Texas Longhorns with newborn calf in Bluebonnets

Texas Longhorns with newborn calf in Bluebonnets

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512-517-2708

Alan Maki

Alan Maki
Doing research at the LBJ Library in Austin, Texas

It's time to claim our Peace Dividend

It's time to claim our Peace Dividend

We need to beat swords into plowshares.

We need to beat swords into plowshares.

A program for real change...

http://peaceandsocialjustice.blogspot.com/2013/03/a-progressive-program-for-real-change.html


What we need is a "21st Century Full Employment Act for Peace and Prosperity" which would make it a mandatory requirement that the president and Congress attain and maintain full employment.


"Voting is easy and marginally useful, but it is a poor substitute for democracy, which requires direct action by concerned citizens"

- Ben Franklin

Let's talk...

Let's talk...
Showing posts with label politics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label politics. Show all posts

Friday, October 8, 2010

Racist and undemocratic Minnesota Supreme Court ruling denies Warriors for Justice ballot status while exposing the undemocratic nature and trap of the two-party system

Warriors for Justice, a new political party in Minnesota calling for an end to racist poverty and unemployment--- victim of Democratic and Republican party fears that the people are fed up and will be looking for real change...

The Minnesota Supreme Court has ruled, ridiculously in a racist and undemocratic manner, that the double-standard between requirements for registering to vote and signing a petition to place a new political party on the ballot is appropriate.


Read the article from the Bemidji Pioneer newspaper below.

This Minnesota Supreme Court ruling is based on the fear that people are going to find their own way to express their anger with Democrats and Republicans who continue to ignore their problems.

Not one single Native American Indian is sitting among the more than 200 Minnesota State Legislators and anyone who has followed the struggles for justice undertaken by Nicole Beaulieu and Greg Paquin understand why this is.

The irony to all of this is that a racist, rich white-man named John McCarthy doles out political campaign contributions to racist white politicians on behalf of the Indian Gaming Industry for the purpose of ignoring the shameful and disgraceful poverty plaguing the Indian Nations in order to maintain a pool of cheap labor for casino managements while the mining and power generating industries are robbing the people blind as their living environment is ruined as the rape of the land takes place.

From the article in the Bemidji Pioneer, below:


Both Paquin and Beaulieu pledge to run write-in campaigns for the two posts.

“It gets rather frustrating when ignorance becomes blatant and obnoxious, we need real representation, someone with compassion, and solidarity for their fellowman, not these status quo wannabe politicians that have made reputations of working in the interests of capitalism,” says Beaulieu’s campaign manager, Curtis Buckanaga. “People’s discontentment with these two parties is becoming more common, although she was denied ballot status.”

Buckanaga blasted both Republicans and Democrats for not paying heed to Indian Country needs.
“Both of these parties are constantly undermining and taking advantage of the situation of my people by over-exaggerating on their supposed competency of resolving matters in the interests of all citizens, which they are trying to be appointed to office by gaining the favor of the majority of the consensus to represent our communities at large, except the Indians,” he said.. “Our basic human needs are constantly ignored, neglected, undermined, belittled and cast aside to make way for the overindulgent excessive necessities of our non-native brethren.”




Nicole Beaulieu, Candidate for Minnesota House District 4A





  
Greg Paquin, Candidate for Minnesota Senate District 4









Published October 08 2010

Link:

http://www.bemidjipioneer.com/event/article/id/100022572/

Minnesota Supreme Court denies candidate Greg Paquin ballot access

The Minnesota Supreme Court, in an opinion filed Thursday, said Beltrami County Auditor-Treasurer Kay Mack properly denied Senate 4 candidate Greg Paquin’s nominating petition for the Nov. 2 ballot.


By: Brad Swenson, Bemidji Pioneer


The Minnesota Supreme Court, in an opinion filed Thursday, said Beltrami County Auditor-Treasurer Kay Mack properly denied Senate 4 candidate Greg Paquin’s nominating petition for the Nov. 2 ballot.

“We … hold that in denying Paquin's nominating petition for lack of sufficient signatures, the County Auditor did not violate Minnesota law and did not violate Paquin’s constitutional rights,” the court ruled in an unsigned opinion.

The Supreme Court denied Paquin’s appeal to be on the Nov. 2 ballot in an Aug. 24 order, but the opinion describing why wasn’t filed until Thursday.

Greg Paquin and Nicole Beaulieu filed petitions as members of the Warriors for Justice Party, with Paquin seeking the Senate 4 seat held by Sen. Mary Olson, DFL-Bemidji, and Beaulieu for the House 4A seat held by Rep. John Persell, DFL-Bemidji. Both needed 500 valid signatures to gain the ballot.

Both had earlier been denied endorsement by the DFL Party and filed as a new party, Warriors for Justice.
Mack denied both petitions, claiming neither contained the needed 500 signatures when names with only post office box numbers were eliminated.

