Spring Solidarity Potluck

DGR-Events-CollageThe Seattle chapter of Deep Green Resistance invites all allies, friends, and interested people to join us for a spring solidarity potluck on the lawn near the public swimming beach at Seward Park, in south Seattle.

Bring a dish to share and join us to meet other environmentalists, feminists, activists, and radicals of all stripes. We’ll spend time in discussion, learning about the work being done in this region and beyond.

See you there!

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Drought in Washington / Shelter-Building Workshop

DSC_1391 copyThis past weekend, we hosted a shelter-building workshop to work on outdoor skills, grow our connection to Earth, and build community. It was a small event but we had a great time. The photo here shows what we built at the base of a mother Cedar tree.

Editorial note: this poem by our good friend and fellow DGR member William Falk is about the drought affecting California — but Washington State has just experienced it’s warmed winter on record, and now more than half of the state is experiencing official drought conditions.

My California Drought

By Will Falk

there’s water, at least,
on the coast
and that’s where I’m heading

when stopped near
Petaluma, California
a sunburnt sign
hangs over a vineyard
celebrating a family
insurance business’s
longevity

the phrase,
“through the Great Depression,
the Great Recession,
and seven wars”
is typed under
the smiling faces
of men in uniform

maybe it’s my own depression
or personal poverty
that make me ponder
my own longevity

that force me to the ocean
during these times of drought

I don’t know, but
the brown coats of sheep
are sprinkled like dust
on the tree-less voids
they call hill-sides

what once flowed through here
left cattle to settle like pebbles
in the washed-out roadbed

the vultures are thirsty
winos circling the vines
by the time they get there
they’ll find only raisins

the wars I’ve seen
are water wars
and they dry my vision
leaving me to believe
wet is only an illusion

that’s not even blood
flecked on the feathers
of red-winged blackbirds
perched uneasily
on a barbed-wire fence

 

This poem was originally published at the San Diego Free Press.

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Mauna Kea – Defending a Sacred Mountain

Mauna Kea protestFor many years now, indigenous Hawaiian people have been involved in a battle to stop the construction of a new 30-meter telescope (TMT) array on Mauna Kea mountain, which is a sacred place and the source of all drinking water on the island. The project would be the size of a sports stadium – bigger than all the other telescopes on the mountain combined.

But now the construction is going ahead. The bulldozers have been moving over the past two weeks. On March 26th, a series of peaceful protests began. More than 31 people have been arrested so far, and a brief moratorium on construction until April 20th has been placed in effect. This is time for the land defenders to come together and build even more pressure!

Support the Resistance

Here are a few ways to support the resistance to the TMT:

  1. Donate to this fundraiser which is focused on bail funds, public education, and supplies for people camping on the mountain.
  2. Support our friend Anne Keala Kelly, Kanaka Oiwi filmmaker who is making a film about this issue to spread the word and grow the movement.
  3. Follow Protect Mauna Kea on Facebook and Twitter, and spread the word online and in your community.
  4. Stay tuned for more news and information on this situation. If you live far away, find out about sacred and special places in your area and work to protect them. Get in touch with DGR if you wish to join us in this effort.

For more on the reasons behind the resistance, check out this scene from “Why The Mountain”:

“Why The Mountain” rough-cut scene with Skippy Ioane. from anne keala kelly on Vimeo.

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Outdoor Skills Workshop (Shelter Focus)

Ever wonder how to build a shelter in the woods? Come on out to this workshop to learn the basics of WILDERNESS SHELTERS.

Join us just outside Seattle on the flanks of Squak Mountain for a half-day informal workshop on outdoor skills. This day’s activities will focus on shelter building in the wilderness. We’ll learn the basic skills needed to stay warm while we work on building a functional shelter!

OTHER TOPICS:
Depending on time, we’ll also discuss:
– Wild edible plants and fungi
– Useful wild plants (for tools, fire-making, weapons, shelter, etc)
– Friction fires (bowdrill)
– Natural fibers for basketry and cordage
– Finding clean water
– Medicinal Plants and natural first aid
– Maps and Navigation
– Geology and watershed dynamics
– Ecological basics
– Regional history

BRING:
Lunch, water bottle, raingear and warm clothes, pocketknife, twine or cordage, notebook, comfortable walking shoes, and a backpack to carry it all. If you have a small saw or hatchet, bring it.

