Tag Archives: Grenada

Workers at Philly abortion clinic saw few options

They say they were just doing what the boss trained them to do.

But eight former employees of a run-down West Philadelphia abortion clinic now face prison time for the work they did for Dr. Kermit Gosnell. Three have pleaded guilty to third-degree murder.

And Gosnell, 72, is on trial in the deaths of a patient and seven babies allegedly born alive.

In testimony at the capital murder trial this past month, an unlicensed doctor and untrained aides described long, chaotic days at the clinic. They said they performed grueling, often gruesome work for little more than minimum wage, paid by Gosnell under the table.

But for most, it was the best job they could find.

Unlicensed doctor Stephen Massof, 50, of Pittsburgh, said he could not get a U.S. medical residency after finishing medical school in Grenada and went to work for Gosnell as a “backup plan” after six years running a bar. He admitted killing two babies by snipping their necks, as he said Gosnell taught him to do.

Eileen O’Neill, 56, had worked as a doctor in Louisiana but relinquished her medical license in 2000 to deal with “post-traumatic stress syndrome,” according to her 2011 grand jury testimony. She is the only employee on trial with Gosnell, fighting false billing and racketeering charges.

According to one colleague, O’Neill was increasingly upset at the line of people who came to Gosnell’s adjacent medical clinic for painkillers. And she was angry that he wasn’t helping her regain her license.

“She said: ‘All I do is break my neck for him all the time, and he never does anything for me. I’m going to have to do something about it,'” front desk worker Tina Baldwin testified this week, recalling a conversation with O’Neill.

However, O’Neill, like many others, stayed on at the clinic until a February 2010 drug raid, which was spawned by Gosnell’s high-volume distribution of OxyContin and other painkillers.

Gosnell, once a gifted student in his working-class black neighborhood, had put his medical school education to work as a 1970s-era champion of drug treatment and legal abortions. But 30 years later, conditions inside his bustling clinic and his old neighborhood had deteriorated, according to trial testimony.

Defense lawyer Jack McMahon argues that no babies were born alive, and unforeseen complications caused the overdose death of the woman who died.

“Just because the place was less than state-of-the-art doesn’t make him a murderer,” McMahon said in opening statements last month.

Baldwin, like colleague Latosha Lewis, had trained to be a medical assistant at a for-profit vocational school before going to work for Gosnell in 2002. She handed out drugs at the front desk to induce labor, while Lewis helped perform ultrasounds, administer medications and deliver babies. Lewis worked from 10 a.m. until well after midnight, making $7 to $10 an hour.

“Gosnell recklessly cut corners, allowed patients to choose their medication based on ability to pay, and provided abysmal care — all to maximize his profit,” prosecutors wrote in the 2011 grand jury report. “He was not serving his community. Gosnell ran a

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/national/~3/OkF76cJdY-M/

Grenada to revive program selling citizenship

Grenada intends to revive a program that essentially allows investors to buy citizenship on the Caribbean island.

Governor General Carlyle Glean made the announcement during a Wednesday speech at the opening of parliament. He says it is part of a strategy to drum up revenue on the struggling island.

Glean says the government will review other nations’ citizenship-by-investment programs and decide the best way forward.

Newly re-elected Prime Minister Keith Mitchell had previously hinted that he planned to revive a citizenship-for-cash program that was suspended after the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks due to fears that local passports could mistakenly be sold to terrorists.

The islands of St. Kitts, Dominica and Antigua currently allow investors to secure local citizenship in return for a healthy contribution or investment.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Jamaica frets over slowdown in returning islanders

In this affluent town in Jamaica‘s cool, mountainous interior, Jasmine Pottinger has realized the dream that kept her going while dealing with racism, culture shock and other challenges during almost four decades of working in drizzly London, a city where she never felt entirely accepted.

The 73-year-old retired nurse and her husband, Earl, have retired to the Jamaican parish of her birth. Their pensions and hard-earned savings from Britain afford them a handsomely decorated house with a big balcony and spacious patio looking out on a terraced garden buzzing with hummingbirds and exploding with red and orange flowers that bloom year round.

