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North American Indians 

Floyd Red Crow Westerman presents: 

Exterminate Them!  (The California Story)

A documentary detailing the holocaust committed against the native people of California by the State and Federal Government.

FACTS:

10 Things You Don’t Know About American Indians

There are many misconceptions when it comes to modern American Indians and the way we identify ourselves in society.

As a Seminole Indian woman, I have had my share of “rain dance” jokes and uncomfortable conversations.

These stereotypes stem from inaccurate portrayals in popular culture that were never properly challenged.

They establish a limited perception. Movies, television shows, mascots.

There’s poverty porn, media that sensationalizes marginalized communities with exploitative or voyeuristic motives. Even Disney perpetuates these problems.

But Native America is far more complex than what mainstream media and education depict.

I can go on for pages about my tribe alone and its colorful history.

Though I’m in no position to speak on behalf of all indigenous community, here are a few basics I think everyone should know.

 

1. We exist today and live contemporary lives.

Being type casted or dismissed is a problem American Indians face daily.

Hearing, “Do you live in a teepee?” is like a rite of passage.

We are so marginalized that references to shaman, “Redskins,” and dream catchers are all that certain people think of when they hear “Native American.”

We’re represented as artifacts in a museum, a few chapters in a history book.

A group of people frozen in time.

I have had experiences with people who didn’t even know American Indians were still alive!

So I’m here to say yes, we do exist today.

We drive cars, tweet about Game of Thrones, listen to Beyoncé.

Though some of us may chose to stay in touch with our traditions, Native Americans aren’t “mystical” or “savage” people from the past.

We go to college, write books, become doctors, run businesses.

 

2. There are multiple ways to address Native America.

Native Americans, Natives, American Indians, Indians, Indigenous peoples, First Nations peoples, Aboriginal, Indian Country.

The list can go on.

It’s ideal to use the name of a specific tribe or nation, like Sicangu, Lakota or Comanche.

It’s the difference between asking a Japanese person “how’s Japan?” as opposed to “how’s Asia?”

With whichever term you use, be cognizant of your relationship to whom you’re addressing, where you are, etc. Context and respect are everything.

 

3. We don’t all look the same.

Some Natives are tall, some are short, some are fair-skinned, some are dark.

We have varying highness of cheekbones, varying weights, varying hair lengths and hair color.

Native American is not so much a “racial” identity.

It’s more of a political one.

We share the same relationship to the United States government in that we are indigenous, but are distinct nations from one another across North America.

 

4. There are more than 560 federally recognized tribes in the U.S.

To be federally recognized means to be legally recognized by the United States Bureau of Indian Affairs.

Even still, there are thousands of tribes, bands, nations, and peoples throughout the U.S. that are not recognized on a government or legal level.

They self-identify as American Indian.

Tribes are separate entities from the United States, are self-governing individuals with tribal courts and elected leaders. “Domestic Dependent Nations.”

Though not entirely sovereign, like a foreign country, American Indian sovereignty continues to be pushed and expanded.

 

5. And each tribe has its own identity as a nation, independent from one another.

Natives aren’t a unanimous culture across North America.

We don’t all hunt buffalo or wear buckskin.

Every tribe has its unique languages, traditions, histories, politics, economies, religions, and overall ways of life.

Of course, there are overlapping practices and characteristics because of complicated histories.

Still, each nation remains individual.

Southeastern tribes are totally different than Northwestern ones.

I can’t speak for totem poles because Seminoles don’t practice that tradition, but my friend from the Shuswap Nation can.

There are countless nuances between nations.

It can be hard to keep up with, but it’s what makes Indian Country so intriguing and beautiful.

 

6. Some Natives live on reservations, some don’t.

Reservations are areas of land owned and managed by Native nations.

Not every tribe has a reservation.

With the Dawes Act in the late 1880's, there are only ~300 reservations in the U.S. today.

Reservations vary in size and location.

The Navajo nation has territory equivalent to the size of West Virginia.

Then there are Natives who, due to the Indian Relocation Act of 1956, come from families that were encouraged by the government to move off of reservations and into cities to “assimilate.”

