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  • Thanksgiving?

    Current mood:awake

    Reposted from Shelby's Blog...which was apparently reposted fro a vegan Hip hop blog...Very interesting...
    Dan Brook

    En Espanol: Celebrando el Genocidio
    on ZNet

    Many people annually get as stuffed as their turkeys in celebration of the Thanksgiving holiday. Thanksgiving is a quintessentially American holiday, so much so that it is not just a holiday, but really is (as the etymology implies) one of our Holy Days, almost universally celebrated by Americans. In its sacredness, families get together to (unintentionally?) celebrate one genocide (against Native Americans) by committing another (against turkeys). Can we celebrate in good faith and conscience?

    On Thanksgiving Day, we give thanks. We give thanks for being the invader, the exploiter, the dominator, the greedy, the gluttonous, the colonizer, the thief, indeed the genocidaire, rather than on the other side of imperialism's zero-sum murderous game. As Mark Twain points out in his War Prayer, wishing and being thankful for one's own success and victory is, at the very same time, wishing and being thankful for another's defeat and destruction. Do we want to make these kinds of wishes and give these kinds of thanks?

    The Lebanese poet Kahlil Gibran declared that "it is the honor of the murdered that they are not the murderers". Perhaps, but it is a very difficult honor to uphold. Native Americans, at least those who have survived the over 500 year genocidal project, are the poorest ethnic group in the richest country of the world. Each year, a group of Native Americans gather at Plymouth Rock on Thanksgiving Day to mourn and fast in honor of their people and in memory of what is lost. What do we want to be honored for? What honors are Americans thankful for?

    It was once earnestly asked by Native Americans, "Why do you take by force what you can have by love?" Christopher Columbus reports in his personal diary that when he arrived in the Americas he was amazed. The Arawaks, with curiosity and joy, came to greet the people coming off the ships from Europe. The Arawaks (whom Columbus mistakenly thought were Indians) were a peaceful people, by all accounts, willing to share anything they had, offering both emotional kindness and their physical objects. Columbus describes how remarkable these people were. So innocent of weapons and violence, Arawak people would initially reach out their hands to feel the strange, shiny objects called swords. The Arawaks would only "work" for a few hours a day, "spending" the rest of their time relaxing, socializing, and creating their culture in the ways that people most enjoy. Columbus also tells of how the Arawaks had no "shame", being able to walk around naked or make love whenever they pleased. With the tiny amount of gold on their island, they fashioned jewelry to adorn themselves. As with many other pre-contact indigenous groups, the Arawaks essentially lived in Utopia. Can Americans be thankful for living in a utopian society? Are we thankful for having destroyed one? Should we be grateful for having so many deadly weapons? For being so greedy for gold, both actual and metaphorical?

    As Kevin Danaher of Global Exchange is fond of pointing out, Columbus could have done one of a few different things after encountering the Arawaks of whom he was so impressed: (1) Columbus could have quit his travels and lived the rest of his days amongst this remarkable people. In fact, millions of people today spend thousands of dollars and their precious couple of weeks of vacation trying to experience modern conditions resembling these ancient ones. (2) Columbus could also have continued on his journeys, exploring other islands, encountering new peoples, and searching for India and elsewhere with which to trade. While doing so, he could have expanded and developed his writings, perhaps doing valuable ethnographic and comparative sociological research. (3) Another possibility is that Columbus could have rushed back to Europe, declaring the wonders of Arawak society and urging that the best minds of Europe go to visit and study the Arawaks. As a result of doing so, Europeans could have incorporated aspects of Arawak society into their own, if not emulating it altogether. Are we proud of and thankful for our hubris and ethnocentrism?

    Of course, Columbus did none of these. Apparently, there was a fourth possibility. With grave implications, Columbus wrote in his diary that with fifty men he could enslave the entire population and capture all their gold. This was no empty boast. The "savage" Arawaks were enslaved, many were tortured, their labor exploited, and their wealth stolen and shipped off to Europe. During this process of imperialist superexploitation, men had their hands chopped off, women had their breasts sliced and their pregnant bellies cut open, babies were thrown into the air, sometimes crashing to the ground and other times being impaled on those strange, shiny swords, presumably all in the name of Christianity, Civilization, and, eventually, Capitalism. The Arawaks were literally exploited to death and they are now extinct, all of them having been killed off through virulent brutality, overwork, and disease. Are Americans thankful they weren't Arawaks? Are we thankful for not being the dehumanized "Other"?

