Thursday, September 1, 2016

Re: [blind-democracy] Wanna-Be Presidential Assassin Hinkley Goes Free, Leonard Peltier Left to Rot and Die in Prison

If only Leonard Peltier were the only political prisoner wrongly
accused and convicted and left to rot.
I was born White, through no fault of my own, and raised in a day and
place where most everybody around me was White. It is very hard for a
young child to think in terms of living a privileged life. Especially
a White Child who is raised in near poverty while living in an
affluent community. Still, I took for granted that I could go out and
hire onto many jobs. I could attend the University of Washington
without ever wondering why so many People of Color were missing.
Even after I became blind, I attended a training center for the blind,
and never noticed that there were only two persons of color attending
with me, a native Alaskan and a Chinese American woman.
How could I even begin to understand that my life was set in place by
White Racists who made certain that the laws and privileges were there
to be enjoyed by other White Racists?
It has taken a lifetime for me to begin to understand, and to make
sense out of the world I accidentally entered back in 1935. How do I
know if I've been successful in becoming rid of my Racist
conditioning, when I still travel through Life as a White man? And
how do I begin to "educate" those others around me, when they are
contented to live as one of the privileged?

Carl Jarvis



On 8/31/16, Miriam Vieni <miriamvieni@optonline.net> wrote:
>
> Excerpt: "This is a clear example of the dual standard of justice when it
> comes to American Indians versus non-Indian people. And here we have a man,
> Hinckley, who was an obvious attempted assassin: they caught him in the
> act.
> And we have the contrast of Leonard Peltier, who has been in prison 40
> years, 10 more years than Hinckley, and they've never convicted him of the
> actual shooting."
>
> Leonard Peltier, the Native American activist and member of the American
> Indian Movement (AIM). Here he is pictured in prison. (photo: Unknown)
>
>
> Wanna-Be Presidential Assassin Hinkley Goes Free, Leonard Peltier Left to
> Rot and Die in Prison
> By Dennis J Bernstein, Reader Supported News
> 31 August 16
>
> AIM founder Bill Means talks about our racist double standard
> Once again, the bold expression of American racism and the racist double
> standard of the U.S. justice system send shock waves through the Native
> American community. In early August, John Hinckley Jr., who came an inch or
> two away from assassinating President Ronald Reagan and his press
> secretary,
> James Brady, was released in an act of mercy, so that the man who managed
> to
> put a few bullets in the beloved 40th president of the United States was
> able to return home to his mother, now terminally ill and dying, according
> to public reports.
> "I'm very glad this happened after Mrs. Reagan passed on," said Ed Rollins,
> campaign manager for Reagan's re-election bid in 1984. Rollins suggested
> that Nancy Reagan might have been a little bit upset had she learned that
> the person who nearly killed her husband, and devastated - left wounded for
> life - his former press secretary, was shown mercy by the Obama Justice
> Department.
> Upset would definitely not cut it when it comes to the outrage native
> leaders in the U.S. have expressed about the treatment of Leonard Peltier,
> whose health is failing. I spoke to Bill Means about the mercy granted
> Hinckley and the dual standard of justice when it comes to Native
> Americans,
> like Peltier, who has now spent over 40 years in jail based on what many
> feel was a travesty of justice - a trial wrought with injustice, fatal
> breaches of his civil rights, false testimony, and massive intimidation of
> witnesses brought forth by the defense.
> "They said Orlando was the largest massacre in the history of the United
> States," Means told me in a recent radio interview. "That shows you how
> much
> the Americans have forgotten about their own history, that we have had
> countless massacres, including Sand Creek, including Wounded Knee."
> Bill Means is a co-founder of the American Indian Movement, also known as
> AIM, and sits on the board of the American Indian Treaty Council. Dennis
> Bernstein spoke with Means in Rosebud, South Dakota.
> Dennis Bernstein: Welcome back to Flashpoints, Bill Means. Well, John
> Hinckley Jr. is free to go, and Leonard Peltier is still being tortured.
> Double standard?
> Bill Means: Yes! This is a clear example of the dual standard of justice
> when it comes to American Indians versus non-Indian people. And here we
> have
> a man, Hinckley, who was an obvious attempted assassin: they caught him in
> the act. And we have the contrast of Leonard Peltier, who has been in
> prison
> 40 years, 10 more years than Hinckley, and they've never convicted him of
> the actual shooting. He was convicted of aiding and abetting. The FBI
> admitted in court that they don't know who shot the FBI agents.
> So we have this type of evidence that continues to burn the conscience of
> the justice system of America where it says that all people have equal
> access to due process, etc. However, we see a man like Hinckley who
> actually
> shot a president - I don't know if you could put a price on a president
> versus two FBI agents - but first of all you have to realize the
> circumstances of Peltier not being convicted of actually shooting the
> agents. The evidence itself in the two cases is totally opposite, in terms
> of the shooter and the conviction of the shooter. We have Leonard Peltier
> sitting in jail for 40 years, for a crime he didn't commit, and we have
> Hinckley, who shot a president of the United States plus his press
> secretary
> by the name of Brady, I believe, who has been in a wheelchair since that
> time. Also, we have the only substantial firearms reform law, called the
> Brady Bill, as a result of the shootings. The after-effects even touched
> something that all our school shootings, or assassinations, or various
> types
> of gun violence hasn't affected, because of the tremendous lobbying power
> of
> the NRA. And here we have the Brady Bill, which stands as a living monument
> to Brady, the press secretary of Reagan who was shot. So you have all these
> extenuating circumstances which show again the racism and the double
> standard of justice when it applies to American Indian prisoners.
> DB: We also have to say a word or two about how unbelievably corrupt and
> questionable the government's case was. And the behavior of the FBI. Could
> you just remind us of a little bit of that, Bill? Because we know that
> Hinckley got a fair trial.
> Means: Well of course in Leonard Peltier's trial there was evidence
> presented at several appeals, in which he was ... his witnesses, in terms
> of
> the prosecution, some of whom were mentally ill and coerced into saying ...
> and later these people, witnesses they used against Peltier, in his case,
> later recanted their story. And then we have the idea that the FBI agents
> themselves, every time he comes up for parole, send letters into the U.S.
> federal parole board, which doesn't exist anymore. But they have mounted
> several campaigns in the past, even as far as marching visibly in front of
> the Supreme Court, when his case made it to the Supreme Court.
> So we have this active protest by FBI agents against the release of Leonard
> Peltier, every time even the thought comes up. But yet we have Hinckley,
> who's been convicted, and nobody from the FBI says anything, at least not
> yet. So again, when the evidence was overwhelmingly ... you know there were
> so many contradictions.
> There was one case that went to the Supreme Court that involved the weapon
> that was used. It turns out that this famous FBI lab, which has been used
> to
> convict many people charged with a crime by the FBI, well, their evidence
> was corrupt. And even they said that they were allowed to use this evidence
> that this was the gun that killed the agents when it turned out, in court,
> that it was impossible, that the firing pin evidence didn't match. And so
> they used, in order to sway the jury, false evidence. And there's many,
> many
> other examples, if you read up a little bit on the Leonard Peltier case,
> even his extradition from Canada, where they used false testimony and
> coerced testimony to bring him back across the border. Several federal
> judges, including in Canada and in the U.S., have indicated that Peltier
> should have at least gotten a new trial, based on the evidence not based on
> coerced testimony, false testimony, and manipulation of the evidence.
> DB: Bill, this has got to go into the extreme racism file when there's sort
> of like "red lives don't matter, white lives are exalted," even if they're
> people who tried to kill the president of the United States. I mean, the
> standard here, the dual standard here ... this is sort of consistent with
> the fact that this is the government that committed genocide against the
> Indian people. And this setup of Leonard Peltier is in the context that you
> were a part of, the first time ever in modern history that the indigenous
> community stood up at Wounded Knee. So this is that ongoing 40-year lesson,
> right? Continuing lesson, to the Native American community, the indigenous
> community: "We will do whatever it takes to shut your ass down." I'm really
> amazed at this one. Your thoughts on that part of it.
> Means: Well, of course, we have in the case of the Black Lives Matter, and
> the issue of what happened in Orlando, Florida, in the nightclub, so many
> people were killed. They said Orlando was the largest massacre in the
> history of the United States. That shows you how much the Americans have
> forgotten about their own history. We have had countless massacres,
> including Sand Creek, including Wounded Knee, including many, many others,
> throughout the continental United States, where masses of Indians ... We
> have a grave on our reservation, seven miles from my home community, at a
> little hamlet called Wounded Knee, in which over 300 men, women and
> children
> are still buried, in a mass grave. Same with the Cheyenne people, when they
> were attacked by a Methodist minister acting as a military leader - his
> name
> was Colonel Chivington - down in Colorado.
> So we have this history that's very well documented, and very well known.
> Matter of fact, at Wounded Knee they gave away, I believe, over 20 Medals
> of
> Honor for the massacre of our people. So this is kind of like the extreme
> method of racism, of perpetrating the lie of the history of America.
> And now we have Hinckley being released, and then we have this idea in the
> Black Lives Matter movement, and all these other various killings, they've
> pushed aside the evidence about Indian people's history, and how many of
> our
> people have been massacred throughout the years. And so it's just ... it's
> just an insult to the intelligence of the American Indian that this could
> go
> on in this day and age.
> DB: And, of course, there's the ongoing oppression, the ongoing racism, the
> economic racism, the kind of racism that continues to be practiced against
> Indians, Indians on their land, their land being stolen, their children
> being stolen. You were a part of bringing the United Nations to the
> communities in North America, on the reservations, where literally the
> representatives were weeping, based on the conditions, and this is the sort
> of the real underside of this story.
> Means: Yes, it is. Because throughout the involvement of the International
> Indian Treaty Councils since 1974 at the United Nations, we have continued
> to document the poverty-stricken condition of Indian people, the violation
> of treaty rights, the violation of human rights, and we finally got passed
> in 2007 what's called The Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People,
> in
> which the United Nations finally recognized Indians as humans. So it took
> us
> 30 years working at the U.N. just to allow the United Nations, in
> opposition
> to the United States by the way, to pass a basic standard of human rights
> for indigenous people all over the world.
> What happened here, in this country, to indigenous people, has indeed
> happened around the world, in terms of human rights, in terms of the
> avarice
> and greed for the minerals that are on indigenous peoples' lands,
> worldwide.
> This little, small act of releasing infamy brings up all these various
> histories of indigenous people around the world, where indigenous peoples
> have been persecuted, murdered, buried in mass graves, and nobody cares.
> But yet they can release this one man, Hinckley, who actually shot the
> president of the United States, and act as if it was a misdemeanor. Or as
> if
> he were some type of mentally ill person, which gave him a reason to shoot
> people. So this is probably the ultimate miscarriage of justice in the
> history of U.S. jurisprudence.
> DB: And to be very clear, Leonard Peltier was part of a movement to resist
> the oppression, the racism, and the slaughter that has finally been
> recognized by the world through the United Nations. So that is at the heart
> of the matter of why they have to keep a leader, an exalted leader, who
> means a great deal to his people, in jail like a criminal. And it's clearly
> a political act of injustice, wouldn't you say, Bill?
> Means: Well, I think throughout the history of this country when people
> have
> stood up, especially Indian people, they have been immediately criminalized
> and treated as sub-standard human beings. Remember, the largest mass
> hanging
> in the history of the United States was 38 of our Lakota people in Manteno,
> Minnesota, in 1862. We could go into atrocity after atrocity to show how
> the
> United States has continued to use Peltier as an example to all people that
> Indian resistance will not be tolerated. And they don't even have a case as
> strong as against Hinckley.
> They don't have a case with the evidence to give him ... they're scared to
> give him a new trial, first of all. But he has served more than any other
> federal prisoner in the modern history of the United States. So I think he
> has suffered enough. It's time for a little humanity. That's the reason
> they're releasing Hinckley, they said in the press, to be with his mother
> who is very ill, at the end of her time on this earth. But what about
> Leonard Peltier? They have a chance to redeem themselves through the
> president of the United States offering clemency. Of course this one act
> can
> not redeem the history of the United States' treatment towards Indians, but
> at least let the man who served longer than any other Indian in history, or
> for that matter most federal prisoners, who don't even serve half his
> sentence. The average time that a federal prisoner given life serves is
> between 16 and 18 years. And now we have him doing 40 years only because
> he's an Indian. What has to be brought out is the injustice and the dual
> standard of justice, because Leonard Peltier deserves to be with his family
> for the rest of what little life he has left.
