Wednesday, March 31, 2010

THE COMMITTEE OF NATIVE FAMILIES FOR THE SAFETY OF OUR CHILDREN STRIKES BACK PROTEST! JUST SAY 'NO' TO THE RIP-OFF SEWER TAX


PRESS RELEASE


'THE COMMITTEE OF NATIVE FAMILIES FOR THE SAFETY OF OUR CHILDREN' STRIKES BACK PROTEST!!! JUST SAY NO TO THE RIP-OFF SEWER FEE TAX RATE HIKE!

NO MEANS NO!!!


RICHMOND, CA- Tonight 6pm, Wednesday- March 31, 2010 the City of Richmond will have a smoke-screen, pony and cart show public hearing to validate to all property and home owners in Richmond why the Richmond Municipal Sewer District needs to up our property taxes with more sewer/ waste-water fees and taxes.

The City of Richmond expects us to go along to get along. To take this tax hike and that the community will sit back and do nothing.

MORE TAXES!!! TAXATION WITHOUT REPRESENTATION!!!

Bring your banners, protest signs, friends and families AND PROTEST THIS VIOLATION OF YOUR HUMAN AND CIVIL RIGHTS AS A HOME OWNER!!!

Plan to PROTEST and make YOUR VOICES HEARD!

Also the West Contra County Unified School District has a measure for another worthless bond for $ 380,000,000 dollars on June 8, 2010 to rip us off here in Richmond for MORE OF OUR TAX DOLLARS!!

The worthless pony and cart show public hearing will start at 6 pm tonight at the Bermuda Room in Richmond Auditorium.


Let's tell the Department of Finance and the Richmond City Council to back off and back down.

http://www.teachingthevaluesofpeace.blogspot.com

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

RECORDS IN ARIZONA SWEAT LODGE CASE OFFER DETAILS

Records in Arizona sweat lodge case offer details
By Felicia Fonseca, Associated Press Writer

Story Published: Mar 28, 2010


PRESCOTT, Ariz. – Documents released March 18 in the case of a motivational speaker charged with manslaughter expand on the already wide range of experiences participants reported having during an Arizona sweat lodge ceremony.

James Arthur Ray, who led the ceremony as part of his “Spiritual Warrior” retreat, faces manslaughter charges in the deaths of three people who entered the sweat lodge near Sedona last year, and suffered heat stroke and hyperthermia. Ray has pleaded not guilty.

The more than 50 people inside the pitch-black sweat lodge all could be called to testify during Ray’s trial slated to begin Aug. 31. Prosecutors also have identified as potential witnesses more than two dozen other people who attended past events led by Ray and about 10 people who worked for him.

Twelve jurors could end up hearing more than 55 days of testimony from witnesses.

Some participants of the October retreat have told authorities that Ray took heed to the concerns expressed inside the sweat lodge and tended to the ill afterward. Others have said Ray did nothing as participants vomited and lay unconscious on the ground.

Still others appeared torn, a detective noted in the documents released Thursday.

Stephen Ray, who was among the 18 people hospitalized following the ceremony, said he hasn’t recouped his sense of taste or smell and still has ringing in his ears, severe headaches and trouble sleeping.

He said James Ray “showed a callous disregard for the participants because of his own ego and greed.”

Christine Mattern said she emerged from the ceremony feeling that “everything that I was experiencing was probably normal” but suggested Ray could have broken up those at the retreat into small groups for the ceremony in order to better care for participants.

Ray sat near the opening of the 415-square-foot sweat lodge and poured water over a pile of hot rocks that was placed in the center. Sweat lodges commonly are used by American Indian tribes to cleanse the body.

Tammy Eshelman, Ray’s former executive assistant, told authorities that Ray’s skills as a trainer and teacher were amazing and didn’t believe he intended to hurt anyone.

“Yet it happened, and he has to have some responsibility for it,” she said. “You can’t just go, ‘oh, darn.’”

Megan Fredrickson, who most recently served as the director of operations for Ray’s Carlsbad, Calif.-based company, James Ray International, said her experience with sweat lodges came solely from those led by Ray. But she recounted few details of the six she has attended.

Fredrickson said no one was monitoring the temperature in the sweat lodge. Most participants acknowledged they understood the heat would be intense and said Ray told them vomiting and passing out were normal.

“Everyone’s monitoring themselves, so it would be a matter of, if they felt that it was dangerous or their perception was that it was dangerous, then their monitoring would be choosing to exit,” she said.

Prosecutors contend Ray recklessly crammed everyone inside. His attorneys have called the deaths of Kirby Brown, 38, of Westtown, N.Y., James Shore, 40, of Milwaukee; and Liz Neuman, 49, of Prior Lake, Minn., tragic accidents.


Copyright 2010 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Monday, March 29, 2010

US HUMAN AND CIVIL RIGHTS RECORD TO INDIAN COUNTRY IS CHALLENGED

US human rights record challenged


ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. – Where do Indian nations go when United States’ courts have failed them, and justice is unattainable?

The Haudenosaunee Confederacy – the oldest continuous democratic government in North America – has long argued that Indian nations should not expect to win justice from colonizing governments, and instead must act as sovereign nations taking their quest for justice to the United Nations and its human rights mechanisms.

Though it claims to be a defender of human rights around the world, the United States is among the worst offenders of Native peoples’ rights, judging by statistics that indicate Indian women are the most raped and abused in the nation, while rampant poverty, disease, crime and unemployment are a way of life on reservations.


There’s also the inexplicably high number of Supreme Court cases decided against tribes that have led to the massive loss of Native lands and natural resources, most often without compensation.

That negative image was bolstered during the Bush regime when the U.S. was voted off the U.N. Human Rights Council, and later was one of only four countries to oppose the adoption of the U.N. Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.

The Declaration was adopted in September 2007 with 144 states in favor, 11 abstentions, and only four votes against – by the United States, Canada, Australia and New Zealand – countries with the largest indigenous populations who own vast amounts of land and natural resources.

Since its adoption, Australia has reversed its position and endorsed the Declaration, while Canada, Colombia and Samoa have recently indicated support.

That leaves the United States and New Zealand standing alone, refusing to support the basic human rights of the world’s 370 million indigenous peoples.

Many hope this will change under President Barack Obama, an adopted son of the Crow Nation of Montana, who has appointed more Native Americans to his administration than any president in history.

Since his election, the United States has regained a seat on the U.N. Human Rights Council, and the president has made positive statements to Indian nations about settling longstanding claims.


Review of human rights record


Against that backdrop, the Human Rights Council is conducting a year-long Universal Period Review of the United States’ human rights record, holding “listening sessions” around the country, with two devoted to concerns of Native peoples.

A national report will be compiled and presented to the 47-member Human Rights Council that will make recommendations on how America can improve its compliance with international human rights obligations.

More than 100 people came to the University of New Mexico Law School to hear and present testimony from tribes and individuals about discriminatory and illegal tactics historically used by the federal government to confiscate land, natural resources, even children, and to suppress their rights to self-determination.

Among them were at least nine top-level officials from the Obama administration who were sent from the departments of Justice, Housing, Health, Education and Agriculture to listen and help formulate solutions for Indian country.


Doctrine of Discovery denounced


Oren Lyons, a faithkeeper from the Onondaga Nation and the Six Nations’ Council of Chiefs, spoke on a panel of leaders about the right to self-determination and the need to honor treaties made by Indian nations with the United States.

