Israel said on Monday it had blocked a boat leading a four-vessel protest flotilla of foreign activists from reaching the Gaza Strip and forced the vessel to sail to an Israeli port. An Israeli military statement said there was no violence in the incident, in which troops boarded, searched and then forced the boat to sail to an Israeli port. Activists said the boat had a few dozen Europeans, including politicians, on board and had been headed for Gaza, the blockaded Palestinian territory. The Israeli statement early on Monday said that "after exhausting all diplomatic channels the Israeli government ordered the Israeli Navy to redirect the vessel in order to prevent breach of the naval blockade" of Gaza. It said troops searched the vessel in international waters and then escorted it to Israel's southern port of Ashdod.
More: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/06/29/israel-gaza-flotilla_n_7684428.html
Tuesday, June 30, 2015
Pentagon Admits 60,000 Black Soldiers Used In Human Experiment
The U.S. Defence Department has, for the first time, admitted that it carried out race-based tests on U.S. troops as part of its research about mustard gas. The U.S. Government used Black soldiers as human guinea pigs in chemical experiments during World War II, according to a new NPR report. Around 60,000 U.S. soldiers were enlisted in a classified chemical weapons testing program in which soldiers were enclosed in gas chambers and exposed to chemicals. “They said we were being tested to see what effect these gases would have on Black skins,” Rollins Edwards, a U.S. Army soldier during World War II told NPR. “You had no choice. You did not know where you were going. They didn’t tell you anything,” Edwards added.
More: http://www.telesurtv.net/english/news/Pentagon-Admits-60000-Black-Soldiers-Used-in-Human-Experiment-20150625-0013.html
More: http://www.telesurtv.net/english/news/Pentagon-Admits-60000-Black-Soldiers-Used-in-Human-Experiment-20150625-0013.html
At Least Five Black Churches Destroyed By Fire In Past Week
At least five predominantly black churches have caught fire in the last week, including at least three that have been the subject of arson, the Southern Poverty Law Center reports. The string of blazes, which have occurred in four Southern states and Ohio, comes a week after nine people were gunned down at a Charleston, South Carolina, church. Dylann Roof, 21, has been charged with nine counts of homicide and possession of a firearm during commission of a violent crime. An arsonist set fire to the College Hills Seventh Day Adventist Church in Knoxville, Tennessee, on Monday. The following day, God’s Power Church of Christ in Macon, Georgia, was gutted by flames.
More: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/06/28/black-churches-fire_n_7681754.html
More: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/06/28/black-churches-fire_n_7681754.html
TPP Fight Is NOT Over!
The Congress will receive it for 60 days before the Fast Track clock starts counting, then there will be additional time for the House to debate and vote followed by the Senate. So we will have several months to educate, organize and mobilize people. This is likely to occur in the Fall, some estimate the likely time will be November. We will know more about the exact dates as we see when the negotiations are finalized. The key thing about that timing is the election season. Anytime after Labor Day is considered the re-election season for members of Congress. This puts them more on edge, more concerned about the voters. As we saw in the Fast Track vote, only the minimum number would take the risk of voting for Fast Track. Elected officials concern with public opinion, and fear of a populist revolt, will be an even greater concern in the fall.
More: https://www.popularresistance.org/zeese-and-flowers-tpp-fight-is-not-over/
More: https://www.popularresistance.org/zeese-and-flowers-tpp-fight-is-not-over/
Introducing the ‘right to eavesdrop on your things’
Data privacy is a big enough deal that Americans need a new right — something nobody even imagined a generation ago.
Embedded, networked sensors and actuators are everywhere. They are in engines, monitoring combustion and performance. They are in our shoes and on our wrists, helping us exercise enough and measuring our sleep. They are in our phones, our homes, hospitals, offices, ovens, planes, trains, and automobiles. Their streams of data will improve industry, energy consumption, agriculture, business, and our health. Software processes these streams to provide real-time analytics, insights, and notifications, as well as control and actuate the physical world.
The emerging Internet of Things has tremendous potential, but also tremendous dangers. As we have seen with the Internet worm infecting the first networked computers in 1988, Nimda in 2001, and SQL injection attacks since the late 2000s, new applications and software present tremendous security threats. New systems and protocols, developed quickly and through grassroots efforts, do not foresee these threats, with the result that it takes decades to react and make these systems secure. For the Internet of Things, this danger is even more acute due to scale and interaction with the physical world. Internet threats today steal credit cards. Internet threats tomorrow will disable home security systems, flood fields, and disrupt hospitals.
The Secure Internet of Things Project is a cross-disciplinary research effort between computer science and electrical engineering faculty at Stanford University, UC Berkeley, and the University of Michigan. The research effort focuses on three key questions:
Embedded, networked sensors and actuators are everywhere. They are in engines, monitoring combustion and performance. They are in our shoes and on our wrists, helping us exercise enough and measuring our sleep. They are in our phones, our homes, hospitals, offices, ovens, planes, trains, and automobiles. Their streams of data will improve industry, energy consumption, agriculture, business, and our health. Software processes these streams to provide real-time analytics, insights, and notifications, as well as control and actuate the physical world.
The emerging Internet of Things has tremendous potential, but also tremendous dangers. As we have seen with the Internet worm infecting the first networked computers in 1988, Nimda in 2001, and SQL injection attacks since the late 2000s, new applications and software present tremendous security threats. New systems and protocols, developed quickly and through grassroots efforts, do not foresee these threats, with the result that it takes decades to react and make these systems secure. For the Internet of Things, this danger is even more acute due to scale and interaction with the physical world. Internet threats today steal credit cards. Internet threats tomorrow will disable home security systems, flood fields, and disrupt hospitals.
The Secure Internet of Things Project is a cross-disciplinary research effort between computer science and electrical engineering faculty at Stanford University, UC Berkeley, and the University of Michigan. The research effort focuses on three key questions:
- Analytics: how will we integrate these enormous streams of physical world instrumentation with all of our existing data?
- Security: how can pervasive sensing and analytics systems preserve and protect user security?
- Hardware and software systems: what hardware and software systems will make developing new intelligent and secure Internet of Things applications as easy as a modern web application?
Supreme Court to Weigh Dispute Over Union Fees
The Supreme Court on Tuesday agreed to hear a challenge to the way public-sector unions finance their operations. Union officials said a ruling against them would deal a blow to organized labor.
The case, Friedrichs v. California Teachers Association, No. 14-915, was brought by California teachers who said being compelled to pay union fees to subsidize activities they disagree with violates their First Amendment rights.
Limiting the power of public unions has long been a goal of conservative groups, and they welcomed Tuesday’s development.
“The question of whether teachers and other government employees can be required to subsidize the speech of a union they do not support as a condition of working for their own government is now squarely before the court,” Mark Mix, president of the National Right to Work Legal Defense Foundation, said in a statement.
The challengers say that some collective bargaining with a government employer amounts to lobbying and that forcing them to pay for those activities violates their First Amendment rights.
The Supreme Court will hear arguments in the case in its next term, which begins in October.
More: http://www.nytimes.com/politics/first-draft/2015/06/30/supreme-court-to-weigh-dispute-over-union-fees/
The case, Friedrichs v. California Teachers Association, No. 14-915, was brought by California teachers who said being compelled to pay union fees to subsidize activities they disagree with violates their First Amendment rights.
Limiting the power of public unions has long been a goal of conservative groups, and they welcomed Tuesday’s development.
“The question of whether teachers and other government employees can be required to subsidize the speech of a union they do not support as a condition of working for their own government is now squarely before the court,” Mark Mix, president of the National Right to Work Legal Defense Foundation, said in a statement.
The challengers say that some collective bargaining with a government employer amounts to lobbying and that forcing them to pay for those activities violates their First Amendment rights.
The Supreme Court will hear arguments in the case in its next term, which begins in October.
More: http://www.nytimes.com/politics/first-draft/2015/06/30/supreme-court-to-weigh-dispute-over-union-fees/
How Activists Won Reparations for the Survivors of Chicago Police Department Torture
Given that Friday was the International Day in Support of Victims of Torture, it seems like an apt time to reflect on the history of the movement in Chicago, which achieved the passing of historic legislation providing reparations to the survivors of Jon Burge's police torture.
More: http://www.truth-out.org/news/item/31621-how-activists-won-reparations-for-the-survivors-of-chicago-police-department-torture
More: http://www.truth-out.org/news/item/31621-how-activists-won-reparations-for-the-survivors-of-chicago-police-department-torture
Dalai Lama Endorses Pope Francis' Encyclical on Climate Change
The Dalai Lama endorsed the Pope’s encyclical on climate change yesterday while speaking at Glastonbury festival, a massive five-day festival that takes place in Somerset, England. The Buddhist leader spoke at a panel on climate change, praising the encyclical and saying it was the duty of everyone to “say more. We have to make more of an effort, including demonstrations.”
More: http://ecowatch.com/2015/06/29/dalai-lama-pope-encyclical/
More: http://ecowatch.com/2015/06/29/dalai-lama-pope-encyclical/
Sixth Great Mass Extinction Event Begins; 2015 on Pace to Become Hottest Year on Record
A recent study shows that the earth has officially entered its sixth great mass extinction event, with humans being both the cause and a species at risk of annihilation. Other climate reports released this month show mounting evidence that anthropogenic climate disruption has ramped up and is progressing in a rapid, nonlinear fashion.
More: http://www.truth-out.org/news/item/31612-sixth-great-mass-extinction-event-begins-2015-on-pace-to-become-hottest-year-on-record
More: http://www.truth-out.org/news/item/31612-sixth-great-mass-extinction-event-begins-2015-on-pace-to-become-hottest-year-on-record
Monday, June 29, 2015
Last Week in Indian Country
A recap of the stories that mattered most in Indian country:
DUBIOUS DISTINCTION: Two Indian country sites have made this year’s list of America’s 11 Most Endangered Historic Places: Embattled Oak Flat, in Arizona, and the Grand Canyon.
HOOKED: Swinomish Fish Company, owned by the Swinomish Tribe, is supplying Baker Lake spring chinook salmon to the largest independent grocery retailer in the Pacific Northwest. Haggen Food & Pharmacy has 164 stores in Washington and Oregon, as well as California, Arizona and Nevada.
COZY HOMES: Students at the Tulalip Tribes’ Construction Training Center were honored on June 15 for building two tiny houses to be donated to the Nickelsville Homeless Encampment in Seattle’s Central District. Thirteen students participated in the construction of the houses, which measure 8-feet by 12-feet and are wired for electricity and heat.
