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John Mullinax
@johnmullinax.bsky.social
about 2 hours ago
Why LASD? Why? "police used tear gas and crowd control tactics to break up a peaceful protest near a federal building housing Marines and National Guard troops. Noriega reports the L.A. County Sheriff’s Department moved in aggressively despite no clear provocation."

www.nbcnews.com/video/police...

www.nbcnews.com

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Metrolink CA Bot
@metrolinkca-bot.bsky.social
about 4 hours ago
(IEOC Line) Train 1858 to San Bernardino-Downtown is delayed up to 20 minutes due to PTC issues.
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Mary Hess
@limelightonyou.bsky.social
about 4 hours ago
Why were Police in L.A. being aggressive on a “Pedestrian Bridge?” 🤨 The Police are now gassing pedestrians. The Police look like fools. It’s time to go home. #NoKings #Indivisible
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Kate
@rin-doodles.bsky.social
about 5 hours ago
Bikes and Los Angeles also always makes me think about the "we aren't California" argument when it comes to bike infrastructure in Winnipeg and other places with cold weather, but more people bike to work in Winnipeg than LA (% wise)
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Noa K Q
@kcboogieshoes.bsky.social
about 5 hours ago
What’s happening in downtown LA today was also happening citywide. There were ono Kings protests at the beach, the valley, in communities across the urban sprawl, groups of people gathered at intersections all over. It’s not just 20,000 downtown. People turned out across all 502 sq miles of LA.
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Orinoco Tribune
@orinocotribune.bsky.social
about 6 hours ago
Daniel Ortega Is No Bukele

orinocotribune.com

<p>By Jill Clark-Gollub  – Jun 11, 2025</p> <p style="text-align: right;"><strong>Ortega and Bukele are polar opposites: one invests in dignity and democracy, the other in mass incarceration and imperial alliances.</strong></p> <p>Opposition media from both Nicaragua and El Salvador, along with the Washington Post, Amnesty International, and Human Rights Watch, all vilify  Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega by equating him with Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele. Although Ortega and Bukele are both serving consecutive terms, and a Central American polling firm reports that they enjoy high popularity among their respective populations, the two presidents actually offer a study in contrasts.</p> <p><strong>Crime and punishment</strong><br /> Bukele is praised for drastically reducing violence in El Salvador, but his political career is actually based on perpetuating it. First, some history. The country’s gang problem originated in the bloody US-supported war of the 1980s, including US and Israeli funding and training of death squads, that forced thousands of young men to escape forced military recruitment by fleeing to the United States. As an underclass of undocumented immigrants, and without the support of their families, many of these young men wound up in gangs on the streets of Los Angeles or in its prisons. In the mid-1990s, thousands of these gang members were deported to El Salvador, bringing violence back to a country that had just lost 75,000 lives in a brutal conflict. As <a class="0" href="https://jacobin.com/2017/07/usaid-el-salvador-gangs-drug-war-security-fmln-arena" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">Hillary Goodfriend<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>writes, “the devastated neoliberal economic landscape proved fertile terrain for the US gang culture imported by Salvadoran youth deported from Los Angeles in the mid-1990s.” The right-wing Nationalist Republican Alliance (ARENA) governments of the postwar years responded to the gang problem with an iron fist.</p> <p>Then from 2009-2019, while the former guerrillas (Frente Farabundo Martí de Liberación Nacional—FMLN) were in office, a preventive approach was attempted. Structural problems were addressed with “unprecedented increases in social spending, including critical education, health care, land, infrastructure and agricultural investment.” But these efforts were frustrated by a majority opposition legislature that limited spending on such programs, and USAID funding for a private sector approach that favored the opposition. The FMLN also made its own mistakes, including secret negotiations (along with the Catholic Church) for a gang truce, which was initially successful but politically costly once it fell apart. Still, progress was made as Salvadoran youth found more alternatives.</p> <p>Nayib Bukele arrived on the national scene as the FMLN candidate for mayor of San Salvador in 2014. There has been suspicion that his political rise was based on secret deals with the gangs, and an increasing number of <a class="0" href="https://www.dropsitenews.com/p/secret-bukele-trump-deal-grenas" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">international media<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>are giving details on how that worked. He is alleged to have <a class="0" href="https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2025/05/29/trump-favorite-president-el-salvador-nayib-bukele/83896220007/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">bribed the gangs<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>for their loyalty in that mayoral race, outbidding the ARENA candidate by a two to one margin. Bukele soon broke with the FMLN and ran against the party in the 2019 presidential election. MS-13 gang leaders are alleged to have negotiated with him prior to the vote, demanding an end to extraditions to the US, shortened sentences, and control of territory. In return they reduced the homicide rate by hiding their crimes. After Bukele’s election, the official murder rate fell, but disappearances went up. This gang also helped him get out the vote for his legislative supermajority in 2021, sometimes violently. While he colludes with the gangs in secret, the public face of Bukele’s crime policy is a return to the repression of the ARENA years.</p> <p>In March 2022, Bukele instituted a state of exception which persists to this day and has led to the imprisonment of an additional 85,000 people, giving El Salvador the highest incarceration rate in the world. Several social movement leaders are among those detained without trial. Meanwhile, many Salvadorans enjoy comparative safety in the country’s streets since the gang violence is less visible and small businesses no longer have to make extortion payments. This, along with <a class="0" href="https://www.reuters.com/investigates/special-report/el-salvador-politics-media/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">savvy manipulation<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>of social media, has made the president extremely popular among a segment of the population, particularly voters living in the diaspora. Now Bukele has gleefully agreed to serve as an offshore jailer for Donald Trump, and seems to delight in images of dehumanized inmates in crowded cells, indicating that they will never leave. Conditions are torturous and rehabilitation is non-existent. As <a class="0" href="https://www.mintpressnews.com/nayib-bukele-worlds-coolest-dictator/289493/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">Alan MacLeod reports<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>, “cruelty is the point.” And violence persists.</p> <p>The photos at the top of this article show the stark contrast in attitude towards prisoners in Nicaragua vs. El Salvador. While Bukele serves cruelty and humiliation, Nicaragua’s Daniel Ortega focuses on human dignity and rehabilitation—particularly through education. A <a class="0" href="https://www.el19digital.com/articulos/ver/159364-formacion-tecnica-y-academica-para-8429-personas-de-los-sistema-penitenciario-del-pais" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">recent article<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>tells of some 8,400 inmates enrolled in university studies, vocational programs, and completing primary and secondary schooling. Inmates are also allowed to work, if they so choose, and their earnings are sent to their families. Sentences are frequently reduced for good behavior. Reconciliation is a hallmark of the Sandinista movement, which abolished the death penalty in 1979. Corporate media stories about “political prisoners” are part of a US-funded propaganda campaign and should be viewed skeptically. <a class="0" href="https://fair.org/home/nicaraguas-political-prisoners-would-be-criminals-by-us-standards/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">This article<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>gives information about the heinous crimes committed by those US media heroes.</p> <p>In Nicaragua there is minimal gang activity, drug trafficking, and drug abuse. At 6 per 100,000 inhabitants, the country’s <a class="0" href="https://www.statista.com/statistics/1002683/homicide-rate-nicaragua/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">homicide rate<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>has been declining since 2007 and is currently just below that of the US. This decrease is thanks to successful implementation of the kinds of social programs the FMLN attempted in El Salvador, which have engaged the youth and greatly reduced poverty. It has been a steady, long-term process that prioritizes the formerly impoverished majority; not an illusion for social media. People are empowered by creative programs that help farmers feed their families and communities, support entrepreneurs in starting a business, promote women’s health and safety, reinstate rights to Afro-descendant and Indigenous peoples, and allow Nicaraguans of all ages to get an education. These are not changes that can easily be turned back, and are the reason that Daniel Ortega keeps getting a larger and larger percentage of the vote in each election.