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Tuesday, May 20, 2008

ENDANGERED!: Right to peacefully, assemble, free speech in the Twin Cities

Every street around the Xcel Center will be closed, to provide security to the politicians who will meet inside to congratulate themselves on 5 years of a brutal war on Iraq. Two parking lots adjacent to the Xcel are reserved for media trucks, which the RNC will rely on to broadcast their message of war, trying to convince the people of this country to cast their votes for more years of war and human suffering in Iraq, and more years of ignoring human needs here at home.

The alternate permit grants our Coalition the small space that remains: A 2000 square foot triangle, across the street from the Xcel Center. Our permit allows the use of that space for less than 2 hours, and requires that the march proceed along a 1000-foot long turn about, then turn back on itself, and return to the State Capitol Building on the same road we marched in on. This limited time and space cannot accommodate 50,000 protesters.






PROTEST RNC MARCH PERMIT APPEAL
Wednesday, May 21
3:30 p.m., public hearing at 5:30 p.m.
St. Paul City Hall
15 W Kellogg Blvd, 3rd Floor
St. Paul

Call on St. Paul Mayor & City Council to Support Permit Appeal by the Coalition to March on the RNC and Stop the War

On Wednesday, May 14, the Coalition to March on the RNC and Stop the War received an alternate permit for our demonstration on September 1, 2008. This alternate permit was provided because both the route and the time in our permit application were rejected by St. Paul Police.

Thanks to public pressure from you, and pending legal action in federal court, we now have a permit that will take our march up to the Xcel Center.

However, the terms of the alternate permit will not accommodate the large, national demonstration we are planning. The space and time limitations are unworkable, and are designed to limit the impact we can have on the RNC and its media coverage.

Every street around the Xcel Center will be closed, to provide security to the politicians who will meet inside to congratulate themselves on 5 years of a brutal war on Iraq. Two parking lots adjacent to the Xcel are reserved for media trucks, which the RNC will rely on to broadcast their message of war, trying to convince the people of this country to cast their votes for more years of war and human suffering in Iraq, and more years of ignoring human needs here at home.

The alternate permit grants our Coalition the small space that remains: A 2000 square foot triangle, across the street from the Xcel Center. Our permit allows the use of that space for less than 2 hours, and requires that the march proceed along a 1000-foot long turn about, then turn back on itself, and return to the State Capitol Building on the same road we marched in on. This limited time and space cannot accommodate 50,000 protesters.

The alternative permit effectively protects the Republicans and their message of war, while restricting the rights of common people to demand peace, justice and equality. Limiting both time and space for the march – ensures that only some protesters will have a chance to raise their voice at the site of the Convention, while thousands may never even see the building. This is a plan we cannot accept.

According to the City ordinance, permit decisions can be appealed to City Council. This week, we will ask St. Paul City Council members to overturn the police department's decision, and grant our original permit request for September 1, 2008. We will also raise our objections to the alternate permit that was granted.

Moreover, the St. Paul Police Department is required to demonstrate a substantial public safety interest that necessitates rejecting the original request. We have received no explanation of how the alternate route satisfies any concerns raised by our original route. City Council members can get real answers.

We ask you to call on the St. Paul City Council to stand on the side of peace and justice, to issue the permit we applied for, to ensure a successful March on the RNC to stop the war on Iraq.

We expect our appeal to be heard at the City Council meeting on Wednesday, May 21, 2008, on the 3rd floor of City Hall at 15 W. Kellogg Blvd, St. Paul. The meeting begins at 3:30pm, and public hearings are scheduled for 5:30pm - it is not clear when the Permit appeal will be scheduled on the agenda. Please attend the meeting if you can, and contact St. Paul City officials beforehand.

Ask them to approve the original permit application, including a later and longer time, and a route that physically accommodates more protesters and provides more space at the Xcel Center. They can also help by getting the police to answer some of these questions:

1. Why was the original permit denied? What specifically about the route and time would create the traffic and safety issues stated as the basis for denial? How does the alternate permit avoid these issues?

2. Why does the March have to clear the Xcel by 2:00 p.m.? Will all demonstrators be banned from the "soft security zone" after 2:00 p.m.? If not, why can't the March go later in the afternoon? Can the March starting time be moved back to accommodate people from out of town who will be arriving? If not, why not?

3. Why do the free speech rights of the corporate media take precedence over the rights of the people? Two parking lots adjacent to X-Cel are both being given to the media, can't one of them be given to the people? Either parking lot would not be any closer to X-Cel than the demonstration zone, but would greatly expand the ability of people to reach the Xcel and turn around without problems.

4. When will the delegates arrive on 9/1/08? Is the plan to make the March pass by X-Cel center by 2:00 p.m. just so that it will be gone by the time the delegates start arriving?

