sábado, 28 de novembro de 2009

Charge: fim do mundo


é o fim do mundo, como nós sabemos... de novo!
um breve histórico das conspirações socialistas para acabar com o estilo de vida norte-americano.


Escolas píblicas? Socilismo!!
1790

Sistema público de abastecimento de água? Socialismo!!

1808

Estradas públicas?? Socialismo!!
1842

Parques públicos? Socialismo!!
1905

Sistema público de saúde? Socialismo!!
2009


quinta-feira, 19 de novembro de 2009

Wind of Change


I ______ the Moskva
Down to Gorky Park
_________ to the wind of change
An August _______ night
________ passing __
Listening to the wind of change

The ________ closing in
Did you ever ______
That we could be so ______, like brothers
The ________'s in the air
I can ______ it _____________
Blowing with the wind of change

Chorus:
_______me to the magic of the __________
On a glory ______
Where the children of __________ dream away
In the wind of change

_________ down the street
Distant __________
Are _________ in the _______ forever


I follow the Moskva
Down to Gorky Park
Listening to the wind of change
Take me to the magic of the moment
On a glory night
Where the children of tomorrow share their dreams
With you and me

Take me to the magic of the moment
On a glory night
Where the children of tomorrow dream away
In the wind of change

The wind of change ________ straight
Into the face of time
Like a stormwind that will _____
The __________ bell for peace of ______
Let your balalaika ______
What my guitar wants to say

Chorus

Word Bank

listening = hearing, paying attention.
soldiers = member of the military.
follow = go after.
summer = one of the four seasons of the year when it’s hot.


everywhere = in every place, in every location.
think = deliberate, conceive in the mind; believe.
world = planet; planet Earth; universe, cosmos; a lot, very much.
future = coming time, coming events, opposite of past.
feel = physically sense; emotionally sense.
close = near, adjacent; intimate.

moment = infinitely short period of time.
take = transport
tomorrow = the day after today.
night = period of time after the evening; darkness.

buried = interred, placed in the ground and covered with earth.
memories = recall; recollection; saved mental impression.
walking = moving along
past =in a time gone by; previously, opposite of future.

ring = call on the telephone (British); bid, call, sound a bell.
blows = exhale; inflate; wave.
freedom = liberty; independence.
wants = desire; need.
mind = brain, human consciousness.

segunda-feira, 16 de novembro de 2009

Ron Paul comments on Obama`s nobel prize



About Ron Paul
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ron_paul

Ecofont


Aqui vai o site da fonte (tipo de letra) que economiza até 20% de tinta.
É esse: www.ecofont.com
Lá é só fazer o download e instalar.

domingo, 15 de novembro de 2009

The History of Health Food, Part 1: Antiquity

Compas,
Encontrei um texto interessante falando sobre comida.
O pessoal do avançado que ler e gostar pode compartilhar com o pessoal do intermediário, o que acham da idéia?
Espero que gostem!
abs
Eduardo
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

We tend to think of health food as a modern invention, but humans have made the connection between food and well-being at least since the beginning of written history—although it’s always been as much a matter of educated guesswork as solid science.

Ancient Greeks believed that good health was dependent on maintaining the balance of the body’s four “humors”—black bile, yellow bile, phlegm and blood—and that modifications in diet could restore balance if levels got out of whack. Hippocrates, Plutarch and other thinkers wrote books on the relationship between food and health, including Galen’s On the Power of Foods, a title that sounds like it could have been written last year.
Garlic, courtesy Flickr user Sebastian Mary

Garlic, courtesy Flickr user Sebastian Mary

Belief in garlic’s health properties was surprisingly widespread in the ancient world: According to legend, the Egyptian pharaohs fed it to their slaves to increase their strength and productivity (imagine the pungent perspiration of those pyramid-builders), and remnants of garlic were found in the tomb of King Tutankhamen.

An article in the Journal of Nutrition describes the health benefits attributed to garlic in other ancient civilizations, too. In China it was a part of the daily diet, and prescribed for respiratory and digestive ailments; evidence also suggests it may have been used to treat depression, headaches and male impotency.