“In London, we could never afford all this,” she says as friends enjoy freshly baked banana bread and strong Jamaican coffee served by a domestic helper. “Jamaica is certainly not cheap, but it does offer us a quality of life we enjoy. Plus, we are Jamaican and this is our country. Although I lived in England for 36 years, coming home was always my intention.”

For years, that was the goal of nearly all Jamaicans who left seeking work because of the poor wages and scarcity of opportunity at home. They returned at retirement to take advantage of the sunny Caribbean island’s lower costs and comfortable climate — and at the same time they provide a significant source of foreign currency for the economy.

But to the dismay of the government, fewer and fewer Jamaicans are coming back from London, New York, Toronto and other cities that drew them away as young adults. Over the last 20 years, the annual number of “returning nationals” has dropped by more than half — down to slightly more than 1,000 in 2011, the most recent year for which official figures are available.

Some overseas Jamaicans are stuck in devalued homes because of the world economic crunch and find their Caribbean paradise is out of reach financially. Others are choosing to live in retirement communities in places like Florida that offer strong personal care services. Often they are put off by Jamaica‘s struggle with high rates of crime that were unimaginable when they left just as the island was shedding its status as a colonial outpost of Britain a half century ago.

Caribbean islands have long suffered from a “brain drain” that has seen professionals and skilled workers head off to jobs in the U.S., Europe and Canada. Leaders of small islands like Grenada and St. Lucia have lately begun wooing nationals abroad and encouraging them to assist with developing their …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Grenada says it can't make upcoming debt payments

The government of Grenada is warning that it does not have the funds to make a scheduled bond payment on March 15 and will seek to restructure its debt.

A statement issued late Friday says that the economy of the southern Caribbean island has been severely affected by the global financial crisis and that its public finances are “currently unsustainable.”

Grenada had to borrow to make a delayed $4.4 million payment on a September coupon for $193 million in bonds due in 2025. That prompted Standard & Poor’s to downgrade Grenada‘s foreign currency credit rating.

Now, another payment is coming due on the 2025 bonds and the government says borrowing is not an option. Newly re-elected Prime Minister Keith Mitchell says the country needs a “fresh start” with creditors.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Get Out Of The Weeds

By Michael Reagan

Ronald Reagan Get Out of the Weeds

America’s got some serious problems to solve.

Our Obama Economy is still stuck in a ditch by the side of the road.

Our campaigner in chief is running around the country pushing for higher taxes and no spending cuts and crying, “The federal sky will fall!” if Congress doesn’t stop the puny 10 percent sequester from happening.

In Washington, the incompetents and cowards in Congress can’t get our fiscal house in order, and they’re too stupid or self-serving to realize they are wrecking the greatest economic machine humans have ever created.

We have a budget to balance and an immigration problem. We’re spending trillions we don’t have and promising tens of trillions more in benefits our grandchildren can never repay.

And what are many of my fellow Republicans and conservatives in Washington — and the media — doing while America is being towed down the road to Greece?

They’re thrashing around in the political weeds, wasting their breath complaining about petty political things that may boost the ratings of talk shows but are otherwise meaningless.

For example, one of the outrages of the week involves the White House being accused of selling access to President Obama in exchange for $500,000 donations to his latest pet advocacy group.

Are these Republican and conservative friends of mine kidding? Were they born yesterday?

The parties in power in Washington have been selling access to their powers and privileges forever.

That’s why libertarians want to keep the federal government as small, weak, and limited as possible, so that when Washington politicians are bought off, they can do as little harm to the country as possible.

Another example this week of Republicans making a partisan mountain out of a molehill is their attack on former Obama press mouthpiece Robert Gibbs for not telling reporters what he knew about the administration’s secret drone program.

Conservatives looking for dirt on Obama and liberal commentators like Rachel Maddow and Jon Stewart went to town over Gibbs’ silence.

But it was just another petty complaint du jour. The White House doesn’t tell reporters everything it’s doing or planning. It never did, whether it was the date for D-Day, our U-2 flights over the USSR, or the raid to kill Osama.

My father invaded Grenada and didn’t tell Congress in advance. He even forgot to tip off his buddy Margaret Thatcher, whose airspace had to be crossed by our warplanes.

