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Charleen Touchette

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    • Redwood Tree Sitters Descend after Agreement to protect Oldest Trees

      New owners convince activists ancient groves will remain untouched
      Evelyn Nieves | The Associated Press

      9/23/2008 -

      SCOTIA, Calif. — After more than 20 years of protests, the last two people living in the giant redwoods of Northern California were climbing down for good, convinced by the new owners of the forest that the ancient trees would be spared from the saw.

      Still, the tree sitters looked rather lost.

      Having lived nearly 200 feet off the ground for 11 months, Nadia Berg — who calls herself Cedar — seemed unsure of her footing on the lush forest floor of Humboldt County's Nanning Creek grove. Cedar had made herself at home in a tree dubbed Grandma, a massive double redwood joined at the base, and had grown accustomed to the whistles and whispers and ways of the woods.

      "Being here, for me, hasn't been a sacrifice," said the 22-year-old Alberta, Canada, native, still in her harness after rappelling down Grandma last week for the final time. "I feel so honored that I could be here for the trees."

      Berg's neighbor, Billy Stoetzer, a 22-year-old activist from the Missouri Ozarks, came down last week, too, after living for nearly a year in a hammocklike shelter in the branches of Spooner, a 300-foot mammoth at least 1,500 years old.

      With that, the great timber wars of the North Coast came to an end.

      It was a long, twilight struggle that redefined environmental activism and introduced the American public to a new type of civil disobedience — tree-sitting.

      So quietly did the truce happen that almost no one involved can believe it. But the drawn-out, sometimes violent, battles between Pacific Lumber Co., the largest private owner of old-growth redwoods, and environmental activists who flocked here to save the trees, are history. Pacific Lumber has new owners, a new name — Humboldt Redwood Co. — and a new pledge to protect old trees, some of which were around before Jesus was born.

      The end began a few weeks ago, when Michael Jani, the president and chief forester of the new Humboldt Redwood Co., hiked into the woods to meet the tree-sitters. "I went out, looked at the trees, looked at the stand of trees that were around them, and I explained to them that under our policy, we would not be cutting those trees," said Jani, a 35-year veteran of logging companies.

      Protecting old-growth trees was part of the plan that Humboldt Redwood, largely owned by Don and Doris Fisher of The Gap Inc., submitted to acquire Pacific Lumber in bankruptcy court. Among other things, Humboldt Redwood promised to spare any redwood born prior to 1800 with a diameter of at least 4 feet. It also pledged to avoid clear-cutting, or cutting down trees in vast swaths, a practice that the timber giant aggressively practiced under its previous owner, Maxxam Inc.

      Environmentalists are cautiously optimistic the company will do as it promises. So for weeks, the tree-sitters at the Nanning Creek and Fern Gully groves have been clearing out their encampments, removing their platforms and figuring out what to do with the rest of their lives.

      "At this point, I'd like to focus on growing a garden," said an activist who goes by the nom de guerre Rudi Bega, as in rutabaga. The 28-year-old Idahoan is an 11-year veteran of the timber wars who helped recruit, train and organize tree-sitters.

      Read rest of article at link above -
      _____________________________

      From TouchArt and OneEarthBlog.blogspot.com in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
      New owners convince activists ancient groves will remain untouched Evelyn Nieves | The Associated Press 9/23/2008 - ... more

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      5 hours ago
    • Open Letter to Barak Obama from Leonard Peltier

      August 28, 2008

      An Open Letter to Barack Obama
      Symbolism Alone Will Not Bring Change
      By LEONARD PELTIER

      I have watched with keen interest and renewed hope as your campaign has mobilized millions of Americans behind your message of changing a political system that serves a small economic elite at the expense of the peoples of the United States and the world. Your election as president of the United States, where slaves and Indians were long considered less than human under the law, will undoubtedly constitute a historic moment in race relations in the United States.

      Yet symbolism alone will not bring about change. Our young people, black and Native alike, suffer from police brutality and racial profiling, underfunded schools, and discrimination in employment and housing. I sincerely hope your campaign will inspire some hope among our youth to struggle for a better future. I am, however, concerned that your recent statement on the Sean Bell verdict, in which the New York police officers who fired 50 shots at a young man on the eve of his wedding were acquitted of criminal charges, displays a rather myopic view of the law. Until the law is harnessed to protect the victims of state violence and racism, it will serve as an instrument of repression, just as the slave codes functioned to sustain and legitimize an inhuman institution.

      As I can testify from experience, the legal institutions of this nation are far from racial and political neutrality. When judges align with the repressive actions and policies of the executive branch, injustice is rationalized and cloaked in judicial platitudes. As you may know, I have now served more than three decades of my life as a political prisoner of the federal government for a crime I did not commit. I have served more time than the maximum sentence under the guidelines under which I was sentenced, yet my parole is continually denied (on the rare occasions when I am afforded a hearing) because I refuse to falsely confess. Amnesty International, South African Bishop Desmond Tutu, the Dalai Lama of Tibet, my Guatemalan sister Rigoberta Menchu, and many of your friends and supporters have recognized me as a political prisoner and called for my immediate release. Millions of people around the world view me as a symbol of injustice against the indigenous peoples of this land, and I have no doubt that I will go down in history as one of a long line of victims of U.S. government repression, along with Sacco and Vanzetti, the Haymarket Square martyrs, Eugene Debs, Bill Haywood, and others targeted by for their political beliefs. But neither I nor my people can afford to wait for history to rectify the crimes of the past....

      Continued in comments below.
      August 28, 2008 An Open Letter to Barack Obama Symbolism Alone Will Not Bring Change By LEONARD PELTIER ... more

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      5 hours ago
    • Censored in the USA: Hush Words

      Respected American Indian journalist Brenda Norrell writes about how censorship operates in Indian Country and the rest of America.

