Monday, February 13, 2017


Army veterans return to Standing Rock to form a human shield against police

A growing group of military veterans are willing to put their bodies between Native American activists and the police trying to remove them

Jake Pogue, a 32-year-old marine corps vet, returned to the Sacred Stone camp on Friday.
Jake Pogue, a 32-year-old marine corps vet, returned to the Sacred Stone camp on Friday. Photograph: Sam Levin for the Guardian

US veterans are returning to Standing Rock and pledging to shield indigenous activists from attacks by a militarized police force, another sign that the fight against the Dakota Access pipeline is far from over.
Army veterans from across the country have arrived in Cannon Ball, North Dakota, or are currently en route after the news that Donald Trump’s administration has allowed the oil corporation to finish drilling across the Missouri river.


The growing group of military veterans could make it harder for police and government officials to try to remove hundreds of activists who remain camped near the construction site and, some hope, could limit use of excessive force by law enforcement during demonstrations. 
“We are prepared to put our bodies between Native elders and a privatized military force,” said Elizabeth Williams, a 34-year-old air force veteran, who arrived at Standing Rock with a group of vets late on Friday. “We’ve stood in the face of fire before. We feel a responsibility to use the skills we have.”
It is unclear how many vets may arrive to Standing Rock; some organizers estimate a few dozen are on their way, while other activists are pledging that hundreds could show up in the coming weeks. An estimated 1,000 veterans traveled to Standing Rock in December just as the Obama administration announced it was denying a key permit for the oil company, a huge victory for the tribe.

The veterans camp at Standing Rock.
Pinterest
 The veterans camp at Standing Rock. Photograph: Sam Levin for the Guardian

The massive turnout – including a ceremony in which veterans apologized to indigenous people for the long history of US violence against Native Americans – served as a powerful symbol against the $3.7bn pipeline.
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But the presence of vets was not without controversy. Some said the groups were disorganized and unprepared to camp in harsh winter conditions, and others lamented that they weren’t following the directions of the Native Americans leading the movement.
Vets with post-traumatic stress disorder also suffered in the cold and chaotic environment without proper support, said Matthew Crane, a US navy veteran who is helping coordinate a return group with the organization VeteransRespond. His group has vowed to be self-sufficient and help the activists, who call themselves “water protectors”, with a wide range of services, including cleanup efforts, kitchen duties, medical support and, if needed, protection from police.
“This is a humanitarian issue,” said Crane, 33. “We’re not going to stand by and let anybody get hurt.”
On Friday afternoon, as snow rapidly melted during an unusually warm day in Cannon Ball, Jake Pogue helped organize a vets camp area at Sacred Stone, the first camp that emerged last spring in opposition to the pipeline.
“We’re not coming as fighters, but as protectors,” said the 32-year-old marine corps vet, noting that he was concerned about police escalating tactics. “Our role in that situation would be to simply form a barrier between water protectors and the police force and try to take some of that abuse for them.”
Since last fall, police have made roughly 700 arrests, at times deploying water cannons, Mace, rubber bullets, teargas, pepper spray and other less-than-lethal weapons. Private guards for the pipeline have also been accused of violent tactics.
“We have the experience of standing in the face of adverse conditions – militarization, hostility, intimidation,” said Julius Page, a 61-year-old veteran staying at the vets camp.
Dan Luker, a 66-year-old veteran who visited Standing Rock in December and returned this month, said that for many who fought in Vietnam or the Middle East it was “healing” to help water protectors.

