Muffin Bottoms [not] Just another WordPress weblog

11/13/2009

From a Soldier To A Senator

Filed under: Academic,Mundane Or Sublime,News,OpEd — admin @ 4:21 pm

OK, this is mostly an open letter to Senator McCain, but Lieberman and a few other menaces to society should listen up too.

Dear Senator McCain,

I’m addressing this to you but it’s for many others as well.

As a veteran, I’m speaking soldier to soldier to you, but I’m also speaking soldier to civilian to so many other people in your camp who believe we should not give a fair trial to the terror suspects. Lastly, I’m speaking soldier to draft dodger to a few of the remaining people in your camp who feel the way you do.

You think it’s inconceivable? You think these human beings should not be tried in a court of law?

You think it sends a mixed message??? How much clearer can it be Mr McCain.

🙁

Or to quote my very first drill instructor ever, it’s that
simple, private! If freedom is worth fighting for, then it is worth
trying people in our courts of law under the laws that apply to them.
Have you never read up on Alien Tort? Have you never read the Amistad
decision, both majority and minority? Please do. Please get your head
out of your sphincter, stop running for office for a few precious minutes
and for once try to remember what it was like when YOU fought for the due
process you deserved as a citizen of the United States, as a human being
and as a soldier and warrior.

Can you not afford that same inalienable right to your enemies? I bet you
can’t. I can. I have that much confidence.

Or are you perhaps afraid that some of these horrible people will finger
you in their open court cases that you are so desperately and aggressively
blocking!!!

Maybe you had something to hide during 9/11? I’m NOT accusing you, I’m just
asking. Maybe you’re not really on the side against torture afterall. How
can you reconcile being against due process and for human rights?

How can you? Tell me this. I need to know.

10/25/2009

How Much do You Know about the Deer Island Massacre?

Filed under: Academic,Mundane Or Sublime,News — admin @ 3:48 pm

334 years ago this month!!!

At the time of King Phillips war, with slave ships heading to Bermuda from all over New England, while there were many Colonial wars raging on everywhere, almost everyone from the Natick “praying Indian” families were rounded up and forcefully marched to Deer Island where they were surrounded by military in what has come to be considered a concentration camp.

The military goal appears to have been to starve everyone dead over one winter’s time. Elder women went past frostbitten hands to gather quahogs and other coastal creatures in attempts to feed as many children as they could hoping that some would live on.

Miraculously, some did.

Read up; there is so much history in Natick, Cape Cod and Boston Harbor areas from those times!

http://www.millermicro.com/NPI-Bostonia.html

http://www.millermicro.com/natprayind.html

http://www.nipmucnation.org/Deer%20Island%20History.htm

10/23/2009

Why is no one but law enforcement helping this man???

Filed under: Mundane Or Sublime,News — admin @ 3:53 pm

Yesterday Josh Michaud was arrested for armed robbery. Last month he robbed a drugstore for painkillers. Two years ago he was a sniper defending our freedom. Why hasn’t the VA taken enough care of him to have kept this from happening???

Michaud was the youngest in a sniper group overseas that has been brought up on murder charges and the VA was doing everything they could with the current budgets (or lacks thereof) to get him the help he needed. In the meantime he behaved this way. I hope in addition to imprisonment, that the state and federal governmental people working with him will have enough courage and intelligence to go the extra mile in getting him the help he needs rather than simply trying to play reward and punishment games with him and other people who will surely be in similar situations.

[ref] = [ http://www.esquire.com/features/michael-hensley-0708-6 ]

Just search this page for Josh Michaud to see what I’m talking about.

He’s a veteran. Why are we only giving him attention AFTER he points a gun into someone’s face???

I’m crying as I write this. Was he priority 8? Maybe several different people in the VA told him they couldn’t help him. Do any of you know how frustrating it is to serve your country for a number of years and then have someone at the VA say they’ve looked up in a chart and your disability percentage is too low? Or that you make $11,500 rather than 11,200 so you can’t get the same service they gave to you or someone else last month?

Just a few things I’m aware of being a vet myself.