 

7. There are American Indians in the U.S. that don’t speak English.

Once, on a train, I was telling my ex-boyfriend about my great grandmother.

I explained how we weren’t that close because of our language barrier: she only spoke Miccosukee, one of the two languages spoken by Seminole people in Florida.

He was shocked.

Oral history is a vital part of our history.

Though the number is dwindling, there are elders who speak their Native language exclusively.

Bilingual individuals are more common.

Many nations keep their languages alive, preserving them and teaching them to younger generations.

To remain linguistically sovereign is important.

Language allows us to control our own narratives and resist colonial oppression.

 

8. Land is not just property to American Indians.

The gap between European and indigenous concepts of land is the most fundamental issue Natives face with the U.S. and Canadian governments.

For Native communities, land transcends the value of “property” as Locke coined it, and functions spiritually as well as economically.

Indigenous religious beliefs and ways of life are tied to the earth and what it produces.

It’s a living entity that is not perceived as something to exert ownership over.

Instead, there’s the notion of a respectful relationship with the earth.

Give and take.

Things like waterways, forests, and buffalo are essential for life and prosperity, and can even hold sacred value.

This is why the loss and destruction of Native land (North America) is so devastating.

Confining nations to allotted areas and destroying the environment disturbs this essence of existence and identity.

 

9. A genocide was enacted upon Native America.

Did you know that Adolf Hitler was inspired by the indigenous genocide in North America when he created concentration camps?

Manifest Destiny and the Third Reich are creepily synonymous.

80-90% of the American Indian population was killed between Columbian contact (Chris. Columbus) and today.

The Trail of Tears, the Sand Creek Massacre, the Wounded Knee Massacre, the Camp Grant Massacre, the list goes on.

When the years of Indian wars came to an end, a new kind of violence emerged.

In the late 19th and early 20th century, the Bureau of Indian Affairs founded American Indian boarding schools.

For decades, the establishments literally kidnapped children from their homes and families.

The children were physically, sexually, and mentally abused in order to “kill the Indian and save the man.”

They were coerced into becoming English-speaking servants and laborers.

Genocide can be physical or cultural.

Today, remnants of these alarmingly recent tragedies surface in the forms of racism, poverty, drug abuse, and historical trauma.

Colonialism is an ongoing system, not an isolated event.

 

10. Native America is changing the world.

It’s empowering to think that every indigenous person living today is descendent of fierce survivors.

And we’re not only surviving, we are making strides.

There’s a woman named Winona LaDuke, Anishinaabe activist, environmentalist, economist, and author of three books.

She’s even run as Vice President alongside candidate Ralph Nader on the Green Party ticket.

Adrienne Keene’s honest blog Native Appropriations has amassed over 50,000 followers on Facebook, and grabbed the attention of companies such as Paul Frank for their problematic behavior.

There are also musicians and bands like A Tribe Called Red, hailing from the Cayuga Six Nations and Nissiping Ojibwe Nation, representing Native expression.

Though there are still huge issues to overcome before Indian Country can rest, Indigenous Resistance is alive and well. With the advantage of the Internet and greater opportunities for education, each generation is getting louder and louder. We are beginning to portray ourselves in the media on our own terms.

In the famous words of Native movie Smoke Signals, “It’s a good day to be indigenous.”

 

Braudie Blais-Billie 

Seminole Indian, born in 1993

Currently in New York City, from Fort Lauderdale, Florida

I am a photographer and a woman activist

 

RUSSELL MEANS

(November 10, 1939 - October 22, 2012)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Russell Charles Means was an Oglala Lakota activist for the rights of Native American people and libertarian political activist.

He became a prominent member of the American Indian Movement (AIM) after joining the organization in 1968, and helped organize notable events that attracted national and international media coverage.

Means was active in international issues of Indigenous peoples, including working with groups in Central and South America, and with the United Nations for recognition of their rights.

He was active in politics at Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota and at the state and national level.

Beginning an acting career in 1992, he appeared in numerous films, including "The Last of the Mohicans" and released his own music CD.