Paquin claimed that someone in the Secretary of State’s Office had advised him that it was OK to use just P.O. box numbers, and Paquin later claimed that state civil regulatory law doesn’t apply on the reservation, where P.O. box numbers are commonly used as residence addresses.

Paquin also claimed that Mack allowed voter registration with only P.O. box numbers and that he was discriminated against by her not allowing P.O. boxes on nominating petitions.

The Supreme Court noted that state law requires that nominating petitions must contain the residence address of the signers so that they can be verified that they live in the district for which the candidate seeks office.

“Upon receipt of a nominating petition by the appropriate election official, the petition is to be inspected ‘to verify that there are a sufficient number of signatures of individuals whose residence address as shown on the petition is in the district where the candidate is to be nominated,’” the court said, citing state law.

Of 557 signatures, 44 were found defective for various reasons and were not disputed by Paquin. Of the 513 remaining signatures, 166 listed a post office box number as “residence address.”

“Paquin argues that respondent Mack should have determined from other sources the residence address of these signers,” the court said in the 13 page opinion. “For example, Paquin suggests, respondent could have contacted the post office to determine the residence address of the holder of the indicated post office box, or could have reviewed voting records from previous elections to confirm that the signature on the petition belonged to someone living in the district.”

But the court notes that federal law prohibits post office workers from divulging information about post office box holders and state law doesn’t provide for the county auditor to investigate further than what is written on the petition.

State law “requires the inspection of a nominating petition ‘to verify that there are a sufficient number of signatures of individuals whose residence address as shown on the petition is in the district where the candidate is to be nominated,’” the opinion states “Nothing in [state law] requires or even authorizes a county auditor (or the Secretary of State’s office, if that is where the petition is filed) to consult other documents to confirm that the signer is a resident of the district.”

The court also ruled that the post office box number alone is insufficient because it doesn’t prove that the signer physically lives in the Senate 4 district.

“Paquin has the burden to prove that leaving his name off the ballot is an error that must be corrected,” the court said. “Paquin cannot meet this burden unless he shows that the petition signers whose signatures were rejected for lack of a residence address provided information on the petition sufficient to establish that the signer lived within the legislative district.”

Public Law 280 establishes that state governments cannot apply state civil laws to American Indians living on the reservation, but the Supreme Court ruled that the state does have jurisdiction with election laws as legislative districts surpass reservation boundaries.

“Public Law 280 does not bar assertion by the state of jurisdiction over activities of Indians ‘going beyond reservation boundaries,’” it said. “Running for state legislative office and signing a nominating petition for state legislative office are activities ‘going beyond reservation boundaries.’ In seeking to become a candidate for state legislative office, and in signing the nominating petition, petitioner and his supporters are subject to state election laws.”

In dismissing charges of discrimination, the court said that state laws differ in required information for registering to vote and in nominating petitions.

“We understand Paquin’s reply to argue that Mack’s strict enforcement of the residence address requirement with respect to his nominating petition violated his right to equal protection under the law,” said the court.

“The language of the voter registration statutes and the statute governing nominating petitions differs. The statute governing nominating petitions requires signers to provide ‘the signer’s residence address including street and number, if any, and mailing address if different from residence address.’ No statute governing voter registration uses this language to describe the information that a prospective voter must provide in order to register to vote.”

Further, “even if the language of the voter registration and nominating petition statutes were the same, it would not be enough for petitioner Paquin to prove that respondent Mack has differed in her enforcement of the residence address requirement over time; he must also prove that such differences were the result of intentional discrimination. Paquin has not made such a showing.”

Both Paquin and Beaulieu pledge to run write-in campaigns for the two posts.

“It gets rather frustrating when ignorance becomes blatant and obnoxious, we need real representation, someone with compassion, and solidarity for their fellowman, not these status quo wannabe politicians that have made reputations of working in the interests of capitalism,” says Beaulieu’s campaign manager, Curtis Buckanaga. “People’s discontentment with these two parties is becoming more common, although she was denied ballot status.”

Buckanaga blasted both Republicans and Democrats for not paying heed to Indian Country needs.
“Both of these parties are constantly undermining and taking advantage of the situation of my people by over-exaggerating on their supposed competency of resolving matters in the interests of all citizens, which they are trying to be appointed to office by gaining the favor of the majority of the consensus to represent our communities at large, except the Indians,” he said.. “Our basic human needs are constantly ignored, neglected, undermined, belittled and cast aside to make way for the overindulgent excessive necessities of our non-native brethren.”

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

A Democrat for governor? Parade of governor hopefuls woo Beltrami DFLers

"Greg Paquin, who was elected as a delegate, spoke about his Senate 4 DFL candidacy against Olson, saying affirmative action laws must be enforced and that more American Indians need to hold elective office."