The herb was an important part of the ancient Greek military diet because it was believed to provide strength for battle, and it was fed to early Olympians before they competed. (As the article’s author suggests, it may have been one of the earliest “performance-enhancing agents” used by athletes.)

According to food historian Francine Segan, who researched ancient texts for her cookbook The Philosopher’s Kitchen, some ancient Greek athletes followed what resembled an early version of the Atkins diet. One text she studied, called The Deipnosophists—a 15-volume description of an epic feast that took place around A.D. 200— tells of an Olympic runner who won several races while subsisting solely on meat. As Segan told National Geographic, “This started a meat-only craze.” She added that some Greek Olympians abstained from eating bread right before a competition, in contrast to the common modern-day practice of carb-loading.

Although the Atkins diet was an unintentional retread of the ancient Greek fad, the last few decades have seen an increased interest in ancient theories of healthy eating, especially traditional Chinese and Ayurvedic diets. I even found a book, called The Kemetic Diet, based on ancient Egyptian practices (the name derives from Kamit, the ancient word for the land we now call Egypt).

The author, Muata Abhaya Ashby, writes that good health, as the ancient Egyptians saw it, relies not only on food for the body but food for the soul and mind—a theory, he points out, that was a precursor to later ideas of holistic medicine. Physical disease, he continues, is caused by digesting impurities, which must be cleansed through the specific alkaline vegetarian diet outlined in the book (although most ancient Egyptians ate meat). A mainstay of the plan is drinking kamut wheatgrass juice, which comes from an ancient grain, and which Ashby claims acts as an “alkaline flush” in the body.

Ashby notes that the ancient Kamitans were the healthiest people of their time. Of course, they still only had an average life expectancy of 40, so I don’t know how ringing of an endorsement that is.

Check back soon for more installments in this series.

segunda-feira, 9 de novembro de 2009

Eisenhower's farewell address


Dwight D. Eisenhower Farewell Address - 17 January 1961
CNM – CUT Advanced Group

Good evening, my fellow Americans.
We now stand ten years past the _______of a century that has __________four major wars among great nations. (…)

Until the latest of our world conflicts, the United States had no armaments industry. American makers of ______________ could, with time and as required, make swords as well. But we can no longer risk emergency _________________ of national defense. We have been ____________ to create a permanent armaments industry of vast proportions. Added to this, three and a half million men and women are directly ___________ in the defense _____________. (…)

Now this ______________ of an immense military establishment and a large arms industry is new in the American experience. The total _______ -- economic, political, even spiritual -- is felt in every city, every ____________, every office of the Federal government. We _____________ the imperative need for this development. Yet, we must not fail to comprehend its _______ implications. Our _____, resources, and __________ are all involved. So is the very __________ of our society.

In the ___________ of government, we must guard against the _____________ of _______________influence, whether __________ or unsought, by the military-industrial complex. The potential for the ______________ rise of __________ power exists and will persist. We must never let the _________of this combination endanger our liberties or democratic processes. We should take nothing for__________. Only an alert and ____________citizenry can compel the proper __________of the huge industrial and military machinery of defense with our peaceful methods and goals, so that security and liberty may prosper together (…)

witnessed = observed, watched, spectated.
midpoint = the exact middle point.

improvisation = a spontaneous creation without planing or preparation.
establishment = public institution, a group in a society exercising power.
plowshares = part of a plow, blade of a plow that cuts into the soil.
compelled = forced.
engaged = involved.

influence = impact; control, hold, power, authority, mastery.
recognize =identify as already known, acknowledge the existence,
conjunction = coincidence, coexistence, simultaneity
grave = serious, severe, grievous.
structure = building, construction.
toil = n. hard physical work.
Statehouse = the building in which a State legislature holds its sessions. livelihood = subsistence or living.

meshing = becoming entangled, locking together with another.
acquisition = a recently acquired asset or object, possession, gain.
unwarranted = not justified or authorized, unwanted, illicit, criminal.
granted = (take for granted) assume that something is true.
sought = desired, wanted, searched (past tense of seek).
disastrous = catastrophic, tragic, devastating.
councils = a formally constituted advisory or administrative body.
misplace = put in the wrong place.
weight = a body's relative mass, pressure, force.
knowledgeable = intelligent and well informed.

