Thursday, March 24, 2011

Brent Everett Gay Online



Want, mountain, murder

Data published by THE AFTERNOON reflecting the seriousness of the issue of homelessness in Pereira, show the impact we cause you and me when we give alms to something more complicated: If you are 1,200 homeless people-from most other municipalities, which receive 96 million dollars daily in charity, and of those only 19.2 go to their survival, while 76.8 million will be the "pots", a service, we are saying that in a month, City moves 2.304 million in drug (...). Only through that mechanism, not counting the "recreational use", etc. Mechanisms that begin with pious alms or "pass" and end up feeding one of the most violent business that exists. One of the violence that sometimes you just feel when we kill someone close. The solution is complex. Help to prevent begging, and if you eat ... be it. ****



capture the alleged head of Cordillera is good news that possibly have dire consequences in the short term, internal wars for the succession. Something is terribly normal. In any criminal criminal structure that occurs with the fall of a leader, usually a chain of various crimes and killings related to who the new boss. Now this might be NOT be given. Well because then Cordillera belong to a (unknown?) Superstructure which is capable of ordering the alleged leader who replaced (from a prison gringa?). Or is it a smaller structure than we thought. O the Lord is not the boss ... the real. Everything is possible in the world of crime. The authorities, intelligence agencies must step up and shielded from such a situation

**** On the subject of murder is being exaggerated. First, it is true, there is a decline. We're pretty far from 2005 when there were 478 homicides which was equivalent to that for every 943 inhabitants in Pereira, 1 was killed (...). It is also true that we still we are far from the national rate. But so is that one can never deny the other: there is an improvement, and those who have led have every right to reproached his detractors. The bottom line is that we forget that historically, not now, but for decades and decades, the city has been one of the most violent in Colombia (one of the most violent countries in the world: one of the most violent cities in the world ?). This lack of "moral sanction" this tolerance, almost cultural, directly or indirectly, almost everyone has with the killings, crime, corruption, their money, their values \u200b\u200bof violence, etc, from the 60s or before, only break with changes in our economic structure, social and political, cultural and transform us psychologically. Only with these structural changes have achieve the peaceful city we want.


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