</p> <p><strong>NGOs</strong><br /> The Washington Post and Amnesty International inaccurately equate El Salvador’s new Foreign Agents Law with Nicaragua’s non-profits law. The Nicaraguan law requires organizations to report payments coming from outside the country and tell how such money is spent, prohibiting the use of foreign monies for political activity. It is meant to curtail foreign interference like the 2018 coup attempt that subjected the Nicaraguan population to three months of politically-motivated terror. <a class="0" href="https://thegrayzone.com/2021/06/01/cia-usaid-nicaragua-right-wing-media/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">This article<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>provides detailed documentation of the extensive flow of USAID regime-change money to Nicaraguan opposition and media outlets before 2022. In a shameless admission that they are still dependent on US funding, the Nicaraguan opposition took to social media at the start of the second Trump administration to decry the <a class="0" href="https://x.com/johnperry21/status/1881898712773067161" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">crisis<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>they had fallen into because <a class="0" href="https://confidencial.digital/english/u-s-ends-92-aid-programs-for-activists-and-opposition-in-nicaragua-cuba-and-venezuela/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">their US funding was cut<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>. Contrary to what the Post and Amnesty would have us believe, media outlets dependent on US government funding are not “independent.” Unfortunately, USAID/NED funding for Nicaraguan opposition media operating outside the country has already been reinstated.</p> <p>El Salvador has also been targeted by USAID in the past for political purposes, including during the FMLN administrations. US meddling is less likely to target Bukele, given his close alignment with the Trump administration. Criticism of the new law’s provision to charge Salvadoran charities a 30% tax on international donations does seem valid. In Nicaragua, most charitable organizations pay a 1% administrative fee on international donations, while the wealthiest charities pay up to 3%—a far cry from Bukele’s 30% tax.</p> <p><strong>Treatment of Migrants</strong><br /> Ortega never participated in the schemes the Trump and Biden administrations negotiated with Nicaragua’s northern neighbors to inhibit the flow of migrants; nor did he impose a ‘special fee’ on <a class="0" href="https://ayuda.avianca.com/hc/en-us/articles/19744371443355-Airport-Improvement-Tariff-at-El-Salvador-International-Airport" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">migrants in transit from Africa<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>, as Bukele did. Nicaragua accepted direct flights from Haiti and Cuba as a humanitarian gesture to ease the crises that US intervention created in those countries. For a period, Nicaragua was a transit country for migrants looking for an inexpensive and safer route to the US that avoided the dangerous Darien Gap. It was rewarded with baseless accusations of “human trafficking” by the US Congress.</p> <p>Meanwhile, Bukele zealously collaborates with Trump’s mass deportation/incarceration plan for migrants, even refusing to release a wrongfully deported Salvadoran man. Daniel Ortega has <a class="0" href="https://www.facebook.com/jpmascentroamerica/posts/el-copresidente-de-nicaragua-daniel-ortega-denunci%C3%B3-el-encarcelamiento-injustifi/705629808801788/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">adamantly denounced this<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>, demanded the return of the kidnapped Venezuelans held in El Salvador, and pleaded for respect for all migrants. Nicaraguan migrants who are deported home from the US are welcomed with free health check-ups, a meal, transportation to their home communities, and a small stipend to get re-settled.</p> <blockquote class="wp-embedded-content" data-secret="F9K4zp8zhp"><p><a href="https://orinocotribune.com/nayib-bukeles-el-salvador-dictatorship-made-in-israel/">Nayib Bukele’s El Salvador Dictatorship: Made in Israel</a></p></blockquote> <p><iframe loading="lazy" class="wp-embedded-content" sandbox="allow-scripts" security="restricted" title="“Nayib Bukele’s El Salvador Dictatorship: Made in Israel” — Orinoco Tribune - News and opinion pieces about Venezuela and beyond" src="https://orinocotribune.com/nayib-bukeles-el-salvador-dictatorship-made-in-israel/embed/#?secret=qkWI9RnvfZ#?secret=F9K4zp8zhp" data-secret="F9K4zp8zhp" width="600" height="338" frameborder="0" marginwidth="0" marginheight="0" scrolling="no"></iframe></p> <p><strong>Handling of the COVID-19 pandemic</strong><br /> El Salvador had one of the most authoritarian responses to the pandemic. The Bukele government shut down the economy,  <a class="0" href="https://coha.org/el-salvador-bukeles-heavy-handed-response-to-covid-19-pandemic-violates-human-rights/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">used military repression<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>to enforce a nationwide quarantine, declared a state of exception, and forced people into COVID detention centers, where many were infected and some died. Bukele tweeted sadistic photos of gang members crowded together like sardines in prisons—bragging about his repressive response with no regard for the danger of spreading the virus.</p> <p>President Ortega did the exact opposite: the economy and schools remained open, while children continued to receive their daily lunches. The government deployed a massive public health campaign with house-to-house information visits, prepared public hospitals to treat COVID, established a hotline for contact tracing and monitoring of patients, and released some prisoners. No one was jailed or went hungry due to the pandemic; the government did not incur excessive debt; and Nicaragua achieved the highest vaccination rate in Central America.</p> <p>Nicaragua had <a class="0" href="https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/excess-deaths-cumulative-per-100k-economist?region=NorthAmerica&globe=1&globeRotation=43%2C-94.5&globeZoom=1.5" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">one of the lowest excess death rates<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>from the pandemic in the world (292 per 100,000 inhabitants). <a class="0" href="https://www.nicasolidarity.com/health" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">UNICEF congratulated Nicaragua<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>on its pandemic response because unlike children who faced lockdowns, Nicaraguan youngsters did not experience more health risks, poorer nutrition, decreased vaccination rates, or diminished education outcomes due to the pandemic.</p> <p>Salvadoran children, unfortunately, faced all the detrimental effects of an extreme lockdown. The country’s democracy suffered, the economy shrank severely, and the government incurred tremendous debt. The excess death rate in El Salvador due to the pandemic was 364 per 100,000 inhabitants.</p> <p><strong>Israel/Palestine</strong><br /> Historically, Zionist collaboration with right-wing repression in <a class="0" href="https://merip.org/1986/05/israel-in-central-america/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">Central America<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>has included the selling of napalm to ARENA governments to use on the Salvadoran people, and aid for Nicaragua’s Somoza dictatorship and <em>contra</em> terrorists.  Now, despite Bukele’s Palestinian heritage, he has clearly allied with Israel. His imports of <a class="0" href="https://www.mintpressnews.com/bukele-israel-dictatorship-surveillance/289578/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">Israeli weapons and surveillance technology<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>are growing at an alarming rate, and El Salvador is one of the most extensive users of Israel’s Pegasus spyware, reportedly deployed against dozens of Bukele’s critics.</p> <p>In contrast, Sandinista Nicaragua has a long history of <a class="0" href="https://www.morningstaronline.co.uk/article/nicaragua-and-palestine-enduring-mutual-solidarity" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">solidarity with the Palestinian people<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>. Since October 7, 2023, Ortega has resolutely supported the Palestinian people’s right to peace and self-determination and the end of Israeli aggression. His was the first nation to join the South Africa suit at the International Court of Justice over Israel’s violations of the Genocide Convention. Nicaragua then filed its own suit against Germany for aiding and abetting genocide, which succeeded in reducing weapons sales to Israel and reinstating German funding to UNRWA. Nicaragua does this despite threats of increased sanctions from the US Congress and Israel.</p> <p><strong>Government social spending</strong><br /> Since Bukele became president, classic neoliberal policies have cut education, healthcare, and poverty reduction programs introduced by the FMLN governments before him. Schools are being closed and healthcare is increasingly unaffordable. Meanwhile, there are constant increases in spending on the military, policing, and prisons.</p> <p>Social spending has been a priority for Nicaragua since President Ortega took office in 2007 and now constitutes 60% of the national budget. There have been vast improvements in health, education, nutrition, housing, drinking water, roads, and electricity. The country’s <a class="0" href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_Human_Development_Index" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">Human Development Index<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>has surpassed El Salvador’s—remarkable since Nicaragua’s per capita GDP (an important component of that score) is half that of El Salvador. And Nicaragua ranks <a class="0" href="https://www.resdal.org/Atlas-RESDAL.html" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">third lowest<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>in the western hemisphere for military spending, even behind Costa Rica which supposedly has no army.</p> <p>The many differences between the two presidents are best summarized by looking at them in historical perspective. Despite the hype, the young Bukele offers nothing new. He is perpetuating the cycle of physical and structural violence in his country, in collusion with the US government. The elder statesman Ortega, however, is helping his country break free from imperialist violence. That is something new.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><em>Jill Clark-Gollub is the coordinator of Americas Without Sanctions, a project of the SanctionsKill campaign. She is also a member of the Nicaragua Solidarity Coalition and the Black Alliance for Peace Solidarity Network.</em></p> <p>(<a href="https://www.blackagendareport.com/daniel-ortega-no-bukele" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Black Agenda Report</a>)</p>