    The Pilgrims later came to America to escape religious persecution from the British, apparently in order to commit ethnic and religious persecution against the Native Americans and, later on, others. And this they did, and we in fact continue to do, effectively and mercilessly. At the time of the first Thanksgiving in 1621, it was also the dawn of another type of genocide. 1619 marks the first year that human beings were brutally "imported" from Africa to become slaves in America, if they happened to survive the cruel capture and horrific Atlantic crossing. So while Africans were being heartlessly torn away from their homes and families, viciously enslaved and dehumanized, tortured and killed, Native Americans were being attacked and annihilated. By the time that President Lincoln re-invented and instituted the Thanksgiving Day tradition in the early 1860s, the US was fighting its civil war. The US Civil War may have been fought over slavery (and labor more generally), though it was certainly not fought for the slaves (or for laborers). Sadly, there is much, much more to the tragic history of genocide and US complicity. Is it for this legacy that Americans give thanks? Are Americans thankful for the results of racism and classism?

    In Europe, during the 1930s and 1940s, various demographic groups were being systematically targeted by the Nazis, including leftists and unionists, people with physical and mental disabilities, Jews and Jehovah's Witnesses, gays and lesbians, the Roma (so-called Gypsies) and the small number of Blacks, as well as other misfortunate minorities. Although we now know that the US had accurate aerial photographs of the rail lines leading to and from the death camps since 1941, among other pertinent information obtained even earlier, the US did not enter the war against fascist Germany until almost 1942, only after the US was physically attacked by Japan. Even then, however, the US neither bombed the rail lines or the death camps themselves, nor allowed in large numbers of refugees from fascism. Indeed, just like Haitians in the 1990s and Afghans in 2001, Jews in the 1940s were sometimes turned back to their respective Hell. Millions and millions of people died unnecessarily. Adding insult to injury, the US government even paid war reparations to US corporations, including General Motors, which were supplying the Nazi military with much-needed machinery and vehicles, for the damage done to their German factories due to the Allied bombing campaign. (The US government went further by guaranteeing safe passage for many Nazi officers and even employing a number of them, some of whom helped advance biological and chemical weaponry as well as death penalty technology in the US. Other Nazi officers were supported, especially in Europe and Latin America, as an oppositional force against real or suspected communism.) Likewise, the US was seemingly uninterested in Japan's genocide against the Chinese in Nanking, and then did (and does) little to stop China's genocide of the Tibetans since the 1950s. The US has also never been interested in the genocide against the Kurds or Armenians. The US was interested, however, in setting up concentration camps in 1942 for Japanese-Americans and, to a much lesser extent, Germans and Italians. Are Americans thankful for our hypocrisy and selective democracy?

    In 1965, the US supported and facilitated genocide in Indonesia. Under the US-supported military dictatorship, half a million to a million communist-sympathizing peasants were killed in Indonesia. Their lives are considered so worthless that a more accurate number of those killed is nearly impossible. (A more recent example of this mentality is from the Gulf War, during which US bulldozing tanks buried an unknown number of slaughtered Iraqis in the desert. When asked how many were killed and buried in these mass unmarked graves, General Colin Powell coldly replied that he wasn't interested and didn't care. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright followed up that mentality by stating on TV that the hundreds of thousands of additional kids who have died since the war, due to sanctions, are a worthwhile price to pay. For whom?) The US supplied some 90% of the weapons and training to the Indonesian military, in addition to favorable trade and investment, but also provided logistics and specific names of Indonesian activists to be targeted for death. The Indonesian military gladly obliged, taking the US hit list and then accomplishing their task as best as possible. Since 1975, similarly, the US has sponsored and abetted genocide in Indonesian-occupied East Timor, culminating in the latest round of "newsworthy" massacres at the end of 1999. Nearly the same time that the modern Indonesian/East Timorese tragedy began, the US condoned genocide in Cambodia, after committing acts of genocide throughout South East Asia in the 1960s and 1970s. In the 1980s, the US supported vicious and murderous wars in Central America, central Asia, and southern Africa, in which hundreds of thousands, perhaps millions, were killed, with many more disabled, displaced, and disappeared. The US also sat idly by during the genocide in Rwanda in the 1990s, while almost totally ignoring slavery and genocide in Sudan throughout that entire decade. Furthermore, the US persists in continuously building, vigorously marketing, and violently employing chemical, biological, nuclear and other weapons of mass destruction. Are Americans proud of US foreign policy? Of supporting murderous dictators and regimes? Of maintaining deadly double standards?

