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APIEL Environmental Law Conference in Knoxville, TN Oct 20-23

Attend the 2nd annual Appalachian Public Interest Environmental Law Conference www.apiel.org

University of Tennessee College of Law
Knoxville, Tennessee
October 20th-23th 2011

Register Today for APIEL-- https://sites.google.com/site/apielconference/registration
Lawyers can get CLE credits

Sign up for the APIEL email listserve-- https://lists.riseup.net/www/info/apielinfo

Propose a Workshop---- https://sites.google.com/site/apielconference/2011-workshop-proposal-app...

You are invited to submit your panel and workshop proposal for the 2011 annual APIEL conference. Join APIEL in addressing our region's most pressing ecological crises, as well as the underlying laws, policies and institutional dynamics that have enabled these issues to occur.
We would like to receive proposals from lawyers, grassroots community organizers, activists, scientists, and policy makers. Panel and workshop formats can range from lecture-style presentations to skills trainings, field trips, collaborative sessions and more.
Submission Deadline is August 1, 2011

What is the APIEL conference?

APIEL is designed to unite activists, attorneys, students, scientists and concerned citizens working for environmental justice throughout Appalachian and surrounding states. The weekend conference will feature a series of workshops and dialogues led by activists, lawyers and scientists with the goal of exchanging information, sharing skills, and fostering collaboration between the grassroots, the bar, and future lawyers and policy-makers. Workshops will address the region's most pressing ecological problems, as well as the underlying laws, policies and institutional dynamics that have enabled these issues to occur.

Topics include:
**Longwall Coal Mining
**Mountaintop Removal Coal Mining and strip mining
**Economic diversification in coalfield communities
**Air and water pollution monitoring
**Coal combustion waste and coal plants
**Appalachian History and Broadform Deed
**Chemical weapons disposal
**The precautionary principle
**Forest protection and ecological restoration
**Know Your Rights for activists
**Land ownership and land reform.
**Oil and Gas Extraction issues

APIEL is an opportunity for activists, lawyers, students and scientists to learn from each other and to reach across state and regional lines to meet and network with others who share common interests and goals. It is an opportunity for community organizations to build their long-term capacity by networking more lawyers, researchers and students.

APIEL is modeled on the Public Interest Environmental Law Conference (PIELC) established in Eugene, Oregon, where once a year lawyers, law students, activists, scientists, funders, and media come from around the planet to be a part of the nation's leading annual environmental law convergence.

For questions email: apielconference@yahoo.com

Or Call (865) 257-4029

FAX- 1-888-201-1104

Write: APIEL CONFERENCE
POB 20363
Knoxville, Tennessee
37920

Please join us as we continue to strengthen and build community for the Eastern United States' forces of public interest environmental law, science and policy. See more at www.apiel.org, and please pass it on!

Great Speeches Full Of Hope Are Nice, But They End When You Get Elected

President Obama swept into office in 2008 based in large part on what he said. Hs speeches were the stuff of legend. There really had not been a presidential candidate perhaps since president Kennedy that could rival his oratory skills. He commanded attention, respect and inspired a vision for a better future. He evoked the sense in us he would stay true to his word, though most of us realized he would not follow through on all of his promises, the major ones – the ones we were most interested in seeing the next president put into action – we felt he would make good on.

hot_air

And those speeches rung in our ears long after his physical presence left the stage. The water cooler talk was often about the speech the candidate gave and how inspiring it was. The talk on the corner was often about how with speeches like that he might win and be different both. The web was festooned with WOW's and that was from both sides of the isle. The country wanted change and he had the recipe for the perfect dish – seasoned just right and cooked as close to perfection as it got.

Funny thing happened on the way back to reality though. We started not getting much. There was this huge, low boredom inflected groan where the inspiration once was. It was like two years of “here it comes” followed by two and a half of... “eh, it was aiight.” I mean we didn't think Camelot would rise and he would head the round table with his knights of change set to lance away the rot on the constitution and our hearts from the pile of junk we were handed and still trying to come to grips with from the other two characters.

We didn't expect magic pixie dust filled peace bombs to be dropped from B-2's that would magically turn the country into Disney World or have us all living on yellow brick roads. On the major issues promised; yeah we expected something. We did expect to have an accelerated drawdown in Iraq, and if Osama Bin Laden was captured or killed to be hearing about accelerated drawdowns there. We did expect intrusions on civil liberties to be addressed – we didn't expect the entire Patriot Act to be repealed, but sincerely cut back, yes.