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@rvonpoofton.bsky.social
about 9 hours ago
See, LA IS walkable.

Los Angeles. Just wow.

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UCLA Institute of Transportation Studies
@uclaits.bsky.social
about 10 hours ago
Each year, UCLA urban planning graduate students partner with local agencies and orgs to tackle some of our region's most pressing transportation issues. Check out past student projects and submit a proposal for the 2025-26 academic year by JULY 18 here www.its.ucla.edu/cap...
Graphic announcement for capstone project submissions from Luskin School graduate students. Text reads: "CAPSTONE PROJECT SUBMISSIONS for Luskin School Grad Students. Professional-level analysis and recommendations to drive action at your organization. All capstones supervised by UCLA faculty member." At the bottom, a yellow bar reads, "Deadline to submit is Friday, July 18." A graphic of a laptop with a clock and cursor icon is shown on the right.
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Orinoco Tribune
@orinocotribune.bsky.social
about 12 hours ago
Daniel Ortega Is No Bukele

orinocotribune.com

<p>By Jill Clark-Gollub  – Jun 11, 2025</p> <p style="text-align: right;"><strong>Ortega and Bukele are polar opposites: one invests in dignity and democracy, the other in mass incarceration and imperial alliances.</strong></p> <p>Opposition media from both Nicaragua and El Salvador, along with the Washington Post, Amnesty International, and Human Rights Watch, all vilify  Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega by equating him with Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele. Although Ortega and Bukele are both serving consecutive terms, and a Central American polling firm reports that they enjoy high popularity among their respective populations, the two presidents actually offer a study in contrasts.</p> <p><strong>Crime and punishment</strong><br /> Bukele is praised for drastically reducing violence in El Salvador, but his political career is actually based on perpetuating it. First, some history. The country’s gang problem originated in the bloody US-supported war of the 1980s, including US and Israeli funding and training of death squads, that forced thousands of young men to escape forced military recruitment by fleeing to the United States. As an underclass of undocumented immigrants, and without the support of their families, many of these young men wound up in gangs on the streets of Los Angeles or in its prisons. In the mid-1990s, thousands of these gang members were deported to El Salvador, bringing violence back to a country that had just lost 75,000 lives in a brutal conflict. As <a class="0" href="https://jacobin.com/2017/07/usaid-el-salvador-gangs-drug-war-security-fmln-arena" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">Hillary Goodfriend<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>writes, “the devastated neoliberal economic landscape proved fertile terrain for the US gang culture imported by Salvadoran youth deported from Los Angeles in the mid-1990s.” The right-wing Nationalist Republican Alliance (ARENA) governments of the postwar years responded to the gang problem with an iron fist.</p> <p>Then from 2009-2019, while the former guerrillas (Frente Farabundo Martí de Liberación Nacional—FMLN) were in office, a preventive approach was attempted. Structural problems were addressed with “unprecedented increases in social spending, including critical education, health care, land, infrastructure and agricultural investment.” But these efforts were frustrated by a majority opposition legislature that limited spending on such programs, and USAID funding for a private sector approach that favored the opposition. The FMLN also made its own mistakes, including secret negotiations (along with the Catholic Church) for a gang truce, which was initially successful but politically costly once it fell apart. Still, progress was made as Salvadoran youth found more alternatives.</p> <p>Nayib Bukele arrived on the national scene as the FMLN candidate for mayor of San Salvador in 2014. There has been suspicion that his political rise was based on secret deals with the gangs, and an increasing number of <a class="0" href="https://www.dropsitenews.com/p/secret-bukele-trump-deal-grenas" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">international media<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>are giving details on how that worked. He is alleged to have <a class="0" href="https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2025/05/29/trump-favorite-president-el-salvador-nayib-bukele/83896220007/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">bribed the gangs<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>for their loyalty in that mayoral race, outbidding the ARENA candidate by a two to one margin. Bukele soon broke with the FMLN and ran against the party in the 2019 presidential election. MS-13 gang leaders are alleged to have negotiated with him prior to the vote, demanding an end to extraditions to the US, shortened sentences, and control of territory. In return they reduced the homicide rate by hiding their crimes. After Bukele’s election, the official murder rate fell, but disappearances went up. This gang also helped him get out the vote for his legislative supermajority in 2021, sometimes violently. While he colludes with the gangs in secret, the public face of Bukele’s crime policy is a return to the repression of the ARENA years.</p> <p>In March 2022, Bukele instituted a state of exception which persists to this day and has led to the imprisonment of an additional 85,000 people, giving El Salvador the highest incarceration rate in the world. Several social movement leaders are among those detained without trial. Meanwhile, many Salvadorans enjoy comparative safety in the country’s streets since the gang violence is less visible and small businesses no longer have to make extortion payments. This, along with <a class="0" href="https://www.reuters.com/investigates/special-report/el-salvador-politics-media/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">savvy manipulation<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>of social media, has made the president extremely popular among a segment of the population, particularly voters living in the diaspora. Now Bukele has gleefully agreed to serve as an offshore jailer for Donald Trump, and seems to delight in images of dehumanized inmates in crowded cells, indicating that they will never leave. Conditions are torturous and rehabilitation is non-existent. As <a class="0" href="https://www.mintpressnews.com/nayib-bukele-worlds-coolest-dictator/289493/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">Alan MacLeod reports<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>, “cruelty is the point.” And violence persists.</p> <p>The photos at the top of this article show the stark contrast in attitude towards prisoners in Nicaragua vs. El Salvador. While Bukele serves cruelty and humiliation, Nicaragua’s Daniel Ortega focuses on human dignity and rehabilitation—particularly through education. A <a class="0" href="https://www.el19digital.com/articulos/ver/159364-formacion-tecnica-y-academica-para-8429-personas-de-los-sistema-penitenciario-del-pais" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">recent article<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>tells of some 8,400 inmates enrolled in university studies, vocational programs, and completing primary and secondary schooling. Inmates are also allowed to work, if they so choose, and their earnings are sent to their families. Sentences are frequently reduced for good behavior. Reconciliation is a hallmark of the Sandinista movement, which abolished the death penalty in 1979. Corporate media stories about “political prisoners” are part of a US-funded propaganda campaign and should be viewed skeptically. <a class="0" href="https://fair.org/home/nicaraguas-political-prisoners-would-be-criminals-by-us-standards/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">This article<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>gives information about the heinous crimes committed by those US media heroes.</p> <p>In Nicaragua there is minimal gang activity, drug trafficking, and drug abuse. At 6 per 100,000 inhabitants, the country’s <a class="0" href="https://www.statista.com/statistics/1002683/homicide-rate-nicaragua/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">homicide rate<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>has been declining since 2007 and is currently just below that of the US. This decrease is thanks to successful implementation of the kinds of social programs the FMLN attempted in El Salvador, which have engaged the youth and greatly reduced poverty. It has been a steady, long-term process that prioritizes the formerly impoverished majority; not an illusion for social media. People are empowered by creative programs that help farmers feed their families and communities, support entrepreneurs in starting a business, promote women’s health and safety, reinstate rights to Afro-descendant and Indigenous peoples, and allow Nicaraguans of all ages to get an education. These are not changes that can easily be turned back, and are the reason that Daniel Ortega keeps getting a larger and larger percentage of the vote in each election.</p> <p><strong>NGOs</strong><br /> The Washington Post and Amnesty International inaccurately equate El Salvador’s new Foreign Agents Law with Nicaragua’s non-profits law. The Nicaraguan law requires organizations to report payments coming from outside the country and tell how such money is spent, prohibiting the use of foreign monies for political activity. It is meant to curtail foreign interference like the 2018 coup attempt that subjected the Nicaraguan population to three months of politically-motivated terror. <a class="0" href="https://thegrayzone.com/2021/06/01/cia-usaid-nicaragua-right-wing-media/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">This article<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>provides detailed documentation of the extensive flow of USAID regime-change money to Nicaraguan opposition and media outlets before 2022. In a shameless admission that they are still dependent on US funding, the Nicaraguan opposition took to social media at the start of the second Trump administration to decry the <a class="0" href="https://x.com/johnperry21/status/1881898712773067161" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">crisis<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>they had fallen into because <a class="0" href="https://confidencial.digital/english/u-s-ends-92-aid-programs-for-activists-and-opposition-in-nicaragua-cuba-and-venezuela/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">their US funding was cut<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>. Contrary to what the Post and Amnesty would have us believe, media outlets dependent on US government funding are not “independent.” Unfortunately, USAID/NED funding for Nicaraguan opposition media operating outside the country has already been reinstated.</p> <p>El Salvador has also been targeted by USAID in the past for political purposes, including during the FMLN administrations. US meddling is less likely to target Bukele, given his close alignment with the Trump administration. Criticism of the new law’s provision to charge Salvadoran charities a 30% tax on international donations does seem valid. In Nicaragua, most charitable organizations pay a 1% administrative fee on international donations, while the wealthiest charities pay up to 3%—a far cry from Bukele’s 30% tax.</p> <p><strong>Treatment of Migrants</strong><br /> Ortega never participated in the schemes the Trump and Biden administrations negotiated with Nicaragua’s northern neighbors to inhibit the flow of migrants; nor did he impose a ‘special fee’ on <a class="0" href="https://ayuda.avianca.com/hc/en-us/articles/19744371443355-Airport-Improvement-Tariff-at-El-Salvador-International-Airport" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">migrants in transit from Africa<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>, as Bukele did. Nicaragua accepted direct flights from Haiti and Cuba as a humanitarian gesture to ease the crises that US intervention created in those countries. For a period, Nicaragua was a transit country for migrants looking for an inexpensive and safer route to the US that avoided the dangerous Darien Gap. It was rewarded with baseless accusations of “human trafficking” by the US Congress.</p> <p>Meanwhile, Bukele zealously collaborates with Trump’s mass deportation/incarceration plan for migrants, even refusing to release a wrongfully deported Salvadoran man. Daniel Ortega has <a class="0" href="https://www.facebook.com/jpmascentroamerica/posts/el-copresidente-de-nicaragua-daniel-ortega-denunci%C3%B3-el-encarcelamiento-injustifi/705629808801788/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">adamantly denounced this<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>, demanded the return of the kidnapped Venezuelans held in El Salvador, and pleaded for respect for all migrants. Nicaraguan migrants who are deported home from the US are welcomed with free health check-ups, a meal, transportation to their home communities, and a small stipend to get re-settled.</p> <blockquote class="wp-embedded-content" data-secret="F9K4zp8zhp"><p><a href="https://orinocotribune.com/nayib-bukeles-el-salvador-dictatorship-made-in-israel/">Nayib Bukele’s El Salvador Dictatorship: Made in Israel</a></p></blockquote> <p><iframe loading="lazy" class="wp-embedded-content" sandbox="allow-scripts" security="restricted" title="“Nayib Bukele’s El Salvador Dictatorship: Made in Israel” — Orinoco Tribune - News and opinion pieces about Venezuela and beyond" src="https://orinocotribune.com/nayib-bukeles-el-salvador-dictatorship-made-in-israel/embed/#?secret=qkWI9RnvfZ#?secret=F9K4zp8zhp" data-secret="F9K4zp8zhp" width="600" height="338" frameborder="0" marginwidth="0" marginheight="0" scrolling="no"></iframe></p> <p><strong>Handling of the COVID-19 pandemic</strong><br /> El Salvador had one of the most authoritarian responses to the pandemic. The Bukele government shut down the economy,  <a class="0" href="https://coha.org/el-salvador-bukeles-heavy-handed-response-to-covid-19-pandemic-violates-human-rights/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">used military repression<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>to enforce a nationwide quarantine, declared a state of exception, and forced people into COVID detention centers, where many were infected and some died. Bukele tweeted sadistic photos of gang members crowded together like sardines in prisons—bragging about his repressive response with no regard for the danger of spreading the virus.</p> <p>President Ortega did the exact opposite: the economy and schools remained open, while children continued to receive their daily lunches. The government deployed a massive public health campaign with house-to-house information visits, prepared public hospitals to treat COVID, established a hotline for contact tracing and monitoring of patients, and released some prisoners. No one was jailed or went hungry due to the pandemic; the government did not incur excessive debt; and Nicaragua achieved the highest vaccination rate in Central America.</p> <p>Nicaragua had <a class="0" href="https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/excess-deaths-cumulative-per-100k-economist?region=NorthAmerica&globe=1&globeRotation=43%2C-94.5&globeZoom=1.5" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">one of the lowest excess death rates<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>from the pandemic in the world (292 per 100,000 inhabitants). <a class="0" href="https://www.nicasolidarity.com/health" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">UNICEF congratulated Nicaragua<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>on its pandemic response because unlike children who faced lockdowns, Nicaraguan youngsters did not experience more health risks, poorer nutrition, decreased vaccination rates, or diminished education outcomes due to the pandemic.</p> <p>Salvadoran children, unfortunately, faced all the detrimental effects of an extreme lockdown. The country’s democracy suffered, the economy shrank severely, and the government incurred tremendous debt. The excess death rate in El Salvador due to the pandemic was 364 per 100,000 inhabitants.</p> <p><strong>Israel/Palestine</strong><br /> Historically, Zionist collaboration with right-wing repression in <a class="0" href="https://merip.org/1986/05/israel-in-central-america/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">Central America<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>has included the selling of napalm to ARENA governments to use on the Salvadoran people, and aid for Nicaragua’s Somoza dictatorship and <em>contra</em> terrorists.  Now, despite Bukele’s Palestinian heritage, he has clearly allied with Israel. His imports of <a class="0" href="https://www.mintpressnews.com/bukele-israel-dictatorship-surveillance/289578/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">Israeli weapons and surveillance technology<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>are growing at an alarming rate, and El Salvador is one of the most extensive users of Israel’s Pegasus spyware, reportedly deployed against dozens of Bukele’s critics.</p> <p>In contrast, Sandinista Nicaragua has a long history of <a class="0" href="https://www.morningstaronline.co.uk/article/nicaragua-and-palestine-enduring-mutual-solidarity" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">solidarity with the Palestinian people<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>. Since October 7, 2023, Ortega has resolutely supported the Palestinian people’s right to peace and self-determination and the end of Israeli aggression. His was the first nation to join the South Africa suit at the International Court of Justice over Israel’s violations of the Genocide Convention. Nicaragua then filed its own suit against Germany for aiding and abetting genocide, which succeeded in reducing weapons sales to Israel and reinstating German funding to UNRWA. Nicaragua does this despite threats of increased sanctions from the US Congress and Israel.</p> <p><strong>Government social spending</strong><br /> Since Bukele became president, classic neoliberal policies have cut education, healthcare, and poverty reduction programs introduced by the FMLN governments before him. Schools are being closed and healthcare is increasingly unaffordable. Meanwhile, there are constant increases in spending on the military, policing, and prisons.</p> <p>Social spending has been a priority for Nicaragua since President Ortega took office in 2007 and now constitutes 60% of the national budget. There have been vast improvements in health, education, nutrition, housing, drinking water, roads, and electricity. The country’s <a class="0" href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_Human_Development_Index" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">Human Development Index<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>has surpassed El Salvador’s—remarkable since Nicaragua’s per capita GDP (an important component of that score) is half that of El Salvador. And Nicaragua ranks <a class="0" href="https://www.resdal.org/Atlas-RESDAL.html" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">third lowest<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>in the western hemisphere for military spending, even behind Costa Rica which supposedly has no army.</p> <p>The many differences between the two presidents are best summarized by looking at them in historical perspective. Despite the hype, the young Bukele offers nothing new. He is perpetuating the cycle of physical and structural violence in his country, in collusion with the US government. The elder statesman Ortega, however, is helping his country break free from imperialist violence. That is something new.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><em>Jill Clark-Gollub is the coordinator of Americas Without Sanctions, a project of the SanctionsKill campaign. She is also a member of the Nicaragua Solidarity Coalition and the Black Alliance for Peace Solidarity Network.</em></p> <p>(<a href="https://www.blackagendareport.com/daniel-ortega-no-bukele" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Black Agenda Report</a>)</p>