If you say you support the troops, then where was his healthcare??
I have healthcare currently but I went without from the day I left the army signal corps until about 2 years ago when I started school again. I’m quite thankful the amount of PTSD I suffer is minimal compared to Josh Michaud.

There but for fortune, go you or or I.

10/06/2009

A Walkin’ On Obit I Missed from Last Year.

Filed under: Mundane Or Sublime,News — admin @ 2:39 am

Oliver died! I think of him often. He and I hit it off back in ’92 when he saw I had a ’64 Epiphone guitar. He wailed on it for half hour or so and then told me two great (and I mean great!) stories about him and guitar. He used to play guitar a long time ago. Years. Hadn’t played much the past couple. Every time he heard about a young person who was taking lessons (or wanted to) he would just give them his guitar and either keep playing the other one he had, or get a new one whenever he could again. No tax write-off for an inkind donation or anything, no press conference, just handing someone a guitar saying “it’s yours now…”

That’s the first one, here’s the second one. Jose Feliciano used to have diabetes. The harshest kind needing the most insulin every day. Over a number of years he privately visited Oliver for 6 door sweats. Changes in diet, sweat and prayers that go along with it gradually got him cutting down on how much insulin (and sugars!) he needed to take each day. He eventually didn’t have diabetes symptoms at all. Doctors were amazed, but of course they refuse to call it a miracle. How may 65 year olds do you know who used to have it and just “kinda sorta” put it behind them??? I don’t know anyone personally like that. And my dad died at 46 having it.

Anyhew, that’s my two stories as told to me by the late Oliver Saunsocie. Rest in Peace, man. You did some stellar stuff your whole life. You are why I try to give away at least one guitar every year and not bother writing it into my taxes or anything.

MACY, Neb. — Oliver Saunsoci Jr., 76, of Macy departed this life Monday, Jan. 21, 2008, at the Winnebago Indian Hospital in Winnebago, Neb.

Services will be 10 a.m. Friday at the Alfred Gilpin Building, with Mr. Frank Saunsoci officiating. Burial will be in Omaha Tribal Cemetery, Macy. Visitation will be held begin today and will continue until service time Friday at the Native American Church (VFW building) in Macy. Arrangements are under the direction of Munderloh Funeral Home in Pender, Neb.

Oliver was born on June 17, 1931, in a home west of Macy. He attended school in Plainview district 151, a country school. He went on to attend Flandreau Indian School. At the age of 17, he enlisted in the U.S. Army and was a veteran of the Korean War from 1949 to 1953. He was a staff sergeant by the age of 18 years old with the 111th Infantry. He graduated from Milford Technical School for auto body repair, which he practiced for 10 years in Lincoln, Neb.

He was a husband to Charlotte Lasley Saunsoci for 36 years, and a father to eleven children.

He was the cofounder of the Lincoln Indian Center and served on its board of directors. He moved back to the Omaha Indian Reservation in Macy and was the director of the Employment Assistance Program. He attended the Nebraska Indian Community College and was one of its first graduates in 1978. He went on to become director of the Omaha Tribal Housing Authority. He served as chairman of the Omaha Tribal Council in 1980. He was an Environmental Health Technician at the Carl T. Curtis Health Center for 16 years. His other activities included being a bull rider and competing in other rodeo competitions. He also was an activist for Native American Rights and a Tribal Spiritual leader.

He is survived by his daughters, Gail J. Saunsoci of Macy, Olivia Saunsoci of Sioux City, Mary Saunsoci and Michelle Saunsoci, both of Macy; sons, Gary Lasley of South Sioux City, Adrian Saunsoci of Macy, Oliver Evan Saunsoci III, Quentin Saunsoci and Brennan Lasley, all of Macy; 52 grandchildren; 46 great grandchildren; and sisters, Eleanor Baxter and her husband Everett of Macy, Maxine Anderson and her husband Gary of Lincoln, Neb., and Cora Belle Saunsoci of Macy.

