Texas Longhorns with newborn calf in Bluebonnets

Texas Longhorns with newborn calf in Bluebonnets

Please note I have a new phone number...

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...

Monday, July 18, 2011

Letter to Carolina Astrain, Minnesota Public Radio

Carolina Astrain

Newsroom coordinator
Minnesota Public Radio
castrain@mpr.org
Carolina;
Thank you for contacting me.
Please find attached the documents I referenced in our phone conversation.
I would encourage you to seek all exhibits and affidavits referenced in the decision handed down by the judge in ordering a new election for the position of Leech Lake Secretary-Treasurer.
You will note that poverty is at the very heart of this corruption of the democratic electoral process, and if casino workers had their rights protected like all other workers under state and federal labor laws these 48 casino workers could not have been intimidated by such a "firing letter" whether the letter was true, or as it appears to be in this case, a fabrication.
As you can see, workers without any rights in their places of employment have no rights in the communities where they reside--- not even when it comes to voting for a candidate; can you imagine what the consequences would be should a casino worker run for tribal or other public office on a platform calling for real living wages and a smoke-free working environment? 
You will have people shove the issue of "sovereignty" in your face as you question them; but, do you know of any sovereign nation that gets away with using "sovereignty" as an excuse for depriving workers of their rights and a safe and healthy working environment?
Here in Minnesota, over 40,000 people employed in the Indian Gaming Industry are forced to work in smoke-filled casinos at poverty wages without any rights under state or federal labor laws. Corrupt tribal politicians and state legislators will argue the state has no business in the affairs of Indian Nations--- this is simply an unfounded argument for convenience because as you can see for yourself, even the Tribal Court Judge in this case relies on state election laws for making a determination as to whether or not a new election should be held.
Also, are you aware that John McCarthy who heads up the Minnesota Indian Gaming Association which doles out tens of millions of dollars to tribal politicians and state legislators for campaign funds, owns Tony Doom Enterprises which prints and manufacturers all kinds of election paraphernalia including such things as yard signs, pens, pencils, buttons, t-shirts, flyers and posters? This may not be illegal; but, I would urge you to consider the ethical question involved of a man in such a powerful position handing out money to politicians with one hand and taking that money right back in for personal gain in his other hand.
The entire political process in Minnesota is being corrupted by those who profit from Indian Gaming. And it is quite obvious that when votes can be purchased for a pack of cigarettes or a tank of gas or for $5.00 we are talking about poverty amidst an industry making the claim of being Indian Gaming from which everyone--- except for a few Indians--- is profiting and enriching themselves, otherwise people wouldn't be selling their votes so cheap, if at all.
Anyone can walk into any of the three casinos operated by the Leech Lake Band--- Palace, Northern Lights, White Oak--- and see there is no reason for one single family on the Leech Lake Indian Reservation to be poor--- yet unemployment is an atrocious and astounding 85% while those employed in the casinos receive poverty wages. I am pretty sure any 10 year old child could tell you that a person receiving poverty wages is going to be poor.
Archie LaRose has a lot of nerve talking about poverty since he works hand in hand with state legislators, federal politicians and the courts who have been enforcing this poverty for centuries and he leads a tribal government committed to denying casino workers their most basic human right--- the right to organize into unions to protect their rights and livelihoods.
Absentee owners of the slot machines and table games run off with the profits and this is why Indian Gaming has forced the people of Indian Nations even further into the poverty with which the United States government planned in creating the reservation system--- in fact, the way the Indian Gaming Industry was created through these so-called "Compacts" it is part and parcel of the centuries old campaign of genocide intended to exterminate Native American peoples. How else can one explain that Minnesota State Legislators banned smoking in all workplaces--- EXCEPT for these casinos. The scientific and medical studies are very clear as to the detrimental affects of second-hand smoke in the workplace--- if you don't believe me, just contact the American Cancer Society or the Minnesota Heart and Lung Foundation... better yet, contact the Indian Health Service to find out how second-hand smoke is related to diabetes, too. 
I would note; as I noted to you in our telephone conversation, that Minnesota Public Radio has not once done a news story on workers employed in the Indian Gaming Industry nor the impact of this industry when it comes to democracy on and off the Indian Reservations.
It is almost laughable, if not so sad, that the Leech Lake Tribal Council would even consider providing a severance package for the former Secretary-Treasurer who swindled the Leech Lake Band out of over two-million dollars--- I guess there really is honor among thieves seeing as how Archie LaRose was arrested at one time for the armed robbery of the Palace Casino.
Thank you for contacting me.
Alan

-- 
Alan L. Maki
Director of Organizing,
Midwest Casino Workers Organizing Council
 
58891 County Road 13
Warroad, Minnesota 56763

Phone: 218-386-2432
Cell: 651-587-5541

Primary E-mail: amaki000@centurytel.net

Sunday, July 17, 2011

Bemidji Pioneer Press omits most important details from story

The article below does not address:

1. Racist poverty imposed by the Indian Gaming Industry with the full complicity of the Minnesota Democratic Farmer-Labor Party along with state and federal governments which fosters this corruption and perversion of democracy resulting from the government imposed poverty of Indian Nations.

2. The article fails to note that those on "the firing list" are casino workers who are forced into employment without any rights under state or federal labor laws.

In fact, this Tribal Court decision is an indictment of what racist poverty breeds.

One wonders if the writer of this article even read the decision before writing about it.

But, in the end, this is very typical of what we get from the mainstream media. No doubt had the writer told the truth Leech Lake Gaming would pull its advertising from The Bemidji Pioneer Press.

Minnesota Public Radio's coverage has been lacking from the beginning and I don't think they even mentioned this most important decision over-turning the election results for Leech Lake Tribal Secretary-Treasurer.

News coverage for what is going on on Indian Reservations should be more closely scrutinized because the issue of poverty is never addressed even when appropriate. For instance, Minnesota Public Radio ran this story about breaking the cycle of obesity and the problems with diabetes on the Leech Lake Indian Reservation:

http://minnesota.publicradio.org/display/web/2010/03/23/ojibwe-take-on-obesity/

Why was their not a single mention about poverty in this MPR story? Did MPR omit mention of poverty or did the people who got the foundation grants not speak about the relationship of poverty and diet and obesity and diabetes because they know that they would never get another grant if they exposed these problems as being the result of racist poverty? After all, it takes quite a little bit of money to "eat healthy," doesn't it? And with an 85% unemployment rate on the huge Leech Lake Indian Reservation is it any wonder people can't "eat healthy?" And then you have people being forced to work in smoke-filled casinos which is a major aggravating factor when it comes to diabetes.

