Showing posts with label rural alaska. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rural alaska. Show all posts

Saturday, 15 May 2010

Sarah Palin, The Great Divider


Sarah Palin has the knack to upset and alienate several different groups of people.

Women


Sarah Palin appeals mainly to white middle-aged men, flaunting her sexuality as a weapon. Older_Wiser summed it up very well when she commented on the NRA thread:


"And if it seemed $P was in her element, I have a theory. This event was probably 75-80% male, all of them more than likely considering themselves "alpha males"--the kind of man Daddy was, the person she always talks about and was taught to emulate, the person who tried to raise her like a boy, with not much input from her mother, a seemingly weak person who went along to get along, deferring to Chuckles in all things, really. $P connects more with men because she caters to them, wants to be one of them. She is what we feminists used to call a "male identified" woman, not one who relates easily to other women, nor who understands the female perspective, nor has much empathy with women, just gives women's lives lip service at best. To her, most women are "weak" because they don't emulate men; she will tolerate women but only if they don't compete with her, only complement her. She has no real women friends, only the hired help. She really does see women as the "weaker sex"--except herself, of course. Caring for children is weak--even though you're too ignorant to use birth control (and use "religion" as an excuse--but I question her maternal history), you can birth a few but let others take care of them or let them raise themselves--no TLC for those kids or much interaction.

Her goals have always been much larger. Her persona is carefully crafted--the "sexy" image which insinuates hard f*cking, not tender lovemaking. Is there any wonder how easily she was mocked in a porn film? She never really talks about her kids in a normal mother's voice; there's no protective instinct there, for chrissakes, she uses them as props for her own agenda.


During my working career, I met a few women executives who she reminds me of, the kind who loved it up there with the power males and who treated the female "help" like shit. They also wore those male-inspired "power suits" except with the short skirts just like she does (face it, pants just are not sexy enough, they make you seem less open to sexual contact; in fact, I worked for one attorney who forbade us to wear pants and he engaged often in sexual harassment and taken to court for it--all the younger women were game). Those women used sexual promise as one of their tools in their climb, aggressive and negative in their approach to women, using their power over others no less than men do.


Notice her speeches to groups with lots of women and on issues women really care about--special needs kids, reproduction, etc. She simply repeats rightwing talking points in a canned way, tells inappropriate jokes or talks about herself, no real preparation, just there to collect the money because she disdains her own sex. Of course, she does this with predominantly male groups, too, but they are more easily tricked by her complicatedly constructed persona which flatters them. Even though she may not have been paid directly for this NRA gig, she was in her element--as twisted as it might seem.


I know this may seem pretty simplistic to some, but this is the way I see her--she's no friend of women, and the polls themselves reflect this, with much fewer women admiring her than men, and I would venture that those women don't really think for themselves but just follow the male lead."


Sarah Palin, the beauty queen, is a feminist in name only and had the nerve to criticize Hilary Clinton for whining.


Environmentalists


Sarah Palin loves to call the studies on climate change "snake oil science". Her "Drill Baby Drill" mantra is well known and although she loves blowing her own trumpet about regulating the oil industry in Alaska, the reality is very different. She taxed them, yes, but the oil companies simply saw it as paying it forward. It was a good investment, as they had the governor of the state fighting their dirty battles with the "Feds", as she affectionately calls the federal government. The state of Alaska initiated law suits against the government regarding the listing of polar bears and Beluga whales as endangered species. Regulations and safety measures were routinely ignored or cheating in the tests went on, before during and after her half-term as governor.


She took her governor's hat off to make a mockery of the Clean Water Act when Pebble Mine paid millions of dollars in bribes to corrupt the outcome of a ballot that, if won by the environmentalists, would have prevented them from polluting Bristol Bay and threatening the livelihood of salmon fishermen in the region.


Sarah Palin rejoiced when the Supreme Court sided with Kensington Mine in another mockery of the Clean Water Act, risking the delicate eco-system of Berners Bay.


Animal lovers


Sarah Palin's stance regarding endangered species was already covered above. Which leaves her predator control programs...


She offered a bounty of $150 for each wolf's left paw when she was in office. In the NRA speech, she said that there is no aerial hunting of wolves. That's correct, it's not hunting, it's extermination, pure and simple. She joked about smoking a pack. She attacked Hollywood little starlets and wildlife groups, saying that they don't respect people and put the lives on Alaska Natives at risk. Sarah Palin played the race card in the most cynical way. She doesn't want to preserve moose and caribou herds for the natives, she wants to protect the interests of commercial trophy hunters.


On a less political note, there are stories about how she hates cats and how her family couldn't control a dog gifted to them by the Menards so they had to return the dog Agia to the Menards. Now she's talking about her dad and her own family getting Labrador dogs to find antlers or something like that. Poor dogs!


Over half a million people took the time to sign a petition protesting Discovery's decision to buy her Sarah Palin's Alaska series.

Special needs community


Sarah Palin addressed a special needs event in Alabama, where she offered the usual platitudes about how Trig was a blessing from God and the best thing that ever happened to them. She couldn't find anything meaningful to say about how they're investing in Trig's future independence through early intervention programs or how much faith she has in the work of advocates for people with special needs. She chose instead to bash what she calls "Obamacare" and repeat her death panels negative message.


We all saw how Trig was paraded during the book tour, at all hours, poorly attired for the weather conditions, rarely wearing his glasses. We saw her "reading" him a book during an interview and how she quickly got rid of him when he became fractious with her flicking the pages in front of his nose. The prop misbehaved, get him out of here!
Grandma Sally and auntie Kate attempted to force feed him solids, Piper helped him take a stroll for the delight of the fans, Trig was carted out to pose with other children with Down syndrome, was passed like a sack of potatoes to Franklin Graham, Jason Recher or anybody who would take him off Sarah's hands when she needed to yield a microphone to address the adoring crowds.