He was preceded in death by his parents, Oliver Saunsoci Sr. and Mae Blackbird Saunsoci; his wife, Charlotte Lasley Saunsoci; brothers, Franklin, Henry, Gary and Vincent Saunsoci; sisters, Mary Ann Saunsoci Cayou, Anna Belle Saunsoci and Rhea Sue Saunsoci; and children, Timothy, Wayne and Corwin Saunsoci.

[ref]=[ http://sacredhorsewoman.blogspot.com/2008/01/uncle-olivers-obituary.html ]

09/30/2009

Nammys11; Wow! Who’da Thunk It?

Filed under: Mundane Or Sublime,Music and Stuff — admin @ 5:55 am

Reflecting On 11+ Years Of NAMMY Ceremonies Devoted To NDN Music!

By Marco Frucht

Rewritten by hand from NYTimes & Long Island Voice articles originally crafted by Robbie Woliver. [*]

The NAMMYS, Ellen Bello’s friends and relatives, and even Ellen herself make up just part (an active part!) of some very profound prophesies.

Recently, Bello chucked her successful PR company, In-Press Communications, and big-name clients (Nirvana, The Buzzcocks, Mary Chapin Carpenter, Sub Pop Records, the Chieftains, Sisters of Mercy, the Chieftains) in exchange for a life devoted to bringing indigenous music to the world’s consciousness.

She founded the Native American Music Awards, or Nammys, the Native American Music Association, or NAMA, a nonprofit organization attempting to preserve and promote American Indian music traditions. She also began lobbying the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences to create a Native American music category for their Grammy awards.

“Jazz is generally called America’s first music,” Bello says, “well that’s wrong. Native music was around before any other type of music, even classical.” Bello says it is owed respect.

Ms. Bello’s involvement began in 1991, when she met Lakota rock group 7th Generation at a Native American music festival in NYC. She stayed in touch with them for a long time and provided professional support pro bono. When the band members invited her to visit them on their reservation in South Dakota she jumped at the chance.

“I was overwhelmed with mixed feelings,” Ms. Bello said. “I was saddened and troubled by their living conditions and quality of life. It’s almost a third-world country. But on the other hand, I was ecstatic and inspired, because as poor as they were, they were so rich in spirit and culture.”

“What was so exhilarating was that when I encountered these people, I saw that my values were aligned with theirs,” Ms. Bello said. “There was a kinship. There was a part of me that I was discovering in South Dakota that couldn’t exist in me in New York.”

Immersing herself in other cultures, she quickly realized there was a severe lack of opportunity for musicians like 7th Generation. She gave up her glitzy show-business world and began concentrating on the earthier needs of Indian musicians.

“It was an interesting dichotomy I was discovering,” she said. “Living with these people and comparing it to the people I knew in New York, I wondered, ‘Do you have to sacrifice money to find wealth and spirituality?'”

With the goal of educating while entertaining the public, it took Ms. Bello two years to develop the music awards concept. The first awards ceremony was held in 1998, at the Foxwoods Resort Casino, run by the Mashantucket Pequot nation, in Connecticut. With Wayne Newton as host, it featured a range of other Indian artists from Robbie Robertson (of the Band) to Chief Jim Billie (chief of Florida’s Seminole tribe), to the Red Bull Drum Group of Canada. More than 100 tribal nations were represented.

Robertson said: “To me, this is a sign of the times. A sign of the acceptance of native music out in the world like never before. And this is just the beginning.”

Joanne Shenandoah, a leading Native American musical artist and two-time recipient of NAMA’s Female Vocalist of the Year Award, said, “The work Ellen started is giving native musicians long overdue exposure and respect.”

Despite all the hard work year round, of running the awards, forming the foundation, running a Web site and lobbying the Grammys organization, Ms. Bello’s life has become simpler, more earthbound.

NAMA has several missions: serving as a clearinghouse and archive for America’s indigenous music, operating as a youth training and artist placement service, providing scholarships and sponsoring seminars and workshops. The organization’s 3,500-hour archive is the largest collection of Native American music, surpassing the Library of Congress’s approximate 2,500 hours, Ms. Bello said. (The Library of Congress includes more historical music.)