“We remind the USA that the Haudenosaunee hold some of the earliest treaties made by your government with European settlers. The Department of Justice last month re-affirmed the continued validity of the 1794 Treaty of Canandaigua in an amicus brief it filed in support of the Cayuga Nation. We have faithfully complied with our treaties; unfortunately the same cannot be said of the USA.”

He traced the roots of 220 years of discriminatory policies designed to remove Native peoples from their homelands, decimate their populations, forcibly take children to boarding schools to be cleansed of their language and culture, and generally perpetrate cultural genocide.

Lyons also denounced discriminatory legal doctrines that underlie United States law. “Among the most damaging of these is the Doctrine of Christian Discovery which claims that Europeans acquired rights over lands used and occupied by indigenous peoples, simply because they were Christians. They deemed Native peoples as heathens, savages and pagans with no right to own land.”

Lyons cited a new study by Tonya Gonnella Frichner, Special Rapporteur for North America to the U.N. Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues, which examines the impacts of the Doctrine of Discovery as a foundation for the violation of human rights.

He called on the United States to endorse the U.N. Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, to ensure that all pending federal legislation (including climate change) contains protections for indigenous human rights, and to honor the border crossing and passport rights of the Six Nations Confederacy which straddles the international border imposed by the U.S. and Canada.


The Black Hills


Chairwoman Theresa Two Bulls of the Oglala Sioux, accompanied by Lakota attorney Mario Gonzalez, recounted the many treaty violations that led up to the “legalized theft” of more than 48 million acres of their homeland under the Indian Claims Commission.

She cited one example of how the federal government would not allow the tribes to fire their attorneys and – without the knowledge or consent of Sioux tribes – the claims attorneys signed a stipulated settlement to accept $40 million for more than 48 million acres of land rich in timber and minerals.

The Lakota leadership of treaty chiefs and elected officials have long refused to accept money for the Black Hills, a sacred place, and were appalled when a class action suit, Different Horse v. Salazar, was filed last year to force the Interior Department to distribute money for Docket 74-A and 74-B Sioux land claims as per capita payments to tribal members.

With interest, that amount exceeds more than $1 billion. But if the money is distributed, Sioux tribes fear the U.S. will argue that they have relinquished their claims to the land.

“We’ve come to the realization that the courts of the United States are not designed to protect the Oglala Sioux’s interests in our claims to ancestral lands and resources. Rather, they are designed to protect the interests of non-Indians who have settled on tribal lands,” Two Bulls said. “The only viable remedy we have to settle our land claims is through negotiating with Congress.”

She was encouraged by President Barack Obama’s statement regarding the Sioux land claims indicating he did not believe the courts or federal government should force Sioux tribes to take settlement money for the Black Hills.

“He said he was open to bringing together all parties through government-to-government negotiations to explore innovative solutions to this long-standing issue,” she said, giving her people hope that the tribe will be able to obtain the return of federally held lands within their aboriginal territories.

Gonzalez said the Rosebud Sioux Tribe has taken the lead intervening in the lawsuit and requesting a dismissal.

He is encouraging the treaty councils and tribal councils to unite and seek a realistic settlement plan with the Obama administration that would include restoration of federally held lands and compensation for the denial of the “exclusive use and occupation of the Black Hills as guaranteed by the 1868 Treaty of Fort Laramie.

Others testified about environmental racism, infringement on Native spiritual practices, the militarization of the borders, and violence against Native peoples.

The listening session was co-hosted by the American Indian Law Center and the Navajo Nation Human Rights Commission, and coordinated by a committee from the All Indian Pueblo Council, Native American Rights Fund, International Indian Treaty Council, and National Congress of American Indians.

Written submissions up to five pages will be accepted until April 19, 2010 by e-mailing to: UPRsub missions@ohchr.org.


Indian Country Today- Valerie Taliman March 24, 2010

Saturday, March 27, 2010

NATIVE AMERICAN ADVOCATE MIKE RACCOON EYES KINNEY: TEACHING VALUES OF PEACE



Native American advocate teaches ‘values of peace’




By: Robert Rogers | March 27, 2010 – 8:05 pm |


Filed Under: Front, Richmond Faces, Uncategorized | Tagged: mike raccoon eyes kinney , native american health center , Native Americans
Share this Article!




The beret and the feather are his trademarks around town, along with his persona as a passionate public activist.



Mike “Raccoon Eyes” Kinney is never at a loss for words – or cause.



“I’ve been a Native advocate and activist for about 20 years,” Kinney said while brewing coffee for guests at the Native American Health Center.

“We have an expression that we are the Holy people, and therefore we must have good self-esteem, good self-worth, and we should not pound or punish ourselves for crimes we have never committed.”



Kinney would echo those themes during a roughly one-hour talk to about 20 listeners at the health center March 24. At times alternately fiery, plaintive and inspiring, Kinney’s speech was titled



“We Must be the Spiritual Change We Wish to See in the Creator’s World.”

Kinney, who has been a local figure for more than 5 years, said he was experimenting with new themes and tones during his lecture Wednesday night.

The thrust was more nurturing encouragement than pièce de résistance.



He said he sought to emphasize the power of “story,” a human art as common to indigenous peoples of the Americas as it was to Ancient Greece or Rome.



“Story is the way Native people have communicated values, education and other life lessons, since the beginning of their beautiful civilizations and on into the future,” Kinney said. “Life emerges as being cyclical, in a circle, with victory and defeat and birth and death.”



Kinney’s audience ranged from young to old. Most professed their Native blood.



“I like to hear (Kinney) speak about history and about information, and do it with that important spiritual connection, that’s very important to give it all a deeper meaning,” said Beverly Dove, one of those in attendance.



Kinney paced restlessly during much of his talk, shuffling and crumpling his yellow cue papers. His voice pitched high and fell to whispers. At times, he would momentarily slump in a sofa.



Another reverberating theme was health and nutrition. Kinney spoke of his own past dependence on alcohol and junk food.



Sugars and and processed flours have been major contributing factors to obesity, heart disease, diabetes and other maladies that have taken a heavy toll on Native Americans drawn into Western culture.



“The pastries, the sugars, the alcohol, it is all killer of our bodies,” Kinney said.



Kinney summed up his talk by stressing a return to the values and cultures of Native people, which he said act as a rejuvenating force amid a world with so many hostile influences.



“We must be able to spiritually feel our Indian communities, not intellectualize the needs of the people,” Kinney said.







By Robert Rogers- richmondconfidential.org



http://www.teachingthevaluesofpeace.blogspot.com

Friday, March 26, 2010

UNITED STATES LISTENING SESSION ON US HUMAN RIGHTS OBIGATIONS TO UNITED NATIONS IN SAN FRANCISCO












State Department held listening sessions on US Compliance with
International Human Rights Obligations in San Francisco
March 26th, 2010




San Francisco – As part of a process conducted by the United Nations Human Rights Council to examine the United States’ compliance with its legally-binding human rights obligations, the U.S. Department of State will conducted a “listening sessions” or consultations with human rights and community groups from the San Francisco Bay Area.


The San Francisco and Berkeley consultations will focus on United
States’ signed and ratified human rights treaties as well as the UN
Charter and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

A wide cross section of Bay Area rights organizations will testify on the fulfillment of human rights protections that address racial
discrimination; criminal justice; economic justice and equity,
including state accountability, health and education; LGBT rights;
disability rights and environmental justice and sustainability.

This November will be the United States’ first review under this Human Rights Council process. The “Universal Periodic Review” or “UPR” assesses the human rights compliance of every UN member state every four years and is intended to improve all UN Member States’ human rights compliance.