 
A Democrat for governor? Parade of governor hopefuls woo Beltrami DFLers

Minnesotans haven’t elected a Democratic governor in 24 years, Beltrami County DFLers heard over and over Sunday by a handful of would-be governors.

http://www.bemidjipioneer.com/event/article/id/100016425/


By: Brad Swenson, Bemidji Pioneer

Rep. Tom Rukavina, DFL-Virginia, addresses the Beltrami County DFL Convention Sunday at Bemidji State University. He won three delegates for his Democratic gubernatorial endorsement bid, with the county also sending six uncommitted delegates to the State DFL Convention in April. Pioneer Photo/Brad Swenson

• Tom Rukavina takes three delegates in contested process



Minnesotans haven’t elected a Democratic governor in 24 years, Beltrami County DFLers heard over and over Sunday by a handful of would-be governors.

Rep. Tom Rukavina, DFL-Virginia, evoked the name of the late Sen. Paul Wellstone, saying he’s another progressive Democrat with fire in his belly.

“I’m a little guy from the Range,” Rukavina told nearly 90 Beltrami County DFLers at their convention Sunday at Bemidji State’s Beaux Arts Ballroom. “But 20 years ago there was a little populist with a lot of ideas and people said he couldn’t win. But Paul Wellstone won.”

Rukavina was the only gubernatorial candidate winning delegates from Beltrami County with three. Six delegates will go to the April 23-25 state convention as uncommitted.

“I’m just a common, ordinary person,” said Rukavina, chairman of the House Higher Education and Workforce Committee. “I can connect with the most liberal, progressive in the state and those blue-collar workers we’ve been losing.”

Said he’s been called the “love child between Paul Wellstone and Jesse Ventura,” Rukavina said he has “a fire in my gut, and I’ve got a lot of passion in my heart, and I know with you I can win this election.”

He was light on proposals, saying as chairman of workforce development, he has worked for years on job creation and on green energy projects. He also called education the way to a job and to better pay.

Fellow Iron Ranger Sen. Tom Bakk, DFL-Cook, called the fall election “a very pivotal election” with Minnesota at a fork in the road.

“Never before will we have a governor as powerful as the next,” Bakk said, saying Gov. Tim Pawlenty’s use of unallotment to balance a state budget that had yet to take effect set new precedent, if it stands in court.

“Never before has the power of unallotment that Tim Pawlenty’s used been used in that way,” he said. “The next governor will be facing a $5.4 billion deficit, with the power to unilaterally hold the budget by him or herself.”

Because the balance of power is so badly tipped, this election must be won by Democrats, Bakk said.

Bakk says his “jobs, jobs, jobs” campaign message is based on his background as carpenter who has gone without a paycheck. Also, as chairman of the Senate Taxes Committee, he said the economy must grow jobs as the state budget deficit can’t be solved by cutting spending or raising taxes.

“The third reason is pure politics,” Bakk said. “You think of this election, we Democrats have to do a little soul-searching. We have lost five governor’s elections in a row. This is not a blue state in the governor’s race.”

Swing voters will determine the next election, he said, in rural Minnesota. “I understand the state better than other candidates … I understand the entire state.”

As House minority leader, former Rep. Matt Entenza, DFL-St. Paul, said he also understands the state, helping to bring the DFL to majority power in 2004. He cited Frank Moe’s win in Bemidji over three-term Republican Rep. Doug Fuller.

“This state gave me all the opportunities that I have,” said the Worthington native and Twin Cities attorney who founded the progressive think tank Minnesota 2020. “It gave me the opportunity to get a good education right out of high school. It gave me the opportunity to go to law school at the University of Minnesota.”

He noted the Bemidji area is now “100 percent Democrat.” The House was down 28 seats from being a majority when Entenza took the lead role, he said, and was told that cities like Bemidji and Park Rapids would never be turned to DFL.

“We need tough leadership, we need strong leadership,” he said. Entenza and then-Senate Majority Leader Dean Johnson in 2005 called Pawlenty’s bluff and forced the governor to shut down state government.

“We didn’t want that, but the governor wouldn’t negotiate,” Entenza said, adding that among Pawlenty’s pitches was to end MinnesotaCare and to deeply cut Local Government Aid. “I believe we aren’t elected to hold office, we’re elected to get things done.”

The shutdown ended in eight days, with Pawlenty signing bills with the only real increase in revenues, he said, although there was a squabble over health impact fee or tax on cigarettes.

“We need to make sure we have a new sustainable environment, that we have respect for sovereignty and real partnerships with our tribes, that we expand MinnesotaCare and health care, and that we have a governor who will be strong and tough in a good DFL tradition,” Entenza said.

Rukavina, Bakk and Entenza were the only gubernatorial candidates to speak to delegates, but a number of surrogates spoke for other candidates.