He published his autobiography "Where White Men Fear to Tread" in 1995.

Russell was born on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, to Theodora Louise Feather and Walter "Hank" Means.

His mother was a Yankton Dakota from Greenwood, South Dakota and his father, an Oglala Lakota.

He was given the name Wanbli Ohitika by his mother, which means "Brave Eagle" in the Lakota language.

Means died in 2012, less than a month before his 73rd birthday.

The Cherokee syllabary is a syllabary invented by Sequoyah to write the Cherokee language in the late 1810s and early 1820s.

His creation of the syllabary is particularly noteworthy in that he could not previously read any script.

He first experimented with logograms, but his system later developed into a syllabary.

In his system, each symbol represents a syllable rather than a single phoneme; the 85 (originally 86) characters in the Cherokee syllabary provide a suitable method to write Cherokee.

Some symbols  do resemble the Latin, Greek and even the Cyrillic script's letters, but the actual sounds are completeley different (for example the sound A is written with a letter thet resembles the Latin D.                            

A Brief Biography of    Sequoyah

Sequoyah was born circa 1776 at the village of Tuskegee, which was very near where his Museum is today. His father was Nathaniel Gist, a Virginia fur trader. His mother was Wut-Teh, daughter of a Cherokee Chief. Sequoyah married a Cherokee, had a family and was a silversmith by trade.

Sequoyah and other Cherokees enlisted on the side of the United States under General Andrew Jackson to fight the British troops and the Creek Indians in the war of 1812. Although Sequoyah was exposed to the concept of writing early in his life, he never learned the English alphabet. He began to toy with the idea of literacy for the Cherokee people. Unlike the white soldiers, he and the other Cherokees were not able to write letters home, read military orders, or record events as they occurred. After the war, he began in earnest to create a writing system for the Cherokees. When he returned home after the war, he began to make the symbols that could make words. He finally reduced the thousands of Cherokee thoughts to 85 symbols representing sounds. He made a game of this new writing systems and taught his little girl Ayoka how to make the symbols. In 1821, after 12 years working on the new language, he and his daughter introduced his syllabary to the Cherokee people. Within a few months thousands of Cherokees became literate. By 1825 much of the Bible and numerous hymns had been translated into Cherokee. By 1828 they were publishing the "Cherokee Phoenix," the first national bi-lingual newspaper, along with religious pamphlets, educational materials and legal documents. In recognition of his contributions, the Cherokee Nation awarded Sequoyah a silver medal. He continued to serve Cherokee people as a statesman and diplomat until his death.

THE CASE OF LEONARD PELTIER

 

Leonard Peltier is an imprisoned Native American considered by Amnesty International, the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, National Congress of American Indians, the Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Center for Human Rights, Archbishop Desmond Tutu and Rev. Jesse Jackson, among many others, to be a political prisoner who should be immediately released.

Leonard Peltier was convicted for the deaths of two FBI agents who died during a 1975 shoot-out on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation. Mr. Peltier has been in prison for over 29 years.

The Wounded Knee occupation of 1973 marked the beginning of a three-year period of political violence on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation. The tribal chairman hired vigilantes, self titled as “GOONS,” to rid the reservation of American Indian Movement (AIM) activity and sentiment. More than 60 traditional tribal members and AIM members were murdered and scores more were assaulted. Evidence indicated GOON responsibility in the majority of crimes but despite a large FBI presence, nothing was done to stop the violence. The FBI supplied the GOONS with intelligence on AIM members and looked away as GOONS committed crimes. One former GOON member reported that the FBI supplied him with armor piercing ammunition.

Leonard Peltier was an AIM leader and was asked by traditional people at Pine Ridge, South Dakota, to support and protect the traditional people being targeted for violence. Mr. Peltier and a small group of young AIM members set up camp on a ranch owned by the traditional Jumping Bull family.

On June 26, 1975 two FBI agents in unmarked cars followed a pick-up truck onto the Jumping Bull ranch. The families immediately became alarmed and feared an attack. Shots were heard and a shoot-out erupted. More than 150 agents, GOONS, and law enforcement surrounded the ranch.