We had the Family Guy incident, when Sarah Palin used Bristol to issue a Facebook rant, showing this family's ignorance about special needs. Andrea Friedman, the actress who voiced the character in that episode of Family Guy, showed the Palins what people with Down syndrome can achieve when their families are truly supportive and provide them with the necessary nurturing (instead of carrying them around like a loaf of French bread).
Many parents of children with special needs commented or contacted us to say that Sarah Palin doesn't speak for them.

Christians and non-Christians

People who follow the real teachings of Jesus Christ are absolutely appalled by Sarah Palin's version of Christianism. God speaks to her and through her. She's not charitable, not forgiving, not anything that could be found in the hearts of a true Christian.


Jewish people can only laugh at her tales of Queen Esther and are very suspicious of her praise of Israel. When she said the Jews would flock to Israel in the coming weeks and months (to Barbara Walters), defending the expansion of Israeli territory, sensible Jews heard alarm bells. What was she on about? It seems to be related to the Rapture, when all Jews who don't convert to Christianism will be destroyed.


Sarah Palin's interpretation of the Constitution is just as skewed as her interpretation of the bible. She believes America is a Christian nation and that the governement should follow Judeo-Christian tenets. That's where the non-Christians come in. They should be patted on the head and tolerated by the "real" American believers.


She seems to have a close association with Franklin Graham, an opportunistic Evangelist who, in a role reversal, appears to use his father as a prop...


Parents


Oh, Mama Grizzly really upsets committed parents. All her children have been used relentlessly since Sarah Palin hit the national scene. Track the brave, fighting for the First Amendment in Iraq. Bristol the knocked-up teenager, campaigning for revirgination and other BS, Willow the statutorily raped, desperately trying to keep a low profile, Piper the cute, the babysitter who should be at school and finally Trig the prop, as explained above.


Bristol, the retroactive virgin, has already jumped on the grifting bandwagon. Speaking engagements and a book are in the pipeline and she has a more manageable prop, poor Tripp.
Sarah Palin loves to ram her "family values" down our throats and we can only shake our heads in disbelief... where is the CPS?

Immigrants, ethnic minorities

Sarah Palin's record regarding Alaska Natives is absolutely terrible. From taking cookies and the Evangelical circus, led by the ubiquitous Franklin Graham, to starving, poverty stricken communitites to appointing Wayne Anthony Ross to the office of Attorney General.

She married a token native and exploits it every step of the way.


She sided with the governor of Arizona on the unconstitutional law against Hispanics or any other minority the local police decides to target. Not content with that, she's now meddling in the affairs of a school in Illinois.


Her references to "Real Americans" are simply an underhanded way of implying that the president is not a real American. He's black, a Muslim and god knows what else...


***

Intelligent, peace loving, sensible people are all disgusted with Sarah Palin's hypocrisy, divisiveness and vindictiveness. Her shallow statements, repeated platitudes and word salad may make us laugh, but deep down we're all horrified.

Sarah Palin is loved and admired by people who can't see beyond a pretty face or a shapely body, by people too ignorant to seek information, too racist to be objective. She's in a comfortable relationship with ruthless Neocons and large corporations. They see each other as useful tools to achieve their own ends. And she gets a pass from the media because she means big bucks for them.

Hopefully the intelligent, sensible people are in the majority and will continue to see through Sarah Palin's lies, continue to be outraged by her ill advised statements and will show their power when the mid-term elections take place later this year and again in 2012.

BONUS PICTURE

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Thursday, 27 August 2009

Looking into Sarah Palin's mirror


This landed on my comments box:

Lambie has left a new comment on your post "Sarah Palin's ineptitude":

"Franklin Graham's circus" ?? Look in the mirror, Regina. What did you or your crowd DO about the plight of people caught for six weeks in the energy crisis in western Alaska? You blog while people starve. Some people carp, and some people act. If Franklin Graham taking action to deliver food and supplies was a circus, then I say less blogging and more circuses.

Dear Lambie,

The bloggers collected thousands of dollars and organized food and supplies boxes to be sent to more than one village, the ones actually affected by the energy crisis, not the two villages where people were amused and very surprised to see Sarah Palin arriving with the Evangelical circus, bearing boxes of food, pamphlets and some cookies. They were grateful, but didn't need them. What Sarah Palin achieved with her photo-op trip was to insult a village elder from Emmonak, one of the villages facing hardship.

None of the bloggers involved in the appeal went to the villages for a photo-op, they just helped publicize the villagers plight and made sure they received the help they needed some 6 weeks before Sarah Palin and attending circus made any effort to help at all.

We forged lasting friendships with some Alaska Natives and have started another appeal on behalf of a dear friend who lost her husband recently. She has one little daughter and is due to have another baby in November, facing a very bleak winter without her beloved husband as she's unable to hunt or earn enough money to heat her house or feed her children.

We blog for a reason, a very good reason. We were the first ones to turn the attention of the rest of the world to the crisis in Western Alaska and we haven't stopped after a photo-op. Donations poured in during those 6 weeks from all over the world and we will continue to be vocal about the problems the villagers face each winter, about all the issues that affect their livelihoods, such as the salmon by-catch by industrial trawlers from out of state that ruined the villagers ability to fish and sustain the local fisheries.

Unlike Franklin Graham's circus, we didn't flood the villages with Evangelical propaganda, our help had no strings attached. We respect the villagers religion and traditions, they don't have to worship at our altar. We helped people out of human solidarity and don't need temples built or any recognition or grovelling gratitude.

