Collapsed on Air, Was Paralyzed From Neck Down
Bob Johnson Turns Down Trump Cabinet Post
Kellogg Quits Breitbart; Website Retaliates
20 Journalists Among Dead in Air Crash; 1 Survives
At N.Y. Times, Castro’s Obit First Drafted in 1959
NAHJ Says Meeting With NABJ Doubled Revenue
Charlotte Observer Backs D.A. in Police Shooting
37 Groups Respond to Stories on Prison ‘Torture’
TV Execs to Sit Out Critics Tour Next Month
Dawne Gee faints Friday in the anchor chair at WAVE-TV in Louisville. (video)
Collapsed on Air, Was Paralyzed From Neck Down
“Minutes after collapsing on live TV, Dawne Gee woke up in an ambulance paralyzed from the neck down. She was having a stroke,” Jere Downs reported Tuesday for the Courier-Journal in Louisville, Ky.
“It was 7:43 p.m. Friday night. ‘I could look up and see the ceiling. There were lights everywhere, and they were working real fast. I couldn’t raise my head.’
“At her side in the ambulance, WAVE 3 weatherman Kevin Harned fumbled with Gee’s phone to call her mother.
“When medics snipped the strap on her $80 red bra, Gee tried to protest. ‘That effort was hard. I kept trying to say, “Something is not right.” I kept saying, “I can’t move. I can’t feel my face.” ‘
“Meanwhile, her skin crawled with what she could only describe as the worst pins and needles.
” ‘I can’t even explain it,’ she said. ‘Like your limbs are concrete and you can’t move them.’
“In the basement emergency room at Norton Hospital, doctors assembled her three adult children to explain how a clot-busting miracle drug might restore blood flow to her brain and reverse the damage. But time was growing short. The enzyme only worked if given within three to four-and-a-half hours after a stroke. But the side effects from the drug, known as Activase, or tPA, could kill her. In rare instances, the drug might unleash a fatal hemorrhage inside her brain, spark another stroke, or prompt seizures.
“Standing at their mother’s bedside, Brittney, Eric and Alex Gee shouted ‘No!’ in unison.
” ‘Momma, do you understand they are just practicing on you?’ Gee remembered her son Eric asking.
” ‘They were saying it could cause you to bleed in your brain,’ Alex Gee recalled Monday. ‘I didn’t like the way it sounded. I don’t trust any of those medicines.’
“It was getting late. At 11:23 p.m., emergency room doctor Jeff Spain appeared at the foot of Gee’s hospital gurney.
” ‘He was so serious. He had that voice,’ Gee remembered. ‘He said, “You have a window, and that window is closing. This may be what you are left with in your life.” ‘
“The information swirled in her head. She was shaken. She began to cry.
” ‘Do it,’ Gee said. ‘Just do it.’
“The drug flowed immediately into her intravenous line.
“Nine minutes later, at 11:31 p.m., Gee could lift her head. The feeling of pins and needles began to fade. By 11:43 p.m., she could move her arms and lift her legs. . . .”
Reporting on his meeting with Donald L. Trump, Robert L. Johnson tells WUSA-TV’s Bruce Johnson, “I wanted to give him a message that I thought was important for African Americans.” (video)
Bob Johnson Turns Down Trump Cabinet Post
Businessman Robert L. Johnson, co-founder of Black Entertainment Television, told television interviewers Tuesday that he met with President-elect Donald J. Trump and top aides, including the controversial Steve Bannon, and turned down an offer of a cabinet post.
“I’m not disclosing the position, but I turned him down,” Johnson told Bruce Johnson of Washington’s WUSA-TV.
On CNBC’s “Squawk Box,” Johnson said, “It was an easy discussion, because I wasn’t coming there on a job interview. He hinted at something I could be interested in, and I quickly shut that down. It was a Cabinet position,” Matthew J. Belvedere reported for CNBC.
“But I can’t work for the government … because to me as an entrepreneur trying to work in a government structure where you got to through 15 different layers of decision-making to get want you want done doesn’t fit my mold,” he added.’
The businessman told WUSA’s Johnson that Trump deserves “the benefit of the doubt.”