Julius Page a 61-year-old veteran: ‘We have the experience of standing in the face of adverse conditions.’
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 Julius Pag,e a 61-year-old veteran: ‘We have the experience of standing in the face of adverse conditions.’ Photograph: Sam Levin for the Guardian

“This is the right war, right side,” said Luker, a Vietnam vet from Boston. “Finally, it’s the US military coming on to Sioux land to help, for the first time in history, instead of coming on to Sioux land to kill natives.”
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Luker said he was prepared to be hit by police ammunition if necessary: “I don’t want to see a twentysomething, thirtysomething untrained person killed by the United States government.”
LaDonna Brave Bull Allard, founder of the Sacred Stone camp and a Standing Rock tribe member, said she welcomed the return of the vets.
“The veterans are going to make sure everything is safe and sound,” she said, adding, “The people on the ground have no protection.”
At Standing Rock, indigenous activists say the mass arrests and police violencehave led many of them to develop PTSD, suffering symptoms that many veterans understand well.
“This historical trauma of indigenous communities in this country is very real. It’s tragic,” said Crane. “The military has a lot of the same problems.”
Aubree Peckham, a member of the Mescalero Apache tribe who has been at Standing Rock for months, was in tears on Friday as she described the way indigenous water protectors have bonded with vets.
“We don’t know how to protect ourselves against the tactical weapons they are using,” she said. “They are getting us better prepared.”
Peckham said the affection was mutual: “We are able to talk about PTSD. And they finally feel like they are understood.

PRESS RELEASE: Trump Ill-Informed About Value of U.S.-Russian Nuclear Arms Reduction Treaty

PRESS RELEASE: Trump Ill-Informed About Value of U.S.-Russian Nuclear Arms Reduction Treaty

 

Disturbing information. respond as you can.
Shelagh

---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Arms Control Association <aca@armscontrol.org>
Date: Thu, Feb 9, 2017 at 1:04 PM
Subject: PRESS RELEASE: Trump Ill-Informed About Value of U.S.-Russian Nuclear Arms Reduction Treaty
To: Shelagh Foreman <shelagh@masspeaceaction.org>


Trump Ill-Informed About Value of U.S.-Russian Nuclear Arms Reduction Treaty

Statement by Executive Director, Daryl G. Kimball
For Immediate Release: February 9, 2017
Media Contacts: Daryl G. Kimball, executive director, (202) 463-8270 ext. 107Kingston Reif, director for disarmament policy, (202) 463-8270 ext. 105
(Washington, DC)—According to an exclusive Reuters story published this afternoon, President Donald Trump denounced the landmark 2010 New START agreement in his first telephone call with Russian President Vladimir Putin. Reuters also reported that when Putin raised the option of extending New START, Mr. Trump had to ask his aides what the treaty was.
The 2010 New START agreement has advanced U.S. and global interests by lowering and capping the two nation’s excessive strategic deployed nuclear arsenals, both of which remained poised on launch-under-attack alert status, meaning that thousands of nuclear weapons could be launched by the U.S. and Russian leaders within minutes of the go order.
The most important responsibility of any American president is to reduce nuclear dangers and to avoid nuclear catastrophe. Unfortunately, Mr. Trump appears to be clueless about the value of this key nuclear risk reduction treaty and the unique dangers of nuclear weapons.
A wide-range of U.S. national security leaders, as well as U.S. military officials, continue to assess that New START remains squarely in the U.S. national interest and that terminating or withdrawing from the agreement would undermine U.S. security. Ending New START would irresponsibly free Russia of any limits on its strategic nuclear arsenal and terminate the inspections that provide us with significant additional transparency about Russian strategic nuclear forces.
It has been longstanding U.S. policy to seek to further reduce the role and number of nuclear weapons in U.S. policy. The five most recent U.S. presidents, including Barack Obama, George W. Bush, Bill Clinton, George H.W. Bush, and Ronald Reagan, negotiated agreements with Russia to reduce their nuclear stockpiles. During his confirmation hearing last month, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson expressed his support for New START and continued engagement with Russia and other nuclear-armed countries on seeking further verifiable reductions of nuclear weapons stockpiles.
Trump and his team must get smart about New START and the unique dangers of nuclear weapons. Before the end of his term in office, Trump will need to decide whether to invite Russia to extend New START for another five years and/or negotiate a new arms reduction treaty.
The United States and Russia should work together to build down, not build up. With up to 1,550 deployed strategic nuclear weapons allowed under the 2010 New START agreement and no limits on the tactical nuclear weapons possessed by each side, Russia and the United States have far more weapons than is necessary to deter nuclear attack by the other or by another nuclear-armed country.
Further nuclear reductions would also save both countries tens of billions of dollars in their ongoing programs to replace their current arsenals and would strengthen global nonproliferation and nuclear risk reduction efforts.
In 2013, President Barack Obama, with input from the Joint Chiefs of Staff and other elements of the national security establishment, determined that the United States can reduce its nuclear force by another one-third below New START levels and still meet deterrence requirements.
As President Obama said in his last news conference Jan. 18 “… there remains a lot of room for both countries to reduce our nuclear stockpiles.”
RESOURCES:
  1. U.S. Strategic Nuclear Forces Under New START (February 2017)
  2. Russian Strategic Nuclear Forces Under New START (October 2016)
  3. New Report Calls for Russia and the West to Move Back from the Brink (June 2016) 
  4. New START at a Glance (August 2012)
###