Representatives of the U.S. Department of State and other federal
agencies will be in attendance to inform their report to the Universal human rights obligations.”



The meetings will be recorded, and a written report will be posted on the U.S. Department of State’s website. This summary may be used as part of the U.S. government’s submission to the Human Rights Council. Organizations are also welcome to submit a 5-page report directly to the UN before April 19th.


The government selected several cities in the US, including San
Francisco and Berkeley, in which to conduct listening sessions.

Listening sessions have been held in New Orleans, Washington, D.C., New York City, El Paso and Albuquerque, and others are planned for Detroit, Chicago and Birmingham.



The San Francisco consultation was held at the University of San Francisco on Friday, March 26, from 9:00 am to 5:00 pm in the Mclaren Conference Center.

Thursday, March 25, 2010

US STATE DEPARTMENT TO HOLD LISTENING SESSIONS ON US COMPLIANCE ON INTERNATIONAL NATIVE HUMAN RIGHTS FOR UNITED NATIONS




March 25, 2010


State Department to hold listening sessions on US Compliance with
International Human Rights Obligations in Berkeley and San Francisco
March 25th and 26th.




San Francisco – As part of a process conducted by the United Nations Human Rights Council to examine the United States’ compliance with its legally-binding human rights obligations, the U.S. Department of State will conduct two “listening sessions” or consultations with human rights and community groups from the San Francisco Bay Area.



The San Francisco and Berkeley consultations will focus on United
States’ signed and ratified human rights treaties as well as the UN
Charter and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

A wide cross section of Bay Area rights organizations will testify on the fulfillment of human rights protections that address racial
discrimination; criminal justice; economic justice and equity,
including state accountability, health and education; LGBT rights;
disability rights and environmental justice and sustainability.

This November will be the United States’ first review under this Human Rights Council process. The “Universal Periodic Review” or “UPR” assesses the human rights compliance of every UN member state every four years and is intended to improve all UN Member States’ human rights compliance.

Representatives of the U.S. Department of State and other federal
agencies will be in attendance to inform their report to the Universal human rights obligations.”



The meetings will be recorded, and a written report will be posted on the U.S. Department of State’s website. This summary may be used as part of the U.S. government’s submission to the Human Rights Council. Organizations are also welcome to submit a 5-page report directly to the UN before April 19th.


The government selected several cities in the US, including San
Francisco and Berkeley, in which to conduct listening sessions or
consultations. Consultations have been held in New Orleans,
Washington, D.C., New York City, El Paso and Albuquerque, and others are planned for Detroit, Chicago and Birmingham.


The Berkeley consultation is on Thursday, March 25 at the Bancroft
Hotel, 2680 Bancroft Way, Berkeley, CA and will begin at 8:30 am and end at 12:30 pm.

The San Francisco consultation will be held at the University of San Francisco on Friday, March 26, from 9:00 am to 5:00 pm in the Mclaren Conference Center, 2130 Fulton Street, San Francisco .


FOR MORE INFO: 415/ 641-4482 OR 510/ 418-0608

RETURN OUR LAND AND CULTURE, NATIVE PEOPLE WAKE UP!! LET US MOBILIZE FOR MORE HUMAN AND CIVIL RIGHTS FOR INDIAN COUNTRY










For us, warriors are not what you think of as warriors. The warrior is not someone who fights, because no one has the right to take another's life. The warrior, for us, is one who sacrifices himself for the good of others. His task is to take care of the elderly, the defenseless, those who can not provide for themselves, and above all, the children, the future of humanity." ---Sitting Bull

4TH ANNUAL AMERICAN INDIAN HEALTH CENTER FUNDRAISER COMEDY JAM





The 4th Annual Indian Health Center Fundraiser Comedy Jam


4th Annual Indian Health Center Fundraiser Comedy Jam
DATE: Friday the 26th of March 2010
TIME: 08:00pm to 10:00pm
LOCATION: Santa Clara Marriott - Grand Ballroom
2700 Mission College Boulevard
Santa Clara, CA 95054


This year will mark the 4th Annual Indian Health Center Fundraiser Comedy Jam. There are four very funny American Indian comics scheduled to attend that include; Marc Yaffe, Jim Ruel, Vaughn Eaglebear, and JR Redwater. These four comic were also seen on a SHOWTIME comedyspecial this past January.

All funds raised from this Comedy Jam go directly to providing services to our communities most vulnerable population.

All general admissio seating will cost $25. There is also a special discounted rate if you are attending the 33rd Annual California Indian Education Conference.

RezHeadz Entertainment
2003 Shadow street
Norman, Oklahoma 73071
405-501-7359

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

INTERNATIONAL DINE ACTIVIST ELOUISE BROWN OF DOODA (NO) DESERT ROCK MAKES CALIFORNIA WHIRLWIND SPEAKING TOUR












For us, warriors are not what you think of as warriors. The warrior is not someone who fights, because no one has the right to take another's life. The warrior, for us, is one who sacrifices himself for the good of others. His task is to take care of the elderly, the defenseless, those who can not provide for themselves, and above all, the children, the future of humanity." ---Sitting Bull





INTERNATIONAL DINE ACTIVIST ELOUISE BROWN OF DOODA (NO) DESERT ROCK MAKES WHIRLWIND CALIFORNIA SPEAKING TOUR




SAN FRANCISCO,CA- Internationally known environmental Native Advocate and Activist Elouise Brown made a brillant, whirlwind speaking engagement in San Francisco, Richmond and Berkeley this past weekend of March 20th and 21st

On December 12th, 2006 community members in Chaco Rio, New Mexico established a blockade to prevent preliminary work for proposed development of a massive coal-fired power plant.

Sithe Global & Diné Power Authority (DPA) are attempting to build the “Desert Rock” power plant , a 1,500 megawatt coal-fired plant in the Four Corners area on the Navajo Reservation. This is an area already polluted by 2 other major coal power plants ( Four Corners and San Juan power plants ).

Doodá (NO!) Desert Rock (DDR) embodies a spirit of resistance and action to prevent construction of the Desert Rock Energy Project.

DDR depends on grassroots member support to shield the people of the Four Corners from the increased deadly health impacts that would be unleashed by poisons from a third massive coal fired power plant.

Transnational corporations serviced by government officials have denied environmental justice in an effort to destroy our Diné (Navajo) homeland. This abuse must STOP!


Elouise Brown of Dooda Desert Rock will be visiting communities throughout California on an 11-day speaking and fundraising tour. The current tour schedule is posted below. It will be kept updated, as more events are confirmed.