    At the same time that the US has, by far, the most expensive and powerful military on Earth, it also has a high poverty rate, the largest prison population, a relatively high infant mortality rate, tremendous overconsumption and waste, a stingy and demeaning welfare program, an active capital punishment program, and almost as many privately owned guns as people. Are Americans proud of US domestic policy? Of supporting murderous policies and programs? Of maintaining deadly discriminatory standards?

    There are many reasons to celebrate and Americans have a lot to be thankful for. Genocide should not be one of those things. What are we doing on Thanksgiving Day? We would be appropriately appalled if Germany or Austria were celebrating a Holocaust Memorial Day, where Germans and Austrians got together with their families for dinner on their official day off, joyously remembering the things that are important to them, just as American families get together for Thanksgiving Day and think of things to be thankful for. (Similar scenarios, just as ugly, could be constructed for white supremacists, rapists, and murderers.) Some activities and events are inappropriate just because of the context in which they occur and the history of suffering they represent. Thanksgiving Day is clearly part of that history. Are Americans thankful for forgetting their own history, for having collective cultural and political amnesia?

    We do not have to feel guilty, but we do need to feel something. At the very least, we need to reflect on how and what we feel. We should also review our history and what it means to us and others, while we must rethink our adopted traditions, including our Thanksgiving High Holy Day. My personal (and therefore political!) resolution for the new year is to stop celebrating genocide. American Thanksgiving may be sacred to some, but it's utterly profane to me.





    **Dan Brook earned a B.A. in Socio-Political Economy from Clark University, an M.A. in Political Science from San Francisco State University, and an M.A. and Ph.D. in Sociology from the University of California, Davis. Dan's work has been published in various journals from the American Journal of Economics and Sociology to Z Magazine. He lives in San Francisco and is currently a freelance instructor of sociology and social science.

    You can read a book review of Michael Parenti's "History as Mystery" by Dan Brook here

    Also, Dan is the author of "Sociological Snippets" which can be found in The Sociology Shop HERE

    Dan's email address is brook@california.com


    ___________________________________________________________________

    and a special note to those concerned w/animal rights, which i hope is everyone reading this:

    how is it that one take the stance of modifying a cultural practice that does celebrate genocide by eating tofurky think their act is revolutionary? please be consistent and consider the rights of ALL animals, humans are w/out a doubt included and your protesting the murder of turkeys on "thanksgiving" all the while supporting and perpetuating a ritual that is nothing but a slap in the face to indigenous people and all who stand in solidarity. furthermore, i encourage you all to support by nothing day (adbusters.org) because again, nonhuman and human animals alike are truly exploited in preparation for the biggest shopping day of the year (i.e. sweatshops and factory farms).
  • Summer 2008 Update- Willie and Love Revolution

    Current mood:accomplished

    Aloha Family~
    Thanks for dropping by...Just announced: The Human Revolution will start our "Love Revolution Summer Tour" opening for Willie Nelson at Dimmick Ranch in Piercy, CA on August 31. We'll be hitting Oregon and then heading to the Southwest, Arizona, New Mexico and Colorado...check the calendar for dates, times and locations.

