Skyline of 
Richmond, Virginia

Thanksgiving: Time to Consider Native Americans’ Plight

11.22.09

From CommonDreams.org :

by Dedrick MuhammadThis Thanksgiving season, the nation should finally commit itself to bridging the socioeconomic divide between the descendents of those who came together during the first Thanksgiving: the Native Americans and the white newcomers. More than cranberry sauce and turkey, this type of reflection and action is essential to the holiday season.Recently, President Barack Obama hosted a White House Tribal Nations conference with representatives from all 564 federally recognized U.S. tribes. Bringing “about meaningful change for those who had, for too long, been excluded from the American dream,” was a driving force behind his presidential bid, Obama said. “And few have been more marginalized and ignored by Washington for as long as Native Americans, our first Americans.” The president’s words deeply resonate with the findings in my upcoming report, “Challenges to Native American Advancement.”This Institute for Policy Studies report reviews a federal policy that, for most of U.S. history, was more apt at removing land and natural resources from American Indians than protecting their resources and property as was agreed to in federally recognized treaties.Whether it was the allotment system, a kind of privatization of Indian land that resulted in transferring about 100 million acres to non-Native Americans, or the Reagan administration’s “New Federalism,” which in the name of self-determination cut funding for American Indian development, the federal government has too often blocked Native American advancement rather than supported it.Over the last few decades, Native Americans have made important gains in cutting poverty rates and unemployment while increasing their educational levels. Yet even with these gains, Native Americans are nowhere near parity with white Americans. For example, in 2007 Native Americans had a poverty rate of almost 25 percent, triple the white poverty rate. In this weak economic condition, American Indians face a serious challenge in today’s “Great Recession.” During the 1980s recession, Native Americans on reservations saw a decline of real family income that lasted for a decade. We can’t let this history repeat itself.If the country is serious about the words Obama spoke during the White House Tribal Conference, where he stated he is “absolutely committed…that [American Indians] can be full partners in the American economy and…have an equal shot at pursuing the American dream,” then federal investment will be necessary to finally turn the page on the history where America marginalized and alienated the “first Americans.”It was through years of intentional and focused government policy that American Indians were separated from the wealth and resources that were properly theirs. It’s through intentional and focused government policy that Native Americans will once again receive their rightful share of the wealth of this land.During this Native American Heritage month and Thanksgiving season, let’s as a country unite behind the president’s call and demand that the plight of American Indians be at the forefront of the effort to rebuild the American economy.Distributed by Minuteman MediaDedrick Muhammad is a senior organizer and research associate at the Institute for Policy Studies, a progressive multi-issue think tank that transforms ideas into action for peace, justice, and the environment.

Brazilian Green Party gains esteemed black, female environmentalist to run for Presidency

