Food Colonialism

why do I have to drive 23 miles to get to Whole Foods? Because the wasicu has found a way to colonize our food. They give us the high fructose corn syrup, contaminated animal products, genetically modified, pesticide-laced fruits and vegetables and the cancer, diabetes, and heart disease that comes with it while they safely eat their organic foods they find in the Trader Joes and Whole Foods that are conveniently close to their homes. Out of 320 stores, Whole Foods just opened their first in the inner-city. If you’ve never been to a Whole Foods store before you should go just to see food you never knew existed and also notice how many of their products contain Mesoamerican ingredients. It is also the only market I know of where they have armed guards (probably off-duty police officers making a few extra bucks) patrolling the minorities who make their way inside.

http://livingmaxwell.com/whole-foods-harlem

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Superbug vs. Monsanto: Nature rebels against biotech titan

Superbug vs. Monsanto: Nature rebels against biotech titan

Published: 25 June, 2012, 05:11
Edited: 25 June, 2012, 15:38
Reuters / Victor Ruiz

super bug
Reuters / Victor Ruiz

TAGS: Ecology, Health, SciTech, USA, Agriculture

A growing number of rootworms are now able to devour genetically modified corn specifically designed by Monsanto to kill those same pests. A new study shows that while the biotech giant may triumph in Congress, it will never be able to outsmart nature.

Western corn rootworms have been able to harmlessly consume the genetically modified maize, a research paper published in the latest issue of the journal GM Crops & Food reveals. A 2010 sample of the rootworm population had an elevenfold survival rate on the genetically modified corn compared to a control population. That’s eight times more than the year before, when the resistant population was first identified.

Experts are also noting that this year’s resistant rootworm populations are maturing earlier than expected. In fact, the time the bug’s larvae hatched was the earliest in decades.

“The Western corn rootworm ‘season’ is underway at a pace earlier than I have experienced since I began studying this versatile insect as a graduate student in the late 1970s,” entomologist Mike Gray wrote in The Bulletin, a periodical issued by the University of Chicago’s Department of Crop Studies.

Studies in other states have also revealed that the rootworm population is becoming increasingly resistant to genetically modified corn. Last year, Iowa State University researcher Aaron Gassmann noted that a number of farmers reported discovering, much to their dismay, that a large number of rootworms survived after the consumption of their GM crops. Gassmann branded these pests “superbugs.”

Farmers and food companies have increasingly been dependent on GM crops, and many have abandoned crop rotation, a practice that has been used to stave off pest infestations for centuries. Some have even gone as far as to ignore federal regulation, which require the GM corn plantations be accompanied by a small “refuge” of non-GM maize.

The recent findings have potentially devastating ramifications for both farmers and consumers. Genetic maize plantation would easily come under attack from the swelling number of “superbugs,” resulting in dwindling harvest numbers for farmers. Ultimately, consumers will pay the price not only for corn, an essential product whose derivatives are used in a plethora of products ranging from yogurts to baby powder, but for other crops sold in the market. Rising corn prices would mean that more farmers would plant corn, despite the risks, and the yield for other crops would drop. That would drive prices for virtually all food items up, hitting hard on a population already smitten by ongoing economic difficulties.

Monsanto launched its anti-rootworm GM corm in 2003. The Cry3Bb1 protein, derived from the Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt.) bacterium, was inserted into the corn’s genetic code. The embedded protein was supposed to be fatal to all rootworms.

The recent findings came days after Monsanto, along with other biotech companies, got a major boost from a congressional panel, which okayed the manufacture of GM crops despite pending legal challenges. Many of the lawsuits that Monsanto faces include assessments that its crops are unsafe for human consumption and affect the health of unborn children.

Monsanto has also been an active plaintiff itself. Its primary targets include entities that seek to label GM foods, and small farmers, whom the biotech behemoth accuses of using genetically modified crops patented by Monsanto.

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Smoking Gun: Gaddafi Was To Receive U.N. Human Rights Award

Smoking Gun: Gaddafi Was To Receive U.N. Human Rights Award

Before NATO and the U.S. started bombing Libya, the United Nations was preparing to bestow an award on Colonel Muammar Gaddafi, and the Libyan Jamahiriya, for its achievements in the area of human rights. That’s right–the same man, Colonel Muammar Gaddafi, that NATO and the United States have been telling us for months is a “brutal dictator,” was set to be given an award for his human rights record in Libya. How strange it is that the United Nations was set to bestow a human rights award on a “brutal dictator,” at the end of March.