quinta-feira, 29 de outubro de 2009

terça-feira, 20 de outubro de 2009

Phrasal Verbs

a mouse working out

If my memory doesn't fail me, this was the sequence of phrasal verbs from our last activity:

Work out
Pass out
Call off
Chop up
Carry on
Show off
Tie up
Try out
Pay off
Give back
Let down
Give up
Set up
Cheer up

Please let me know if it's not correct!
See you guys on monday!
Eduardo

domingo, 18 de outubro de 2009

Blowing in the wind


CNM – CUT Intermediate Lessons
How many ______ must a man walk down
Before you call him a man?
Yes, 'n' how many _____ must a white dove sail
Before she sleeps in the ______?
Yes, 'n' how _____ times must the cannon balls ___
Before they're forever _________?
The ________ my friend, is blowin' in the wind,
The ________ is blowin' in the wind.
How many years can a ____________exist
Before it's washed to the sea?
Yes, 'n' how many years can some people exist
Before they're ___________ to be ______?
Yes, 'n' how many times must a man turn his ______,
Pretending he just doesn't ___?
The answer, my friend, is blowin' in the wind,
The answer is blowin' in the wind.
How many times must a man look up
Before he can really see the sky?
Yes, 'n' how many _____ must one man have
Before he can hear people ___?
Yes, 'n' how many ____ will it take till he knows
That too many people have died?
The answer, my friend, is blowin' in the wind,
The answer is blowin' in the wind.

Word box

answer - deaths - seas - see - head - ears- sand - many - banned - mountain - allowed - free - cry - roads

quinta-feira, 8 de outubro de 2009

Stand by me


Stand by me – John Lennon Recording
CNM –CUT Intermediate lessons

When the ______ has come
And the land is _______
And the moon is the only light _____ see
No I won't be ______, no I won't be afraid
Just as long as you stand, stand by me
And darling, darling, stand by me, oh now now stand by me
Stand by me, stand by me
If the sky that we ______ upon
Should tumble and ______
And the ___________ should crumble to the _____
I won't cry, I won't cry, no I won't shed a ______
Just as long as you stand, stand by me
And darlin', darlin', stand by me, oh stand by me
Stand by me, stand by me, stand by me-e, yeah

Whenever you're in _______ won't you stand by me, oh now now stand by me
Oh stand by me, stand by me, stand by me
Darlin', darlin', stand by me-e, stand by me
Oh stand by me, stand by me, stand by me.

wordbox

tear - trouble - we'll - look - night - mountains - sea - fall - afraid - dark

segunda-feira, 5 de outubro de 2009

The Human Body



















Clique na imagem para ampliar.

Fruits and Vegetables

sexta-feira, 2 de outubro de 2009

Rio is ready



A strong economy and guaranteed funding

Brazil's economy is now the tenth largest in the world - and predicted to be fifth by 2016. We are the world's second biggest food exporter, one of the world's largest oil and ore producers and the fifth largest advertising market. Our diverse economy is the engine of South America and one of the world's top 10 consumer markets. We have the highest levels of Internet use in the world. The enduring strength of our economy - even in the current global climate - has enabled the Government to guarantee the investments needed for the 2016 Games, including direct funding of US$700m for the OCOG.

Spirit, sport and a powerful legacy

We will unite Rio's unique spirit with the power of sport to stage an exceptional event, full of Brazilian passion. Rio 2016 will provide memories of a lifetime for every athlete and all other members of the Games Family. And the Games will leave a powerful legacy by meeting the long-term needs of the city and its residents. Every aspect of the Rio Games concept has been designed to align with the strategy for the future of the city and country.

World-class existing venues

More than half of Rio 2016's venues are already built. They include state-of-the-art facilities constructed for the 2007 Pan and Parapan American Games: the magnificent João Havelange Stadium (the proposed 2016 venue for Athletics), the Maria Lenk Aquatic Centre, the Rio Olympic Arena (which will host Gymnastics and Wheelchair Basketball), the Rio Olympic Velodrome, the National Equestrian Center and its close neighbor, the National Shooting Center.