The mainstream media is doing a horrible job when it comes to covering the news on Indian Reservations... but, then again, what's new? And look who is underwriting Minnesota Public Radio programming--- the Indian Gaming Industry which directly reaps super-profits from this poverty. And in turn the politicians are getting huge campaign contributions which are nothing more than bribes to ignore this racist poverty. It is this vicious cycle of racism, poverty and corruption which must be broken but to accomplish this requires the enforcement of democracy.

Alan L. Maki
Director of Organizing,
Midwest Casino Workers Organizing Council

Published July 17, 2011, 12:00 AM

Judge nullifies Leech Lake secretary-treasurer election

Leech Lake Band of Ojibwe Election Judge Heidi Drobnick ruled invalid Friday the June 28 special election that gave Donald “Mick” Finn the secretary-treasurer’s position.
By: Molly Miron, Bemidji Pioneer


http://www.bemidjipioneer.com/event/article/id/100030103


Leech Lake Band of Ojibwe Election Judge Heidi Drobnick ruled invalid Friday the June 28 special election that gave Donald “Mick” Finn the secretary-treasurer’s position.

The vote was certified by the General Reservation Election Board at 1,104 or 50.14 percent for Finn and 1,098 or 49.86 percent for Donald “Donnie” Headbird. Headbird petitioned for a hearing and discovery, which was set for July 14 at the Minnesota Chippewa Tribe Offices, on the election results.

Judge Drobnick found that Headbird had proved violations, which change who was the winning candidate. She ordered a new special election to be held in compliance with the Minnesota Chippewa Tribe Election Ordinance.

Issues raised in Headbird’s contesting of the election included:

- Lack of cross tabulation by the General Reservation Election Board.
- Technical violations such as spoiled ballots, non-resident votes, non-Leech Lake votes, notary stamp irregularity and malfunctions of the tally on the automated machines.
- Absentee votes also voted at precincts.
- Cross-district votes.
- Discrepancy of counting absentee ballots between the official counting site and final printed vote tally.
- Election precinct officers and/or clerks vouching for voter identity.
- Voter intimidation through a false “firing list.”
- Tribal program funds and gas vouchers used to influence votes.


According to Minnesota Chippewa Tribe Election Ordinance, the burden of proof of irregularities is with the person contesting the election, namely Headbird. Drobnick ruled that Headhad met his burden of proof that sufficient irregularities occurred and affected the June 28 vote.
If anyone seeks to appeal the judge’s decision, the process must abide by Minnesota Chippewa Tribe Election Ordinance.

Saturday, July 16, 2011

Leech Lake Tribal Court Overturns Secretary-Treasurer Election; Indian Gaming, Poverty and Corruption go hand-in-hand subverting democracy

Minnesota Democrats in creating the "Compacts" enabling Indian Gaming to take place in a way where casino workers were left without any rights under state or federal labor laws knew full well in doing this they were creating a breeding ground for corruption to thrive from the poverty they were enforcing.

Here is the Leech Lake Tribal Court's decision:

http://leechlakecorruption.blogspot.com/2011/07/leech-lake-tribal-court-overturns.html

Friday, July 15, 2011

Tax the rich; What we have learned in Minnesota.

Here in Minnesota we have learned that "tax the rich" needs to become more than a campaign slogan. If we want to get real results we need to break free from the two-party trap--- a web spun from the lies and deceit by high-paid Wall Street sooth-Sayers employed by these parasitical vultures and coupon clippers--- a web in which we are all trapped.

"Tax the rich" needs to become not only a new political party but a movement of ordinary people determined to take power from the hands of Wall Street thieves.

The entire economic and political system is as corrupt as Bernard Madoff; yet, of all these Wall Street liars, crooks and thieves, only Bernard Madoff is behind bars. Wall Street was willing to sacrifice one of its own hoping they could continue their scam. In the meantime, we all "do the time" as our country suffers from austerity measures dictated by Wall Street to pay for its wars.

Don't buy into this crap about how we need to "raise the debt limit" or face economic catastrophe--- Wall Street bankers profit from our Nation's debt the same way the Wall Street merchants of death and destruction profit from these wars. We have this debt as a result of over 100 years of dirty imperialist wars.

The web we are trapped in has been spun with lies and deceit.

If we are to free ourselves from this two-party trap spun by Wall Street, ordinary citizens must become politicians and each and every one of us must become active citizen/lobbyists in the "Spirit of 1776" marching in the footsteps of Thomas Paine, Frederick Douglas, Floyd Olson, Elmer Benson, John Bernard, Nellie Stone-Johnson, Roger Jourdain, Rudy Perpich and Paul Wellstone.

If we are going to free ourselves from this two-party trap it will take much more than simply declaring ourselves to be "independents."

What we need is a "Declaration of Independence from the Democratic and Republican parties."

We need a "meeting of the minds" from liberals, progressives and the left united around a common agenda for real change--- for peace, social and economic justice.

These dirty wars must end now--- not later. No nation can continue to squander its wealth on wars; this is like dumping the wealth of the Nation into the sewers and the deepest depths of the oceans. For over 100 years our Nation has been squandering our wealth on dirty imperialist wars defending Wall Street's interests. The rich have profited from these wars in many ways and now the wealth they have accumulated over a century must be taxed to the hilt if we are going to solve our problems.

The worst political blunder in American history was when the Minnesota Farmer-Labor Party merged with the thoroughly corrupt Minnesota Democratic Party which was, and remains as the MNDFL, controlled and manipulated by the "Summit Hill Club."

At a time of weakness while under severe attack from the bankers, mining companies, forestry companies, big agri-business and the power generating industries, the Minnesota Farmer-Labor Party should have reached outwards to workers and farmers in other states to build a national Farmer-Labor Party for its strength--- not to the Democratic Party.

Today, Minnesotans are paying a very heavy price for not having a political party like the Minnesota Farmer-Labor Party which elected two socialist governors: Floyd Olson and Elmer Benson.

"Tax the rich" is a good campaign slogan but if it is going to become the basis for government policies we need a "Tax-the-Rich" political party; a political party that becomes a powerful movement of ordinary people willing to become citizen/politicians and citizen/lobbyists.

We can break free from Wall Street's two-party trap but first we must declare our independence from the Democratic and Republican parties while stepping forward to organize our own political party and movement--- we should call our new political party and movement what we are after: Tax-the-rich.


How is Barack Obama's Wall Street war agenda working for you?


