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Stop The FTAA - Columbus Day Protest!


SIMULTANEOUS ACTIONS THROUGHOUT THE AMERICAS TO BE HELD ON THE 510TH ANNIVERSARY OF COLUMBUS. THOUSANDS TO RISE UP FOR INDIGENOUS RIGHTS AND AGAINST NEW ERA OF CORPORATE COLONIALISM.
This Saturday, October 12th, dozens of demonstrations will be held all over the US in solidarity with actions in Mexico and Central America to protest the 510th anniversary of Columbus day. Thousands of indigenous activists and supporters from Canada to Panama, will demand basic human rights for all native peoples and an end to free trade agreements that exploit native communities and their lands. They will also call for an end to the militarization that accompanies corporate globalization. Demonstrators will block roads and borders, and hold marches, cultural celebrations, rallies, and other direct actions.

In Washington, DC the American Indian Movement is sponsoring a rally and Press Conference Saturday, October 12, 10:00AM at the Columbus Statue in front of Union Station.

SPEAKERS INCLUDE:
• Vernon Bellecourt, Founding Member American Indian Movement(AIM)
• Gabrielle Tayac, Piscataway Indian Nation
• Margarito Esquino, Association of Indigenous Salvadoreans(ANIS)
• Damu Smith, Black Voicves for Peace
• Chuck Kauffman, Latin American Solidarity Network
• Rev. Phillip Wheaton, Committee of Indigenous solidarity
• Others to be announced

Contact John Steinbach at 703-369-7427

"October 12th marks the 510th anniversary of the coming of the colonial pirate Christopher Columbus and the beginning of the American holocaust that has claimed 16 million Indian lives in what is now called United States,"

Says American Indian Movement (AIM)'s Vernon Bellecourt. "On this day, we join voices with all peoples of Peace and Justice to call for tribunals against all death squad governments in the Global South and their CIA collaborators. Also, we demand respect for indigenous treaty, cultural and environmental rights by way of restitution and reparations that will begin the reconstruction of an indigenous future in America."

The Southwest Network for Environmental & Economic Justice will mobilize activists from the U.S./Mexico border communities of El Paso/Ciudad Juarez and Nogales to rally at the border. This rally will demonstrate their rejection of the corporate colonialism advanced with the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), and now the looming FTAA (Free Trade Area of the Americas). In Washington, D.C. demonstrations led by representatives of AIM will take place at a Christopher Columbus statue to demand, among other things, the immediate release of AIM's Leonard Peltier, wrongfully imprisoned for the deaths of two FBI agents. Other large demonstrations are planned in New York City, Minneapolis, Chicago, Boston, San Francisco and Columbus, Ohio among other cities.

Also in the US, actions will occur at Federal Buildings, borders, military installations, trade offices, and multinationals such as Coca-Cola, Nike, Monsanto, and Citibank. Demands of the U.S.-based Latin American Solidarity Coalition (LASC) include ending U.S. sponsored economic and military violence in the Americas including halting bombing on Vieques, Puerto Rico, shutting down the School of the Americas, and stopping the FTAA.

The LASC actions will occur in solidarity with Central America and Mexico-wide actions against the Plan Puebla Panama (PPP). Teodosio Angel of the Union of Indigenous Communities in the Northern Zone of the Isthmus (UCIZONI), in Oaxaca, Mexico says, "We will block roads, ports and borders and protest multinationals like Coca Cola to demand that corporations and governments stop robbing our natural resources and basic rights. For 510 years, governments and corporations have ignored us and it continues today with the PPP." In Panama, indigenous activists are marching from Costa Rica to Panama City, a distance of over 200 miles, to protest the ecological destruction caused by mining on their lands. In Managua, Nicaragua, actions against the Inter-American Development Bank will expose their role as a corporate welfare institution.

"October 12, so called Columbus Day, is the day when terrorism began on our lands." says Andrea Carmen of Yaqui Indigenous Nation and Executive Director International Indigenous Treaty Council (IITC). "Its ongoing legacy has continued for 510 years. We've seen our lands taken, cultures and sacred sites destroyed, treaties violated, families killed and imprisoned, and so-called 'development' imposed on us with no regards for our peoples' ways of life. October 12, 2002 is a day not to despair about the past but to celebrate our continued resistance and survival as Peoples and Nations. We are coming together today to rededicate ourselves to the struggle for safeguarding our Mother Earth, the continued survival of our traditional cultures, and renewing bonds of solidarity with all peoples of this world who share our aspirations for a better life."

To reach local organizers in cities from Panama to Canada please contact ACERCA (Action for Community and Ecology in the Regions of Central America) at 802-863-0571 or brendan (at) asej.org. For more information and to see a list of U.S. based actions visit www.lasolidarity.org and www.aimovement.org.
 
 
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Greed Kills

Frankly, I think that we should celebrate Columbus day. The only reason that nonwhites such as yourselves can't stand the holiday is that even today you couldn't do what columbus did.
Of course, it is dumb to state that Columbus discovered America. He didn't even set foot on the contident. He just knocked around the bermuda triangle. Leif Ericson discovered America and set foot on the land of the new world. According to the Vinland Sagas, the new world was first spotted by his father, Eric the red. Eric the red was declared an outlaw because of a killing that occurred. Obviously, he told the story to his son at some point. If we stop celebrating Columbus day, we should celebrate these Viking heroes instead. It might be even more proper to do so then Columbus day itself.
As far as messing around with primitive cultures goes, I agree with you. They should be left completely alone, totally. The only reason that capitalists mess with these guys is to take jobs away from white people, an act of intentional structural discrimination. OUR businesses should give US first crack at getting the jobs. Of course primitive cultures have the right to exist unmolested in their native lands as opposed to ours.
The foundation of racially pure states will result in the only permanent peace on Earth that is possible, once the job is done.

14/88
 

Post-Columbian Progress

Yes, Columbus DID discover America in every meaningful way. He discovered it for Europe and led the scientific and industrial progress that the local tribes were incapable of creating for themselves. Where would North America be without his influence? Look at how backwards Africa is: millions are dying from either starvation or disease, tribals wars of ruling gangs have persisted for thousands of years.
 

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