The villagers don't know our faces or our names, we don't need the publicity, we have no hidden agenda. We preserved the dignity of a very proud people because we didn't demand any public show of gratitude, we accepted their friendship instead.

Yes, Lambie, I look in the mirror. What I see is a face that doesn't need to be photographed, a name that doesn't need broadcasting. I am but one of the thousands of people from all over the world who look in the mirror and like what they see and only wish they could do more. We sent what we could to people thousands of miles away from our heated, comfortable homes.

I don't know what Sarah Palin sees when she looks into her mirror... but I guess it's not pretty.

How about you, Lambie? Where did you send YOUR money? SarahPac? The Alaska Fund Trust? The Samaritan Purse?

If you did, go and have a look in the mirror. You will see the face of a sucker.
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Tuesday, 19 May 2009

Sarah Palin's heart of gold


In response to the suggestion by John Coale that SarahPac should donate to Hillary Clinton to help offset her campaign debts and broker a relationship between the Palins and the Clintons, Meg Stapleton said:

“While we appreciate your efforts and recognize that a friendship with the Clintons is appropriate, the governor believes (and I concur*) that using SarahPAC to pay down Hillary’s debt is not a prudent use of the money,” Stapleton wrote to Coale in a Feb. 17 e-mail, a few days after he made his pitch to the governor. “Contributors who chose between heating their homes and sending in a contribution because they believe in Sarah would be crushed.”

People might get the idea that the residents of Emmonak have donated to SarahPac...

No, they had to choose between heating and eating. But they were OK after Sarah visited the wrong villages with the Evangelical Circus and dished out her home baked cookies.

Our Sarah has a heart of gold...

*(Have you noticed how Meg Stapleton now gives her opinion when speaking on behalf of the governor?)
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Wednesday, 13 May 2009

Please help


The residents of the flooded villages in Alaska need help!

The Red Cross in Fairbanks is handling any donations and help. They are working with people from all throughout the area not just Eagle.

Pat, from Red Cross in Fairbanks, said what they were in desperate need of right now are comfort kits. Small bags of toiletries items: Shampoo, Soap, wash cloths....

Items and/or checks should be sent to:

Spring Flood 09
c/o Red Cross
725 26th Ave Suite 201
Fairbanks, Alaska 99701
(907) 456-5937

Thanks!

Links
Mudflats, Anonymous Bloggers
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Friday, 8 May 2009

Sarah Palin does the right thing


Unconfirmed report of Sarah Palin's expected whereabouts this weekend:

"The governor may be on the East Coast this weekend to attend state events and meetings. If she is there, the governor may accept one of the standing invitations for dinner," said Palin spokeswoman Meg Stapleton.

Unconfirmed travel plans are cancelled:

Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin will miss a chance to chat up President Obama this weekend because she's cancelling plans to attend the White House Correspondents' dinner, but she's got a good excuse.

Sarah Palin is staying in Alaska and this weekend will travel to an area affected by flooding . The governor declared a disaster a few days ago:

Gov. Sarah Palin's office just announced the state is declaring a disaster in Interior Alaska because of this week's violent flooding and the potential for more damage.

Well done, Sarah Palin. I'm always suspicious of her motives for doing anything, though.

In this case, either Sarah Palin decided to act as a proper governor at long last, or she's trying to avoid the kind of criticism she received in the light of January's events in Western Alaska.

The annoying bloggers* launched an online campaign to help villagers who were having to choose between heating and eating. The campaign was very successful, but Sarah Palin waited six weeks before visiting the area, then showed up at the wrong villages with an Evangelical circus and a few cookies.

If this visit to the flooded areas is conducted in a more dignified manner, should we thank Sarah Palin or the annoying bloggers?

Oh well, let's thank everybody!

* "Bored, anonymous, pathetic bloggers who lie annoy me." ~ Sarah Palin to Esquire magazine
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Thursday, 30 April 2009

Sarah Palin goes fishing


Salmon fishing, Yukon Delta


Sarah Palin's official government website has released a video of the Emmonak Job Fair 2009 narrated by her Rural Adviser, John Moller.

I can't embed the video, but you can watch it by clicking on the link above. See who was chosen to illustrate commercial salmon fishing...

What I don't understand is why fishermen from the Yukon Delta would go fishing in Bristol Bay, shown on the video as an example.

It seems to me that this Emmonak Job Fair video was put together to show what a fantastic effort the state government is making to solve the villagers' problems. As they never took any interest in those villages before the bloggers drew attention to the energy crisis back in January, I suppose they didn't have any footage of real natives doing some real fishing in their own area.

Should we expect to see Sarah Palin starring in the next series of the "Deadliest Catch"?

Recall Sarah Palin
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Wednesday, 29 April 2009

Sarah Palin's respect


The same 2005 interview mentioned in my last post provides another insight into Sarah Palin's thinking:

Q:What do you plan to do next?

A: We talked in the beginning about our passions and what piques our interest.

And as much as I've become so frustrated with the Alaskan political scene, that still is my interest is serving Alaska in whatever capacity Alaskans may see fit in the future. And I recognize that there is a time and a season for everything. I don't know exactly when the season would be, but I would like to serve somehow statewide at some point because this is my home. I have great respect for my husband's native roots and I'm so fortunate to have married into this family that has ties to Alaska's, our foundation. Bush Alaska, villages, Native communities ... I think deserve a lot more respect. It's another one of my passions, and it's another kind of driving force that gets me thinking if Alaskans would choose me to do something in the future for them, I would love to serve them.

Sarah Palin said she thinks Native communities deserve a lot more respect.