“A mother knows a lot about a person,” said Lorraine Rybak Nelson, Minneapolis Mayor R.T. Rybak’s mother. “I know more about R.T. than anybody.”

She told of being a single mother running a drug store near downtown Minneapolis and raising and educating a family.

“He is a proven leader, he has been a leader all of his life,” said Nelson. “He’s also a person who knows how to handle people and crises.”

She said her son as mayor has balanced eight city budgets. “That’s being fiscally responsible — he learned that from me. He also knows how important it is for everyone to succeed in this world.”

Minnesota needs a Democratic governor, she said, “someone who appeals to people all over this state … The grass-roots people flock to him.”

Nelson urged to Democrats to solidify behind whoever is endorsed at the state convention.

Karen Thissen spoke on behalf of her husband, Rep. Paul Thissen, DFL-Minneapolis, and chairman of the House Health and Human Services Policy and Oversight Committee.

Paul Thissen’s “clear and decisive leadership” is a reason to endorse his candidacy, Karen Thissen said. “He has a proven and successful track record on state-level issues like health care, education and economic development, and that track record is in the partisan environment of the State Capitol.”

He’s also “a fresh, energetic new face in the DFL who can beat the Republicans in November,” she said. “We’re not nominating a candidate, we are nominating a governor. Paul’s going to do particularly well in November against Republicans.

“He is not weighed down by institutional political baggage like a lot of other candidates in the race,” Karen Thissen said. “He can focus on Minnesota’s future, he can be a fresh face in the DFL, and that will make him particularly strong in November.”

House Speaker Margaret Anderson Kelliher “absolutely is the candidate who has one foot very firmly in the rural area and in the metro area,” said Rep. Brita Sailer, DFL-Park Rapids, who spoke on behalf of Kelliher’s bid for governor.

Sailer said she has worked closely with Kelliher and recommends her candidacy as a rural and metro candidate. “She knows and understands our part of the country, of the state, and she also a very, very good understanding of the metro area.”

All of the candidates are “great people,’ Sailer said, “but we need somebody who can win throughout the state.”

Sailer said she was particularly pleased with Kelliher’s leadership in a House override of a Pawlenty veto of transportation funding that included a phased-in gasoline tax hike, the first in 20 years.

Herb Davis, a DFL delegate from a southern county, spoke on behalf of Sen. John Marty, DFL-Roseville, who cited his work in health care.

“He supports universal health care and a single-payer system,” Davis said. “Go on his Web site, and to know what he believes is to know me.”

Local legislators Sen. Mary Olson, DFL-Bemidji, and Rep. John Persell, DFL-Bemidji, also addressed the convention but only to urge support of the endorsed candidate for governor, that the governor’s office must be taken by Democrats in the fall.

Greg Paquin, who was elected as a delegate, spoke about his Senate 4 DFL candidacy against Olson, saying affirmative action laws must be enforced and that more American Indians need to hold elective office.



Sunday, February 28, 2010

Bemidji lawmakers score high on racial equity issues; but, should they have failed?


The best way out of poverty is a job, he said, and that’s why he continues to push enforcement of affirmative action.

Gregory Paquin
Candidate for Minnesota State Senate District 4

Minnesota Democratic Farmer-Labor Party holds press conference skewing the facts to try to deflect charges of racism


The Minnesota Democratic Farmer-Labor Party, reeling in disorganization and disunity from charges of racism surrounding the Bemidji Regional Event Center (BREC) and resolutions passed across the state at precinct caucuses and county conventions for enforcement of affirmative action, pulled together its gaggle of front groups to try to pin the problem of racist hiring practices resulting in extreme poverty for Native American Indians who have no representation in the Minnesota State Legislature, on Native American Indian candidates now seeking the legislative seats held by Senator Mary Olson, Representative Jim Persell and Representative Brita Sailer.

The DFL leadership is fearing many of its other candidates will be challenged for national, state and local offices across Minnesota by Native American Indians seeking a voice in the state's decision-making process as a way to end the racist poverty plaguing Native American Indian communities and Indian Reservations.

For months these racist white legislators have been attacking Gregory Paquin, a Native American Indian and journeyman union pipefitter, for exposing the fact that no affirmative action program and policy was--- or is--- in place regarding the largest public works project in decades now under construction in northern Minnesota costing over one-hundred million dollars with another one-hundred and fifty million dollars in associated development about to get underway as the BREC nears completion and is brought into operation.

The BREC is an operation called by many a “boon-doggle” to make the rich richer while ignoring the extreme poverty plaguing the region.

People have cited as examples of this being a boon-doggle:

Sledge-hammers being rented for $15.00 a day and wheel-barrows being rented by the contractors for $28.00 a day for the duration of this two-year project.

It isn’t hard to figure how many sledge hammers and wheel-barrows could be purchased over a two-year period at rental rates like these.