Tuesday, March 23rd - Aptos (Santa Cruz)
12:00pm at Cabrillo College:
Student Activities Center (SAC) East, Room #225 - campus map
hosted by the Watsonville Brown Berets

Tuesday, March 23rd - Watsonville
7:00pm at the Brown Berets office:
555 Main St., downtown Watsonville (behind the old Chavez Furniture Store)
hosted by the Watsonville Brown Berets

Wednesday, March 24th - Santa Barbara
7pm at American Indian Health & Services - 4141 State Street, Suite A1 - map
hosted by American Indian Movement, Santa Barbara (myspace)

Thursday, March 25th - Los Angeles
2:00pm at University of Southern California - 3501 Trousdale Parkway - map
room: Taper Hall of Humanities (THH) 101
hosted by Critical Resistance-LA and PASEO

Thursday, March 25th - Los Angeles
7:00pm at Chuco’s Justice Center - 1137 E. Redondo Blvd. (Inglewood) - map
$5 suggested donation

Saturday, March 27th - San Diego
6:30 pm at the City Heights Free Skool - 4246 Wightman St. - map
Arrive Hungry! Dinner will be available by the plate, as a fundraiser for Dooda Desert Rock.
hosted by City Heights Free Skool

Sunday, March 28th - San Diego
7:00pm at the World Beat Center (in Balboa Park) - 2100 Park Blvd - map
hosted by the World Beat Cultural Center

Source: official website of http://doodadesertrock.com

Posted by Mike (Ali) Raccoon Eyes Kinney

http://www.teachingthevaluesofpeace.blogspot.com

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

SPEAKING ENGAGEMENT WITH MIKE (ALI) RACCOON EYES KINNEY..WE MUST BE THE SPIRITUAL CHANGE WE WISH TO SEE IN CREATOR'S WORLD




foto by Ellen Gailing

A SPEAKING ENGAGEMENT WITH MIKE (ALI) RACCOON EYES KINNEY- 'WE MUST BE THE SPIRITUAL CHANGE WE WISH TO SEE IN CREATOR'S WORLD '

PRESS RELEASE


"WE MUST BE THE SPIRITUAL CHANGE, WE WISH TO SEE IN CREATOR'S WORLD"

The Richmond Native Wellness Center will present a evening speaking engagement with nationally-known Native Human and Civil Rights Advocate , Mike (Ali) Raccoon Eyes Kinney.



Mike (Ali) Raccoon Eyes Kinney will be giving a spiritual talk from his lecture series- "Teaching the Values of Peace to Indian Country." He is founder and co-editor of TEACHING THE VALUES OF PEACE Indian Country news blog.


Mike's talk will be "We Must Be The Spiritual Change, We Wish To See In Creator's World "

The talk will focus on Native Spirituality, Spiritual Transformation and Human Development for Native families and Native Communities to might the challenges Indian Country for the 21st Century.

Location: Richmond Native Wellness Center
260-23rd St. (Near the intersection of MacDonald Av. and 23rd St.)
Richmond, CA. 94804

Date: March 24th, 2010- Wednesday

Time: 5:30 PM - 7:00 PM

For more Information: 510/ 232-7018

POTLUCK WILL BE SERVED
Posted by Mike (Ali) Raccoon Eyes Kinney at 12:29 PM
Monday, March 15, 2010

Monday, March 22, 2010

INTER-TRIBAL COUNCIL OF CALIFORNIA MOVES FORTH FOR INDIAN COUNTRY




INTER-TRIBAL COUNCIL OF CALIFORNIA CONFERENCE MEETS THE CHALLENGES OF INDIAN COUNTRY

foto by Mike Raccoon Eyes Kinney

top foto:delegates John Syfert and his cousin Eric
lower foto: ITCC delegates in a working session


SACRAMENTO, CA- This past Friday and Saturday, March 19th and 20th, the Inter-Tribal Council of California held the annual conference at the Red Lion Hotel in Sacramento.

Native Delegates came from all over Indian Country in California to help to provide more services and infra-structure to the needs of California Indian Country.

Thursday, March 18, 2010

RUSSELL MEANS: UN LISTENING SESSION ON US NATIVE'S HUMAN RIGHTS IS SMOKESCREEN





Russell Means: UN Listening Session is US Smokescreen
Statement by Russell Means, Republic of Lakotah


Once again, the occupation government of the United States of America has trotted out its dogs and ponies to provide a smokescreen and diversion from its continuing crimes against the indigenous peoples and nations of the Western Hemisphere. The reason for today’s media spectacle is supposedly for the US State Department to “listen” to input from indigenous peoples and nations for inclusion in the U.S.’s report to the United Nations Human Rights Council, universal periodic review process.

As we can see, many indigenous people have been duped to participate, yet again, in a lying and duplicitous process of the United States. The United States has absolutely no interest or intention of admitting to the world its human rights record that is neither justifiable nor defensible. In particular, the record of the United States with regard to historical, and ongoing, violations of over 370 treaties that were negotiated and signed with indigenous nations must be, but will not be, addressed by the United States. Instead, as is its ongoing practice, the United States will use this session, and the one tomorrow on the territory of the Diné (Navajo) Nation, as its justification that indigenous peoples were “consulted,” and “listened to,” while the U.S. simultaneously lies to the world about its disgraceful human rights record.

The Republic of Lakotah will not legitimize this embarrassing process. Instead, we will submit our report directly to the UN Human Rights Council, not to be filtered or sanitized by the State Department. Let us be clear, our report will be scathing. The United States continues, on a daily basis to violate the terms of the 1851 and 1868 Fort Laramie Treaties with the Lakotah. Our report will indicate that the United States never intended to abide by the terms of the treaties, and has violated them consistently from the time of their signing to the present.

Our report will also cite the United States’ own language in acknowledging that “the treaties retain their full force and effect even today because they are the legal equivalent of treaties with foreign governments and have the force of federal law.” Periodic Report of the United States of America to the UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination, April 23, 2007, paragraph 335. In light of the United States’ own admissions, in addition to reporting to the Human Rights Council on the egregious human rights record of the US towards indigenous peoples, the Republic of Lakotah will report to the Council and to the world, the exercise of its own rights under principles of international law. The United States has continually breached the treaties with the Lakotah, and international law allows the Lakotah to return to our status quo ante position prior to the signing of the treaties.

On March 30, 2010, the Republic of Lakotah will repeat its position to the United States, and will transmit its communication to the President of the United States and to the Secretary of State, demanding that the United States cease and desist it activities in Lakotah territory, and insisting that the United States withdraw its presence from our homeland.

Brendan Norrell- March 18, 2010

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

INDIGENOUS LEADER DEMANDS CHEVRON BE HELD ACCOUNTABLE FOR ECO-RAPE IN ECUADOR

C


Indigenous leader confronts Chevron

By Rick Kearns, Today correspondent





Emergildo Criollo traveled to California recently from his indigenous village in Ecuador to the home of Chevron’s new CEO John Watson and then to a meeting with state lawmakers, demanding that the oil giant Chevron “… take responsibility for their actions and clean up our rivers and forests – our homes.”
Criollo, a leader of the Cofan people from the Oriente region of Ecuador, grew up in one of the areas where Chevron (then Texaco) was drilling and has been the subject of a massive lawsuit. He came to Chevron’s base of operations to say that the contamination killed two of his sons, along with many other Ecuadorians, and caused his wife to contract uterine cancer.

“I want to say to our indigenous brothers in the U.S. that we, the indigenous people of Ecuador need support to get Chevron to clean up the Amazon,” Criollo said. “We need your support to push this new CEO to take action.

“The contamination still exists. The rainforest is sacred, and part of it is our pharmacy which has been destroyed.”

The March visit coincides with another round of legal actions taken on behalf of 30,000 Ecuadorians, many of them indigenous, who are suing Chevron, accusing the company of dumping billions of gallons of wastewater from oil operations into the rainforest and abandoning nearly 1,000 open, unlined pits containing crude oil and toxic waste. The plaintiffs in the lawsuit assert that the contamination has caused tens of thousands of cases of cancer, miscarriages, birth defects and other illnesses.

Recent press reports are predicting that a decision in the case, now in an Ecuadorian court, could come as early as this summer and that Chevron could be ordered to pay as much as $27 billion to the plaintiffs.


