Wendsler Nosie, Tracker of Evil at the Santa Fe Plaza
Frances Madeson
Special to Censored News This interview was conducted on Saturday, September 9, 2017
San Carlos Apache activist Wendsler Nosiecame to Santa Fe to participate in the third annual street protest against the public Entrada costume pageant on September 8, which depicts Spanish Conquistadores reconquering the city 12 years after being forcibly expelled during the Pueblo Revolt of 1680. When Censored News caught up with Mr. Nosie, evil was on his mind.
What happened yesterday in the plaza?
I felt the unrest feeling, and I didn't know why I was feeling that way. It was cold, something was wrong with that place. And then I was told about the 70 executions of Pueblo people ordered by Don Diego de Vargas in 1693. There was a wrong that occurred there, and it has to be healed. The true history has to be told, and that place should be treated like a cemetery, a memorial, where the losses are respected.
By Tonia Stands, Lakota Censored News EDGEMONT, South Dakota -- The Seismic Testing Project is at work everyday for another month. Every day is another day of attack to the Sacred Black Hills and Wind Cave Structures below, which have been mapped at 300 miles. The permit process is illegal because none of the tribes were notified.
The same Cultural Relevance attack is holding, Dewey Burdock Uranium project is in the same area of Edgemont, South Dakota.
As for Crow Butte Uranium Expansion, our Oglala Sioux Tribal Attorney Steve Gun did not want to pursue anything because he said there are no grounds, because the process is already done
So we are looking for any legal help. .
Tonia Stands said, "They never mentioned any Nations connected to the Sacred Black Hills. National Forest Service ignores us all. Instead they go to private archaelogical consultants and SHPO (State Historic Preservation Officer) plus the District Ranger, then sign off on our Indigenous Rights.
We need all Warriors, Land Defenders, Sacred Site Protectors, Akicita, Lakota/Dakota/Nakota Oyate to come and join us in a opposition against this illegal Seismic Testing Project."
Stop Energy Transfer Partners National Campaign Rally at Pipeline Headquarters in Dallas By Yolonda Bluehorse, Lakota Society of Native Nations Censored News DALLAS -- On Friday Sept 8, 2017 members of the Society of Native Nations, an indigenous led, non-profit organization in Texas, organized a rally at Energy Transfer Partners in Dallas, Texas. This event was created to stand in solidarity with the national campaign to Stop ETP, and events that were held on Sept 9, 2017, across the US. Members of the Indigenous Environmental Network and representatives from other pipeline resistance that Energy Transfer Partners is building, came to show their support as well. Native and Non Native communities came together to stand in solidarity against Energy Transfer Partners and all fossil fuel companies, to demand accountability to the destruction of our Mother Earth and their contribution to climate change. We must make the changes necessary in order to protect the future by prioritizing and protecting the sacred Mother Earth, sacred land, sacred air, and sacred water now before it's too late.
Kelcy Warren's Energy Transfer Partners is owner of Dakota Access Pipeline. The crude oil now threatens the Missouri River and the drinking water of millions. The resistance to the pipeline at Standing Rock revealed thousands taking a prayerful stand against the pipeline, even though they were subjected to excessive force and brutality by police. Dakota, Lakota, Nakota, and their allies, were shot with rubber bullets and projectiles, gassed with tear gas, and jailed in dog kennels by Morton County, North Dakota, Sheriff Kyle Kirchmeier, with numbers written on their arm as was done by the Nazis.
The City of Santa Fe has used Pueblo history and culture to sell itself. It has turned the Sacred into its commodity. Now, as Native people protest to halt the glamorizing of Conquistadors, and instead promote accurate history, the City of Santa Fe responds with excessive force and a power play of criminal charges -- all by the same profiteering and oppressive forces that have turned Native culture into Santa Fe's cash economy.
The targeting of The Red Nation by police does not come as a surprise. The broadcast of Red Nation's excellent interviews on Standing Rock Spirit Resistance Radio were interfered with by outside forces, making it impossible for us to share these interviews with the radio stations across the country who were rebroadcasting the programs from Oceti Sakowin last fall.
Read The Red Nation's statement on Friday's action and arrests.
The City ignored a statementissued by the #AbolishTheEntrada coalition prior to the protest encouraging officials to stand with us in denouncing racism and the celebration of genocide and conquest. They instead chose to double down on their defense of racism and violent colonial revisionist history by brutalizing Indigenous people and violating their First Amendment rights. On Friday, in Santa Fe, history didn’t repeat itself — it stayed the same.
