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Guantanamo on the Platte

Update: Denver police pepper spray and beat activists

From Colorado Legal Eagles
info@coloradolegaleagles.org

For photos and more informaton, see:
http://www.coloradolegaleagles.org/

 DENVER -- Glenn Spagnuolo, one of the main organizers of Recreate 68, was interviewed on Peter Boyles on KHOW radio Tuesday morning about the pepper bullet incident on Monday. You can listen to the full interviews here:

http://www.khow.com/pages/boyles.html

Glenn said that the incident last night started around 5:30pm, whenheavily-armed police in SWAT gear began making random sweeps through Civic Center Park, harassing people sitting in the grass by poking them with nightsticks and telling them to get up and leave. Glenn complained several times to the protester's police liaison, and the police would stop the harassment, just to start it again a few minutes later. He said that happened about 4 or 5 times.

Taser Bait, on the streets of Denver

Update: Denver police stage bizarre behavior

by Brenda Norrell

Photo: An Aurora, Colorado, police officer draws his weapon on peaceful marchers, calling for freedom for political prisoners at the federal courthouse in Denver on Monday. Photo Brenda Norrell

DENVER -- It was an incredible morning in the streets of Denver, with the voices of the people spilling out through this city during the Political Prisoners March and Rally. It was clear that there is another divide underway, those who are in the Democratic National Convention with their expense accounts and those in the streets, lending powerful voices to define the future. With most US citizens in a state of post traumatic stress syndrome, the brave faced off with Denver police and marched through the streets this morning. What began as a small crowd near the Civic Center grew as hundreds joined the march through the heart of the city to the federal courthouse.

Obama, McCain: Who's really paying their fair share?

This is a bit off track for me, posting blog style. But I couldn’t resist weighing in on the latest flap in the pres race, when it turned to home ownership.

You see, I admit to being a homeowner — family and all. And my property taxes are, well, a pain in the posterior of my existence. But I pay them willingly (or they would take my house) in the belief, naively so, maybe, that the schools, city and county services they help to fund are important to fostering a better community.

Two things that tick me off on that front are fraud, waste and abuse on the part of the government entities collecting the taxes; and folks who find ways to skimp or otherwise cheat out paying their fair share. I don’t think I’m alone in that inclination.

Dakota women arrested countering Minnesota genocide

By Brenda Norrell

Dakota women were arrested on Saturday, August 16, 2008 during a counter genocide protest. Dakotas from the Yellow Medicine Dakota Community, with their allies, countered the Upper Sioux Agency State Park's program. The genocide celebration was part of the Sesquicentennial of the state of Minnesota, portraying the 1858 1st Regiment.

Chris Mato Nunpa, retired Dakota professor, said, "My daughter, Waziyata Win, and my grand-daughter, Winuna were arrested. Fortunately, they both were released later in the day.

US border wall increases risk to lives of Tohono O'odham from monsoon flash floods

US/Mexico border wall increases risk to lives of Tohono O'odham during monsoon flash floods

Flash floods damage businesses and government offices in Arizona and Mexico after Homeland Security flaunts federal laws and builds border wall

By Brenda Norrell

LUKEVILLE, Ariz. - The risk to the lives of Tohono O'odham and other residents living on the Arizona and Sonora border due to monsoon flash floods has increased because of a newly constructed border wall. Homeland Security flaunted federal laws and the laws of nature to build the border wall in 2008.

In a report made public this week, the National Park Service details the ecological and infrastructure damage in Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument caused by flood obstruction and debris accumulation along recently constructed portions of the border wall. Tohono O'odham and others reside in the area on both sides of the international border.

Two ICE Raids and 99 suspected illegal aliens in custody shows our U.S. Government’s vulnerability security infrastructure risk!

Finally, I can say thank you U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) for showing that our U.S. government’s national security critical infrastructure is as weak as a "Samson without his hair."

Nevertheless, these two raids were nothing but a “show” to justify ICE’s immigration enforcement initiatives. I reviewed some of the news video clips from the Asheville, NC raid, and the ICE spokesperson, along with his peers looked rather non-enthusiastic, frustrated and bored. I know that feeling because it is exactly the way I used to feel in 1982 when we were conducting immigration employment raids in San Francisco, CA.

Lakotah Republic plans civil disobedience fishing

FISH-IN: In the tradition of Gandhi and Martin Luther King, the Lakotah Republic will exercise its fishing rights

By Brenda Norrell

The Republic of Lakotah announced that Lakotah guaranteed their fishing rights under the 1851 Fort Laramie Treaty will exercise those fishing rights on August 25, 2008.