>
> ________________________________________
> Dennis J Bernstein is the executive producer of Flashpoints, syndicated on
> Pacifica Radio, and is the recipient of a 2015 Pillar Award for his work as
> a journalist whistleblower. He is most recently the author of Special Ed:
> Voices from a Hidden Classroom.
> Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work.
> Permission
> to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader
> Supported News.
> Error! Hyperlink reference not valid. Error! Hyperlink reference not
> valid.
>
> Leonard Peltier, the Native American activist and member of the American
> Indian Movement (AIM). Here he is pictured in prison. (photo: Unknown)
> http://readersupportednews.org/http://readersupportednews.org/
> Wanna-Be Presidential Assassin Hinkley Goes Free, Leonard Peltier Left to
> Rot and Die in Prison
> By Dennis J Bernstein, Reader Supported News
> 31 August 16
> AIM founder Bill Means talks about our racist double standard
> nce again, the bold expression of American racism and the racist double
> standard of the U.S. justice system send shock waves through the Native
> American community. In early August, John Hinckley Jr., who came an inch or
> two away from assassinating President Ronald Reagan and his press
> secretary,
> James Brady, was released in an act of mercy, so that the man who managed
> to
> put a few bullets in the beloved 40th president of the United States was
> able to return home to his mother, now terminally ill and dying, according
> to public reports.
> "I'm very glad this happened after Mrs. Reagan passed on," said Ed Rollins,
> campaign manager for Reagan's re-election bid in 1984. Rollins suggested
> that Nancy Reagan might have been a little bit upset had she learned that
> the person who nearly killed her husband, and devastated - left wounded for
> life - his former press secretary, was shown mercy by the Obama Justice
> Department.
> Upset would definitely not cut it when it comes to the outrage native
> leaders in the U.S. have expressed about the treatment of Leonard Peltier,
> whose health is failing. I spoke to Bill Means about the mercy granted
> Hinckley and the dual standard of justice when it comes to Native
> Americans,
> like Peltier, who has now spent over 40 years in jail based on what many
> feel was a travesty of justice - a trial wrought with injustice, fatal
> breaches of his civil rights, false testimony, and massive intimidation of
> witnesses brought forth by the defense.
> "They said Orlando was the largest massacre in the history of the United
> States," Means told me in a recent radio interview. "That shows you how
> much
> the Americans have forgotten about their own history, that we have had
> countless massacres, including Sand Creek, including Wounded Knee."
> Bill Means is a co-founder of the American Indian Movement, also known as
> AIM, and sits on the board of the American Indian Treaty Council. Dennis
> Bernstein spoke with Means in Rosebud, South Dakota.
> Dennis Bernstein: Welcome back to Flashpoints, Bill Means. Well, John
> Hinckley Jr. is free to go, and Leonard Peltier is still being tortured.
> Double standard?
> Bill Means: Yes! This is a clear example of the dual standard of justice
> when it comes to American Indians versus non-Indian people. And here we
> have
> a man, Hinckley, who was an obvious attempted assassin: they caught him in
> the act. And we have the contrast of Leonard Peltier, who has been in
> prison
> 40 years, 10 more years than Hinckley, and they've never convicted him of
> the actual shooting. He was convicted of aiding and abetting. The FBI
> admitted in court that they don't know who shot the FBI agents.