“. . . ‘If you ignore a president and a party that holds the House and the Senate and their ability to enact legislation or policies that may not be in your interest, they will do that because they have no reference point to talk to you. They have no knowledge of what you’re most concerned about, what your fears are,’ Johnson said. ‘And if you find that common ground, you go forward with the opportunity that something positive could happen as a result of the relationship.’ . . .”
Belvedere also reported, “Johnson met with Trump and top advisors Steve Bannon, Reince Priebus and Jared Kushner at Trump National Golf Club in Bedminster, New Jersey, on Nov. 20.”
Ben Carson, the surgeon who ran for president in the Republican primaries, is the only African American reported under consideration for a cabinet post. Carson is said to have been offered the job of secretary of Housing and Urban Development.
Bannon, former president of Breitbart News, is anathema to civil and human rights groups. Jonathan Greenblatt, CEO of the Anti-Defamation League, has said, “It is a sad day when a man who presided over the premier website of the ‘alt-right’ — a loose-knit group of white nationalists and unabashed anti-Semites and racists — is slated to be a senior staff member in the ‘people’s house.’ ”
However, Johnson told CNBC, “To me, I never thought Donald Trump, and I still don’t believe it today, was a racist. I don’t believe that he’s anti-African-American.”
Kellogg Quits Breitbart; Website Retaliates
“Following Kellogg’s announcement on Tuesday that it would be pulling ads from Breitbart, the ‘alt-right’ news organization created a campaign encouraging its readers to boycott the company,” Kristina Monllos reported Wednesday for adweek.com.
“The maker of Pop-Tarts, Apple Jacks and Rice Krispies came under fire for ads on the site after President-elect Donald Trump appointed former Breitbart chairman and white nationalist Steve Bannon as his chief strategist.
” ‘We regularly work with our media-buying partners to ensure our ads do not appear on sites that aren’t aligned with our values as a company,’ Kris Charles, a spokeswoman for Kellogg, told Bloomberg of its decision to remove its ads from Breitbart.
Meanwhile, Gregory Ferenstein, editor of the Ferenstein Wire, and author of a book on Silicon Valley politics, wrote for Politico on Tuesday that though he wrote in favor of Hillary Clinton, “as the election results poured in on November 8, I was forced to reflect on a very (very) difficult realization: Much of my work last year was, electorally speaking, worthless. I, evidently, needed to start writing for publications that were trusted by Trump supporters.” He said he plans to start writing for Breitbart.
- Martin Baron, Vanity Fair: Washington Post Editor Marty Baron Has a Message to Journalists in the Trump Era
- Ramzy Baroud, Arab American News: What should Palestinians expect — can Trump be any worse? (Nov. 23)
- Jonathan Capehart, Washington Post: Here’s how to preserve the Kennedy ideal in Trump’s America, from a Kennedy
- Jelani Cobb, New Yorker: Protecting Journalism from Donald Trump
- Mary C. Curtis, Roll Call: Still No N.C. Governor-Elect as Voting Charges Echo Trump’s Claims (Dec. 1)
- Jarvis DeBerry, NOLA.com | the Times-Picayune: Donald Trump’s tweets are a study in incoherence
- Renée Graham, Boston Globe: Trump’s revenge on Romney
- Michael M. Grynbaum and Sydney Ember, New York Times: If Trump Tweets It, Is It News? A Quandary for the News Media
- Amanda Hess, New York Times: The Far Right Has a New Digital Safe Space
- Jens Manuel Krogstad and Mark Hugo Lopez, Pew Research Center: Hillary Clinton won Latino vote but fell below 2012 support for Obama
- Tony Norman, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette: Call to serve? First, ritualistic humiliation
- Leonard Pitts Jr., Miami Herald: Recount not justified in this election
- Southern Poverty Law Center: The Trump Effect: The Impact of The 2016 Presidential Election on Our Nation’s Schools
- Margaret Sullivan, Washington Post: Journalists in the age of Trump: Lose the smugness, keep the mission.
- Armstrong Williams, National Newspaper Publishers Association: President Donald Trump Will Make the Middle East Great Again, Too
- Lilly Workneh, Huffington Post Black Voices: Google Chrome Extension Replaces ‘Alt-Right’ With ‘White Supremacy’
“It seems the plane split in to three parts” says South American football expert @Tim_Vickery #Colombia plane crash https://t.co/MqhzBnedfM
— Sky News (@SkyNews) November 29, 2016
20 Journalists Among Dead in Air Crash; 1 Survives
“Twenty journalists are among the dead in the airline crash that devastated a Brazilian soccer team, officials said Tuesday,” Peter Prengaman reported for the Associated Press.
“Colombian aviation authorities said 21 of the 77 people aboard the charter flight were journalists covering the Chapecoense team from southern Brazil and its upcoming South American Cup match in Medellin, Colombia.
“One journalist was among the six survivors: Rafael Valmorbida of Radio Oeste Capital, a station in the Brazilian city of Chapeco, where the team is based.
” ‘We lost more than just a team,’ said the station’s website. ‘We lost friends, partners, colleagues and family members.’
“The station called for prayers for Valmorbida’s recovery, and for three other station journalists who died.
“The journalists, all men, included cameramen, photographers, commentators and reporters from radio stations in Brazil as well as larger media outlets such as Fox and Globo, a large Brazilian conglomerate. . . .”
- Associated Press: The Latest: Officials identify 59 victims of Colombia crash
At N.Y. Times, Castro’s Obit First Drafted in 1959
” ‘Every Mexico correspondent in recent years, myself included, inherited and worked on the Fidel Castro ‘Death Plan,’ ” Randal C. Archibold reported Tuesday for the New York Times “Times Insider” publication. “We all thought for sure it would happen on our watch — only to see Castro outlive our tenures, just as he outlasted presidents.
“Azam Ahmed, the Mexico bureau chief, is now that sweepstakes ‘winner,’ though Damien Cave, by amazing luck, is the one who was actually there when it happened — on vacation.”
Archibold, now the Times’s deputy sports editor, introduced “Decades in the Making: Fidel Castro’s Obituary.” A subheadline explained, “Sixteen New York Times journalists recount their work on the Cuban revolutionary’s obituary, first drafted in 1959.”
- Mark Brown, Chicago Sun-Times: Souvenir, telephone secrets from 1984 meeting with Castro
- Raoul Lowery Contreras, Fox News Latino: Cuba in a perfect world after Fidel
- Roberto Lovato, Alfredo Estada, Loren Medina, Suyapa Portillo Villeda, Latino Rebels: Latino Rebels Contributors Weigh In on the Death of Fidel Castro
- Mac Maharaj, New York Times: Fidel Castro, a South African Hero
- Neil Reisner, Columbia Journalism Review: In Cuba’s ‘second capital,’ covering Castro’s death a letdown for journalists
- P.J. Rickards, The Root: Black Writers’ Room: Author Gives Us a Glimpse Inside the CIA’s Covert War on Jamaica
- Albor Ruiz, Al Día, Philadelphia: “12 uncertain hours that changed my life forever…”
- Fabiola Santiago, Miami Herald: A threatening Trump wants ‘a better deal,’ but knee-jerk moves won’t transform a post-Fidel Cuba
- Michael Weissenstein and Paul Haven, Associated Press: Fidel Castro clung to socialism, mentored new leftists
NAHJ Says Meeting With NABJ Doubled Revenue
The joint convention between the National Association of Black Journalists and National Association of Hispanic Journalists “exceeded revenue expectations!” immediate past president Mekahlo Medina wrote on Facebook Wednesday.
“We doubled @NAHJ conf revenue from 2015. Great way to end my @NAHJ presidency.
“Couldn’t have done it without the great help of my board, Executive Director Alberto B Mendoza, past president Hugo Balta, our amazing sponsors including Toyota, United and dozens of others and NAHJ members!
“Thank you to the great partner in (NABJ) National Association of Black Journalists and Sarah J. Glover.”
Mendoza would not elaborate, saying by email, “we’ll be sending that info to our members first later this week or early next, so it will be available externally then.”
NABJ reported last month that the convention in the nation’s capital saw 3,209 NABJ and 681 NAHJ registrants. The success helped lead NABJ, which projected a 2015 deficit of nearly $380,000, to predict that it would end 2016 with a projected $1 million surplus.
Charlotte Observer Backs D.A. in Police Shooting
“Of all the words Mecklenburg District Attorney Andrew Murray said in his news conference late Wednesday morning, none may have been truer than his first,” the Charlotte Observer editorialized after the news conference.
“ ‘We’re here,’ Murray said, ‘to discuss a tragic case.’
“The shooting death of Keith Lamont Scott was exactly that — a tragedy for Scott’s family, which has had to grapple with a sudden and very public loss. It was a tragedy, too, for Charlotte-Mecklenburg police officer Brentley Vinson, who fired four bullets in the heat of a moment few can imagine.
“Vinson will not face criminal charges for that September shooting, Murray announced Wednesday. The officer, he said, ‘acted lawfully.’ We heard nothing that makes us disagree with the district attorney’s determination. . . .”
Bruce Henderson, Katherine Peralta and Ely Portillo reported for the Observer, “Dozens of protesters marched from Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police headquarters to the city center Wednesday night.” They also wrote, “Speakers at the protest, organized by the coalition Charlotte Uprising, said they want to see more police transparency in investigations. The march was generally peaceful, especially compared with the sometimes violent protests in the days after Scott’s death in September. . . .”
- Glenn Burkins, Qcitymetro: DA: No criminal charges warranted against officer in Keith Lamont Scott shooting that sparked protests
37 Groups Respond to Stories on Prison ‘Torture’
“In a letter to U.S. Attorney General Loretta Lynch, 37 civil rights, human rights and church groups on Monday asked the U.S. Department of Justice to investigate ‘harrowing allegations of abuse and torture’ of prisoners at the federal prison at Lewisburg, Pa., based on stories last month by NPR and The Marshall Project,” Joseph Shapiro reported for NPR.
“Groups signing the letter included the American Civil Liberties Union, Human Rights Watch, National Alliance on Mental Illness and Southern Poverty Law Center.
” ‘Reported conditions at USP Lewisburg call for swift intervention and accountability,’ said the Rev. Laura Markle Downton, of the National Religious Campaign Against Torture, one of the drafters of the letter.
“The letter writers said the stories showed ‘a facility in crisis that requires greater oversight, transparency and accountability to ensure humane and lawful conditions of confinement.’
“The investigation by NPR and The Marshall Project found violence between prisoners is six times more likely at Lewisburg, compared with all federal prisons. That violence is more likely because of the practice of putting dangerous men together in one solitary confinement cell — a practice called double celling — for 23 to 24 hours a day, plus a lack of mental health care and the frequent use of restraints for prisoners who refuse to live with a specific cellmate.
“One man in our investigation, Sebastian Richardson, was put in restraints for 28 days after he refused to cell with a man who had a reputation in the prison for attacking his cellmates.. . .”
TV Execs to Sit Out Critics Tour Next Month
“January’s semi-annual Television Critics Association press tour will be without some of the industry’s biggest executives, as well as another streaming outlet,” Lesley Goldberg reported Tuesday for the Hollywood Reporter.
“Amazon has opted to join Netflix as well as Starz and completely sit out the January TCA press tour. Additionally, NBC, ABC, Fox and CBS have all eliminated executive panels from their day-long sessions. Instead, insiders say, each of the Big Four networks want to focus on their midseason fare. Sources suggest that the networks will resume executive panels during the summer as they look to heavily promote their 2017-18 fall lineups. . . .”
“During the summer TCA, [Glenn] Geller was roasted about CBS’ lack of diversity during a panel in which he confessed the network needed to “do better” as part of a grueling 10-minute-long diversity discussion. Fox brass [Dana] Walden and [Gary] Newman fielded questions about the future of The X-Files; ABC’s [Channing] Dungey — in her debut — opened up about axing Castle and plans for a Star Wars TV series; and NBC’s [Bob] Greenblatt and Jennifer Salke were quizzed on [Donald J.] Trump.
“Given the near lack of a breakout broadcast hit and the absence of outright [cancellations] amid a lower ratings barometer, it’s almost no surprise that execs from the Big Four networks would sit out the January tour in an effort to maintain a positive news cycle. . . .”
Short Takes
- The “Journal-isms” fund drive, which officially began on “Giving Tuesday,” raised $5,625 from 57 people in its first two days. Many added comments extolling the site’s value. The overall goal is $50,000. List of supporters.
- Sopan Deb of CBS News, who is described as of “Indian-origin” by an Indian news outlet and “who emerged as a standout 2016 reporter for his tireless coverage of Donald Trump, is joining The New York Times culture desk,” Michael Calderone reported Wednesday for the Huffington Post. “In a memo to staff, Times Culture Editor Danielle Mattoon said Deb will ‘cover a spectrum of news — cultural, political, race/gender/class, way-we-live-now — through arts and entertainment lenses in the Trump era. . . .”
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“Police are investigating the shooting death of a Clark Atlanta University student outside a Sandy Springs condo,” Raisa Habersham reported Wednesday for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. “Cierra Ford, 25, was with her boyfriend when she was shot Friday . . . Tyrique Lobban, 21, was taken to the North Fulton Hospital with multiple gunshot wounds and is listed in critical, but stable condition. Robbery is thought to be a motive . . . Ford’s family told Channel 2 Action News she was majoring in communications at Clark Atlanta University and wanted to cover issues concerning African-Americans, including gun violence. She had already earned an associate’s degree at Contra Costa Community College in San Pablo, California. . . .” Berkeleyside account.
- “House Bill 48 — which passed the Ohio House by a huge margin a year ago — is singularly ill-timed,” the Plain Dealer in Cleveland editorialized on Tuesday, “coming right after an armed attack on the Ohio State University campus that injured 11 people.” The bill would authorize the carrying of concealed weapons on the campuses of Ohio’s public and private universities and colleges. Ohio State students divided.
- “David Brown, who, as Dallas Police Chief, became familiar to Americans in the days following the ambush police killings of five officers in July, has joined ABC News as an analyst,” Chris Ariens reported Wednesday for TVNewser. “A 33-year veteran of Dallas P.D., Brown resigned from the force on Oct. 22. He’d been chief since 2010. . . .”
- At Indiana University in Bloomington, “Members of the Black Graduate Student Association and the National Association of Black Journalists gathered Tuesday for a mass meeting to discuss policing and write letters to Ramsey Orta, the man behind the camera in the Eric Garner video,” Bailey Cline reported for the Indiana Daily Student. “Garner was killed after being held to the ground by a police officer in New York City. . . . ‘I felt the need to write letters to him to let him know someone still cares,’ said Taylor Hurt, president of the NABJ. ” Orta is the only person at the scene of Garner’s 2014 killing by police who will serve jail time.
- Editorializing on the Dakota Access Pipeline dispute at the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation in North Dakota, the Boston Globe wrote Tuesday, “Winter is coming, and conditions at the protesters’ Oceti Sakowin camp are deteriorating quickly. On Tuesday, after the governor ordered the camp evacuated and a winter storm swept in, officials said they would begin blocking supplies. The protesters vowed to stay put. . . . what better time for [President] Obama to show he is commander in chief and intervene, in the interest of negotiating a peaceful solution to a standoff that could have fatal consequences. . . .” Essay by photographer Shannon Kiss in the Comments section.
- “On Nov. 29, 1864, hundreds of Native Americans were killed,” Billy J. Stratton wrote Tuesday for Time magazine. “In treaties such as the Fort Laramie Treaty of 1851, the lands of Native peoples in the west were legally recognized and guaranteed. That such agreements carry the full weight of the United States Constitution belies the casual nature of their neglect. The Sand Creek Massacre of Nov. 29, 1864, represents just one example of our nation’s failure to live up to the ideals and laws sanctified in the documents of civilization. . . .” video (Rocky Mountain PBS)
- Some people think that racism toward Asian Americans “diminished because Asians ‘proved themselves’ through their actions,” Jeff Guo wrote Tuesday for the Washington Post. “But that is only a sliver of the truth. Then, as now, the stories of successful Asians were elevated, while the stories of less successful Asians were diminished. As historian Ellen Wu explains in her book, ‘The Color of Success,’ the model minority stereotype has a fascinating origin story, one that’s tangled up in geopolitics, the Cold War and the civil rights movement. . . .”
