Thursday, March 19, 2009

6th Anniversary of U.S. Invasion Of Iraq (March 2009)

Aloha/Yasou/Saluton/Hello/Hola/Bonjour All,

it's now March 19, 2009, the 6th anniversary of the U.S. invasion of Iraq
there's many activities that are happening in relation to this organized by different groups.

Saturday March 21 Washington DC (National Capital) www.PentagonMarch.org
Saturday March 21 NYC www.WarResistersLeague.org (NYC chapter)
Saturday March 21 everywhere www.TroopsOutNow.org

and

Friday April 3 March On Wall Street (Money For Jobs, Housing, HealthCare, Not Corporations & the War Machine) www.BailoutPeople.org

for news about activities worldwide, check out www.indymedia.org

good to be back after a long hiatus on blogger, you can also still check me out the myspace site
www.myspace.com/JesseLokahiHeiwa

Labels:

Monday, August 21, 2006

Jesse Lokahi Heiwa on myspace
www.myspace.com/JesseLokahiHeiwa

great links to bands, peoples, causes.
Ain't no power like the power of the people,
'cause the power of the people don't stop

Friday, August 18, 2006

STOP THE MERCHANTS OF DEATH http://www.warresisters.org/smod/smod_hp.shtml

STOP THE MERCHANTS OF DEATH
(the military-industrial complex)
http://www.warresisters.org/smod/smod_hp.shtml

Monday, August 14, 2006

NoMoreDeaths/NoMasMuertes

No More Deaths/No Mas Muertes
Humanitarian Aid Is Not A Crime

http://www.NoMoreDeaths.org/

No Human Being Is Illegal

Sunday, August 13, 2006

FIST-Fight Imperialism Stand Together http://FISTyouth.blogspot.com/

FIST-Fight Imperialism, Stand Together
http://FISTyouth.blogspot.com/

Wednesday, August 09, 2006

Thur Aug 10 7PM "Act of War: Overthrow of the Hawaiian Nation"

Thur Aug 10 7PM "Act of War: Overthrow of the Hawaiian Nation"
at www.Bluestockings.com (directions/location at end)

ACT OF WAR: THE OVERTHROW OF THE HAWAIIAN NATION"
See Hawaiian history through Hawaiian eyes. In 1893, armed troops from the U.S.S. Boston landed at Honolulu in support of a coup d'etat against the constitutional sovereign of the nation of Hawai'i. The event marked the culmination of a century of foreign intervention in Hawai'i. Today, after another century of dispossession, the people of Hawai'i, the Kanaka Maoli, are asserting their right to self-determination. A discussion will follow the film, lead by Jesse Lokahi Heiwa of the Hawai'i Solidarity Committee.

Bluestockings is located in the Lower East Side of Manhattan at 172 Allen Street between Stanton and Rivington - which means that we are 1 block south of Houston and 1st Avenue.By train: We are 1 block south of the F train's 2nd Avenue stop and just 5 blocks from the JMZ-line's Essex / Delancey Street stop.By car: If you take the Houston exit off of the FDR, then turn left onto Essex (aka Avenue A), then right on Rivington, and finally right on Allen, you will be very, very close.

Monday, August 07, 2006

Indigenous Peoples & Militarization

Statement of Bobby Castillo LPDC International Spokesperson for Leonard Peltier Defense Committee,
UN COMMISSION ON HUMAN RIGHTS
TWENTY THIRD SESSION
JULY 31- AUG 4, 2006
Item 4
Review of developments pertaining to the promotion and protection of human
rights and fundamental freedoms of indigenous peoples
(b) Principle theme "Utilization of Indigenous Peoples' Lands by
Non-Indigenous Authorities, Groups or Individuals for Military Purpose"
Mr. Chairperson,
The last major campaigns by the U.S. Army against Indigenous People in North
America took place in the late 1800s. But the military is still dangerous
to Indigenous Peoples in the Western hemisphere today. A recent study
contends the dramatic expansion of U.S. military bases during the 20th
century was largely concentrated in the same remote, arid places where
Indian reservations were located. That means Indigenous People's could be
disproportionately exposed to toxic chemicals and unexploded bombs, compared
to non- Indigenous People's , according to the report by Gregory Hooks of
Washington State University. Two world wars and the Cold War "pushed the
United States to produce, test and deploy weapons of unprecedented
toxicity," the study said. "Native Americans have been left exposed to the
dangers of this toxic legacy."
The Department of Defense has acknowledged the problems, quoting a 2001
department report that said Indian lands have "hazardous materials,
unexploded ordnance (UXO), abandoned equipment, unsafe buildings, and
debris." The government estimates that unexploded ordnance, which can
include mines, nerve gases and explosive shells, probably contaminates 20 to
50 million acres of land in the United States and would take centuries to
clean up at current rates.
By 1916, the U.S. Army owned about 1.5 million acres of land, and expanded
dramatically during World War I. By 1940, the Army owned about 2 million
acres of land. The huge build-up to World War II saw the Army acquire
another 8 million acres. Most of those lands were in the vicinity or
contiguous to Indian reservations. . Conventional weapons in World War II
were far more lethal than weapons from previous wars, and the United States
has led the world in the production of weapons of mass destruction,
including nuclear, biological and chemical weapons.
Today there are plans for a Pentagon-led experiment that involves detonating
700 tons of explosives at the Nevada Test Site on Western Shoshone
traditional land which is part of an effort to design a weapon that can
penetrate solid rock formations in which a country might store nuclear
weapons or other weapons of mass destruction.
The test will involve nearly 40 times the amount of commercial ammonium
nitrate and fuel oil explosive set off in the largest open-air, non-nuclear
blast at the site to date. In 2002, 18 tons of explosives were set off at
the Nevada Test Site. The Western Shoshone sovereign nation has always
condemned the use of their traditional lands for bomb testing. They consider
such practices as a violation of their treaty rights.
The Leonard Peltier Defense Committee condemns also all military test on
Indigenous lands or elsewhere which are especially being designed to kill
our brothers and sisters in Iraq, Palestine and Lebanon today. Indigenous
people traditional values consider that all life is sacred so we cannot
support State governments who are using military forces to bring death and
destruction.
To conclude, we fully support Professor Alfonso Martinez words on its
working paper on "Indigenous peoples and conflict resolution", stating "
This is a major source of conflict, which often results in either the forced
eviction of indigenous peoples, or life-threatening circumstances connected
with nearby warfare. The State's power to `extinguish` aboriginal titles to
lands on the basis of national security needs is often used to give license
to armed forces to launch national defense projects on indigenous lands
including the construction of military bases, testing grounds and territory
for war games."
No indigenous land should be used for military reason because this is
against our values and traditions.
Thank you Mr. Chairperson,
Bobby Castillo LPDC International Spokesperson
Leonard Peltier Defense Committee