Many people have suggested that Kraus-Anderson Construction company has learned a few tricks from the military-industrial complex and their high-priced toilet seats.

But, at issue for most people has been the blatant racism in hiring practices surrounding the BREC; a result of the fact that Kraus-Anderson has testified in court that when it asked Bemidji City officials for the affirmative action policies… both the Bemidji City Manager and the Bemidji City Attorney responded, “There is no affirmative action policy you need to follow on this project.”
The City of Bemidji, the State of Minnesota and Kraus-Anderson are now arguing in court that since there is no proof that they discriminated against anyone that they are in compliance with city, state and federal statutes and laws even though they intentionally failed to devise an affirmative action program knowing that poverty in the area has a most distinct racist edge. They can look out their office windows on any given day and see the impoverished Native American Indian people seeking help at the food bank across from city hall.

Minnesota DFL legislators representing the area who boasted that they brought hundreds of jobs to the community with this project are now embarrassed because they refused to see to it that affirmative action hiring policies were in place to assure equal employment opportunities for everyone.

Of further embarrassment to the Minnesota Democratic Farmer-Labor Party, is the fact that a number of the contractors on the job are rat, or non-union, contractors; and some of the contractors are refusing to pay prevailing wages as required by state and federal laws. Workers on the project have further complained that there has been an almost complete failure to enforce health and safety laws and regulations on the job site resulting in a number of injuries.

The Organizing Apprenticeship Project, a front group for the thoroughly racist and corrupt Minnesota Democratic Farmer-Labor Party which is owned by the Minnesota Indian Gaming Association headed up by John McCarthy a racist, rich white man who has a two-million dollar estate built on the poverty he and the Minnesota Indian Gaming Association have subjected casino workers to; and Audrey Thayer, an opportunist apologist for this institutionalized racism, are seeking to divide Native American voters in an election year where people are thoroughly fed up with Obama’s and the Democrat’s dirty wars, their failure to enforce affirmative action and defend worker’s jobs as they claimed they would do in order to get elected: work to end poverty and provide people with healthcare, not to mention the continuing home foreclosures and evictions and rising prices on everything from food to heating costs during a period of economic depression which the Democrats have done nothing about.

Any thinking person with an ounce of common sense can see right through this article that is nothing but a puff-piece where these legislators have not even been asked by the media to explain their refusal to insist on the enforcement of affirmative action on what the Democrats refer to as a “jobs creation project;” jobs for everyone except Native American Indians, other minorities, women and the disabled.

Any person with the least little bit of intelligence has to ask how it is that a foundation funded outfit like the Organizing Apprenticeship Project which has refused to enter the struggle for affirmative action in spite of racist record high levels of unemployment among Native American Indians in the City of Bemidji and the surrounding communities, without one whimper of protest from the Organizing Apprenticeship Project or the three DFL legislators mentioned in this article or the complete and disgraceful silence from the American Civil Liberties Union another front group for the Minnesota Democratic Farmer-Labor Party as is clearly evidenced by the shameful remarks of Audrey Thayer in covering up the racist hiring practices surrounding the Bemidji Regional Event Center where Native American Indians, other minorities, women and the disabled have been intentionally and systematically excluded from jobs--- the largest public works project in over 70 years in northern Minnesota situated between three large Indian Reservations where unemployment ranges from 65% to 85% and where we see predominantly Native American Indians standing in long lines in minus thirty degree cold waiting to get food at the Beltrami County Food Bank right across from the Bemidji City Hall; any thinking and reasonably intelligent person has to ask how it is that Senator Mary Olson, Representatives John Persell and Representative Brita Sailer could possibly score anything but a big fat “F” for intentionally sitting by in complete silence as this institutionalized racism reared is nasty and ugly head in such a vicious and pernicious manner around the BREC.

One Bemidji woman attending today’s Beltrami DFL County Convention compared these legislators getting an “A” for their work for racial equality with Barack Obama receiving the Nobel Peace Prize as he expanded the war in Afghanistan.

Instead of resolving the problem created by one boon-doggle; the DFL with this thinly veiled attempt to cover up its racism is seen by most people as indulging in one more racist shenanigan--- thus compounding the racist injury and insult.

This is not a news story; this article should have been a campaign advertisement paid for by the Minnesota Indian Gaming Association.

The real crux of this story below in the Bemidji Pioneer today is this racist comment from Minnesota State Senator Mary Olson:

“Olson, however, said she had asked Paquin for specific violations but received none from him. Also, she can only work with state violations and she noted that Paquin has a lawsuit against the city of Bemidji involving the lack of American Indian workers on the Bemidji Regional Event Center.”

Olson, like all other DFL legislators is running away from having to say “affirmative action.”

Who the hell is receiving a pay-check courtesy of the tax-payers, which include thousands of Native American Indians living in poverty in the communities in the region surrounding the Bemidji Regional Event Center?