Emergildo Criollo, (center) a leader of the Cofan people from the Oriente region of Ecuador, walked up Happy Valley Road in Lafayette, Calif. on his way to deliver a petition signed by 325,000 people to Chevron CEO John Watson.
“It is time for Chevron to listen to Emergildo, the 30,000 Ecuadorians who are suffering and dying because of Chevron’s policies, and the 325,000 plus people from around the globe who believe that energy shouldn’t cost lives,” said Maria Ramos, Change Chevron Campaign director at Rainforest Action Network, who accompanied Criollo on the visit to the Watson home in Lafayette, Calif.

As part of his effort to publicize the issue, Criollo and a group of U.S.-based activists went first to the home of Watson March 2, and then to company headquarters later in the afternoon and on to Sacramento the following day. Criollo’s hosts included Amazon Watch, Rainforest Action Network and Avaaz.org.

Watson did not answer when the group pressed the buzzer to his gated home, according to Han Shan, coordinator of Amazon Watch’s Cleanup Ecuador campaign. Shan noted that Criollo did read his message into Watson’s speaker at the gate, and then left a copy of a petition signed by 325,000 people from around the world, asking Chevron to clean up the affected area.

The event March 3 however, entitled “From Ecuador to California: California’s largest corporation, one of the world’s worst oil related disasters, and what California’s legislators can do” was more successful according to Brianna Cayo Cotter of RAN.

The reception with senators, Assembly members, and their staff included Democratic California Sens. Fran Pavley and Loni Hancocki, as well as Assemblyman Manny Perez, Assemblyman Paul Fong, Assemblyman Ira Ruskin and Assemblyman Jared Huffman.

“These key leaders from both the environmental and Latino caucuses not only listened to Emergildo’s story, but spoke of their desire to support the people of Ecuador who are suffering and dying because of Chevron’s operations,” Cayo Cotter said in a press release.

Huffman spoke of the need “to remedy a very serious environmental and human tragedy.”

Cayo Cotter wrote that Criollo “… told the lawmakers about how he was only 6 years old when Chevron (then Texaco) began oil drilling in his community. He spoke of how his family was forced to relocate because of the contamination. About how he had to part centimeters of oil off of the river to drink the water. About how he has lost two sons and nursed a wife through uterine cancer because of the contamination. His family drank, bathed, and fished in water that was poisoned by oil dumping.”

At the end of his presentation Criollo asked all of the Assembly members and senators for their help and invited them to visit his home and “see for themselves the devastation Chevron’s behavior has caused.”

Hancock, from the Contra Costa district where Chevron is headquartered, said she “would like to come and visit. This is an international issue and an issue here as well.”

Other lawmakers expressed interest in supporting the cleanup effort, according to Cayo Cotter.

Soon after the Sacramento reception Criollo returned to Ecuador, where, he noted that his people were also receiving help from small local indigenous organizations.



Indian Country Today-March 17, 2010

SPEAKING ENGAGEMENT WITH MIKE (ALI) RACCOON EYES KINNEY.....WE MUST BE THE SPIRITUAL CHANGE WE WISH TO SEE IN CREATOR'S WORLD




foto by Ellen Gailing

A SPEAKING ENGAGEMENT WITH MIKE (ALI) RACCOON EYES KINNEY- 'WE MUST BE THE SPIRITUAL CHANGE , WE WISH TO SEE IN CREATOR'S WORLD ' PRESS RELEASE


"WE MUST BE THE SPIRITUAL CHANGE, WE WISH TO SEE IN CREATOR'S WORLD"The Richmond Native Wellness Center will present a evening speaking engagement with nationally-known Native Human and Civil Rights Advocate , Mike (Ali) Raccoon Eyes Kinney.



Mike (Ali) Raccoon Eyes Kinney will be giving a spiritual talk from his lecture series- "Teaching the Values of Peace to Indian Country." He is founder and co-editor of TEACHING THE VALUES OF PEACE Indian Country news blog.


Mike's talk will be "We Must Be The Spiritual Change, We Wish To See In Creator's World "

The talk will focus on Native Spirituality, Spiritual Transformation and Human Development for Native families and Native Communities to might the challenges Indian Country for the 21st Century.

Location: Richmond Native Wellness Center
260-23rd St. (Near the intersection of MacDonald Av. and 23rd St.)
Richmond, CA. 94804

Date: March 24th, 2010- Wednesday

Time: 5:30 PM - 7:00 PM

For more Information: 510/ 232-7018

POTLUCK WILL BE SERVED

Monday, March 15, 2010

OHLONE BURIAL GROUND DISTURBED UNDERNEATH S.F. BAY BRIDGE

Burial ground disturbed underneath Bay Bridge

March 12, 2010
http://www.sfexamin er.com/local/ Burial-ground- disturbed- underneath- Bay-Bridge- 87528257. html

The Bay Bridge's deadly S-curve was built hundreds of feet above a Muwekma Ohlone tribal burial ground, and spirits whose bodies were unearthed and placed in storage are said to be restless.

The Ohlone were the first people to inhabit the Bay Area, where their burial grounds and other sacred sites are frequently unearthed.

At least 26 Ohlone skeletons were discovered between 2002 and 2004 in a burial ground at Yerba Buena Island, which was subsequently excavated to clear a path for a new Bay Bridge east span.

The east span replacement project has suffered billions of dollars in cost overruns and a decade of construction delays that could force motorists to navigate the temporary S-curve — a dogleg where the speed limit drops from 50 mph to 40 mph — until 2014. A truck driver was allegedly traveling at 50 mph when his pear-laden truck flipped Nov. 9 off the recently installed S-curve and plummeted to the former burial ground, where he died.

The California Highway Patrol responded by aggressively policing the speed limit and Caltrans placed addition striping, signs and other features on the S-curve, helping to slash the curve's high accident rate.

Bodies unearthed at the Ohlone burial ground were treated differently depending on which government owned the land where they were discovered.
Bodies found on state-owned land were appropriately ceremonially reburied elsewhere on the island, according to tribal spokeswoman Ann Marie Sayers, who led the ceremony.
But skeletons found on adjacent Coast Guard land were placed in storage because the tribe, which is recognized by California, has not been recognized by the United States since the 1930s.

Remains found on Coast Guard land at Yerba Buena Island could only be legally repatriated to the Ohlone people and reburied if the U.S. Department of Interior formally recognizes the tribe, according to Coast Guard spokesman Dan Dewell. The remains are stored securely, he said.

The remains of tens of thousands of Ohlone people excavated from various places, generally on federal land and placed in storage, could be ceremonially reburied if the tribe wins federal recognition through a lawsuit filed in 2003, according to Sayers.
"It creates confusion in the energy and frequency when they're not at peace or in the spirit world," Sayers said. "There are burials that want to be reinterred — they want to go back to the spirit world. When there are accidents on the Bay Bridge, it doesn't surprise me at all."

Ohlone homeland
Counties that were part of the Muwekma Ohlone until the 18th-century arrival of the Spanish Empire:

San Francisco
San Mateo
Santa Clara
Alameda
Contra Costa
Napa*
Santa Cruz*
Solano*
San Joaquin*
* Portion of the modern county was Muwekma Ohlone homeland

Source: Muwekma Ohlone Tribe

Sunday, March 14, 2010

GUIDIVILLE BAND OF POMO MAY SUE FOR LIBEL

The Eye on the Bay

GUIDIVILLE BAND OF POMO MAY SUE FOR LIBEL IN THE PT.MOLATE CASINO-RESORT

RICHMOND, CA-Casino claims: The Eye blinks fast from the heat rising over an Indian tribe's bid to build a billion-dollar casino-resort at Point Molate in Richmond.

