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  • 11May

    This news makes me so mad, for real.. I’ll write more on this later.  For now all I have to say is hold your heads high my native brothers and sisters, we’ve dealt with hundreds of years of this terrorism and we still stand strong and proud of our heritage.

    DA seeks hate crime charges in NM swastika case

    The three white men are accused of forcing the 22-year-old victim from the Navajo Indian reservation into a car on April 29 and driving him to an apartment. Besides branding the man's arm there, police say the suspects shaved a swastika into his hair and drew degrading words and pictures on his body with permanent marker.

    The three white men are accused of forcing the 22-year-old victim from the Navajo Indian reservation into a car on April 29 and driving him to an apartment. Besides branding the man's arm there, police say the suspects shaved a swastika into his hair and drew degrading words and pictures on his body with permanent marker.

    The three white men are accused of forcing the 22-year-old victim from the Navajo Indian reservation into a car on April 29 and driving him to an apartment. Besides branding the man's arm there, police say the suspects shaved a swastika into his hair and drew degrading words and pictures on his body with permanent marker.

    The three white men are accused of forcing the 22-year-old victim from the Navajo Indian reservation into a car on April 29 and driving him to an apartment. Besides branding the man's arm there, police say the suspects shaved a swastika into his hair and drew degrading words and pictures on his body with permanent marker.

    http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100509/ap_on_re_us/us_swastika_brand

    FARMINGTON, N.M. – Prosecutors in northwestern New Mexico said they will pursue hate crime charges against three men accused of branding a swastika on a mentally challenged man’s arm using a heated metal clothes hanger.

    Jesse Sanford, 24, William Hatch, 28, and Paul Beebe, 26, were charged Friday with kidnapping, aggravated battery causing great bodily harm and other felony charges. The men were jailed with bond set at $150,000 cash.

    “We’ll explore every conceivable available avenue in charging them with a hate crime because what happened to the victim was so horribly wrong,” said Chief Deputy District Attorney Sarah Weaver.

    The three white men are accused of forcing the 22-year-old victim from the Navajo Indian reservation into a car on April 29 and driving him to an apartment. Besides branding the man’s arm there, police say the suspects shaved a swastika into his hair and drew degrading words and pictures on his body with permanent marker.

    Afterward, the trio allegedly kicked the victim out of the apartment, and a nearby convenience store clerk called 911.

    Police took the victim to San Juan Regional Medical Center, where hospital employees washed off the degrading speech and pictures. A local barbershop cut the man’s hair to remove the swastika, police Sgt. Robert Perez said.

    Officers obtained search warrants for the apartment and the men’s vehicle. Insignia associated with white supremacist beliefs were found in the apartment, Perez said.

    “We haven’t identified this as a gang-related crime. That is still under investigation,” Perez said. “But they appear to be associated in some fashion to the white supremacist movement.”

    Sanford told police the victim came into a McDonald’s restaurant where the three men worked and was looking for a place to stay. Sanford claimed that the victim, who wanted a haircut and a tattoo, “wanted the swastika design because it was a tribal symbol,” according to court records.

    It was unclear whether the three suspects had attorneys.

    New Mexico’s hate crime law would add one year to the sentence for each charge if the men are convicted. The suspects face up to 35 1/2 years in prison, including a mandatory 18 years for kidnapping, if convicted of all the charges and the hate crime enhancement.

    The New Mexico Crime Victims Reparation Commission will help the victim with any medical, emotional or psychological issues that come about as a result of this crime, Weaver said.

    Farmington detectives also spoke with a plastic surgeon and were trying to make arrangements to have the damage to the victim’s right bicep removed, Perez said.

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  • 13Jun

    Nine policemen die in bloody clashes with Amazon Indians

    Police open fire on Amazon Indians blocking the road in Bagua Grande in Peru's northern province of Utcubamba on Friday.

    Police open fire on Amazon Indians blocking the road in Bagua Grande in Peru's northern province of Utcubamba on Friday.

    http://www.gulfnews.com/world/Peru/10320624.html

    Lima: President Alan Garcia laboured on Saturday to contain Peru’s worst political violence in years, as nine more police officers were killed in a bloody standoff with Amazon Indians fighting his efforts to exploit oil and gas on their native lands.

    The new deaths brought to 22 the number of police killed – seven with spears – since security forces moved early Friday to break up a roadblock manned by 5,000 protesters.