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In Boston- ALL DIAMONDS ARE BLOOD DIAMONDS! Valentine's day event by Uhuru Solidarity Movement

Uhuru Solidarity Movement Boston presents:
ALL DIAMONDS ARE BLOOD DIAMONDS!
February 14th, 2017
6:30-9:00pm
@ Parts and Crafts, 577 Somerville Avenue, Somerville
$5-10 sliding scale (and bring diamonds if you have them!)
Wheelchair Accessible

Please join us for a presentation to deepen our understanding of the
colonialist diamond industry and the theft of diamonds and exploitation
of African labor that serve as a bloody, brutal backdrop to the annual
romantic Valentine’s celebrations in European and North American
communities. We call on white people to turn over their blood diamonds
to Black Star Industries so they become Certified Liberated Diamonds!

Showing videos clips by, with discussion after:
- PENNY HESS, Chairwoman of the African People's Solidarity Committee;
on the history of blood diamonds
- FENTY THOLLEY, from the African People's Socialist Party in Sierra
Leone (where many blood diamonds are stolen from); on the issue locally
- BLACK STAR INDUSTRIES, the liberated African economy; on the history
of Africa and the rise of capitalism.

We will be selling copies of Penny Hess's in-depth historical text, “All
Diamonds Are Blood Diamonds: The Truth About the Diamond Trade” for $3
each. It is also available here:
http://www.apscuhuru.org/analysis/diamonds/diamonds_web.pdf

The proceeds benefit the struggle of African people to reclaim the
control of their wealth, resources and labor!
Facebook event to share: https://www.facebook.com/events/1468146916528715/

The Uhuru Solidarity Movement (USM) is an organization of white people
that works under the leadership of the African People's Socialist Party.
We organize in the white community for reparations to African people.
www.uhurusolidarity.org
www.facebook.com/usmboston
usmboston@riseup.net

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In Boston - 2/21 Generation Revolution

In honor of Black History Month, SubDrift is excited to present the
Boston premiere of "Generation Revolution," a feature-length documentary
film that brings to screen the powerful story of London’s new generation
of black and brown activists. View the trailer here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cq0-BGmE9PQ
<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cq0-BGmE9PQ>

In an era of Brexit and Trump, it is important to consider how
communities of color can stand in solidarity with each other both
locally and globally, and how arts can be a vehicle for social change.
The UK-based co-directors of "Generation Revolution," Usayd Younis and
Cassie Quarless (who are of South Asian and black descent,
respectively), will be present for Q&A and discussion after the film.

EMW Bookstore <https://www.facebook.com/emwbookstore/>
934 Massachusetts Ave, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139
6:30-9:30 PM
<https://www.facebook.com/emwbookstore/>

We ask for a $5-10 donation to support the powerful work of these
emerging filmmakers.

More about "Generation Revolution" here: http://www.genrevfilm.com/

-----
Subcontinental Drift Boston (SubDrift) is part of a national movement
building creative community amongst local South Asians. Through regular
open mics and other programming, we create space for powerful artistic
expression and collaboration. All are welcome!

Follow us on Twitter/Instagram @subdriftboston

https://www.facebook.com/events/624996257705412/

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