08.29.09

In one of the largest nations in the world, Brazil, their growing Green Party should be heartening to U.S. Greens.The New York Times  August 29, 2009The Saturday Profilehttp://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/29/world/americas/29silva.html?_r=1&scp=3&sq=alexei%20barrionuevo&st=cseA Child of the Amazon Shakes Up a Nation’s PoliticsBy ALEXEI BARRIONUEVOBRASÍLIAFOR Marina Silva, life began in the heart of the Amazon. From the age of 11, she walked nine miles a day helping her father collect rubber from trees.These days, as an icon in the environmental movement, she has dedicated her life to protecting that same rainforest.Illiterate and seriously ill from hepatitis, Ms. Silva left her home when she was 16 and headed by bus to the city of Rio Branco seeking medical care and an education. There she learned how to read and write, graduated from college and became a teacher and a politician.She worked closely with her friend Chico Mendes, the rubber tapper and environmental activist, before he was gunned down in 1988 by ranchers opposed to his activism. When Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva was elected Brazil’s president in 2002, he picked Ms. Silva to be his environmental minister, and on her watch Brazil devised a national plan to combat deforestation and created an indigenous reserve roughly the size of Texas.Last week Ms. Silva shook up Brazilian politics by announcing that, after nearly three decades, she was leaving Mr. da Silva’s Workers’ Party to join the Green Party, where she is likely to be its candidate in next year’s presidential election.Her story — that of a humble woman who overcame extreme poverty and illness to become a force in Brazilian politics — could prove an inspiration to Brazilians in their search for a president to replace the popular Mr. da Silva, himself a product of humble beginnings, political analysts said.“Marina is a person that earned her own wings, and it is not surprising to discover that those who have wings can fly,” said Jorge Viana, the former governor of Acre, Ms. Silva’s home state.Her candidacy would pit her against Dilma Rousseff, President da Silva’s chief of staff and his choice to succeed him. Political analysts say the two women have been at odds since 2003 over the country’s economic development policy, including energy projects that Ms. Silva has questioned for environmental reasons.Ms. Silva has “shaken up the race, mixed up all the cards,” said David Fleischer, a political science professor at the University of Brasília.If either woman wins, history will be made. Brazil has never had a woman as president. In addition, the country has never had a black president; Ms. Silva is black.Ms. Silva resigned as environmental minister last year, after expressing concerns that the government might give in to pressure from business interests to ease off emergency measures she put in place to counteract a jump in Amazon deforestation. She returned to the national Senate, where she continued to press her environmental agenda.IN an interview here, Ms. Silva, 51, said she grew frustrated with the internal struggle to persuade members of the Workers’ Party to pursue a more sustainable economic development strategy.“With the opportunity to try to construct this new future for Brazil and for the planet, I prefer to put my hopes in this movement,” she said of her switch to the Green Party.While many admire her, some political analysts say they believe that Ms. Silva’s past serious health problems could become a political liability in a presidential contest. Hepatitis, malaria and heavy metals contamination have caused her to be hospitalized for long stretches.Concerns about Ms. Rousseff’s chemotherapy treatment for a melanoma have dogged her in recent months and led some supporters of Mr. da Silva to urge him to back a different candidate for his successor. Brazilians still remember the case of Tancredo Neves, a popular president-elect who became severely ill in 1985 and died before taking office.Still, Ms. Silva has spent a lifetime proving doubters wrong.BORN in Seringal Bagaço, a small community of rubber tappers in Acre, Ms. Silva was one of 11 children, three of whom died. The family’s nearest neighbor lived about an hour away on foot through the thick forest. Reaching Rio Branco, about 43 miles away, sometimes took a week during the rainy season, when the family car would get stuck in the muddy road, she said.Disease was common in the Amazon, and it took its toll on her family. Her mother died when Ms. Silva was 11. Two younger sisters later died with measles and malaria.At 11, she began working with her father as a rubber tapper. They would typically leave the house at 5 a.m. and return about 12 hours later. To increase the family’s productivity, her father would go to one area of the forest and she and her sisters to another.To keep her from being robbed or tricked by rubber buyers, her father taught her simple mathematics at an early age, she said.After Ms. Silva became ill with hepatitis, she resolved to head to Rio Branco to find treatment. She wanted to become a nun and study.She enrolled in a course for illiterate adults, worked as a maid and soon finished primary school. During vacation breaks, she returned to her father’s home and helped him collect rubber.She dropped her idea of becoming a nun and entered college, graduating at 26 with a history degree.While at the university, she joined the Revolutionary Communist Party, a clandestine group working to oppose Brazil’s military dictatorship.During that period, she met Mr. Mendes, a rubber tapper who organized workers to warn about the dangers of burning and clearing the forest and about the displacement of traditional Amazon communities.Ms. Silva joined Mr. Mendes’s movement, which involved peaceful demonstrations, and it led her into politics. After being elected a town councilwoman in Rio Branco, she went on to become a state legislator and a federal senator.With her staunch advocacy of the Amazon, Ms. Silva “was clearly the candidate of the Brazilian environmental movement,” said Steve Schwartzman, the director of tropical forest policy at Environmental Defense Fund in Washington and a longtime friend.“Marina was part of the movement that made the Amazon and deforestation and the possibility of a different development model a national issue in Brazil in a way it had never been before,” he said.Her advocacy won her acclaim from international environmental groups around the world, which say that clearing of the forest for Brazilian industries could be affecting global climate change. Although deforestation continues, the rate slowed significantly from 2004 to 2007.But in May 2008 Ms. Silva resigned her position, blaming “stagnation” within the government on its environmental policy. She had become increasingly isolated in Mr. da Silva’s government over her criticism of some proposed hydroelectric dams and of genetically modified crops.STILL, most of the policies she set in motion have continued, environmentalists said.She credited Mr. da Silva, whom she considers a “living hero” along with Nelson Mandela and Barack Obama, for Brazil’s progress on protecting the environment. But she said the government must preserve the advances it had made.“I was fortunate to achieve some things, but they were far short of what Brazil and the world needs us to do,” she said.Mery Galanternick contributed reporting from Rio de Janeiro.