Ongoing venue investment

Brazil's commitment to sport can be seen in the further venue investment that is already under way in Rio. The world-famous Maracanã stadium will close next year for two years of refurbishment. The areas around it will be renovated, with access and transport links improved as the entire neighborhood is reborn ready for host the final of the 2014 FIFA World Cup. Work is already underway on the ongoing development of the Olympic Training Center (OTC), which includes many of the state-of-the-art venues built for the 2007 Pan and Parapan American Games. The OTC will be at the heart of the Rio Games - and international sport for years afterwards. Athletes and coaches from all over the world will be offered scholarships to what will be a new regional hub for sport.

Uniting sport and youth

Rio is committed to bringing together Brazil's youthful population - including 65 million under 18s - with the full range of Olympic and Paralympic sport. One example is the X Park, a sports complex that will combine Olympic disciplines with many of the modern sports that have emerged in recent years . In keeping with Rio 2016's clear strategy to align Games plans with the long-term development of the city, the X Park will be built in Deodoro - the area of Rio with the youngest population and a recognised need for more sports facilities.

An extraordinary Village experience for every athlete and official

The global sports family will enjoy high quality accommodation in Rio - with ground-breaking facilities and superb views - within walking distance of many competition and training venues. Because every sport will be staged in Rio itself, every athlete and official will stay in a single Village - and a Village in a remarkable location on the shore of a lake, with its own park, private oceanside beach and dedicated training facilities. The famous character of Rio will be brought to life in the pedestrian boulevard of Rua Carioca, with sidewalk cafes, live music, restaurants and shops at the heart of the Village. The needs and requirements of every client group, across every functional area, have been considered and addressed in the comprehensive planning for Rio's Games concept.

Taking sport to new audiences

Rio will provide an amazing stage for the athletes, stunning locations for sport and a breathtaking spectacle for Games visitors and broadcasters, who - thanks to Rio's favorable time zone - will be able to offer live coverage in peak times worldwide. Rio 2016 will also work with every sport to develop high impact entertainment concepts that harness the incredible energy of Brazilian spectators, whilst preserving the tradition of each sport. We have budgeted to develop creative concepts and innovative technologies with each sport - to connect spectators to the athletes and enhance the Games experience for both. We will also ensure that as many people as possible see the action. Part of our fully funded, pioneering Full Stadia Program will bring young, passionate Brazilian sports fans to the Games via text message.

A truly global celebration

Rio 2016 will be Games of celebration, extended worldwide via a network of sites in key global locations. Our Olympics Live initiative will fund 15 Live Sites around the world, including at least two on every continent, bringing a genuine sense of connectedness , specifically targeting youth audiences and creating a direct bridge to the Games experience. Using a combination of the latest broadcast technology and interactive activities, the sites will offer a new level of live global Games experience.

quinta-feira, 1 de outubro de 2009

Busuu.com



Galera,

É o seguinte, esse site aqui: Busuu.com funciona como uma comunidade das pessoas que estão aprendendo algum idioma. Eu já me cadastrei por lá e estou aprendendo Francês e Alemão e colaborando com Português e Inglês.
abs

San Quentin


San Quentin – Jonny Cash

Any of the _______ that are still speaking to me, could I have a glass of_______?
San Quentin just for you.

San Quentin, you've been living hell to __
You've busted me since ________ sixty three
I've seen 'em come and go and I've seen them ___
And long ago I ________ asking why

San Quentin, I hate every inch of ___.
You've cut me and have scarred me through and through.
And I'll walk out a wiser weaker ___;
Mister Congressman you can't ___________.

San Quentin, what ______ do you _____ you do?
Do you think I'll be ________ when you're through?
You bent my _____ and mind and you warp my _____,
And your stone walls turn my blood a little cold.

San Quentin, may you rot and _____ in hell.
May your walls fall and may I live to tell.
May all the world forget you ever ______.
And may all the ______ regret you did no good.

San Quentin, I hate every inch of you.

Word box: nineteen – different- guards – burn - good – die – soul - water stopped – world -think – heart - cold – live – you – me – understand – stood - man

segunda-feira, 28 de setembro de 2009

Expressões Idiomáticas














Go fly a kite!
, ou seja "Vai empinar uma pipa", quer dizer "vai ver se eu não estou lá na esquina!"