The most ridiculous complaint of the week made by people on our side of the political fence was their reaction to Michelle Obama’s appearance on the Oscars broadcast Sunday night.

They acted like it was an impeachable offense. But the first lady handing out a best-picture award at an Oscar ceremony is not something Republicans should waste a second of their time on.

It’s not new and not a Democrat thing. On Jan. 20, 1985, Ronald Reagan — who, if I recall, was a Republican — performed the opening coin toss for the Super Bowl game via television from the White House.

The first lady’s appearance at the Oscars was something my father and my mother …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism

Grenada's opposition wins parliamentary elections

A former prime minister of Grenada is returning to power on the eastern Caribbean island after his party won all 15 constituencies in parliamentary elections.

Keith Mitchell’s New National Party defeated the National Democratic Congress of outgoing leader Tillman Thomas in Tuesday’s vote. Thomas had served as prime minister since 2008.

Elections supervisor Judy Benoit says preliminary results show the NNP received more than 31,000 votes and the NDC more than 20,000.

Grenada has nearly 110,000 inhabitants.

The 13 seats in the island’s Senate are indirectly determined by the election. The new government appoints 10 of the seats while the opposition names three.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Grenada holds elections amid economic crisis

The eastern Caribbean island of Grenada is holding parliamentary elections for the first time in nearly five years as it struggles to emerge from an economic crisis.

Prime Minister Tillman Thomas of the National Democratic Congress is seeking a second term. His party pledges to boost tourism, agriculture and the renewable energy sector. Former Prime Minister Keith Mitchell of the New National Party is promising to create new jobs on an island struggling with a 30 percent unemployment rate.

More than 62,000 of the island’s nearly 110,000 inhabitants are registered to vote.

Long lines were already reported early Tuesday as voters chose candidates for 15 seats of the 28-seat bicameral Parliament. Legislators for the remaining 13 seats are appointed by the ruling and opposition parties.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

The $700 Million Vision to Put Grenada on the Global Luxury Map

By Marc E. Babej, Contributor Products that transform an industry are few and far between – which is why they get so much attention from users and the media. On any given day, you’ll find business news coverage of smartphones, shale gas,  drones or electrical cars. But when was the last time you heard of a single business venture that has the potential to revamp an entire country? Enter the island nation of Grenada. Chances are you haven’t been thinking about Grenada for a while – and when you last did, it was likely in the context of the 1983 US-led invasion. Or maybe you had a fleeting moment of thinking why one hears so little about Grenada compared to other Caribbean islands such as Barbados. If real estate developers Peter de Savary and Robin Paterson have their way, this is about to change. Their vision is to put Grenada on the map – with a development the tune of $700 million.
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

America’s Role In A Darkening Age

By Breaking News

United States map SC America’s Role in a Darkening Age

When, in the 1950s, Nikita Khrushchev said, “We will bury you,” and, “Your children will live under communism,” Eisenhower’s America scoffed.

By 1980, however, the tide did indeed seem to be with the East.

America had suffered a decade of defeats. Southeast Asia had fallen. The ayatollah had seized power in Iran. Moscow had occupied Afghanistan. Cuban troops were in Ethiopia and Angola. Grenada and Nicaragua had fallen to the Soviet bloc. Eurocommunism was all the rage on the continent.

Just a decade later, the world turned upside-down.

The Berlin Wall fell. Eastern Europe was suddenly free. The Soviet Union disintegrated. China abandoned Maoism for state capitalism.

Read More at takimag.com . By Patrick J. Buchanan.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism

Grenada PM calls general elections for next month

The Caribbean island of Grenada will hold parliamentary elections Feb. 19.

Prime Minister Tillman Thomas announced the date at a political rally Sunday night a week after the country’s parliament was dissolved. A few hundred partisans attended the gathering.

Thomas’ National Democratic Congress will be pitted against the opposition New National Party led by former Prime Minister Keith Mitchell.

There are roughly 55,000 registered voters on the island of about 110,000 people.

In September, Grenada‘s governor general suspended a parliamentary session allowing Thomas to avoid debate on a no-confidence motion filed by a political ally.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News