    The new Human Revolution album Love Revolution will be finished by the August 31 show as well as the long awaited Naked Remix and re-release. We are happy to be joined on our LR Summer Tour by Weezer guitarist Abe Dertner and keyboardist Kirk Handley will join us for the first leg of the tour. We're looking forward to hitting the road and seeing y'all. Thanks so much for all the love and support~

    Aloha~
    Human
  • Meditations on the Hemp Plant- Project P.E.A.C.E.

    Current mood:peaceful

    Reposted from the website http://projectpeace.blogspot.com/:
    Ecologist Paul Von Hartman's site.

    The Limit of Law

    At what point does a law become so transparently perverse that it ceases to command respect? When
    do truth, morality and reason over-rule an unjust, environmentally, economically and socially
    degenerative law? In the absence of accountability for the truth, is there an obligation to obey
    such a law, or is there a moral obligation to disobey it?

    Prohibition of Cannabis was instituted seventy years ago, primarily in order to make money for a
    relative few wealthy people, at the expense of many other, poorer people. The laws prohibiting
    Cannabis hemp cultivation, manufacture and free trade have induced prolonged, essential resource
    scarcity, induced global food insecurity and malnutrition, global chemical dependence on toxic
    finite resources, and imposed radical economic disparity. At the same time, the "drug war" has
    been proven to be -- beyond doubt -- counter-productive to its own stated objectives.

    The reason for this is that problems are profitable. A wealthy, all-powerful and voracious
    bureaucracy has been constructed to suppress economic competition from small scale, organic
    agriculture. Small farms stabilize regional economics, evenly distribute the wealth of what's
    truly valuable. Cannabis provides clean fuels, healing food, copious quantities of biodegradable
    fiber, plastics, and substantial agronomic benefit. Without Cannabis as part of the global
    economy, sustainability may not be possible for our species.

    Time is the limiting factor in the equation of survival. Unless we make the best use of every
    growing season that remains, before the planet is beyond saving, globally broiled beyond
    recognition, then we are doing too little. It may already be too late to avoid synergistic
    collapse of environment, economics and social evolution. Certainly that is happening in some parts
    of the world, right now.

    Cannabis is the only common seed with four essential fatty acids (EFAs)in proper proportion for
    long-term consumption. Cannabis seed is, potentially, the best available source of organic
    vegetable protein on Earth, is a valuable rotational crop. It also tastes wonderful.

    In spite of all this, Cannabis seed is not even recognized as food for humans by the United
    Nations Food & Agriculture Organization (UN/FAO). The overwhelming failure of logic that argues
    for prohibition is obviously part of a generator for political corruption and the wealthy black
    market. An unregulated drug market Is also a potential delivery mechanism for chemical pathogens.

    On average, one law enforcement officer is killed per month, enforcing drug laws that only make
    drug use more prevalent. Trillions of dollars have been wasted in the futile attempt to control
    what can never be controlled through coersion.

    The fundamental challenge of our time is to re-valuate the world's most useful and nutritious
    organic agricultural resource, and initiate a normal relationship with this plant, in time to
    plant this spring, for food, for biofuels and in the end, for world peace. The natural, god-given
    freedom to farm Cannabis is "self-evident," beyond the rightful jurisdiction of any court. If our
    children are to inherit natural rights, then we must claim them by limiting the rule of law to
    serve the common good. This means allowing for a truly free, organic agriculturally-based, market
    economy, operating in harmony with the Earth's Natural Order.



    Paul J. von Hartmann
    Project P.E.A.C.E.
    Planet Ecology Advancing Conscious Economics
    www.pvonh.com


    posted by Paul J. von Hartmann @ 6:21 AM


    Thursday, January 04, 2007


    The following was written in response to a forum question about which currency would most likely favor our survival:

    It isn't the "euro," the "dollar," the "yen," or the "sheckle" that determines whether or not
    humans are able to recover the global balance that would allow humankind to achieve sustainable
    existence. It is the character of the resource base, of whatever currency we choose, that will
    decide the future of this planet. Right now (and for the past three generations), our economic
    system is/has been based on highly toxic, unevenly distributed, unsustainable energy production.
    This poor choice, made early last century, could only lead to the present, extinctionistic result
    we are all in the middle of.

