Translate

Monday, May 27, 2019

Vol VII No. 757 - Part 1aa : "Stand With Puerto Rico"

Fwd: Sign if you agree: Trump's racism will cost lives in Puerto Rico


Inbox
x

Tony Castanha

Sun, May 26, 2:31 PM (20 hours ago)
to papbullslist-l, demilnet_Hawaii
*Sign on . . . most of the information below is true with the added, but not surprising, fact that the local "commonwealth" (i.e., neocolonial) government is just as responsible for the mess we are in. I believe the bill was scheduled to be passed last week with one fanatical congressman halting it. Good info. anyway to keep abreast of the precarious and sad situation Boriken is in and will be in for the next few decades... with hurricane season beginning this week! A tropical strom will mean the loss of power for "two weeks." One little rain like we had "last week" and "poof," the power goes out. Our fake gov. can't even keep the lights on.

---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Heidi Hess, CREDO Action <act@credoaction.com>
Date: Sat, May 11, 2019 at 9:13 AM
Subject: Sign if you agree: Trump's racism will cost lives in Puerto Rico



Save lives in Puerto Rico. Fully fund disaster relief and rebuilding.
Petition to the U.S. Senate:
"$600 million for food stamps is not enough. Reject Trump's racist approach to Puerto Rico and fully fund critical disaster relief, reconstruction funding, physical and mental health care, food assistance expansion and long-term climate resilient solutions."
Add your name:
Sign the petition ►
Dear Antonio,
Save lives in Puerto Rico. Fully fund disaster relief and rebuilding.
After Hurricane Maria crushed Puerto Rico, killed more than 3,000 Americans, and left millions more without electricity and reliable access to food and water, Donald Trump floated the idea of never rebuilding the island. Now, Trump is trying to make that racist idea a horrific reality.
Trump refuses to sign a hurricane disaster relief bill if it includes significant funds for Puerto Rico. He made it clear he will reject any bill for hurricane-stricken states and territories that includes more than $600 million solely for food assistance in Puerto Rico, even though even Senate Republicans agree that the island needs far more to rebuild.1
Trump's hatred for Puerto Rico is racist, pure and simple. We cannot let him get away with blocking aid to Americans in desperate need. Trump's intransigence is already driving a wedge between him and congressional Republicans – we need to ramp up the pressure to get Puerto Rico the help it needs.
Tell the Senate: Save lives in Puerto Rico. Fully fund disaster relief and rebuilding. Click here to sign the petition.
We are seeing what happens when white nationalists set disaster policy – and with a new hurricane season approaching, it will cost even more lives. Already, the Puerto Rican government cut more than 1 million people off of food assistance. And in a recent speech in Florida, Trump lied again about how much aid Puerto Rico already received. Instead of serving all Americans, Trump is trying to pit disaster survivors against each other with vicious lies.2 The manager of the world-champion Boston Red Sox even refused to visit the White House over Trump's Puerto Rico stance.3
Puerto Rico is the sticking point holding up a major disaster relief bill that would help Texas, Florida and Georgia as well – and Donald Trump is the only person standing in the way. Democrats are standing strong and recently voted down a bill that only had $600 million in food stamps for Puerto Rico. Some Republican senators want more funding than Trump. But their proposals are significantly less than what is needed to rebuild the island, provide continuing relief after the disaster of Hurricane Maria and improve Puerto Rico's ability to cope with devastating climate change.4
Trump's callous take on Puerto Rico is despicable and costs lives. He caused massive delays in aid efforts even as the elderly were dying due to the lack of medicine or electricity for ventilators and dialysis, then later tweeted that Puerto Ricans “want everything to be done for them.” Trump also accused San Juan Mayor Carmen Yulín Cruz of criticizing the disaster response because Democrats put her up to it, insisted that Wall Street be able to profit off loans to Puerto Rico and said the disaster wasn’t a “real catastrophe” like Katrina during a trip where he tossed paper towels to desperate people like he was a game show host.
We need to turn the pressure up on Trump – and make sure corporate Democrats and Republicans continue to press to fully fund Puerto Rico's recovery.
Tell the Senate: Save lives in Puerto Rico. Fully fund disaster relief and rebuilding. Click here to sign the petition.
The crisis in Puerto Rico is decades in the making and the result of a racist, colonial approach to the island. First, it was the exploitation of the sugarcane industry. Then, Congress turned Puerto Rico into a tax haven for manufacturing and pharmaceutical companies. When Congress allowed those tax breaks to expire, the Puerto Rican economy collapsed and its government had to take on additional debt. Washington then imposed an unelected, Wall Street-backed “fiscal control board” to institute harsh austerity measures in response to that debt.
Puerto Ricans are American citizens – but have been treated like colonial possessions to be exploited by large corporations and then told they cannot manage their own affairs. They had no voice in Congress when our government was boosting oil and gas companies and are suffering now that climate change has supercharged storms and devastated the island. Now, Donald Trump is willing to let people die to serve his racist agenda. We can't let that happen.
Tell the Senate: Save lives in Puerto Rico. Fully fund disaster relief and rebuilding. Click below to sign the petition:
https://act.credoaction.com/sign/puerto-rico-disaster-relief-bill?t=10&akid=32531%2E13503301%2Eqrd4b6
Thank you for speaking out,
Heidi Hess, Co-Director
CREDO Action from Working Assets
Add your name:
Sign the petition ►
References:
  1. Haley Bird and Phil Mattingly, "Stalled disaster relief package shows Congress-White House split," CNN, May 9, 2019.
  2. Kathryn Krawczyk, "Trump keeps telling the same whopper about Puerto Rico," The Week, May 9, 2019.
  3. Devin Cole and Betsy Klein, "Red Sox manager to skip White House visit, citing Trump's Puerto Rico hurricane response," CNN, May 6, 2019.
  4. Bird and Mattingly, "Stalled disaster relief package shows Congress-White House split."

FB Share on Facebook
Post to your wall
Tw Tweet this
Post to Twitter

Radio Interview -- Hawai'i and Puerto Rico: Historical Deprivation and Myths of Statehood

Inbox
x

No comments: