She muses

ponderings of a canadian gypsy

Archive for the 'Social Justice' Category


there is still so much to do in these final days

Posted by jodietonita on October 31, 2008

Melissa Harris-Lacewell from THE KITCHEN TABLE tells it like it is…

Yolanda,

I am in Chicago today and waiting for you and the girls to join me this evening for trick-or-treating. We will get a couple days at the American Academy of Religion Conference and then head back to NJ where we will each be part of the final days of this historic campaign.

There is still so much to do in these final days.

We have to keep fighting hateful smears. McCain-Palin have initiated an intellectual dragnet that seems to determined to sweep up respected scholars who have used their intellectual freedom to actually ask tough questions about complicated world political issues (gasp!) It was nice to be back in Hyde Park last night where I laughed and joked with my colleagues from the University of Chicago. But beneath our “pal-ing around” was an undercurrent of anxiety produced by the very factors you discussed in your last post. Who might next find their name being mispronounced by Palin since it seems that the GOP is just going through old UChicago faculty directories looking for leftists or anyone who might have a critique of the free market or of Israel?

I presented this afternoon on a panel with my colleague Dwight Hopkins. He is a member of Trinity United Church of Christ, and I attended TUCC for seven years. Together he and I discussed the ways that race and religion have been addressed and often mishandled by the media during this election. I came back to my hotel, turned on CNN, and the anchor was discussing Reverend Jeremiah Wright! ARGHHHH! Do we really have to spend the last few days of the campaign addressing this garbage?

There is still so much to do in these final days.

We have to keep bringing attention back to the issues that actually impact people’s lives. We are in a deep recession. We need to harness the power of government to create good paying jobs that provide dignity and stability. We need to find ways to protect Americans from predatory lenders and to reward savings. We are in the midst of an unending occupation of another country. We cannot win an occupation, we must simply find a safe, humane, and stable way to exit Iraq and allow her people to govern themselves. We are facing continuing racial, income, and gender inequality. We need to develop a new covenant with another as citizens so that we no longer count our neighbors as our adversaries, but instead see them as our partners in the struggle for a better country.

There is still so much to do in these final days.

We have to keep calling, knocking doors, and reminding our friends to vote. Leading in the polls means nothing. The only thing that matters is the final count of votes. Barack will not win a close election. He must win a landslide. We need Virginia, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Colorado and New Mexico. And I want Arizona just for the fun of it! Seriously, if this thing is close McCain will not concede. The results will be battled and challenged. No one wants that. We must win decisively.

There is still so much to do in these final days.

We have to remember to run the race all the way to the end. And we must run it with the philosophy Barack has taught us. Discipline, intellect, optimism. We will not allow ourselves to be discouraged by the tactics of hate and distraction. We will win with dignity and grace just as we have campaigned.

There is still so much to do in these final days.

We have to pray. For those of us who believe that there is a God active in human history we must pray for the future of our nation and of all nations.

It is not yet time to rest.

Barack Obama gave us the most eloquent closing argument in contemporary American history on Wednesday night. He used the power of television to remind Americans that we are more alike than we are different. He showed us the struggle of single moms and retired couples, of husbands that labor for their wives, and fathers who read to their daughters, he showed us how mothers keep families together, and how communities can pull together. He reminded us of his own biography and allowed us to hear our own story in the resonance of his. He has given us all the tools we need to make for ourselves the country that we want. Now it is our job to do it.

There is still so much to do because when we cross the finish line then the governing begins.

Melissa

Posted in Leadership, Politics, Social Justice | No Comments »

join me at the Facing Race conference: Nov 13-15th

Posted by jodietonita on October 31, 2008

early bird discounts end today… get on it!

From the thousands rallying for the Jena Six in Louisiana, to the outcry against the upsurge in nooses and hate crimes, to the protests against fatal police shootings, the continued struggle to recover on the Gulf Coast, and the fight for immigrants’ rights as raids rip apart families, our communities are working to change the rules so that privileges and punishments are not determined by the color of our skin.

This presidential election has created an opening for dialogue about racial justice that we haven’t seen in decades. Questions of racial justice dominate debates in academia, government and the media.

This is our moment. Critical Moments Require Critical Mass.

Facing Race is our chance to cut across the color line, claim this moving moment, and gather people of different races from across the country to discuss a myriad of issues and to outline a vision for the future of racial justice.

Advancing racial justice is not only an idea we share; it is a mission to define justice and make change.

Facing Race will explore the innovative strategies and successful models that have the power to make our racial justice moment into a reality. You can find out more about the schedule, speakers and even register right here at http://www.arc.org/content/view/487/111/

Posted in Politics, Social Justice | No Comments »

Don’t let anyone stop you from voting

Posted by jodietonita on October 30, 2008

brought to you by the wonderful peeps at Color of Change

Posted in Politics, Social Justice | No Comments »

demolished

Posted by jodietonita on October 30, 2008

palestinian camp demolished
Photo: Naye Hashlamoun/Reuters

A Palestinian is seen reflected in a mirror after shanties were demolished by Israel’s civil administration at a Bedouin encampment south of the West Bank city of Hebron.

Posted in Social Justice | No Comments »

poem for the young voter - yes we did

Posted by jodietonita on October 26, 2008

Posted in Politics, Social Justice | No Comments »

it has to STOP!

Posted by jodietonita on October 17, 2008

The Republican nominees are increasingly relying on a strategy of race-baiting and fear-mongering to win this election. It’s completely unacceptable and it has to stop.

McCain-Palin rallies have started to look more like mob scenes than political events. The candidates keep asking “who is the real Barack Obama?” (a question that also kicks off almost every McCain television ad). In response, supporters have yelled “terrorist!” and “traitor!” And the venom goes beyond Obama–one McCain/Palin supporter shouted a racial epithet at a Black member of a news crew, saying “sit down, boy.”

McCain and Palin are going down a dangerous path. Watching some of their supporters being interviewed shows the kind of fear their campaign is stoking and exploiting.McCain and Palin are clearly in the driver’s seat. They’ve personally made it a point to use “terrorist” and “Obama” in the same sentence; they have surrogates repeatedly refer to him by his middle-name;and they keep pushing the discredited guilt-by-association smears that have long been debunked.

Watch a video from Brave New Films and then a news segment showing the McCain/Palin campaign and its supporters in action. Then, please sign the open letter demanding that they reject the politics of division and fear. Color of Change will publicize the letter and make the sure the McCain campaign has to respond.

Together, we can show that Americans of all races won’t stand for this.

Thanks.

Posted in Leadership, Politics, Social Justice | No Comments »

southern Colombia

Posted by jodietonita on October 16, 2008

colombian protest
Photo: Christian Escobar Mora/AP

Indians block a road in Candelaria, in southern Colombia.

Posted in Social Justice | No Comments »

Evon Peter on Palin, Oil and Alaska

Posted by jodietonita on October 15, 2008

Reposted from EvonPeter.net

My name is Evon Peter; I am a former Chief of the Neetsaii Gwich’in tribe from Arctic
Village, Alaska and the current Executive Director of Native Movement. My
organization provides culturally based leadership development through offices in Alaska
and Arizona. My wife, who is Navajo, and I have been based out of Flagstaff, Arizona for
the past few years, although I travel home to Alaska in support of our initiatives there as
well. It is interesting to me that my wife and I find ourselves as Indigenous people from
the two states where McCain and Palin originate in their leadership.

I am writing this letter to raise awareness about the ongoing colonization and violation of
human rights being carried out against Alaska Native peoples in the name of
unsustainable progress, with a particular emphasis on the role of Sarah Palin and the
Republican leadership. My hope is that it helps to elevate truth about the nature of
Alaskan politics in relation to Alaska Native peoples and that it lays a framework for our
path to justice.

Ever since the Russian claim to Alaska and the subsequent sale to the United States
through the Treaty of Cession in 1867, the attitude and treatment towards Alaska Native
peoples has been fairly consistent. We were initially referred to as less than human
“uncivilized tribes”, so we were excluded from any dialogues and decisions regarding our
lands, lives, and status. The dominating attitude within the Unites States at the time was
called Manifest Destiny; that God had given Americans this great land to take from the
Indians because they were non-Christian and incapable of self-government. Over the
years since that time, this framework for relating to Alaska Native peoples has become
entrenched in the United States legislative and legal systems in an ongoing direct
violation of our human rights.

What does this mean? Allow me to share an analogy. If a group of people were to arrive
in your city and tell you their people had made laws, among which were:
1. What were once your home and land now belong to them (although you could live
in the garage or backyard)
2. Forced you to send your children to boarding schools to learn their language and
be acculturated into their ways with leaders who touted “Kill the American, save
the man” (based on the original statement made by US Captain Richard H. Pratt
in regards to Native American education “Kill the Indian, save the man.”)
3. Supported missionaries and government agents to forcefully (for example, with
poisons placed on the tongues of your children and withheld vaccines) convince
you that your Jesus, Buddha, Torah, or Mohammed was actually an agent of evil
and that salvation in the afterlife could only be found through believing otherwise
4. Made it illegal for you to continue to do your job to support your family, except
under strict oversight and through extensive regulation
5. Made it illegal for you to own any land or run a business as an individual and did
not allow you to participate in any form of their government, which controlled
your life (voting or otherwise)

How would this make you feel? What if you also knew that if you were to retaliate, that
you would be swiftly killed or incarcerated? How long do you think it would take for you
to forget or would you be sure to share this history with your children with the hope that
justice could one day prevail for your descendents? And most importantly to our
conversation, how American does this sound to you?

To put this into perspective, my grandfather who helped to raise me in Arctic Village was
born in 1904, just thirty-seven years after the United States laid claim to Alaska. If my
grandfather had unjustly stolen your grandfathers home and I was still living in the house
and watching you live outdoors, would you feel a change was in order? Congress
unilaterally passed most of the major US legislation that affect our people in my
grandfathers’ lifetime. There has never been a Treaty between Alaska Native Peoples and
the United States over these injustices. Each time that Alaska Native people stand up for
our rights, the US responds with token shifts in its laws and policies to appease the
building discontent, yet avoiding the underlying injustice that I believe can be resolved if
leadership in the United States would be willing to acknowledge the underlying injustice
of its control over Alaska Native peoples, our lands, and our ways of life.

United States legal history in relation to Alaska Natives has been based on one major
platform - minimize the potential for Alaska Native people to regain control of their lives,
lands, and resources and maximize benefit to the Unites States government and its
corporations. While the rest of the world, following World War II, was seeking to return
African and European Nations to their rightful owners, the United States pushed in the
opposite direction by pulling the then Territory of Alaska out of the United Nations
dialogues and pushing for Statehood into the Union. Why is it that Alaska Native Nations
are still perceived as being incapable of governing our own lands, lives, and resources
differently than African, Asian, and European nations?

Let me get specific about what is at stake and how this relates to Palin and the
Republican leadership in Alaska and across this country. To this day, Alaska Native
peoples are among the only Indigenous peoples in all of North America whose
Indigenous Hunting and Fishing Rights have been extinguished by federal legislation and
yet we are the most dependent people on this way of life. Most of our villages have no
roads that connect them to cities; many live with poverty level incomes, and all rely to
varying degrees on traditional hunting, fishing, and harvesting for survival. This has
become known as the debate on Alaska Native Subsistence.

As Alaska Governor, Palin has continued the path of her predecessor Frank Murkowski
in challenging attempts by Alaska Native people to regain their human right to their
traditional way of life through subsistence.