Indigenous people undergo ongoing brutalization by armed men of the state who uphold white supremacy and settler colonialism on stolen Pueblo land. Today, conquistadors and cavalrymen simply wear different uniforms. But the tactics remain the same.
Police targeted, pulled from a crowd, and arrested TRN leader Jennifer Marley.
Protesters faced obstacles before the protest, which was scheduled to start at 1 PM MST. Around 11 AM social media posts began to circulate alerting protesters to the decision by Los Caballeros de Vargas to start the reenactment two hours earlier than the scheduled time of 2 PM. Although Manuel Garcia, the President of Los Caballeros, claims the time change was made several days prior, the announcement was not issued until late Friday morning. Although clearly a tactic to silence public dissent, the eleventh hour decision neither deterred nor demoralized protesters.
From mid-morning onward, social media posts and photos showed extensive police presence, what the Santa Fe New Mexican called a “small army of police officers”. With state, city, and county forces on the ground, it is clear that the City intended to wield the power of the state to further censor #AbolishTheEntrada protests.
Sniper nests were posted atop buildings.
But protesters would not be silenced. At noon, five Indigenous women were the first to arrive. Slowly, hundreds joined them filling the streets. Entire families came out with their children. Native students from nearby colleges such as the Institute of American Indian Arts and University of New Mexico (UNM) joined. Standing on the right side of history, every walk of life came together in unison to demand the abolition of the racist Entrada. The City of Santa Fe stood as it has for centuries: on the side of conquest; on the wrong side of history, with blood on its hands.
In a further attempt to silence constitutionally protected free speech, the Santa Fe police captain Adam Gallegos took to the mic on the Plaza stage to announce that the event permit holders wanted to limit protest to a designated “Free Speech Zone.” The “Free Speech Zone” was a heavily-guarded police barricade that was meant to corral protesters and force them off public space. Of questionable constitutional or legal validity, this “Free Speech Zone” had a clear political message: shut up and go away or you will be silenced and arrested. The Santa Fe Police Department and Los Caballeros De Vargas made the unconscionable decision to not only keep protesters out-of-sight and out-of-earshot by limiting their First Amendment right to free speech, but they also dehumanized Native people by corralling them — just like conquistadors and cavalrymen of the past who forced Native men, women, children and elders into heavily-policed and surveilled open air concentration camps like Fort Sumner. Again, the racist message was loud and clear: go back to the reservation or get arrested; Indians are not welcome here.
After several other protesters were arrested, our very own TRN-Albuquerque leader and UNM KIVA Club Vice-President, Jennifer Marley (San Ildefonso Pueblo), was seized. Jennifer is a leader in efforts to #AbolishTheEntrada. The Santa Fe Police knew this. It is clear to us that she was targeted for arrest and harassment by police specifically because she is a high-profile leader of the resistance. Multiple videos of her arrest show several male officers violently grabbing Jennifer without provocation, slamming her to the ground and aggressively pinning her arms behind her. Officers then paraded her through the streets where she was verbally assaulted by bystanders jeering “Go back to where you came from!”
While Santa Fe sent its weakest men armed to the hilt to defend the City’s genocidal pageantry, we sent our strongest women armed only with their love for Indigenous peoples and lands.
Weeks earlier, the City of Santa Fe welcomed Indigenous artists at the annual SWAIA Santa Fe Indian Market. On Friday, Native people faced an entirely different scene. Police created a militarized zone with sniper nests, barricades, and processing tables for mass arrests to protect a racist celebration of genocide. In this “Free Speech Zone,” protesters were surveilled under the oppressive gaze of the police state. The City loves to exploit Indigenous art and culture because of the cash flow it brings to City coffers. But at the first sign of Native political demands for human rights and justice, what does the City do? It pursues an aggressive campaign to silence and criminalize Indigenous people by unleashing the full force of the police state on Indigenous women, children, and elders, pointing guns at them and arresting them for “criminal trespass” on their own ancestral lands.
The City of Santa Fe is guilty of criminal trespass on the lands and bodies of Pueblo people, not Pueblo people themselves.