How come she treats them with utter contempt, dismissing their pleas for help in preserving their livelihoods and way of life? When she took the Evangelical circus to Western Alaska, the best she could do was give them some cookies and urge them to emulate Native Todd: go and seize opportunities upon the North Slope.

They don't have to go and seek opportunities hundreds of miles away from their villages. They have a local economy based on salmon fishing, presently being wrecked by the salmon bycatch which is a result of factory trawlers from out of state fishing for pollock.

Did Sarah Palin support the Natives during the North Pacific Fisheries Management Council meeting in Anchorage last month? Did she help them make their case for a limit on bycatch allowing the salmon population to recover so their economy wouldn't collapse and they wouldn't have to face another winter without cash to buy fuel and groceries?

No.

To the Natives of Western Alaska, salmon fishing means a whole lot more than a photo opportunity.

What is the exact meaning of the word respect in Sarah Palin's dictionary?

Excellent post about salmon bycatch: Mudflats
Recall Sarah Palin

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Sunday, 12 April 2009

Sarah Palin's rural adviser, John Moller or John Mole?


John Moller was interviewed by Newsminer recently. Some answers made go hmmmm. (emphasis mine)

Q: Tell me a little bit about where you’ve been and what kinds of things people are telling you about. Are you an ambassador for the governor? Are you a resource for rural Alaskans?

A: I believe this position is about the link between the governor’s office and rural Alaskans. That isn’t to say that any resident of rural Alaska, or all Alaska for that matter, doesn’t have access to our governor. It just sometimes may be easier to get hold of me than her.

Q: Do you report directly to the governor? Do you have some face time to really be able to talk to her about some of these issues that are being brought to your attention?

A: In some cases. Not all of them (issues) are a high priority, but eventually, if not directly, through e-mail, indirectly she gets my reports.

In terms of face time, I think I get as much as some, maybe more than others.

Q: How can the state, as a governing entity, respond to that? [rural communities having no economies] Who has sovereignty over things?

A: At least one of the tools to answer that question has been formed by this governor, through the rural sub-cabinet and the advisory panel to that sub-cabinet, which is made up on rural Alaskans.

Q: What about subsistence issues?

A: AFN (Alaska Federation of Natives) has had a position on subsistence. It doesn’t align with our constitution. If it’s going to be addressed, it needs to be addressed as a whole, the Legislature and the administration — that’s if it’s going to be addressed.

Q: Gov. Palin’s appointment of Wayne Anthony Ross as attorney general is causing some consternation among some Native groups. Have you gotten a lot of feedback on the appointment?

A: A little bit; I hear a little bit. I have my own thoughts on it. We as Alaskans want the best person in the job that’s best for overall Alaska.

I also believe sometimes those positions are filled by people who have actually done something in their life, which there’s a great chance somebody is not going to agree with.

Hmmmm...

I'm highly suspicious of any appointments made by Sarah Palin, as a rule.

Judging by the answers above, John Moller is proving to be no exception...

Links
Newsminer interview
Previous post about rural Alaska and John Moller

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Friday, 27 March 2009

Sarah Palin's war against Alaska Natives


Sarah Palin's record on issues regarding Alaska Natives:

As soon as Palin was sworn in as governor, she set a firm course against Native subsistence rights. One of her very first decisions was to continue litigation that seeks to overturn every subsistence fishing determination the federal government has ever made in Alaska.

The reason is no secret: to diminish subsistence fishing rights in order to expand sport and commercial fishing.


The federal court in Alaska rejected Palin’s main challenge. But that defeat has not deterred Palin.

Palin continues to argue in court that federal subsistence protections are too broad and should be narrowed to exclude vast areas from subsistence fishing in favor of sport and commercial fishing. Palin opposes subsistence protections in marine waters, she opposes subsistence protections on many of the lands that Alaska Natives selected under their 1971 land claims settlement, and she opposes subsistence protections in many of the rivers where Alaska Natives customarily fish.

In her two years as governor Palin has proven herself to be no friend of Alaska Native subsistence.

Palin has also tried to overturn critical federal protections for Alaska Native customary and traditional uses of game, again simply to enhance sport hunting. Palin’s attack here has targeted (among others) the Ahtna Indian people in Chistochina; and although the federal court last year rejected this challenge, too, Palin has refused to lay down her arms. The battle has thus moved on to the appellate courts.

In both hunting and fishing matters, Palin has challenged critical protections that Native people depend upon for their subsistence way of life, merely to enhance sport fishing and hunting opportunities.

At the very same time that she has challenged federal subsistence rights, she has waged a second battle against tribal sovereignty.

While Palin pays lip service to the fact that Alaska tribes are federally recognized, it is an empty statement because she insists they have no authority whatsoever to act as sovereigns despite that recognition unless, she argues, the state first permits a tribe to take some particular action.
From and article on Indian Country Today, by Lloyd Miller and Heather Kendall-Miller, who practice law in Anchorage, Alaska, representing Native interests.

WAR

Wayne Anthony Ross has lobbied Congress over amendments to the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act. He was co-counsel on the initial subsistence lawsuit, the McDowell case, in which the state Supreme Court tossed out the state's rural-preference law and affirmed equal hunting and fishing rights for Alaskans no matter where they live.

Native sovereignty threatens to create separate classes of Alaskans and would further divide the state, Ross said. ''The idea of Native sovereignty is a 19th-century principle, and we are going into the 21st century.''

Ross, an urban hunter, wants to keep the state constitutional guarantee of equal access to fish and game. ''Rural preference is wrong and not necessary to ensure subsistence foods,'' he says.
From "Who's Wayne Ross?", ADN

I intend to challenge provisions of ANILCA that mandate federal management of our resources, through pressure on our congressional delegation and through court action as well. Alaska’s fish and game resources must be managed by Alaskans and not by the Feds.