MONEY FOR HOPE: The U.S. Department of Education has awarded Pine Ridge School in South Dakota a $218,000 grant under the agency’s Project School Emergency Response to Violence program in response to a sharp increase in youth suicides. The school is a BIE-operated K-12 boarding school on the Pine Ridge Reservation that serves nearly 800 students from the Oglala Sioux Tribe.
LIAR, LIAR: Former Seneca Nation of Indians tribal council member Bergal Mitchell III admitted on June 22 to lying to FBI special agents investigating the purchase of 251-acres of farmland in Lewiston. Mitchell used the land purchase, which is the current location of the Seneca Hickory Stick Golf Course to cover up his theft of $338,000.
WAIT AND SEE: Oglala Lakota president John Yellow Bird Steele told a group of New Age spiritualists who plan to gather in the Black Hills that as long as they respect the sacred site, including Lakota traditions, he does not have a problem with their scheduled event next month.
DREAMING BIG: The WNBA Atlanta Dream continued their Heritage series June 19-21 with games honoring Native American culture. Guard Shoni Schimmel, Umatilla, leads the team in assists and averages 7.8 points per game. Jude Schimmel, Shoni's sister, received the Atlanta Dream Women of Inspiration Award.
CUTTING EDGE: Cinemersia, a production company specializing in cutting-edge virtual reality technology, has announced its second VR feature film: "Arapaho." "Imagine Dances with Wolves, only you are out there, with them, not sitting in a theater," says writer and director David Marlett.
NO ROAD FOR YOU: Canada's government will not commit to building a road to an isolated Ontario First Nation that has suffered for 18 years without potable water despite being surrounded by Winnipeg's own tap water.
Read more at http://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/2015/06/28/week-was-big-stories-indian-country-june-28-2015-160881
DUBIOUS DISTINCTION: Two Indian country sites have made this year’s list of America’s 11 Most Endangered Historic Places: Embattled Oak Flat, in Arizona, and the Grand Canyon.
HOOKED: Swinomish Fish Company, owned by the Swinomish Tribe, is supplying Baker Lake spring chinook salmon to the largest independent grocery retailer in the Pacific Northwest. Haggen Food & Pharmacy has 164 stores in Washington and Oregon, as well as California, Arizona and Nevada.
COZY HOMES: Students at the Tulalip Tribes’ Construction Training Center were honored on June 15 for building two tiny houses to be donated to the Nickelsville Homeless Encampment in Seattle’s Central District. Thirteen students participated in the construction of the houses, which measure 8-feet by 12-feet and are wired for electricity and heat.
MONEY FOR HOPE: The U.S. Department of Education has awarded Pine Ridge School in South Dakota a $218,000 grant under the agency’s Project School Emergency Response to Violence program in response to a sharp increase in youth suicides. The school is a BIE-operated K-12 boarding school on the Pine Ridge Reservation that serves nearly 800 students from the Oglala Sioux Tribe.
LIAR, LIAR: Former Seneca Nation of Indians tribal council member Bergal Mitchell III admitted on June 22 to lying to FBI special agents investigating the purchase of 251-acres of farmland in Lewiston. Mitchell used the land purchase, which is the current location of the Seneca Hickory Stick Golf Course to cover up his theft of $338,000.
WAIT AND SEE: Oglala Lakota president John Yellow Bird Steele told a group of New Age spiritualists who plan to gather in the Black Hills that as long as they respect the sacred site, including Lakota traditions, he does not have a problem with their scheduled event next month.
DREAMING BIG: The WNBA Atlanta Dream continued their Heritage series June 19-21 with games honoring Native American culture. Guard Shoni Schimmel, Umatilla, leads the team in assists and averages 7.8 points per game. Jude Schimmel, Shoni's sister, received the Atlanta Dream Women of Inspiration Award.
CUTTING EDGE: Cinemersia, a production company specializing in cutting-edge virtual reality technology, has announced its second VR feature film: "Arapaho." "Imagine Dances with Wolves, only you are out there, with them, not sitting in a theater," says writer and director David Marlett.
NO ROAD FOR YOU: Canada's government will not commit to building a road to an isolated Ontario First Nation that has suffered for 18 years without potable water despite being surrounded by Winnipeg's own tap water.
Read more at http://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/2015/06/28/week-was-big-stories-indian-country-june-28-2015-160881
Breaking News: Interior Announces Final Fed Rec Process to Acknowledge Tribes
Reform of the regulatory process by which the Department of the Interior officially recognizes Indian tribes moved another step closer today with the release of a final rule.
Secretary of the Interior Sally Jewell and Assistant Secretary-Indian Affairs Kevin K. Washburn made the announcement regarding a process that will promote more transparency for a timely and consistent process, while being flexible enough to account for the unique histories of tribal communities, while maintaining the integrity of criteria in place for nearly 40 years.
Read more at http://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/2015/06/29/breaking-news-interior-announces-final-fed-rec-process-acknowledge-tribes-160886
Secretary of the Interior Sally Jewell and Assistant Secretary-Indian Affairs Kevin K. Washburn made the announcement regarding a process that will promote more transparency for a timely and consistent process, while being flexible enough to account for the unique histories of tribal communities, while maintaining the integrity of criteria in place for nearly 40 years.
Read more at http://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/2015/06/29/breaking-news-interior-announces-final-fed-rec-process-acknowledge-tribes-160886
Inmate’s Confession Promises New Trials for Fairbanks Four, Roberts Paroled
Marvin Roberts returned home for the first time in 17 years on June 17, but his mood was subdued. “He’s happy to be out,” said his attorney, Bill Oberly of the Alaska Innocence Project. “But he has the other guys on his mind.”
The other guys – fellow Alaska Natives George Frese and Eugene Vent, and Kevin Pease, Crow – remain in prison, convicted with Roberts of the 1997 beating death of Fairbanks teenager John Hartman.
A recent confession by another inmate – backed by corroborating evidence and a lie detector test – suggests strongly that the four were wrongfully convicted. Roberts, Frese, Pease and Vent return to court October 5-12 for an evidentiary hearing to determine whether a new trial should be granted. If the judge grants a new jury trial, the other three could be released on bail, Oberly said in an earlier interview.
Read more at http://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/2015/06/29/inmates-confession-promises-new-trials-fairbanks-four-roberts-paroled-160882
The other guys – fellow Alaska Natives George Frese and Eugene Vent, and Kevin Pease, Crow – remain in prison, convicted with Roberts of the 1997 beating death of Fairbanks teenager John Hartman.
A recent confession by another inmate – backed by corroborating evidence and a lie detector test – suggests strongly that the four were wrongfully convicted. Roberts, Frese, Pease and Vent return to court October 5-12 for an evidentiary hearing to determine whether a new trial should be granted. If the judge grants a new jury trial, the other three could be released on bail, Oberly said in an earlier interview.
Read more at http://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/2015/06/29/inmates-confession-promises-new-trials-fairbanks-four-roberts-paroled-160882
Supreme Court Blocks Obama’s Limits on Power Plants
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Monday blocked one of the Obama administration’s most ambitious environmental initiatives, an Environmental Protection Agency regulation meant to limit emissions of mercury and other toxic pollutants from coal-fired power plants.
Industry groups and some 20 states had challenged the E.P.A.’s decision to regulate the emissions, saying the agency had failed to take into account the punishing costs its rule would impose.
The Clean Air Act required the regulation to be “appropriate and necessary.” The challengers said the agency had run afoul of that law by deciding to regulate the emissions without first undertaking a cost-benefit analysis.
Supreme Court Allows Use of Execution Drug
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court ruled on Monday against three death row inmates who had sought to bar the use of an execution drug they said risked causing excruciating pain.
Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr. wrote the majority opinion in the 5-to-4 decision. He was joined by the court’s four more conservative justices.
The drug, the sedative midazolam, played a part in three long and apparently painful executions last year. It was used in an effort to render inmates unconscious before they were injected with other, severely painful drugs.
Four condemned inmates in Oklahoma challenged the use of the drug, saying it did not reliably render the person unconscious and so violated the Eighth Amendment’s ban on cruel and unusual punishment. Lower courts disagreed.
'Banning the box' doesn't go far enough (OPINION)
Recently, the Oregon Senate approved the "ban the box" House Bill 3025. It's unfortunate that the law will ultimately not accomplish that much in getting ex-offenders hired because "banning the box" — the popular movement to prevent companies from asking on a job application whether you've ever been convicted of a crime — doesn't go far enough...
...companies still refuse to hire ex-offenders when they learn about records; research from the Bureau of Justice Statistics says that just 12.5 percent of employers say they would definitely accept an application from someone with a criminal history.
All this shows how woefully insufficient the "ban the box" movement is — a bandwagon on which 16 states and 100 cities and counties have already jumped, disallowing public employers from asking about criminal convictions on a job application.
The theory of "ban the box" legislation was to force employers to view candidates through a lens unclouded with their criminal histories. Only once a business decides it wants to hire the candidate can it inquire about felony convictions. Then the employer typically preserves the absolute right to rescind the offer of employment if the criminal record is "job related and consistent with business necessity."
More: http://www.oregonlive.com/opinion/index.ssf/2015/06/banning_the_box_doesnt_go_far.html#incart_2box_opinion_index.ssf
...companies still refuse to hire ex-offenders when they learn about records; research from the Bureau of Justice Statistics says that just 12.5 percent of employers say they would definitely accept an application from someone with a criminal history.
All this shows how woefully insufficient the "ban the box" movement is — a bandwagon on which 16 states and 100 cities and counties have already jumped, disallowing public employers from asking about criminal convictions on a job application.
The theory of "ban the box" legislation was to force employers to view candidates through a lens unclouded with their criminal histories. Only once a business decides it wants to hire the candidate can it inquire about felony convictions. Then the employer typically preserves the absolute right to rescind the offer of employment if the criminal record is "job related and consistent with business necessity."
More: http://www.oregonlive.com/opinion/index.ssf/2015/06/banning_the_box_doesnt_go_far.html#incart_2box_opinion_index.ssf
The Conservative Case for Pretrial Justice Reform and Seven Solutions for Right-Sizing the System (Pt. 2)
In the first part of this two-part series, the conservative case was set forth for right-sizing America’s pretrial justice system, and the first solution of eliminating unnecessary criminal offenses was discussed. Now, we turn to six other steps towards a system that is more consistent with limited government and individual liberty.