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Jonah Bliss
@jonahbliss.bsky.social
about 13 hours ago
The most exciting thing about the new LAX / Metro Transit Center? It's not the fast ride to the airport or the architectural grandeur, it's the fact that this is the first time, anywhere in America, that two non-downtown serving rapid transit lines connect.
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Ogechi Aghaji
@oaghaji.bsky.social
about 14 hours ago
I'm once again at the Rialto Metrolink Train Station. Headin' to my Hometown Of Los Angeles.
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Orinoco Tribune
@orinocotribune.bsky.social
about 15 hours ago
Daniel Ortega Is No Bukele

orinocotribune.com

<p>By Jill Clark-Gollub  – Jun 11, 2025</p> <p style="text-align: right;"><strong>Ortega and Bukele are polar opposites: one invests in dignity and democracy, the other in mass incarceration and imperial alliances.</strong></p> <p>Opposition media from both Nicaragua and El Salvador, along with the Washington Post, Amnesty International, and Human Rights Watch, all vilify  Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega by equating him with Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele. Although Ortega and Bukele are both serving consecutive terms, and a Central American polling firm reports that they enjoy high popularity among their respective populations, the two presidents actually offer a study in contrasts.</p> <p><strong>Crime and punishment</strong><br /> Bukele is praised for drastically reducing violence in El Salvador, but his political career is actually based on perpetuating it. First, some history. The country’s gang problem originated in the bloody US-supported war of the 1980s, including US and Israeli funding and training of death squads, that forced thousands of young men to escape forced military recruitment by fleeing to the United States. As an underclass of undocumented immigrants, and without the support of their families, many of these young men wound up in gangs on the streets of Los Angeles or in its prisons. In the mid-1990s, thousands of these gang members were deported to El Salvador, bringing violence back to a country that had just lost 75,000 lives in a brutal conflict. As <a class="0" href="https://jacobin.com/2017/07/usaid-el-salvador-gangs-drug-war-security-fmln-arena" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">Hillary Goodfriend<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>writes, “the devastated neoliberal economic landscape proved fertile terrain for the US gang culture imported by Salvadoran youth deported from Los Angeles in the mid-1990s.” The right-wing Nationalist Republican Alliance (ARENA) governments of the postwar years responded to the gang problem with an iron fist.</p> <p>Then from 2009-2019, while the former guerrillas (Frente Farabundo Martí de Liberación Nacional—FMLN) were in office, a preventive approach was attempted. Structural problems were addressed with “unprecedented increases in social spending, including critical education, health care, land, infrastructure and agricultural investment.” But these efforts were frustrated by a majority opposition legislature that limited spending on such programs, and USAID funding for a private sector approach that favored the opposition. The FMLN also made its own mistakes, including secret negotiations (along with the Catholic Church) for a gang truce, which was initially successful but politically costly once it fell apart. Still, progress was made as Salvadoran youth found more alternatives.</p> <p>Nayib Bukele arrived on the national scene as the FMLN candidate for mayor of San Salvador in 2014. There has been suspicion that his political rise was based on secret deals with the gangs, and an increasing number of <a class="0" href="https://www.dropsitenews.com/p/secret-bukele-trump-deal-grenas" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">international media<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>are giving details on how that worked. He is alleged to have <a class="0" href="https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2025/05/29/trump-favorite-president-el-salvador-nayib-bukele/83896220007/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">bribed the gangs<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>for their loyalty in that mayoral race, outbidding the ARENA candidate by a two to one margin. Bukele soon broke with the FMLN and ran against the party in the 2019 presidential election. MS-13 gang leaders are alleged to have negotiated with him prior to the vote, demanding an end to extraditions to the US, shortened sentences, and control of territory. In return they reduced the homicide rate by hiding their crimes. After Bukele’s election, the official murder rate fell, but disappearances went up. This gang also helped him get out the vote for his legislative supermajority in 2021, sometimes violently. While he colludes with the gangs in secret, the public face of Bukele’s crime policy is a return to the repression of the ARENA years.</p> <p>In March 2022, Bukele instituted a state of exception which persists to this day and has led to the imprisonment of an additional 85,000 people, giving El Salvador the highest incarceration rate in the world. Several social movement leaders are among those detained without trial. Meanwhile, many Salvadorans enjoy comparative safety in the country’s streets since the gang violence is less visible and small businesses no longer have to make extortion payments. This, along with <a class="0" href="https://www.reuters.com/investigates/special-report/el-salvador-politics-media/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">savvy manipulation<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>of social media, has made the president extremely popular among a segment of the population, particularly voters living in the diaspora. Now Bukele has gleefully agreed to serve as an offshore jailer for Donald Trump, and seems to delight in images of dehumanized inmates in crowded cells, indicating that they will never leave. Conditions are torturous and rehabilitation is non-existent. As <a class="0" href="https://www.mintpressnews.com/nayib-bukele-worlds-coolest-dictator/289493/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">Alan MacLeod reports<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>, “cruelty is the point.” And violence persists.</p> <p>The photos at the top of this article show the stark contrast in attitude towards prisoners in Nicaragua vs. El Salvador. While Bukele serves cruelty and humiliation, Nicaragua’s Daniel Ortega focuses on human dignity and rehabilitation—particularly through education. A <a class="0" href="https://www.el19digital.com/articulos/ver/159364-formacion-tecnica-y-academica-para-8429-personas-de-los-sistema-penitenciario-del-pais" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">recent article<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>tells of some 8,400 inmates enrolled in university studies, vocational programs, and completing primary and secondary schooling. Inmates are also allowed to work, if they so choose, and their earnings are sent to their families. Sentences are frequently reduced for good behavior. Reconciliation is a hallmark of the Sandinista movement, which abolished the death penalty in 1979. Corporate media stories about “political prisoners” are part of a US-funded propaganda campaign and should be viewed skeptically. <a class="0" href="https://fair.org/home/nicaraguas-political-prisoners-would-be-criminals-by-us-standards/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">This article<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>gives information about the heinous crimes committed by those US media heroes.</p> <p>In Nicaragua there is minimal gang activity, drug trafficking, and drug abuse. At 6 per 100,000 inhabitants, the country’s <a class="0" href="https://www.statista.com/statistics/1002683/homicide-rate-nicaragua/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">homicide rate<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>has been declining since 2007 and is currently just below that of the US. This decrease is thanks to successful implementation of the kinds of social programs the FMLN attempted in El Salvador, which have engaged the youth and greatly reduced poverty. It has been a steady, long-term process that prioritizes the formerly impoverished majority; not an illusion for social media. People are empowered by creative programs that help farmers feed their families and communities, support entrepreneurs in starting a business, promote women’s health and safety, reinstate rights to Afro-descendant and Indigenous peoples, and allow Nicaraguans of all ages to get an education. These are not changes that can easily be turned back, and are the reason that Daniel Ortega keeps getting a larger and larger percentage of the vote in each election.</p> <p><strong>NGOs</strong><br /> The Washington Post and Amnesty International inaccurately equate El Salvador’s new Foreign Agents Law with Nicaragua’s non-profits law. The Nicaraguan law requires organizations to report payments coming from outside the country and tell how such money is spent, prohibiting the use of foreign monies for political activity. It is meant to curtail foreign interference like the 2018 coup attempt that subjected the Nicaraguan population to three months of politically-motivated terror. <a class="0" href="https://thegrayzone.com/2021/06/01/cia-usaid-nicaragua-right-wing-media/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">This article<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>provides detailed documentation of the extensive flow of USAID regime-change money to Nicaraguan opposition and media outlets before 2022. In a shameless admission that they are still dependent on US funding, the Nicaraguan opposition took to social media at the start of the second Trump administration to decry the <a class="0" href="https://x.com/johnperry21/status/1881898712773067161" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">crisis<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>they had fallen into because <a class="0" href="https://confidencial.digital/english/u-s-ends-92-aid-programs-for-activists-and-opposition-in-nicaragua-cuba-and-venezuela/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">their US funding was cut<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>. Contrary to what the Post and Amnesty would have us believe, media outlets dependent on US government funding are not “independent.” Unfortunately, USAID/NED funding for Nicaraguan opposition media operating outside the country has already been reinstated.