Senator Mary Olson has now made this most outrageous racist statement yet this reporter did not even ask her what she has done to make sure equal employment opportunities are made available to everyone in keeping with the law of the land” the Executive Order #11246 from Lyndon Baines Johnson mandating that affirmative action is enforced until there is “a level playing field” for everyone.

What does Gregory Paquin have to do with whether or not affirmative action guidelines are being enforced on this massive public works project--- the Bemidji Regional Event Center?

It is not up to Gregory Paquin to tell Senator Mary Olson about any violations of anything. It is up to Senator Mary Olson and her legislative colleagues to monitor a project like this to make sure affirmative action is being enforced according to the Executive Order #11246 from President Johnson that is the law of the land; and, in spite of challenges from every single racist organization, every racist employer imaginable and the racists who head up the building trades unions--- in spite of challenge after challenge, President Lyndon Baines Johnson’s Executive Order mandating affirmative action remains solidly and firmly in place.

Now, if Senator Mary Olson and all of her Democratic Party colleagues who have just received this grading of an “A” for their “outstanding” work on behalf on racial justice have to complain that they have taken no action against what anyone except a blind person can easily see just by looking that affirmative action has not been enforced on the Bemidji Regional Event Center perhaps it is time for Senator Mary Olson to make an appointment with her eye-doctor to see about a new pair of glasses.

The question here is not whether or not Greg Paquin told Senator Mary Olson, Representatives Persell or Sailer about the lack of enforcement of affirmative action on this BREC public works project… THE QUESTION here is why Senator Mary Olson, Representative John Persell and Representative Brita Sailer along with the entire gaggle of Democratic Party politicians who have been so quick to boast about all the jobs they created with this project never insisted that an affirmative action policy be in place before one single penny of tax-payers’ money was expended on this project right from the very beginning.

This is the question Senator Mary Olson and her DFL legislators cannot escape answering.

It is the epitome of the worst kind of racism that Minnesota Democratic Farmer-Labor Party State Senator Mary Olson would turn around in trying to escape what she is mandated by law to do as part of her job as a public official required to see to it that the rights of all people are protected as far as equal employment opportunities go and blame Greg Paquin for her failure to perform her job as an elected State Senator.

Senator Mary Olson’s entire campaign has been funded by either the racist Minnesota Indian Gaming Association which lavishly spends the money rightfully belonging to the Native American Indian people to elect their own representatives to the Minnesota State Legislature with most of the rest of her campaign contributions coming from the vey racist building trades unions which have made attempt after attempt--- to no avail--- to get the courts to overturn President Lyndon Baines Johnson’s Executive Order intended to be enforced for just these types of public works projects like the Bemidji Regional Event Center.

And to compound racist injury upon racist injury, Senator Mary Olson and her gaggle of DFL colleagues have REFUSED to insist that an affirmative action policy and plan be put in place for the hiring of maintenance workers and staff of the BREC.

Than this article brings up this entire business of Minnesota legislators passing this legislation concerning the teaching of the Native American culture and language in the public schools.

The racist hypocrisy of this is the epitome of sickening because not one single one of the legislators who voted for this legislation that State Senator Mary Olson has boasted she introduced have raised their voice to question the systemic and institutionalized racism that is a part of the present public school systems here in Minnesota where Native American Indian children are not being taught their own language--- but, they are not being taught to read and write English, properly, either--- thus depriving Native American Indians of the ability and the right to participate fully in the decision-making process in a way that will better their lives and livelihoods after being subjected to centuries of racist genocidal policies on the part of a conquering nation’s government which, in robbing them of their land and natural resources and their way of life, language, culture and livelihoods--- pushed Native American Indians onto reservations hoping they would die off quicker than is being accomplished, thus ending “the Indian problem.”

I suppose State Senator Mary Olson is going to blame some Native American Indian person for not coming to tell her there is a problem of systemic and institutionalized racism in the public schools preventing Native American Indian youth from learning to read and write English properly and that no one informed her that there is going to be an even much larger problem once Native American Indian school children start to learn their own language, again, and then teaching these children to read and write English.

Of course, Senator Mary Olson never had a Native American Indian explain to her why there are no Native American Indians sitting among her and her colleagues in the Minnesota State Legislature or among its Congressional delegation.

Can someone explain to the racist Minnesota Democratic Farmer-Labor Party State Senator Mary Olson in some kind of peculiar political language she expects to be communicated to in, that it is her job to take the time to look into all of these problems including making sure an affirmative action hiring policy is in place before any work begins on a public works project like the Bemidji Regional Event Center--- because, for now, it is her name, not Greg Paquin’s name, on the pay-check she is receiving courtesy of Minnesota tax-payers--- ALL of whom have the right to decent jobs and quality public educations.