The subsistence issue must be resolved. Until that happens, confrontation will continue and politics will rule. The first priority must be protection of the resource. Only in times of shortage of the resource should there be a priority for subsistence use, and that priority should be for those who need the resource to feed themselves and their family. Priority should not be based on an individual Alaskan’s zip code. Once we wrest control of our resources back from the federal government, Alaskans of goodwill can sit down together and resolve the subsistence issue.
From Fish Alaska Magazine, when Ross was trying to run for governor.


Sarah Palin's war on Alaska Natives is out in the open. She has sought to undermine their culture and their way of life every step of the way, with her patronizing attitudes and her attempts to disperse their communities by not supporting their own solutions to address the needs of their people, suggesting instead that they emulate Todd Palin and seize opportunities upon the North Slope, abandoning their villages.

Having the law as her new ally, what's in store for Alaska Natives?

Links
Indian Country Today
"Who's Wayne Ross?"
Fish Alaska Magazine

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Thursday, 26 March 2009

Sarah Palin's rural Alaska

Following Sarah Palin's visit to Marshall and Russian Mission with the Evangelical circus in late February, Nick Tucker, an Emmonak elder, wasn't very happy with the way his conversation with the Governor went or her answers to his questions.

Quite rightly, Mr Tucker objected to Sarah Palin's patronizing tone and her failure to address any of the problems the villagers have been facing for a long time. Sarah Palin delivered the usual insulting platitudes and that was that.



The Governor and her sidekick Sean Parnell went to Western Alaska for a photo opportunity with celebrity evangelist Franklin Graham and his Samaritan Purse. The trip had the purpose of silencing the Governor's critics about her inaction since the story broke in mid-January and promoting the Evangelical movement.

The residents of the two villages were surprised to receive food they didn't need, but were grateful just the same. Mr Tucker had to fly to Marshall to speak to the Governor.

Sarah Palin's new Rural Advisor, Mr John Moller, responded to Nick Tucker's criticism in a letter.


John Moller, Sarah Palin's Rural Advisor

Here is a snippet:

"I spoke to Mr. Tucker three times while in Emmonak, including just before he left for Marshall. At that time, Emmonak had already received thousands of pounds of food from both state and private resources. Samaritan's Purse made the right decision to deliver aid to Marshall and Russian Mission. The governor and lieutenant governor were guests and not in control of the destinations. Both had also previously made an attempt to fly to Emmonak but were weathered out."

Apart from Rep Jay Ramras efforts to send cash, boxes of food and supplies to the relevant villages, the state had not sent anything other than food vouchers.

Mr Moller ends his letter with this sentence: "The state's efforts will continue."

Mmmmmm...

Links
Jay Ramras and more details about donations in an excellent article
Nick Tucker's letter
John Moller's letter in full

Previous post about John Moller's appointment
Post about the present situation
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Wednesday, 11 March 2009

Please help! SOS from rural Alaska


I have reproduced this post from Anonymous Bloggers by Ann Strongheart to help extend the coverage of their appeal for assistance.

There's another village in need of help in rural Alaska. The weather is still pretty bad, prices continue to be high and the villagers are struggling.

Alakanuk (uh LUCK uh NUK)

Located in between Nunam Iqua and Emmonak.

Population: 700+

Households: 154

If you will recall I mentioned Alakanuk in my “Shopping Day” Story, hubby and I passed it on our way to Emmonak.

HOW TO HELP:

Food donations can be sent to:

Alakanuk Food Drive
c/o Alakanuk Traditional Council
P.O. Box 149
Alakanuk, AK 99554

Fuel Donations can be made two ways:

1. Credit Card donations can be made by calling Mike James, Alakanuk City Administrator at (907) 238-3313

2. Checks can be made payable to: City of Alakanuk and sent to the above address.

If anyone has any questions or needs more information please feel free to contact me:

Ann Strongheart
email: nunamiquayouth@yahoo.com or annstrongheart@anonymousbloggers.com
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Monday, 9 March 2009

Todd Palin's rural village


Emmonak and Nunam Iqua

Dillingham University campus and Beaver Creek B&B

Aerial view and Bristol Inn, Dillingham

"Welcome to The Bristol Inn. We are located in downtown Dillingham, in the heart of Bristol Bay, Alaska, home of the world's largest salmon run. Our fine hotel is two blocks from the Samuel K. Fox Museum with easy access to banking, restaurants, grocery stores, gift shops and more. Our beautifully appointed rooms, friendly service and warm atmosphere will make your stay a pleasure you'll want to repeat many times."

"Dillingham, Alaska, is home to Beaver Creek Bed and Breakfast. Enjoy a restful nights sleep, charming Alaskan home-style ambience, and friendly hospitality that only Alaskans can offer. Beaver Creek B&B is open year round and is a favourite place to stay for Business Travellers visiting Dillingham."

That's the Dillingham where Todd was born and grew up, according to his wife, Sarah Palin - if we discount Glennallen and Wasilla, of course...

Compare the photos of Dillingham to the top two pictures, of Emmonak and Nunam Iqua, which were at the heart of the energy crisis this winter. Emmonak has a grocery store, Nunam Iqua doesn't. I very much doubt they have a Bristol Inn or easy access to banking, restaurants and more.

But hey, Todd grew up in REAL rural Alaska, he's a TRUE native who seized his opportunities!
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Thursday, 5 March 2009

Oil, gas and a village

The village of Nuiqsut is 60 miles west of Prudhoe Bay in the North Slope, where oil and gas development has occurred for over 40 years.

