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Archive for April 15th, 2007

Puerto Rico Considering Same Sex Unions

2:40 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · GLBT| Puerto Rico · 3 Comments

15 Apr 2007

gayricans.jpgThe U.S colony of Puerto Rico is being pushed to do what the United States refuses to do, grant civil union status to same-sex couples. The blog, Blabbeando writes:

El Nuevo Dia says that Pedro Julio Serrano began his declaration by kissing his partner, Steven Toledo on his lips shocking some legislators. Earlier the paper also said that, at the end of his speech, Pedro Julio began to call on several same-sex couples in the audience by their names and, one by one, they stood up as he told the audience that “We are just as human as you are, we are just as equal as you are, we are just as Puerto Rican as you are. Honorable legislators, please do what is just, do what is right: Please validate equal rights before the law of all human beings. Everyone is everyone”

Wouldn’t it be a hugely powerful statement if Puerto Rico, who is subject to US laws, were to pass the measure and prove once and again how it truely is its own nation with a clear concept of the diversity that is the Puerto Rican people?

Via / Blabbeando

Ecuador Votes to Make Its Congress Weaker

1:31 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Ecuador| Politics · 1 Comment

15 Apr 2007

correa_rafael.jpgToday, Sunday, Ecuadorians are voting in a referendum put forth by President Rafael Correa on whether to create a special assembly to rewrite the nation’s constitution. Correa, a leftist president, who has maintained popular support since winning the presidential seat, put forward the proposal in order to weaken the power the nation’s congress, accused of rampant corruption, holds. But critics are calling Correa’s moves “Chavezesque” and worry about him having too much unchecked power.

Correa has not offered detailed proposals for the anti-corruption measures he envisions will result from a new constitution. But he has mentioned that a new charter should eliminate the authority of Congress — which is controlled by Ecuador’s traditional parties — to name judges and other judicial and electoral authorities.”His goal clearly is to accumulate power. There is no doubt of that,” said Benjamin Ortiz, head of a think tank in Quito, Ecuador’s capital. “His style and form of governing is intolerance. What we don’t know is the economic model he wants to lead us to.”

Socialism anyone?

Read more…


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