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Middleboro Review 2

NEW CONTENT MOVED TO MIDDLEBORO REVIEW 2

Toyota

Since the Dilly, Dally, Delay & Stall Law Firms are adding their billable hours, the Toyota U.S.A. and Route 44 Toyota posts have been separated here:

Route 44 Toyota Sold Me A Lemon



Sunday, January 31, 2016

RSN: One-Third of Ecuador's Rainforests to Be Auctioned Off to Chinese Oil Companies, New Report Shows Mistreatment of Garment Workers by Familiar Brands




It's Live on the HomePage Now:
Reader Supported News

Robert Reich | The Post's Wrong-Headed Attack on Bernie Sanders's Health Plan
Robert Reich. (photo: Perian Flaherty)
Robert Reich, Robert Reich's Blog
Reich writes: "We can debate specific numbers, but the Post's unstated assumption - that the quality of health care received by Americans is superior to the quality received by, say, Canadians, from their single-payer, mostly publicly-funded system - is not borne out by evidence."
READ MORE
State Department Will Not Release 22 'Top Secret' Clinton Emails
Laura Koran, CNN
Koran writes: "The State Department announced Friday that it will not release 22 emails from former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton because they contain 'top secret' information, the highest level of government classification."
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Baltimore Warns That Children Are at Risk of Lead Poisoning From Paint
Luke Broadwater, The Baltimore Sun
Broadwater writes: "State officials are urging nearly 400 families to find out whether their children may have lead poisoning after launching an investigation of a private inspector who they say improperly certified rental properties as lead-free."
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New Report Shows Mistreatment of Garment Workers by Familiar Brands
Katie Herzog, Grist
Herzog writes: "It's no secret that the working conditions of garment workers in developing nations - and even some industrialized ones - are bad, but a new report by the NGO India Committee of the Netherlands illustrates just how abysmal they can be. Factories singled out in the report supply goods to H&M, GAP, Tommy Hilfiger, and Inditex, the parent company of Zara."
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Declining Life Expectancy: Brought to You by Washington
Nick Alexandrov, CounterPunch
Alexandrov writes: "The US oversees slaughter so intense it cuts life expectancy in various countries abroad."
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Haiti's Electoral President Resigns
teleSUR
Excerpt: "The head of Haiti's electoral council, who has been accused of fraud, resigned Thursday, but the country's president will maintain his post."
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One-Third of Ecuador's Rainforests to Be Auctioned Off to Chinese Oil Companies
Peter de Jesus, Latin Post
De Jesus writes: "China could soon be free to exploit about 3 million of the country's 8.1 million hectares of pure, untouched Amazonian rainforest. The region has remained pristine despite the advent of industrialization, until now."
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Nina Gualinga, an international activist on indigenous rights, traveling on the Bobonaza River, Sarayaku, Ecuador. (photo: Caroline Bennett/Amazon Watch)
Nina Gualinga, an international activist on indigenous rights, traveling on the Bobonaza River, 
Sarayaku, Ecuador. (photo: Caroline Bennett/Amazon Watch)
lmost two years after a controversial bid by the country's politicians to auction off part of the Amazon Rainforest to Chinese oil drilling companies, the it seems like the deal is finally about to get finalized, according to The Business Insider.
If the deal does go through, China would be free to exploit about 3 million of the country's 8.1 million hectares of pure, untouched Amazonian rainforest. The region has remained pristine despite the advent of industrialization, until now.
Areas of the Amazon are widely believed to carry vast deposits of oil, one of the global market's primary commodities. With China growing at an unprecedented pace, its acquisition of the Amazonian rainforest would, of course, enable the Asian giant to access more resources.
Of course, such a move carries undeniable consequences, most of all being the obvious negative effects on the Amazon's ecosystem. Ecuador, most especially the millions of hectares of pure rainforest, is extremely biodiverse and is widely thought to hold species of animals that are probably yet to be discovered.
However, such biodiversity is also extremely delicate; thus, the oil exploration activities of China might very well compromise its balance.
Axis of Logic stated that the sale of parts of the Amazon was met with much criticism, especially from the indigenous groups who consider the land their home. A previous court ruling has also granted them the right to veto any projects that might involve the environment.
In a nutshell, the court ruling stated that their consent is needed before the rainforest could be touched.
Narcisa Mashienta, one of the leaders of Ecuador's Shuar people, has stated that her people, as well as the other indigenous groups residing in the area, are sternly refusing the intended exploitation of the forest.
"They have not consulted us, and we're here to tell the big investors that they don't have our permission to exploit our land," she said.
With Ecuador's current financial troubles, however, groups such as the Shuar people might not have a choice. Avid environmentalist and human rights and campaigner Adam Zuckerman of the California-based NGO Amazon Watch, believes that China might have left Ecuador with no choice, reported The People's Voice.
"My understanding is that this is more of a debt issue. It's because the Ecuadoreans are so dependent on the Chinese to finance their development that they're willing to compromise in other areas such as social and environmental regulations," he said.
China has been loaning Ecuador billions of dollars since 2009 in exchange for oil shipments. The Asian superpower has also helped the country fund its most ambitious hydroelectric infrastructure projects. As of last summer, Ecuador owned China $7 billion, which is more than a tenth of the country's GDP. 





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