Here is a program for real change:


* Peace--- end the wars in Iraq, Afghanistan and Libya and shutdown the 800 U.S. military bases on foreign soil.

* A National Public Health Care System - ten million new jobs.

* A National Public Child Care System - three to five million new jobs.

* Works Progress Administration - three million new jobs.

* Civilian Conservation Corps - two million new jobs.

* Tax the hell out of the rich and cut the military budget by ending the wars to pay for it all which will create full employment.

* Enforce Affirmative Action; end discrimination.

* Raise the minimum wage to a real living wage

* What tax-payers subsidize in the way of businesses, tax-payers should own and reap the profits from.
 

* Moratorium on home foreclosures and evictions.

* Defend democracy by defending workers' rights including the right to collective bargaining for improving the lives and livelihoods of working people.

* Roll-back and freeze the price of food, electricity, gas and heating fuels; not wages, benefits or pensions
.

* Wall Street is our enemy
.

How is Barack Obama's Wall Street war economy working for you?

Let's talk about the politics and economics of livelihood for a real change. 

We are going to be hearing a lot of talk from politicians about "jobs, jobs, jobs." There is only one way to put people back to work in this country and that is by putting people to work solving our problems.


Something to think about around the dinner table this evening.


What you can do:

* Circulate this blog posting.
* Write a "letter to the editor."
* Become your own lobbyist by becoming a blogger.
* Consider running for public office.
* Become a citizen/lobbyist/activist.
* Organize a get-together in your home with a few friends and lets talk about these things. This is where real change begins--- in your living room or sitting around the kitchen table.

I'm fed up; are you?

Check out this short YouTube video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GEYwVb-6TeE

Here in Minnesota we have learned that you can't hope to tax the rich without a new political party that is part of a broad people's movement for change. We have learned that it is the same Wall Street crowd that profits from wars that is against taxing the rich to pay for social programs.

For anyone who thinks this "battle over the budget" is at an end they are in for a rude awakening--- the real troubles are yet to begin.

"The Summit Hill Club" reminds me of the old Finnish feudal lords and these old Finnish feudal lords weren't dragged down from their hills without quite a little ruckus.


Yours in the struggle,

Alan L. Maki
Former elected member
State Central Committee
Minnesota Democratic Farmer-Labor Party


Read about what one citizen did when he decided it was time for change--- check out the new book written by our neighbor to the north from Manitoba, Howard Pawley: Keep True. Get Keep True from your local library; if the library doesn't have it you can get it through the inter-library loan program. A great summer read.

Thursday, July 14, 2011

A response to Robert Reich

Note: The Campaign for America's Future refused to allow me this response to Robert Reich--- whose article on jobs is published below in its entirety and on the Campaign for America's Future's web site.

Professor Reich;

As usual, you make excelent points and suggestions but intentionally omit equally important points, if not more important.

You continue to ignore the job-killing impact of these wars that need to be ended NOW.
For you to continue leaving financing militarism and these wars out of your analysis of "our economic dilemma," as you explain away the economic depression we are in the midst of, this is not only misleading and wrong but intellectually dishonest.

You also refuse to acknowledge that the biggest and best job creation programs would be a National Public Health Care Program and a National Public Child Care Program, ten million and five million jobs respectively.

In the end, after all your criticisms of Barack Obama and his handling of the economy you will turn around and support him for re-election rather than advocating for a new political party which, unlike Obama and the Democrats, would take up your suggestions in challenging Wall Street for power. Barack Obama and the Democratic Party will never entertain your important suggestions for creating jobs even though the 2012 elections will be all about "jobs."

In the end, it is not what Obama "should have said" but what he should do but we both know he won't do.
Second, you don't provide figures for how many jobs WPA and CCC will create. Yes, these are excellent job creating programs; but, together they do not create full-employment. We need much more:

A program for real change...

* Peace--- end the wars in Iraq, Afghanistan and Libya and shutdown the 800 U.S. military bases on foreign soil.
* A National Public Health Care System - ten million new jobs.

* A National Public Child Care System - three to five million new jobs.

* Works Progress Administration - three million new jobs.

* Civilian Conservation Corps - two million new jobs.
* Tax the hell out of the rich and cut the military budget by ending the wars to pay for it all which will create full employment.
* Enforce Affirmative Action; end discrimination.
* Raise the minimum wage to a real living wage

* What tax-payers subsidize in the way of businesses, tax-payers should own and reap the profits from.

* Moratorium on home foreclosures and evictions.
* Defend democracy by defending workers' rights including the right to collective bargaining for improving the lives and livelihoods of working people.

* Roll-back and freeze the price of food, electricity, gas and heating fuels; not wages, benefits or pensions.
* Wall Street is our enemy.
How is Barack Obama's Wall Street war economy working for you?

Let's talk about the politics and economics of livelihood for a real change.


Originally posted at RobertReich.Org.


The President’s Jobs Plan (Not)


By Robert Reich

July 13, 2011


What did the President do in response to last week’s horrendous job report — unemployment rising to 9.2 percent in June, with only 18,000 new jobs (125,000 are needed each month just to keep up with the growth in the potential labor force)?

He said the economy continues to be in a deep hole, and he urged Congress to extend the temporary reduction in the employee part of the payroll tax, approve pending free-trade agreements, and pass a measure to streamline patent procedures.

To call this inadequate would be a gross understatement.

Here’s what the President should have said:

This job recession shows no sign of ending. It can no longer be blamed on supply-side disruptions from Japan, Europe’s debt crisis, high oil prices, or bad weather.

We’re in a vicious cycle where consumers won’t buy more because they’re scared of losing their jobs and their pay is dropping. And businesses won’t hire because they don’t have enough customers.

Here in Washington, we’ve been wasting time in a game of chicken over raising the debt ceiling. Republicans want you to believe the deficit is responsible for the bad economy. The truth is that when the private sector cannot and will not spend enough to get the economy going, the public sector must step into the breach. Cutting the deficit now would only create more joblessness.

My first priority is to get Americans back to work. I’m proposing a jobs plan that will do that.

First, we’ll exempt the first $20,000 of income from payroll taxes for the next two years. This will put cash directly into American’s pockets and boost consumer spending. We’ll make up the revenue shortfall by applying Social Security taxes to incomes over $500,000.

Second, we’ll recreate the WPA and Civilian Conservation Corps — two of the most successful job innovations of the New Deal – and put people back to work directly. The long-term unemployed will help rebuild our roads and bridges, ports and levees, and provide needed services in our schools and hospitals. Young people who can’t find jobs will reclaim and improve our national parklands, restore urban parks and public spaces, recycle products and materials, and insulate public buildings and homes.

