THE HANDSTAND

DECEMBER 2003


.
LETTER FROM an AMERICAn:


Thankstaking Day?

As most Americans are sitting down to eat that once noble native bird,
the turkey, a growing number of us are observing a No Thanksgiving/ Day of
Sorrow to reflect on the genocide committed against the American Indians.
Eating the once noble turkey,  nominated by that one intellectual giant
amongst the founders of the USA, Benjamin Franklin, to be our national bird,
has come to symbolize much of what is wrong about celebrating this bogus
holiday.
The original turkey was a wiley, respected bird, the successful stalking
of which marked one as a skilled hunter. The fowl that most Americans will
be stuffing themselves with this Thursday is raised in cages, being fed
increasing amounts of genetically engineered grain, laced with antibiotics.
It is so hyper-inbred, the male¹s breast often is so large females must be
artificially inseminated. It would seem being to fat to have sex has now
become another addition to the American tradition.
While the historical myth of American Indians peaceably sharing their
turkey dinner with  the white settlers on Thanksgiving is still taught as
fact to our children, a review of the historical record shows no reference
to this event ever happening.
Benjamin Franklin and the Founding Fathers of America didn¹t celebrate
this holiday. In fact, the Thanksgiving holiday was a public relations
gimmick dreamed up by that Indian Fighter turned corporate lawyer turned politician, Abraham Lincoln, during the darkest days of the Civil War in an attempt to win support for an increasingly unpopular war.
No, during Benjamin Franklin¹s time, the white settlers were to busy
actually dealing with a militant, armed, united, well led and organized
League of the Iroquois to be bothered pretending they were friends. One
needs to look no further than the so called Prince Phillips War in the
middle of the 18th century to find some of the most horrendous massacres,
nay, genocide, committed against the savage Indian by the god fearing
Christians, hardly the environment for celebrating holidays about friendly
get togethers.
Yet the nation empire founded by the legendary Hiawatha , the League of
the Iroquois, occupied a considerable portion of Benjamin Franklin scholarly
attention in his earlier years.  As a printer Franklin was in charge of the
correspondence between the League of the Iroquois and the Colony of Pennsylvania. He became such an authority on the American Indian that he was appointed to his first diplomatic post as Commissioner of Indian Affairs  and acted as Ambassador to the League of the Iroquois for the colony of Pennsylvania. Addressing the Albany Congress in 1754, Franklin called on the delegates from the English colonies to unite along the lines of the League of the Iroquois, something they were not to do until 30 years later.
Benjamin Franklin was also the author of the original, draft constitution
of what would become the first democracy in the western world, the USA.
When looking for models for Franklins new democracy in European society,
you find little in over two thousand years of European history,  having to
go all the way back to the Roman and earlier Greek city states.
Yet if you look at Franklins neighbors, the League of the Iroquois, and
their constitution, you find remarkable similarities with what Franklin
envisioned in his Constitution. What is this I am saying, that these savage
red skins ran their society democratically? That these supposed
barbarians, who oversaw an empire that stretched from New England to the
Mississippi River, may have been the model for the first democracy in the
western world? This is something I doubt most Americans have even
considered.
The League of the Iroquois was composed of nation ³states² which had
jurisdiction over affairs in that state only. Each state had its own
elected legislature, which, as in Franklins Constitution, chose a number of
electors to the federal League of the Iroquois. These electors were
accorded to each state  based on the individual states population. The
electors  met regularly in a sacred hall for their deliberations.. This
grand council (the name Franklin used in the original draft of the
Constitution for what came to be the Congress of the USA) was unicameral, as
was Franklins original white settler council, later Congress, of the
former English colonies.
This Grand Council of the League of the Iroquois declared war and
negotiated peace treaties, sent and received ambassadors, decided on new
members joining the League and in general acted as a federal government
whose decisions superseded those of the ³states² in affairs of the nation.
As in Franklin¹s Constitution, in the League of the Iroquois, the
electors could not be serving in the military  while holding office. In both
cases, an electorate chose the electors and could recall their choice at
anytime. One of the main differences between the two "democracies" was that
in the League of the Iroquois, the electors were reserved for men BUT
ELECTED BY THE WOMEN. Thats right, in the League of the Iroquois the women
elected the leadership, something much more democratic than the actual
minority of men who got to vote in the USA.
Franklins protege, Thomas Jefferson, who wrote the final draft of the
Constitution, was also a student of the American Indian. Jefferson was the
first person to propose a systematic ethnological study of the American
Indian so as to collect their traditions, laws, customs, languages and
other circumstances.
Yet the founding fathers of the USA displayed a savagery in destroying the
League of the Iroquois as well as that other American Indian democracy,
the Creek Confederation, that shocked even some of their peers.
That  genocide, both good and ill intentioned, was carried out by
Europeans against the American Indians is an undeniable fact. The question
we must ask is why did this happen?.
One reason proposed is that as long as Africans in slavery had a place to escape to, as well as base to launch retaliation from, no slave owner was safe. The threat represented by Indian/African unity resulted in the
ruthless attacks on the League of the Iroquois, the Creek Confederation, and
finally, the so called Seminole Wars of the early 19th century.
Seminole is a Spanish corruption of an Indian word for runaway or
renegade. The Seminole Indians were a mixture of escaped Africans and
American Indians, mainly remnants of the Creek Confederation who had escaped
to the Florida Everglades. The Seminoles fought the longest most expensive
war in American history until that point.  Their defeat eventually followed by the Trail of Tears death march, ended the last major resistance by American Indians east of the Mississippi River, and secured the institution of slavery in the south. Slavery was King and The Only Good Indian was a Dead Indian became the slogan for much of what was policy
in the USA.
With this in mind, and with ³Thanksgiving² once again upon us, it
behooves all Americans of good will to take the time to reflect on our real
history, to teach this to our children, and to stop ³celebrating² this
mythical holiday that represents so dark a period in the history of this
country. Leave that poor turkey in peace, and join with us in observing a
No Thanksgiving/ Day of Sorrow.

