mr. Zelaya was not very fond of the two other branches of the government.

Usually by annulling the current constitution, drafting a new one, and granting dictatorial powers to the Head of State.- The famous project for Fourth Ballot Box (Proyecto de la Cuarta Urna), an illegal and unconstitutional electoral vote promoted by President Manuel Zelaya. Its sole purpose was to install a National Constituent Assembly (annulling the current constitution) and drafting a new one (the lawyer from Spain), which would dissolve the existing Legislative and Judicial branches, replace them with new ones to his liking; and extend the presidential term indefinitely. In essence it would change the form of government of Honduras. Thankfully Montesquieu’s checks and balances prevailed. The fourth ballot box was nothing more than a self coup d’état disguised as democracy, a ballot box filled with predetermined votes (remember the 43 computers impounded on June 28).

Indeed there was a coup d’état in Honduras on June 28th, a self coup d’état, one which did not culminate, and one the International Media does not speak of for reasons that truly baffle the bounds of human logic. For after analyzing the facts it is evident and obvious.

Some might still argue that on June 28th Mr. Manuel Zelaya was the victim of a coup d’état, as he was forcefully exiled from Honduras at gunpoint by the military, a version which currently predominates amongst the International Media. It is interesting how Mr. Zelaya cunningly limits himself to only telling a part of the story, and for those who believe him and have chosen not to search for the truth, here is what he will never willingly admit:

Article 239: The citizen, who has served as head of the Executive Branch, shall not serve again as President or Vice-President of the Republic. He who violates this disposition or proposes its reform, as well as all those who support him directly or indirectly, shall immediately cease in the functions of their respective posts, and will be disabled for a period of 10 years to hold any public office.

President Manuel Zelaya proposed and even began to carry out a constitutional reform with his project of a Fourth Ballot Box (Proyecto de la Cuarta Urna) on June 28th. A reform which sought to change the 7 irreformable articles also known as “articulos petreos”, in an attempt to extend his presidential term. Thus he clearly violated article 239, and on June 28th at exactly 5:00 AM when the illegal electoral vote began he removed himself from office through his own unconstitutional actions. The man who was arrested and then exiled was not the President of the Republic of Honduras; he was an ordinary citizen, nothing more nothing less. So if a president was not forcefully removed from office and exiled, how can we have a military coup? We simply cannot, it truly is as simple as that; the truth is enlightening isn’t it?

Article 102: No Honduran citizen can be expatriated or handed over by the authorities to a foreign state.

Many will argue that when Mr. Manuel Zelaya was put on plane and flown to Costa Rica he was exiled, and article 102 of the Constitution of Honduras was violated along with his personal constitutional rights and guarantees. Indeed they have a strong and valid point, but once again they purposely fail to tell the whole story; for the Constitution of Honduras is far wiser in its ways.

 

Article 42: The status of citizenship is lost when: 4) Restricting the liberty to vote, altering electoral documents, or employing fraudulent means to undermine the will and the vote of the people.

5) Inciting, promoting, or supporting the continuance or reelection of the President of the Republic of Honduras.

It seems that when the story is told in its entirety the situation becomes clearer. Mr. Manuel Zelaya employed fraudulent means to undermine the vote of the people to his own benefit, in this case his own people, his followers (the 43 computers impounded on June 28th). For a period of over six months he publicly and repeatedly incited, promoted and supported his own continuance and his own reelection to the Presidency. The Honduran citizenship of the man who was flown and exiled to Costa Rica is obviously in serious doubt.

The story of Mr. Manuel Zelaya is the story of a man obsessed with power, so obsessed that he believed himself to be superior to the Legislative and Judicial branches of his country and sought recklessly his continuance in power. Currently he has several pending trials in Honduras, and perhaps the best way to resolve the Honduran political crisis is for Mr. Zelaya to turn himself in to the judicial authorities, and to not campaign the Western Hemisphere clamoring “coup d’état”.

In the end the Honduran people have taught us and reminded us something we have taken for granted and forgotten long ago, to defend our Freedom, our Constitution and its Laws; and that no man -not even a President- is above the Law. For this they should be congratulated and applauded, and not condemned by the International Community. I would like to thank you, the reader, for taking the time to read this article. My most sincere thanks.