Third, we’ll enlarge the Earned Income Tax Credit so lower-income Americans have more purchasing power.

Fourth, we’ll lend money to cash-strapped state and local governments so they can rehire teachers, fire fighters, police officers, and others who provide needed public services. This isn’t a bailout. When the economy improves, scheduled federal outlays to these states and locales will drop by an amount necessary to recover the loans.

Fifth, we’ll amend the bankruptcy laws so struggling homeowners can declare bankruptcy on their primary residence. This will give them more bargaining leverage with their lenders to reorganize their mortgage loans. Why should the owners of commercial property and second homes be allowed to include these assets in bankruptcy but not regular home owners?

Sixth, we’ll extend unemployment benefits to millions of Americans who have lost part-time jobs. They’ll get partial benefits proportional to the time they put in on the job.

Yes, most of these measures will require more public spending in the short term. But unless we get this economy moving now, the long-term deficit problem will only grow worse.

Some in Congress will fight against this jobs plan on ideological grounds. They don’t like the idea that government exists to help Americans who need it. And they don’t believe we all benefit when jobs are more plentiful and the economy is growing again.

I am eager to take them on. Average Americans are hurting, and their pain is not going away.

We bailed out Wall Street so that the financial system would not crash. We stimulated the economy so that businesses would not tank. Now we must help ordinary people on the Main Streets of America — for their own sakes, and also so that the real economy can fully mend.

My most important goal is restoring jobs and wages. Those who oppose me must explain why doing nothing is preferable.

Access to my blog after being prohibited from posting--- again

After keeping me out of my own blog for a long period of time, Blogger.com has finally provided me access to my blog. Isn't this nice of these people who claim to respect democracy?

Monday, July 4, 2011

Peace activists get their message across at Netroots Nation 2011 Conference in Minneapolis


(Click on picture to enlarge) Unfortunately, the need to end these dirty wars was seldom mentioned at the Netroots Nation 2011 national conference as organizers and many participants tried to protect Barack Obama from any criticism. Failure to end these wars for occupation is Obama's "Achilles' Heel" and will most likely lead to his defeat at the polls. These activists tall of the mounting financial cost of these wars in numbers as their shirts tell us what we could have instead of wars. I had my own "demonstration" for peace as I distributed about 2,400 of my business cards to NN2011 participants with the question: How is Barack Obama's Wall Street war economy working for you?

Sunday, July 3, 2011

Same old, same old

This government shut-down in Minnesota is nothing but a ploy by Democrats and Republicans to soften up public employees to take huge cut-backs and concessions in their contract which expired the exact same time the government shut-down while trying to condition and bully Minnesotans into expecting less from government while paying higher taxes as private contractors extract greater profits.

Friday, July 1, 2011

Minnesota shuts down--- where is the money? It's time to talk about redistribution of wealth.

These private, for profit, home health care "providers" (read profiteers) are bankrupting Minnesota like other states. State legislators are guaranteeing these parasites fantastic profits. One need only look at outfits like Provide Care, Inc.--- they mistreat both "clients" and workers. Why haven't legislators put the facts out about this home health care industry?

Then we have a multi-billion dollar casino industry going tax-free. Put up toll-booths to the casinos not at state parks.

Liberal Minnesota Democratic Farmer-Labor Party Governor Mark Dayton has finally mentioned the magic number that I raised with Time Pawlenty years ago: 8,000.

Minnesota has 8,000 millionaires with many of these, like Dayton himself, billionaires. Do the math. If each one of these millionaires/billionaires was taxed really progressively they could pay off the state's debt. Yes; tax the hell out of the rich.

The taconite tax should be increased 300% and large stumpage fees should be assessed on the forestry industry.

But, the primary source of the state's budget problems is Obama's wars. These wars are robbing us of trillions of dollars; combined with the continued militarization of our country with over 800 military bases circling the globe not to mention the U.S. Navy with a huge presence in every ocean and this mobile military unit costing billions now fighting as they have been for over 100 years against the Filipinos.

Let's open the books fully for public observation to find out just how wealthy these 8,000 millionaire/billionaires are. Chances are good each of them could easily afford a one-time tax of $500,000.00--- call it a "fiscally responsible tax on the rich;" after all, where did these wealthy people obtain this wealth from? From the working people they exploit. At $500,000.00 they would be getting off easy since we aren't even looking at their historic robbery which for many of these wealthy people has been going on for over 100 years--- like the Dayton-Hudson Company. And then we have the Pillsbury's and the like.
When will the Minnesota shutdown end? As soon as state workers are bullied and badgered to take huge cuts in pay, benefits and job loss. The contract for state employees expired June 30; the politicians shut down the government on July 1. Coincidental? No chance. State workers are going to be forced to pay for what millionaires/billionaires should be paying for.

Saturday, June 25, 2011

A FaceBook friend asks me why I am "soft" on the Republicans


  • Alan, I'm curious...I rarely read if at all that you bash the Republicans. Why is that? Seems there would at least be some mention of how they are trying to screw over seniors, women, children, edcucation, environmental protections etc. Just sayin. Democrats are not the only ones in Congress.






  • Debbie; feel free to read my blog which I have published for years and you will find I have taken issue with the Republicans in the same way because both the Democrats and Republicans are part of the "two-party trap" Wall Street has set to ensnare working people. 

    Furthermore, as you must be aware I voice my anger towards the Republicans quite often simply by stating, "I wouldn't vote Republican unless Abe Lincoln were to rise from his grave but even then I probably wouldn't be voting Republican because I doubt Lincoln would run on today's Republican Party platform."

    It really isn't my responsibility to engage in an attack on the Republicans when so many of you are doing such a fine job of this as you fail to "hold Obama's feet to the fire" as all of you liberals, progressives and leftists who supported him promised you would do but never found the time to strike the match to light this fire and keep it stoked.

    Furthermore, myself and our Organizing Council and Organizing Committees have been busy bringing forward real solutions to very specific problems creating havoc and misery comprising a crisis of everyday living for just about every single working class family making up the entire working class--- now, may I ask YOU why you haven't taken up support for our alternative to Wall Street's agenda of continual and perpetual wars of occupation financed through these terribly repressive and reactionary austerity measures pushed by BOTH Democrats and Republicans as vigorously as what we have done with very limited resources?