We expected problems with the nation's education situation to be addressed. After all we used to be number one in the world in education. It fed our standing in the rest of the world with regards to so much else. Now we see the disintegration of our standing in education and as a result so much else is left with grumbling hunger pangs. This goes for college level and high end blue collar education. We have high unemployment – yet in certain sectors of the job market there is a serious dearth of people with the necessary skills to fill the jobs.

In fact according to the Wall Street Journal there are millions of them. CEOs Jef Immelt and Ken Chenault report, “There are more than two million open jobs in the U.S., in part because employers can't find workers with the advanced manufacturing skills they need. The private sector must quickly form partnerships with community colleges, vocational schools and others to match career training with real-world hiring needs.” (http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000142405270230425930457638032331152353...)

But this is nothing new. When the president was running he said some of the stimulus money would be pumped into getting people to work and in part that would include vocational training of the sort needed now. So what happened? Education in America is failing right now, and the jobs right here in America that need people are going unfilled, because there aren't the workers with the training to fill them. These are good jobs, and they will – like so much else previously in America's manufacturing sector - go overseas to people ready to be trained by companies or governments that are willing to pay a little now to for sustained profits into the future.

We cannot allow more jobs to go overseas because of cruise control action and waiting around for... well whatever exactly it is the president waiting around for. He got the money in 2009 and even a quiet stimulus passed this time with the help of Republicans in 2010 and where is that money going? (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/12/09/AR201012...) Is it just siting on some shelf? Wherever it is it should it should be going towards training for manufacturing to fill jobs and stay competitive worldwide and it should not stop there.

When I'm in urban neighborhoods in my city and state I don't see people are wealthier, happier or more prosperous. Yet, those things can come through better schools and safer neighborhoods for the kids walking home and playing outside. They come when more money is put towards college scholarships and grants for students that can't afford tuition.

Schools around the country need that money and dollars spent on the wars would do well to help with that. If we took those billions being wasted on Iraq imagine how much better our schools around the country could be from nursery schools to institutes of higher learning and vocational schools. We bring in students from other countries to get training at our colleges to then leave to benefit and better other nations. Why haven't we benefitted here?

Instead of homeownership through subprime loans how about homeownership through an increased standard of living across the board? Iraq is already contemplating its own standard of living and guess what – we are not included in the plans. In fact when one member of the House from California suggested they pay us back some of the money for rebuilding their nation they said “no” flat out unanimously. (http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0611/56776.html)

That money could be going towards fulfilling one of the promises of then candidate Obama mentioned in many eloquent and stirring speeches but that so far has not packed the oomph promised. And that thus far has been the story. We need the wars to wind down. Iraq cannot be won because it has already been admitted to be a mistake – no WMD remember? How can we win? It's like a policeman on COPS pulling over someone and then admitting on camera he was wrong about them traveling over the speed limit. Then for some odd reason he decides to hand out a ticket and put all his energy into going to court to defend the ticket when the defendant decides to fight it. Of the two guess the person that ends up looking like the fool? Why do it?

Regarding Afghanistan he told us in moving speeches we would finish the job by finding Bin Laden and either capturing or killing him. We did. What are we doing there now? Their government will not be what we want it to any time soon and we are dumping billions there. Why do it there when we need it here? We have vast numbers of ordinary Americans under surveillance due to the Patriot Act that really don't need to be. 9/11 didn't happen because we didn't have the Patriot Act, it happened because the Bush administration failed to act when they were handed a memo in August of 2001 that read “Bin Laden determined to strike in US.” (http://articles.cnn.com/2004-04-10/politics/august6.memo_1_bin-conduct-t...) It warned of hijackings and attacks on the World Trade Center in Manhattan.

Let's get the money to the real security problems; the economy and the future of America. Here's a newsflash, it ain't in Iraq, Afghanistan or in becoming a nation that believes the people we can trust least are Americans like Communists in Russia and Nazis believed. “In response to (President Lyndon) Johnson's comment that the military remained optimistic (on the Vietnam War in 1968), (Dean) Acheson replied, 'Mr. President, you are being led down the garden path.'” (http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m2751/is_54/ai_53972637/?tag=conte...) In many ways that quote applies today to much of what is going on regarding our foreign policy.

I like to hope President Obama is the man in his speeches not the hit and more often miss man of the past two years and almost five months. I like to believe he is a man that keeps the promises he makes and doesn't go around saying essentially, “I'll do whatever you want” with no plans to do a thing. In his recent trip to Puerto Rico he said during one speech, that regarding the island's commonwealth status he would let them decide. In other words again he is already saying, “whatever you want tell me and I will do it... after the election.”