Rosemary Ahtuangaruak, the former mayor of Nuiqsut describes the impacts the village has suffered as oil development expanded over the years.

"The first oil well was over 60 miles from the village," she explains, "That wasn't so bad. But then they wanted another well. They came to our village and told us one well would mean a 12-acre gravel pad, no road, 200 people to build the well, and 20 airplane and helicopter flights a month during our hunting season."

"That's not what we got. We got 400 acres of gravel pads, miles of pipelines, 12 miles of roads, a large runway, two helicopter pads, 1,200 people, and 1,900 flights in six weeks during the caribou migration."

The caribou changed their migratory route to avoid the commotion of development. Before the seismic tests and pipelines, 97 of 103 households in her village harvested caribou; after, only three.

Before the seismic tests in the ocean, village hunters - the whalers - harvested whales within 2 miles of the island; after, the whales moved 20 miles or more offshore. Twenty miles is too far from the village to safely harvest whales. When storms blew up, the whalers would have to stop hunting as small boats can easily swamp.

Rosemary's oldest son was nine when the caribou herds last migrated through the village. He is now twenty-four.

Subsistence - harvesting, sharing, and celebrating wild foods - is the primary means of survival in all of the villages. It is understood that loss of traditional foods and loss of the opportunity to harvest the food means loss of their way of life.

There are also health problems in Nuiqsut associated with the oil development. Rosemary is a former community health aide practitioner. She was the first to sound the alarm about the skyrocketing cases of asthma as the oil wells marched ever closer to Nuiqsut. The closest wells with their flaring gases and air pollution are now within four miles of - and almost surround - the village.

The refrain from the other villages is: "We don't want to happen here what happened in Nuiqsut!" But unless other Americans act to intervene, the Inupiat culture will almost surely be assimilated. Loss of resources fits the United Nations definition of cultural genocide.

There are further leases for oil and gas exploration for sale and other villages will be equally affected if development goes ahead on the same lines as in Prudhoe Bay. The U.S. Department of the Interior is accepting comments on the Beaufort and Chukchi Seas (Arctic Ocean) Oil & Gas Lease Sales until March 16, 2009.

Mailing Address:
Department of the Interior
1849 C Street, N.W.
Washington DC 20240
Phone: 202-208-3100
E-Mail: webteam@ios.doi.gov

The above are excerpts from an article by Riki Ott, which can be found here.
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Wednesday, 4 March 2009

Sarah Palin v Alaska Natives


Sarah Palin gave her wish list to Kim Elton to take to Washington. It was all about oil, as usual, with a bit of responsible mining thrown in. But as Director of Alaska Affairs for the U.S. Department of the Interior, Mr Elton has a much wider remit, involving the status of Alaska Tribes as well as the development of natural resources. We know that Native Alaskans are never on the Governor's wish list, unless it's about dispersing the villagers and killing their culture and way of life.

Alaska tribal sovereignty is a very important issue. Alaska tribes are federally recognized, have a government-to-government relationship with the United States, and possess the privileges, powers and responsibilities of any other federally recognized tribe.

Alaska Tribes do differ in some respects from those in the lower 48. Perhaps most significantly, most Alaska tribes are essentially landless, as ANCSA (Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act) placed control of traditional Native lands in the hands of corporations. Thus Alaska tribal jurisdiction generally extends only to membership and not to a reservation or other "Indian country." But in all other essential respects—including their inherent sovereignty and powers of self-government—Alaska Tribes are the same as all others. The Bush Administration, taking its cue from the State and its congressional delegation, did not treat Alaska Tribes as "real" Tribes.

Victoria Briggs of Ugashik and Ann Strongheart of Nunam Iqua have outlined a long term plan containing several proposals for rural Alaska in the light of the recent energy crisis in the Yukon Delta. Some of the issues raised in their plan show that tribal recognition remains a very grey area, along with the corporations accountability to the tribes and their communities.

Given past court rulings affirming the federally recognized tribal status of Alaska Native villages, Sarah Palin does not technically challenge that status. But Palin argues that Alaska Tribes have no authority to act as sovereigns, despite their recognition. A number of lawsuits reflect her stance regarding this issue.

The Office of Congressional & Intergovernmental Affairs published an extensive document, American Indian & Alaska Native Tribal Government Policy, in October 2000.

The guidelines for interactions of Federal and State departments with tribal governments are very clearly stated in this policy document. A tactical move to ensure tribal marginalization during the Bush years has been the government's attempt to mediate its relationship with Alaska Natives through the thirteen powerful regional corporations, thereby bypassing Alaska tribal governments.

The Tribal Council requests that any legislative or policy initiatives the new Administration undertakes that impact Alaska Tribes require the involvement of Tribes—the sovereign governments representing Alaska Natives—not just corporations.

That's where Kim Elton comes in. He can reverse the tactics of the Bush Administration thus restoring the spirit of the policy document regarding the status of tribal governments.

Sarah Palin wouldn't like that at all. It doesn't fit in with her agenda of cultural genocide.

Links
Victoria Briggs' and Ann Strongheart's proposals
Tribal council document
Alaska Native Tribal Government Policy document
The above link doesn't seem to work anymore. Here's another link, from the Dept of Energy
Court case 1 Court case 2

All posts about Native Alaska on this blog.
US Department of the Interior
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Monday, 2 March 2009

Sarah Palin's board games


Last Friday the Board of Game started examining proposals that will affect subsistence hunters. The board consists mainly of sport hunting enthusiasts and people with ties to commercial hunting.