When the shoot-out ended the two FBI agents and one Native American lay dead. The agents were injured in the shoot-out and were then shot at close range. The Native American, Joseph Stuntz, was shot in the head by a sniper’s bullet. Mr. Stuntz’s death has never been investigated, nor has anyone ever been charged in connection with his death.

According to FBI documents, more than 40 Native Americans participated in the gunfight, but only AIM members Bob Robideau, Darrell Butler, and Leonard Peltier were brought to trial.

Mr. Robideau and Mr. Butler were arrested first and went to trial. A federal jury in Iowa acquitted them on grounds of self-defense, finding that their participation in the shoot-out was justified given the climate of fear that existed on the Pine Ridge Reservation. Further, they could not be tied to the close-range shootings.

Leonard Peltier was arrested in Canada on February 6, 1976, along with Frank Blackhorse, a.k.a. Frank Deluca. The United States presented the Canadian court with affidavits signed by Myrtle Poor Bear who said she was Mr. Peltier’s girlfriend and allegedly saw him shoot the agents. In fact, Ms. Poor Bear had never met Mr. Peltier and was not present during the shoot-out. Soon after, Ms. Poor Bear recanted her statements and said the FBI threatened her and coerced her into signing the affidavits.

Mr. Peltier was extradited to the United States where he was tried in 1977. The trial was held in North Dakota before United States District Judge Paul Benson, a conservative jurist appointed to the federal bench by Richard M. Nixon. Key witnesses like Myrtle Poor Bear were not allowed to testify and unlike the Robideau/Butler trial in Iowa, evidence regarding violence on Pine Ridge was severely restricted.

An FBI agent who had previously testified that the agents followed a pick-up truck onto the scene, a vehicle that could not be tied to Mr. Peltier, changed his account, stating that the agents had followed a red and white van onto the scene, a vehicle which Mr. Peltier drove occasionally.

Three teen-aged Native witnesses testified against Mr. Peltier, they all later admitted that the FBI forced them to testify. Still, not one witness identified Mr. Peltier as the shooter.

The U.S. Attorney prosecuting the case claimed that the government had provided the defense with all FBI documents concerning the case. To the contrary, more than 140,000 pages had been withheld in their entirety.

An FBI ballistics expert testified that a casing found near the agents’ bodies matched the gun tied to Mr. Peltier. However, a ballistic test proving that the casing did not come from the gun tied to Mr. Peltier was intentionally concealed.

The jury, unaware of the aforementioned facts, found Mr. Peltier guilty. Judge Benson, in turn, sentenced Mr. Peltier to two consecutive life terms.

Following the discovery of new evidence obtained through a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit, Mr. Peltier sought a new trial. The Eighth Circuit ruled, “There is a possibility that the jury would have acquitted Leonard Peltier had the records and data improperly withheld from the defense been available to him in order to better exploit and reinforce the inconsistencies casting strong doubts upon the government's case." Yet, the court denied Mr. Peltier a new trial.

During oral argument, the government attorney conceded that the government does not know who shot the agents, stating that Mr. Peltier is equally guilty whether he shot the agents at point-blank range, or participated in the shoot-out from a distance. Mr. Peltier’s co-defendants participated in the shoot-out from a distance, but were acquitted.

Judge Heaney, who authored the decision denying a new trial, has since voiced firm support for Mr. Peltier’s release, stating that the FBI used improper tactics to convict Mr. Peltier, the FBI was equally responsible for the shoot-out, and that Mr. Peltier's release would promote healing with Native Americans.

Mr. Peltier has served over 29 years in prison and is long overdue for parole. He has received several human rights awards for his good deeds from behind bars which include annual gift drives for the children of Pine Ridge, fund raisers for battered women’s shelters, and donations of his paintings to Native American recovery programs.

Mr. Peltier suffers from diabetes, high blood pressure, and a heart condition. Time for justice is short.