More: http://townhall.com/columnists/marclevin/2015/06/26/the-conservative-case-for-pretrial-justice-reform-and-six-solutions-for-rightsizing-the-system-part-2-n2017536/page/full
More: http://townhall.com/columnists/marclevin/2015/06/26/the-conservative-case-for-pretrial-justice-reform-and-six-solutions-for-rightsizing-the-system-part-2-n2017536/page/full
The Conservative Case for Pretrial Justice Reform and Seven Solutions for Right-Sizing the System (Pt. 1)
The valid purposes of the pretrial justice system are to ensure that individuals appear at all proceedings to answer for the conduct that led to their arrest and prevent the individual from being re-arrested during the intervening period, particularly for a serious crime. However, the ubiquity of pretrial detention effectively flips the traditional order of the justice system in which most people assume the punishment occurs after conviction. In fact, in New York City, 46 percent of defendants
who did not make bail were not sentenced to incarceration, with about half never convicted and the other half receiving a non-custodial sentence such as probation.
Additionally, defendants detained pretrial are four times more likely to ultimately receive a jail sentence and three times more likely to ultimately receive a prison sentence compared with otherwise similar defendants who are released prior to trial. Significantly, the effect is even more pronounced among those assessed as low-risk. The terms of incarceration are also two to three times longer for those kept behind bars until their case is resolved. Reasons for these disparities could include: it is harder to coordinate a legal defense while behind bars, prosecutors have more leverage to secure a plea to their liking while the defendant is jailed, and once someone is successful on pretrial supervision it may make the judge more likely to find them a suitable candidate for probation.
More: http://townhall.com/columnists/marclevin/2015/06/25/the-conservative-case-for-pretrial-justice-reform-and-six-solutions-for-rightsizing-the-system-n2017531/page/full
who did not make bail were not sentenced to incarceration, with about half never convicted and the other half receiving a non-custodial sentence such as probation.
Additionally, defendants detained pretrial are four times more likely to ultimately receive a jail sentence and three times more likely to ultimately receive a prison sentence compared with otherwise similar defendants who are released prior to trial. Significantly, the effect is even more pronounced among those assessed as low-risk. The terms of incarceration are also two to three times longer for those kept behind bars until their case is resolved. Reasons for these disparities could include: it is harder to coordinate a legal defense while behind bars, prosecutors have more leverage to secure a plea to their liking while the defendant is jailed, and once someone is successful on pretrial supervision it may make the judge more likely to find them a suitable candidate for probation.
More: http://townhall.com/columnists/marclevin/2015/06/25/the-conservative-case-for-pretrial-justice-reform-and-six-solutions-for-rightsizing-the-system-n2017531/page/full
Sunday, June 28, 2015
40 Years of Injustice: ABQ Demands Clemency for Leonard Peltier
On Friday, June 26, more than thirty people stood outside the Peter V. Dominici federal courthouse in Albuquerque, NM to demand executive clemency for Leonard Peltier, an Anishnabe and Lakota leader of the American Indian Movement (AIM) who was wrongly convicted and imprisoned for the murders of two FBI agents 40 years ago at the Jumping Bull Ranch in the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation.
The “stand-out” action was in solidarity with a Freedom Run, Powwow, and Prayer Walk in Oglala, SD in the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation to commemorate “Leonard Peltier Day,” an official holiday of the Oglala Sioux Tribe. Actions demanding Peltier’s clemency were also held worldwide.
More: http://therednation.org/2015/06/27/40-years-of-injustice-abq-demands-clemency-for-leonard-peltier/
The “stand-out” action was in solidarity with a Freedom Run, Powwow, and Prayer Walk in Oglala, SD in the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation to commemorate “Leonard Peltier Day,” an official holiday of the Oglala Sioux Tribe. Actions demanding Peltier’s clemency were also held worldwide.
More: http://therednation.org/2015/06/27/40-years-of-injustice-abq-demands-clemency-for-leonard-peltier/
Free Leonard Peltier!
Friday past, members of Sinn Féin Republican Youth Béal Feirste joined a white line picket protest in support of Leonard Peltier...
We here in Ireland have a proud reputation of promoting human rights and demanding action against injustice not only in our own land but abroad as well, such as in Palestine and in the Basque Country. It is imperative upon us to offer our solidarity in this desperate time of need for Leonard Peltier, a present hero facing the injustices of America. He is a man who has spent a decade longer in jail than Nelson Mandela did.
More: https://belfastsfry.wordpress.com/2015/06/28/free-leonard-peltier/
We here in Ireland have a proud reputation of promoting human rights and demanding action against injustice not only in our own land but abroad as well, such as in Palestine and in the Basque Country. It is imperative upon us to offer our solidarity in this desperate time of need for Leonard Peltier, a present hero facing the injustices of America. He is a man who has spent a decade longer in jail than Nelson Mandela did.
More: https://belfastsfry.wordpress.com/2015/06/28/free-leonard-peltier/
Grateful Dead enthrall faithful in first of 5 final shows
SANTA CLARA, Calif. (AP) — The songs still ran long. To the uninitiated, the communal rituals of the faithful fans probably looked strange. Was it trippy? Well, this was a Grateful Dead show, after all, the first in a handful over the next week that are said to be the last.
The four surviving members of the Dead, joined by a trio of well-versed companions, launched their "Fare Thee Well" mini-tour on Saturday night in Northern California, where the legendary jam band got its start 50 years ago and almost two decades after the death of beloved lead guitarist Jerry Garcia.
During a performance that featured a little more than 3 ½ hours of music, the group's so-called "core four" — rhythm guitarist Bob Weir, bassist Phil Lesh and percussionists Mickey Hart and Bill Kreutzmann — unreeled a set list featuring both crowd-pleasers and more obscure pieces from their early catalog.
More: https://news.yahoo.com/grateful-dead-bid-faithful-fare-thee-well-california-205627511.html
The Internet Health Test Reveals Network Slowdowns
For too long Internet users had to take it on faith that our Internet access providers were making good on their promises to give us what we pay for. But even those who pay a premium for top speeds have found that certain sites and services sputter out at the pace of dial-up. And calling your ISP’s customer-service department to find out what’s going on can be a torturous exercise — requiring you to endure an endless loop of hold music as you pray for a sentient being to pick up the line. Now you can do something about it. Last month the Free Press Action Fund and our BattlefortheNet.com partners launched the Internet Health Test to collect data on the speeds offered by the likes of AT&T, Comcast and Verizon.
More: http://www.freepress.net/blog/2015/06/24/internet-health-test-reveals-network-slowdowns
More: http://www.freepress.net/blog/2015/06/24/internet-health-test-reveals-network-slowdowns
Is The Trans-Pacific Partnership Unconstitutional?
It is January 2017. The mayor of San Francisco signs a bill that will raise the minimum wage of all workers from $8 to $16 an hour effective July 1st. His lawyers assure him that neither federal nor California minimum wage laws forbid that and that it is fine under the U.S. Constitution. Then, a month later, a Vietnamese company that owns 15 restaurants in San Francisco files a lawsuit saying that the pay increase violates the “investor protection” provisions of the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) agreement recently approved by Congress. The lawsuit is not in a federal or state court, but instead will be heard by three private arbitrators; the United States government is the sole defendant; and the city can participate only if the U.S. allows it.
More: http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2015/06/tpp-isds-constitution/396389/
More: http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2015/06/tpp-isds-constitution/396389/
Federal Documents Debunk Baltimore ‘Gang Threat’ Narrative
Self-described “FOIA terrorist” Jason Leopold of Vice (6/24/15) has released devastating documents about the Department of Homeland Security and the FBI’s analysis of a “threat” released by Baltimore police to media on April 27. The police had claimed that local “gangs” had gotten together and conspired to “take out cops”; this “credible threat,” used to justify an aggressive crackdown on protests against police violence, was reported on at the time from everyone from local news to national outlets like CBS News (4/27/15):
More: http://fair.org/home/federal-documents-debunk-baltimore-gang-threat-narrative/
As the funeral for Freddie Gray, the man who suffered a fatal spinal injury in police custody, was held Monday, the Baltimore Police Department announced they had received information about a “credible threat” against the lives of its officers.It turns out, however, that an FBI review in the following days would determine this threat was entirely without merit.
In a press release, the department states that “members of various gangs including the Black Guerilla Family, Bloods, and Crips have entered into a partnership to ‘take out’ law enforcement officers.” The statement advises local agencies to “take appropriate precautions to ensure the safety of their officers.”
More: http://fair.org/home/federal-documents-debunk-baltimore-gang-threat-narrative/
This Shadow Government Agency Is Scarier Than The NSA
If you have a telephone number that has ever been called by an inmate in a federal prison, registered a change of address with the Postal Service, rented a car from Avis, used a corporate or Sears credit card, applied for nonprofit status with the IRS, or obtained non-driver’s legal identification from a private company, they have you on file. They are not who you think they are. They are not the NSA or the CIA. They are the National Security Analysis Center (NSAC), an obscure element of the Justice Department that has grown from its creation in 2008 into a sprawling 400-person, $150 million-a-year multi-agency organization employing almost 300 analysts, the majority of whom are corporate contractors.
More: http://phasezero.gawker.com/this-shadow-government-agency-is-scarier-than-the-nsa-1707179377
More: http://phasezero.gawker.com/this-shadow-government-agency-is-scarier-than-the-nsa-1707179377
Our 18th Century Bill of Rights Needs Revising
There is no denying that the Bill of Rights was progressive at the time it was written - in 1791 - advancing civil and political (and property) rights. Along with the Declaration des Droits de l'Homme et du Citoyen (Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen of 1789), it promised to safeguard citizens against arbitrary power; to protect freedom of speech and freedom of religion; and assured citizens that their property could not be taken for public use without compensation.
Both the Bill of Rights and the Declaration provided protections to ensure that anyone accused of a crime had the right to a fair trial. Thomas Jefferson played some role in influencing the drafting of both. And certainly the ideas of major Enlightenment philosophers, such as Montesquieu and Rousseau, provided the intellectual framework for assumptions about individualism, freedomand equality.
But the similarities end there. While France and other European countries have updated their constitutions to include economic, social and cultural rights (with some including environmental rights as well), the US has not ventured beyond civil, political and property rights, and the Bill of Rights has only been gingerly expanded, chiefly to abolish slavery and expand voting rights for Black people and women.
More: http://www.truth-out.org/opinion/item/31510-our-18th-century-bill-of-rights-needs-revising
Both the Bill of Rights and the Declaration provided protections to ensure that anyone accused of a crime had the right to a fair trial. Thomas Jefferson played some role in influencing the drafting of both. And certainly the ideas of major Enlightenment philosophers, such as Montesquieu and Rousseau, provided the intellectual framework for assumptions about individualism, freedom
But the similarities end there. While France and other European countries have updated their constitutions to include economic, social and cultural rights (with some including environmental rights as well), the US has not ventured beyond civil, political and property rights, and the Bill of Rights has only been gingerly expanded, chiefly to abolish slavery and expand voting rights for Black people and women.