Flogging a dead horse (British Idiom)

When someone is trying to convince people to do or feel something without any hope of succeeding.

Nod's as good as a wink
(British Idiom)

Is a way of saying you have understood something that someone has said, even though it was not said directly.

Thin blue line
(British Idiom)

Is a term for the police, (because of their uniform) suggesting that they stand between an ordered society and potential chaos.

Tired and emotional
(British Idiom)

This idiom is a euphemism used to mean 'drunk', especially when talking about politicians.

You do not get a dog and bark yourself
(British Idiom)

If there is someone in a lower position who can or should do a task, then you shouldn't do it.

Over-egg the pudding
(British Idiom)

To spoil something by trying to improve it excessively.

Rearrange the deckchairs on the Titanic
(British Idiom)

To make small changes that will have no effect as the project, company, etc, is in very serious trouble.

Fall off the turnip truck
(North American Idiom)

Causes someone to be uninformed, naive and gullible. (Often used in the negative)

Give away the store
(North American Idiom)

Say or do something that makes their position in negotiations, debates, etc, much weaker.

If I had a nickel for every time
(North American Idiom)
When someone uses this expression, they mean that the specific thing happens a lot.


Nailing jello to the wall
(North American Idiom)

Describes a task that is very difficult because the parameters keep changing or because someone is being evasive.


Squeaky wheel gets the grease
(North American Idiom)

It means that the person who complains or protests the loudest attracts attention and service.

Lower than a snake's belly in a wagon rut
(North American Idiom)

Very low moral standing.
Someone who is not trustworthy.

Squeeze blood out of a turnip
(North American Idiom)

It means that you cannot get something from a person, especially money, that they don't have.

Blood is worth bottling
(Australian Idiom)

If someone says this you he/she is complimenting or praising you for doing something or being someone very special.

Dog-whistle politics
(Australian Idiom)

When political parties have policies that will appeal to racists while not being overtly racist.

See which way the cat jumps
(Australian Idiom)

If you see which way the cat jumps, you postpone making a decision or acting until you have seen how things are developing.

Sitting in a pickle
(Dutch Idiom)

In an awkward or embarrassing situation."
Meats and vegetables can be preserved by soaking them in barrels of a salty solution called pickle.

FreeMind



O FreeMind é um programinha leve e grátis usado para sistematizar idéias. Recomendo que quem puder faça o download, para que o utilizemos como ferramenta complementar às aulas


Link para download

"I'd rather dance with you"


I’d rather dance with you – Kings of Convenience

I'd rather dance with you than ____ with you
So why don't we just ____ into the other ____
There's _____ for us to shake, and hey, I like this tune

Even if I could ____ what you said
I doubt my reply would be ___________ for you to hear
Because I haven't read a _____ book all year
And the only film I ___, I didn't like it at all

I'd rather dance, I'd rather dance than talk with you
I'd rather dance, I'd rather dance than talk with you
I'd rather dance, I'd rather dance than talk with you

The music's too _____ and the noise from the crowd
Increases the chance of _____________________
So let your _____ do the talking
I'll make you laugh by acting like the guy who ____
And you'll make me _____ by really getting into the swing
Getting into the swing, getting into the swing
Getting into the swing, getting into the swing

(Getting to the swing...)
I'd rather dance, I'd rather dance than talk with you
I'd rather dance, I'd rather dance than talk with you
I'd rather dance, I'd rather dance than talk with you
I'd rather dance with you

The Honduras coup: A template for a hemispheric assault on democracy














The people of Honduras have now suffered more than 40 days of military rule. The generals’ June 28 coup, crudely packaged in constitutional guise, ousted the country’s elected government and unleashed severe, targeted and relentless repression.

The grassroots protests have matched the regime in endurance and outmatched it in political support within the country and internationally. Its scope and duration is unprecedented in Honduran history. Popular resistance is the main factor affecting the international forces attempting to shape the outcome of the governmental crisis. It weighs heavy on the minds of the coup’s authors and their international backers.