The same piece of unilateral federal legislation, known as the Alaska Native Claims
Settlement Act (ANCSA) of 1971, that extinguished our hunting and fishing rights, also
extinguished all federal Alaska Native land claims and my Tribe’s reservation status. In
the continental United States, this sort of legislation is referred to as ‘termination
legislation’ because it takes the rights of self-government away from Tribes. It is based in
the same age-old idea that we are not capable of governing our people, lands, and
resources. To justify these terminations, ANCSA also created Alaska Native led for-
profit corporations (which were provided the remaining lands not taken by the
government and a one time payment the equivalent of about 1/20th of the annual profits
made by corporations in Alaska each year) with a mission of exploiting the land in
partnership with the US government and outside corporations. It was a brilliant piece of
legislation for the legal termination and cultural assimilation of Alaska Natives under the
guise of progress.

Since the passage of ANCSA, political leaders in Alaska, with a few exceptions, have
maintained that, as stated by indicted Senator Ted Stevens, “Tribes have never existed in
Alaska.” They maintain this position out of fear that the real injustice being carried out
upon Alaska Natives may break into mainstream awareness and lead to a re-opening of
due treaty dialogues between Alaska Native leaders and the federal government. At the
same time the federal government chose to list Alaska Native tribes in the list of federally
recognized tribes in 1993. Governor Palin maintains that tribes were federally recognized
but that they do not have the same rights as the tribes in the continental United States to
sovereignty and self-governance, even to the extent of legally challenging our Tribes
rights pursuant to the Indian Child Welfare Act. What good are governments that can’t
make decisions concerning their own land and people?

The colonial mentality in and towards Alaska is to exploit the land and resources for
profits and power, at the expense of Alaska Native people. Governor Palin reflects this
attitude and perspective in her words and leadership. She comes from an area within
Alaska that was settled by relocated agricultural families from the continental United
States in the second half of the last century. It is striking that a leader from that particular
area feels she has a right, considering all of the injustices to Alaska Native people, to
offer Alaskan oil and resources in an attempt to solve the national energy crisis at the
Republican Convention. Palin also chose not to mention the connection between oil
development and global warming, which is wreaking havoc on Alaska Native villages,
forcing some to begin the process of relocation at a cost sure to reach into the hundreds of
millions.

Our tribes depend on healthy and abundant land and animals for our survival. For
example, my people depend on the Porcupine Caribou herd, which migrates into the
coastal plain of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge each spring to birth their young. Any
disruption and contamination will directly impact the health and capacity for my people
to continue to live in a homeland we have been blessed to live in for over 10,000 years.
This is the sacrifice Palin offered to the nation. The worst part of it is that there are viable
alternatives to addressing the energy crisis in the United States, yet Palin chooses options
that very well may result in the extinguishment of some of the last remaining intact
ecosystems and original cultures in all of North America. Palin is also promoting off
shore oil drilling and increased mining in sensitive areas of Alaska, all of which would
have a lifespan of far fewer years than my grandfather walked on this earth and which
would not even make a smidgen of an impact on national consumption rates or longer
term sustainability. McCain was once a champion of protecting the Arctic National
Wildlife Refuge and it is sad to see, that with Palin on board, he is no longer vocal and
perhaps even giving up on what he believes in to satisfy Palin’s position.

While I have much more to say, this is my current offering to elevate the conversation
about what is at stake in Alaska and for Alaska Native peoples. Please share this offering
with others and help us to make this an election that brings out honest dialogue. We have
an opportunity to bring lasting change, but only if we can be open to hearing the truth
about our situations and facing the challenges that arise.

Many thanks to all those who are taking stands for a just and sustainable future for all of
our future generations,

Evon Peter

*This essay is a personal reflection and should not be attributed to my tribe or organization.

Posted in Culture, Leadership, Politics, Social Justice | No Comments »

Barack and Curtis: Manhood, Love and Respect

Posted by jodietonita on October 15, 2008

reposted from RaceWire

A provocative new video compares and contrasts models of manhood presented by Barack Obama and 50 Cent.