Ghaddafi
Report of the Working Group on the Libyan Arab Jamahiriya [Document A/HRC/WG.6/9/L.13]

So, I ask a question. Who is this “brutal dictator” that the United Nations General Assembly Human Rights Council was preparing to bestow an award to, for human rights, sometime at the end of March? So, they would have us believe that they knew that he was a “brutal dictator,” yet decided to give him an award for human rights?! Astounding! Astounding the lies that we’re being told by the media, NATO and the U.S. government. Absolutely astounding! Not surprising, but astounding! But more astounding still, is the fact that, time after time after time, much of the American public–without questioning–believes every single word that comes from the “news” media.

It is noteworthy to read the following couple of sentences from the General Assembly’s report:

“Several delegations also noted with appreciation the country’s commitment to upholding human rights on the ground. Additional statements, which could not be delivered during the interactive dialogue, owing to time constraints, will be posted on the extranet of the universal periodic review when available.”

In a footnote of that report, there is a list of countries that praised Colonel Gaddafi and the Libyan Jamahiriya (state of the masses), in support of the General Assembly Human Rights Council’s decision to bestow this award upon Colonel Gaddafi. I simply present the list. The reader can look at the list and make his or her own judgement regarding the credibility level, or perceived credibility level, of any of the particular countries listed:

Denmark, China, Italy, The Netherlands, Mauritania, Slovenia, Nicaragua, The Russian Federation, Spain, Indonesia, Sweden, Norway, Ecuador, Hungary, South Africa, The Phillippines, Maldives, Chile, Singapore, Germany, Australia, Kazakhstan, Latvia, Angola, Nigeria, Congo, Burundi, Zambia, Rwanda, Burkina Faso, Senegal, Cote d’Ivoire, Djibouti, Zimbabwe.

If you have been paying any attention to the news, you will note that a few of the above-listed countries suddenly made an about-face, and decided to start supporting NATO and the U.S. in their war of aggression. Why? Why else!? Money. That’s always the bottom line, and there’s no doubt that it will all be exposed, at some time in the future, just as was exposed the lies that the U.S. government told its citizens, and the world, about “weapons of mass destruction” in Iraq. And those same countries were just about to bestow an award on Colonel Gaddafi, for human rights, after having carefully studied Libyan society. So, what’s this about the “brutal dictator?” It’s what my big brother would call it: CHEWED UP GRASS [Bullshit!! For the delicate amongst you, pardon my colorful language].

If you have been paying any attention to the news, you will note that a few of the above-listed countries suddenly made an about-face, and decided to start supporting NATO and the U.S. in their war of aggression. Why? Why else!? Money. That’s always the bottom line, and there’s no doubt that it will all be exposed, at some time in the future, just as was exposed the lies that the U.S. government told its citizens, and the world, about “weapons of mass destruction” in Iraq. And those same countries were just about to bestow an award on Colonel Gaddafi, for human rights, after having carefully studied Libyan society. So, what’s this about the “brutal dictator?” It’s what my big brother would call it: CHEWED UP GRASS [Bullshit!! For the delicate amongst you, pardon my colorful language].

By Dennis South

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The Good Of Gadhafi, Yes, The Good.