Currently, Mr. Peltier’s attorneys have filed a new round of Freedom of Information Act requests with FBI Headquarters and all FBI field offices in an attempt to secure the release of all files relating to Mr. Peltier and the RESMURS investigation. To date, the FBI has engaged in a number of dilatory tactics in order to avoid the processing of these requests.

MOUNT RUSHMORE & THE PROMISES

 

The founding fathers on that rock shared common characteristics. All four valued white supremacy and promoted the extirpation of Indian society. The United States' founding fathers were staunchly anti-Indian advocates in that at one time or another, all four provided for genocide against Indian peoples of this hemisphere.

 

GEORGE WASHINGTON...

In 1779, George Washington instructed Major General John Sullivan to attack Iroquois people.

Washington stated, "lay waste all the settlements around...that the country may not be merely overrun, but destroyed".

In the course of the carnage and annihilation of Indian people, Washington also instructed his general not to listen to any overture of peace before the total ruin of their settlements is effected".

(Stannard, David E. AMERICAN HOLOCAUST. New York: Oxford University Press, 1992. pp. 118-121.)

In 1783, Washington's anti-Indian sentiments were apparent in his comparisons of Indians with wolves: "Both being beast of prey, tho' they differ in shape", he said. George Washington's policies of extermination were realized in his troops behaviors following a defeat.

Troops would skin the bodies of Iroquois "from the hips downward to make boot tops or leggings".

Indians who survived the attacks later re-named the nation's first president as "Town Destroyer".

Approximately 28 of 30 Seneca towns had been destroyed within a five year period. 

 

THOMAS JEFFERSON...

In 1807, Thomas Jefferson instructed his War Department that, should any Indians resist against America stealing Indian lands, the Indian resistance must be met with "the hatchet".

Jefferson continued, "And...if ever we are constrained to lift the hatchet against any tribe, " he wrote, "we will never lay it down till that tribe is exterminated, or is driven beyond the Mississippi."

Jefferson, the slave owner, continued, "in war, they will kill some of us; we shall destroy all of them". 

In 1812, Jefferson said that American was obliged to push the backward Indians "with the beasts of the forests into the Stony Mountains".

One year later Jefferson continued anti-Indian statements by adding that America must "pursue [the Indians] to extermination, or drive them to new seats beyond our reach". 

 

ABRAHAM LINCOLN...

In 1862, President Abraham Lincoln ordered the execution, by hanging, of 38 Dakota Sioux prisoners in Mankato, Minnesota.

Most of those executed were holy men or political leaders of their camps.

None of them were responsible for committing the crimes they were accused of. Coined as the Largest Mass Execution in U.S. History.

(Brown, Dee. BURY MY HEART AT WOUNDED KNEE. New York: Holt, Rinehart, Winston, 1970. pp. 59-61)

 

THEODORE ROOSEVELT...

The fourth face you see on that "Stony Mountain" is America's first twentieth century president, alleged American hero, and Nobel peace prize recipient, Theodore Roosevelt.

This Indian fighter firmly grasped the notion of Manifest Destiny saying that America's extermination of the Indians and thefts our their lands "was ultimately beneficial as it was inevitable".

Roosevelt once said, "I don't go so far as to think that the only good Indians are dead Indians, but I believe nine out of ten are, and I shouldn't like to inquire too closely into the case of the tenth". (Stannard, Op.Cit.)

The apathy displayed by these founding fathers symbolize the demoralization related to racial superiority. Scholars point toward this racial polarization as evidence of the existence of Eugenics.

Eugenics is a new term for an old phenomena which asserts that Indian people should be exterminated because they are an inferior race of people.

Jefferson's suggestion to pursue the Indians to extermination fits well into the eugenistic vision.

In David Stannard's study American Holocaust, he writes: "had these same words been enunciated by a German leader in 1939, and directed at European Jews, they would be engraved in modern memory.

Since they were uttered by one of America's founding fathers, however...they conveniently have become lost to most historians in their insistent celebration of Jefferson's wisdom and humanity."

Roosevelt feared that American upper classes were being replaced by the "unrestricted breeding" of inferior racial stocks, the "utterly shiftless", and the "worthless".