</p> <p>El Salvador has also been targeted by USAID in the past for political purposes, including during the FMLN administrations. US meddling is less likely to target Bukele, given his close alignment with the Trump administration. Criticism of the new law’s provision to charge Salvadoran charities a 30% tax on international donations does seem valid. In Nicaragua, most charitable organizations pay a 1% administrative fee on international donations, while the wealthiest charities pay up to 3%—a far cry from Bukele’s 30% tax.</p> <p><strong>Treatment of Migrants</strong><br /> Ortega never participated in the schemes the Trump and Biden administrations negotiated with Nicaragua’s northern neighbors to inhibit the flow of migrants; nor did he impose a ‘special fee’ on <a class="0" href="https://ayuda.avianca.com/hc/en-us/articles/19744371443355-Airport-Improvement-Tariff-at-El-Salvador-International-Airport" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">migrants in transit from Africa<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>, as Bukele did. Nicaragua accepted direct flights from Haiti and Cuba as a humanitarian gesture to ease the crises that US intervention created in those countries. For a period, Nicaragua was a transit country for migrants looking for an inexpensive and safer route to the US that avoided the dangerous Darien Gap. It was rewarded with baseless accusations of “human trafficking” by the US Congress.</p> <p>Meanwhile, Bukele zealously collaborates with Trump’s mass deportation/incarceration plan for migrants, even refusing to release a wrongfully deported Salvadoran man. Daniel Ortega has <a class="0" href="https://www.facebook.com/jpmascentroamerica/posts/el-copresidente-de-nicaragua-daniel-ortega-denunci%C3%B3-el-encarcelamiento-injustifi/705629808801788/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">adamantly denounced this<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>, demanded the return of the kidnapped Venezuelans held in El Salvador, and pleaded for respect for all migrants. Nicaraguan migrants who are deported home from the US are welcomed with free health check-ups, a meal, transportation to their home communities, and a small stipend to get re-settled.</p> <blockquote class="wp-embedded-content" data-secret="F9K4zp8zhp"><p><a href="https://orinocotribune.com/nayib-bukeles-el-salvador-dictatorship-made-in-israel/">Nayib Bukele’s El Salvador Dictatorship: Made in Israel</a></p></blockquote> <p><iframe loading="lazy" class="wp-embedded-content" sandbox="allow-scripts" security="restricted" title="“Nayib Bukele’s El Salvador Dictatorship: Made in Israel” — Orinoco Tribune - News and opinion pieces about Venezuela and beyond" src="https://orinocotribune.com/nayib-bukeles-el-salvador-dictatorship-made-in-israel/embed/#?secret=qkWI9RnvfZ#?secret=F9K4zp8zhp" data-secret="F9K4zp8zhp" width="600" height="338" frameborder="0" marginwidth="0" marginheight="0" scrolling="no"></iframe></p> <p><strong>Handling of the COVID-19 pandemic</strong><br /> El Salvador had one of the most authoritarian responses to the pandemic. The Bukele government shut down the economy,  <a class="0" href="https://coha.org/el-salvador-bukeles-heavy-handed-response-to-covid-19-pandemic-violates-human-rights/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">used military repression<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>to enforce a nationwide quarantine, declared a state of exception, and forced people into COVID detention centers, where many were infected and some died. Bukele tweeted sadistic photos of gang members crowded together like sardines in prisons—bragging about his repressive response with no regard for the danger of spreading the virus.</p> <p>President Ortega did the exact opposite: the economy and schools remained open, while children continued to receive their daily lunches. The government deployed a massive public health campaign with house-to-house information visits, prepared public hospitals to treat COVID, established a hotline for contact tracing and monitoring of patients, and released some prisoners. No one was jailed or went hungry due to the pandemic; the government did not incur excessive debt; and Nicaragua achieved the highest vaccination rate in Central America.</p> <p>Nicaragua had <a class="0" href="https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/excess-deaths-cumulative-per-100k-economist?region=NorthAmerica&globe=1&globeRotation=43%2C-94.5&globeZoom=1.5" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">one of the lowest excess death rates<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>from the pandemic in the world (292 per 100,000 inhabitants). <a class="0" href="https://www.nicasolidarity.com/health" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">UNICEF congratulated Nicaragua<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>on its pandemic response because unlike children who faced lockdowns, Nicaraguan youngsters did not experience more health risks, poorer nutrition, decreased vaccination rates, or diminished education outcomes due to the pandemic.</p> <p>Salvadoran children, unfortunately, faced all the detrimental effects of an extreme lockdown. The country’s democracy suffered, the economy shrank severely, and the government incurred tremendous debt. The excess death rate in El Salvador due to the pandemic was 364 per 100,000 inhabitants.</p> <p><strong>Israel/Palestine</strong><br /> Historically, Zionist collaboration with right-wing repression in <a class="0" href="https://merip.org/1986/05/israel-in-central-america/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">Central America<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>has included the selling of napalm to ARENA governments to use on the Salvadoran people, and aid for Nicaragua’s Somoza dictatorship and <em>contra</em> terrorists.  Now, despite Bukele’s Palestinian heritage, he has clearly allied with Israel. His imports of <a class="0" href="https://www.mintpressnews.com/bukele-israel-dictatorship-surveillance/289578/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">Israeli weapons and surveillance technology<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>are growing at an alarming rate, and El Salvador is one of the most extensive users of Israel’s Pegasus spyware, reportedly deployed against dozens of Bukele’s critics.</p> <p>In contrast, Sandinista Nicaragua has a long history of <a class="0" href="https://www.morningstaronline.co.uk/article/nicaragua-and-palestine-enduring-mutual-solidarity" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">solidarity with the Palestinian people<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>. Since October 7, 2023, Ortega has resolutely supported the Palestinian people’s right to peace and self-determination and the end of Israeli aggression. His was the first nation to join the South Africa suit at the International Court of Justice over Israel’s violations of the Genocide Convention. Nicaragua then filed its own suit against Germany for aiding and abetting genocide, which succeeded in reducing weapons sales to Israel and reinstating German funding to UNRWA. Nicaragua does this despite threats of increased sanctions from the US Congress and Israel.</p> <p><strong>Government social spending</strong><br /> Since Bukele became president, classic neoliberal policies have cut education, healthcare, and poverty reduction programs introduced by the FMLN governments before him. Schools are being closed and healthcare is increasingly unaffordable. Meanwhile, there are constant increases in spending on the military, policing, and prisons.</p> <p>Social spending has been a priority for Nicaragua since President Ortega took office in 2007 and now constitutes 60% of the national budget. There have been vast improvements in health, education, nutrition, housing, drinking water, roads, and electricity. The country’s <a class="0" href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_Human_Development_Index" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">Human Development Index<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>has surpassed El Salvador’s—remarkable since Nicaragua’s per capita GDP (an important component of that score) is half that of El Salvador. And Nicaragua ranks <a class="0" href="https://www.resdal.org/Atlas-RESDAL.html" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">third lowest<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>in the western hemisphere for military spending, even behind Costa Rica which supposedly has no army.</p> <p>The many differences between the two presidents are best summarized by looking at them in historical perspective. Despite the hype, the young Bukele offers nothing new. He is perpetuating the cycle of physical and structural violence in his country, in collusion with the US government. The elder statesman Ortega, however, is helping his country break free from imperialist violence. That is something new.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><em>Jill Clark-Gollub is the coordinator of Americas Without Sanctions, a project of the SanctionsKill campaign. She is also a member of the Nicaragua Solidarity Coalition and the Black Alliance for Peace Solidarity Network.</em></p> <p>(<a href="https://www.blackagendareport.com/daniel-ortega-no-bukele" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Black Agenda Report</a>)</p>

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ZombieGoMoan
@zombiegomoan.bsky.social
7 days ago
For a more general feed about Los Angeles, follow this one: bsky.app/profile/did:...
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maria_from_ga
@mariafromga.bsky.social
about 17 hours ago
Esp since if these ppl actually looked at metros not NYC/LA, they would realize YIMBY/progressives are aligned bc they are both anti-status quo rebelling against wealthy white resource-hoarding homeowners This is why you see Austin, not NY lead the nation in affordable housing construction
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AIUpd8Bot
@aiupd8bot.bsky.social
about 18 hours ago
🚖🔥 Waymo halts robotaxi services across the U.S. amid protests and safety concerns, leaving LA drivers without a reliable transport option! How long do you think this pause will last? Share your thoughts! 🤔 #Waymo #Robotaxis #Protests LINK
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Orinoco Tribune
@orinocotribune.bsky.social
about 18 hours ago
Daniel Ortega Is No Bukele