The latest salvo: The Guidiville Band of Pomo Indians has threatened to sue gambling watchdog Cheryl Schmit, head of Stand Up for California, for libel. She has been a vocal critic of the casino plan, telling Richmond council members and federal officials alike that it amounts to blatant "reservation shopping" by a tribe hailing from more than 100 miles north.

Guidiville says Schmit knows better. The tribe has filed thousands of pages of documents with federal officials to show it has strong historical and current ties to the Richmond area. In a letter last month, tribal lawyer Little Fawn Boland demanded that Schmit stop and threatened to sue her for libel.

"People spreading lies about the tribe is not something we're willing to tolerate," said Michael Derry, CEO of the tribe's economic development arm. "It's exposing our tribal members to hatred."

Schmit's lawyer fired back last week in a letter, calling the threats a classic bid to muzzle free debate. Schmit said she has no plans to stop and that her claims are well documented. "It was a nice shot over the bow to try to silence me," she said. "They don't want anyone else to try to influence the same decisionmakers they're trying to influence."

The Eye will be watching out for legal blows.

Bay Area News Group- March 12, 2010



CHEROKEE SOCIETY OF THE GREATER BAY AREA (San Francisco) TO MEET MARCH 27TH

CHEROKEE SOCIETY OF THE GREATER BAY AREA'S GENERAL MEETING AND POTLUCK

The March Cherokee Society of the Greater Bay Area’s General Meeting and Potluck will be on Saturday March 27th, 1pm-4 at The Mark Twain Retirement Center 3525 Lyon Ave. Oakland, CA 94601

The theme of this meeting will be Spring Foods and also planning for the Northern California Cherokee Picnic and getting out newsletter together (more on this below). We will also be making medicine bags, storytelling and Cherokee Language lesson!


We will be performing a fun Cherokee Sing A long at the Picnic this year and we would like all of you, especially the children of our group to participate in this fun! Most of you who have attended the meetings have sung “Itsy Bitsy Spider” and also “Head, Shoulders, Knees and Toes in Cherokee and we will be doing a group sing in at the picnic teaching these songs. So please come and we’ll do a little practicing! No pressure, it will be fun! Words will be available!



Park on street or nearest BART station is Fruitvale.



Please call 510.464.4649 or email in advance for BART pick-up.



Please RSVP with what dish you plan to bring - 510.464.4649 or email Cherokee Society @ yahoo.com.

The Northern California Cherokee Picnic will be on Sunday, April 25th at Rush Ranch in Suisun City. Please put this date on your calendar! More information will be coming out soon.

This is a big undertaking and we are always looking for help in the planning, set up, serving, clean-up and other duties that come with a large picnic.

The Cherokee Nation Hog Fryers will be teaching those of you who are interested in learning the art of the Hog Fry and wish to join a local group, who can perform this tasty task at local celebrations. Please let us know if you are interested and we will send you more information. Making of Fry Bread will also be done as well.

Please call us at 510.464.4649 or email Cherokee Society @ yahoo.com to volunteer.



We look forward to seeing you all at our future gatherings!



Wado!

Jacquie Archambeau



Leadership Council Chair



Cherokee Society of the Greater Bay Area



Community Voice Mail: (510) 464-4649



Community Email: CherokeeSociety@yahoo.com



Website: www.bayareacherokee.org

Saturday, March 13, 2010

INDIAN COUNTRY LEGEND LAKOTA HARDEN KEYNOTE SPEAKER IN RICHMOND, CA . LAS BOMBERAS DE LA BAHIA PUT ON SIZZLING SHOW









Text and Fotos by:
Mike(Ali)Raccoon Eyes Kinney


LAKOTA HARDIN AND LAS BOMBERAS DE LA BAHIA GRACE 3RD ANNUAL WOMEN'SCELEBRATION

RICHMOND, CA.- This past Saturday, March 13, 2010 at the Lovonya DeJean Middle School was the '3rd Annual Women In Solidarity'.This years theme was entitled: Healing Our Beloved Community.

The keynote speaker was internationally known Native Advocate Lakota Hardin.

Lakota was introduced by Courtney Cummings of the Richmond Native Wellness Center.

The Afro-Puerto Rican all Women's Drumming, Singing and Dance troupe sizzled and electrified the huge crowd. They dazzled the audience with the call and response between the dancer and drummers. Scores of attendees got up on the stage to join the Las Bomberas in the celebration.

Las Bomberas performance was truly a celebration of life and Resistance.

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

A SPEAKING ENGAGEMENT WITH MIKE (ALI) RACCOON EYES KINNEY- 'WE MUST BE THE SPIRITUAL CHANGE , WE WISH TO SEE IN CREATOR'S WORLD '


PRESS RELEASE


"WE MUST BE THE SPIRITUAL CHANGE, WE WISH TO SEE IN CREATOR'S WORLD"


The Richmond Native Wellness Center will present a evening speaking engagement with nationally-known Native Human and Civil Rights Advocate , Mike (Ali) Raccoon Eyes Kinney.


Mike (Ali) Raccoon Eyes Kinney will be giving a spiritual talk from his lecture series- "Teaching the Values of Peace to Indian Country." He is founder and co-editor of TEACHING THE VALUES OF PEACE Indian Country news blog.


Mike's talk will be "We Must Be The Spiritual Change, We Wish To See In Creator's World "

The talk will focus on Native Spirituality, Spiritual Transformation and Human Development for Native families and Native Communities to might the challenges Indian Country for the 21st Century.

Location: Richmond Native Wellness Center
260-23rd St. (Near the intersection of MacDonald Av. and 23rd St.)
Richmond, CA. 94804

Date: March 24th, 2010- Wednesday

Time: 5:30 PM - 7:00 PM

For more Information: 510/ 232-7018

POTLUCK WILL BE SERVED


http://www.teachingthevaluesofpeace.blogspot.com

THE SACRED SMOKE OF CREATOR




"I know Grandpa told me that to smoke is wakan (holy). The smoke you inhale represents the spirits of everything you put into the pipe. When you breathe in the smoke, you are asking to become one with everything or to become whole."

Dr. A.C. Ross (Enhanamani), LAKOTA


The smoke allows us to go from the Seen World to the Spirit World.

It is in the Spirit World where we are all connected.

In this way, we can become one with all things. Our pipe is sacred.

We need to be respectful of our medicine. When we smoke the pipe, we need to have good thoughts because these thoughts are shared with the Spirit World.

The pipe, the smoke, the spirits, our thoughts - these things are Wakan.

Monday, March 8, 2010

CARD CLUBS SECRET DEALINGS TO DESTROY GUIDEVILLE BAND OF POMO CASINO HOTEL RESORT AT POINT MOLATE

Card clubs' secret dealings


The secret card club gang bankrolling the disturbing anti-Indian casino ad blitz in Richmond has failed to acknowledge basic city psychology: It's OK for us to criticize us but it's not OK for outsiders to do it.

The eight-page mailer and 30-second TV spot from a group calling itself Stop The Mega Casino features some of Richmond's most unseemly neighborhoods.

The text paints a nightmare scenario, in which the opening of a Las Vegas-style Indian casino at Point Molate will render permanent the presence of drug dealers, loan sharks, poverty and crime.

Richmond residents are outraged. And with good reason. They know they have problems.
And many folks are rightfully concerned about how the city will balance the negative social impacts of a full-blown gambling institution against the economic benefits.
But the last thing Richmond residents want is an overblown depiction of the city as a cesspool from an outside group that won't disclose its members and stands nowhere close to moral ground.