The back side of the  'monument' of the four U.S Presidents on Mt. Rushmore overlooking the South Dakota Indian Reservations.

Indian Maps slide show

The Troubles of the Native American Today

 

 

The Native American Indian population of the United States faces serious cultural and social dilemmas that threaten their society. Among these issues are the problems of poverty, alienation and a high rate of alcoholism. There is also the threat of a loss of their cultural identity due to interracial marriages and the large number of young Native Americans who are leaving the territories of the Indian Nations and becoming fully integrated into American culture, leaving the old ways of their cultural history behind.                                                                                                 

The Native Americans once ruled the continent until the arrival of settlers who conquered the old American Indian tribes in wars that came close to genocide for the Indians. The victorious American government put aside some land for the remaining Indians to live on, which have become known as reservations. There was an unwillingness to share the same land with the defeated race. 

These reservations have been the home of most, but not all of the remaining American Indian population. This mass segregation turned the once dominant American Indians into an oppressed minority. There are 24 million Native Americans remaining, which is a very small amount considering the population of the country. The new culture of reservation life that the Indian nations were forced to accept has spawned the new social problems which plague them today.

 

The isolation of the life on the reservations created serious problems for the American Indians. It limited all the way they used to survive and make economic profit. Farming, hunting and trading were all affected by their new limitations. Their inability to thrive as they had once done led to mass poverty across all the Indian Nations. The US Census says that the poverty rate among the Indian Nations is 25%. For the ones who do have jobs, their average salary tends to be less than is average. Only 30 percent have health insurance. Non-reservation Indians have only a slightly higher standard of living. Despite efforts of the tribes to become more economically independent in recent years, the race that once ruled the continent is now poor and hungry.

 

The desperation caused by poverty has induced recent generations of young Native American Indians to leave reservation life behind them and travel to other places where they can make a better living and provide for their families. This is causing a slow erosion of those still devoted to the old customs. The languages, traditions and practices that have been the heart of Native American culture for 1,000 years are being replaced more and more every generation that goes by. The old customs are being replaced by American culture, Christianity, the English language and a national educational system that doesn’t know anything about traditional tribal ways. For centuries, American Indian culture was not viewed as a valid culture to teach in schools and it is only recently that Native American studies have entered in academic curriculums.

 

The old oral tradition of passing down knowledge and tradition from parent to child is becoming a thing of the past. The older Native Americans fear that if the younger generations continue to refuse studying the ways of their ancestors, the history of Indian culture will be lost forever. Similarly, children of mixed cultures who live outside the reservations are often raised in the non-Indian culture and never learn about their other heritage.

 

The rate of alcoholism among the Native Americans is much higher than the national average. One in every ten American Indian deaths is alcohol related. The rate of alcohol consumption is higher than any other minority ethnic group in this country. Since the Native Americans have long been an oppressed society, the likelihood of alcoholism increases because people who experience depression, unemployment and poverty and statistically more apt to drink to access than others are. The most frequent alcohol related deaths are from car accidents and suicide. Native American women in general drink more than men, which may explain why Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder rates among the Native Americans are the highest in the country.

 

Every two hours, someone in the United States commits suicide, making it the third highest leading cause of death in the country. Native American Indian males have a rate of suicide which is almost twice that of any other racial group. In fact, the rates may be even higher than reported, since the social stigma of suicide might embarrass a family, its speculated that many suicides are reported as accidental deaths. Further, for each successful suicide, there are approximately 20 aborted or failed attempts.

While there are various factors that influence the possibility of suicide in every ethnic group, there are some which are unique to the Indian nations. The stress and mental trauma of the disintegration of their traditional culture, as well as racial conflicts and alienation. The social alienation, identity confusion and self-hate that so many Native Americans feel are strong reasons for their high alcohol and suicide rates.