Since taking office in 2006, Sarah Palin sought to invalidate determinations the Federal Subsistence Board had made regarding customary and traditional uses of game through the courts. If successful, sport and commercial hunting groups would have been the winners. The first legal challenge, concerning the Ahtna Indian people in Chistochina, was rejected by the federal district court, but an appeal was lodged and heard in August 2008. (State of Alaska x Federal Subsistence Board)

The state of Alaska was clutching at straws in their efforts. Among other inane arguments, they came up with this one:

Alaska contends that the instant Customary and Traditional determination places restrictions on nonsubsistence taking because granting Chistochina residents a federal subsistence priority to take moose throughout Game Management Unit 12 increases moose taking and thus necessitates greater conservation efforts by the state.

Excuse me! They argue that giving priority to subsistence hunting discriminates against other types of hunting and puts the state under further pressure in their conservation efforts??? Are they trying to say that sport and commercial hunting conserve the moose population and subsistence hunting is the real culprit for the decline in the numbers of moose??? Are they completely insane?

The state of Alaska lost the appeal.

But the problems of the Ahtna natives are far from over.

Ken Johns, president of the Glennallen-based Ahtna Corporation, told the board that subsistence hunters in the region are being attacked with "meaningless restrictions" that make it harder for them to get meat and that he's seen evidence of discrimination.

"It really came to a head this year when we were told to cut the horns in half, which we did, but then the 40-mile caribou hunters coming through Glennallen with these big tracks... they didn't have any restrictions," he said. "It's been tiring. People keep coming every year and pouring out their hearts, and things just seem to be getting worse and worse and worse,"

Ahtna board member Nick Jackson supports a plan that would give Ahtna a set amount of hunting permits that the corporation would distribute throughout villages in the region. We need to solve this Ahtna situation up there, so they know that they're going to be able to hunt and get some traditional hunting activities allowed up there," he said.

But there are legal obstacles, he said, that prevent the state from giving permits to a single group of people. "We're going to try to work around that, but it's something we've been battling for at least 10 years."

Sarah Palin's Board of Game works very hard at placing obstacles, legal or otherwise, between Alaska Natives and their food.

Links
Alaska x Federal Subsistence Board, click here.
For news articles, commentary and further links about the Board of Game, click here.

Saturday, 21 February 2009

Missionary position



An Inuit hunter asked the missionary priest: "If I did not know about God and sin, would I go to hell?" "No," said the priest, "not if you did not know." "Then why," asked the Inuit earnestly, "did you tell me?"

Franklin Graham went to Western Alaska with Sarah Palin to publicize his Samaritan Purse and show how much God loves the natives. The pair flew on Graham's private luxury jet to do their good work.

Anybody wishing to make donations should do so through the people who have been helping from day one. Make your contribution directly to the villagers, not to the Samaritan Purse. Despite doing some good work, they are not as accountable as the bloggers who launched the original appeal.

Franklin Graham's allegiances are to Sarah Palin, not to Alaska Natives.

More information about donations: the Mudflats (pdf)
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Sarah Palin explains...

Thank you so much Sarah Palin. You finally explained why the villagers in the Yukon Delta went through a major crisis this winter. They are lazy. They have no leaders. They don't help themselves. They don't act like your husband, a prime example of a true native, they just sit on their butts and wait for the government to solve all their problems.


[A richer, more powerful group of people arrive in the United States, take away everything you value, tell you that you have to live in a different way, that you have to abandon your way of life. You have no power to fight back. There are too many of them. These powerful people do all this while patting you on the head, saying that your culture is really interesting, your trinkets are very attractive, your clothes exquisite. They even go as far as dressing like you on occasions, they like to show they support your culture. They are really really nice to you. Just as long as you toe the line and embrace their new lifestyle. Why, of course you would enthusiastically grab all the opportunities they place in front of you! If they offer you and your people jobs, you take them, even if these jobs are very far away from your home. You could visit the valley, your nice, warm home in Wasilla from time to time and keep in touch with your old life. You could do that as long as they don't find something under your house that would progress their great new nation. You wouldn't mind if they started digging there, would you? You wouldn't stand in the way of progress and making the most of the natural resources! Maybe you would feel nostalgic for your old ways, feel that these people don't quite understand what you had to leave behind. But hey, they know better and only have your best interests at heart. You would have to help yourself because it's not their job to help you in any way. They gave you opportunities to have a great life and you should be very grateful. Like a true American (they were kind enough to let you keep that) you're going to jump on board and do whatever it takes to make the new nation a great nation.]


Back to the villagers.

Why oh why do they have to moan so much? There are so many opportunies open to them, why are they so lazy and ungrateful? You are showing them that you care, you're even taking a priest to see them, you've been sending food to them all these weeks, you organized so many appeals! (Oh, you haven't?) In a goverment kind of way, of course. You mobilised an army of volunteers from the private sector, the church, you personally collected money so they could buy fuel (You haven't??). You're not heartless, you do your bit for people in need, like an angel (You didn't???). Just not as the Governor, because that's not what Governors do. You know your job, you believe in small government and you stick to your guns on that. In fact, your government is so small it's hard to detect it.


Sarah, you are an insult to Native Alaskans. You don't understand anything about their way of life, you don't respect their culture, you don't like them.

Your attitude and your policies sabotage any of their efforts to preserve all that is precious to them, all that gives them a sense of identity and worth and belonging.

Being married to a token native doesn't give you any authority to tell true natives, who cherish their heritage, how to live their lives.

They have roots, they can only exist as one with nature, with their environment, which you're doing your best to destroy in your thirsty lust for oil.

You are not an Alaskan and never will be. Go back to Idaho, please.

Watch video of interview as Sarah Palin prepared to board a plane to Western Alaska.
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Friday, 20 February 2009

Relief for rural Alaska. NOT from Sarah Palin

Sen Mark Begich and Sen Lisa Murkowski have secured relief money for the villagers affected by the energy crisis, which will be made available immediately.