- “Looks like there’s been a change in the weather at KXAS/Channel 5, especially on weekends,” Robert Philpot reported Tuesday for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. “NBC 5 confirms that Remeisha Shade, who has primarily been doing weather on the weekend-evening newscasts since late 2010, has left the station. . . .”
- In Atlanta, “Morning host Gloria Neal has left CBS46 today after just 17 months,” Rodney Ho reported Nov. 22 for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. “Her name has been stripped off the staff listings and her bio page is gone. . . .”
- In Los Angeles, “KTTV morning anchor Tony McEwing expects to be off the anchor desk for several weeks due to medical treatment,” Mark Joyella reported Monday for TVSpy.
- “Ugandan authorities should immediately and unconditionally drop all charges against Kenya Television Network (KTN) reporter and anchor Joy Doreen Biira,” the Committee to Protect Journalists said Wednesday. “Police detained Biira on November 27 after she reported on a deadly battle between police and a traditional monarch’s royal guard, charged her with ‘abetting terrorism,’ and released her pending trial the following day, she and her lawyer told CPJ. . . .”
- The Committee to Protect Journalists said Wednesday that it had urged Mexican authorities “to ensure the safety of journalists working at the Tijuana-based weekly Zeta. The Mexican magazine is currently under police protection after authorities learned of a plot by a cartel to attack the office. . . .”
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- Journal-isms’ Richard Prince Wants Your Ideas (FishbowlDC, Feb. 26, 2016)
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- Richard Prince with Charlayne Hunter-Gault,“PBS NewsHour,” “What stagnant diversity means for America’s newsrooms” (Dec. 15, 2015)
- Book Notes: Journalists Follow Their Passions
- Book Notes: Journalists Who Rocked Their World
- Book Notes: Hands Up! Read This!
- Book Notes: New Cosby Bio Looks Like a Best-Seller
- Journo-diversity advocate turns attention to Ezra Klein project (Erik Wemple, Washington Post, March 5, 2014)
- Book Notes: “Love, Peace and Soul!” And More
- Book Notes: Book Notes: Soothing the Senses, Shocking the Conscience
- Diversity’s Greatest Hits, 2015
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- Book Notes: Books to Ring In the New Year
- Book Notes: In-Your-Face Holiday Reads
- Fishbowl Interview With the Fresh Prince of D.C. (Oct. 26, 2012)
- NABJ to Honor Columnist Richard Prince With Ida B. Wells Award (Oct. 11, 2012)
- So What Do You Do, Richard Prince, Columnist for the Maynard Institute? (Richard Horgan, FishbowlLA, Aug. 22, 2012)
- Book Notes: Who Am I? What’s Race Got to Do With It?: Journalists Explore Identity
- Book Notes: Catching Up With Books for the Fall
- Richard Prince Helps Journalists Set High Bar (Jackie Jones,BlackAmericaWeb.com, 2011)
- Book Notes: 10 Ways to Turn Pages This Summer
- Book Notes: 7 for Serious Spring Reading
- Book Notes: 7 Candidates for the Journalist’s Library
- Book Notes: 9 That Add Heft to the Bookshelf
- Five Minutes With Richard Prince (Newspaper Association of America, 2005)
- ‘Journal-isms’ That Engage and Inform Diverse Audiences (Q&A with Mallary Jean Tenore, Poynter Institute, 2008)
2 comments
What They Are Not Telling You About Standing Rock
By Shannon Kiss
You will hear of the sea turning black, and many living things dying because of it.
You will see many youth, who wear their hair long like my people, come and join the tribal nations, to learn their ways and wisdom.
These are the 8th and 9th signs in the ancient Hopi prophecy prior to great earthly destruction.
The 8th sign of the Lakota prophecy states, “the black snake will come and attempt to cross our river into our land. The 7 tribes must come together to defeat the black snake. If the 7 tribes fail and the black snake succeeds in crossing the river, it will mark off the end of the world.”