Free Peltier

07.11.09

Friends,Your help is urgently needed. Please, everyone, take a few minutesto contact your Members of Congress and urge them to write a letterto the U.S. Parole Commission by TUESDAY, JULY 14, on behalf ofLeonard Peltier.  Use fax or e-mail.  You may also consult yoursenators’ and representative’s Web sites for telephone numbers.Get started now.<http://www.FreePeltierNow.org/congressmaster.htm>Please also contact the following Members of Congress who havesupported Peltier in the past to urge them to immediately write aletter to the U.S. Parole Commission.–> Rep. John Conyers, Jr., Chairman, House Judiciary Committee.  Call202-225-3951.–> Sen. Daniel Inouye via the Committee on Indian Affairs at (202)224-2251; <comments@indian.senate.gov>.  A SHOUT OUT to Minnesota:Remember that your new senator, Al Franken, is the newest memberof the Committee on Indian Affairs.  Drop him a line, too.–> The members of the Congressional Black Caucus at 202-226-9776;<congressionalblackcaucus@mail.house.gov>.  Remind them of thecongressional briefing with the CBC on the Peltier case on May17, 2000.  A number of the members supported Leonard a decadeago and must do so again.  They can help to educate their newermembers, as well. But time is of the essence. Members of specialnote include Rep. John Conyers, Jr., (MI), Rep. John Lewis (GA),Rep. Maxine Waters (CA), and Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton (DC).The Leonard Peltier Defense Offense Committee also hasasked that all supporters contact Speaker of the House NancyPelosi to urge her also to renew her commitment to Leonard’sfreedom.  Contact the Speaker of the House at 202-225-0100.Or use e-mail: <http://speaker.house.gov/contact/> or<AmericanVoices@mail.house.gov>. San Francisco constituentsmay also reach Ms. Pelosi at (415) 556-4862 or at her DC office(202-225-4965).—–Additions   :)Sample Letter   :)United States Parole Commission5550 Friendship BoulevardSuite 420Chevy Chase, MD 20815-7286(Insert Date)Re: LEONARD PELTIER #89637-132Dear Commissioners,Convicted in connection with the deaths on June 26, 1975, of Ronald Williams and Jack Coler, agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Mr. Leonard Peltier remains imprisoned at the United States Penitentiary in Lewisburg, Pennsylvania.The court record in this case clearly shows that government prosecutors have long held that they do not know who killed Mr. Coler and Mr. Williams nor what role Leonard Peltier “may have” played in the tragic shoot-out.Further, in a decision filed by the 8th Circuit Court of Appeals on December 18, 2002, Mr. Peltier’s sentences “were imposed in violation of [Peltier’s] due process rights because they were based on information that was false due to government misconduct,” and, according to the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals, in 2003: “…Much of the government’s behavior at the Pine Ridge Reservation and its prosecution of Leonard Peltier is to be condemned. The government withheld evidence. It intimidated witnesses. These facts are not disputed.”Despite these admissions, Leonard Peltier has served over 33 years in prison.After careful consideration of the facts in Leonard Peltier’s case, I have concluded that Leonard Peltier does not represent a risk to the public. First, Leonard Peltier has no prior convictions and has advocated for non-violence throughout his prison term. Furthermore, Leonard Peltier has been a model prisoner. He has received excellent evaluations from his work supervisors on a regular basis. He continues to mentor young Native prisoners, encouraging them to lead clean and sober lives. He has used his time productively, disciplining himself to be a talented painter and an expressive writer. Although Leonard Peltier maintains that he did not kill the agents, he has openly expressed remorse and sadness over their deaths.Most admirably, Mr. Peltier contributes regular support to those in need. He donates his paintings to charities including battered women’s shelters, half way houses, alcohol and drug treatment programs, and Native American scholarship funds. He also coordinates an annual holiday gift drive for the children of the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation.Leonard Peltier is widely recognized for his good deeds and in turn has won several awards including the North Star Frederick Douglas Award; Federation of Labour (Ontario, Canada) Humanist of the Year Award; Human Rights Commission of Spain International Human Rights Prize; and 2004 Silver Arrow Award for Lifetime Achievement. Mr. Peltier also has been nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize six times.Leonard Peltier is now over 60 years of age—a great-grandfather—and suffers from partial blindness, diabetes, a heart condition, and high blood pressure.I recognize the grave nature of the events of June 26, 1975, and I extend my deepest sympathy to the families of those who died that day. However, I find aspects of this case to also be of concern and I believe Leonard Peltier deserves to be reunited with his family and allowed to live the remaining years of his life in peace. I also believe that, rather than presenting a threat to the public, Mr. Peltier’s release would help to heal a wound that has long impeded better relations between the federal government and American Indians.Thank you for your time and consideration.Sincerely yours,Signature(Your Name)(Your Street Address)(Your City, State, and Zip Code)IMPORTANT NOTE TO ALL SUPPORTERS: When you write a letter in support of Leonard’s parole, mail the letter directly to the U.S. Parole Commission, but also please send a copy of your correspondence to the Peltier Legal Team, c/o LP-DOC, P.O. Box 7488, Fargo, ND 58106.Time to set him free… Because it is the RIGHT thing to do.Friends of Peltierhttp://www.FreePeltierNow.org