More: http://www.truth-out.org/opinion/item/31510-our-18th-century-bill-of-rights-needs-revising
Long Taught to Use Force, Police Warily Learn to De-escalate
SEATTLE — Officer Corey Papinsky was recently showing a group of Seattle police officers how to reduce the chance of using force against a citizen during a suddenly antagonistic encounter.
Approaching a civilian with your hands on a weapon or making too much eye contact with someone could unnecessarily escalate a situation, Officer Papinsky said. “Keep your hands visible at all times,” he advised.
But he faced a tough crowd. “It seems good advice for the suspect,” one officer said. “We want to see their hands.”
Another officer had a different approach.
“Last week, there was a guy in a car who wouldn’t show me his hands,” the officer said. “I pulled my gun out and stuck it right in his nose, and I go, ‘Show me your hands now!’ That’s de-escalation.”
Another officer had a different approach.
“Last week, there was a guy in a car who wouldn’t show me his hands,” the officer said. “I pulled my gun out and stuck it right in his nose, and I go, ‘Show me your hands now!’ That’s de-escalation.”
Across the country, police departments from Seattle to New York and Dallas to Salt Lake City are rethinking notions of policing that have held sway for 40 years, making major changes to how officers are trained in even the most quotidian parts of their work.
Secret World War II Chemical Experiments Tested Troops By Race
While the Pentagon admitted decades ago that it used American troops as test subjects in experiments with mustard gas, until now, officials have never spoken about the tests that grouped subjects by race. And it wasn't just African-Americans. Japanese-Americans were used as test subjects, serving as proxies for the enemy so scientists could explore how mustard gas and other chemicals might affect Japanese troops. Puerto Rican soldiers were also singled out.
Source: http://www.npr.org/2015/06/22/415194765/u-s-troops-tested-by-race-in-secret-world-war-ii-chemical-experiments
Source: http://www.npr.org/2015/06/22/415194765/u-s-troops-tested-by-race-in-secret-world-war-ii-chemical-experiments
Congress Just Got One Step Closer To Blocking Net Neutrality
The House committee that writes the federal budget approved a provision on Wednesday that would freeze the FCC's net neutrality rules. The provision of the spending bill written by the House Appropriations Subcommittee on Financial Services and General Government suspends the rules until a federal court rules on the legal challenge currently facing them. It also requires the FCC to publish the details of any rule it proposes at least 21 days before voting on it—a step that agency advocates oppose because it contravenes the typical rulemaking process—and significantly cuts the commission's funding. The full House Appropriations Committee voted 30-20 to approve the bill, which becomes part of the overall spending bill that will eventually go to the House floor. The anti-net-neutrality provision is not present in the Senate appropriations bill.
More: http://www.dailydot.com/politics/net-neutrality-fcc-blocked-funding-bill-house-committee/
More: http://www.dailydot.com/politics/net-neutrality-fcc-blocked-funding-bill-house-committee/
Guantánamo Prisoner On Nine-Year Hunger Strike Will Be Released
A prisoner who has been on a nine-year hunger strike to protest against his confinement at the US base at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, can now return to his native Saudi Arabia, a government review board said on Friday. The Periodic Review Board, which has been re-evaluating dozens of Guantánamo prisoners previously deemed too dangerous to release, said in a statement published on its website that Abdul Rahman Shalabi can be released to take part in a Saudi government rehabilitation program for militants and would be subject to monitoring afterward. Shalabi, 39, was among the first prisoners taken to Guantánamo in January 2002. He was never charged with a crime but the government said he had been a bodyguard for Osama bin Laden and had links to the external operations chief for al-Qaida, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, who is facing trial by military commission at Guantánamo.
More: http://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2015/jun/26/guantanamo-prisoner-hunger-strike-released-saudi-Arabia
More: http://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2015/jun/26/guantanamo-prisoner-hunger-strike-released-saudi-Arabia
Saturday, June 27, 2015
Leonard Peltier – How the FBI railroads activists
The story of Leonard Peltier is but one rather sensational story among many many others that don’t receive the same notoriety. Many people are behind bars doing hard time that are innocent of what they were convicted of. Most recently was the tragic story of teenager Kalief Browder who was held in Rikers Island adult jail for three years without being charged for a crime. After suffering numerous beatings by jail staff and inmates, upon his release he committed suicide. He was never even charged let alone convicted.
I have had several potential “manufactured crimes” with me as the perpetrator created by the police and FBI. They remain open and unsolved cases to this day, ready to be pulled out of the hat when the time is deemed right. In the past year my mom and I have come back to her apartment after being in San Francisco and turned on the TV only to see the very location where we had been embroiled in a police/FBI investigation. Coincidence? I don’t think so. Just as in the Leonard Peltier documentary above, we have seen cars that are the same color and make as ours driving by with the drivers doing strange things.
More: http://allstaractivist.com/2015/06/26/leonard-peltier-how-the-fbi-railroads-activists/
I have had several potential “manufactured crimes” with me as the perpetrator created by the police and FBI. They remain open and unsolved cases to this day, ready to be pulled out of the hat when the time is deemed right. In the past year my mom and I have come back to her apartment after being in San Francisco and turned on the TV only to see the very location where we had been embroiled in a police/FBI investigation. Coincidence? I don’t think so. Just as in the Leonard Peltier documentary above, we have seen cars that are the same color and make as ours driving by with the drivers doing strange things.
More: http://allstaractivist.com/2015/06/26/leonard-peltier-how-the-fbi-railroads-activists/
BLOOD IN THE HILLS – Leonard Peltier and the Pine Ridge Reservation Shootout 40 Years Later
...By June of 1975, the FBI was apparently frustrated beyond clear-headedness. Matthiessen’s exhaustive account elucidates the details of the incident at Jumping Bull which would eventually result in Leonard Peltier’s conviction. Among the most striking is the fact that while agents Coler and Williams were ostensibly investigating the theft of a pair of cowboy boots, a myriad of law enforcement and paramilitary forces totaling at least 250 men were assembling within a few miles of the Jumping Bull property, which was soon surrounded.
Throughout the exchange of fire, all of the Indians involved were able to escape into the hills, except for the fallen Joe Stuntz. Leonard Peltier, who was certainly among those who fled, eventually escaped to Canada, from where he was extradited back to the U.S. and tried for the murders of agents Coler and Williams.
Peltier’s extradition and trial proved to be even more fraught with fraud than the Means-Banks trial. The prosecution depended largely on the testimony of a mentally unstable woman named Myrtle Poor Bear who later admitted that she had been threatened and coerced by the FBI. Although she was groomed to damn Peltier, she later admitted that she had never met him.
Despite this and several other witnesses’ claims of coercion at the hands of the FBI, ballistics evidence which concluded in favor of Peltier’s innocence, and a general lack of evidence, Leonard Peltier was convicted and sentenced to two back-to-back life sentences.
Justicia para Leonard Peltier: 40 aniversario del incidente en Oglala
Hace cuarenta años, el 26 de junio de 1975, dos agentes de la Oficina Federal de Investigaciones (FBI) -Jack Coler y Ron Williams- entraron en la propiedad privada de la reserva india de Pine Ridge, Dakota del Sur. Condujeron vehículos sin identificación, vestían ropas de civil, y descuidadamente no se identificaron como agentes de la ley. Al parecer, tratarían de arrestar a un joven indio por el supuesto robo de un par de botas de vaquero.
En ese momento, miembros del Movimiento Indio Americano (AIM) estaban acampando en la propiedad (les habían pedido proteger a los ancianos de la violencia extrema en la reserva).
Por razones desconocidas, se desató un tiroteo. Una familia con niños pequeños quedó atrapada en el fuego cruzado. A lo largo de la estancia, la gente gritaba que estaban bajo ataque y muchos de los hombres presentes se apresuraron a devolver el fuego. Cuando terminó la escaramuza, los dos agentes del FBI estaban muertos. Un joven nativo americano, Joe Stuntz, también yacía muerto, a causa del disparo en la cabeza de un francotirador.
El activista Leonard Peltier fue condenado injustamente en 1977, a propósito de la muerte a tiros de los dos agentes del FBI. Encarcelado durante casi 40 años, actualmente en la prisión federal de Coleman, Florida, Peltier ha sido reconocido como un preso político por Amnistía Internacional. Nelson Mandela, Desmond Tutu, 55 miembros del Congreso de EEUU y otras personalidades, incluyendo un juez que integró la Corte en dos de las apelaciones de Peltier, todos han pedido su liberación inmediata. Ampliamente reconocido por sus obras humanitarias y seis veces candidato al Premio Nobel, Peltier también es un escritor y pintor consumado.
More: http://www.radiohc.cu/especiales/exclusivas/60554-justicia-para-leonard-peltier-40-aniversario-del-incidente-en-Oglala
En ese momento, miembros del Movimiento Indio Americano (AIM) estaban acampando en la propiedad (les habían pedido proteger a los ancianos de la violencia extrema en la reserva).
Por razones desconocidas, se desató un tiroteo. Una familia con niños pequeños quedó atrapada en el fuego cruzado. A lo largo de la estancia, la gente gritaba que estaban bajo ataque y muchos de los hombres presentes se apresuraron a devolver el fuego. Cuando terminó la escaramuza, los dos agentes del FBI estaban muertos. Un joven nativo americano, Joe Stuntz, también yacía muerto, a causa del disparo en la cabeza de un francotirador.
El activista Leonard Peltier fue condenado injustamente en 1977, a propósito de la muerte a tiros de los dos agentes del FBI. Encarcelado durante casi 40 años, actualmente en la prisión federal de Coleman, Florida, Peltier ha sido reconocido como un preso político por Amnistía Internacional. Nelson Mandela, Desmond Tutu, 55 miembros del Congreso de EEUU y otras personalidades, incluyendo un juez que integró la Corte en dos de las apelaciones de Peltier, todos han pedido su liberación inmediata. Ampliamente reconocido por sus obras humanitarias y seis veces candidato al Premio Nobel, Peltier también es un escritor y pintor consumado.