ΝΙΚΟΣ ΒΕΡΟΠΟΥΛΟΣ WHITE FEATHER:

ΠΡΟΣΚΕΚΛΗΜΕΝΟΣ ΣΤΗΝ ΤΗΛΕΟΠΤΙΚΗ ΕΚΠΟΜΠΗ ΤΟΥ SKAI

"ΠΡΩΙΝΕΣ ΔΙΑΔΡΟΜΕΣ" (ΣΤΙΣ 28/1/1999 & 2/2/1999) 

ΜΕ ΠΑΡΟΥΣΙΑΣΤΗ ΤΟΝ ΚΩΣΤΗ ΠΑΡΡΑ.

ΘΕΜΑ: ΟΙ ΙΝΔΙΑΝΟΙ ΤΗΣ ΑΜΕΡΙΚΗΣ

[Note: This article is reproduced with permission from the "Multinational Monitor", Vol XVI, No. 9, September 1995] 

 

             I N D I A N   B U R I A L   G R O U N D S   F O R   

                                 N U C L E A R   W A S T E

 

                                   By Randel D. Hanson

 

              Randel D. Hanson is a freelance writer for 

                "The Circle" in Minneapolis, Minnesota.

 

WHAT DO YOU DO with a 50-year accumulation of some of the most toxic garbage ever produced? 

If federal bureaucrats and multinational corporations have their way, the nuclear industries of the world will dump high-level radioactive waste on North American Native lands.  

 

The U.S. government has spent decades searching for a  permanent repository for high-level nuclear waste. 

The Cold War's legacy is an enduring pile of toxic waste. 

A recent report by the U.S. Nuclear Weapons Cost Study Project estimated that the U.S. nuclear weapons program will end up costing $3.9 trillion. 

Meanwhile, as growing stockpiles of high-level nuclear waste are overflowing at 110 nuclear reactors across the United States, the U.S. government and private utilities are undertaking an increasingly desperate search for "solutions."  

 

Problems associated with nuclear waste disposal are "transcientific," according to former Oak Ridge National Laboratory head Alvin Weinberg. 

The staggering toxic durability of the waste means that the testing techniques of "normal science" do not apply, he says.

Given this toxicity, few communities believe that the benefits of a nuclear dump would outweigh its costs. 

In lieu of other bidders, Native Americans and First Nation Canadians are being asked to assume this burden.  

 

"Indians know that the general public doesn't want the waste around, so federal and corporate bureaucrats are using the old trick to go to 'Indian Country,' conveniently geographically removed from mainstream communities," says Lance Hughes of Oklahoma-based Native Americans for a Clean Environment. 

"The general public doesn't know anything about this move, and given the geographic and political  segregation, they probably won't hear much about it." 

Ένα συγκλονιστικό κείμενο των Ινδιάνων Λακότα (Σιού) για τους "λευκούς χριστιανούς"

Το αίμα των ιθαγενών του Νέου Κόσμου που σφαγιάστηκαν από τους "χριστιανούς" της Δύσης στο όνομα του Ιησού και του λεγόμενου απ' αυτούς "πολιτισμού Του" , πολιτισμού επιβαλλομένου με τη φωτιά και το σπαθί, κατ'ουσίαν πολιτισμού του Μαμωνά, μοιάζει με εκείνο το Γραφικό αίμα του Άβελ που βοά προς τον Κύριο από τη γη.

Ολόκληρες φυλές εξοντώθηκαν, λεηλατήθηκαν, εξανδραποδίστηκαν και δεν έφτανε η φιλότιμη προσπάθεια ολίγων ιεραποστόλων για να φυλαχθεί η αξιοπρέπεια του "δυτικοχριστιανικού πολιτισμού". Και εύστοχα παρατηρεί κάπου ο Φώτης Κόντογλου αναλογικά, αναφερόμενος στους νέγρους της αφρικανικής ηπείρου και τις εμπειρίες τους με τους παπικούς "ιεραποστόλους του Ιησού" , πώς στην φαντασία αυτών των ανθρώπων ο διάβολος δεν θα έχει μαύρο χρώμα αλλά λευκό...