The Good Of Gadhafi, Yes, The Good.
By Brother Jesse October 22, 2011

Read more: http://globalgrind.com/news/good-gadhafi-yes-good#ixzz1blhiFec2
The media has a keen ability in making a good man look wicked and a wicked man look good. Sadly, most of us as American citizens readily embrace what we see and hear on television and on the Internet without doing further investigation. Some of us mock or tease others who jump on the bandwagon after a certain team wins a championship yet in our hypocrisy we allow this government’s opinion of world leaders to give us our full perspective on them—even if it is outright lies.
Therefore, we have continuously jumped on America’s bandwagon. Sorry to disappoint you, but many of us can’t go along with it. Never have, never will.There is a long list of good works that was done by Muammar Gadhafi that we have chosen to ignore and has been underreported. Yes, good works.
Have you ever heard of journalist Gerald A. Perreira from Guyana? He was an executive member of the World Mathaba based in Tripoli and also served in the Green March, an international battalion for the defense of the Libyan revolution. What makes the reporting of Perreira so valuable is the fact that he lived in Libya and wrote extensively about the good works of Gadhafi. In a press conference at the UN on June 15, the Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan quoted from Perreia’s article titled “In the Theatre of the Absurd, Libya Now Takes Centre Stage.”
According to this article, some of the good works of Gadhafi, not known by most, included:
• Gadhafi nationalized Libya’s oil reserves and used the oil revenue to build schools, hospitals and repair infrastructure for the Libyan people.
• Money from Libya’s oil revenuewas directly deposited into the bank account of every Libyan.
• He raised the life expectancy from 44 years to 75 years.
• He raised the literacy rate from 20 percent to 83 percent.
• All people in Libya had access to doctors, hospitals, clinics and medicines. And it was free!
• Basic food items were subsidized and electricity was made available throughout the country.

Read more: http://globalgrind.com/news/good-gadhafi-yes-good#ixzz1blhljIwL
• Gadhafi set up huge irrigation projects in order to support agricultural development and food self-sufficiency.
• Gadhafi spent billions on the Great Man Made River project where his engineers brought water up out of the desert for the people. Would a ‘madman’ do that?
• Any Libyan who wanted to become a farmer was given free use of land, a house, farm equipment, livestock and seed.
• Under Gadhafi, womenhad full access to education, employment; and Gadhafi enabled them to serve in the armed forces.
• Gadhafiwas the first and only leader in the Arab world to formally apologizefor the Arab role in Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade.
• Gadhafi put up a 21st century communications satellite—the first in Africa. This upset European companies who now lost a stream of income that came from their outrageous fees imposed on Africans.
• Gadhafi vowed that his own parents, who lived in a tent in the desert, would not be housed until every Libyan was housed. He made his word bond. Under Gadhafi, Libya attained the highest standard of living in Africa.
• Gadhafi started and financed the African Union with the purpose of developing the “United States of Africa.” This was and is something the Western world did not want.

Read more: http://globalgrind.com/news/good-gadhafi-yes-good#ixzz1blhquMAQ
Wait, there is one more thing. We say we love Nelson Mandela, right? When Mandela visited Gadhafi, he was quoted as saying “Those who object to my visiting Libya have no morals, and I will not join them because I have morals. Qadhafi is my friend. He helped us at a time when we were alone. And the ones who are stopping us from coming here were helping our enemies at that time.”
Gadhafi wasn’t perfect but who is? When analyzing his life, I think about a few tweets that Minister Farrakhan posted on Aug. 30. He tweeted“There is no leader in this world who was or is loved by all. Allah puts on His Scale the weight of our good and our evil. This is how He judges and He is judging today.”
There is much more good that Gadhafi did, but the question is do you really care?

Read more: http://globalgrind.com/news/good-gadhafi-yes-good#ixzz1blhx1WjQ

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How Birth Control Affects A Woman’s Memory

Ever realized how all of the wasicu’s tricknology they brag about causes more harm than good?

How Birth Control Affects A Woman’s Memory
Submitted by Lois Rain on September 25, 2011 – 10:29 pm3 Comments

A crucial discovery was made when researchers decided to test the effects of contraceptives on memory. Sex hormones like estrogen and progesterone which are linked to left brain cognition are suppressed to prevent pregnancy.

In the study, women using birth control for as little as one month showed difficulties recalling important details in a test. Is it possible that many women on the pill eventually seek Ritalin due to their altered concentration and memory?

~Health Freedoms

How Birth Control Affects A Woman’s Memory

Women who use contraceptives like birth control pills experience memory changes, according to new UC Irvine research. Their ability to remember and retain details is dramatically reduced.

“What’s most exciting about this study is that it shows the use of hormonal contraception alters memory,” UCI graduate researcher Shawn Nielsen said. “There are only a handful of studies examining the cognitive effects of the pill, and more than 100 million women use it worldwide.”