Like casinos, card rooms are gambling establishments, only smaller and with less flashy ways to lose your money. They don't care about Richmond. They don't want the competition. It's pure hypocrisy, plain and simple.
We're told that Stop the Mega Casino is a coalition of a dozen "mom-and-pop" to medium-sized undisclosed card clubs.

The campaign representatives have refused to name the card clubs while simultaneously declaring themselves open.

Their one attempt at transparency is laughable.
On Feb. 11, David Fried, the lawyer for The Oaks card room in Emeryville, registered in Richmond as the representative of a grass-roots lobbyist organization called Stop the Mega Casino.

The form lists as its only activity a $33,900 payment to a San Francisco consulting firm, Whitehurst Mosher, for "advice, signs and media."
So, card room lawyers are grass-roots organizers now?
Richmond City Clerk Diane Holmes rejected the application; The city has no grass-roots lobbyist category.

Stop the Mega Casino may want to look at what happened in Walnut Creek.
Last year, a mall developer secretly sabotaged a competing firm's plans to build a Neiman Marcus department store downtown, claiming it would unleash intolerable parking havoc.

Granted, the availability of $500 Manolo pumps does not inspire the same societal fear as a $20-minimum blackjack table.
But the point is this: The move backfired. The city's voters overwhelmingly approved the high-end department store last year.

When outsiders with blatant commercial self-interests drop into town, voters pull up the welcome mat and lock the front door.

Contra Costa Times- March 6, 2010

PEACEFUL PATHWAYS, REDUCING EXPOSURE TO VIOLENCE

Dear Colleague:
We are reaching out to funders with a strong interest in the Native American community to invite you to nominate local projects for a new matching grants program—Peaceful Pathways: Reducing Exposure to Violence.
Across the U.S., violent behavior can be a significant obstacle to good health. Through Peaceful Pathways,Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Local Funding Partnerships offers matching grants of $50,000 to $200,000 for new projects that serve communities of color and other traditionally under-resourced groups.

Please consider forwarding this Call for Proposals to nonprofit leaders whose programs build on community strengths and wisdom to increase peace and safety. Eligible projects may address any behavior that causes physical, emotional or psychological harm.

We rely on local grantmakers who recognize innovative, community-based projects that create meaningful change to solve complex issues. Together, we could leverage our combined resources to foster a program’s long-term success.
Please feel free to call on any one of us at 609-275-4128 to discuss our grantmaking programs or the proposal you may nominate. We look forward to talking with you.
Sincerely,



Common Places. Common Causes. Uncommon Connections.
A national program of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation®
administered by the Health Research & Educational Trust of New Jersey.
760 Alexander Road, Princeton, NJ 08543-0001
(609) 275-4128 — info@localfundingpartnerships.org


The American Indian Graduate Program at The University of California, Berkeley
(mailing address) 316 Sproul Hall # 5900, Berkeley, CA 94720-5900
(office location) 598 Barrows Hall, The University of California, Berkeley
(email) aigp@berkeley.edu / (phone) 510.642.3228 / (fax) 510.643.8909
http://www.grad.berkeley.edu/aigp

Saturday, March 6, 2010

NATIVE AMERICANS AND SIKH COMMUNITY WALKS FOR PEACE IN THE STREETS IN THE CITY OF RICHMOND,CA





top foto: thousands of Richmond residents march for the end of violence on the stree
middle foto: Sikhs from the San Francisco Bay Area Gurawada listening to the plea to stop the violence in Richmond, CA.
bottom foto: Courtney Cummings of the Richmond Native Wellness Center

RICHMOND, CA- On Saturday, March 6, 2010 Community Advocates and Activists, along with religious clergy and thousands of Richmond residents took to the streets to protest the need to end the youth and young adult violence that has plagued the City.

There was a sizable rally at the Richmond City Hall Plaza, where the community gathered to start the spiritual walk for peace.


Thursday, March 4, 2010

WILMA MANKILLER DIAGNOSED WITH CANCER, LAST PUBLIC APPEARANCE MARCH 5, 2010

Mankiller diagnosed with cancer
Slated to make last public appearance March 5

By S.E. Ruckman, Today correspondent


TAHLEQUAH, Okla. – Wilma Mankiller, the first woman chief of the Cherokee Nation, has been diagnosed with stage IV pancreatic cancer. The 14-county Cherokee jurisdiction reeled from the news after her husband, Charlie Soap, made the announcement March 2.

She is slated to make her last public appearance in Tulsa at the Renaissance Hotel at 10:30 a.m. on Friday, March 5 for a cancer summit hosted by Cherokee Nation, according to reports.Mankiller, 64, said she decided to issue a statement because she wants her family and friends to know that she has “mentally and spiritually prepared” herself for her latest health crisis.“I learned a long time ago that I can’t control the challenges the Creator sends my way, but I can control the way I think about them and deal with them. On balance, I have been blessed with an extraordinarily rich and wonderful life, filled with incredible experiences.”

She added that she has been touched by countless people in her life and regrets not being able to deliver the news of her illness personally. She requested that well wishers contact her at wilmapmankiller@yahoo.com.Mankiller’s pancreatic cancer is not the first health challenge she has faced. After surviving a head-on collision in 1979 that killed the other driver in rural Cherokee County, she was diagnosed with a neuromuscular disease, myasthenia gravis, in 1980 in which her thymus was removed as the cure.

In 1995, she was diagnosed with lymphoma. She underwent two kidney transplants in 1990 and 1998, after inherting kidney disease from her father, who died of it. In 1999, she was diagnosed with breast cancer.Pancreatic cancer has the highest mortality rate, particularly stage IV, with a prognosis of three to six months, according to medical resources. Chemotherapy is the standard course for this type of terminal cancer.Meanwhile, Cherokee Chief Chad Smith, told hundreds of tribal employees March 2 that he regretted making the announcement but did so in order for her immediate family to be respected.“Please allow them the privacy they deserve, either when they are at work or when they are in the community during this trying time,” Smith said in an employee memo. Members of her family work for Cherokee Nation in various capacities.

Mankiller served as the Cherokee Nation’s principal chief in 1985 after serving two years as the tribe’s deputy chief starting in 1983. She inherited the top position after then principal chief, Ross Swimmer, was appointed to the head of the BIA. She was elected in 1987 then 1991 by Cherokee voters. She opted to step down from political life in 1995.Her terms as principal chief were marked by focusing on education, health care, new school construction, job-training centers and health clinics. A health clinic bearing her name is located in Stilwell, Okla.Her life has been one that has been about taking the twists and turns of life’s roads.

In her 1993 book, “Mankiller: A Chief and Her People,” she recounts a path that included a family migration from Cherokee County in Oklahoma to San Francisco, Calif. in the 1950s as part of the BIA’s Relocation Program.Soon after graduating high school in 1963, she married Hugo Olaya and had two daughters, Gina and Felicia. About two years after her divorce in 1974, she made the decision to return to Oklahoma, where she soon became a community coordinator for the Cherokee Nation.

She later married fellow Cherokee tribal member, Charlie Soap, in 1986. They have made their home in Stilwell, living on her family allotment for the last several years. Mankiller is the grandmother of a grandson and granddaughter.Since leaving political life, Mankiller has served on numerous boards and named for several distinctions, including induction into the Women’s Hall of Fame in New York City in 1994. In 1995, she received a Chubb Fellowship from Yale University.

She was also a recipient of the Presidential Medal of Freedom by then-president Bill Clinton in 1998.She is the co-author of a 2004 book, “Every Day is a Good Day: Reflections by Contemporary Indigenous Women,” with Gloria Steinem and Vine DeLoria Jr.