The convergence and complexities of race, gender, sexual orientation, culture and power are all here.

How can Black masculinity be redefined and how can white patriarchy be challenged? How could Obama, if elected, model a different kind of manhood than his white predecessors and some of his Black contemporaries?

The 10-minute video, “Barack and Curtis: Manhood, Love and Respect” tackles the tough questions, navigates the nuances, and offers no easy answers. But it’s definitely worth a watch.

What models of manhood (or healthy and humane expressions of gender) would you like to see from our cultural and political leaders?

Posted in Culture, Politics, Social Justice | No Comments »

The country is on fire, and McCain is pissing gasoline

Posted by jodietonita on October 12, 2008

reposted from Too Sense

For so many months, the far right has been trying to convince America that Obama is secretly an angry radical, that Michelle holds a racial grudge against white people, that Rev. Wright hates America. How bitterly ironic, then, and how desperately sad it is that the real rage, the radicalism, the animosity…is coming from the right’s supporters.

McCain’s public rallies have descended into cries that Obama is a terrorist, and calls for his head to be cut off. McCain himself said nothing to correct an audience member who referred to Obama as a socialist and a hooligan. One of McCain’s senior advisers referred to Obama as “some guy off the street.” What we are seeing is the early stages of a blood frenzy. Old, old anxieties and resentments are being stoked, and directed against Obama the “other” as a convenient scapegoat for what ails the audience member. The (so far) sporadic calls for violence are going un-checked, which is, in itself, a form of tacit encouragement.

The country is on fire, and McCain is pissing gasoline.

Coming from the South, and being a student of her history, I can tell you that these are forces that cannot easily be contained, once unleashed. The old stories of blacks usurping white power during Reconstruction have not gone away, nor have the tales of black violence during the most tumultuous phase of the Civil Rights Movement. These resentments have been out there, covered by a thin coat of anti-welfare rhetoric (and now the effort to blame the mortgage crisis on poor black people who had the nerve to buy houses).

They never went away, they just became the subtext for much of our political discourse. Only now, they are less and less a matter of subtext. They are being brought to the forefront, and inflamed. To all those thinking that somehow America had “transcended race” via Obama’s nomination, here is your undenaible proof that no such transcendance has taken place. For all of the Benetton ads, Cosby Shows, and “Yes We Can” videos, we have not excised the emotional cancer of our collective past. At most, it has only ever been in remission, waiting for the chance to grow again.

In a way, I think that Ta-Nehisi may be a little too kind in his appraisal of McCain’s actions:

I’ve been thinking about this McCain-Palin Obama “palling around with terrorist” idea more lately. The saddest thing about many Republicans isn’t just that they disagree with liberals on race–it’s they are largely ignorant on race. When the McCain campaign cast the spell of diabolical jingoism, they have no idea of the forces they are toying with. We remember Martin Luther King’s murder as a sad and tragic event. Less remembered is the fact that ground-work for King’s murder was seeded, not simply by rank white supremacy, but by people who slandered King as a communist.

They have no idea of the forces they are toying with? With respect to TC, there’s just no way that the Republicans don’t know what they’re doing. The Dixiecrats, after all, became closely intertwined with the core power structure of the GOP when they switched over from being Democrats. If any group of people has collective knowledge about the nature of these emotional forces, it’s the Dixiecrats. For most of their period of ascendancy in the South (from the Tilden-Hayes Compromise onward), the Dixiecrats’ hold on power was predicated on manipulating those exact emotions. There is no credible basis to assume that somehow the rest of the GOP remained ignorant of these things after they welcomed the Dixiecrats with open arms.

No, the Republicans know. They know, and they continue. There is nothing innocent in their conduct. The road that the GOP has put themselves on, the road that they want the rest of us to take, leads directly to black preachers bleeding out on hotel balconies, to small chidren blown to pieces in their own church, to presidential candidates dying in hotel kitchens. The road to Hell is paved with political intentions.

Posted in Politics, Social Justice | No Comments »