One activity Ms. Bello hopes to formulate soon are folk-styled seminars by tribal elders. “It would be a live music library with the elders passing on the musical traditions to the youth,” she said.

Another mission of the association is to provide scholarships; four have already been presented. One recipient, Mary YoungBear, a 40-year-old mother of four and grandmother of three from the Tama Meswaki Indian Settlement in Iowa, moved to New Mexico to attend the Institute for American Indian Arts.

“Because I am not eligible for most financial aid,” said Ms. YoungBear, “the scholarship I received went a long way toward financing my tuition. Also, the whole experience of the Native American Music Awards is something I will carry with me as long as I am alive.”

“There’s a great humbleness and spirituality in our music,” said Ms. Shenandoah, who performs around the world, and recently sang at the White House, “and Ellen shares our Indian heart.

“The prophecy is coming to be now, and Ellen and her great work are certainly helping that along.”

[*]The liberties that the NYTimes editors took with Ellen Bello’s quotes enraged me, frankly. It’s likely I’ve misquoted her in here as well, because I did not interview her and I am not directly in touch with Robbie Woliver. But I compared both articles, weighing heavier on the Voice side just because it’s where the story started from. I believe with all my heart that I got closer to representing this story through these quotes than my former employer did. Yes, I’m saying the NYTimes (who snootily believe they are THE letter of record) just plain suck. Call me bold, call me crazy, but don’t call me. Having been on both sides of the interview structure at both the NYTimes and Washington Post, not to mention other smaller dailies and weeklies all over the world, I will say this clearly and unequivocally: Quotes are sacred. Struggle toward accuracy there, or get out of the way for us younger journalists to pave the way.

[**] NAMMYS will have their 11th annual Ceremony this Saturday night at 8pm. Watch it live on a videobroadcast at: http://www.nammys.org

http://www.nytimes.com/2000/04/30/nyregion/italian-irish-force-for-american-indian-music.html?pagewanted=all

http://www.nativeamericanmusicawards.com/files/nammys-in-the-grammies.pdf

http://www.jkp.com/catalogue/author/1895

http://fasters.tripod.com/ati128.html

http://www.nammys.org

09/28/2009

“If An Agent Knocks” Updated & Re-released

Filed under: Mundane Or Sublime,OpEd,Tech — admin @ 5:56 am

The Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR) has reissued the pamphlet “If an Agent Knocks” – a document written for activists likely to be targeted by the FBI. For the first time in over a decade, this classic “know your rights” pamphlet has been updated with the most timely and relevant information available.

I advise all activists to take a small amount of time to read this pamphlet. This is among the best investments you can make as an activist.

From the CCR description: “This guide includes both the timeless advice included in the original version and extensive updates to reflect the current state of the law and law enforcement tools. It also includes a comprehensive discussion of today’s technology, including cell phones, e-mail and Web browsing.”

Download the PDF here.

To obtain a free print copy, please email iaak@ccrjustice.org.

09/12/2009

Small Brained Politics.

Filed under: Humor,Mundane Or Sublime,OpEd,Tech — admin @ 5:14 am

OK, healthcare discourse on Capitol Hill has left the realm of feisty and sailing into contentious, meanspirited, nasty and simple bad form.

While President Obama was addressing Congress, Senator Joe Wilson threw a tantrum that I thought was hurtful and actually demeaning to the wider base of his own party. Honestly, his outburst there hurt my feelings as an American. We are not just a bunch of yahoos frothing at the mouth, I promise. Who voted Wilson? What pretenses did win on? I’m sure if he shook hands all over his state promising to jump up and down flailing his arms around acting like Jim Carrey in “Dumb and Dumber” they probably would have voted the other guy.

Who remembers when Oliver North ran for office? Embarrassed Marines organized nationally around who could buy a house in Virginia quick enough to vote against him. People who owned a property there but had residency somewhere else inquired about switching in time as well.