    Here is our program for real change which I made available to over 2,400 participants at the recent Netroots Nation 2011 national conference convened in Minneapolis, Minnesota--- now, I ask you: How many of these self-avowed "progressive" and "professional leftists" do you see writing and commenting about this most basic and fundamental program geared to responding to the crisis Wall Street and its Democratic and Republican Party politicians have orchestrated:

    A program for real change...

    * Peace--- end the wars in Iraq, Afghanistan and Libya and shutdown the 800 U.S. military bases on foreign soil.

    * A National Public Health Care System - ten million new jobs.

    * A National Public Child Care System - three to five million new jobs.

    * Works Progress Administration - three million new jobs.

    * Civilian Conservation Corps - two million new jobs.

    * Tax the hell out of the rich and cut the military budget by ending the wars to pay for it all which will create full employment.

    * Enforce Affirmative Action; end discrimination.

    * Raise the minimum wage to a real living wage

    * What tax-payers subsidize in the way of businesses, tax-payers should own and reap the profits from.

    * Moratorium on home foreclosures and evictions.

    * Defend democracy by defending workers' rights including the right to collective bargaining for improving the lives and livelihoods of working people.

    * Roll-back and freeze the price of food, electricity, gas and heating fuels; not wages, benefits or pensions.

    * Wall Street is our enemy.

    How is Barack Obama's Wall Street war economy working for you?

    Let's talk about the politics and economics of livelihood for a real change.

    Come on Debbie; how often are you throwing this program in Obama's face?

    How many Democrats have you told that this is what you expect from them?

    I know just about every single state legislator--- Democrat and Republican--- in Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan and I know Barack Obama on a personal basis and I shove this program under their noses at each and every opportunity I get so ALL these politicians are fully aware of where I stand--- are they aware of where you stand?

    May I ask you another question, Debbie?

    Have you ever taken the time to write or call or talk to any politician face-to-face about the plight of the more than two-million American workers forced to work in these loud, noisy, smoke-filled casinos dropping dead left and right from second-hand smoke induced cancers, heart and lung diseases and diabetes who all work for poverty wages without any rights protected under state or federal labor laws like all other workers which assure these workers have no rights in the communities where they live as Democrats reap more in campaign contributions from these casino profits than what any Native American Indian community or reservation benefits from--- all under the guise of a perverted and most racist form of "sovereignty" enforced by these "Compacts" created by the Democrats who don't file as having received campaign contributions from "sovereign" foreign Nations?

    Please feel free to check out my blog keeping in mind that it is my job to be the best voice possible for the rank-and-file casino workers whose dues pay my salary and I have never received one single complaint about how I do this job from one single casino worker paying my salary and until I do I don't intend to contemplate altering how I write and speak for anyone--- certainly not this Wall Street flim-flam man and con artist who intends to reap over a billion dollars for his re-election campaign from the likes of the Fertitta Family and the attorneys and lobbyists employed by Brownstein/Hyatt/Farber/Schreck who represent just about every major corporation in the United States and many foreign multi-nationals along with any mobster who comes along seeking a gaming license to conduct business as an Indian Gaming enterprise pushing Native American Indians further into poverty.

    Here is my blog for you to examine. Feel free to use its "search" feature to enter "Republican" or "George Bush" and let all the FaceBook readers know what you conclude as to how "soft" I am on the Republicans:

    http://thepodunkblog.blogspot.com/
  • Friday, June 24, 2011

    What kind of "labor solidarity" rally has been planned by the AFL-CIO in the name of "Hands Across Borders?"

    A letter to a Canadian trade union friend.

    There are all kinds of ironies in life.

    Here is one of these ironies---

    The International Labour Council will be meeting at the scab Grand Portage Lodge & Casinoin Grand Portage Minnesota July 15 thru 17th holding a "Hands Across the Border" international labor solidarity rally in a non-union facility rented by a leader of the United Food and Commercial Workers union who doesn't care about the Draconian conditions casino workers are forced to work under.

    I wonder if Canadian labour leaders understand that the workers at Grand Portage Lodge & Casino in Grand Portage, Minnesota are forced to work in loud, noisy, smoke-filled casinos at poverty wages without any rights under state or federal labor laws without protections and rights extended to all other workers under the National Labor Relations Act as a result of "Compacts" explicitly created to deny workers their most basic human rights in the so-called Indian Gaming Industry where not one single slot machine is owned by any Native American or Tribal Council?

    Does Ken Georgetti know that U.S. labor "leaders" secured this scab facility? Does Ken Lewenza know? Does Kevin Rebeck, President of the Manitoba Federation of Labour know what he is being dragged into? Does Sid Ryan understand what is taking place here?

    I remember when some people invited me to speak at a meeting at the Wheels Inn in Chatham, Ontario. Upon getting to the motel I found CAW pickets. I didn't speak at the meeting and I didn't cross the picket line. Later I participated in a demonstration organized by the Ontario Federation of Labour at the Wheels Inn.

    I hope you Canadian trade unionists are going to be asking questions about why U.S. labor leaders see fit to rent the scab facilities of the Grand Portage Lodge & Casino in Grand Portage, Minnesota for a "labour solidarity action."

    It is disgusting and shameful, but not atypical, for U.S. union leaders to have no sense of solidarity with workers struggling to organize and this is why labor membership in the United States is at an all-time low.

    The blatant racism in using this scab facility knowing the conditions workers are forced to endure is most shameful and disgusting.

    The International Labour Council President, Jim Gleb from United Food and Commercial Workers, rented these scab facilities. His number is 218-728-5174. How does Jim Gleb explain inviting Canadian trade unionists to such a scab facility under the theme "Hands Across the Border." Would Jim Gleb rent facilities from any of the scab hotels/motels on Canal Park in Duluth?

    One can't help but ask why Minnesota AFL-CIO President Shar Knutson did not inform Jim Gleb of the consequences of such action.

    And what about Richard Trumka, the big-mouth who heads up the AFL-CIO?

    And what about Leo Gerard, the USW President with the potty mouth?

    All these U.S. labor leaders who talk about "solidarity" are now using the dues of their members to rent the scab facilities of the Grand Portage Lodge & Casino and dragging Canadian trade unionists into a dirty, racist, anti-labor activity in the name of cross border labor solidarity. Why hasn't Jim Gleb apprised Canadian trade unionists of the most Draconian conditions the workers at the Grand Portage Lodge & Casino are forced to work under and endure without any voice or rights at work?

    Did Jim Gleb tell Canadian trade unionists of the dirty relationship between the Minnesota Democratic Farmer-Labor Party and the Minnesota Indian Gaming Association?