    Protest leaders said at least 30 Indians, including three children, died in the clashes. Authorities said they could confirm only nine civilian deaths, but cabinet chief Yehude Simon told reporters that 155 people had been injured, about a third of them with bullet wounds.

    He announced a 3pm-6am curfew in the affected region and said authorities had made 72 arrests.

     

    “The government was required to take these measures, not only for the president of the republic but for all 28 million Peruvians,” Simon said of breaking up the protests, which blocked the flow of oil and gas out of the Amazon and prevented food and supplies from coming in.

    “We’ve all been affected one way or another by the protest& when they take over highways and strategic points that can affect the national economy,” Simon said.

    The political violence is the Andean country’s worst since the Shining Path insurgency was quelled more than a decade ago, and it bodes ill for Garcia’s ambitious plans to boost Peru’s oil and gas output.

    It began early on Friday when security forces moved to break up a roadblock protesters mounted in early April. About 1,000 protesters seized police during the melee, taking more than three dozen hostage, officials said.

    Twenty-two officers were rescued in Saturday’s storming of Station No 6 at state-owned Petroperu in Imacita, in the jungle state of Amazonas, Defence Minister Antero Florez told the Radioprogramas radio network. He said seven officers were missing.

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  • 18May

    Here we repost something from another blog because we liked the title so much.  What if a team had the name “blackskins” or “whiteskins”….  This name is so racist!!

    Washington Redskins Win Legal Battle to Be Racist

    http://bleacherreport.com/articles/176638-washington-redskins-win-legal-battle-to-be-racist

    In a story likely to be missed by the local media, the Washington Redskins won a 17-year legal battle against a group of Native Americans petitioning the team to drop its racist trademark.

    Redskins attorney Bob Raskopf said millions have been spent on the Redskins brand and the team would have suffered great economic loss if they lost the trademark registrations. “It’s a great day for the Redskins and their fans and their owner Dan Snyder,” he said.

    Wonderful. Millions of merchandising dollars will be saved, and only for the small price of mass-marketed racial insensitivity towards an entire group of American citizens.  While they’re at it, why doesn’t the team endow a George Wallace Memorial Scholarship and bump members of the Leesburg chapter of the Ku Klux Klan up on the season ticket list.

    There’s no reason to go into the racial connotations of the name, because if you need an explanation, you’ve already missed the boat on the discussion. And it’s not that everybody who likes the term Redskins or is not bothered by it is a raving lunatic or bumbling racist.

    In fact, you’ll probably find more intelligent arguments from fans on why to keep it than ignorant assertions.

    At this point in history, you just hope for the majority of people to “get it.” You want so much for people to be separated on issues that don’t matter, like sports, and tolerant and understanding on the issues that do. Is a name really that serious, that even in its explicit offensiveness and hurtful nature, people just have to have it?

    We all have a role to play in this life. We all have to believe in something, and we have to believe in it forcefully enough to make our lives make sense and feel valuable.

    Daniel Snyder, his administration, and legions of Washington football fans believe that this name and its imagery mean everything to the history of the franchise. Records, players, and memories are Legacy 1b, but the term “Redskins” is 1a.

    I believe that people who believe that are dead wrong. Nothing personal, just a separate set of beliefs.

    To that end, I have to back up my own beliefs in a more forceful way than I have been. It will cost me pageviews, it will cost me Adsense clicks, Google search results, and likely, loyal readers. But inaction, no matter how small on an independent blog, is strong advocacy for the wrong ideals.

    And to that end, I will never again mention the term “Redskins” on this blog.

    To everyone who enjoys reading this blog and my opinion, please understand my moral approach to this and do not take it as a personal attack on your fandom or morals.

    But, I don’t publish profanity, I don’t make jokes about homosexuality, race or gender, and I don’t go out of my way to viciously attack people when facts are so much more attractive to bombard.

    I avoid these things, not because I’m above them, but because I believe that they are below the standard of what’s necessary to create or enjoy good sports writing.

    I’m entertained by gaudy jokes as much as the next guy, but the craft of blogging is and will be so much more than the juvenile humor that attracts millions of readers on thousands of sports blogs each and every day.

    For that, I owe the craft much more than the common and usual. I owe the craft my genuine respect, and my genuine care.

    Now, is that too much to ask from a billion-dollar company? Respect and care towards another group of people?

