Two Countries One Voice: The Real Story
Thursday, December 11, 2014
Vamos Unidos, Site of Conspiracy
Juan Gutierrez's little hq
Site of the one of the most bizarre political conspiracies of them all
Wednesday, December 10, 2014
Wednesday, December 3, 2014
evidence astroturf
http://www.republicreport.org/2012/walmarts-los-angeles-lobbying-firm-caught-sending-fake-reporter-infiltrate-worker-group-throws-employee-bus/
Astroturf evidence one
Cable 'coalitions' sketchy
David Lazarus
Published 4:00 am, Wednesday, November 2, 2005
The group is called Consumers for Cable Choice. It describes itself as "an alliance of consumer organizations across the nation committed to the development of a competitive, vibrant cable communications market."
The group says its goal "is an open, diverse, pro-consumer market for cable subscribers that will stimulate price, choice and service options."
What's not to like?
For one thing, Consumers for Cable Choice, which presents itself to policymakers as the voice of the people, isn't exactly a consumer group. Its "alliance of consumer organizations" is actually a loose collection of regulatory gadflies and interest groups with ties to the telecom industry
For another, Consumers for Cable Choice is funded to a large extent by phone giants Verizon and SBC, which are set to offer TV service to millions of customers but want the rules changed so they don't have to jump through as many regulatory hoops as cable companies.
On Monday, the Federal Communications Commission approved SBC's takeover of AT&T and Verizon's purchase of MCI.
Bob Johnson, the president of Consumers for Cable Choice, acknowledged having received $75,000 in startup funds from Verizon this summer and "a commensurate amount" from SBC.
"It doesn't undermine the credibility of our organization," he told me. "The bottom line is that is that if you want to get your message out, you need the financial resources to do it."
Consumers for Cable Choice, Johnson argued, is firmly convinced that prices will come down and service will improve if phone companies can smoothly enter the TV business using sophisticated fiber-optic networks.
And this will happen, he said, only if so-called franchise rules are relaxed nationwide, allowing phone companies to bypass negotiations with local governments and to build video-ready networks basically wherever they choose.
Franchise regulations for cable companies typically require that service be made available to all residents of a
Omnicon engages Mercury who engages political street thugs
Owns, through Diversified Agency Services
Mercury Public Affairs
Mr Wren of Ominicon
Mercury Public Affairs
Big Companies, Big Mission
So why would two corporations employ a political thug like Juan Guitterez to harass billionaires?
Omnicon
Omnicom Buys Mercury Public Affairs
ByAdweek Staff- October 23, 2003, 12:00 AM EDT
- Advertising & Branding
NEW YORK Diversified Agency Services, a unit of Omnicom Group Inc., said it has purchased a majority interest in Mercury Public Affairs.
Mercury, which has offices in New York, Albany and White Plains, N.Y., is the shop where top Republican consultants Keiran Mahoney and Michael McKeon, the latter a former communications director for New York Governor George Pataki, hang their hats.
"We were impressed with Mercury's unique approach to public affairs and exceptional record of success for their clients. This is a company that has taken on problems large and small, and produced big results," said Thomas L. Harrison, chief executive officer of DAS, in a statement. "Mercury's track record is stellar."
Mercury offers clients strategic management, public opinion research, crisis communications, advertising, government affairs and public relations.
Mercury, which has offices in New York, Albany and White Plains, N.Y., is the shop where top Republican consultants Keiran Mahoney and Michael McKeon, the latter a former communications director for New York Governor George Pataki, hang their hats.
"We were impressed with Mercury's unique approach to public affairs and exceptional record of success for their clients. This is a company that has taken on problems large and small, and produced big results," said Thomas L. Harrison, chief executive officer of DAS, in a statement. "Mercury's track record is stellar."
Mercury offers clients strategic management, public opinion research, crisis communications, advertising, government affairs and public relations.
Bowery Boys of Political Extortion
Remember the Bowery Boys??
They were funny, sort of cute in a irreverent way.
Roger Salazar, Andres Ramirez, Kevin deLeon, Juan Guttierez,
Fabian Nunez are not the Bowery Boys, they are more like
Goodfellas, how they trash and burn for corporate clients
Meet them
Then cross to another side of the street
Juan Guttierez
Political Street Thug
Kevin deLeon
Corrupt Legislator
Fabian Nunez
Political Parasite
Andres Ramirez
Hack
Roger
Salazar
Useful Idiot
Here is where it all began for Nunez, deLeon, and Guttierez
Law Center That Provides Low-Cost Services Opens
A family law center that provides free and low-cost service opened in Boyle Heights on Thursday at the One Stop Immigration Center, officials announced.
"As the immigrant community becomes more established in the United States, the need to create a diversity of services to meet the needs of this community has increased dramatically," said Juan Jose Gutierrez, executive director of the nonprofit group.
The new Family Support Center is at 2045 1/2 Cesar Chavez Ave. It will provide affordable consultations with experts on family law, child support, divorce and custody issues, said resident attorney Cristina Golesorkhi.
"Anybody who wants an attorney should be able to afford one," she said.
2013
This is when they decided to sell out, making money abusing the
political process
TracFone's complaint is baseless and an attempt to stifle organizing with immigrant communities, which have been harmed by the high cost of telephone service in Mexico, said Juan Jose Gutierrez, Two Countries' co-director.
"I never lobbied anyone," he said.
Two Countries describes itself as a binational group that works "to educate the public about who Carlos Slim is, and, specifically, to tell them about what we perceive to be his monopolistic and predatory business practices as we see them develop over time in Mexico and throughout Latin America."
Slim, said Gutierrez, "has made his money time and time again at the expense of the well being of the Mexican economy."
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