Stop the Klamath Agreements, Save our Wild Salmon

Zig Zag's avatarWarrior Publications

Klamath River protester 1 Oni Rose Orcutt stands in the algae contaminated Trinity River, where her ancestors have fished since time immemorial (Photo contributed by Oni’s mother)

Will Senator Greg Walden attempt to slam through fraudulent legislation for the smoke and mirror Klamath agreement?

December 15th2015 (Upper Klamath Basin, Oregon)
The infamous Klamath water Agreements appear to be on their final days. Rumor has it that Tuesday December 15th Senator Greg Walden will attempt to slam through fraudulent legislation for the smoke and mirror Klamath agreement. But there’s a catch. The bill as it stands today will no longer include the language for dam removal, which has been a primary bargained for benefit to signatory tribes to improve historic Klamath River wild salmon runs that have been irreversibly damaged by settler occupancy.

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San Bernadino was a false flag

No Lies Radio has this up — Jim and Kevin get into a rather nasty argument, so be forewarned.  Not a pretty sight.

Here’s the link to the sheriffs advocating citizens to become armed.  I have mixed feelings about it, as you all know.  The second sheriff of brevard county is a little too angry for my comfort.  He talks as if San Bernadino were true as fact, without examining the evidence.

Aboriginal children at residential schools often buried in unmarked graves, report reveals

It never ceases to amaze me how people feel they have a right to force their religion upon others. And I’m not naive enough to think this was ONLY about religion — it was about power and control over others, with religion used as the means to do it.

Zig Zag's avatarWarrior Publications

Residential School class Native children in a residential school.

by Marlene Leung, CTV News, Dec 15, 2015

Aboriginal children attending residential schools died at a higher rate than school-aged children in the general population, and were often buried in unmarked graves, according to the final report from the Truth and Reconciliation Commission.

The commission released its final report Tuesday afternoon, marking the culmination of six years of research and interviews with more than 6,000 residential school survivors and their families.

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Highway of Tears gets $3M for transportation safety plan

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Highway of Tears billboard Billboard warns against hitch hiking along Highway 16 in northern BC, also known as the “Highway of Tears” for the high number of missing/murdered women.

Funding comes after a recent meeting between transportation officials and First Nations leaders in the area

CBC News, Dec 14, 2015

The B.C. government is committing $3 million to improve public transit along B.C.’s so-called Highway of Tears.

The funding comes following a recent meeting between transportation officials and First Nations leaders in the area, to address concerns about the number of women who have gone missing or been murdered while hitchhiking Highway 16, which runs between Prince George and Prince Rupert.

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Easy to be Cold…

Three Dog Night was one of the best bands of the 60s and 70s.  Easy to be Hard is one of the more soulful, deep songs that captures the feelings of the time — the era of the Vietnam War, Civil Rights fight, Women’s rights, and what we , or at least I, felt was a very hopeful time that we were moving in a positive direction towards the Light.

Now it just feels we are being engulfed by the Darkness.

And lastly, this, my younger readers, is what music is…not the screeching that passes for music nowadays.  (Gah, do I sound like an old fogey or what??)