> So we have this type of evidence that continues to burn the conscience of
> the justice system of America where it says that all people have equal
> access to due process, etc. However, we see a man like Hinckley who
> actually
> shot a president - I don't know if you could put a price on a president
> versus two FBI agents - but first of all you have to realize the
> circumstances of Peltier not being convicted of actually shooting the
> agents. The evidence itself in the two cases is totally opposite, in terms
> of the shooter and the conviction of the shooter. We have Leonard Peltier
> sitting in jail for 40 years, for a crime he didn't commit, and we have
> Hinckley, who shot a president of the United States plus his press
> secretary
> by the name of Brady, I believe, who has been in a wheelchair since that
> time. Also, we have the only substantial firearms reform law, called the
> Brady Bill, as a result of the shootings. The after-effects even touched
> something that all our school shootings, or assassinations, or various
> types
> of gun violence hasn't affected, because of the tremendous lobbying power
> of
> the NRA. And here we have the Brady Bill, which stands as a living monument
> to Brady, the press secretary of Reagan who was shot. So you have all these
> extenuating circumstances which show again the racism and the double
> standard of justice when it applies to American Indian prisoners.
> DB: We also have to say a word or two about how unbelievably corrupt and
> questionable the government's case was. And the behavior of the FBI. Could
> you just remind us of a little bit of that, Bill? Because we know that
> Hinckley got a fair trial.
> Means: Well of course in Leonard Peltier's trial there was evidence
> presented at several appeals, in which he was ... his witnesses, in terms
> of
> the prosecution, some of whom were mentally ill and coerced into saying ...
> and later these people, witnesses they used against Peltier, in his case,
> later recanted their story. And then we have the idea that the FBI agents
> themselves, every time he comes up for parole, send letters into the U.S.
> federal parole board, which doesn't exist anymore. But they have mounted
> several campaigns in the past, even as far as marching visibly in front of
> the Supreme Court, when his case made it to the Supreme Court.
> So we have this active protest by FBI agents against the release of Leonard
> Peltier, every time even the thought comes up. But yet we have Hinckley,
> who's been convicted, and nobody from the FBI says anything, at least not
> yet. So again, when the evidence was overwhelmingly ... you know there were
> so many contradictions.
> There was one case that went to the Supreme Court that involved the weapon
> that was used. It turns out that this famous FBI lab, which has been used
> to
> convict many people charged with a crime by the FBI, well, their evidence
> was corrupt. And even they said that they were allowed to use this evidence
> that this was the gun that killed the agents when it turned out, in court,
> that it was impossible, that the firing pin evidence didn't match. And so
> they used, in order to sway the jury, false evidence. And there's many,
> many
> other examples, if you read up a little bit on the Leonard Peltier case,
> even his extradition from Canada, where they used false testimony and
> coerced testimony to bring him back across the border. Several federal
> judges, including in Canada and in the U.S., have indicated that Peltier
> should have at least gotten a new trial, based on the evidence not based on
> coerced testimony, false testimony, and manipulation of the evidence.
> DB: Bill, this has got to go into the extreme racism file when there's sort
> of like "red lives don't matter, white lives are exalted," even if they're
> people who tried to kill the president of the United States. I mean, the
> standard here, the dual standard here ... this is sort of consistent with
> the fact that this is the government that committed genocide against the
> Indian people. And this setup of Leonard Peltier is in the context that you
> were a part of, the first time ever in modern history that the indigenous
> community stood up at Wounded Knee. So this is that ongoing 40-year lesson,
> right? Continuing lesson, to the Native American community, the indigenous
> community: "We will do whatever it takes to shut your ass down." I'm really
> amazed at this one. Your thoughts on that part of it.
> Means: Well, of course, we have in the case of the Black Lives Matter, and
> the issue of what happened in Orlando, Florida, in the nightclub, so many
> people were killed. They said Orlando was the largest massacre in the
> history of the United States. That shows you how much the Americans have
> forgotten about their own history. We have had countless massacres,
> including Sand Creek, including Wounded Knee, including many, many others,
> throughout the continental United States, where masses of Indians ... We
> have a grave on our reservation, seven miles from my home community, at a
> little hamlet called Wounded Knee, in which over 300 men, women and
> children
> are still buried, in a mass grave. Same with the Cheyenne people, when they
> were attacked by a Methodist minister acting as a military leader - his
> name
> was Colonel Chivington - down in Colorado.
> So we have this history that's very well documented, and very well known.
> Matter of fact, at Wounded Knee they gave away, I believe, over 20 Medals
> of
> Honor for the massacre of our people. So this is kind of like the extreme
> method of racism, of perpetrating the lie of the history of America.