As Eva Golinger has convincingly documented, the United States took part in conceiving, planning and staging the coup. The U.S. ambassador in Tegucigalpa, Hugo Llorens, coordinates a team of high-ranking U.S. and Honduran military officials, and creatures from the old Bush administration.

But when the army, machine guns blazing, assaulted President Zelaya’s house, kidnapped him and dumped him in Costa Rica -- still in pajamas -- their actions forged unprecedented unity in Latin America and the Caribbean against the coup regime, and enraged hundreds of thousands within the country.

Latin American unity

In the first days after the coup, it appeared that the whole world denounced the Honduran generals and their civilian front men. ALBA -- the nine-nation Bolivarian alliance initiated by Venezuela and Cuba -- took the initiative in uniting Latin American governments around a common stand.

Nicaragua’s capital, Managua, became the temporary capital of Our America. Many Latin American presidents knew only too well that they could soon suffer Zelaya’s fate.

Argentina’s Cristina Fermandez devoted her entire speech to this theme at the OAS general assembly, which took a unanimous stand against the golpistas (coupsters). That was followed quickly by a UN General Assembly meeting, convened by its president Father Miguel d’Escoto (a veteran Nicaraguan Sandinista leader), which also passed a unanimous resolution repudiating the coup and recognizing Zelaya as the legitimate president of Honduras.

Faced with this reality, the U.S. government hastened to portray itself as a key opponent of the military take-over and a supporter of Zelaya’s return. It was politically urgent for the Obama regime, not only in Latin America but domestically, to disclaim involvement in the coup.

There has been much speculation that Obama disagrees with his government’s duplicitous policy on the coup, and of course that cannot be excluded.

But what counts for the people of Honduras and their supporters is not Obama’s possible private opinions but his government’s actions. Its ‘walk’ betrayed its pronouncements.

The U.S. has not acted to cut the legs out from under the coup regime. It could topple the coup with a five-minute phone call that included a few bottom-line dollar figures. Its words, as time has shown, were mainly those of deceit and of manipulation of different forces acting on the Honduran crisis.

Main aims of the coup

Washington staged the coup to promote a number of closely related aims:

-To strike a blow at the ALBA alliance, by taking out its assumed “weakest link” -- Honduras and its member government headed by Zelaya;

-To prepare for an assault on revolutionary Venezuela, prefaced by the announcement of new U.S. military bases that will convert Colombia into a gigantic aircraft carrier and platform for staging hostile operations against ALBA countries, with Ecuador and Bolivia also high on the list.

-To “take back” Honduras, and again use it as a platform to strike out against leftwing presidencies and mass movements in Guatemala, El Salvador and Nicaragua, and to demoralize and discourage grassroots support for those disobedient or defiant regimes.

-To test Latin America’s turbulent waters for a revival of coup-making in Latin America and the Caribbean, and to use it as a laboratory for coup-making in 21st-Century conditions. This involves attempting to re-inspire and regroup rightwing political and military supporters across the hemisphere. It also tested where the powerful Catholic Church would stand. (A free Bible if you guess right!)

-To probe South America’s “soft underbelly” -- mainly Brazil and Chile -- to see if they were amenable to a deal, or at least could be bribed into silence.

The goal is to drive a wedge between the ALBA Alliance and so-called centre-left regimes (Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay, Uruguay, and Chile).

Since then, a lot of water has gone down the Rio Coco (between Honduras and Nicaragua).

The coup regime threatened to become a millstone around Washington’s neck and hinder its renewed drive to find leverage and points of support, especially in South America. Hence Washington’s efforts for plausible denial, and lack of qualms about letting the golpistas hang out to dry if necessary.

Latin American unity is now being sorely tested by the provocative decision to place U.S. military air and naval bases in Colombia. While both Brazil and Chile have reluctantly bowed down with the argument the issue is a “sovereign” decision for Colombia, others like Bolivia, Nicaragua, Ecuador, Uruguay, Venezuela and Cuba have denounced the move.

An effective resistance

Meanwhile, the Honduran resistance has had immense impact on the population, the regime, the national and regional economy and international opinion. This outcome is horrifying the local ruling class and Washington.