Global Greens condemn violence in Peru, seek an independent investigation of police actions at protests against land grab for oil drilling

06.23.09

GREEN PARTY OF THE UNITED STATES
http://www.gp.org

For Immediate Release:
Monday, June 22, 2009

Contacts:
Scott McLarty, Media Coordinator, 202-518-5624, cell 202-904-7614, mclarty@greens.org
Starlene Rankin, Media Coordinator, 916-995-3805, starlene@gp.org

Statement of the Global Green Coordination, forwarded by the Green Party of the United States

WASHINGTON, DC — The following statement was issued by the Global Green Coordination on June 15. The Global Greens (http://www.globalgreens.org) is the international network of Green parties and political movements, founded in 2001 at the First Global Greens Congress, in Canberra, Australia. The Green Party of the United States is a member of the Global Greens.

Global Greens Condemn Violence in Peru
http://www.globalgreens.org/statements/peru

The Global Green Coordination has called for an independent investigation into the actions of police in the Amazonian region of Peru which resulted in at least 50 deaths. After the violence near the town of Bagua Grande, hundreds more people, mainly indigenous people, are missing and it is alleged that police have hidden hundreds of bodies. Indigenous people were protesting against new legislation which will mean their land can be exploited for oil and gas drilling.

We call on the government of President Alan Garcia to immediately stop all police actions against demonstrations by indigenous people. We also urge the Union of South American Nations (UNASUR) to launch an independent investigation into the violence, just as it did after similar violence in Bolivia earlier this year. In that instance, UNASUR played a very important role in calming an extremely volatile situation and they could do so again in this case. It is also vital that the Peruvian authorities allow human rights organisations free access to the area where the clashes took place, so that a thorough assessment of what happened can be made.

The Global Greens also call on the international community to put all the pressure it can on the Peruvian Government so that it stops police violence against indigenous protesters and launches a thorough and independent investigation into the causes of the violence.

An important element of the pressure which could be brought to bear on Peru is related to trade agreements: the change in legislation the indigenous protested against is necessary following the stipulations in the recent Free Trade Agreement between Peru and the USA. The Commercial Agreement the EU is currently negotiating with with Peru, Colombia and Ecuador contains very similar provisions, and partly goes beyond US demands. Therefore, a radical change of the EU negotiations is necessary as a first step we call on the European Commission and Council to suspend negotiations on a Free Trade Agreement with Peru (as well as Ecuador and Colombia) until an independent investigation has reached its conclusions and the people responsible for the violence have been tried and, if found guilty, been sentenced to punishment. The suspension should provide the time necessary to reorientate the contents of the negotiations, so that a future agreement protects people and the environment rather then exploit them.

MORE INFORMATION

Green Party of the United States http://www.gp.org
202-319-7191, 866-41GREEN
Fax 202-319-7193
Tally of Green election victories http://www.gp.org/2008-elections/election-results.html
Green candidate news http://www.gp.org/2008-elections/candidate-news.php
Green candidate database for 2008 and other campaign information: http://www.gp.org/elections.shtml
Green Party News Center http://www.gp.org/newscenter.shtml
Green Party Speakers Bureau http://www.gp.org/speakers
Green Party ballot access page http://www.gp.org/2008-elections

Global Greens http://www.globalgreens.org

International Committee of the Green Party of the United States http://www.gp.org/committees/intl

2009 Annual National Meeting of the Green Party, Durham, NC, July 23-26 http://www.gp.org/2009-ANM
Media credentialing page http://www.gp.org/forms/media

Green Pages, Vol. 13, No. 1
The official publication of record of the Green Party of the United States
http://gp.org/greenpages-blog

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No April Fool’s - MATTAPONI WIN!

03.31.09

On behalf of the Green Party, congratulations to everyone, especially Tyla MattesonFrom the Sierra Club Falls of the James blogDear Mattaponi Friends,    This is fantastic news.  The judge ruled today in the federalcourt case of the Alliance to Save the Mattaponi, Sierra Cluband Chesapeake Bay Foundation vs. the Corps of Engineers.    You can read the attachments: the Corps was “arbitraryand capricious”…and the case is remanded to the Corps andEPA.    Thanks to everyone, and especially to our attorneysDeborah Murray with Southern Environmental Law Center,and Jon Muller with CBF.    I’m sure there are more details, which I’ll forward whenit’s clearer to me what the next legal steps will be.    –Tyla 

Virginia’s Indian tribes won’t be receiving any stimulus funds

03.01.09

The economic stimulus package will not be giving assistance to Native American tribes in Virginia, reports the Daily Press. Nationally, some $2.5 billion will be going to Native American tribes, but since no tribes in Virginia are federally recognized, none will receive any funding directly.


 

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