If his track record on his promises so far says anything Puerto Rico will be waiting a long time. Hopefully between now and 2012 President Obama will fulfill some of those promises not to lean left, right or center, but simply to keep his word. That would be something worth learning about, talking about and most definitely hearing about.

To read about my inspiration for this article go to www.lawsuitagainstuconn.com.

Mountain Justice Training Camp May 20-27 Letcher County, Kentucky ww.mountainjustice.org

Coal mining is happening in the following states across the country and threatens nearly 38 states across the country. Mountain Justice has been honing a skill set that we have effectively used to work against the coal industry here in Appalachia and many of these tactics apply to all coal mines including surface and underground mines.

Coal Mining states
Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, New Mexico, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia, West Virginia, Wyoming

Check out the following links for more info about coal mining in the US.
http://www.eia.doe.gov/cneaf/coal/quarterly/html/t2p01p1.html
Coal is found in thirty-eight states, and nearly one-eighth of the country lies over coal beds.
http://www.coaleducation.org/lessons/MII/doc3.htm
http://pubs.usgs.gov/of/1996/of96-092/Comp/main.gif

As the campaign to stop mountaintop removal gains national awareness, we have more and more opportunities for folks to help out. We've got a job for every interest, skill set and time commitment! We invite you to spend the summer working with one of our ally groups or to work with us in your hometown throughout the year!

Mountain Justice training camp is an opportunity for veteran and novice activist to build the skills and vision needed to abolish mountaintop removal and build vibrant, healthy, self-reliant communities. We ask that you attend camp with the intention of using these skills either working with allies in Appalachia or working on this issue in your hometown. The registration process will help you develop a plan for how you will use this training. Training camp is a time for training, strategizing, bonding, service and action for people living both within and outside of the coalfields, for people of all races, for youth and elders, and anyone in between.

Mountain Justice Training Camp May 20-27 Letcher County, Kentucky www.mountainjustice.org

Heartwood’s 21st Annual Forest Council: Energy! May 27-30, 2011 at Camp Ahistadi in Southwestern Virginia. http://www.heartwood.org/forest-council/

March on Blair Mountain: June 5-11To register for the march, visit http://www.appalachiarising.org/register/
If you would want to get involved with organizing, visit http://www.appalachiarising.org/getinvolved/ For up to the minute information, visit http://www.friendsofblairmountain.org/

Realizing that we ought to model independence from coal, camp will be off the grid this year!
We're so excited to be off the grid, but for Mountain Justice, a sustainable community is more than some solar panels and rainwater barrels. It's about the people that defend what they love, the people who work to create sustainable communities, and the nourishing relationships between them. Our focus on sustainability will mean building a strong and diverse organizing community that works on both resistance and solutions.

Trainings and Discussions
This year camp will feature themed training days. Themes will include, Community Organizing, Non-violent Direct Action, Science and SMCRA, and Alternative Economies. Check back for more information about the schedule. Some workshops being covered will include:
• community organizing
• air and water monitoring
• administrative and legal avenues to stop MTR
• media work
• direct action and civil resistance
• alternative economies
• sustainable livelihoods
• and a lot more!

Trainings will be collaborative as possible, so come open minded and willing to actively participate. If you want to facilitate a workshop, please let us know! Our hope is to continue to build a broad community to sustain, guide and nourish us as we all continue working to abolish surface mining and rebuild economically self-sufficient communities in Appalachia.

No community is sustainable without fun, dancing, bonfires and Appalachian mountain music! So bring your instruments, dancing shoes and high spirits, we'll be celebrating the ways of life we're fighting to preserve!
Register Now!
www.mountainjustice.org

One different Easter

I am asking of God only one thing: Does not exist anymore the mining company Barrick in my continent

I was at the top of my town, with my people, with the children ... We were watching to the horizon, looking with tenderness all the mountains that lie far away with their white color on their laps. And the cold wind of those giants was broken in our faces. They looked so far away but they were always in our life and we always loved them. And I remembered the song about the cardboard houses.

Watching them my tears runs away ... Like small pearls, when I still seeing over our mountain's peaks with all respect that they deserve. I am crying, because of the future that waits to my people, I am crying for the hundreds of children who roam the city streets aimlessly with the faces of hunger, with empty stomachs, staring the showcases full of shiny malls.

Those indigenous children haven't a future ... But they have schools that teach them to be westerners and consumers. It's necessary for not seeing them, that all of them will not have a future: Their farms infected by cyanide that destroys everything green that exist in our Mother the Earth. She gave to Us to eat we a rich fruits before, but now She languishes every one moment during our existence - with hers snow and glaciers that die each day and we can not to do anything, because the enemies took away our souls in more than five hundred years!