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      Censored in the USA: Hush words

      Posted by Brenda Norrell - July 28, 2008 at 5:42 pm By Brenda Norrell

      I didn't see it coming. After 25 years of writing American Indian news, I didn't really expect to be blackballed and censored out of the business. But, then again, any journalist writing serious news in the United States should expect to be censored. There are some hot topics that get U.S. journalists fired, including investigating the war in Iraq. U.S. Presidents realize the power of words and song to move the masses. It was Buffe Sainte Marie's "Universal Soldier," during the Vietnam War that led to her being blackballed and censored out of the music business in the U.S.


      In Indian country news, there are also hush words, words to be used sparingly, if at all. For editors, those words include two names "Russell Means" and "Leonard Peltier." Also, in Indian country, reporters know it is unlikely that editors will publish any serious criticism of the war in Iraq or the Bush administration. Reporters also know it is unlikely that their articles will be published if they point out how the elected American Indian tribal councils sell out their people and their land, air and water for energy royalties and energy leases. At the same time, those councilmen and tribal chairmen give voice to the need to protect sacred Mother Earth.

      While on staff at Indian Country Today in 2004, the managing editor, a non-Indian, demanded that I halt writing about "grassroots people and the genocide of American Indians." When I continued, I was reprimanded again. Eventually I was fired without a reason given.

      It taught me about history and the soul of America. In the United States, there is this hole in history, and this hole in the hearts of the people, which disallows for these facts: the genocide of American Indians, including the butchering of women and shooting of little children, and the kidnapping, enslavement, torture, rape and murder of blacks.

      Read entire article at link -
      http://narcosphere.narconews.com/notebook/brenda-norrel...
      _____________________________________
      From TouchArt.net and OneEarthBlog.blogspot.com
      where Charleen Touchette knows first-hand about
      being censored, blackballed, and banned.
      Respected American Indian journalist Brenda Norrell writes about how censorship operates in Indian Country and the rest of America. ... more

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      40 responses

      1 day ago
    • One Earth Blog by TouchArt

      One Earth Blog

      Take a break to join Charleen Touchette of Mixed Blood Radio, for a virtual cup of tea or coffee in historic Santa Fe to chat, reflect on the weather, art, raising children, living green, world politics and keeping creativity flowing in a challenging world.

      Check One Earth Blog as the mood moves you for new thoughts, pictures, viewpoints, radio interviews, video, art and links several times each week.

      TouchArt's One Earth Blog brings you news, voices, and leaders in Indigenous Arts and Politics, Environmental and Green News and Scientists, American Indian Leaders, Artists and Authors, Mixed Blood Activists and Leaders, and voices, art and literature from youth from diverse rural, urban and reservation communities.

      Check out One Earth Blog for news on Touchette's work with TouchArt Books, Russell Means and the Oppressionist Art Movement, Martin Luther King III and the Realizing the Dream Poverty in America Initiative and Bill Brown at New Mexico Global Warming.

      With each decision, we each can be part of the solution.

      We share one earth.

      Like a stone dropped into a pool of water, every action has a ripple effect.

      ONE EARTH - THINK ABOUT/ACT LIKE IT.

      ___________________________

      From TouchArt.net and OneEarthBlog.blogspot.com
      One Earth Blog ... more

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      5 days ago
    • War Sucks

      TouchArt talks about how War Sucks.

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      21 days ago
    • Violence starts at home - It can stop with me and you

      War worldwide tops the headlines.

      People call for peace.

      Activists remind us there can only be peace if we work for justice.

      Ask where the violence begins.

      Too often violence begins at home.

      The violence of adults makes a devastating impact on children.

      Peace begins at home.

      Lao Tze said "If you want peace in the world, Make peace at home, in the family and in your own soul.

      Be peace.

      ___________________
      from TouchArt.net and OneEarthBlog.blogspot.com
      War worldwide tops the headlines. People call for peace. Activists remind us there can only be peace if we work for justice. ... more

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      11 days ago
    • WAR SUCKS

      For Memorial Day 2008, TouchArt.net's Charleen Touchette
      talks about war and its immeasurable costs to the world.
      Touchette, a mother of 4 adult children asks us to stop war
      and work for peace and justice.

      ___________________
      from TouchArt.net and OneEarthblog.blogspot.com
      For Memorial Day 2008, TouchArt.net's Charleen Touchette talks about war and its immeasurable costs to the world. ... more

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      3 days ago
    • Martin Luther King III Tells Congress "Mobilize Will to End Poverty in Americ...

      Martin Luther King III told Congress the U.S. does not lack the means to end poverty, it lacks the will. Mr. King said that if we can spend trillions on war and destruction in Iraq, we must mobilize the will to bring the 35 million Americans living below the poverty line out of poverty. Martin Luther King III told Congress the U.S. does not lack the means to end poverty, it lacks the will. Mr. King said that if we can ... more

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      12 hours ago
    • Peace Artist Shows What President Bush Accomplished for America

      Clarity of Touchette's art indicts George W. Bush for Crimes against Humanity.

      American Artist and mother of four, Charleen Touchette wrote, "How can I tell my children the U.S. doesn't torture when they see pictures everyday of our soldiers forced to do unspeakable things to other human beings."

      "I feel like the good Germans who stood by helpless while Hitler used their tax money in an imperialistic unprovoked war to torture and murder people. Over 53% of our tax dollars go for war and destruction. How can this be Christian?"
      Clarity of Touchette's art indicts George W. Bush for Crimes against Humanity. ... more

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      9 days ago
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Charleen Touchette

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