The change makes sense, said Nielsen, who works with neurobiologist Larry Cahill, because contraceptives suppress sex hormones such as estrogen and progesterone to prevent pregnancy. Those hormones were previously linked to women’s strong “left brain” memory by Cahill’s research group.

“This new finding may be surprising to some, but it’s a natural outgrowth of the research we’ve been doing on sex differences for 10 years,” Cahill said.

A neurobiologist not involved in the latest work agreed it was a logical and intriguing next step in the examination of memory differences between the sexes. Like any research, she added, it would be important to validate it further.

“Larry Cahill is already well known for his phenomenal research linking sex to memory,” said Pauline Maki, professor of psychiatry and psychology at the University of Illinois at Chicago, who specializes in memory and brain functioning. “The fact that women on oral contraceptives remembered different elements of a story tells us that estrogen has an influence on how women remember emotional events.”

In the study, groups of women either on the contraceptive or experiencing natural hormonal cycles were shown photographs of a mother, her son, and a car accident. The audio narrative differed; some in each group were told the car had hit a curb, while others were told the car had hit the boy and critically injured him.

One week later, all were given surprise tests about what they recalled. Women using hormonal contraceptives for as little as one month barely remembered any details of the event such as a fire hydrant next to the car.

Nielsen and fellow researcher Nicole Ertman agreed the findings could help lead to fuller answers about why women experience post traumatic stress syndrome more frequently than men, and how men remember differently than women. Men typically rely more on right-hemisphere brain activity to encode memory. They retain the gist of things better than details. Women on the pill, who have lower levels of hormones associated with female reproduction, may remember emotional events similarly to men. Nielsen plans to do her doctoral thesis on whether hormones affect the retention of details.

The work, funded by the National Institute of Mental Health, appears in the September issue of the journal Neurobiology of Learning and Memory. Additional authors include Cahill and UCI undergraduate research assistant Yasmeen Lakhani.

Source:

http://preventdisease.com/news/11/091211_How-Birth-Control-Affects-A-Womans-Memory.shtml

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Sicangu Scribe Scribblings

Sicangu Scribe Scribblings
2011-08-24 / Voices


VI WALN
Sicangu/ Lakota

The

Lakota people, along with all of the other Indian tribes living on this continent, were not supposed to survive. Our ancestors were systematically attacked and killed. The buffalo herd we depended on for sustenance was decimated. The foreigners who came from the east so long ago had an agenda filled with greed. It seemed they would stop at nothing to get what they wanted.

The coming of the wasicu saw many of our ways lost. Our people gave up much to survive. We have assimilated to the point where we live in the houses brought to us by the wasicu. We drive his cars. We go to school to learn his language. We shop in his grocery stores. Our children wear the clothes and shoes sold in the malls built by the wasicu.

So there are hardly any Indian people left who can actually say we are not assimilated because all of us have adapted to this wasicu way of life to some extent. I have visited some self-contained villages on reservations in the Southwest, but I doubt the Lakota people could survive a plains winter living in a tipi. We are accustomed to living in a house with a furnace or wood stove. We are also dependent upon electricity and indoor plumbing. How many of us actually live all year without these conveniences?

Even though we have adapted so well into the wasicu way of life, we still have those customs that differentiate our people from mainstream society. At the risk of sounding cliché, I have to say there are many Lakota people who still walk in two worlds. Many of us are still strong in our language and culture. We still have the cannunpa and sacred rites brought to us by Pte San Win. And we have completed another extremely powerful season of Wi Wang Waci. The people will survive another year on Unci Maka. Our prayer keeps us alive.

We may be semi-assimilated but there are still some of us who refuse to succumb to colonized thinking. When you are a colonized thinker your mind operates like a wasicu. You might think it is better to just let go of everything that is inherently Lakota and embrace the way of life the federal government wants us to lead. In my opinion, it is better to keep my mind in a place where I can clearly see where my conversion to a 100% colonized brain will take me. Colonized thought has only led our people down the path of cultural destruction.

Colonized thinkers believe our ceremonies should be put away. They believe our prayers are better off heard in the wasicu churches. Why should we suffer any longer in the Wi Wang Waci? It’s so much easier sitting for an hour every week in an air conditioned church with a taste of bread and wine than it is praying without food or water for four days.

