
I start my conversation with you with two bald assertions, merely that all peoples living on this planet have an inalienable right to self-determination and that all peoples (regardless of nationality) have a duty to help others enjoy this inalienable right. If you disagree with either proposition, feast your eyes on another section of this fine periodical as our fundamental disagreements are too great to be explored in the limited space I have been afforded. So now that I have the attention of the more morally palatable portion of the readership, I implore all of us to begin the arduous journey of freeing Latin America and the rest of the third world from the shackles of neocolonialism. For too long, Latin America has lived under U.S. economic and political domination. Simply put, the United States government will crush any democratic movement in Latin America that doesn’t serve U.S. corporate interest. In other words, we love democracy as long as you pick who we like. Unfortunately, we tend to like murderers. No U.S terror campaign exemplifies this policy better than Operation Condor, a campaign that toppled fragile democracies in the region and brought to power butchers like Stroessner, Pinochet, Banzer, Goulart, and Videla. Under no circumstances should our government seek to subvert democracies in the third world, even if the selected representatives of those democracies are inimical to U.S. corporate interest. Now it is our duty to finally help the people of Latin American be free. Hispanic Americans are the only politically relevant set of human beings in this planet with U.S. political power and an understanding of the plight in Latin America. It is time that Hispanic Americans bind together and force our government to let Latin American and the rest of the third world go.
Dennis Núñez is a patent attorney and has received his Juris Doctor, with honors, from Chicago-Kent College of Law in 2005.
In addition, Mr. Núñez worked for two years as an electrical engineer in Huntsville, Alabama after earning his B.S. in Electrical Engineering from the University of Alabama in 2000. During his time as an engineer in Huntsville, Mr. Núñez worked primarily programming and modeling radar systems.
Mr. Núñez has extensive experience prosecuting and preparing patent applications for various large clients in various diverse technological areas, including telecommunications systems, integrated circuits, semiconductor devices, microelectromechanical systems, artificial intelligence systems, internet systems, and computer-implemented business methods.
Mr. Núñez also has experience in preparing and drafting trademark applications, preparing infringement opinions, and cancellation and opposition hearings before the Trademark Trial & Appeal Board. Mr. Núñez is admitted to practice before the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) without territorial restriction. Mr. Núñez is licensed to practice law in Tennessee and Illinois, but is not currently licensed to practice law in North Carolina.
Dennis Núñez is a patent attorney and has received his Juris Doctor, with honors, from Chicago-Kent College of Law in 2005.
In addition, Mr. Núñez worked for two years as an electrical engineer in Huntsville, Alabama after earning his B.S. in Electrical Engineering from the University of Alabama in 2000. During his time as an engineer in Huntsville, Mr. Núñez worked primarily programming and modeling radar systems.
Mr. Núñez has extensive experience prosecuting and preparing patent applications for various large clients in various diverse technological areas, including telecommunications systems, integrated circuits, semiconductor devices, microelectromechanical systems, artificial intelligence systems, internet systems, and computer-implemented business methods.
Mr. Núñez also has experience in preparing and drafting trademark applications, preparing infringement opinions, and cancellation and opposition hearings before the Trademark Trial & Appeal Board. Mr. Núñez is admitted to practice before the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) without territorial restriction. Mr. Núñez is licensed to practice law in Tennessee and Illinois, but is not currently licensed to practice law in North Carolina.