    To shift the paradigm, back to sustainability, we must recognise the urgency of prioritizing
    respect for the Natural Order, and re-designing our economic systems to reflect increasing
    awareness of where we are in the paradigm we've co-created. Inertia and time-lags are working
    against that, but it doesn't mean that there isn't still a chance for us to recover.

    In my opinion, because of our reletively recent ability to communicate globally, electronically,
    instantaneously, it may still be possible to achieve harmony with the primarily significant Laws
    that determine our collective fate. We can make energy from renewable resources. We can shift our
    values to disempower the short-sighted, chemical/radioactive economy, by initiating pragmatic
    solutions, currently being suppressed by the corrupted forces that have achieved political
    dominance.

    Consider what would happen if the world's most useful agricultural resource were to be utilised to
    its fullest potential, instead of being widely, dogmatically, prohibited. Consider what the effect
    would be if people were suddenly aware that the Cannabis plant (a.k.a. hemp, 'marijuana') is the
    most immediate, best available source of renewable biofuels, organic vegetable protein and the
    only common seed with three essential fatty acids, on Earth. The fundamental imbalances that have
    resulted from inducing prolonged, essential resource scarcity are hardly being considered because
    of the knee-jerk resistance, resulting from propaganda, prejudice and distraction surrounding the
    issue of 'marijuana.'

    Because we haven't had access to this "strategic" resource for so long, most people cannot imagine
    how critically determinate this unique and essential crop truly is. Consider that, incredibly, the
    UN/FAO doesn't even recognize the world's most nutritious seed as food fit for human consumption.
    That's just one, blatantly obvious indication of how extreme the insidious corruption of human
    values is.

    I've been teaching people about the true value of Cannabis for the past fifteen years. A lot has
    changed in that time, but I am still constantly amazed at the resistance that persists, in spite
    of growing awareness and concern for the accelerating degeneration of our environment, economics
    and social structures fundamentally related to induced, essential resource scarcity. If you were
    on an island, and offered the choice of a barrel of petroleum or a bag of hemp seed, which would
    you choose? Unfortunately, our grandfathers were hood-winked into choosing the barrel of
    petroleum. Earth Island is now polluted and the barrel is almost empty.

    If we don't snap out of "Reefer Madness" our species will become extinct as the result of
    synergistic collapse of the Natural Order. If we acheive global consensus on the urgency of
    initiating a shift to organic agricultural solutions to the equation of survival, we may yet be
    able to secure a liveable future. I believe that ending Cannabis prohibition is the first step to
    finding our way back to balance and harmony with the ancient, abiding forces that govern this
    planet.

    'Time' is the limiting factor in the equation of survival. It is in everyone's best interest to
    actively demand an end to Cannabis prohibition. If we all pull together to achieve this lynch-pin
    change, the economic forces that steer our environmental and social evolution will shift in ways
    that may yet avert the predictable synergistic collapse we are certainly barreling toward.


    posted by Paul J. von Hartmann @ 11:19 AM


    Sunday, February 19, 2006


    Illegal to Eat ?

    Consider how the drug war impacts food security. Because of 'marijuana' prohibition, the UN Food & Agriculture Organization has been criminally negligent by failing to promote hemp cultivation for seed protein.

    Failure by the UN to acknowledge and educate people regarding the exceptional food value of Cannabis seed, introduces a global issue of grave concern, on a scale that amounts to genocide. Imposed essential resource scarcity is directly responsible for epidemic malnutrition, illness anddeath, effecting billions of people.

    Interfering with people's natural right to farm an unique and essential food resource is an unacceptable, criminal consequence of prohibition, that continues to go completely unaccounted for.


    posted by Paul J. von Hartmann @ 10:06 PM
  • Video about Monsanto Corp.

    Current mood:sassy

    A very interesting Canadian video report...
    http://www.stopthenorthamericanunion.com/videos/The-World-According-To-Monsanto.shtml

    Knowledge is power!
    Have no fear!
    EDUCATE EVERYONE!

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