[Mb-civic] Save Native Programs
Lyle K'ang
lyve at netzero.com
Mon Mar 21 19:17:48 PST 2005
After a hundred years have gone by it is obvious that indigenous people from ALL countries have been under attack from the white brother.
It is an unfortunate truth, the dark skinned, the brown skinned, the red skinned has faced decades of discrimination-it is a sad truth.
Compare this program to other successful programs and it will be obvious that no one can be this dumb, ignorant, or cruel, and willfully forget tribes of people in need. If these were white brothers crying out to the Senate, and asking in the name of Jesus Christ, we would see momentum.
Unfortunately, if you have not been in a situation to understand how the minority is treated, it is hard to accept this premise and reality.
There are concerned individuals, like Barbara that feel, genuinely about these people and their future because like Barbara, they are endowed with special privilege and sensitivity to understand from the heart, deep pain and positive critical thinking solutions for generations of mistaken misdeeds because of ideology, insensitivity, arrogance, and stubbornness. Where ignorance builds walls instead of stable bridges, we have a continuance of these misdeeds-this time not mistaken, but deliberate.
Lyle
-- "Barbara Siomos" <barbarasiomos38 at msn.com> wrote:
From: The Peltier Legal Team
The Bush Administration's budget for fiscal year 2006 proposes cutting funds for reservations. Advocates for American Indian & Native Alaskan families, are beginning to ask some tough questions.
1. Why is it that the U.S. can afford unlimited amounts for destruction & reconstruction on the other side of the world, but cannot afford resources for people who have been historically mistreated within its own borders?
2. Why would the Congress cut infrastructure money for disadvantaged communities at home while billions in reconstruction money can disappear in Iraq?
3. Why is it fair to run up the deficit giving tax cuts to the very rich & then decide to reduce that deficit by hurting the poor?
Those in Congress who are aware of the living conditions of poor tribes agree that the proposed cuts for Indian programs in the 2006 budget make little sense. Fiscal conservative Senator John McCain(AZ) says the dramatic cuts proposed will do nothing for the country at large but will cause much harm to the most vulnerable & deprived people in Indian Country. In his words:
The federal government has continually reneged on its trust & moral obligations to meet the educational, health care & housing needs of Indians & these needs far outweigh the imperceptible contribution that the proposed cuts will make to reducing the deficit.
Background
The following factual picture is drawn from information provided by the National American Rights Fund & the Navajo Nation. We call your attention to reservation distress.
A Navajo soldier who built infrastructure in Iraq may face these circumstances at home:
+ Only 2,000 miles of roads in 25,000 square miles of countryside, many dirt & gravel.
+ Housing in short supply; in some cases, 10 people live in a one-bedroom home.
+ Some people live in buses.
+ Utilities lacking in 85 percent of homes, many lacking plumbing.
+ No telephones in 40 percent of homes.
+ Wood fire stoves, which too often brings on asthma & respiratory problems, but ventilators are not an option because there is no electricity.
+ Grocery store as much as 40 miles away.
+ Drinking water hauled in 50-gallon drums.
+ Extremely high unemployment.
+ Inadequate schools.
+ A health system that provides half as many care dollars as are spent on other poor citizens.
+ A trust system where those with Individual Indian Money accounts get little of the money owed them from the land & leases that the federal government manages for them.
At Now
Your representative & senators will be voting on a budget resolution THIS WEEK. Visit: http://capwiz.com/fconl/issues/alert/?alertid=7228431&type=CO.
Urge them:
PLEASE DON'T VOTE TO CUT PROGRAMS THAT ARE BRINGING NATIVE AMERICANS OUT OF POVERTY.
Also write to President Bush. Let him know that his mistreatment of the First Nations is unacceptable under ANY circumstances.
President George W. Bush
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue
Washington, DC 20500
Phone Numbers:
Comments: 202-456-1111
Switchboard: 202-456-1414
Fax: 202-456-2461
E-Mail: president at whitehouse.gov
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