Recently, I witnessed the Sinte Gleska Tiospaye honor their elders. The Sinte Gleska Tiospaye was probably one of the first to settle in the area where Parmelee is now located. I remember my late Grandmother used to talk about when she lived in Salt Camp, located east of Parmelee.

Dennis and Pearl Spotted Tail raised a family who honored them with a public meal and giveaway. Some families still uphold the custom of honoring their elders by recognizing them at public gatherings. We honor our families and children by sharing our food with everyone. We also honor them by distributing gifts to the public. It made me feel really good to see this tradition is still being carried on.

It was awesome to see Dennis Spotted Tail, Ray Spotted Tail, Steven Spotted Tail and Zach Spotted Tail enter the wacipi arbor on horses. Today, it is an extremely rare event to witness four generations of a family descended from our most famous Itancan all together in one place. I believe Chief Spotted Tail would be proud to know that his descendants still carry on some of the customs his family knew when he walked the earth during the nineteenth century.

Spotted Tail pondered the future of his people. “The closing years of Sinte Gleska’s life are considered the most significant in the terms of contributions made to the Sicangu Lakota, and quite possibly Native Americans in general. It was during these years that he began to look at long-range goals and the struggles that the Sicangu people were to endure. As one of the important Lakota leaders, Sinte Gleska viewed people from the highest position and perspective. Viewing people from his level and dealing with the U.S. government at its highest level, the Sicangu Itancan (leader) caught a brief glimpse of the future of the Sicangu.

“What he foresaw in the twentieth century, due to the deteriorating condition of the Lakota and the extremely aggressive policies of the U.S. government, was shocking. Based on this observation and reaction, Sinte Gleska revealed that unless the Lakota were able to cope with this situation, they would not survive as a people. This need for survival prompted him to stress and advocate the idea of accepting the minimal, but basic, aspects of the Wasicu tool of education for survival in the white dominated world. He optimistically envisioned that a certain portion of the Lakota population would master the Wasicu basic skills of learning, and eventually these people would supplant the untrustworthy Wasicu working as clerks, translators, and other agency officials. This would then ensure the survival of the Lakota…

“Today, Sinte Gleska lies buried on the crest of the nearest northern hill overlooking the Rosebud Agency, where the hub of activity between U.S. government and the Sicangu people is enacted on a daily basis.” http://www.sintegleska.edu/HistoryofSinteGleska. htm

Spotted Tail worked hard to ensure our survival. His decisions were based on his desire to see us live. We must follow his example and ensure the survival of our unborn generations.

Vi Waln is Sicangu Lakota and an enrolled member of the Rosebud Sioux Tribe. Her columns were awarded first place in the South Dakota Newspaper Association 2010 contest. She can be reached through email at: vi@lakotacountrytimes.com.

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More Latinos Identify as Native American, Census Shows

More Latinos identify as Native American, census shows
PUERTO RICO

September 30, 2011|By Laurie Guthmann, CNN


“I always knew I had Taíno blood. Looking at the face of my grandmother, how could I not?” Maynard said.

When Ana María Tekina-eirú Maynard filled out her census form last year, she checked the box for Latino, and for the first time, she also checked the box for Native American.
It had taken her more than 30 years — plus research and genetic testing — to discover her ties to the indigenous Taínos of Puerto Rico, to claim her identity and re-learn what she thought she knew of her history.
She’s not the only one. Since 2000, the number of Hispanics who identified themselves as Native American grew from 407,073 to 685,150, according to the 2010 census.