Receiving an “A” rating from a MN DFL front organization and then being praised by Audrey Thayer of the ACLU all sitting in the offices at Bemidji City Hall in what can only be described as “damage control” by the Minnesota Democratic Farmer-Labor Party as Olson, Persell and Sailor are facing Native American Indian opponents in the upcoming election. Audrey Thayer, a political gadfly who frequently flirts with the Green Party when it is to her advantage, has made a career out of being apologist for DFL racism while managing to pull off a cute little hat trick pretending she is the advocate for Native American Indian rights without having raised her voice in support of affirmative action in hiring in her “illustrious” career as a human rights advocate--- just like she has managed to remain silent concerning all the rancor and charges of racism in hiring presently surrounding the Bemidji Regional Event Center. Audrey Thayer conveniently manages to talk about past injustices and future injustices but never once has expressed concerns for injustices taking place for which she and the American Civil Liberties Union with their vast resources could do something about… being it covering up for the racist hiring practices surrounding the Bemidji Regional Event Center by taking part in a farce like something like this, or helping to cover-up the recent police murder of a Native American Indian youth by Bemidji Police--- the powers that be can always count on Audrey Thayer to come to their rescue… this time though, she is caught in her own web of deceit and disinformation.

These are the final paragraphs from the article below:
Greg Paquin, the Bemidji union organizer who is opposing Olson for the Democratic nomination to Senate 4, said not enough has been done to enforce affirmative action policies at the county and city level.

Olson, however, said she had asked Paquin for specific violations but received none from him. Also, she can only work with state violations and she noted that Paquin has lawsuit against the city of Bemidji involving the lack of American Indian workers on the Bemidji Regional Event Center.

“We need to have more of our representation to get our people’s needs met,” Paquin said, adding there are no American Indians serving in the Legislature.

“If we just stand by and let it continue, then it won’t be long and all the Indian people will be gone,” he said. “Our people are important.”

The best way out of poverty is a job, he said, and that’s why he continues to push enforcement of affirmative action.
Probably the most profound statement we will ever hear from any politician across the country during the election campaign has come from the Native American Indian pipe-fitter, Greg Paquin, who has decided to run for public office seeking the Senate seat now held by Mary Olson:


The best way out of poverty is a job, he said, and that’s why he continues to push enforcement of affirmative action.

Every single voter in this country should determine if who they intend to vote for supports and understands the very basic and simple truth and what justice requires.

Again--- DFL Senator Mary Olson, DFL Representative Jim Persell and DFL Representative Brita Sailor--- based upon their failure to see to it that affirmative action is implemented and enforced according to statutes and legislative mandates brought into existence as a result of the Executive Order issued by Democratic President Lyndon Baines Johnson in making affirmative action the law of the land, should have received an “F” instead of an “A” when it comes to racial equality… fortunately, voters, not a couple DFL party front groups and an apologist for racism holding a press conference trying to cover up this disgusting and shameful racism which enforces poverty on an entire people, will get to do the final grading which will be done by giving these racist bigots the boot on election day.

Hopefully candidates will step forward to run against Skoe and Howes because if the politicians above received an “A” just imagine what kind of dirt-bags Skoe and Howes must be to have received a “C.”

Let’s just hope that the grading in our public schools is done in a more honest and scientific manner… After all, these people doing the grading gave Minnesota’s most racist and reactionary ever governor, Republican Tim Pawlenty, a “B;” but, we all know why this happened don’t we? Another cutesy little political game being played by the DFL Summit Hill Club who orchestrated this entire charade at the behest of the Minnesota Indian Gaming Association… it isn’t coincidental that Senator Mary Olson’s campaign for re-election is headed up by John McCarthy, the rich white man sitting up on the hill in his multi-million dollars estate courtesy of profits derived from Native American Indians living in poverty.

Alan L. Maki



http://www.bemidjipioneer.com/event/article/id/100016371/



Published February 28 2010

Bemidji lawmakers score high on racial equity issues


Bemidji’s two lawmakers scored “A’s” on racial equity issues in the 2009 session, according to a report released Friday in Bemidji.

By: Brad Swenson, Bemidji Pioneer


Sen. Mary Olson and Rep. John Persell, both Bemidji Democrats, talk Friday to about their “A” ratings in the Organizing Apprenticeship Project’s 2009 Minnesota Legislative Report Card on Racial Equity, released at the City Hall meeting by the ACLU-Minnesota Greater Minnesota Racial Justice Project. Pioneer Photo/Brad Swenson

Bemidji’s two lawmakers scored “A’s” on racial equity issues in the 2009 session, according to a report released Friday in Bemidji.

Sen. Mary Olson and Rep. John Persell, both Bemidji Democrats, earned the high rating from the Organizing Apprenticeship Project, which rated lawmakers on their 2009 votes on racial justice issues.