Perhaps a similar migration into Wilson’s South Carolina district is in order, ousting this fringe lunatic at his very next reelection bid. Actually, I think he’s campaigning already: for whoever else wants the position. Did you know he’s on the House Armed Services Committee, the Subcommittee on Military Personnel, the Committee on Education and Labor, and the Committee on Foreign Affairs? Again I must ask difficult questions such as “how on Earth did he get his colleagues to give him these positions?” I know for a fact he didn’t say “appoint me and I’ll wiggle around in my seat fidgeting and yelling silly stuff.”

I must not just pick on Wilson; he represents reaction in assuming that many mainstream Americans support him as such. This didn’t come out of nowhere.

Imagine for a moment you are a grade school child in Wilson’s congressional district (or anywhere for that matter) and your parent just told you you’ll be missing school tomorrow because they refuse to let you watch or discuss President Obama’s address to a chosen grade school. Or imagine if you’re in the grade school where he will speak. You’re disallowed from meeting him? Imagine looking back to a time when your parent stood up in a Joe Courtney or Chris Dodd town hall meeting and yelled out obnoxious things at the top of their lungs?  I thank G-d every day my mom & late father (both Republicans) lacked hatred/fear & taught me to think for myself. This hybrid of hateful Republicans is like a bad segment from Mike Judge’s movie “Idiocracy.”

09/08/2009

Republicans Gone Wild!

Filed under: Academic,Mundane Or Sublime,News — admin @ 6:38 am

OPINION:

Can U even imagine looking back 2 a time when your parent forbade U meeting a President simply out of hatred/fear 4 his politics?

I thank G-d every day my mom & dad (both Republicans!) lacked hatred/fear and instead had the courage to teach my sister and me to think for ourselves. This hybrid of hateful Republicans is like a bad segment from Mike Judge’s movie “Idiocracy.”

09/04/2009

I am my brother’s keeper…

Filed under: Academic,Food,Mundane Or Sublime,Tech — admin @ 3:31 am

I *am* my brother’s keeper. Healthcare is neither a right NOR a privilege; rather it is simply something I should make sure everyone around me has access to. The “returns” and benefits of giving that out, comes back exponentially and immensely!

yupper.

Three Milwaukee hospitals own this massive flatbed truck with MRI/CAT/Airblower/CAD thing worth about a billion dollars that I’m sure won’t be paid off and fully owned until 2020! How come each hospital can list the full amount as an asset when convenient, yet a liability when not??? I thought Exxon Valdez and Enron were our wakeup calls that creative math was going to kill us?

Healthcare costs come way down, people take two aspirin and some apple juice instead of antibiotics whenever effective, we shift as much into preventative rather than catastrophic as we can, and we look around and punish fraud. I betcha the tort reform people are yakking away about has less to do with malpractice and more to do with wanting to keep defrauding with flatbed trucks and brand new panasonic laptops and stuff.

08/07/2009

Indymedia having DNS problems | Major Outage

Filed under: Mundane Or Sublime,News,Tech — admin @ 5:26 am

http://www.indymedia.org is down right now.

DNS troubles are causing outages of not just global imc, but locals all over the world. Every indymedia site ending with .indymedia.org will be down until DNS can be brought up.

Some of the other indymedias that are currently still up:

http://www.indybay.org | http://www.indymedia.org.il |  http://indymedia.nl | http://www.cmaq.net | http://indy.media.hu | http://indymedia.us | http://radio.indypgh.org | http://www.phillyimc.org | http://www.indymedia.ie | http://cbusimc.org | http://www.ntimc.org http://stlimc.org |  http://www.climateimc.org | http://ucimc.org | http://rogueimc.org | http://sbindymedia.org | http://www.tnimc.blogspot.com | http://www.indymedia.org.uk | http://www.midiaindependent… | http://www.indymedia.ie | http://www.indymedia.org.nz | http://kcindymedia.org | http://indymediapr.org


Specifics about the DNS issues at:

https://lists.aktivix.org/pipermail/imc-tech-emerg/2009-August/000012.html

[yes the following CRs are for scrolling Bernie Madoff’s mug further down the page. Yuck…]

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