    I would suggest that this "Hands Across the Border" solidarity action be moved to a public facility where workers are union members working under a union contract--- like a Minnesota State Park; but, then again, AFSCME members might not have a contract, right?

    I wonder if the banners for this "solidarity rally" will be printed by the same outfit who printed James Oberstar's yard signs and other campaign material--- by John McCarthy's "Tony Doom Enterprises?" John McCarthy is the racist rich white man who heads up the Minnesota Indian Gaming Association. John McCarthy hands out campaign contributions on behalf of the Minnesota Indian Gaming Association and then with his other hand takes this money back through his business, "Tony Doom Enterprises." 

    It's no wonder the United Food and Commercial Workers haven't been able to organize Wal-marts with staff people like Jim Gleb.

    In a phone conversation I had this morning (6/24/2011) with Jim Gleb he told me he is not aware of the Draconian working conditions imposed on casino workers through these "Compacts" created by the Democrats in return for hundreds of millions of dollars in campaign contributions. Like we say here in Minnesota, "Ya, sure; you betcha." 

    Yours in struggle and solidarity,

    Alan L. Maki
    Director of Organizing,
    Midwest Casino Workers Organizing Council

    Thursday, June 23, 2011

    Slow economic recovery hurting Obama politically as re-election campaign begins

    Published Wednesday, June 22, 2011

    ap news
    AP-GfK poll: Slow economic recovery hurting Obama politically as re-election campaign begins

    By JIM KUHNHENN and STACY A. ANDERSON Associated Press , The Associated Press - WASHINGTON
    Mired in economic worry, Americans are growing gloomier about where the country is headed and how President Barack Obama is leading it. Opinions of the economy are at the lowest of the year as high gas prices, anemic hiring and financial turmoil abroad shake a nation's confidence.

    Obama has hit new highs he'd like to avoid _ in public disapproval over his handling of the economy in general and unemployment in particular _ according to a new Associated Press-GfK poll. In addition, more disapprove of his handling of health care and the federal budget deficit than in the past.
    The poll shows that four out of five people now believe the economy is in poor shape. And, separately, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said Wednesday that some causes of the slowdown, including a depressed housing market, could persist into next year. Bernanke said the Fed believes growth will pick up going into 2012 but at a slower pace than expected.

    How slow is a matter of high interest at the White House. A little more than 16 months before the November 2012 election, the public is split on whether the president deserves a second term.

    For the first time this year in AP-GfK polling, respondents who say Obama deserves re-election have fallen below 50 percent into a virtual split of 48-47 in favor, a demanding challenge for him. Economic concern has quickly stripped away the gloss he briefly gained after the death of Osama bin Laden.

    Obama's re-election team is no doubt concerned as well. The president has been traveling every week for months to campaign battleground states to promote job initiatives. He acknowledges the sluggishness of the recovery, illustrated by May's uptick in unemployment.

    The price of gasoline at the pump has declined a bit recently though it is still nearly 90 cents higher on average than a year ago. White House officials are also monitoring the precarious fiscal situation in Greece where a default by the government could send damaging financial tremors across world markets.

    Obama's overall approval rating fell to 52 percent in the new poll, in line with his ratings before the daring raid in Pakistan by U.S. commandos last month that killed bin Laden.

    The erosion of approval is primarily among women. Last month, 57 percent said they felt he deserved re-election, a figure that dipped to 48 percent this month. The decline came almost entirely among white women, just 37 percent of whom say Obama deserves re-election in the new poll. He also lost support among self-described independents, from 62 percent approval last month to 43 percent now, his lowest since June 2010.

    "I just think that he's not doing his job the way he should be," said Mary Perrine, a grandmother of three from West Lafayette, Ind., who said she has had to struggle to pay her bills.

    Obama faced 59 percent disapproval on his handling of the economy and on unemployment. The steepest decrease was among respondents with incomes above $50,000. In May, 53 percent approved of his efforts to fight unemployment; in June 36 percent approved.

    Still, the poll also showed the public to be conflicted about the president. And their perceptions about the national economy were often at odds with their own personal experiences.

    More people _ 56 percent of respondents _ had a favorable impression of Obama himself than approved of his performance. Moreover, about three-quarters of the survey participants said it is unrealistic to expect noticeable results on the economy in one term.

    And despite the overwhelming sentiment that the national economy is in poor shape, more than three of five of those polled rated the financial situation of their own households as good. While glum about the current state of the economy, one-third said they expect it to get better over the next year. Less than a third said it would get worse, and the remainder said it would remain the same.

    In another consolation for the president, he rates far better than Congress with the public. Congressional job disapproval climbed to 76 percent in the poll, a new high.

    "I kind of sit on the fence about it," Paul Fenger, a Cottonwood, Minn., farmer said about Obama's job performance.

    "I think he is trying to do a good job, but the information isn't getting out, and Congress_ the Republicans and Democrats_ aren't working together."

    Obama may have to count on the likes of John Holdnak, a Florida Department of Education administrator, who didn't vote for him in 2008 but believes "he has really stepped up to do this job."
    Does Obama deserve re-election? "I don't know yet. A lot of things can happen now and between the election that could be his fault. At this particular juncture, he hasn't done anything in my mind not to be re-elected," said Holdnak, one of the survey participants.

    The poll was conducted June 16-20 by GfK Roper Public Affairs and Corporate Communications. It involved landline and cellphone interviews with 1,001 adults nationwide and had a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 4.1 percentage points.
    ___
    Associated Press Polling Director Trevor Tompson, Deputy Polling Director Jennifer Agiesta and AP News Survey Specialist Dennis Junius contributed to this report.

    Online:
    http://www.ap-gfkpoll.com

    Tuesday, June 14, 2011

    Netroots Nation 2011

    The Midwest Casino Workers Organizing Council extends a progressive welcome to bloggers from across the country and from around the world as you gather in Minneapolis-St. Paul for Netroots Nation 2011.

    Welcome to Minnesota where the state government is about to shut down!

    Welcome to Minnesota!

    Minnesota is the home of the Minnesota Farmer-Labor Party that elected two socialist governors--- Floyd Olson and Elmer Benson--- and a Communist Congressman from the Iron Range--- John Bernard.

    Minnesota is a state where historic working class struggles have taken place on the Iron Ore Range, on the docks of Duluth, in the northern region's forests, the great 1934 Teamster Strike in Minneapolis, the struggle to organize the UAW at Ford in St. Paul and struggles of family farmers against big agri-business.

    Today, casino workers are fighting for their rights and union recognition.