More: http://www.radiohc.cu/especiales/exclusivas/60554-justicia-para-leonard-peltier-40-aniversario-del-incidente-en-Oglala
Giustizia per Leonard Peltier
Quaranta anni fa, il 26 giugno 1975, due agenti dell’ FBI -Jack Coler e Rum Williams– entrarono nella proprietà privata della riserva indigena di Pine Ridge, in Dakota del Sud. Guidavano dei veicoli senza targa, indossavano vestiti civili, e negligentemente non si identificarono come agenti della legge. Sembrerebbe, che tentarono arrestare un giovane indigeno per l’ipotetico furto di un paio di stivali da cow-boy.
In quel momento, membri del Movimento Indigeno Americano (AIM) stavano accampando nella proprietà (avevano chiesto loro di proteggere gli anziani nella riserva dalla violenza estrema dei vigilanti).
Per ragioni sconosciute, è incominciata una sparatoria. Una famiglia con bambini piccoli rimase catturata dal fuoco incrociato. Durante l’accaduto, la gente gridava che stavano soffrendo un attacco e molti degli uomini presenti si affrettarono a restituire il fuoco. Quando finì la scaramuccia, i due agenti dell’FBI erano morti. Un giovane nativo americano, Joe Stuntz, giaceva anche morto, a causa dello sparo alla testa di un franco tiratore.
40th Anniversary of Pine Ridge Shootout
Today is the 40th anniversary of the June 26, 1975, shootout at Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota between two FBI agents who drove in with unmarked cars and several members of the American Indian Movement (AIM), a Native American rights group operating out of the reservation at the time. Both FBI agents were wounded by gunfire before appearing to be shot execution-style, and a member of AIM, Joseph Stuntz, was also fatally shot. The FBI never investigated his killing but reports he was "apparently shot by a law enforcement officer at the scene" during the shootout.
Despite having a population of just 12,000, there were more murders in Pine Ridge in the two years before the shootout than in the rest of the state of South Dakota combined. Three years ago, the FBI resolved to reinvestigate 45 homicides contemporary tribal leaders say remain unresolved. In the 1970s, many of the unsolved murders were attributed to the "Guardians of the Oglala Nation" (GOON) squad, a vigilante-like group organized by the tribal chair, Dick Wilson. AIM and others blamed Wilson, a "progressive" (as opposed to the "traditionalists" of the AIM), for the campaign against "traditional people," and accused him of widespread corruption, not uncommon in tribal governments at the time.
More: http://reason.com/blog/2015/06/26/40th-anniversary-of-pine-ridge-shootout
Despite having a population of just 12,000, there were more murders in Pine Ridge in the two years before the shootout than in the rest of the state of South Dakota combined. Three years ago, the FBI resolved to reinvestigate 45 homicides contemporary tribal leaders say remain unresolved. In the 1970s, many of the unsolved murders were attributed to the "Guardians of the Oglala Nation" (GOON) squad, a vigilante-like group organized by the tribal chair, Dick Wilson. AIM and others blamed Wilson, a "progressive" (as opposed to the "traditionalists" of the AIM), for the campaign against "traditional people," and accused him of widespread corruption, not uncommon in tribal governments at the time.
More: http://reason.com/blog/2015/06/26/40th-anniversary-of-pine-ridge-shootout
Libertà per Leonard Peltier
Sono passati esattamente 40 anni: il 26 giugno 1975 avvenne nella riserva indiana di Pine Ridge il cosiddetto "incidente a Oglala", quando al termine di una lunga e terribile sparatoria morirono due agenti dell'FBI e un nativo della tribù dei Lakota.
More: http://www.agoravox.it/Liberta-per-Leonard-Peltier.html
More: http://www.agoravox.it/Liberta-per-Leonard-Peltier.html
Friday, June 26, 2015
Statement by Leonard Peltier, Oglala Commemoration, 26 June 2015
Greetings to you, my relatives and friends.
This is the first time that my dear sister Roselyn will not be there for me, but I know she is there in spirit as she has gone on her journey. I have seen pictures of the gathering over the years and can still see her sitting there under the trees with our relatives… I will always miss her and be grateful to her for all she did for me and for our people.
This year I am most concerned with our children and the taking of their own lives. This is very sad to me, as it is to you, and I know there are many reasons for them to feel such despair and hopelessness. But I can only ask and encourage all of us to double our efforts to show them love and support, and let them know that we will always look after them and protect them. That includes asking big brothers and sisters to look after the younger ones. They are our future and have to be protected and to learn to be the protectors. This is not something we can live with, we need to all work to change this.
And this year it is even more urgent that we come together to protect our sovereignty. There are so many issues to face and fight. We continue to fight for our Black Hills and to stop the XL pipeline from poisoning our water and our land, and I stand with the Lakota, Dakota and Nakota Nations, and all people of like mind in this fight.
The destruction of our Mother Earth by the heavy and toxic Tar Sands oil, fracking, gas and oil drilling and uranium mining is unacceptable to me and to us. We are supposed to be protecting these things even as others try to push us aside. I honor all of our relatives who are on the front lines of this fight.
And after all that I have seen in these 40 years behind bars, I was still shocked to see what they are trying to do to the Apache people at Oak Flats. This cannot be tolerated. It is not only a blatant money grab at the expense of a tribe’s Sacred site, but it is an effort to push us back in the direction of termination by ignoring our rights as sovereign nations. This we will not tolerate. Nothing is sacred to these people and they will continue to try to bulldoze us out of the way without even a single thought to our coming generations if we do not continue to stand up and oppose them. We must be ready for anything or we will lose all that we have gained in the last 40 years.
The continued use of racist mascots is something that we can never accept as Indigenous peoples and we need to all continue to push to end that racist practice.
As for me, time is something I have learned a lot about in these years in prison. And now I can see that time is slipping away from me and I know that if I do not get out under this President I will almost certainly die here in prison.
I have been able to survive with the hope you have given to me and your prayers and I am grateful for that support from all of you.
I continue to pray for the family of my brother Joe Stuntz and for all those who paid such a dear price in those bitter times 40 years ago.
And I pray for the families of all our people who have suffered so much and continue to suffer now.
I thank all of you for coming today and I know how hot it can be there. And especially to all the runners and walkers I offer my gratitude.
I send my Love to the people of the Lakota Nations and to all Native Nations.
In the Spirit of Crazy Horse…
Doksha,
Leonard Peltier
This is the first time that my dear sister Roselyn will not be there for me, but I know she is there in spirit as she has gone on her journey. I have seen pictures of the gathering over the years and can still see her sitting there under the trees with our relatives… I will always miss her and be grateful to her for all she did for me and for our people.
This year I am most concerned with our children and the taking of their own lives. This is very sad to me, as it is to you, and I know there are many reasons for them to feel such despair and hopelessness. But I can only ask and encourage all of us to double our efforts to show them love and support, and let them know that we will always look after them and protect them. That includes asking big brothers and sisters to look after the younger ones. They are our future and have to be protected and to learn to be the protectors. This is not something we can live with, we need to all work to change this.
And this year it is even more urgent that we come together to protect our sovereignty. There are so many issues to face and fight. We continue to fight for our Black Hills and to stop the XL pipeline from poisoning our water and our land, and I stand with the Lakota, Dakota and Nakota Nations, and all people of like mind in this fight.
The destruction of our Mother Earth by the heavy and toxic Tar Sands oil, fracking, gas and oil drilling and uranium mining is unacceptable to me and to us. We are supposed to be protecting these things even as others try to push us aside. I honor all of our relatives who are on the front lines of this fight.
And after all that I have seen in these 40 years behind bars, I was still shocked to see what they are trying to do to the Apache people at Oak Flats. This cannot be tolerated. It is not only a blatant money grab at the expense of a tribe’s Sacred site, but it is an effort to push us back in the direction of termination by ignoring our rights as sovereign nations. This we will not tolerate. Nothing is sacred to these people and they will continue to try to bulldoze us out of the way without even a single thought to our coming generations if we do not continue to stand up and oppose them. We must be ready for anything or we will lose all that we have gained in the last 40 years.
The continued use of racist mascots is something that we can never accept as Indigenous peoples and we need to all continue to push to end that racist practice.
As for me, time is something I have learned a lot about in these years in prison. And now I can see that time is slipping away from me and I know that if I do not get out under this President I will almost certainly die here in prison.
I have been able to survive with the hope you have given to me and your prayers and I am grateful for that support from all of you.
I continue to pray for the family of my brother Joe Stuntz and for all those who paid such a dear price in those bitter times 40 years ago.
And I pray for the families of all our people who have suffered so much and continue to suffer now.
I thank all of you for coming today and I know how hot it can be there. And especially to all the runners and walkers I offer my gratitude.
I send my Love to the people of the Lakota Nations and to all Native Nations.
In the Spirit of Crazy Horse…
Doksha,
Leonard Peltier
Inspector General: Millions Wasted in Private Prison Contract
Jun 23, 2015
WASHINGTON – Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley is calling on the Bureau of Prisons to explain how approximately $2 million in questionable spending was allowed in one of its largest prison management contracts. A recent Justice Department Inspector General audit of a Bureau contract for management of the Reeves County Detention Center uncovered that the Bureau improperly paid $1.95 million in fringe benefits at the contractor’s request.
WASHINGTON – Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley is calling on the Bureau of Prisons to explain how approximately $2 million in questionable spending was allowed in one of its largest prison management contracts. A recent Justice Department Inspector General audit of a Bureau contract for management of the Reeves County Detention Center uncovered that the Bureau improperly paid $1.95 million in fringe benefits at the contractor’s request.
The inspector general was reviewing the Bureau’s contract with Reeves County, Texas, and its subcontractors for compliance with terms relating to billing and staffing requirements as well as oversight and monitoring. Both the Bureau’s and the contractor’s failure to understand the applicable law led to the improper use of funds, according to the inspector general’s audit. The audit further determined that the Bureau should reduce the monthly payout to the contractor by $41,088 to prevent additional waste of $945,024 throughout the remainder of the contract.
The improper spending was compounded by findings that the prison consistently failed to meet minimum contractual standards and received too many notices of concern. Further, one of the subcontractors, the GEO Group, did not adequately respond to the inspector general’s inquiries. In a letter to the Bureau, Grassley is asking for a detailed explanation of its oversight practices as well as whether the Bureau has taken steps to remedy the concerns raised by the inspector general’s audit.
Why Do Prosecutors Fight to Maintain Wrongful Convictions?
When it comes to our criminal justice system, prosecutor and police misconduct remains the elephant in the courtroom. Sometimes it is spoken about, but rarely is any action taken. One recent exception to this pattern of inaction, however, can be seen in Orange County, California, where all 250 lawyers in the district attorney's office have been disqualified from participation in a capital murder case. After evidence surfaced that the District Attorney's office, in concert with the county sheriff's department, had systematically suppressed exculpatory evidence in at least forty cases, Superior Court Judge Thomas Goethals removed every single prosecutor from the DA's office from the case.