Το κείμενο που ακολουθεί αναφέρεται σε δήλωση των ινδιάνων Sioux και είναι χαρακτηριστικό της αντίληψης που διαμόρφωσαν για τους Ευρωπαίους χριστιανούς :


[Λέω:] "Αν ο στρατός των Ηνωμένων Πολιτειών σκότωνε αρκετές χιλιάδες Ινδιάνους, δεν θα είχαμε πια προβλήματα". Καταλαβαίνω απο την γλώσσα που χρησιμοποιείς ότι είσαι "χριστιανός" και είσαι πρόθυμος να κάνεις ο,τιδήποτε για να διαδώσεις το έργο του Χριστού. Είσαι, χωρίς αμφιβολία, ένας πιστός του Σωτήρα των Λευκών, αλά αρνείσαι να δεχτείς πως και οι Ινδιάνοι μπορούν να έχουν τον δικό τους "Σωτήρα". Οι Ινδιανοι δεν συμπάθησαν ποτέ την χριστιανική θρησκεία όπως κηρύσσεται και εφαρμόζεται από τους Λευκούς. Θέλεις να μάθεις τον λόγο γι' αυτό; Γιατί ο καλός πατέρας όλων, μας έδωσε μια καλύτερη θρησκεία - μια θρησκεία που έχει μόνο καλά και τίποτα κακό, μια θρησκεία που είναι σύμφωνη με τις ανάγκες μας. Λέτε πως αν είμαστε καλοί, υπακούμε στις δέκα εντολές και δεν κάνουμε πια αμαρτίες, θα μας επιτραπεί στο τέλος να καθίσουμε πάνω σ' έναν άσπρο βράχο και να τραγουδάμε ύμνους στο Θεό για πάντα και να κοιτάμε από ψηλά τους ειδολολάτρες πατέρες μας, τις μητέρες, τους αδελφούς και τις αδελφές μας που θα ουρλιάζουν στην κόλαση. Δεν μπορούμε να δεχτούμε κάτι τέτοιο. Ο ηθικός κώδικας που εφαρμόζει η λευκή φυλή δεν μπορεί να συγκριθεί μ' αυτόν των Ινδιάνων.

Δεν πληρώνουμε ούτε δικηγόρους ούτε ιεροκήρυκες, αλλά δεν έχουμε ούτε το ένα χιλιοστό απο τα εγκλήματα που έχετε εσείς. Αν ο Σωτήρας μας πραγματικά έρθει, δεν θα προσπαθήσουμε να σας φέρουμε με το ζόρι στην πίστη μας. Δεν θα δέσουμε ποτέ για να κάψουμε αθώες γυναίκες στον πάσσαλο, ούτε θα κόψουμε άντρες κομμάτια τραβώνατας τους με τα άλογα, γιατί αρνιούνται ν' ακολουθήσουν στους χορούς μας των Πνευμάτων. Εσείς οι λευκοί άνθρωποι έχετε εναν Μεσσία, ακόμα κι αν πρέπει να πιστέψει κανείς στην ιστορία, σχεδόν κάθε έθνος είχε από έναν. Είχατε δώδεκα Απόστολους, εμείς έχουμε μόνο έντεκα και μερικοί από αυτούς είναι κιόλας στις στρατιωτικές φυλακές σας. Είχαμε ακόμη και μια παρθένο Μαρία και είναι κι αυτή στις φυλακές σας. Ανυπομονείτε να πιάσετε στα χέρια σας τον Μεσσία μας, για να τον ρίξετε κι αυτόν στα σίδερα. Ίσως να κάνετε κάτι τέτοιο, ίσως πραγματικά τον σταυρώσετε όπως κάνατε και με τον Άλλο, μα δεν μπορείτε να οδηγήσετε τους Ινδιάνους στην χριστιανική θρησκεία αν δεν μολύνετε το αίμα τους με το αίμα των Λευκών. Ο ουρανός του λευκού ανθρώπου είναι αποκρουστικός για την φύση του Ινδιάνου και αν η κόλαση των λευκών σας βολεύει, γιατί όχι, μπορείτε να την κρατήσετε. Σκέφτομαι ότι θα έχετε αρκετούς λευκούς παλιανθρώπους να την γεμίσετε."

 

 

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