    We ask you not to patronize any casinos  during your stay in Minnesota.

    41,000 thousand Minnesotans are forced to work in these loud, noisy, smoke-filled casinos at poverty wages without a voice at work and without any rights under state or federal labor laws under the most Draconian working conditions imposed by a bunch of mobsters who own the one-armed bandits.

    These mobsters working through the Minnesota Indian Gaming Association contribute tens of millions of dollars to the campaign coffers of the Democrats to make sure it all stays this way with the profits going out as the workers are impoverished and the already impoverished Indian Nations are pushed further into poverty as the people are used and abused as a pool of cheap labor for these casino managements.

    Casino workers are forced to sign statements contingent upon being hired that they will not engage in union organizing all in complete violation of international labor laws and all human rights standards.

    Hundreds of casino workers have been fired for the very reason why all of us a gathering here for this Netroots Nation national convention in Minneapolis--- blogging.

    Fired for blogging about their living and working conditions.

    The State of Minnesota routinely denies unemployment compensation to these casino workers fired for blogging.

    Please don't patronize any of the casinos in Minnesota while enjoying your stay in the "land of ten thousand lakes" where every single one of these lakes is contaminated and polluted by the mining companies, big agri-business and bad forestry harvesting practices.

    While visiting the Twin Cities, consider having your picture taken at the bronze monument of socialist Minnesota governor Floyd B. Olson just outside of the Capitol Building in St. Paul.

    Portraits of both socialist governors--- Floyd B. Olson and Elmer Benson--- hang in the Minnesota State Capitol Building, another great photo opportunity--- great photos for your blogs!

    You also don't want to miss out in visiting the St. Paul Ford Twin Cities Assembly Plant. If the Ford Motor Company, Democrats and Republicans have their way, this historic manufacturing facility which operates from the clean green hydro produced electricity from the adjacent dam on the Mighty Mississippi River will be bulldozed over with 2,000 jobs lost just a few months from now to make way for up-scale apartments and condominiums.

    Allow me to explain how politics works in Minnesota...

    The head of the Minnesota Indian Gaming association is a racist rich white man, John McCarthy, whose personal wealth is derived directly from the impoverishment of Indian people used as a pool of cheap labor by the casino managements.

    The Minnesota Indian Gaming Association then receives a portion of these profits to distribute as campaign contributions.

    Not one single Native American Indian sits among Minnesota state or federal legislators.

    John McCarthy, as head of the Minnesota Indian Gaming Association with one hand he  hands out tens of millions of dollars in campaign contributions on behalf of the Minnesota Indian Gaming Association to Minnesota Democrats.

    John McCarthy, the head of the Minnesota Indian Gaming Association and the owner of Tony Doom Enterprises then with his other hand takes back these campaign contributions from these Democrats as they purchase their campaign materials from Tony Doom Enterprises.

    Quite the set-up, eh.

    Ethics?

    Morality in politics?

    Not in Minnesota.

    Something to think about:

    Minnesota legislators banned smoking in all workplaces in Minnesota but intentionally excluded the casinos from this ban in spite of the fact that workers in no other industry suffer the wide-spread health consequences as Minnesota's more than 40,000 casino workers.

    Please don't patronize any casinos in Minnesota.

    Listen to what Minnesota's Democratic Farmer-Labor Party's politicians will be telling you about how "progressive" they are; you are best letting what they say go right out the other ear until you can check out the truthfulness of what they tell you because the truth and the facts seldom jibe with their high-sounding words.

    Thanking you in advance for your solidarity,  

    Alan L. Maki
    Director of Organizing,
    Midwest Casino Workers Organizing Council

    I will be at Netroots Nation 2011 and look forward to discussing these concerns with you; feel free to contact me: 651-587-5541


    How is Barack Obama's Wall Street war economy working for you?
     

    Sunday, June 12, 2011

    The question we need to keep asking...

    As liberal, progressive and left working class activists we should strive to make sure the entire politics of this country begins to revolve around how the American people answer this one basic and fundamental question:

    How is Barack Obama's Wall Street war economy working for you?


    - Ask this question in letters to the editor.

    - Post it on your refrigerator, on bulletin boards at work, in churches and community centers.

    - Use it on protest signs at vigils and demonstrations.

    Most people will tell you that this economy is not working very well for them. After finding out why it isn't working very well for them we can begin to put together a program to turn this country around in creating the kind of country we really want.

    This is such a basic and fundamental question as we approach the 2012 Elections that it is dishonest to be engaged in politics not asking this question of the American people.

    --
    Alan L. Maki
    Director of Organizing,
    Midwest Casino Workers Organizing Council
    58891 County Road 13
    Warroad, Minnesota 56763


    Primary E-mail: amaki000@centurytel.net

    The question we need to keep asking...

    As liberal, progressive and left working class activists we should strive to make sure the entire politics of this country begins to revolve around how the American people answer this one basic and fundamental question:

    How is Barack Obama's Wall Street war economy working for you?


    - Ask this question in letters to the editor.

    - Post it on your refrigerator, on bulletin boards at work, in churches and community centers.

    - Use it on protest signs at vigils and demonstrations.

    Most people will tell you that this economy is not working very well for them. After finding out why it isn't working very well for them we can begin to put together a program to turn this country around in creating the kind of country we really want.

    This is such a basic and fundamental question as we approach the 2012 Elections that it is dishonest to be engaged in politics not asking this question of the American people.

    --
    Alan L. Maki
    Director of Organizing,
    Midwest Casino Workers Organizing Council
    58891 County Road 13
    Warroad, Minnesota 56763


    Primary E-mail: amaki000@centurytel.net

    Saturday, June 11, 2011

    How the big-money of the Indian Gaming Industry controls the media and places profits above human health

    I sent "Letters-to-the-Editors" to over 100 newspapers in response to the Walk Across America promoting awareness of diabetes in the Native American communities.

    My letters concerned the fact that it was being omitted from this awareness campaign that the primary offenders when it comes to the relationship between diabetes and second-hand smoke are the casinos of the Indian Gaming Industry.

    Not one single newspaper out of more than 100 printed my "letters-to-the-editors" yet all health professionals and scientists state that there is a direct link between second-hand smoke and diabetes.

    Not coincidentally, all of these newspapers run very lucrative advertising from casinos in the Indian Gaming Industry.

    When newspaper revenues and profits are involved human health doesn't matter.