Add to that that “A” list Rep. Brita Sailer, DFL-Park Rapids, who represents Beltrami County north of Bemidji.

“The OAP has been at the forefront in dealing with racial equity and justice issues in the Legislature,” said Olson. “I am honored to receive this recognition, and I will continue to carefully consider issues of racial equity and justice as we move through the 2010 Legislative Session.”

The Organizing Apprenticeship Project works to advance racial, cultural, social and economic justice in Minnesota through organizer and leadership training, policy research, and strategic convening work.

It ranked lawmakers on a variety of bills, including hiring equity in green jobs, covering more kids with health insurance, and strengthening efforts to revitalize the Dakota and Ojibwe languages.

Both Olson and Persell were at a session late Friday afternoon at Bemidji City Hall to go over racial justice issues, held by the American Civil Liberties Union-Minnesota Greater Minnesota Racial Justice Project.

Olson “has done phenomenal work,” said Audrey Thayer, executive director of the Greater Minnesota Racial Justice Project. And she noted that Olson, Persell and Sailer were three of the only eight lawmakers to receive “A’s” from the OAP ranking.

“This year we particularly wanted to be sure to thank our representatives and senator,” Thayer said. “We still have a lot of work to do locally … in the community, and that’s where we see the grass roots work.”

Thayer noted that Wisconsin passed a law to record race when making traffic stops, so it could be determined if officers are conducting racial profiling. Olson carried a bill to do that in Minnesota, but it died.

“Things like that happen, for whatever reason, so you try again,” Thayer said.

Thayer said ACLU must remain non-partisan, but “I want to assure you that the representatives that we have representing us right now are doing the job that they need to for us, and all we need to do is let them know what we need on a local level.”

Among other legislators, Sen. Rod Skoe, DFL-Clearbrook, scored a “C”, as did Rep. Larry Howes, R-Walker. The Legislature overall and Gov. Tim Pawlenty earned “B’s” for 83 percent support for racial equity bills, OAP said.

“John and I are down there doing what we think is the right thing to do,” Olson said. “We try to represent people in our district and often we get the privilege to be involved in local initiatives and things people bring to us to help us accomplish at the Legislature.”

Olson authored legislation, S.F. 1256, that was incorporated into the Legacy Amendment appropriations bill that was passed and signed into law last session providing $2 million for preservation and revitalization of the Dakota and Ojibwe languages and culture. The funding will be used to design and promote education programs in the two native languages.

“That bill really evolved out of the work a lot of people have been doing for a long time,” Olson said. “It was clear that there were many different initiatives happening by different tribes, but that they weren’t necessarily even aware of what other tribes were doing.”

The bill puts together a working group with representation from each tribe in Minnesota, as well as from communities with high American Indian populations like Bemidji .

The group over two years “will come back with recommendations on how we can build native culture and language into our curriculum, for not just native students but everyone to have some exposure to the benefits of what that would bring,” she said. “We can revitalize the language so that our youth can be fluent speakers, so it doesn’t become an historic language but a living, used language.”

Funded through the new Legacy Amendment, the pot grew from $125,000 to $2 million.

Persell joked that he gained House support for the measure by bringing Leech Lake smoked whitefish to his colleagues.

“A lot of good things came out of that, and we’re poised pretty well on the language issue,” he said.

OAP said that 10 of the 12 racial justice issue bills they were following passed in the 2009 session.

Bills it tracked included covering more kids with health insurance, holding public schools harmless in budget cuts, setting new standards for payday lenders, rethinking graduation testing, and opposing efforts to dismantle General Assistance Medical Care.

The report also cited Olson for authoring restorative justice legislation.

People at Friday’s meeting, representing a wide array of community action groups, cited the need for transitional housing and more youth activities. Cited as a positive move is the placing of Ojibwe language signs in Bemidji businesses.

Greg Paquin, the Bemidji union organizer who is opposing Olson for the Democratic nomination to Senate 4, said not enough has been done to enforce affirmative action policies at the county and city level.

Olson, however, said she had asked Paquin for specific violations but received none from him. Also, she can only work with state violations and she noted that Paquin has lawsuit against the city of Bemidji involving the lack of American Indian workers on the Bemidji Regional Event Center.

“We need to have more of our representation to get our people’s needs met,” Paquin said, adding there are no American Indians serving in the Legislature.

“If we just stand by and let it continue, then it won’t be long and all the Indian people will be gone,” he said. “Our people are important.”

The best way out of poverty is a job, he said, and that’s why he continues to push enforcement of affirmative action.


Yours in struggle and solidarity,

Alan L. Maki

Director of Organizing,

Midwest Casino Workers Organizing Council



58891 County Road 13

Warroad, Minnesota 56763



Phone: 218-386-2432

Cell Phone: 651-587-5541



E-mail: amaki000@centurytel.net



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