...Careers are made off of many wrongful convictions. Some of these same officers go on to be police commissioners. Some district attorneys go on to become judges in state and federal courts, and some become attorney generals. Innocent prisoners are the skeletons in their closets. If our stories were ever to get out, their careers--and those of many others--would come into question. It's sad, but egos also play an integral part. Most of the time, prosecutors are only concerned with winning cases to put more notches on their belts. Justice is rarely on their agendas.
More: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/lorenzo-johnson/why-do-prosecutors-fight-_1_b_7637010.html
...Careers are made off of many wrongful convictions. Some of these same officers go on to be police commissioners. Some district attorneys go on to become judges in state and federal courts, and some become attorney generals. Innocent prisoners are the skeletons in their closets. If our stories were ever to get out, their careers--and those of many others--would come into question. It's sad, but egos also play an integral part. Most of the time, prosecutors are only concerned with winning cases to put more notches on their belts. Justice is rarely on their agendas.
More: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/lorenzo-johnson/why-do-prosecutors-fight-_1_b_7637010.html
‘Terrible Racial Disparities’ Not Fixed With SD Juvenile Justice Reform
South Dakota took a hard look at juvenile justice, and found glaring problems with its system. The “Juvenile Justice Reinvestment Initiative Work Group’s Report,” issued in November 2014, resulted in the passing of State Bill 73 in January. The bill calls for an overhaul of South Dakota's juvenile justice system, including a 50 percent reduction of incarcerated youth by 2020. But for Native youth, will that be enough?
Joshua Rovner, a state advocate associate at The Sentencing Project, Washington, D.C., doesn’t think so. He said that nationally, Native youth are arrested less often than all other youth — but not in South Dakota. There, the Native population is 9 percent, but comprises almost 40 percent of the incarcerated youth. “South Dakota shows terrible racial disparities,” Rovner said. Sarah McGregor of ALIIVE, a diversion program in Roberts County, South Dakota, noted that law enforcement makes contact with Native versus white youth at a 9 - 1 ratio.
Read more at http://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/2015/06/24/terrible-racial-disparities-not-fixed-sd-juvenile-justice-reform-160831
Joshua Rovner, a state advocate associate at The Sentencing Project, Washington, D.C., doesn’t think so. He said that nationally, Native youth are arrested less often than all other youth — but not in South Dakota. There, the Native population is 9 percent, but comprises almost 40 percent of the incarcerated youth. “South Dakota shows terrible racial disparities,” Rovner said. Sarah McGregor of ALIIVE, a diversion program in Roberts County, South Dakota, noted that law enforcement makes contact with Native versus white youth at a 9 - 1 ratio.
Read more at http://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/2015/06/24/terrible-racial-disparities-not-fixed-sd-juvenile-justice-reform-160831
The House may be ready for major, bipartisan criminal justice reforms
The bipartisan movement for criminal justice reform has been growing and gaining momentum for nearly a decade, with dozens of states cutting prison sentences and adopting "data-driven" rehabilitation policies. Now a group of members of the House of Representatives is trying to get Congress to follow the states' lead, with a bill called the Safe Justice Act — which bundles together a lot of relatively small reforms into a package that could reduce the federal prison population significantly.
Over the past couple of years, momentum on criminal justice reform has been in the Senate, which has considered bills such as the Smarter Sentencing Act (to cut congressionally mandated minimum sentences) and the Corrections Act (to allow some inmates to earn time off their sentences while in prison). The Safe Justice Act is bigger than either of those bills — it includes variations on both of them, as well as a lot of other things — but it's also a little more politically cautious. And criminal justice reformers on both the left and the right are extremely excited about it.
More: http://www.vox.com/2015/6/25/8846673/safe-justice-act
Over the past couple of years, momentum on criminal justice reform has been in the Senate, which has considered bills such as the Smarter Sentencing Act (to cut congressionally mandated minimum sentences) and the Corrections Act (to allow some inmates to earn time off their sentences while in prison). The Safe Justice Act is bigger than either of those bills — it includes variations on both of them, as well as a lot of other things — but it's also a little more politically cautious. And criminal justice reformers on both the left and the right are extremely excited about it.
More: http://www.vox.com/2015/6/25/8846673/safe-justice-act
Obama: FREE LEONARD PELTIER
Published on Jun 26, 2015
#OccupyKitchen #LightBrigade at #UnionSquare #NYC
Santa Cruz Supports Statewide Coordinated Actions To End Solitary Confinement
Over 14,000 people in California prisons, and 80,000 in the United States on any given day, are kept alone in steel and concrete cells the size of a parking space, with no fresh air or sunlight, for years and decades, some over 40 years. Many more are in solitary confinement in jails, juvenile facilities, and detention centers. Activists gathered on June 23 outside the Santa Cruz Post Office to expose and end the torture of solitary confinement in all lock-ups, in Santa Cruz County, statewide, nationwide, and worldwide. On the 23rd of each month, since March 23, 2015, Statewide Coordinated Actions To End Solitary Confinement (SCATESC) are held in cities throughout California.
More: http://bradleyallen.net/2015/06/end-solitary-confinement/
More: http://bradleyallen.net/2015/06/end-solitary-confinement/
Peru’s Indigenous People Protest Against Relicensing Of Oil Concession
Hundreds of indigenous people deep in the Peruvian Amazon are blocking a major Amazon tributary following what they say is the government’s failure to address a social and environmental crisis stemming from oil operations. Kichwa men, women and children from numerous communities have been protesting along the River Tigre for almost a month, barring the river with cables and stopping oil company boats from passing. Oil companies have operated in the region for over 40 years, and have been linked by local people to pollution that has led the government to declare “environmental emergencies” in the Tigre and other river basins. “The Tigre is the most contaminated, but the government has done nothing serious,” says Jose Fachin, a Kichwa leader.
More: http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2015/feb/02/perus-indigenous-people-protest-against-re-licensing-of-oil-concession
More: http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2015/feb/02/perus-indigenous-people-protest-against-re-licensing-of-oil-concession
#SOSBlakAustralia: Global Actions To Save Indigenous Communities
Fifteen weeks after Prime Minister Tony Abbott’s “lifestyle choices” comment and WA Premier Colin Barnet’s announced plans to close up to 150 Western Australian communities, a wave of actions calling for a halt to community closures have been taking place worldwide, with a reach of over 12 million people from all walks of life. Though the protests have made state and federal governments tone down their rhetoric, new plans show that their nation-wide agenda remains the same: the steady winding back of Indigenous services and community and cultural protections, while paving the way to reap resources from Aboriginal land through measures like the $5 billion “Northern Frontier” plan.
More: https://www.popularresistance.org/sosblackaustralia-global-actions-to-save-indigenous-communities/
More: https://www.popularresistance.org/sosblackaustralia-global-actions-to-save-indigenous-communities/
DLNR, TMT Workers Turn Around Due To Protesters On Mauna Kea
After a seven-hour demonstration, Hawaii DLNR (Department of Land and Natural Resources) agents just informed the hundreds of protesters on Mauna Kea that officers and TMT workers will turn around and no longer ask anyone to leave. No further arrests will be made today, they say. Protesters began lining up early Wednesday morning to prevent construction of the Thirty Meter Telescope on the on the summit of Mauna Kea. A total of eleven people were arrested, and the TMT crew made it about 1.5 miles up the seven-mile road. In all, more than 700 people gathered to stand in what they say is protection of a sacred Native Hawaiian space.
More: http://www.hawaiinewsnow.com/story/29393022/tmt-construction-set-to-resume-as-protesters-gather-at-mauna-kea-summit
More: http://www.hawaiinewsnow.com/story/29393022/tmt-construction-set-to-resume-as-protesters-gather-at-mauna-kea-summit
Justicia para Leonard Peltier: 40 aniversario del incidente en Oglala
Hace cuarenta años, el 26 de junio de 1975, dos agentes de la Oficina Federal de Investigaciones (FBI) -Jack Coler y Ron Williams- entraron en la propiedad privada de la reserva india de Pine Ridge, Dakota del Sur. Condujeron vehículos sin identificación, vestían ropas de civil, y descuidadamente no se identificaron como agentes de la ley. Al parecer, tratarían de arrestar a un joven indio por el supuesto robo de un par de botas de vaquero.
En ese momento, miembros del Movimiento Indio Americano (AIM) estaban acampando en la propiedad (les habían pedido proteger a los ancianos de la violencia extrema en la reserva).
Por razones desconocidas, se desató un tiroteo. Una familia con niños pequeños quedó atrapada en el fuego cruzado. A lo largo de la estancia, la gente gritaba que estaban bajo ataque y muchos de los hombres presentes se apresuraron a devolver el fuego. Cuando terminó la escaramuza, los dos agentes del FBI estaban muertos. Un joven nativo americano, Joe Stuntz, también yacía muerto, a causa del disparo en la cabeza de un francotirador.
El activista Leonard Peltier fue condenado injustamente en 1977, a propósito de la muerte a tiros de los dos agentes del FBI. Encarcelado durante casi 40 años, actualmente en la prisión federal de Coleman, Florida, Peltier ha sido reconocido como un preso político por Amnistía Internacional. Nelson Mandela, Desmond Tutu, 55 miembros del Congreso de EEUU y otras personalidades, incluyendo un juez que integró la Corte en dos de las apelaciones de Peltier, todos han pedido su liberación inmediata. Ampliamente reconocido por sus obras humanitarias y seis veces candidato al Premio Nobel, Peltier también es un escritor y pintor consumado.
Durante dos años antes de la balacera, los residentes de la reserva fueron víctimas de palizas, tiroteos y apuñalamientos llevados a cabo por los vigilantes locales que colaboraban con el FBI. Los activistas de AIM fueron forzados a una postura defensiva para proteger no sólo sus vidas, sino las vidas de los demás, ancianos, mujeres y niños. De hecho, los coacusados del Sr. Peltier fueron absueltos por razones de defensa propia. Si hubiera sido juzgado con sus coacusados, Peltier también habría sido absuelto.