Some attribute the increase to immigration from parts of North and South America where there are large indigenous populations. In some cases, it’s because of recently discovered ties to native cultures.
Growing up in the Bronx, New York, and spending summers in Puerto Rico, Maynard said she had no words to identify who she was. She just felt “different.”
“It is one thing to know that you have indigenous blood,” Maynard said. “And I have always known it. I look at the faces of my mother and grandmother, and that reality is undeniable.”
But Maynard had long been taught that Taíno Indians, the indigenous people of Puerto Rico, were “gone, dead and buried” for centuries, decimated by Spaniards who arrived on the island in the 16th century.
“Why would you question what you have always been taught and what was considered as common knowledge?” she asked.
Still, 14 years ago, Maynard founded the Puerto Rican Folkloric Dance & Cultural Center in Austin, Texas, to preserve the culture of indiginous Puerto Ricans. Today, Maynard gives dance and singing classes as a volunteer at the center, in addition to her full-time job as an engineer with IBM.
Four years ago, Maynard heard about the work of Dr. Juan Carlos Martinez Cruzado, a geneticist from the University of Puerto Rico. In an island-wide genetic study, he found that at least 61.1% of those surveyed had mitochondrial DNA of indigenous origin.
Cruzado’s findings eventually cast doubt upon the notion that the Taínos of Puerto Rico had been completely extinguished but suggested that they assimilated.
“When I learned about (Cruzado’s) work, my life changed,” Maynard said. “It was an awakening that the Taíno heritage was not extinct.”
For Maynard, this was a living heritage to reclaim. Months later, she took a DNA test that confirmed she was Taíno via her mother’s ancestry.
“I walked through that door and for the first time had a deep understanding of who I was,” she said.

Despite diminished numbers — the Taíno population decreased from 8 million in 1492 to 20,000 in 1520 to 200 in 1560 — the Taíno culture has survived and is still present in the language today, said Jose Barreiro, assistant director for research at the National Museum of the American Indian.
“I am originally from Cuba, and I like to say to my fellow Cubans that Cuba is a Taíno word,” Barreiro said. “They have no idea that when they say the word Cuba, they are speaking Taíno. It means ‘big land, well-planted.’ ”

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You Can’t Have an Accent in Arizona

Arizona teacher accent scrutiny halted to avoid civil-rights suit

12 comments by Pat Kossan – Sept. 12, 2011 12:00 AM
The Arizona Republic

Facing a possible civil-rights lawsuit, Arizona has struck an agreement with federal officials to stop monitoring classrooms for mispronounced words and poor grammar from teachers of students still learning the English language.

Instead, the task of testing teachers’ fluency in English will fall to school districts and charter schools as part of federal and state legal requirements.

The state’s agreement with the U.S. Departments of Justice and Education allows it to avoid further investigation and a possible federal civil-rights lawsuit.

The investigation began after unnamed parties filed a civil-rights complaint in May 2010 alleging that the state’s on-site monitoring reports led to teachers being removed from classrooms based on their accents.

In November, federal officials told Arizona that its fluency monitoring may violate the Civil Rights Act of 1964 by discriminating against teachers who are Hispanic and others who are not native English speakers.

Under the agreement, the Arizona Department of Education will remove the fluency section from the form used by its monitors who visit classrooms. It also will require schools and districts to file assurances with the state that their teachers are fluent. The state did not admit any wrongdoing.

As a result, federal officials determined there were insufficient facts to establish a civil-rights violation and closed the case.

Despite the agreement to drop fluency from the form, John Huppenthal, Arizona superintendent of public instruction, said his office will continue to instruct state monitors to talk to districts about individual teachers whose English pronunciation or grammar is flawed.

“We still are going to be conscious of these articulation issues,” Huppenthal said. “Students should be in a class where teachers can articulate.”
State monitoring

Each year, state monitors visit a sampling of classrooms to determine compliance with state and federal laws covering how schools teach children still learning English.

The monitoring of teacher fluency began in 2002 after passage of the federal No Child Left Behind Act.

A concern was the low proportion of English-learning students who pass the state’s standardized test in reading, writing and math, called AIMS.

Monitors have reported infractions such as teachers instructing in Spanish, using Spanish-language teaching materials or hanging Spanish-language posters on their classroom walls, which are prohibited by Arizona’s English-only law.

Monitors also reported that some teachers did not have proper credentials to teach English learners.

The monitors also noted what they considered unacceptably heavy accents that caused some teachers to mispronounce words and teachers using poor English grammar.

In 2007, The Arizona Republic examined reports from the 32 districts monitored that year. State officials found teachers with unacceptable pronunciation and grammar in nine districts.

Examples of concerns included a teacher who asked her English learners “How do we call it in English?” and teachers who pronounced “levels” as “lebels” and “much” as “mush.” Last year, federal officials found monitoring reports that documented teachers who pronounced “the” as “da” and “lives here” as “leeves here.”