orinocotribune.com

<p>By Jill Clark-Gollub  – Jun 11, 2025</p> <p style="text-align: right;"><strong>Ortega and Bukele are polar opposites: one invests in dignity and democracy, the other in mass incarceration and imperial alliances.</strong></p> <p>Opposition media from both Nicaragua and El Salvador, along with the Washington Post, Amnesty International, and Human Rights Watch, all vilify  Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega by equating him with Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele. Although Ortega and Bukele are both serving consecutive terms, and a Central American polling firm reports that they enjoy high popularity among their respective populations, the two presidents actually offer a study in contrasts.</p> <p><strong>Crime and punishment</strong><br /> Bukele is praised for drastically reducing violence in El Salvador, but his political career is actually based on perpetuating it. First, some history. The country’s gang problem originated in the bloody US-supported war of the 1980s, including US and Israeli funding and training of death squads, that forced thousands of young men to escape forced military recruitment by fleeing to the United States. As an underclass of undocumented immigrants, and without the support of their families, many of these young men wound up in gangs on the streets of Los Angeles or in its prisons. In the mid-1990s, thousands of these gang members were deported to El Salvador, bringing violence back to a country that had just lost 75,000 lives in a brutal conflict. As <a class="0" href="https://jacobin.com/2017/07/usaid-el-salvador-gangs-drug-war-security-fmln-arena" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">Hillary Goodfriend<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>writes, “the devastated neoliberal economic landscape proved fertile terrain for the US gang culture imported by Salvadoran youth deported from Los Angeles in the mid-1990s.” The right-wing Nationalist Republican Alliance (ARENA) governments of the postwar years responded to the gang problem with an iron fist.</p> <p>Then from 2009-2019, while the former guerrillas (Frente Farabundo Martí de Liberación Nacional—FMLN) were in office, a preventive approach was attempted. Structural problems were addressed with “unprecedented increases in social spending, including critical education, health care, land, infrastructure and agricultural investment.” But these efforts were frustrated by a majority opposition legislature that limited spending on such programs, and USAID funding for a private sector approach that favored the opposition. The FMLN also made its own mistakes, including secret negotiations (along with the Catholic Church) for a gang truce, which was initially successful but politically costly once it fell apart. Still, progress was made as Salvadoran youth found more alternatives.</p> <p>Nayib Bukele arrived on the national scene as the FMLN candidate for mayor of San Salvador in 2014. There has been suspicion that his political rise was based on secret deals with the gangs, and an increasing number of <a class="0" href="https://www.dropsitenews.com/p/secret-bukele-trump-deal-grenas" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">international media<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>are giving details on how that worked. He is alleged to have <a class="0" href="https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2025/05/29/trump-favorite-president-el-salvador-nayib-bukele/83896220007/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">bribed the gangs<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>for their loyalty in that mayoral race, outbidding the ARENA candidate by a two to one margin. Bukele soon broke with the FMLN and ran against the party in the 2019 presidential election. MS-13 gang leaders are alleged to have negotiated with him prior to the vote, demanding an end to extraditions to the US, shortened sentences, and control of territory. In return they reduced the homicide rate by hiding their crimes. After Bukele’s election, the official murder rate fell, but disappearances went up. This gang also helped him get out the vote for his legislative supermajority in 2021, sometimes violently. While he colludes with the gangs in secret, the public face of Bukele’s crime policy is a return to the repression of the ARENA years.</p> <p>In March 2022, Bukele instituted a state of exception which persists to this day and has led to the imprisonment of an additional 85,000 people, giving El Salvador the highest incarceration rate in the world. Several social movement leaders are among those detained without trial. Meanwhile, many Salvadorans enjoy comparative safety in the country’s streets since the gang violence is less visible and small businesses no longer have to make extortion payments. This, along with <a class="0" href="https://www.reuters.com/investigates/special-report/el-salvador-politics-media/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">savvy manipulation<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>of social media, has made the president extremely popular among a segment of the population, particularly voters living in the diaspora. Now Bukele has gleefully agreed to serve as an offshore jailer for Donald Trump, and seems to delight in images of dehumanized inmates in crowded cells, indicating that they will never leave. Conditions are torturous and rehabilitation is non-existent. As <a class="0" href="https://www.mintpressnews.com/nayib-bukele-worlds-coolest-dictator/289493/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">Alan MacLeod reports<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>, “cruelty is the point.” And violence persists.</p> <p>The photos at the top of this article show the stark contrast in attitude towards prisoners in Nicaragua vs. El Salvador. While Bukele serves cruelty and humiliation, Nicaragua’s Daniel Ortega focuses on human dignity and rehabilitation—particularly through education. A <a class="0" href="https://www.el19digital.com/articulos/ver/159364-formacion-tecnica-y-academica-para-8429-personas-de-los-sistema-penitenciario-del-pais" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">recent article<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>tells of some 8,400 inmates enrolled in university studies, vocational programs, and completing primary and secondary schooling. Inmates are also allowed to work, if they so choose, and their earnings are sent to their families. Sentences are frequently reduced for good behavior. Reconciliation is a hallmark of the Sandinista movement, which abolished the death penalty in 1979. Corporate media stories about “political prisoners” are part of a US-funded propaganda campaign and should be viewed skeptically. <a class="0" href="https://fair.org/home/nicaraguas-political-prisoners-would-be-criminals-by-us-standards/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">This article<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>gives information about the heinous crimes committed by those US media heroes.</p> <p>In Nicaragua there is minimal gang activity, drug trafficking, and drug abuse. At 6 per 100,000 inhabitants, the country’s <a class="0" href="https://www.statista.com/statistics/1002683/homicide-rate-nicaragua/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">homicide rate<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>has been declining since 2007 and is currently just below that of the US. This decrease is thanks to successful implementation of the kinds of social programs the FMLN attempted in El Salvador, which have engaged the youth and greatly reduced poverty. It has been a steady, long-term process that prioritizes the formerly impoverished majority; not an illusion for social media. People are empowered by creative programs that help farmers feed their families and communities, support entrepreneurs in starting a business, promote women’s health and safety, reinstate rights to Afro-descendant and Indigenous peoples, and allow Nicaraguans of all ages to get an education. These are not changes that can easily be turned back, and are the reason that Daniel Ortega keeps getting a larger and larger percentage of the vote in each election.</p> <p><strong>NGOs</strong><br /> The Washington Post and Amnesty International inaccurately equate El Salvador’s new Foreign Agents Law with Nicaragua’s non-profits law. The Nicaraguan law requires organizations to report payments coming from outside the country and tell how such money is spent, prohibiting the use of foreign monies for political activity. It is meant to curtail foreign interference like the 2018 coup attempt that subjected the Nicaraguan population to three months of politically-motivated terror. <a class="0" href="https://thegrayzone.com/2021/06/01/cia-usaid-nicaragua-right-wing-media/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">This article<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>provides detailed documentation of the extensive flow of USAID regime-change money to Nicaraguan opposition and media outlets before 2022. In a shameless admission that they are still dependent on US funding, the Nicaraguan opposition took to social media at the start of the second Trump administration to decry the <a class="0" href="https://x.com/johnperry21/status/1881898712773067161" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">crisis<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>they had fallen into because <a class="0" href="https://confidencial.digital/english/u-s-ends-92-aid-programs-for-activists-and-opposition-in-nicaragua-cuba-and-venezuela/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">their US funding was cut<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>. Contrary to what the Post and Amnesty would have us believe, media outlets dependent on US government funding are not “independent.” Unfortunately, USAID/NED funding for Nicaraguan opposition media operating outside the country has already been reinstated.</p> <p>El Salvador has also been targeted by USAID in the past for political purposes, including during the FMLN administrations. US meddling is less likely to target Bukele, given his close alignment with the Trump administration. Criticism of the new law’s provision to charge Salvadoran charities a 30% tax on international donations does seem valid. In Nicaragua, most charitable organizations pay a 1% administrative fee on international donations, while the wealthiest charities pay up to 3%—a far cry from Bukele’s 30% tax.</p> <p><strong>Treatment of Migrants</strong><br /> Ortega never participated in the schemes the Trump and Biden administrations negotiated with Nicaragua’s northern neighbors to inhibit the flow of migrants; nor did he impose a ‘special fee’ on <a class="0" href="https://ayuda.avianca.com/hc/en-us/articles/19744371443355-Airport-Improvement-Tariff-at-El-Salvador-International-Airport" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">migrants in transit from Africa<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>, as Bukele did. Nicaragua accepted direct flights from Haiti and Cuba as a humanitarian gesture to ease the crises that US intervention created in those countries. For a period, Nicaragua was a transit country for migrants looking for an inexpensive and safer route to the US that avoided the dangerous Darien Gap. It was rewarded with baseless accusations of “human trafficking” by the US Congress.</p> <p>Meanwhile, Bukele zealously collaborates with Trump’s mass deportation/incarceration plan for migrants, even refusing to release a wrongfully deported Salvadoran man. Daniel Ortega has <a class="0" href="https://www.facebook.com/jpmascentroamerica/posts/el-copresidente-de-nicaragua-daniel-ortega-denunci%C3%B3-el-encarcelamiento-injustifi/705629808801788/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">adamantly denounced this<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>, demanded the return of the kidnapped Venezuelans held in El Salvador, and pleaded for respect for all migrants. Nicaraguan migrants who are deported home from the US are welcomed with free health check-ups, a meal, transportation to their home communities, and a small stipend to get re-settled.</p> <blockquote class="wp-embedded-content" data-secret="F9K4zp8zhp"><p><a href="https://orinocotribune.com/nayib-bukeles-el-salvador-dictatorship-made-in-israel/">Nayib Bukele’s El Salvador Dictatorship: Made in Israel</a></p></blockquote> <p><iframe loading="lazy" class="wp-embedded-content" sandbox="allow-scripts" security="restricted" title="“Nayib Bukele’s El Salvador Dictatorship: Made in Israel” — Orinoco Tribune - News and opinion pieces about Venezuela and beyond" src="https://orinocotribune.com/nayib-bukeles-el-salvador-dictatorship-made-in-israel/embed/#?secret=qkWI9RnvfZ#?secret=F9K4zp8zhp" data-secret="F9K4zp8zhp" width="600" height="338" frameborder="0" marginwidth="0" marginheight="0" scrolling="no"></iframe></p> <p><strong>Handling of the COVID-19 pandemic</strong><br /> El Salvador had one of the most authoritarian responses to the pandemic. The Bukele government shut down the economy,  <a class="0" href="https://coha.org/el-salvador-bukeles-heavy-handed-response-to-covid-19-pandemic-violates-human-rights/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">used military repression<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>to enforce a nationwide quarantine, declared a state of exception, and forced people into COVID detention centers, where many were infected and some died. Bukele tweeted sadistic photos of gang members crowded together like sardines in prisons—bragging about his repressive response with no regard for the danger of spreading the virus.</p> <p>President Ortega did the exact opposite: the economy and schools remained open, while children continued to receive their daily lunches. The government deployed a massive public health campaign with house-to-house information visits, prepared public hospitals to treat COVID, established a hotline for contact tracing and monitoring of patients, and released some prisoners. No one was jailed or went hungry due to the pandemic; the government did not incur excessive debt; and Nicaragua achieved the highest vaccination rate in Central America.</p> <p>Nicaragua had <a class="0" href="https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/excess-deaths-cumulative-per-100k-economist?region=NorthAmerica&globe=1&globeRotation=43%2C-94.5&globeZoom=1.5" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">one of the lowest excess death rates<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>from the pandemic in the world (292 per 100,000 inhabitants). <a class="0" href="https://www.nicasolidarity.com/health" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">UNICEF congratulated Nicaragua<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>on its pandemic response because unlike children who faced lockdowns, Nicaraguan youngsters did not experience more health risks, poorer nutrition, decreased vaccination rates, or diminished education outcomes due to the pandemic.</p> <p>Salvadoran children, unfortunately, faced all the detrimental effects of an extreme lockdown. The country’s democracy suffered, the economy shrank severely, and the government incurred tremendous debt. The excess death rate in El Salvador due to the pandemic was 364 per 100,000 inhabitants.</p> <p><strong>Israel/Palestine</strong><br /> Historically, Zionist collaboration with right-wing repression in <a class="0" href="https://merip.org/1986/05/israel-in-central-america/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">Central America<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>has included the selling of napalm to ARENA governments to use on the Salvadoran people, and aid for Nicaragua’s Somoza dictatorship and <em>contra</em> terrorists.  Now, despite Bukele’s Palestinian heritage, he has clearly allied with Israel. His imports of <a class="0" href="https://www.mintpressnews.com/bukele-israel-dictatorship-surveillance/289578/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">Israeli weapons and surveillance technology<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>are growing at an alarming rate, and El Salvador is one of the most extensive users of Israel’s Pegasus spyware, reportedly deployed against dozens of Bukele’s critics.</p> <p>In contrast, Sandinista Nicaragua has a long history of <a class="0" href="https://www.morningstaronline.co.uk/article/nicaragua-and-palestine-enduring-mutual-solidarity" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">solidarity with the Palestinian people<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>. Since October 7, 2023, Ortega has resolutely supported the Palestinian people’s right to peace and self-determination and the end of Israeli aggression. His was the first nation to join the South Africa suit at the International Court of Justice over Israel’s violations of the Genocide Convention. Nicaragua then filed its own suit against Germany for aiding and abetting genocide, which succeeded in reducing weapons sales to Israel and reinstating German funding to UNRWA. Nicaragua does this despite threats of increased sanctions from the US Congress and Israel.</p> <p><strong>Government social spending</strong><br /> Since Bukele became president, classic neoliberal policies have cut education, healthcare, and poverty reduction programs introduced by the FMLN governments before him. Schools are being closed and healthcare is increasingly unaffordable. Meanwhile, there are constant increases in spending on the military, policing, and prisons.</p> <p>Social spending has been a priority for Nicaragua since President Ortega took office in 2007 and now constitutes 60% of the national budget. There have been vast improvements in health, education, nutrition, housing, drinking water, roads, and electricity. The country’s <a class="0" href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_Human_Development_Index" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">Human Development Index<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>has surpassed El Salvador’s—remarkable since Nicaragua’s per capita GDP (an important component of that score) is half that of El Salvador. And Nicaragua ranks <a class="0" href="https://www.resdal.org/Atlas-RESDAL.html" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">third lowest<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>in the western hemisphere for military spending, even behind Costa Rica which supposedly has no army.</p> <p>The many differences between the two presidents are best summarized by looking at them in historical perspective. Despite the hype, the young Bukele offers nothing new. He is perpetuating the cycle of physical and structural violence in his country, in collusion with the US government. The elder statesman Ortega, however, is helping his country break free from imperialist violence. That is something new.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><em>Jill Clark-Gollub is the coordinator of Americas Without Sanctions, a project of the SanctionsKill campaign. She is also a member of the Nicaragua Solidarity Coalition and the Black Alliance for Peace Solidarity Network.</em></p> <p>(<a href="https://www.blackagendareport.com/daniel-ortega-no-bukele" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Black Agenda Report</a>)</p>