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  • 07Jan

    Even though the title of this article is racist (“Indian”) it is still a good article for the fact that it brings light to this genocide.  And ‘genocide’ is the right word.  To quote Immortal Technique:  “America, land of the free, home of the brave/ Indigineous holocaust and the home of the slaves.”  But people don’t want to talk about the foundations of the so-called ‘civilized’ world on this continent.  The truth is something that they can’t handle.  Instead they want to talk about Thanksgiving, and act like it was all love.  Malcolm-Che and other conscious sisters and brothers know what’s really good.



    Famous picture of Native American man crying…. wasn’t this from some commercial against littering?!?!  As if Native Americans are crying because of littering?!?!  There was a genocide that happened but these racists think we’re crying because of some litter?!


    Playground bones force Canada to face genocide of Indian children


    http://news.scotsman.com/world/Playground-bones–force-Canada.4845558.jp


    IN OVERGROWN deserted school playgrounds across Canada lie the bones of thousands of native Indian children who were stolen from their families.

    Historian John Milloy is helping to uncover their stories in official research on burial sites. “We know that children were buried in unmarked graves, children who disappeared and were never heard from again,” he said. The research is part of Canada’s attempts to face up to a disturbing legacy of its residential school system, an attempt to “assimilate” native children that resulted in thousands of deaths and ruined lives.

    From the late 19th century right up to the 1970s, an estimated 150,000 native children – First Nations, Inuit and Métis – were packed off to the schools, funded by the state and run by the Catholic, Anglican and United churches.

    The story has taken a more sinister turn, with allegations about death by torture, fatal medical experiments, forced sterilisation and secret burials in mass graves filtering into the public domain.

    These allegations have been gathered and disseminated by Kevin Annett, a defrocked minister who was thrown out of the United Church in 1996 for his part in exposing the schools scandal and the clergy’s sale of entrusted native lands to a logging company.

    Fred Hiltz, primate of the Anglican Church of Canada, apologised last year on behalf of the religious authorities. “We failed them, we failed ourselves, we failed God. We failed because of our racism and because of the belief that white ways were superior to aboriginal ways,” he said.

    Canada’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) has responded to the claims over Mr Annett’s allegations by ordering maps to be drawn up of possible burial sites and research into numbers and causes of death.

    Mr Milloy and his team plan to track down the death certificates and records of maintenance payments sent to schools. Much of the proof will have been lost in routine government purges of official documentation in the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s, he fears.

    Michael Pollesel, general secretary of the Anglican Church of Canada, says that many schools would also have lost track of children.

    Roland Chrisjohn, a professor of native studies St Thomas University in Fredericton, New Brunswick, is sick of what he perceives as Canada tip-toeing around the issue.

    “I want someone with the power to subpoena witnesses and documents and go all kinds of places this commission can’t go at all,” he said.

    Describing the residential schools as “genocide”, he said: “Perpetrators are still living. People should be held to account.”

    Mike Cachagee, the chairman of the National Residential Schools Survivors’ Society, has his own theory about the TRC. “It is an opportunity for churches to receive absolution,” he said.

    “For us, there are no words of reconciliation, you have to make amends. Just listening for ten minutes doesn’t work.”

    Thousands abused in regime built to crush native cultures

    LAST June, the Canadian prime minister, Stephen Harper, rose in parliament to apologise to aboriginal people on behalf of all Canadians for a system of Indian residential schools he called a “sad chapter in our history”.

    From the 1870s to the 1970s, some 150,000 native Indian children were forcibly removed from their parents and sent to distant residential schools. Many survivors said they were abused mentally, physically and sexually. In 2006, a class-action lawsuit resulted in a court settlement that awarded them close to $2 billion (£1.5 billion).

    There are about 80,000 survivors of a practice that ripped an estimated 150,000 children from their communities and sent them off to be relieved of their “Indian-ness”.

    In decades past the aim was to assimilate aboriginal peoples and crush their cultures. Duncan Campbell Scott, a senior government bureaucrat dealing with aboriginal matters, declared in 1920: “I want to get rid of the Indian problem.” He went on: “Our objective is to continue until there is not a single Indian in Canada that has not been absorbed into the body politic.”

    Children were called pigs and dogs. Teachers beat them if they used their own languages and told them they would go to hell unless they converted to Christianity. Many parents never saw their sons and daughters again. Survivors often took to drugs and alcohol to dim the pain.

    The Truth and Reconciliation Commission, set up for five years under the terms of the 2006 Indian Residential Schools Settlement Agreement, is expected to hear the stories of survivors, beginning this year.

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