La evidencia demuestra la intención del gobierno de Estados Unidos de lograr la condena del Sr. Peltier, por cualquier medio, incluyendo la falsificación de documentos de extradición y el fraude intencional ante un tribunal canadiense, así como obligar a los testigos para que ofrecieran falsos testimonios, y la supresión de pruebas de la inocencia del Sr. Peltier durante su juicio. El propia gobierno admitió años después que había falsificado las pruebas de balística, la parte más crítica de la acusación contra el Sr. Peltier. Aunque los tribunales han reconocido la evidencia de mala conducta del gobierno, Peltier se le ha negado un nuevo juicio.*
El caso de Peltier ha sido examinado por el reconocido autor Peter Matthiessen (“In the Spirit of Crazy Horse”) y por una película documental producida y narrada por Robert Redford (“Incident at Oglala”). La falta de equidad en todas las etapas del caso de Peltier, preocupa a muchas personas de todo el mundo y ha conducido a gobiernos extranjeros y organizaciones internacionales de derechos humanos a cuestionar el encarcelamiento continuo de Peltier.
La facultad de conmutar dos cadenas perpetuas de Peltier ahora recae en el presidente Barack Obama.
###
* Estados Unidos Versus Leonard Peltier: Evidencia de una condena injusta. De los archivos de la Oficina Federal de Investigaciones en http://goo.gl/ZbP45h
(Con información de Who is Leonard Peltier)
Source: http://www.cubadebate.cu/noticias/2015/06/26/justicia-para-leonard-peltier-40-aniversario-del-incidente-en-oglala/#.VY1zJiDbKM8
En ese momento, miembros del Movimiento Indio Americano (AIM) estaban acampando en la propiedad (les habían pedido proteger a los ancianos de la violencia extrema en la reserva).
Por razones desconocidas, se desató un tiroteo. Una familia con niños pequeños quedó atrapada en el fuego cruzado. A lo largo de la estancia, la gente gritaba que estaban bajo ataque y muchos de los hombres presentes se apresuraron a devolver el fuego. Cuando terminó la escaramuza, los dos agentes del FBI estaban muertos. Un joven nativo americano, Joe Stuntz, también yacía muerto, a causa del disparo en la cabeza de un francotirador.
El activista Leonard Peltier fue condenado injustamente en 1977, a propósito de la muerte a tiros de los dos agentes del FBI. Encarcelado durante casi 40 años, actualmente en la prisión federal de Coleman, Florida, Peltier ha sido reconocido como un preso político por Amnistía Internacional. Nelson Mandela, Desmond Tutu, 55 miembros del Congreso de EEUU y otras personalidades, incluyendo un juez que integró la Corte en dos de las apelaciones de Peltier, todos han pedido su liberación inmediata. Ampliamente reconocido por sus obras humanitarias y seis veces candidato al Premio Nobel, Peltier también es un escritor y pintor consumado.
Durante dos años antes de la balacera, los residentes de la reserva fueron víctimas de palizas, tiroteos y apuñalamientos llevados a cabo por los vigilantes locales que colaboraban con el FBI. Los activistas de AIM fueron forzados a una postura defensiva para proteger no sólo sus vidas, sino las vidas de los demás, ancianos, mujeres y niños. De hecho, los coacusados del Sr. Peltier fueron absueltos por razones de defensa propia. Si hubiera sido juzgado con sus coacusados, Peltier también habría sido absuelto.
La evidencia demuestra la intención del gobierno de Estados Unidos de lograr la condena del Sr. Peltier, por cualquier medio, incluyendo la falsificación de documentos de extradición y el fraude intencional ante un tribunal canadiense, así como obligar a los testigos para que ofrecieran falsos testimonios, y la supresión de pruebas de la inocencia del Sr. Peltier durante su juicio. El propia gobierno admitió años después que había falsificado las pruebas de balística, la parte más crítica de la acusación contra el Sr. Peltier. Aunque los tribunales han reconocido la evidencia de mala conducta del gobierno, Peltier se le ha negado un nuevo juicio.*
El caso de Peltier ha sido examinado por el reconocido autor Peter Matthiessen (“In the Spirit of Crazy Horse”) y por una película documental producida y narrada por Robert Redford (“Incident at Oglala”). La falta de equidad en todas las etapas del caso de Peltier, preocupa a muchas personas de todo el mundo y ha conducido a gobiernos extranjeros y organizaciones internacionales de derechos humanos a cuestionar el encarcelamiento continuo de Peltier.
La facultad de conmutar dos cadenas perpetuas de Peltier ahora recae en el presidente Barack Obama.
###
* Estados Unidos Versus Leonard Peltier: Evidencia de una condena injusta. De los archivos de la Oficina Federal de Investigaciones en http://goo.gl/ZbP45h
(Con información de Who is Leonard Peltier)
Source: http://www.cubadebate.cu/noticias/2015/06/26/justicia-para-leonard-peltier-40-aniversario-del-incidente-en-oglala/#.VY1zJiDbKM8
Tattoo Recognition
Mollie Halpern: The FBI is collaborating with private industry, academia, and other government agencies to research and develop ways to better identify tattoos.
One in five people in the United States wears ink, so using biometric modalities, such as tattoos, can help law enforcement identify criminals and victims.
Tattoos are currently categorized and searched for in law enforcement databases using keywords, which Nicky Megna, the unit chief of the FBI’s Biometric Center of Excellence, describes as…
Nicky Megna: …a very subjective and cumbersome process that takes time.
Halpern: The FBI is holding a challenge where vendors would enhance text-based with image-based search technology.
Megna: …where they would compete their algorithms, and then we can gain insight on things like accuracy, scalability, and the ability to meet the needs of the law enforcement community.
Halpern: The hope is that the results of the information sharing between the government and private industry will provide law enforcement with a more efficient, effective, and accurate tool to solve crime and help victims through tattoos. For more information on the FBI’s use of other biometrics, visit www.fbi.gov. I'm Mollie Halpern of the Bureau, with FBI, This Week.
Source: https://www.fbi.gov/news/podcasts/thisweek/tattoo-recognition.mp3/view
One in five people in the United States wears ink, so using biometric modalities, such as tattoos, can help law enforcement identify criminals and victims.
Tattoos are currently categorized and searched for in law enforcement databases using keywords, which Nicky Megna, the unit chief of the FBI’s Biometric Center of Excellence, describes as…
Nicky Megna: …a very subjective and cumbersome process that takes time.
Halpern: The FBI is holding a challenge where vendors would enhance text-based with image-based search technology.
Megna: …where they would compete their algorithms, and then we can gain insight on things like accuracy, scalability, and the ability to meet the needs of the law enforcement community.
Halpern: The hope is that the results of the information sharing between the government and private industry will provide law enforcement with a more efficient, effective, and accurate tool to solve crime and help victims through tattoos. For more information on the FBI’s use of other biometrics, visit www.fbi.gov. I'm Mollie Halpern of the Bureau, with FBI, This Week.
Source: https://www.fbi.gov/news/podcasts/thisweek/tattoo-recognition.mp3/view
Thursday, June 25, 2015
I Was Tortured. I Know How Important It Is to Hold the CIA Accountable.
More than once, I begged my torturers to kill me. Years later, I think about it and wonder if I really meant it. I think I did, at the time.
I was tied up, nude and blindfolded, and electrically prodded all over my body. Twice they pretended they were executing me by placing a gun to my head or in my mouth and clicking the trigger.
To my abusers, who interrupted this torture with question after question, this was merely “enhanced interrogation.”
That was decades ago, in Argentina. But today, U.S. political figures — including presidential candidate Rick Perry — are using this same euphemism to describe the CIA’s torture and ill treatment during its secret detention operations from 2002 to 2008. And earlier this month, John Oliver’s HBO show “Last Week Tonight” reported that of 14 declared U.S. presidential candidates, only four said they would keep an executive order put in place by President Barack Obama in his first days in office that seeks to ensure the U.S. does not commit torture.
Read more: http://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2015/06/cia-torturers-should-be-held-accountable-119345.html
I was tied up, nude and blindfolded, and electrically prodded all over my body. Twice they pretended they were executing me by placing a gun to my head or in my mouth and clicking the trigger.
To my abusers, who interrupted this torture with question after question, this was merely “enhanced interrogation.”
Read more: http://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2015/06/cia-torturers-should-be-held-accountable-119345.html
'The clock is running' on Obama clemency initiative
WASHINGTON — The Obama administration is urging lawyers for federal inmates to move more quickly in filing petitions for presidential clemency, reminding them that "the clock is running" on the Obama presidency .
The new urgency from the Justice Department comes more than a year into a program intended to shorten the sentences to federal inmates who would have gotten less time under current law.
That clemency initiative was coupled with the Clemency Project 2014, an outside consortium of lawyers working on those cases. But the Clemency Project filed only 31 petitions in its first year, leading to criticism from some proponents of criminal justice reform that the process is moving too slowly.
More: http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2015/06/24/clemency-initiative-clock-is-running/29128091/
The new urgency from the Justice Department comes more than a year into a program intended to shorten the sentences to federal inmates who would have gotten less time under current law.
That clemency initiative was coupled with the Clemency Project 2014, an outside consortium of lawyers working on those cases. But the Clemency Project filed only 31 petitions in its first year, leading to criticism from some proponents of criminal justice reform that the process is moving too slowly.
More: http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2015/06/24/clemency-initiative-clock-is-running/29128091/
California’s Drought Is Part of a Much Bigger Water Crisis. Here’s What You Need to Know
Pretty much every state west of the Rockies has been facing a water shortage of one kind or another in recent years. California's is a severe, but relatively short-term, drought. But the Colorado River basin — which provides critical water supplies for seven states including California — is the victim of a slower-burning catastrophe entering its 16th year. Wyoming, Colorado, New Mexico, Utah, Nevada, Arizona and California all share water from the Colorado River, a hugely important water resource that sustains 40 million people in those states, supports 15 percent of the nation's food supply, and fills two of largest water reserves in the country.
The severe shortages of rain and snowfall have hurt California's $46 billion agricultural industry and helped raise national awareness of the longer-term shortages that are affecting the entire Colorado River basin. But while the two problems have commonalities and have some effect on one another, they're not exactly the same thing.
More: http://www.propublica.org/article/california-drought-colorado-river-water-crisis-explained
The severe shortages of rain and snowfall have hurt California's $46 billion agricultural industry and helped raise national awareness of the longer-term shortages that are affecting the entire Colorado River basin. But while the two problems have commonalities and have some effect on one another, they're not exactly the same thing.