In recent years, the state has monitored up to 60 districts a year and has notified between five and 10 districts of concerns regarding fluency issues, said Andrew LeFevre, spokesman for the state Department of Education.

After monitors documented the mistakes, the state required districts to develop and implement “corrective-action plans” to improve a teacher’s English.

Arizona has never suggested a teacher be removed from a classroom or fired because of improper use of grammar, syntax and punctuation, LeFevre said.

“It was certainly brought up to the district but never in a fashion that this teacher should not be teaching this class,” LeFevre said.

Instead, state officials would suggest helping the teacher take additional English-language classes or work with a fluency coach, LeFevre said.

The monitoring did lead to transfers of some teachers.

After a visit from a state monitor in the 2006-07 school year, the Creighton Elementary School District received a list of about 10 teachers who monitors said had problems speaking English fluently, said Susan Lugo, the district’s director of human resources. Lugo said the 10 teachers were very skilled at their jobs and their students made academic progress.

“We offered them assistance with classes for grammar and pronunciation,” Lugo said. The classes were free. Five of the teachers continued to struggle, and Creighton transferred them out of English-learning classes and into regular classes.

“Nobody lost pay,” Lugo said. “Nobody lost a job. Keeping them in the district was a good move for us.”

The Arizona Education Association, the state’s largest teachers union, investigated several complaints that teachers were removed from classrooms for fluency reasons, union President Andrew Morrill said.

“We followed up on initial complaints that they themselves or someone they knew in their building were being harassed, receiving undue scrutiny and having their fluency called into question because of their accent,” Morrill said. No evidence was found that it was widespread.

Morrill said the union never heard of a teacher being fired because of the monitoring reports.
Federal concerns

Federal officials found Arizona’s approach to determining fluency was unacceptable because findings were subjective and based only on brief classroom visits. That was the case even when targeted teachers had passed more extensive English-fluency exams administered by districts.

During the 2010-11 school year, the state monitored 1,000 classrooms “and most visits were for at least 15 to 20 minutes,” LeFevre said.

Arizona defended its actions, saying the classroom visits were effective and the No Child Left Behind Act of 2002 required the state to monitor fluency.

The state agreed to change the monitoring form by removing the fluency sections.

The state instead will accept a district’s or school’s assurance that a teacher tested as fluent on a more complete, objective exam.

But Huppenthal said he will continue to find ways to regain state power over determining the fluency of English-language teachers.

He plans to explore requiring a fluency test when teachers are licensed by the state and seeking direct authority to monitor fluency through the state Legislature.

“We’re going to want explicit authority from the Legislature so we can have regulatory power over these issues,” Huppenthal said. “That’s how we’re going to resolve this issue.”

Read more: http://www.azcentral.com/news/articles/2011/09/12/20110912arizona-teacher-accent-scrutiny-halted.html#ixzz1XiydTJ4z

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Rigoberto Menchu Seeks Guatemala Presidency

Menchu seeks Guatemala presidency

Rigoberto Menchu

Rigoberta Menchu launching her Winaq movement
Menchu launched her Winaq movement earlier this month
Indigenous activist Rigoberta Menchu says she will run for president in Guatemala’s elections this September.

Ms Menchu will stand for a coalition of the indigenous party Winaq, which she founded earlier this month, and the left-wing Encounter for Guatemala.

If elected, she will become the first president from Guatemala’s indigenous Maya community.

Rigoberta Menchu was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1992 for her work in defence of indigenous rights.

We are two women who share ideas and have extraordinary teams
Rigoberta Menchu

Profile: Rigoberta Menchu
She drew attention to abuses during the Guatemalan civil war during which her parents were murdered by the Guatemalan army.

She has since led a campaign for Guatemala’s former military rulers to be put on trial.

Looking for change

Rigoberta Menchu, 48, made her announcement after talks with Nineth Montenegro, who heads Encounter for Guatemala.

“We are two women who share ideas and have extraordinary teams,” said Ms Menchu.

For her part, Ms Montenegro said that her colleague’s candidacy was the start of “a successful process that will change the country”.

Winaq is a Mayan word meaning “the wholeness of the human being”.

If Rigaberta Menchu were to win, she would be the first woman to hold the office, as well as the first Maya president.