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ShellNO Protest

Seattle DGR Chapter at ShellNO Protest This WeekendAs most of you probably know, the port of Seattle is set to host the giant oil-drilling rig that Shell Oil Corp. plans to use in the Arctic next summer. Popular opposition has been building in the area, and there will be a large protest this Saturday (May 16th) in West Seattle, near Alki. We’re planning to be there with a contingent to participate, pass out flyers, and try to spread the message that strategic eco-sabotage is self-defense for the planet. We’ll be making one or two catchy signs and printing some materials to hand out as well. If you plan to join and have any time this week to make a sign or two, please contact us. We’ve attached a few ideas (1, 2)

Here is the Facebook page for the event.

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The Lilacs Bloomed in March

lilacs bloomingby Bob Doublin, Deep Green Resistance Seattle

Here in Seattle, the lilacs bloomed in March this year. I saw three or four bushes full of flowers this past Wednesday and Thursday. That was April 1 and 2 but it clearly took a few days to look like that. Normally it’s the third or fourth week of April. And then Friday morning as I walked to get breakfast, I noticed that hawthorn trees had tons of flower buds all over them.They were fully formed and ready to burst into bloom; some already had into fully formed flowers. Normally, it’s the second or third week in May before this happens.

March 2015 was our warmest March on record. This was our second month in a row that was the warmest on record. And the fourth month of the last six that was a record (Oct 2014, Dec 2014, Feb 2015, March 2015). A couple were only Sea-Tac records. The feds moved the reporting station from the Downtown Federal Building out to the new International Airport just after WWII.

Recently I joked on a friend’s page after other friends living back East commented on the Winter they’re still having that out here we just finished our fourth month of Spring. And this will continue probably into Summer.

The beautiful Magnolia trees I love to see each Spring bloomed the third or fourth week of February this year. This was four weeks ahead of their normal time of the Spring Equinox. Daffodils were just as early. Most trees in my neighborhood on Capitol Hill have fully leafed;some already having a complete canopy of fully formed leaves grown to their full size. Most years,I don’t see that until mid to late April at the earliest. Last fall, the leaves didn’t turn colors and drop until Halloween or early November. And then most trees had their Winter buds out mid December- we set record highs five of six days then,including an all time December high.

My friend Dale who lives in Albany, Oregon has been telling me about what’s happening down there. He remarked he already has the wood supply for next Winter half-cut. Left over from this past Winter. A friend of his said he only used three or four cords of wood all season it’s been so warm most nights.

http://www.komonews.com/weather/blogs/scott/Seattle-sets-twin-records-for-warmest-February-winter-on-record-294516031.html

http://www.komonews.com/weather/blogs/scott/Add-it-to-the-pile-March-sets-record-for-all-time-warmest-in-Seattle-298199921.html

http://www.circleofblue.org/waternews/2015/world/pacific-northwests-winter-warm-wet-climate-change-preview/

http://www.climatecentral.org/news/record-hot-winter-for-california-18737

These are good articles. Five states have had their warmest Winters on record; Washington, California, Arizona, Nevada, and Utah. Two others, Oregon and Idaho, had their second warmest. (Dating back 120 years of record keeping.) Several others out West were in the top five.

What stands out for me is the length of time all of this is lasting. San Diego has gone 17 consecutive months with above average monthly temperatures. Seattle only had one month below average in 2014, back in February. Since then we have had 13 months in a row with above average temperatures. Here in Seattle. Even the rainy weather lately hasn’t really put us below average. Up until last Spring, where we set a record for rain between March and the end of July (broke it by the end of May), most rainy Springs have been cooler than average. Not so lately.

2014 was the warmest year on record. But 2015 so far is quite simply BLOWING THROUGH that record. Each month of 2015 so far has been quite a bit above the corresponding month of 2014. Here’s the anomalies, first 2014, then 2015: Jan +2.3, +3.0, Feb -1.65, +5.35, March +2.0, +4.05. Weather is always a wild card, but weather service predictions are for more of the same. Can you say global warming?

If you take the record 2014 years as just one 12 month running period, we have set record 12 month running periods for four consecutive months Jan 2014-Dec 2014, Feb 2014-Jan 2015, March 2014- Feb 2015,and Apr 2014-Mar 2015.

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Photos from Outdoor Skills Workshop

outdoor skills workshop outdoor skills workshop 20150326-090249-Edit 20150326-090427-Edit20150329-121531-EditThis past weekend, Deep Green Resistance Seattle held our first ever outdoor skills workshop. It was a great success. We had around 10-15 participants ranging from just a few years old to middle-aged who came out for the event.

We discussed wild foods and medicines, finding clean water, bows and tools, friction fires, and a lot of other subjects.