Debbie Montgomery (Ward 1) * 651-266-8610
Dave Thune (Ward 2) * 651-266-8620
Pat Harris (Ward 3) * 651-266-8630
Russ Stark(Ward 4) * (651) 266-8640
Lee Helgen (Ward 5) * 651-266-8650
Dan Bostrom (Ward 6) * 651-266-8660
Kathy Lantry, President (Ward 7) * 651-266-8670

Also, please contact Chris Coleman, Mayor * 651-266-8510

Background:
See a map of the City's proposal on-line here - http://www.twincities.com/localnews/ci_9262346
See the Coalition's proposed route on-line here - http://www.protestrnc2008.org/node/39
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LEGAL OBSERVER AND KNOW YOUR RIGHTS TRAINING
Tuesday, May 20 (TONIGHT!)
6-8 pm
2104 Stevens Ave S, Minneapolis
Casual dinner will be served

Come and learn:
-about your First Amendment rights
-about the importance and role of Legal Observers
-how Legal Observers have put their skills to use
And get trained to be a Legal Observer!

* You do not need to be a lawyer or law student to participate. Community members and people working/volunteering with community-based organizations are encouraged to attend!
* All ages welcome, must be 21 to BE a Legal Observer

Sponsored by the Main Street Project and MN Chapter of the National Lawyers Guild
For more info:
Kathy@leagueofruralvoters.org or 612-879-7578
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POSTVILLE: LARGEST IMMIGRATION RAID IN US HISTORY

This raid, in a tiny little town in Iowa, is shaping up to be the largest in history. It will have a devastating impact on the community--immigrant and non-immigrant alike. Below this article is a post from Amalia Anderson with Main Street Project, a friend of CUAPB, who was on the ground in Postville and has ways for people to help. Please help if you can.

Raid Could Make Postville a Ghost Town
05/14/2008
http://kaaltv.com/article/stories/S443938.shtml?cat=10151

(KAAL) -- The immigration raid in Iowa we told you about on Monday is being called one of the largest of its kind in U.S. history.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials arrested 390 people from the Postville Kosher Meatpacking Plant in northeast Iowa.

We've learned 20 people, 10 men and 10 women officially face criminal charges. That means they'll face trials and possible jail time. The men were in court Tuesday and the women will appear today.

The rest of those arrested from Agriprocessors Incorporated are suspected of aggravated identify theft and using fraudulent social security numbers. They're being held at local jails and nearby fairgrounds, and they could face deportation.

Postville, Iowa had fewer than 2,300 residents before Monday’s immigration raid.

Now, with so many arrested and so many others leaving, many are worried about the city's future.

Carla Campos manages her mother's Guatemalan diner. Most days by lunch, the place is packed. But today, there isn’t a single customer. It gave Campos no choice but to close up shop.

"It's uncertain, we don't know what we're going to do, close, stay open or what," says Campos.

In the window of nearly every Hispanic business in Postville, there's the same bilingual sign up today: Closed.

Postville Mayor Robert Penrod says many residents fled town or hid in fear.

"They were afraid to go home, because they were afraid they would be arrested. The children at school were afraid to go outside," says Mayor Penrod.

With more than a third of Agriprocessors' workers detained, city officials wonder how their largest employer can bounce back.

"If Agriprocessors pulls out I guarantee you this will be a ghost town," says Penrod.

Without the plant, he estimates, two-thirds of the homes here will sit empty. 95% of downtown businesses, like the diner, will dry up.

He hopes it doesn't come to that. Instead of deporting the people arrested, he'd like to find a way to keep them in Postville. Right now, he's working with state and federal lawmakers to come up with a plan.
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WHAT YOU CAN DO TO HELP

The Postville Raid--the largest at a single site in history, has left many victims in its wake. Approximately 390 people were arrested on Monday as ICE descended on Agriprocessors-- the nation's largest kosher packing plant. There are many needs! Below please find a variety of options for donating cash or supplies to the various organizations/institutions that are directly working with the detainees and their families.

This list was created based on conversations with staff working with the community in Waterloo and Postville.

***For those of you in MN-- the Main Street Project is more that willing to serve as a 'drop-off' location: 2104 Stevens Ave S, Minneapolis. For directions to our office, please contact: Kathy Hiltsley at 612-879-7578 or kathy@mainstreetproject.org.