    Also of concern is the fact that casino managements played a major role in funding and supporting this Walk Across America to create diabetes awareness thus assuring the connection between second-hand smoke, diabetes and casino workers didn't become an issue because as the Indian Health Service has acknowledged, it is the second-hand smoke in these casinos presenting the greatest problem when it comes to the relationship between second-hand smoke and diabetes along with cancers and heart and lung problems.

    So, why was there no emphasis on the need to end smoking in the casinos of the Indian Gaming Industry? It's all about money trumping human health.

    Out of one-hundred plus newspapers I monitored for reporting on the Walk Across America to create awareness of diabetes among Native American Indians, not one single reporter asked a question about the relationship between second-hand smoke and diabetes in the Indian Gaming Industry which is the major employer of Native American Indian workers. This is more than coincidental if you ask me given the direct link between second-hand smoke and diabetes since the Indian Gaming Industry is the major employer of Native American Indians and these newspapers receive major revenue from the advertising of the Indian Gaming Industry.

    Here is a link to an e-mail exchange between myself and Dr. Nathaniel Cobb, MD--- a high-level official in the Indian Health Service--- quite some time ago so it wasn't like no one was aware of this issue:

    http://laborjournal.blogspot.com/2009/04/letter-to-dr-nathaniel-cobb-indian.html


    And here is another more recent article:

    Secondhand smoke linked to diabetes




    NEW YORK | Thu Mar 10, 2011 7:21pm EST
     
    (Reuters Health) - Cigarette smoke is tied to a higher risk of type 2 diabetes, both for smokers and the people around them, a new study shows.

    And the more secondhand smoke people are exposed to, the greater their risk of type 2 diabetes, according to the paper in Diabetes Care.

    The potential risks of diabetes from being exposed to secondhand smoke weren't previously known, said Dr. David Nathan, who heads the Diabetes Center at Massachusetts General Hospital and is a professor at Harvard Medical School.

    "This just reinforces the lesson from a public health point of view that we've been stressing for decades," which is to limit exposure to cigarette smoke, Nathan, who was not involved in the study, told Reuters Health.

    For the new research, Dr. John P. Forman at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston and colleagues looked at the responses of more than 100,000 women to questionnaires they had answered in 1982.
    The women -- all nurses participating in a national study that would last several decades -- provided information about how much time they spent around cigarette smoke.

    During the next 24 years, about one in 18 women were diagnosed with type 2 diabetes.

    Overall, about one in 13 people in the U.S. have this disease, according to the National Institutes of Health. Type 2 diabetes, in which the body can't process sugar properly, usually develops in adults. Sometimes it can be controlled by diet and exercise, but advanced cases require insulin treatment and can have life-threatening complications.

    Forman's group found that women who smoked more than two packs a day had the highest odds of developing diabetes. For every 10,000 women in the study, about 30 of the heavy smokers got diabetes every year, compared to about 25 women who didn't smoke and didn't spend time exposed to other people's cigarette smoker.

    The risks were actually higher for ex-smokers and for women exposed to second-hand smoke. In both of these groups, about 39 of every 10,000 women developed diabetes each year. However, once the researchers took things such as weight status, age, and family history of diabetes into account, the ex-smokers had a 12 percent higher risk of diabetes compared to women who were regularly exposed to secondhand smoke.

    Even though the smokers had a lower risk of developing diabetes in this study, that doesn't mean it's better for them to continue smoking, Nathan said.

    In this study, nearly all the women were white, but type 2 diabetes affects men and women fairly equally, Nathan said.

    "There's no a priori reason to think that this wouldn't apply to men as well," he told Reuters Health, since the risk factors for the disease are the same for both sexes.

    Nathan said no one knows why smoking and type 2 diabetes are linked, but inflammation may play a role in both.

    Forman and his team did not respond to requests for comment by deadline.

    Nathan noted that the study can't prove that smoking causes diabetes. It just shows they are associated with each other.

    But "did we need another reason not to smoke? I don't think so," he said.
    SOURCE: bit.ly/i1whLA Diabetes Care, online February 25, 2011.


    Alan L. Maki
    Director of Organizing,
    Midwest Casino Workers Organizing Council

    A guest blog: Save the Penokees


    (Posted as a guest blog on request by the author who would like this to receive the widest circulation possible. Alan L. Maki)


    June 7, 2011 

    Dear Editor: After a boiler explosion on a steamer in the anti-lynching novel "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn," Aunt Sally asks, "Good gracious! Anybody hurt?" Huck says, "No’m. Killed a n----." Aunt Sally responds, "Well, it’s lucky; because sometimes people do get hurt."

    Which is exactly what courses through my mind when I read the pro-mining propaganda saturating our media around Wisconsin supporting the http://madisle.info/2011/06/03/gogebic-taconite-asks-for-public-support-in-hurley-meeting-last-night/#axzz1OcDEmcAE Penokee mountaintop removal project near Mellen. The downstream tribe is never acknowledged. Some people will get hurt more deeply by this iron mining project. And they are the Bad River Ojibwe and ultimately the rest of us in the downstream plume on Cheqaumegon Bay and Lake Superior.

    According to our water hydrologist friend Jamie Dunn, who grew up hunting and fishing in the Penokees and was mentored by conservationist Martin Hanson, we can expect the mining "reform" bill will pass right through the Legislature. The Fitzgerald brothers will suddenly announce the introduction of the streamlined iron mining bill, which will lower well water protection standards and deny us the due process right to contest the mine permit.

    All that is left us to protect our motherland is that the Bad River Ojibwe won treatment as state status from the federal government, which allows tribal sovereignty to establish more protective water quality standards, and local opposition to the mine, which reflects the spirituality most Indians and many others feel about the water.

    This proposed mine has put an assault rifle laser sight dead center on the hearts and minds of the Ojibwe people. https://www.facebook.com/l.php?u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.epa.gov%2Fr5water%2Fwqs5%2Fpdf%2Fbadriver%2Fa%2520TAS%2520Supplemental%2520Letter_final_July232008.pdf&h=5c07a The Bad River people believe state and federal law is inadequate to protect this source of life.

    We are adversaries to this proposed mountaintop removal. As the poet Dylan Thomas reminds us, we will not go gentle into that good night. We will rage, rage against the dying of the light. We invoke our grandmothers’ and grandfathers’ fierce tears.

    And we will become more humble before Nokomis Aki, Grandmother Earth.

    Nick VanderPuy

    LaPointe
    madisle.info
    HURLEY — On Thursday, Gogebic Taconite officials asked for public support of legislation yet to be introduced in the Wisconsin legislature that would speed up the permitting process for their proposed iron mine.