Of course, this was just an introduction. The skills we touched on take years to fully grasp, let alone master. That’s why we’re planning to hold more of these workshops in the future. If you want to stay posted for future events, sign up for the email updates or RSS feed from our website, or follow us on Twitter and Facebook.

20150329-123407-EditAbout DGR Seattle

We are the chapter of Deep Green Resistance covering the Seattle area, as well as Renton, Kent, Shoreline, Lynnwood, Federal Way, Tacoma, Everett, Bainbridge, Vashon, Bremerton, the Eastside, Kirkland, Bellevue, Issaquah, and all surrounding regions. This is occupied land of the Duwamish, Suquamish, Muckleshoot, Snoqualmie, Tulalip, and Puyallup nations.

Deep Green Resistance Seattle is about stopping the destruction of the planet. We work to stand in solidarity with oppressed communities. If you’re interested in joining our collective, participating in our organizing work, or supporting in any other ways, get in touch. For ongoing news, check out our blog.

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A Feminist, Radical Environmentalist and AWOL: DGR Member Kourtney Mitchell

6532571Editors note: this interview with our dear friend and fellow DGR member Kourtney Mitchell was recently featured in Counterpunch.

 

by VINCENT EMANUELE

Kourtney Mitchell is a writer and activist currently living in northeast Georgia, United States. He sits on the steering committee for Deep Green Resistance and the national board of directors for Veterans for Peace. Co-author of The Enemy in Blue: The Renatta Frazier Story, he has been involved in social justice activism for eight years. Kourtney is currently AWOL from the Georgia Army National Guard.

***

Vincent Emanuele: Let’s talk a little bit about your background. I know you were born in Illinois and now live in Georgia. What was your childhood like? Was your family politically active?

Kourtney Mitchell: Yes, I was born and spent the first part of my childhood on Chicago’s west side, right in the heart of the inner city. I remember huge gang fights and gun shots carrying on while I was trying to sleep as a kid, and always worrying about getting into fights with neighborhood kids while playing outside with my family. In Chicago, I lived in a three story home where each floor was like its own apartment. I lived with not just my parents and siblings, but also cousins, aunts, uncles, their spouses and my great grandmother, who to this day continues to keep the family together as the virtual matriarch. This is why my family always has and forever will have strong family bonds. Loyalty is natural for us.

We would cross the street to get Chicago-style polish sausages and Italian beef sandwiches, and fries smothered in mild sauce. This was back in the day of corner stores—real corner stores that weren’t attached to gas stations and pharmacies. Up the street the other way was a city park with a basketball court and jungle gym. Even though there was a lot of gang violence in my neighborhood, my family was well-established in the community and for the most part we got along just fine.

In Chicago, we were bussed out of the inner city to a magnet school instead of attending the schools closer to home. Of course I realized the problems with this, but I loved that school as a kid. I can still remember some of my friends, including the sweet little girl who wanted to be my girlfriend after I roughed up a bully who hit her during recess.

As a matter of fact, my grandfather is a former Black Panther in the Chicago chapter. That’s the only thing I know of the political activity of my family. We’ve visited him several times while I was a kid. However, he’s currently in prison in Illinois for charges dating back to his time with the Panthers.

When my mom moved us to Springfield, IL to finish her undergraduate degree, it was a different world. There in the state capitol, we attended mostly white schools where we surprisingly got along just fine and made a whole lot of friends. Schools with enough computers and television screens in the classroom, and decent textbooks. It was in those schools that I was able to write a full romance novel manuscript started when I was ten years old, almost get it published, and appear on Black Entertainment Television for an interview about it. Our middle and high schools were a bit more integrated, and those were the most formative years of my life.

It was in high school that my mother joined the Springfield, IL police department and experienced a lot of racism and sexism, for which she filed a civil suit against the city and settled out-of-court. That whole fiasco was extremely traumatic for my family—we had to move out of the state, and then back to Illinois within a single year. Constant media coverage and negative publicity for my mother and family until it was all settled. Continued harassment from the police department, including an eviction where cops threw all of our belongings out onto the street on my brother and I’s birthday. But we made the most of it. My mother and I wrote and self-published a creative nonfiction book about her experiences.

Vincent Emanuele: The last time we spoke, you were AWOL from the U.S. Army. I remember wanting to escape my unit, but being reluctant because I didn’t have politicized friends or comrades in the military or outside the military. Why did you join the military? And what’s your current status?