More: http://www.propublica.org/article/california-drought-colorado-river-water-crisis-explained
Leonard Peltier "I Will" Clemency Campaign - Part 3 - The Last Internationale
https://youtu.be/enb1aivC-Sw
Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Indian Blood
The Last Internationale
Filmed live at the Viper Room, West Hollywood, CA
#TDIH Custer's Last Stand
The sun was just cracking over the horizon that Sunday, June 25, 1876, as men and boys began taking the horses out to graze. First light was also the time for the women to poke up last night’s cooking fire. The Hunkpapa woman known as Good White Buffalo Woman said later she had often been in camps when war was in the air, but this day was not like that. “The Sioux that morning had no thought of fighting,” she said. “We expected no attack.”
Those who saw the assembled encampment said they had never seen one larger. It had come together in March or April, even before the plains started to green up, according to the Oglala warrior He Dog. Indians arriving from distant reservations on the Missouri River had reported that soldiers were coming out to fight, so the various camps made a point of keeping close together. There were at least six, perhaps seven, cheek by jowl, with the Cheyennes at the northern, or downriver, end near the broad ford where Medicine Tail Coulee and Muskrat Creek emptied into the Little Bighorn River. Among the Sioux, the Hunkpapas were at the southern end. Between them along the river’s bends and loops were the Sans Arc, Brulé, Minneconjou, Santee and Oglala. Some said the Oglala were the biggest group, the Hunkpapa next, with perhaps 700 lodges between them. The other circles might have totaled 500 to 600 lodges. That would suggest as many as 6,000 to 7,000 people in all, a third of them men or boys of fighting age. Confusing the question of numbers was the constant arrival and departure of people from the reservations. Those travelers—plus hunters from the camps, women out gathering roots and herbs and seekers of lost horses—were part of an informal early-warning system.
100 Groups From Around the World to UN: Demand Accountability for CIA Torture
This Friday, the world will mark International Day in Support of Victims of Torture. This day is commemorated every year to reaffirm the universal commitment to the total eradication of torture, which is categorically prohibited under international law.
Today, the largest-ever group of civil society organizations from scores of countries urged the UN Human Rights Council to call out the United States for failing to provide justice for both the perpetrators and the victims of the CIA's abhorrent torture program.
More: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jamil-dakwar/100-groups-from-around-th_b_7656778.html
Today, the largest-ever group of civil society organizations from scores of countries urged the UN Human Rights Council to call out the United States for failing to provide justice for both the perpetrators and the victims of the CIA's abhorrent torture program.
More: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jamil-dakwar/100-groups-from-around-th_b_7656778.html
Did Prison Officials Single Out Barrett Brown For Solitary Confinement?
According to reports from supporters on social media, Texas Department of Criminal Justice officials moved imprisoned journalist Barrett Brown into solitary confinement last week. Brown is an outspoken and controversial journalist who worked closely with Anonymous during the peak of that movement in the early years of this decade. The government noticed this collaboration and targeted Brown for prosecution during their campaign against the hacktivist group Lulzsec, a high-profile subgroup of Anonymous, which also resulted in the imprisonment of political prisoner Jeremy Hammond.
More: http://www.mintpressnews.com/did-prison-officials-single-out-political-prisoner-barrett-brown-for-solitary-confinement/206824/
More: http://www.mintpressnews.com/did-prison-officials-single-out-political-prisoner-barrett-brown-for-solitary-confinement/206824/
Bronx Theater Uses Avant-Garde Theater To Teach Activism
A recent study revealed that nearly half of people between the ages of 13 and 22 have experienced online harassment. Of those surveyed, one-third did nothing when they saw someone else being bullied. It’s an issue the members of the historically Latino Pregones Theater in the South Bronx, New York, saw in their community. So they wrote a play about it—and not just any play. They used a tradition of avant-garde theater to make sure that audience members leave better prepared to take action when they see cyber-bullying take place in their lives. The play is part of a program called “Pregones Emotions,” a blend of traditional theater, improv, and audience participation that the group started performing with local middle schools in 2006.
More: http://www.yesmagazine.org/happiness/bronx-theater-pregones-avant-garde-teach-everyday-activism
More: http://www.yesmagazine.org/happiness/bronx-theater-pregones-avant-garde-teach-everyday-activism
These Pacific Islanders Still Live At The Mercy Of The US Military
In the latest development of the Obama administration’s pivot to Asia, a strategy of reorganising and strengthening US military capabilities in the Pacific, the islanders of Pagan and Tinian are being told to make way for a “simulated war zone”. After decades of living at the behest of American military priorities, they are still resisting moves to encroach on their homelands – and their chances of success are as slim as ever. Both islands are part of the US associated Commonwealth of the Northern Marianas. Their strategic location, midway between the US Pacific Fleet headquarters in Hawaii and the Asian mainland, with further logistical support available at the naval facilities in nearby Guam, make them attractive locations for the US military’s purposes.
More: https://theconversation.com/these-pacific-islanders-still-live-at-the-mercy-of-the-us-military-43288
More: https://theconversation.com/these-pacific-islanders-still-live-at-the-mercy-of-the-us-military-43288
Who’s Speaking Up for the American Worker?
...Unfettered free trade has not only put the Henry County region near the top of Virginia’s unemployment rankings for more than a decade, but it has also ushered in an era of soaring food insecurity and Social Security disability claims.
And crime, too. A sheriff’s deputy told me at another book signing that many of his calls are now related to methamphetamine and heroin. An unemployed man accidentally set an abandoned factory on fire while trying to rip out copper electrical wires to sell on the black market; he was riding a bicycle, an unusual sight in this hilly, rural, car-reliant area.
After weeks of Congressional chess over the Asia-Pacific trade accord, with lawmakers finagling new methods to pass or block trade-negotiating authority — depending on the day — the so-called “fast track” is now on President Obama’s desk, a crucial step toward completion of the accord, known as the Trans-Pacific Partnership.
Economists aren’t sure how many factory jobs will be lost as a result, but even T.P.P. proponents have acknowledged probable losses, especially in lower-skilled, labor-intensive manufacturing.
Homegrown Extremists Tied to Deadlier Toll Than Jihadists in U.S. Since 9/11
WASHINGTON — In the 14 years since Al Qaeda carried out attacks on New York and the Pentagon, extremists have regularly executed smaller lethal assaults in the United States, explaining their motives in online manifestoes or social media rants.
But the breakdown of extremist ideologies behind those attacks may come as a surprise. Since Sept. 11, 2001, nearly twice as many people have been killed by white supremacists, antigovernment fanatics and other non-Muslim extremists than by radical Muslims: 48 have been killed by extremists who are not Muslim, including the recent mass killing in Charleston, S.C., compared with 26 by self-proclaimed jihadists, according to a count by New America, a Washington research center.
The slaying of nine African-Americans in a Charleston church last week, with an avowed white supremacist charged with their murders, was a particularly savage case.
Gallup: Confidence in police lowest in 22 years
Americans' confidence in the police is down to 52%, an all time low since 1993 in the wake of the the Rodney King police beating. Although this Gallup report concludes that the 52% figure means that the "majority of American remain confident in this institution and have more faith in it than in most other institutions," put another way, nearly half of all Americans do not have faith in most institutions including the police.
More: http://www.gallup.com/poll/183704/confidence-police-lowest-years.aspx?utm_source=Politics&utm_medium=newsfeed&utm_campaign=tiles
More: http://www.gallup.com/poll/183704/confidence-police-lowest-years.aspx?utm_source=Politics&utm_medium=newsfeed&utm_campaign=tiles
Wednesday, June 24, 2015
Congressional Democrats Introduce an Ambitious New Bill to Restore the Voting Rights Act
Two years ago, on June 25, 2013, in Shelby County v. Holder, the Supreme Court invalidated the centerpiece of the Voting Rights Act. Tomorrow, congressional Democrats will introduce an ambitious new bill that would restore the important voting-rights protections the Supreme Court struck down. The Voting Rights Advancement Act of 2015 would compel states with a well-documented history of recent voting discrimination to clear future voting changes with the federal government, require federal approval for voter ID laws, and outlaw new efforts to suppress the growing minority vote.
The legislation will be formally introduced tomorrow by Senator Patrick Leahy of Vermont, the ranking Democrat on the Senate Judiciary Committee, and leaders of the Black Caucus, Hispanic Caucus, and Asian Pacific American Caucus in the House. Civil-rights icon Representative John Lewis will be a co-sponsor. The bill is much stronger than the Voting Rights Amendment Act of 2014 (VRAA), Congress’s initial response to the Supreme Court’s decision, which garnered bipartisan support in the House but was not embraced by the congressional Republican leadership, which declined to schedule a hearing, let alone a vote, on the bill.
More: http://www.thenation.com/article/210673/congressional-democrats-introduce-ambitious-new-bill-restore-voting-rights-act#
The legislation will be formally introduced tomorrow by Senator Patrick Leahy of Vermont, the ranking Democrat on the Senate Judiciary Committee, and leaders of the Black Caucus, Hispanic Caucus, and Asian Pacific American Caucus in the House. Civil-rights icon Representative John Lewis will be a co-sponsor. The bill is much stronger than the Voting Rights Amendment Act of 2014 (VRAA), Congress’s initial response to the Supreme Court’s decision, which garnered bipartisan support in the House but was not embraced by the congressional Republican leadership, which declined to schedule a hearing, let alone a vote, on the bill.
More: http://www.thenation.com/article/210673/congressional-democrats-introduce-ambitious-new-bill-restore-voting-rights-act#
Torture Is Already Illegal, So Why "Ban" It?
A recent Senate bill is a welcome recognition of anti-torture principles, but it is also a redundant measure: Torture is already illegal under US and international law. Still, government-authorized torture continues in the form of solitary confinement, sleep deprivation and indefinite detention.
More: http://www.truth-out.org/news/item/31561-torture-is-already-illegal-so-why-ban-it
More: http://www.truth-out.org/news/item/31561-torture-is-already-illegal-so-why-ban-it
Dzhokhar Tsarnaev Apologizes to Victims of Boston Marathon Bombing
BOSTON — Dzhokhar Tsarnaev stood in a federal courtroom here on Wednesday and spoke publicly for the first time since uttering the words “not guilty” at his arraignment almost two years ago in the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing.
In his brief comments, Mr. Tsarnaev apologized for the bombing and noted that it was Ramadan, which he said was a time to ask for forgiveness.
“I’m sorry for the lives that I’ve taken, the suffering that I’ve caused and the damage that I’ve done, irreparable damage,” he said, wearing a dark suit, his hair longer and messier than it was during his trial.
He spoke for about four minutes, in a soft voice that was difficult to hear in the courtroom. “I would like to begin in the name of Allah,” he said. “This is the blessed month of Ramadan.”
He also included an admission: “I am guilty” of the bombing.
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