The police were so empowered after Jennifer’s arrest that they arrested an Indigenous man, Julian Rodriguez, who had nothing to do with the protest. Eyewitnesses report that Mr. Rodriguez was walking down the street with his partner when police officers stopped him and asked him to remove his bandana. He removed it and then put it back on as he walked away. He was then arrested and charged with “criminal trespassing.” In a clear case of racial profiling consistent with the City’s racist message to silence Native people for resisting dehumanization, Mr. Rodriguez was made a criminal simply for being Native in Santa Fe. He was “off the reservation” and therefore open to arrest.
As Jennifer Marley stated prior to the protest,
“We don’t expect the cops to protect us now or ever. In fact we expect intensified police brutality, and intensified violence from Entrada attendees. The lengths [to which] the city is going to police this event with firearms and even police from departments all across the state is disgusting. But what it does tell us is that Pueblo resistance is a true threat to them. Their cowardice is a show of our strength and potential to make cracks in the settler colonial project!”
Despite dozens of live streaming feeds (see below) that documented this cowardice as it was unfolding, Santa Fe Mayor Javier Gonzales did nothing to stop the police free-for-all against peaceful protesters and innocent bystanders. Instead, Mayor Gonzales took to social media Friday afternoon to thank the Santa Fe police officers who “helped maintain public safety.” To detract from the actual repression he promoted, he euphemistically called the arrest and censorship of Native people and allies “a very difficult conversation” that “move[d] forward” as a result of the day’s events.
How can we move forward when Santa Fe uses spectacular violence to silence Native free speech? When it so brazenly and unmercifully profiles, harasses, brutalizes, intimidates, and humiliates Native men, women, and children? When it continues to celebrate genocide and settler revisionist history?
A month prior to the Entrada protest, hundreds of white supremacists and Nazis descended on Charlottesville, Virginia to protect the “history and heritage” of racist Confederate monuments similar to the Entrada reenactment. Police stood down to protect Nazis’ right to free speech in Charlottesville, but came out in full force to prevent Natives’ free speech in Santa Fe. One Nazi, James A. Fields, drove his car into a crowd of protesters, injuring dozens and killing anti-racist protester, Heather Heyer. Last February, Santa Fe Police Union chief Troy Baker posted a meme that read “ALL LIVES SPLATTER” to his Facebook page encouraging murderers like Fields to run over protesters exercising their First Amendment rights. Baker is still employed with the Santa Fe Police Department.
Clearly, Santa Fe police officers are inclined towards violence against those demonstrating their First Amendment rights. As history has shown, Nazis, racists, and white supremacists are never brutalized by police; it is always people of color, women, non-gender conforming people, the poor, and Natives who are. In other words, it is always those who challenge power and oppression who are met with the full force of the police state. Yesterday was no different. Claiming it was because they did not want “anyone getting hurt,” Santa Fe police protected Los Caballeros and their followers at the behest of City officials. The lone white racist pro-Entrada protester, Richard Polese, arrived at the #AbolishTheEntrada protest with a full police escort. Meanwhile, Entrada protesters did get hurt, all at the hands of the police.
They can arrest us, but they cannot kill or imprison this movement. Native people will never relinquish our human rights to move and speak freely on our own lands.
Prior to the protest, the #AbolishTheEntrada coalition undertook a public education campaign to explain why celebrating a crime against humanity — genocide — is wrong. These organizations also asked the City to stop violating the “separation of church and state” clause of the First Amendment because the Entrada is a Catholic Church-run event that is partially funded by public tax money: the lodgers tax. It is worth noting that Indian Market is the largest annual event in Santa Fe that draws over 80,000 visitors each year. These visitors pay a lodgers tax every time they book a room for Indian Market. Not only does the City make a killing off of lodgers tax revenues from Indian Market, but it uses these revenues to fund a celebration of genocide. It exploits Native labor, then uses profits from that exploitation to dehumanize Native people.
This is called anti-Indianism, and Santa Fe is anti-Indian to its core.
While we continue to work towards total Indigenous liberation, it is not too much to ask that the colonizer uphold his own laws set forth in the First Amendment. The City of Santa Fe has deliberately rejected Pueblo and Native concerns despite several peaceful attempts since 1977 to ask the City to stop celebrating conquest and genocide. It has instead offered empty gestures of “dialogue” and “conversation” while also aggressively pursuing censorship and violent repression.
In other words, the City has a long track record of denying Indigenous people free speech and fundamental human rights. This must end NOW.