In a letter to South Dakota Attorney General Larry Long, the Lakotah Republic reminded the official that, "all members of the tribes to the 1851 Fort Laramie Treaty have the right to fish within the 1851 Treaty territory, which includes all of South Dakota from the east bank of the Missouri River."

Gentle Rage: Clyde Bellecourt remembers the birth of the American Indian Movement

By Brenda Norrell

SAN FRANCISCO -- Clyde Bellecourt spoke of the birth of the American Indian Movement forty years ago, remembering his mother's own legacy and also the time of the end for the priests who were controlling the Sundance, during the 40th Anniversary, "AIM For Freedom," photo exhibit.
During the culminating night of the exhibit at SomArts, July 30, Bellecourt shared his own journey and the birth of the American Indian Movement. He said his spirit name is Nee-gon-we-way-we-dun, "Thunder Before the Storm."

Guatemala Indigenous anti-mining activist assassinated

Antonio Morales, Maya Mam, community organizer assassinated, fought GoldCorp's Montana mining in Guatemala

By Brenda Norrell

Antonio Morales, Maya Mam, Guatemalan indigenous leader from the Committee of Campesino Unity, was attacked and assassinated on Thursday, August 7, 2008, morning as he returned to his home in Colotenango, Guatemala.

Morales was a national leader of the CUC, CNOC and Maya Waqib Kej, three of Guatemala's most important indigenous organizations which have actively opposed large scale mining projects, hydroelectric projects and the privatization of water, according to Tim Russo of Free Speech Radio.

Shots Fired…Officer Down! - The U.S. Customs Service in 1997 and the DHS-CBP in 2008

Introduction

This Narco News report is about two tragic shooting incidents involving two U.S. Customs Service (“Customs”) Inspectors who got shot and wounded on April 17, 1997 at the Calexico, CA International Port of Entry, and the killing of a U.S. Customs & Border Protection (“CBP”) Special Agent assigned to the CBP’s Office of Internal Affairs, Miami, FL on August 5, 2008. This author intend to bring a comparison of the two incidents and the different attention they received from the top agency’s heads under two different U.S. Presidential administrations under former president William Jefferson Clinton and president George Walker Bush.

FARC's Options

Things haven't been going very well for the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) over the last year. Missile attacks, bombardments, killing of several leaders, the death of Manuel "Sureshot" Marulanda Vélez, desertions, that Dutch girl who left her diaries lying around and of course the sneaky plot to free Ingrid Betancourt and a couple of US mercenaries.

Opinions differ on what plans the US-Colombia axis may have with the rebel force. Raúl Zibechi writes on the website of the Center for International Policy:

Court reversal on San Francisco Peaks magnifies collapse of US democracy

By Brenda Norrell

FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. -- Bending under pressure from the Bush Administration, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals reversed an earlier decision which halted plans to make sewer water into snow for San Francisco Peaks, sacred to 13 Native American Nations.

On San Francisco Peaks, medicine men hold ceremonies and gather medicine plants for healing.

Beware of politicians bearing gifts for the Cold War Hydra

See Part I of this story here:

The connection between former Kyrgyzstan president Askar Akayev and John McCain may seem oblique by the shallow, personality-driven reporting standards that dominate coverage of a presidential election. But dig a bit deeper, and that connection proves far from superficial.

Syracuse University’s Research Center: incriminating data on DHS-ICE’s deceptive practices available

Syracuse University’s Research Center: incriminating data on DHS-ICE’s deceptive practices available

“Only a handful of agencies said they have conducted annual audits to ensure their fleets are the right size. The Department of Homeland Security said it hasn't conducted a department-wide audit since the agency was created five years ago. The agency said it is “working toward that end” but doesn't yet have the resources to analyze its 41,000-vehicle fleet.” http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/nation/20080731-1039-unclesamscars.html

Day of Mourning for US Media: Revolution for Truth

By Brenda Norrell

Today is a day of mourning for the U.S. media. In case you missed its passing, columnist Roberto Rodriguez' article "Questions journalists never ask," serves as a memorial. Rodriquez' column also points out that it wasn't just the integrity of the U.S. media that died, but U.S. democracy, now on the fast track to Nazi-style dictatorship. The Bush administration and its team of multi-national corporate profiteers continue co-opting the U.S. Congress, military, police and commerce.

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