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QuietOurStreets
@socalsilencer.bsky.social
about 21 hours ago
Our major cities (LA & San Diego, specifically) r greedily rubber stamping permits for LIAR developers to proclaim multi-unit buildings (aka, APARTMENT buildings) as “ADU’s” just to satiate salivating businessmen. This is NOT the definition of ADU, NOR is it the definition of affordable housing!!!
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American City Business Journals
@bizjournals.com
about 21 hours ago
The largest permanent supportive housing project in L.A. has opened downtown from developers Weingart Center and Related California.
L.A.'s largest permanent supportive housing community opens downtown

bit.ly

L.A.'s largest permanent supportive housing community opens downtown

The largest permanent supportive housing project in L.A. has opened downtown from developers Weingart Center and Related California.

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Andrew Lokenauth | TheFinanceNewsletter.com
@finacenewsletter.bsky.social
about 22 hours ago
Costco is building apartments above its stores to address the affordable housing crisis, starting early this year. Walking downstairs and getting a $1.50 hot dog gives new meaning to “affordable walkability.” Los Angeles is the first residential complex with 800 apartments and a built-in store.
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Alex Ip 葉清霖
@alexip718.com
about 23 hours ago
Which is why the opening of the LAX/ Metro Transit Center a game changer: For the first time in modern American history, two rail transit lines that do not serve downtown will meet each other at an interchange
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🍀🩵Cindy💙🍀
@cindyandrewsmcgraw.bsky.social
about 23 hours ago
A group of military veterans and their families gathered in front of the Supreme Court, demanding that taxpayer dollars for Saturday’s military parade and for putting troops in Los Angeles should be used for housing, health care and food, instead.
Capitol Police arrest 60 parade protesters, including vet using a walker

www.nbcwashington.com

Capitol Police arrest 60 parade protesters, including vet using a walker

U.S. Capitol Police arrested 60 people for unlawful demonstration Friday evening, the agency said. A group of military veterans and their families gathered in front of the Supreme Court, demanding tha...

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Orinoco Tribune
@orinocotribune.bsky.social
about 24 hours ago
Daniel Ortega Is No Bukele