Thomas C. Mountain
tmountain@hawaii.rr.com
47-431 Hui Nene St., Kaneohe, Hawaii, 96744
(808)239-8112
RELEASE: TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 2003, AND THEREAFTER
by Molly Ivins
http://www.creators.com/opinion_show.cfm?columnsName=miv
AUSTIN, Texas -- Wow! Not one, but two huge, horrible, last-minute life-changing bills, and the second is even worse than the first! Record-shattering bad legislation immediately eclipsed by record-shattering bad legislation. These Republicans have talent:
It is not easy to do this much damage to people's lives with a straight face and that unctuous air of piety.
I like the timing, too -- slipped that Medicare deform bill through just in time for the drug companies, the insurance companies and the HMOs to give loud hosannas around their Thanksgiving tables. Let us hear their hymns of praise, paeans, benedictions and blessings upon the Republican Party rise from their groaning and appreciative boards forever, amen.
Oh, and as for you senior citizens who believed that amusing little claim that you would all benefit from this bill -- suckers! According to Public Citizen, pharmaceutical companies have given $44 million since 1999 -- 78 percent to Republicans, 22 percent to Democrats -- and spent millions more hiring an army of lobbyists that physically outnumbers the 535 members of Congress. The Health Reform Program of Boston University estimates that of the bill's $400 billion price tag, $139 billion will go to increase drug-company profits over eight years, a 38 percent increase in what is already the world's most profitable industry.
But forget about the Medicare bill -- it won't take effect until 2006 anyway, so you won't even notice what it does til them. Regard the even more amazing energy bill. In case you haven't been keeping up (and you do have to race to keep up), there is a gasoline additive called MTBE that has polluted groundwater across the country. So naturally, the Republicans have put in a provision that would limit the liability of the manufacturers of MTBE -- that means you can't sue them for ruining the water -- and the bill would give the companies up to $2 billion in federal aid. Congratulations! That means you, the users of MTBE-polluted water across the nation, will get to pay for cleaning it up.
This is an amazing energy bill because it does not: A) reduce our dependence on foreign oil, B) provide significant new energy sources, C) create many jobs, D) improve the grid system so we won't have more blackouts, E) promote energy efficiency or conservation or F) do anything about global warming.
BUT, it will cost at least $20 billion in subsides to fossil fuel companies. Those poor li'l oil, gas, coal and nuclear companies like Exxon/Mobil and General Electric need our help -- this is compassionate conservatism.

We would, of course, tell you who wrote this abomination, except Dick Cheney, who headed the task force, doesn't think any of us should know where this law came from, and the Republicans who have been working on it in secret for months met in secret. Democrats were not even admitted to the committee meetings.
The environmental groups are still going through it, finding new horrors hidden away. Greenwire reports, "Section 349 would remove the discretion of the Interior Department to deny applications to drill amid onshore and offshore lands -- upon receiving an application to drill in a leased area, the department would have 10 days to determine whether additional information is required to grant a permit. Once the information is provided, the department must approve the application regardless of whether drilling would damage the environment."
I like that. Suppose the additional information required shows the company to be a notorious polluter, responsible for numerous previous spills and even blowouts. Nothing to be done.
The Natural Resources Defense Council reports that the bill rolls back environmental protections to boost oil and gas drilling on American's last remaining wild lands and open spaces. It also means eliminating consumer protections and subsidizing construction of new nuclear plants most Americans don't want, and it means exempting polluters from laws that ensure clear water and healthy air. A provision seriously weakening the Clean Air Act was inserted at the last minute behind closed doors.
And the sin of omission once again outweighs all the sins of commission, even in this stupefyingly bad bill. Our economy wastes more energy than any other country, perhaps as much as half of our total energy. This bill does nothing to encourage energy efficiency or fuel economy standards. The simplest, cheapest thing we can do about energy is save it -- but of course if we conserve energy and make our cars more efficient, that means lower profits for oil, gas, coal and nuclear industries.
No wonder the energy companies have given over $71 million in contributions to politicians, over 80 percent to Republicans, since 1999. They're getting a $20 billion return on that little investment just in direct subsidies, and there is much more in the bill in indirect subsidies. Folks, it is time to get serious about fixing this system.
To find out more about Molly Ivins and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.
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