At this time 10,000 people from 400 nations have gathered by the Cannonball and Missouri Rivers at the Standing Rock reservation in North Dakota to protest completion of the Dakota Access Pipeline that the US Army Corps of Engineers (USACOE) routed through contested sacred Tribal land. The initially proposed route through Bismarck, N.D., was rejected due to risk and proximity to residential and municipal water sources. The USACOE subsequently elected to route the pipeline under the Missouri River half a mile from the Standing Rock reservation. As a result of shifting that risk to Tribal land with very little environmental study by the USACOE and being contested by the indigenous people, there is an ongoing effort to raise awareness and cease development of this pipeline.
There is a great deal occurring at Standing Rock that is being misrepresented or is not being covered by mainstream media. It hasn’t been reported that the military police on site are removing the protective rubber from their rubber bullets before firing, but they are. We are not being told that the security officers are taping down the safety valve on tear gas canisters so they explode instead of spraying a targeted stream, but this is happening.
We haven’t learned about the financial warfare of hundreds of falsely created GoFundMe pages to divert donations intended for the Tribe, but it is rampant. We also weren’t informed that the DAPL aggressors deliberately set fire to the fields above the camps and refused to put them out, but those fields are now charred and black. We haven’t been told about the seizure and destruction of personal property, such as medical canoes, and their broken pieces being placed behind razor wire in the face of their owners who used them to carry
their harmed brothers and sisters to safety.
Mainstream media won’t tell you that the former front line at the bridge on 1806 has been deemed a “Kill Zone” where DAPL security are permitted to use live rounds against unarmed citizens because they are deemed an “imminent threat to their safety”. And we are being shown images in the media of young native warriors placing themselves between armed forces and civilian protestors with captions that state they were attacking the police officers, when in fact they were placing themselves in harm’s way in order to protect
untrained civilians from police assault.
Payu Vane Harris, a recent resident of Boulder, CO, is a member of the North
Cheyenne Tribe from the Lame Deer Reservation in Montana.
He has been living on site at Standing Rock for 4 months, spending time every day at the front lines. One of his main roles for the Tribe is to ensure that protestors remain peaceful and to move anyone who has been harmed by DAPL security to safety.
There have been days when he has pulled as many as 30 people out of danger during a direct action, although sometimes too late to prevent injury. Other days he simply works as a mediator to calm protestors who are incited and must be reminded that their words or actions could cause the police to harm many others who are there in prayer. He is even working to conduct friendly dialogue with the security officers to defuse emotions and remind them that the protestors are people, not just targets.
“Prayer” is another word and concept that mainstream media is not speaking of, however it is the most prevalent element and objective of the Tribal elders and most residents of the camps. Every morning begins with a prayer ceremony and the sacred fire remains lit, often with elders present, for spiritual guidance. There is a prayer circle before every meal, and prayers are conducted in the healing tents, at the water ceremonies, at the front line and throughout every inch of these camps.
The overwhelming effort and method of protest from natives and most traveling
protestors is peaceful and prayerful. But, you aren’t hearing about this on the major news networks.
The indigenous people who hold their burial grounds, water and land resources
supremely sacred are standing up in prayer to face the men in black on the hill.
They are speaking to them from the water’s edge with respect, yet asking with great strength how they would feel if their grandparents’ graves were being desecrated for profit. They honorably ask where is their compassion for the oppressed Tribes whose land continues to be stolen out from under them in spite of signed treaties.
They reach out to find understanding and appeal to some sense of a conscience
about how they could brutalize unarmed people who are merely coming to their
sacred place of prayer in attempt to protect their water. They look up and ask the officers if they pray. Upon receiving an answer of silence, they say they will pray for them, for their children and for their safety.
Of course there is a growing element in the camps of young warriors who want to fight for their rights. They are struggling to honor the requests of their elders by remaining peaceful while also harboring great concern that their forces need to be strengthened and more aggressive action should be taken to slow pipeline progress.
The Red Warriors were asked to leave Oceti Sakowin, the main camp in contested territory on the north side of the river that borders the front line.
As of November 27, they had not left, but they remained peaceful. It is imperative that non-native people coming to protest know to respect the Tribe’s stated wishes and do not incite violence. As Payu stated, “no matter what they do to fight back, it will impact the people living in the camps and praying at the front line. The police will assert that they feel threatened by acts of aggression and will respond with undue force.”
This response by Shannon Kiss needs to go viral. People do not get the full story on what is going on at Standing Rock. That pipeline needs to be stopped!