The Honduran economy is in tatters. Import-export activity is down an estimated 60 per cent. Zelaya reported in a press conference in Mexico City that over 200 road barricades had been erected, most of them heavily repressed by the army in an attempt to keep produce moving. Public schools have not functioned since the coup because of teachers’ strikes and student boycotts. Health workers have maintained a long strike, and many other work centres have been hit by shorter strikes and slowdowns.

The de facto government has been unable to meet payrolls, and the profits of the ten ruling families are starting to dry up.

Adidas, Nike and GAP -- flagships of the maquila sector -- have urged the U.S. government to accelerate Zelaya’s return because their products are not being exported, and they are losing millions.

The crisis is also hitting Nicaraguan and El Salvadoran import-export enterprises that depend on the northern Honduran port of Cortés for commerce with the eastern and southern U.S. and Europe.

Yet despite stiff resistance and surprises on the international front, de facto President Roberto Micheletti’s “government” has not collapsed.

Its main weapon, aside from Catholic Church sermons and virtual monopoly control over media, has been targeted killings and arrests of unarmed protesters, who take nothing to their actions but conviction, courage and picket signs.

Disappearances and torture are selectively carried out, the right to free movement permanently violated and curfews are often lengthened.

The regime has now moved to close down Globo Radio, the only station that has dared to oppose the coup, support Zelaya as the country’s legitimate president and give the resistance a voice. It is still on the air as of August 6, surrounded by hundreds of supporters as defense guards.

If the regime hangs on, it will likely also close down TV Cholusat Sur (Channel 36/34), which works closely with Globo.

The Arias Plan


Costa Rican President Oscar Arias’s plan for ending the coup and restoring “stability” to Honduras should be called the “Obama-Clinton-Lula Plan.” Santiago O’Donnell, regular journalist for the Argentine Pagina 12, wrote on July 26 that the Arias Plan was traced out in a Moscow meeting between Lula and Obama. According to O’Donnell, “Lula wanted Zelaya to return and Obama wanted him not to remain in power. So they came to agreement: Zelaya would return but would not remain in power.”

The plan’s evident, but unstated, intent was to keep Zelaya from exercising any real power and block any possible return to office in the future. And, above all, to weaken the mass resistance movement. The two presidents met again at the G-8 summit in Italy.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton chose Arias, whose skills in serving imperialism won him a Nobel Peace prize, to host talks between the Zelaya government (in-exile) and the coup leaders. He “mediated” in San José between representatives of “both sides.” With the OAS pushed out of the picture, the talks moved away from the demand for the immediate and unconditional return of Zelaya, to a framework of conditional and delayed return (and thus the conditioned and delayed retirement of the de facto regime).

The talks began as a means to delay Zelaya’s return and to buy time for the coup regime, in the hope it could stabilize its rule within the country. Zelaya accepted the Plan as a basis for discussion. But talks soon collapsed, because the coup regime categorically rejected Zelaya’s return. A second attempt by Arias failed for the same reason.

Zelaya then turned away from the Arias exercise and began again to refocus on building the resistance and on diplomatic outreach. His government in exile operates mainly on the Honduran-Nicaraguan border (Ocotal), and at the Honduran embassy in Managua.

Impact of resistance


Mass opposition resumed, inspired by Zelaya’s attempts to return via the Nicaraguan border, and by the effective work done by his wife (Xiamara Castro de Zelaya) within the country. This had its effect. Obama declared more pointedly that the coup regime had to accept Zelaya’s return through the San José-Arias path. Brazil and Mexico backed this stance, as did OAS General Secretary Insulza.

The coup regime continues to reject this course. On the heels of Obama’s statement, Jose Miguel Insulza, Oscar Arias and Spanish vice-president Maria Teresa Fernandez de la Vega proposed sending an OAS ministerial-level delegation to Honduras to try to convince the military regime to accept Zelaya’s return, and perhaps try to extract more teeth from Zelaya.

Coup leader Micheletti said he would accept such a delegation only if no ministers from ALBA countries were included. The mission, which will arrive on August 11, is made up of foreign ministers of Argentina, Mexico, Canada, Costa Rica, Jamaica and the Dominican Republic, accompanied by José Miguel Insulza of the OAS.

