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    • "Right Now, I Could Kill President Bush"

      Posted by theangryindian

      Not the sort of thing you'd normally expect to hear out of the mouth of a Nobel Peace Prize winner, but then, these are not normal times : Nobel Peace Prize winner Betty Williams came from Ireland to Texas to declare that President Bush should be impeached. In a keynote speech at the International Women's Peace Conference on Wednesday night, Ms. Williams told a crowd of about 1,000 that the Bush administration has been treacherous and wrong and acted unconstitutionally. "Rig

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      Vitter was a repeat customer

      Posted by theangryindian from Tpmmuckraker

      Well, at least it wasn't during Lent. From The Times-Picayune: A phone number for Sen. David Vitter, R-La., appears at least five times in the billing records of what federal authorities say was a Washington call-girl operation, the first just four months after he was sworn in to the U.S. House in 1999 and the last on Mardi Gras of 2001.

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      Pope wants to deliver Jews 'from their darkness' | Press Esc

      Posted by theangryindian from pressesc.com

      Pope Benedict XVI courted fresh controversy today by formally sanctioning the celebration of a Latin prayer that calls for Jews to "be delivered from their darkness" and calls for their conversion to Christianity. "In parishes, where there is a stable group of faithful who adhere to the earlier liturgical tradition, the pastor should willingly accept their requests to celebrate the Mass according to the rite of the Roman Missal published in 1962, and ensure that the welfare of these faithful

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      Aotearoa: National Day of Action: July 14th - Melbourne

      Posted by theangryindian from Angryindian.blogspot

      National Day of Action: Stop the Genocide on Stolen Aboriginal Land A mass community rally will be held in Melbourne on Saturday 14 July, 12:30 pm to voice opposition to the government's escalation of attacks on Indigenous communities and the denial of justice for Mulrunji and other Indigenous people who have been killed in police custody.

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      US Still Refuses to Work With Hamas

      Posted by theangryindian from presstv.ir

      The United States has said that it would not change its policy toward Hamas, despite the group's role in the release of BBC reporter Alan Johnston. "Everybody is pleased that Mr. Johnston is back safe and sound, reunited with his family," said US State Department spokesman Sean McCormack on Thursday.

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  • Just Said
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  1. thumbnail

    pradip comments on:

    Dead Black Man Was Tasered Nine Times by White Cop

    they are rascals like a mad pig

     

    Reply »

    4:39 am 7/29/08
  2. thumbnail

    pradip comments on:

    Dead Black Man Was Tasered Nine Times by White Cop

    white police officer are ghost & bastard

    Reply »

    4:38 am 7/29/08
  3. thumbnail

    theangryindian comments on:

    Black Accountability Project: DNC Color Divide

    Yeah, especially if you are meaning still working within your political system although we don’t want to.  I can think of several.

    You could start with the U.S. must offically apologising for American Aboriginal genocide and than make the necessary changes to the educational system to wash out the colonial propaganda clotting American hearts and minds.  Second, ALL of First Nations-U.S. are to be honoured and without undue delay.  Next, the United States is to offically apologise for chattle slavery, genocide and systematic institutional racial bias.  The U.S. must then return full sovereignty to Puerto Rico, Guam, the Dominican Republic, the Philippines and promise to not try and re-take the island of Cuba.

    Following all that there would need to be a restructuring of the entire political system and the acceptance of multiple parties including revamping the voting system without the Electoral College.

    Without the former list of suggestions, the latter half is only cosmetic.  Just my opinion.

    Reply »

    4:08 pm 5/22/08
  4. thumbnail

    Damianmann comments on:

    Black Accountability Project: DNC Color Divide

    That’s fine. Got another option?

    Reply »

    3:10 pm 5/22/08
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    theangryindian comments on:

    Black Accountability Project: DNC Color Divide

    If my vote counted, Florida 2000 would have been addressed.  It still hasn’t.  I’m still not convinced.  Sorry.

    Reply »

    2:52 pm 5/22/08
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    Damianmann comments on:

    Black Accountability Project: DNC Color Divide

    It’s a strange thing because aboriginals DESERVE to be involved and respected.

     

    I know the real history and it makes me sick. I’ve read Zinn. I’ve been on "Indian" reservations and seen the sqaulor. It’s shameful. This land is THEIR land…we ( not me literally…as I’m Irish American and my relatives served as indentured servants ) are robbers. The real criminals are long dead. The modern white is ignorant to the facts…But, they DO benefit from these crimes.

    But, again, NOT voting gives them more power …and they thank you for not voting…as they thank the millions of others… who…if they voted, could remove them from power…

    It’s that or violent revolution…which is fine with me. Apathy gets people nowhere…

    except in the case of the government. It gets them everywhere ….and everything.

    Reply »

    1:25 pm 5/22/08
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    theangryindian comments on:

    Black Accountability Project: DNC Color Divide

    How can Aborignals not being involved be a strange thing?  We were never meant to be involved nor were we ever expected to survive past the early 1900’s.  What you should be asking is why this country continues to pursue a national mythology that presupposes the notion that Europeans were by Provindence destined to run roughshod over people who were here thousands of years before the first European ever wore a shoe.  Why is this not on the table.

    For every psychologically beaten Indian who can’t see past the U.S. brainwashing of our people, there are scores who want nothing at all to do with the U.S.  I am one of them.  If I walk down a city street its not because I "love" the society that still works to either kill my people off or worse, make us believe the idea that Aboriginal genocide was a good thing for us too.  I walk because I have no choice but to stride across  the pavement that masks my beginings before European invasion.  So no, I do not vote to keep the same government that enacted genocide against my people in place.  And I find it insulting that no-Natives are still too caught up in their own lies to see or care about where we are coming from.

    Reply »

    1:06 pm 5/22/08
  • Just Said
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  1. thumbnail

    theangryindian

    Member since Aug 2008

    “The Angryindian” is an internationally recognised Indigenist activist and outspoken critic of U.S. colonialism practised against Aboriginal societies in America and abroad. He is editor of IntelligentaIndigena Novajoservo and the host of Radyo Inteligentaindigena, an independent, non-partisan international Indigenist podcast.

    Indian Country