Indian Country Today-March 4, 2010

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

DEBATE OVER POINT MOLATE HOTEL AND CASINO PROPOSAL INTENSIFIES

Debate over Point Molate hotel-casino proposal intensifies

The battle over a proposed $1.2 billion hotel-casino resort on a stretch of Richmond's waterfront is heating up as the project inches closer to a vote.

City leaders on Tuesday extended the closing date on its $50 million deal to sell the old Point Molate Naval Fuel Depot to a developer, giving the parties more time to negotiate changes to the contract. The deal was set to expire on March 15; it now ends on April 20.
Progress has been made in recent negotiations, City Councilman Tom Butt said.

"There are a lot of issues out there. None of them to me seem to be insolvable," said Butt, who is seeking a commitment from the developer to keep historic buildings in tact among other issues.
Additional extensions that would push the deadline to later this year — and squarely into the City Council election season — are likely if officials want this project to move forward.
Meanwhile, the card club-backed Stop the Mega Casino group is spending $33,900 to oppose the resort.

Their eight-page mailer, which began arriving in mailboxes Saturday, depicts a gritty Richmond and suggests drug dealing, loan sharking, poverty and crime will become permanent fixtures if a casino opens here. It urges locals to call the City Council to tell them to say no to a casino.
A 30-second television ad in the same style as the mailer also aired this past weekend.

Stop the Mega Casino is working with Whitehurst/Mosher Campaign Strategy and Media in San Francisco, according to an expenditure report filed with the city clerk's office. The group represents a dozen medium and small card clubs that worry about competition from a large casino.

The proposed Point Molate hotel-casino resort would host 124,000 square feet of gaming, a conference center, nearly 1,100 hotel rooms, restaurants, shops, tribal headquarters, a shoreline park, trails and ferry service. Developer Upstream Point Molate and the Guidiville Band of Pomo Indians, with the Yocha Dehe Wintun Nation as an investor, are seeking federal, state and local approvals to build it.

The city would receive at least $16.6 million annually under a 20-year agreement with Upstream.
This is the second extension of the closing date. The deal was initially set to expire in January, but officials postponed it to March 15 and now to next month.
More extensions are likely if officials want this project. The city has not distributed responses to public comments on the draft environmental impact report yet; nor has it voted to certify the document. Both are required as a condition of closing.

At Tuesday's council meeting, union workers wearing green "Support the Resort at Point Molate" T-shirts outnumbered project opponents. They urged officials to approve projects that create construction and long-term operational jobs.
"Richmond needs jobs ... something to give hope to people in Richmond that will generate jobs," said resident Ricky Jackson, who supports the project. "Positive change promotes positive things."
Opponents fear the project is a pipe dream that won't produce as many jobs for locals as promised. Officials should let the land sale agreement expire and study other options, they said.

"It is time to let this go," said Joan Garrett, a member of Citizens for a Sustainable Point Molate.
Jim Levine of Upstream acknowledged the mailer and TV ads mark the start of an election-year battle over the project. But Levine said their message ignores 17,000 direct and indirect jobs that the casino resort promises, with agreements for mostly local jobs and training programs to help fill them. Levine dismissed the ads' claim that the project would only burnish the city's struggles with drugs, crime and poverty.

Katherine Tam - Contra Costa Times, March 3, 2010

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

WHEN A NATIVE PERSON STANDS UP.....

When you as a Native person stand up for what you believe is right,
you must have the courage to acknowledge your actions and face the consequences.

Monday, March 1, 2010

INDIGENOUS PLAN OF ACTION FOR INTERNATIONAL CLIMATE CHANGE SUMMIT

Indigenous plan of action for climate change summit

By Rick Kearns, Today correspondent

Story Published: Mar 1, 2010

To “defeat the resistance of the contaminating countries” was the objective of indigenous leaders from 13 Latin American countries who prepared a plan of action recently for the upcoming Climate Change Summit in Mexico.The “Second Latin American Summit on Climate Change and its Impact on Indigenous Peoples” convened in Lima, Peru Jan. 25 and then on Feb. 12 to plan for the larger gathering.Native representatives from Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, the United States, Guatemala, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Peru and Venezuela drafted a declaration and plan of action for the summit.

Hosting the meetings were members of the Continental Link of Indigenous Women-South America region, the Indigenous Council of Central America (CICA) and the Indigenous Cultures Center of Peru (CHIRAPAQ).“Latin America is known for bringing a variety of voices to the summits, there are many positions and this makes the process even slower,” said Hortencio Hidalgo, an Aymara leader from Chile.“The rest of the countries say they no longer have patience for our region, and because of that we must unite to have a larger and stronger influence.

”Towards that effort, the hundreds of participants reviewed and analyzed the results of last years UN Climate Change Summit held in Copenhagen, Denmark. Work groups, assisted by a variety of consultants, drafted plans that addressed issues of food security and nutrition, gender, adaptation to and mitigation of climate change, and an action plan and policies.Donald Rojas, CICA president, noted that their plans are to “guarantee a unified proposal from all of the networks, to influence governments to take on these approaches, to design a local community strategy for adaptation to and mitigation of climate change.”They also, “… must guarantee food security and create an indigenous platform for the Mexico summit.”The document that came out of the meetings was titled “The Lima Declaration: For the Life of the Mother Nature and Humankind,” which articulated reasons for indigenous involvement and plans for implementation.

The Declaration started with a list of indigenous rights to property – intellectual and otherwise – and to natural resources, among other items.“Recognizing that we the indigenous peoples have the inherent right to sovereignty, free determination and autonomy, with the clear ability to decide on political, social, cultural and environmental policies that restores our state of ‘good living’ as peoples and that recognizes our individual and collective rights to the lands, territories and natural resources and to biodiversity and intellectual property.”The fourth and fifth paragraphs of the Declaration assert that indigenous peoples have been disproportionately affected by the various effects of climate change, especially global warming. These effects extend to many areas of indigenous life.“… the impact of climate change brings as a consequence the crisis of food insecurity, diseases, the loss of traditional knowledge and practices, the weakening of our own structures of organization and government, breaking the balance of ecological, socio-economic and spiritual equilibrium.

”Due to these factors and others, the indigenous leaders expressed concern over their exclusion from the decision making process in the summits. They noted that the preamble to the Kyoto Protocol claimed that the agreements “needed the active role of civil society,” but that the protocol drafters “did not consider the participation of indigenous peoples in the discussions, planning sessions and implementation of actions that would allow for the strengthening of our own systems and ancestral strategies.”In their Actions and Strategies sections the indigenous leaders presented plans to develop alliances with non-governmental organizations that are fighting against the causes and effects of climate change, as well as with governments in the region to seek consensus, strategies and solutions based on indigenous knowledge.

They also seek “the creation of a group of climate change experts that will include representatives of the indigenous peoples who will be responsible for analyzing the impacts of climate change on Native peoples and the monitoring of the implementation of the policies of the Climate Change Accord.”The Lima Declaration and plan, among other things, included a demand for further application of the UN Declaration on the Human Rights of Indigenous Peoples on the proceedings. They also made a broader appeal to the international community regarding “extractive industries” such as oil, petrochemical and mining operations.“To put out a call to create actions of solidarity for the mobilization of indigenous peoples against extractive industries. … considering the harmful effects they have had on the community and in particular on the health of our women, children and elders.”Officials have not yet announced the date for the Mexico summit.

Indian Country Today-March 1, 2010