> And now we have Hinckley being released, and then we have this idea in the
> Black Lives Matter movement, and all these other various killings, they've
> pushed aside the evidence about Indian people's history, and how many of
> our
> people have been massacred throughout the years. And so it's just ... it's
> just an insult to the intelligence of the American Indian that this could
> go
> on in this day and age.
> DB: And, of course, there's the ongoing oppression, the ongoing racism, the
> economic racism, the kind of racism that continues to be practiced against
> Indians, Indians on their land, their land being stolen, their children
> being stolen. You were a part of bringing the United Nations to the
> communities in North America, on the reservations, where literally the
> representatives were weeping, based on the conditions, and this is the sort
> of the real underside of this story.
> Means: Yes, it is. Because throughout the involvement of the International
> Indian Treaty Councils since 1974 at the United Nations, we have continued
> to document the poverty-stricken condition of Indian people, the violation
> of treaty rights, the violation of human rights, and we finally got passed
> in 2007 what's called The Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People,
> in
> which the United Nations finally recognized Indians as humans. So it took
> us
> 30 years working at the U.N. just to allow the United Nations, in
> opposition
> to the United States by the way, to pass a basic standard of human rights
> for indigenous people all over the world.
> What happened here, in this country, to indigenous people, has indeed
> happened around the world, in terms of human rights, in terms of the
> avarice
> and greed for the minerals that are on indigenous peoples' lands,
> worldwide.
> This little, small act of releasing infamy brings up all these various
> histories of indigenous people around the world, where indigenous peoples
> have been persecuted, murdered, buried in mass graves, and nobody cares.
> But yet they can release this one man, Hinckley, who actually shot the
> president of the United States, and act as if it was a misdemeanor. Or as
> if
> he were some type of mentally ill person, which gave him a reason to shoot
> people. So this is probably the ultimate miscarriage of justice in the
> history of U.S. jurisprudence.
> DB: And to be very clear, Leonard Peltier was part of a movement to resist
> the oppression, the racism, and the slaughter that has finally been
> recognized by the world through the United Nations. So that is at the heart
> of the matter of why they have to keep a leader, an exalted leader, who
> means a great deal to his people, in jail like a criminal. And it's clearly
> a political act of injustice, wouldn't you say, Bill?
> Means: Well, I think throughout the history of this country when people
> have
> stood up, especially Indian people, they have been immediately criminalized
> and treated as sub-standard human beings. Remember, the largest mass
> hanging
> in the history of the United States was 38 of our Lakota people in Manteno,
> Minnesota, in 1862. We could go into atrocity after atrocity to show how
> the
> United States has continued to use Peltier as an example to all people that
> Indian resistance will not be tolerated. And they don't even have a case as
> strong as against Hinckley.
> They don't have a case with the evidence to give him ... they're scared to
> give him a new trial, first of all. But he has served more than any other
> federal prisoner in the modern history of the United States. So I think he
> has suffered enough. It's time for a little humanity. That's the reason
> they're releasing Hinckley, they said in the press, to be with his mother
> who is very ill, at the end of her time on this earth. But what about
> Leonard Peltier? They have a chance to redeem themselves through the
> president of the United States offering clemency. Of course this one act
> can
> not redeem the history of the United States' treatment towards Indians, but
> at least let the man who served longer than any other Indian in history, or
> for that matter most federal prisoners, who don't even serve half his
> sentence. The average time that a federal prisoner given life serves is
> between 16 and 18 years. And now we have him doing 40 years only because
> he's an Indian. What has to be brought out is the injustice and the dual
> standard of justice, because Leonard Peltier deserves to be with his family
> for the rest of what little life he has left.
>
> Dennis J Bernstein is the executive producer of Flashpoints, syndicated on
> Pacifica Radio, and is the recipient of a 2015 Pillar Award for his work as
> a journalist whistleblower. He is most recently the author of Special Ed:
> Voices from a Hidden Classroom.
> Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work.
> Permission
> to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader
> Supported News.
> http://e-max.it/posizionamento-siti-web/socialize
> http://e-max.it/posizionamento-siti-web/socialize
>
>
>

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