Kourtney Mitchell: Technically my status is still AWOL, though I’m working closely with my unit leadership to get the discharge once and for all. The unit was very good to me actually, so I believe them when they say they won’t pursue legal recourse. Answering why I joined the military is tricky. I want to admit right away that I knew better, but… I never should have enlisted.

Okay, so I had returned to Georgia from living and going to school in Missouri, which I still to this day view as a mistake because I had a great community in Missouri and it was hard leaving them. I didn’t like living at home, and I was having a very hard time finding decent work. My family urged me to enlist, so originally I was going to enlist with the Marines, even signed the contract and received a ship date for boot camp. But then I backed out, and went with the National Guard instead. The 68W MOS (combat medic) had a ship date that was too far in the future for my liking, so I decided to join as infantry so I could ship-off ASAP. That was an even bigger mistake than enlisting. Basically, I did it so I could get out on my own again and develop some job skills that may lead to career opportunities. I attended OSUT infantry training at Fort Benning, where WHINSEC (formerly the School of the Americas) trains death squads to squash the resistance in South America.

Vincent Emanuele: Let’s backtrack. At what point did you become radicalized? And who were some of your initial influences?

Read the full article at Deep Green Resistance News Service.

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Sacred Water Tour — Updates

Cave Valley, NV - Sacred Water TourIn about two months, we’ll be helping to lead the Sacred Water Tour in eastern Nevada, on traditional lands of the Goshute and Shoshone nations. We’re in the thick of planning the trip and coordinating with activists in the area.

The latest news, which we’re pleased to announce, is that our good friend and fellow DGR member William Falk will be offering a short poetry workshop as part of the tour.Will is a powerful writer who uses poetry to grapple with issues of environmental destruction, connection to the land, mental health, and more. Here is one example of his writing and poetry.

We hope you will consider joining us for the tour. Please get in touch if you’re interested in coming along!

About the Tour:

Join us this Memorial Day weekend for a tour of sacred lands threatened by unsustainable “development”. We will spend three days visiting the communities to be affected by the water grab, learning about the project and the threatened sacred lands and waters, and camping in some of these beautiful places.

Driven by the greed of real estate speculators, the Southern Nevada Water Authority — the corporate-like utility that provides water to the Las Vegas area — is planning to extract millions of gallons of water from the eastern Great Basin.

The Great Basin is a beautiful and remote place, full of soaring limestone mountains, broad valleys, a startling array of wildlife, and some of the most isolated locations in the west.

Posted in Biodiversity & Habitat Destruction, Indigenous Autonomy, Listening to the Land | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Seattle Event: People’s Tribunal on the US Juvenile Justice System

MAR 28 People's Tribunal on the US Juvenile Justice SystemThere is a state of emergency for our youth of color in the United States. Ending the Prison Industrial Complex [EPIC] is responding to this state of emergency by organizing a People’s Tribunal on the US Juvenile Justice System. A people’s tribunal is a people’s court. Folks most impacted by the Prison Industrial Complex and EPIC are planning to hold the King County juvenile justice system accountable for its crimes against youth and families of color, and for its crimes against humanity.

Date: Saturday, March 28. 9:30am – 6:00pm

Location: Seattle University Campion Hall. 901 12th Ave, Seattle, Washington 98122

The People’s Tribunal will be a one-day event that is intended to speak truth-to-power, to educate our community about how the Prison Industrial Complex [PIC] operates in Seattle-King County, to allow those most impacted by the PIC to hold this system accountable, and to help organize our community to be part of an anti-racist movement that is determined to make the PIC obsolete.

This one-day event is led by youth who have been working to stop the building of a new King County Children and Family Justice Center (i.e., youth jail). The People’s Tribunal will convene those most impacted by this system, their families, jurists, special guests, artists, policy makers, community organizers, educators, and activists from around the world. The People’s Tribunal will lift-up testimonials from those most impacted by the system and their families. It will involve popular education, artistic performances, workshops, and networking sessions that are designed to strengthen our local No New Youth Jail Movement and the international movements to end the PIC.

You will also have an opportunity to hear directly from politicians, developers, law enforcement, judges, and other folks who support investing $210 million dollars into building a King County Children and Family Justice Center (i.e., youth jail). We have “subpoenaed” these key stakeholders so that those most impacted, their families, and the community can hold them accountable.

This is a national call of conscience to all who seek a new day for youth. Those who have ears, let them hear! Those who have eyes, let them see!

RSVP :: http://peoplestribunal.bpt.me/

EMAIL :: endingthepic@gmail.com

Donate :: gofundme.com/peoplestribunal

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