Al-Fatiha Open Letter Concering WorldPride Jerusalem

Al-Fatiha Open Letter Concerning WorldPride Jerusalem
Posted by: "Al-Fatiha - LGBTIQ Muslims" gaymuslims@yahoo.com gaymuslims
Sun Aug 6, 2006 5:04 pm (PST)
Open Letter to the LGBTIQ Community and WorldPride ParticipantsAs LGBTIQ Muslims and allies, the Al-Fatiha Foundation is torn, but united in our boycott of WorldPride in Jerusalem. As a religious organization, Al-Fatiha embraces the great symbolism that WorldPride in Jerusalem represents: the bringing together of LGBTIQ people in a city regarded as holy by Islam, Judaism and Christianity. Yet, this WorldPride will not be a bringing together of people; Palestinians and the vast majority of Muslims will continue to be denied access to the city of Jerusalem. Al-Fatiha cannot, in good faith, support participation in WorldPride held in a segregated Jerusalem, under an Israeli apartheid system.There is no pride in a system of apartheid institutionalized by the Israeli government and enforced by the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) against Palestinian civilians. Palestinians living in the West Bank and Gaza are routinely denied freedom of movement and unrestricted access to Jerusalem. Palestinians must carry identity cards to go anywhere, and if granted, special permits to enter or exit Jerusalem. Every day, Palestinians must endure numerous checkpoints which restrict and often prohibit their travel for work, for education, and for healthcare. The escalating violence targeting civilians in Palestine/Israel precludes freedom of movement for everyone, regardless of sexuality, religion or ethnicity. There is no pride in collective punishment of millions of people, in wholesale denial of food, water, adequate shelter, right to property, freedom of movement, access to health care and hospitals, access to education, right to earn a living, right to integrity and liberty. These are basic human rights. And, these are human rights that are systematically violated by policies and practices of the Israeli government and the IDF on a daily basis throughout Palestine. The recent Israeli bombing of a water treatment plant and the sole power plant that supplies electricity to sixty-five percent of Gaza Strip's 1.4 million inhabitants is just one example of collective punishment experienced by all Palestinians--regardless of religion, political or ideological persuasion, sexual _expression or identity. To date, thousands of Palestinians are still without access to clean water and electricity during the hottest summer months. In addition, the recent systematic violence by Israel targeting civilian lives in Lebanon and the deliberate annihilation of Lebanese infrastructure of water and electric power plants, airports, seaports, highways, schools and hospitals further widens the scope of collective punishment of millions of innocent civilians.As an organization, and as a community that spans all continents of the globe, Al-Fatiha stands for justice, peace and self-determination for all people. We believe that all people have the inherent right to liberty, and to freedom of sexual and religious _expression. We equally believe that all people have inviolable human rights, regardless of ethnicity, culture, or nationality. The Al-Fatiha Foundation stands in solidarity with the many individuals and organizations, such as ASWAT and Helem, which are actively working for nonviolent, peaceful solutions to the violations of human rights in Palestine/Israel, and now Lebanon. We envision a time when all people, regardless of faith, sexuality, gender, ethnicity, culture, or nationality, may celebrate a true WorldPride in a united Jerusalem. In Struggle and Solidarity,Al-Fatiha Board of Directorshttp://www.al-fatiha.org/