Meanwhile, Zelaya has agreed to major concessions. He has accepted the principle of a national unity government, whose main task would be to stabilize the country, get the economy moving again, restore services such as education and health and organize the November national elections.

In essence, Zelaya’s team feels it has no choice but to accept a deal that will leave it weakened and hand-tied, in a government that includes major figures of the coup.

The authors of the Arias Plan hope this would leave the ruling class and the army with significant leverage to politically defeat the mass movement and the Zelaya current in the coming elections. That is not certain.

In a press conference in Mexico during his state visit this week, Zelaya sent a message to Washington and other hemispheric governments -- either golpismo (coup making) by the extreme right will be contained, or Latin America’s left-wing guerrillas will be reborn. He again asserted the people’s right to insurrection under conditions of military dictatorship.

To the grassroots


Anyone who leaves the mass movement out of their calculations may come up short. The resistance movement has emerged as a new force, much more sophisticated and powerful than before June 28.

Activists have been through a particularly acute and brutal school of class struggle. The growing unity between mestizo, indigenous and Afro-Honduran peoples augurs well. Their international ties are more varied and stronger than before.

The Zelaya current itself is not the same as it was before the coup. There is every possibility that the interim period, with or without Zelaya’s return, can be used to mature and consolidate this movement and to build its capacity to take on the ruling class in the electoral process and the ongoing battle of for the hearts and minds of the great majority of the nation.

Today is a Day of Action, when marches from all over Honduras will converge on the industrial centre San Pedro Sula and the capital Tegucigalpa. Hondura’s National Resistance Front has appealed for simultaneous solidarity protests around the world today.

The outcome depends, above all, on the ability of the grassroots to remain on guard and active in political struggle. Their activity will likely unfold under the twin banners of an election campaign and building support for convoking a Constituent Assembly.

Anti-imperialist fighters should focus on defending the mass movement and its leaders in Honduras, and the goal of continental unity of Our America against imperial domination.

The Honduran coup of June 28 was an imperial dress rehearsal, a test for the coup instigators and for all of Latin America. Above all, the coup is a school for the Honduran grassroots. No matter what short-term twists and turns the contending forces may take, Hondurans will never be the same.

Felipe Stuart Cournoyer is a Canadian-born Nicaraguan citizen, who divides his time between the two countries. He is a member of the FSLN, and a contributing editor of Socialist Voice, where this article also appears. He wishes to acknowledge news analytical sources that inform this article, including Radio Globo (Honduras), Radio La Primerisima (Nicaragua), El19, Pagina 12 (Buenos Aires), La Jornada (Mexico, D.F.), Rebelion, Latin-American-Australian journalist Fred Fuentes (Green Left Weekly), Tortilla con Sal (Nicaragua), Via Campesina , Honduran Resists, and Rights Action.

"Another day in paradise" activity


Ouça a música e escolha a palavra correta:

She calls out/comes out to the man on the street
’sir, can you help me?
It’s cold/sold and I’ve nowhere to sleep/sit,
Is there somewhere/someone you can tell me? ’
He walks on/talks on, doesn’t look back/black.
He pretends he can’t hear/hurt her
Starts to whistle as he crosses the street by Phil Collins
Seems embarrassed to be there/here
Oh think twice/tight, it’s another/older day for
You and me in paradise
Oh think twice, it’s just another day for you,
You and me in paradise
She calls out/cries out to the man on the street/on a street
He can see she’s been crying/trying
She’s got blisters/bitten on the soles of her feet/face
Can’t walk but she’s trying/crying
Oh think twice...
Oh lord, is there something/nothing more anybody can do
Oh lord, there must be something/nothing you can say/play
You can tell/sell from the lines/lights on her face/feet
You can see that she’s been there/here
Probably been moved on from every place/memory place
’cos she didn’t fit/sit in there
Oh think twice...

Welcome!

Dear comrades,

I have created this blog to post videos, texts, songs and activities that we use in class.
Hope it will be a useful tool for all of us.

Kindest Regards
Eduardo

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Caros companheiros,

Criei este blog para colocar os vídeos, textos, músicas e atividades que utilizamos em aula.
Espero que ele se torne uma útil ferramenta para todos nós.

Saudações