orinocotribune.com

<p>By Jill Clark-Gollub  – Jun 11, 2025</p> <p style="text-align: right;"><strong>Ortega and Bukele are polar opposites: one invests in dignity and democracy, the other in mass incarceration and imperial alliances.</strong></p> <p>Opposition media from both Nicaragua and El Salvador, along with the Washington Post, Amnesty International, and Human Rights Watch, all vilify  Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega by equating him with Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele. Although Ortega and Bukele are both serving consecutive terms, and a Central American polling firm reports that they enjoy high popularity among their respective populations, the two presidents actually offer a study in contrasts.</p> <p><strong>Crime and punishment</strong><br /> Bukele is praised for drastically reducing violence in El Salvador, but his political career is actually based on perpetuating it. First, some history. The country’s gang problem originated in the bloody US-supported war of the 1980s, including US and Israeli funding and training of death squads, that forced thousands of young men to escape forced military recruitment by fleeing to the United States. As an underclass of undocumented immigrants, and without the support of their families, many of these young men wound up in gangs on the streets of Los Angeles or in its prisons. In the mid-1990s, thousands of these gang members were deported to El Salvador, bringing violence back to a country that had just lost 75,000 lives in a brutal conflict. As <a class="0" href="https://jacobin.com/2017/07/usaid-el-salvador-gangs-drug-war-security-fmln-arena" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">Hillary Goodfriend<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>writes, “the devastated neoliberal economic landscape proved fertile terrain for the US gang culture imported by Salvadoran youth deported from Los Angeles in the mid-1990s.” The right-wing Nationalist Republican Alliance (ARENA) governments of the postwar years responded to the gang problem with an iron fist.</p> <p>Then from 2009-2019, while the former guerrillas (Frente Farabundo Martí de Liberación Nacional—FMLN) were in office, a preventive approach was attempted. Structural problems were addressed with “unprecedented increases in social spending, including critical education, health care, land, infrastructure and agricultural investment.” But these efforts were frustrated by a majority opposition legislature that limited spending on such programs, and USAID funding for a private sector approach that favored the opposition. The FMLN also made its own mistakes, including secret negotiations (along with the Catholic Church) for a gang truce, which was initially successful but politically costly once it fell apart. Still, progress was made as Salvadoran youth found more alternatives.</p> <p>Nayib Bukele arrived on the national scene as the FMLN candidate for mayor of San Salvador in 2014. There has been suspicion that his political rise was based on secret deals with the gangs, and an increasing number of <a class="0" href="https://www.dropsitenews.com/p/secret-bukele-trump-deal-grenas" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">international media<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>are giving details on how that worked. He is alleged to have <a class="0" href="https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2025/05/29/trump-favorite-president-el-salvador-nayib-bukele/83896220007/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">bribed the gangs<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>for their loyalty in that mayoral race, outbidding the ARENA candidate by a two to one margin. Bukele soon broke with the FMLN and ran against the party in the 2019 presidential election. MS-13 gang leaders are alleged to have negotiated with him prior to the vote, demanding an end to extraditions to the US, shortened sentences, and control of territory. In return they reduced the homicide rate by hiding their crimes. After Bukele’s election, the official murder rate fell, but disappearances went up. This gang also helped him get out the vote for his legislative supermajority in 2021, sometimes violently. While he colludes with the gangs in secret, the public face of Bukele’s crime policy is a return to the repression of the ARENA years.</p> <p>In March 2022, Bukele instituted a state of exception which persists to this day and has led to the imprisonment of an additional 85,000 people, giving El Salvador the highest incarceration rate in the world. Several social movement leaders are among those detained without trial. Meanwhile, many Salvadorans enjoy comparative safety in the country’s streets since the gang violence is less visible and small businesses no longer have to make extortion payments. This, along with <a class="0" href="https://www.reuters.com/investigates/special-report/el-salvador-politics-media/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">savvy manipulation<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>of social media, has made the president extremely popular among a segment of the population, particularly voters living in the diaspora. Now Bukele has gleefully agreed to serve as an offshore jailer for Donald Trump, and seems to delight in images of dehumanized inmates in crowded cells, indicating that they will never leave. Conditions are torturous and rehabilitation is non-existent. As <a class="0" href="https://www.mintpressnews.com/nayib-bukele-worlds-coolest-dictator/289493/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">Alan MacLeod reports<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>, “cruelty is the point.” And violence persists.</p> <p>The photos at the top of this article show the stark contrast in attitude towards prisoners in Nicaragua vs. El Salvador. While Bukele serves cruelty and humiliation, Nicaragua’s Daniel Ortega focuses on human dignity and rehabilitation—particularly through education. A <a class="0" href="https://www.el19digital.com/articulos/ver/159364-formacion-tecnica-y-academica-para-8429-personas-de-los-sistema-penitenciario-del-pais" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">recent article<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>tells of some 8,400 inmates enrolled in university studies, vocational programs, and completing primary and secondary schooling. Inmates are also allowed to work, if they so choose, and their earnings are sent to their families. Sentences are frequently reduced for good behavior. Reconciliation is a hallmark of the Sandinista movement, which abolished the death penalty in 1979. Corporate media stories about “political prisoners” are part of a US-funded propaganda campaign and should be viewed skeptically. <a class="0" href="https://fair.org/home/nicaraguas-political-prisoners-would-be-criminals-by-us-standards/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">This article<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>gives information about the heinous crimes committed by those US media heroes.</p> <p>In Nicaragua there is minimal gang activity, drug trafficking, and drug abuse. At 6 per 100,000 inhabitants, the country’s <a class="0" href="https://www.statista.com/statistics/1002683/homicide-rate-nicaragua/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">homicide rate<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>has been declining since 2007 and is currently just below that of the US. This decrease is thanks to successful implementation of the kinds of social programs the FMLN attempted in El Salvador, which have engaged the youth and greatly reduced poverty. It has been a steady, long-term process that prioritizes the formerly impoverished majority; not an illusion for social media. People are empowered by creative programs that help farmers feed their families and communities, support entrepreneurs in starting a business, promote women’s health and safety, reinstate rights to Afro-descendant and Indigenous peoples, and allow Nicaraguans of all ages to get an education. These are not changes that can easily be turned back, and are the reason that Daniel Ortega keeps getting a larger and larger percentage of the vote in each election.</p> <p><strong>NGOs</strong><br /> The Washington Post and Amnesty International inaccurately equate El Salvador’s new Foreign Agents Law with Nicaragua’s non-profits law. The Nicaraguan law requires organizations to report payments coming from outside the country and tell how such money is spent, prohibiting the use of foreign monies for political activity. It is meant to curtail foreign interference like the 2018 coup attempt that subjected the Nicaraguan population to three months of politically-motivated terror. <a class="0" href="https://thegrayzone.com/2021/06/01/cia-usaid-nicaragua-right-wing-media/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">This article<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>provides detailed documentation of the extensive flow of USAID regime-change money to Nicaraguan opposition and media outlets before 2022. In a shameless admission that they are still dependent on US funding, the Nicaraguan opposition took to social media at the start of the second Trump administration to decry the <a class="0" href="https://x.com/johnperry21/status/1881898712773067161" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">crisis<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>they had fallen into because <a class="0" href="https://confidencial.digital/english/u-s-ends-92-aid-programs-for-activists-and-opposition-in-nicaragua-cuba-and-venezuela/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">their US funding was cut<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>. Contrary to what the Post and Amnesty would have us believe, media outlets dependent on US government funding are not “independent.” Unfortunately, USAID/NED funding for Nicaraguan opposition media operating outside the country has already been reinstated.</p> <p>El Salvador has also been targeted by USAID in the past for political purposes, including during the FMLN administrations. US meddling is less likely to target Bukele, given his close alignment with the Trump administration. Criticism of the new law’s provision to charge Salvadoran charities a 30% tax on international donations does seem valid. In Nicaragua, most charitable organizations pay a 1% administrative fee on international donations, while the wealthiest charities pay up to 3%—a far cry from Bukele’s 30% tax.</p> <p><strong>Treatment of Migrants</strong><br /> Ortega never participated in the schemes the Trump and Biden administrations negotiated with Nicaragua’s northern neighbors to inhibit the flow of migrants; nor did he impose a ‘special fee’ on <a class="0" href="https://ayuda.avianca.com/hc/en-us/articles/19744371443355-Airport-Improvement-Tariff-at-El-Salvador-International-Airport" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">migrants in transit from Africa<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>, as Bukele did. Nicaragua accepted direct flights from Haiti and Cuba as a humanitarian gesture to ease the crises that US intervention created in those countries. For a period, Nicaragua was a transit country for migrants looking for an inexpensive and safer route to the US that avoided the dangerous Darien Gap. It was rewarded with baseless accusations of “human trafficking” by the US Congress.</p> <p>Meanwhile, Bukele zealously collaborates with Trump’s mass deportation/incarceration plan for migrants, even refusing to release a wrongfully deported Salvadoran man. Daniel Ortega has <a class="0" href="https://www.facebook.com/jpmascentroamerica/posts/el-copresidente-de-nicaragua-daniel-ortega-denunci%C3%B3-el-encarcelamiento-injustifi/705629808801788/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">adamantly denounced this<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>, demanded the return of the kidnapped Venezuelans held in El Salvador, and pleaded for respect for all migrants. Nicaraguan migrants who are deported home from the US are welcomed with free health check-ups, a meal, transportation to their home communities, and a small stipend to get re-settled.</p> <blockquote class="wp-embedded-content" data-secret="F9K4zp8zhp"><p><a href="https://orinocotribune.com/nayib-bukeles-el-salvador-dictatorship-made-in-israel/">Nayib Bukele’s El Salvador Dictatorship: Made in Israel</a></p></blockquote> <p><iframe loading="lazy" class="wp-embedded-content" sandbox="allow-scripts" security="restricted" title="“Nayib Bukele’s El Salvador Dictatorship: Made in Israel” — Orinoco Tribune - News and opinion pieces about Venezuela and beyond" src="https://orinocotribune.com/nayib-bukeles-el-salvador-dictatorship-made-in-israel/embed/#?secret=qkWI9RnvfZ#?secret=F9K4zp8zhp" data-secret="F9K4zp8zhp" width="600" height="338" frameborder="0" marginwidth="0" marginheight="0" scrolling="no"></iframe></p> <p><strong>Handling of the COVID-19 pandemic</strong><br /> El Salvador had one of the most authoritarian responses to the pandemic. The Bukele government shut down the economy,  <a class="0" href="https://coha.org/el-salvador-bukeles-heavy-handed-response-to-covid-19-pandemic-violates-human-rights/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">used military repression<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>to enforce a nationwide quarantine, declared a state of exception, and forced people into COVID detention centers, where many were infected and some died. Bukele tweeted sadistic photos of gang members crowded together like sardines in prisons—bragging about his repressive response with no regard for the danger of spreading the virus.</p> <p>President Ortega did the exact opposite: the economy and schools remained open, while children continued to receive their daily lunches. The government deployed a massive public health campaign with house-to-house information visits, prepared public hospitals to treat COVID, established a hotline for contact tracing and monitoring of patients, and released some prisoners. No one was jailed or went hungry due to the pandemic; the government did not incur excessive debt; and Nicaragua achieved the highest vaccination rate in Central America.</p> <p>Nicaragua had <a class="0" href="https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/excess-deaths-cumulative-per-100k-economist?region=NorthAmerica&globe=1&globeRotation=43%2C-94.5&globeZoom=1.5" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">one of the lowest excess death rates<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>from the pandemic in the world (292 per 100,000 inhabitants). <a class="0" href="https://www.nicasolidarity.com/health" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">UNICEF congratulated Nicaragua<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>on its pandemic response because unlike children who faced lockdowns, Nicaraguan youngsters did not experience more health risks, poorer nutrition, decreased vaccination rates, or diminished education outcomes due to the pandemic.</p> <p>Salvadoran children, unfortunately, faced all the detrimental effects of an extreme lockdown. The country’s democracy suffered, the economy shrank severely, and the government incurred tremendous debt. The excess death rate in El Salvador due to the pandemic was 364 per 100,000 inhabitants.</p> <p><strong>Israel/Palestine</strong><br /> Historically, Zionist collaboration with right-wing repression in <a class="0" href="https://merip.org/1986/05/israel-in-central-america/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">Central America<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>has included the selling of napalm to ARENA governments to use on the Salvadoran people, and aid for Nicaragua’s Somoza dictatorship and <em>contra</em> terrorists.  Now, despite Bukele’s Palestinian heritage, he has clearly allied with Israel. His imports of <a class="0" href="https://www.mintpressnews.com/bukele-israel-dictatorship-surveillance/289578/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">Israeli weapons and surveillance technology<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>are growing at an alarming rate, and El Salvador is one of the most extensive users of Israel’s Pegasus spyware, reportedly deployed against dozens of Bukele’s critics.</p> <p>In contrast, Sandinista Nicaragua has a long history of <a class="0" href="https://www.morningstaronline.co.uk/article/nicaragua-and-palestine-enduring-mutual-solidarity" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">solidarity with the Palestinian people<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>. Since October 7, 2023, Ortega has resolutely supported the Palestinian people’s right to peace and self-determination and the end of Israeli aggression. His was the first nation to join the South Africa suit at the International Court of Justice over Israel’s violations of the Genocide Convention. Nicaragua then filed its own suit against Germany for aiding and abetting genocide, which succeeded in reducing weapons sales to Israel and reinstating German funding to UNRWA. Nicaragua does this despite threats of increased sanctions from the US Congress and Israel.</p> <p><strong>Government social spending</strong><br /> Since Bukele became president, classic neoliberal policies have cut education, healthcare, and poverty reduction programs introduced by the FMLN governments before him. Schools are being closed and healthcare is increasingly unaffordable. Meanwhile, there are constant increases in spending on the military, policing, and prisons.</p> <p>Social spending has been a priority for Nicaragua since President Ortega took office in 2007 and now constitutes 60% of the national budget. There have been vast improvements in health, education, nutrition, housing, drinking water, roads, and electricity. The country’s <a class="0" href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_Human_Development_Index" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">Human Development Index<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>has surpassed El Salvador’s—remarkable since Nicaragua’s per capita GDP (an important component of that score) is half that of El Salvador. And Nicaragua ranks <a class="0" href="https://www.resdal.org/Atlas-RESDAL.html" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">third lowest<span class="0"><span class="element-invisible"> </span></span></a>in the western hemisphere for military spending, even behind Costa Rica which supposedly has no army.</p> <p>The many differences between the two presidents are best summarized by looking at them in historical perspective. Despite the hype, the young Bukele offers nothing new. He is perpetuating the cycle of physical and structural violence in his country, in collusion with the US government. The elder statesman Ortega, however, is helping his country break free from imperialist violence. That is something new.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><em>Jill Clark-Gollub is the coordinator of Americas Without Sanctions, a project of the SanctionsKill campaign. She is also a member of the Nicaragua Solidarity Coalition and the Black Alliance for Peace Solidarity Network.</em></p> <p>(<a href="https://www.blackagendareport.com/daniel-ortega-no-bukele" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Black Agenda Report</a>)</p>

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