Sarah Palin is still arranging the details of her photo-op trip to the area.

More details form Shannyn Moore

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Thursday, 19 February 2009

Sarah Palin is a liar

Nearly five weeks after the Bloggers started the appeal to help the villagers from Emmonak, which later extended to other villages in the Yukon Delta, Governor Sarah Palin has announced that she will travel to the area. The tone and content of the press release from her office indicate that Sarah Palin is trying to score political points and intent on portraying herself as the driving force behind all the help that poured into the region from all over the globe. Sarah Palin is lying.

February 19, 2009, Juneau, Alaska - Following up on several trips to Western Alaska by multi-agency state personnel, Governor Sarah Palin and Lieutenant Governor Sean Parnell will travel with Franklin Graham, President and CEO of Samaritan’s Purse, to the communities of Marshall and Russian Mission on Friday. Samaritan’s Purse is a nonprofit organization that provides humanitarian aid across the world. Working with private sector and nonprofit resources, an estimated 10,000 pounds of food will be distributed to more than 200 Alaska families in need.

For several weeks the administration has been working with residents on the Lower Yukon in an attempt to identify their eligibility for various aid programs for communities and individuals. Five state departments and the governor’s rural affairs advisor, John Moller, are involved in the immediate relief effort, and are currently visiting communities across the region.

Faith-based, nonprofit groups, such as Samaritan’s Purse, have partnered with state agencies and have been instrumental in providing assistance to Western Alaska in recent weeks. The Department of Public Safety has utilized its aircraft to deliver food collected from around the state by faith-based and other nonprofit organizations. The Department of Public Safety is working with the Department of Education and Early Development personnel in implementing a plan to provide bulk foods to area residents.

Additionally, state benefit specialists from the Department of Health and Social Services visited Emmonak recently and enrolled individuals in several existing public assistance programs. The Department of Fish and Game has expanded the moose-hunting season for residents, and is also reviewing concerns with the commercial king salmon fishery that many Lower Yukon River residents depend on for a substantial portion of their income.

The governor’s trip to Western Alaska, coupled with work on the economic stimulus certification requirements and budget amendments, will prevent her from attending the National Governors Association meeting in Washington, D.C., this weekend.


Sarah Palin is a liar.

More information: The Mudflats

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Monday, 16 February 2009

Ethnic cleansing


Many of the causes for today's upheaval in Alaska Native communities and families can be found in their history, specifically, Alaska Natives' experiences since contact with Europeans, and in the cultural, social, political and economic climate created for them by both the federal and state governments.

At the core of many problems in the Alaska Native community are unhealed psychological and spiritual wounds and unresolved grief brought on by a century-long history of deaths by epidemics and cultural and political deprivation at others' hands; some of the more tragic consequences include the erosion of Native languages, in which are couched the full cultural understanding, and the erosion of cultural values.

Despite some growth in incomes and numbers of jobs in the 1980s, villages still have much smaller incomes and higher unemployment rates than the state as a whole. An estimated 21.5 percent of Alaska Native families had incomes below the officially established "poverty" line income.

Villages are precariously dependent upon public sector spending, and the cost of living in villages is exorbitant. Knowingly in some cases and unknowingly in others, many Alaska Natives have turned to government subsidies, income maintenance programs, and other components of the transfer economy to make ends meet.

One recent study indicates that many small Southwest region villages may be losing their geographic advantage due to thinning of fish and game stocks, lack of jobs, and the need for goods and services available in larger population areas, such as Bethel or Anchorage. . .. The plight of the villages will worsen in the absence of systematic efforts to reduce the problems associated with a rapidly growing population.

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The destruction of aboriginal cultures is nothing new. North America, Australia, South America, Africa... are but a few of the examples to be found in the history of settlement of new territories. From outright massacre to well intentioned missionaries, the contributing factors to the erosion of the way of life, cultural and spiritual heritage of native peoples is well documented.

Aboriginal populations were decimated through genocide, disease, alcohol, loss of territory and livelihood brought on by European settlers throughout the world.

These days some governments have taken steps towards reparation. In the United States there are laws aimed at protecting Native Americans. In Alaska such laws also exist, but how are these laws interpreted by the state government?

The government of the state of Alaska is presently personified by Sarah Palin. She appears to champion the causes of Alaska Natives when she tells the world about her husband's 1/8 Yup'ik genetic inheritance, when she wears native attire and jewellery on special occasions or when she attends some carefully picked cultural events where tribal music and dance are displayed.

Beyond that, do her policies and actions reflect an active interest in preserving Alaska Natives way of life? Does she use the power she was given through the ballot box to ensure that the many and diverse communities in rural Alaska have a chance of survival?

Whose interests does the Governor serve? What are her priorities?

This weekend Sarah Palin addressed a crowd of republicans:

"Like Lincoln, who was interested in building transportation infrastructure such as roads, railroads and harbors, so too are Alaskans in developing the same infrastructure as well as opening up more federal land. We’ve got to let the federal government know we can responsibly and safely develop our natural resources.”

Oil, forever big oil, that's what is foremost in her mind. By opening up more federal land she means drilling in ANWR and other land in the hands of Alaska Natives. Their interests and ownership of some protected chunks of Alaska collide head-on with what she's so intent on promoting.

Paying lip service to the laws intended to protect these people while sitting back and watching the slow death of their communities is a typical passive agressive attitude.

The way I see it, the Governor, while wearing ethnic jewellery and attending their cultural displays, is in fact perpetrating the ethnic cleansing of rural Alaska.

Source: Alaska Natives Commission Reports
Image: "Death and Life", by Gustav Klimt

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