As cited by Franciscans International, according to the Navy's figures, throughout the course of six decades about 5 million pounds (2,000 t) of ordnance was dropped on Vieques every year. Ordnance included toxic compounds and elements such as arsenic, lead, mercury, cadmium, depleted uranium and napalm, and tons of a fiberglass-like substance.
#Boriken #PuertoRico #History #USA

Trump’s N.J. golf club made women wear uniforms several sizes too small, lawsuit claims
The three-time Trump voter alleges that she was forced to wear uniforms that were a child's size.
njand favorable tariffs (Tovar et al., 1971). By 1930, Allen and his banking partners converted 45% of all arable land into sugar plantations. They owned the insular postal system, the entire coastal railroad, and the international seaport of San Juan. Today, the syndicate is known as Domino Sugar.
(5/5)
#PuertoRico #Boriken #History #USAand joined the House of Morgan (J.P. Morgan & Co.) and the Guaranty Trust Company of New York as their vice president. In 1907 he created the world’s largest sugar syndicate in Puerto Rico, the American Sugar Refining Company (later the Sugar Trust). This Trust owned and controlled 98% of the sugar processing capacity in the United States. Allen’s political appointees in Puerto Rico provided him with land grants, tax subsidies, water rights, railroad easements, foreclosure sales,
(4/5)
He was also listed as one of the “Politicians in the Lumber and Timber Business in Puerto Rico” (Library of Congress). In the single year Allen was governor, he managed to appoint half of the offices in the government to visiting Americans (626 individuals), and nearly all the Executive Council were U.S. expatriates (Maldonado-Denis, 1972).
In 1901, Allen resigned as governor, fled to Wall Street,
(3/?)
With the extra funds, he instead re-directed them to no-bid contracts for U.S. businessmen, building roads at double the cost, railroad subsidies for U.S.-owned sugar plantations (his father owned Otis Allen and Son, a lumber business that created wooden boxes and sold railroad ties, housing frames, and road building materials), and high salaries for U.S. bureaucrats in the island government (Allen & McKinley, 1901).
(2/?)
The Treaty of Paris of 1898 forced Spain to cede Puerto Rico to the U.S., which allowed the U.S. to appoint a civilian governor under the Foraker Act, Charles Herbert Allen, and placed the island under military rule. Allen was a corrupt businessman with no background in governmental practices and policies. He slashed operating expenses on the island, refusing to use the budget surplus to make essential infrastructure and education investments.
(1/?)
The people were promised assistance in independence, and despite the lie and the attempts by the U.S. government, the F.B.I., and the insular government, We The People still say: ¡Viva La Republica! ¡Viva Borikén/Puerto Rico Libre!
(5/5)
has risen since, given the wave of attention and, especially, education, that's splashed around many parts of the world, but most importantly, en la isla, in regards to our history (pre- and post-colonial roots). Not to mention the ballots that were found to be burned or sabotaged on both ends (
https://periodismoinvestigativo.com/2024/10/mas-testimonios-irregularidades-registro-electoral/). With all that, even with the lack of participant voters-to-whole-population, the percentage has possibly risen past the 33%.
(4/5)

“¿Quién votó por mí?”: Más testimonios de irregularidades en el Registro Electoral
A los hallazgos del CPI sobre personas que aparecen votando pese a haber muerto, se añaden testimonios de electores inscritos dos veces y de residentes en Estados Unidos que el Registro Electoral en Puerto Rico dice que participaron en elecciones en las que nunca votaron.
Centro de Periodismo Investigativo