In closing, The Red Nation issues the following demands to the City of Santa Fe:
DEMAND #1: RELEASE JENNIFER MARLEY IMMEDIATELY. As of approximately 1:30 PM MST on Saturday, September 9th, all of those arrested have been released except for Jennifer Marley, who now faces five counts — both felonies and misdemeanors — of battery of a peace officer, criminal trespass, and disorderly conduct. This is a clear case of a strong freedom fighter and leader being persecuted for political dissent. Jennifer is a political prisoner. Her political act is defined as criminal by the state to discredit the Indigenous liberation movement because it is gaining momentum and legitimacy in New Mexico. The political act of protesting genocide is reduced to a criminal act to affirm the absolute invulnerability of the existing order. In other words, Santa Fe criminalizes Native people to justify its own criminal behavior.
DEMAND #2:DROP ALL CHARGES against those arrested. As of now, there were eight confirmed arrests. Those who were arrested include Chad Brown Eagle, Julian Rodriguez, Nicole Ullerich, Trenton Ward, Carmen Stone, Jennifer Haley, Sierra Logan, and Jennifer Marley. The Santa Fe police department has also charged several of those arrested with felonies, after the fact, in an attempt to justify the outrageous charges of “criminal trespass” in a public plaza. Anyone with a basic knowledge of trespass law knows “criminal trespass” is reserved for trespassing on private property, not public property.
DEMAND #3: ABOLISH THE ENTRADA
We ask that people flood the Mayor’s office with calls, emails, tweets, and Facebook posts to demand Jennifer Marley’s release; all charges against all protesters are dropped; and that the Entrada is abolished:
MNN. 11 Sept. 2017. The private corporations known as Canada, Quebec and Barriere Lake Band Council Inc. continue to try to defraud the not gullible Anishinabe of the Ottawa River Water Shed.
CANADA, QUEBEC & BAND COUNCIL SALIVATING OVER 10,000 SQ. KILOMETRES OF ANISHINABE TERRITORY
The land is over 10,000 sq. kilometres of unceded territory in the middle of Reserve Faunique Laverendrye Park, which is coveted by logging companies. Resolute Paper Products wants to clearcut 95% of the entire territory and leave 5% for outfitting camps for non-natives. The Anishinable true original people will be dispersed.
Information on the agreement has been withheld from them. Proper consultation will not take place because the natives cannot give up their land. In 1996 two-thirds of the Algonquins fled the violence of CEO Jean Maurice Matchewan of Barriere Lake, who pretends to represent the Anishinabe.
They refused to play along. So Indian Affairs placed the Anishinabe under third party management, Lemieux Nolet of Quebec City. They administer the funds for Algonquins of Barriere Lake ABL.
Anishinabe are living on their land without any assistance from anyone. They hunt, fish and look after each other.
CORPORATE SALES AGENT SAHNANADAH
Russell “Potato Bug” Diabo, also known as “sahnanadah”, which mean “brown skin with white innards”, is the son of an ironworker from Kahnawake who was raised in Brooklyn New York. He has no clan.
He studied in Arizona. Was hired to assist in the North American Water Project where land is to be cleared of forests for the reservoirs being set up throughout Canada.
He and native lawyer, David Nahwegabo, were sent into Barriere Lake around 1982 to present this pilot project to get the elders to agree. The elder refused to sign the Trilateral Agreement to hand over their land and resources to the three corporations and getting out of the way. They face having Quebec laws and taxes being imposed. This is the model for turning all native communities into municipalities throughout Canada.
They warned the Anishinabe they were facing self-extinction because the clear cut and logging is going to be done anyway without their consent.
NEVER MIND THE ECO SYSTEM OR ROADS.
The people have gotten no information and understand very well the long term effects, which is scattering the people and the wildlife, destroying their language, culture and eco system in general. After much protesting Nahwegabo, Diabo and Matchewan were kicked out. They are all back. Treasonous INDIANS are hard to fire.
Dee Dee Sharp sings about dancing with the big boys: “It’s the latest, it’s the greatest. Mashed potato, ya, ya ,ya, ya . . . Now everybody is doin’ fine. They dance alone or in a big boss line. And they discovered it’s the most man. The day they did it to Please Mr. Postman”.
Mohawk Nation News kahentinetha2@yahoo.com for more news, to donate and sign up for MNN newsletters, go to mohawknationnews.com More stories at MNN Archives. Address: Box 991, Kahnawake [Quebec, Canada] J0L 1B0
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