More than half of Guatemala’s 13 million inhabitants are descendants of the Mayans.

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Native culture On hipsters/hippies

Hipsters
by Jen Musari, on the Native Appropriations website
Kelsey pointed me to this post on Sociological Images last week which rounds up some of the latest and greatest of this ever continuing trend.
I know my parents, grandparents, aunties and uncles have had to deal with this in their time and it’s certainly not a new thing –but it’s 2010 and not only does it still continue strongly to this day – it’s taken some interesting turns down the erasure of true origins road. This isn’t a hate letter, or reverse racism (as if there were such a thing!). It’s also not an attempt to discourage you from finding out more about Native people – and in fact I strongly ENCOURAGE you to do some actual research and knowledge seeking so you might get our culture right and think twice about things like permission and respect before you act on your appropriation.
So to the hipsters/hippies who appropriate Native culture but aren’t First Nations/Aboriginal/Indigenous, I’m asking you nicely now, to PLEASE stop annoying (the fuck out of) me with the following:
The clothing. Whether it’s headbands, feathers, bone necklaces, mukluks, or moccasins – at least put some damn thought into WHAT you are wearing and WHERE it’s from. I know our people sell these things en masse in gift shops and trading posts, and it seems like it’s an open invitation to buy it and flaunt it, but you could at least check the label to see A. If it’s made by actual Indigenous people/communities B. What does this really mean if YOU wear it?
Organic living and environmentalism as “new” concepts. One of my friends jokes that all Native people should get green energy for free because that’s how we’ve been living for centuries and also taught the colonizers how to live (which may or may not have screwed us in the end). I really do love the resurgence of the green movement and how things are becoming more environmentally friendly – but I don’t need certain members of the movement pretending like they started this or ignoring extreme realities we’re facing like environmental racism and justice. I also think we need actual Native people being in charge of and leading the responses to environmental degradation that are happening in our own territories. It’s not to say we don’t need allyship and support – but it’s also rather irritating when I read an event posting for a cause of some sort for a First Nation where there’s like two Native people in the whole place (who either barely say anything or are supposed to go along with the way the hippies organize without complaint because they’re “doing something for us”).
The appropriation of and silence about our medicines and teachings. I see direct examples of this in some of the alternative feminine and menstrual cycle products that are on the market now. I’m not hating on the DIVA cup or suggesting that the “divine goddess” isn’t a great story to hear, but I am wondering where your assertion of Indigenous midwifery knowledge is – and that in fact the absence of acknowledgment of where periods not being a bad thing or the blood from our menstrual cycles being sacred originates, is a direct erasure of Indigenous truth. It’s not enough to romanticize our medicines and teachings about women’s bodies and power and say, “Look at how thousands of years ago they used to do that!” and then capitalize your product or book off of some ancient-seeming fluff you are trying to present as en vogue. No! We are STILL doing this, we STILL believe in this, and damn it, you need to HONOR where this comes from!
We’re all one race. I’m not here to burst your bubble of unity and friendship, those things are great – but I am here to remind you that while some of you want to be our friends and ignore so-called “cultural differences” – you can’t ignore the history and current day presence of colonialism and racism. I don’t need to list off the statistics of health disparities and poverty in Native communities today to prove this fact to you – just consult the facts. I don’t want to be the angry Indian you won’t be friends with, so do me a favor and when you talk about “earth-based” things and your “right” to participate in whatever culture you want because we’re all human, know that there is such a thing as cultural protocol and that many of us are in crisis now of how to protect Indigenous knowledge.
Your grandfather’s, sister’s, cousin’s great-grandma was a Cherokee princess. This is an old one that we’ve been hearing for decades now – but it’s especially bothersome when I’m on the plane and you want me to educate you about blood quantum systems and status for the next 2 hours of the flight. I won’t do this, and I’m tired of you getting upset at me if I don’t initially present myself as Native (because no, we don’t all have braids and brown skin) but then you look at my laptop stickers and are like, “Mohawk. Hey my third cousin’s sister’s best friend is Native!” and then I just turn the volume on my IPod louder because I don’t always have the answers to your incessant questions – which are really just one question to me – why are we so invisible to you?

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