Supplies Needed:
reams of white paper for copying/printing
staplers
staples
Xerox toner
pens
paper clips
diapers (for infants-toddlers)
infant formula (Simulac and Enfamil)
gas cards (Recommended for IA: Kum & Go, Hy-Vee, Casey's General Store)
Hygiene products for men and women (shampoo, soap, deodorant, toothpaste, toothbrush)
food (non perishable)
phone cards (long distance to Latin America)

Cash Donations for Immigrant Families:
For sending checks and cash, the address is:
Veridian Credit Union
P.O. Box 6000
Waterloo, IA 50701

If making a donation via credit card, please call 1-800-235-3228

*** Please include account number for the Postville fund when sending either form of payment: 5830490

Cash Donations for El Centro Latinoamericano (general operating):
El Centro Latinoamericano
500 E 4th Street Ste. 321
Waterloo, Iowa 50703
Phone: 319-287-6400

Cash Donations for St. Bridget's Catholic Church:
Saint Bridget’s Hispanic Ministry
Att’n. Paul Real
PO BOX 369
Postville, IA. 52162
___________________________________________________________
Communities United Against Police Brutality
3100 16th Avenue S
Minneapolis, MN 55407
Hotline 612-874-STOP (7867)
Meetings: Every Saturday at 1:30 p.m. at Walker Church, 3104 16th Avenue South
http://www.CUAPB.org

Monday, May 05, 2008

A Call For A Pan-afrikan Tribute For Fidel Castro - The BN Village

A Call For A Pan-afrikan Tribute For Fidel Castro - The BN Village

Few world leaders have been supportive of the Pan Africanism as former Cuban President Fidel Castro. I will be doing a tribute as well in the near future.

1805 Treaty: Twin Cities still Dakota Land

Courtesy Chris Spotted Eagle, host of the excellent Indian Uprising show on KFAI community radio here in the Twin Cities:

KFAI’s Indian Uprising for May 4, 2008 from 7:00 - 8:00 p.m. CDT #264

Statehood - now reaching one hundred and fifty years. "On May 11, 2008, Minnesota will reach its 150th anniversary as the 32nd state in the United States of America. Beginning in January 2008, the Sesquicentennial will be a year long, statewide commemoration and a catalyst, to learn from our past and connect all of us as Minnesotans in creating a thriving, innovative future." - 2007 Minnesota Sesquicentennial Commission.

The public's knowledge about the Indigenous people of their homeland, Mini Sota Makoce (land where the waters reflect the skies), and their true history before and after Minnesota statehood proclamation and how it came to be, is abysmal.

• What about the gallows where the 38 Dakota men were hung in Mankato, Minnesota, on December 26, 1862, for defending their homeland? It was the largest mass hanging in the U.S.

• What about the Treaty of 1805? Most of St. Paul and Minneapolis are on this land. The land is Dakota land and was not compensated for.

• What about the 1,700 Dakota people, primarily women, children, and elders who were force-marched 150 miles from southwestern Minnesota to the concentration camp at Ft. Snelling in 1862-1863? Many were killed during the march and others died at the camps.

"My grandmother was bayoneted in the stomach by a soldier on horseback. Then, hundreds more were killed in concentration camps during the cold Minnesota winter of 1862-63." - Chris Mato Nunpa (Dakota)

"My grandfather spent his third birthday at the concentration camp at Fort Snelling, which ironically was only a few miles from his birthplace on Nicollet Island in the Mississippi River. My great grandfather, Mazaadidi, was one of the warriors condemned to hang at Mankato but was instead sent to prison." - Reuben Wambdi Kitto, Jr. (Dakota)

Letter to the Editor excerpt, Mpls Star Tribune: "The decision of the Legislature whether to fund a project concerning Fort Snelling is a golden opportunity for Minnesota to take a leadership role in the nation in dealing with the legacy of the genocide of indigenous peoples in the Americas. We can renovate the fort or we can imagine something better. I propose that the state appropriate funds for the removal and reconstruction of Fort Snelling on more neutral ground and to turn the reconstructed site into the Minnesota Museum of Genocide. The original site would be turned into a state park in which the DNR and the Dakota communities of Minnesota, both federally recognized and non-federally recognized, would come to an agreement on the design and management." - Jeffrey Kolnick, Associate Professor of History, Southwest Minnesota State University and Augsburg College. See complete letter: http://www.startribune.com/opinion/commentary/15679667.html

Guests are:

Chris Mato Nunpa (Dakota), Ph.D., Associate Professor, Indigenous Nations & Dakota Studies (INDS), Southwest Minnesota State University

James Anderson (Dakota), Cultural Liaison, Mdewakantunwan Dakota Community Center, Minnesota

Waziyatawin Angela Wilson (Dakota), Ph.D., AAUW American Postdoctoral Fellow, former Associate Professor of Indigenous History, Department of History, Arizona State University; Editor, In the Footsteps of Our Ancestors: The Dakota Commemorative Marches of the 21st Century, Living Justice Press

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Indian Uprising a one-hour radio Public & Cultural Affairs program relevant to Native Indigenous people, broadcast each Sunday at 7:00 p.m. CDT over KFAI 90.3 FM Minneapolis and 106.7 FM St. Paul. Producer and host is volunteer Chris Spotted Eagle. To receive or stop getting announcements, message Chris to radio@spottedeagle.org

For internet listening, visit www.kfai.org, click Play under ON AIR NOW or for listening later via their archives, click PROGRAMS & SCHEDULE > Indian Uprising > STREAM. Programs are archived only for two weeks.

Thursday, May 01, 2008