We were subjected to torture to stop being we Indigenous People: Huamanchucos, Chachapoyas, Cañares, Chancas Now I see those kids all pale as the white of our snow peaks, shivering in a cardboard house in the high hills of the big city, with the light of a candle that must be purchased with the sweat of their parents - slaves on the plantations of new bosses, which are the same as yesterday.

And also I see: all my years of struggle, there I were left my youth. I were fighting for my people all my life, and now in my years of old man, without almost forces I still fighting like yesterday... even though my feet were flying before as the condor in the sky's height, now my feet are heavy as the stone of Icchal.

I wanted to go to renew my promise that I made many years ago, but my feets just drag and my spirit feel so horrible pain. I want to rebel but my tired body is unresponsive. Because so many years, I was being arrested by the enemies of my nation.

I would: like the condor at the end of his years, I want to fly to the highest cliff, and to jump almost no forces and die! But after I've expulsed the idea of dying! I have to die with my face to my village.

I still want to fight to the moment of my death, I want to be a ray of fire - generated from Katequil and I will become to make fire all the steppes and to the highlands of hills, I will lift all stones and they too will follow me: We will evict the invader who enslaves and kills five hundred so long years to my people! My indigenous people who doesn't understood that their chains have even stronger then ever.

I see their faces, in my eyes and they say to me: "Tata Tupac, because it's so far the horizon, where you want to take us right now?" I answer: "Doesn't matter the time we will get there, you are the strength that I lost so many years ago!”

And I look back and I look for the huge hole. Our enemies turned in this hole so much people of my nation. The greedy interests of a handful of people who came to us from the north, they are not from our country. I see how the invasion would cheat to my people with a new glass bead: which were called schools of clay with beautiful stained glass windows. They make it while still burrowing and destroying to our Mother Earth! Before we loved our Mother Earth, and she gave us, all that we needed to live.

And I see my brothers who sold our people to the enemy. Those misery brothers all around with the alcohol, they say it gives them pleasure, others like fools wearing the clothes of mistis. The clothes, of the enemy who throw us away from our land.

The enemies say: "We are preaching the truth!"

But the only truth is: day after day we were nowhere to live. And we wonder: "Where will I die?"

Time ago this land was ours, but the Europeans took it from us and we have no where to go. My Mother Earth has wired now. I remember my childhood: I walked on this land with my feet or some times on my Moor horse, which tata Noah gave me. But now I can not go there and a sign says: "Private property! Forbidden to enter! Here has order: To shoot! "

I can not enter in my country to make my ritual offering by my lakes. Many times ago my Mother Water gives life to Mother Earth, which irrigate the fields where we played with my ayitos - guardians in that my childhood.

Just I found one of them engulfed in alcohol on a fork-lift He stop me and still recognize me ... He said: My boy, where you go? Where is yours mother Herlinda? I look in his eyes the sadness, which the European culture brought here to us. I saw his misery: his children crying for bread that the father will not give them. And I turned around; I just grabbed his tanned hands, his hands so sad and crumpled by the pain. Those hands now have not, a plantation there they working before. They have no running waters...

During my childhood, He looked after me, and in there lands we together saw a abundance of running waters! And now? My sadness now turns sadder.

And I see his children as slacker, they crouched in the corners of the streets, hoping to steal, because at home no food to eat. This is the only thing which the "European civilization" gave them.

And I remember those words, which the mining company told him: Barrick promise them that the indigenous people will have much money for their lands and thus will take them a progress.

They sold the piece of land that tata Noah was left at them. And after reached to the coast where they spent those little money. After looking for work they no found other: only a pawn for one person.

Then they wanted to return to his people and found no place to live. All the earth barbed with wire that was brought from the progress of the gringos. And there working like guardians - those brothers - who once told him: "Do not be goofy! Sale all the land of tata Noah and will see your life will change for better."

Now he has nothing and I ask him: "Where you live?” Because I know: if I give him some money, He only will consume it for alcohol. He did not tell me, but I do know where he lives, there, where all my brothers search refuge in the big city:

Behind the hills of sand with their cardboard houses, this can not keep them from the light and from the rains of the summers, and never can save them from the freezing of the winters. My brothers shivering without shelter, they will all be near the fire of newspapers, because they want to try a piece of his warm glow.

I tell my ayita-guardian to my childhood:" I see you soon". And now I have to fulfill my promise that I made yesterday. I am walking with pain burthen; because I see my brothers now suffer so much because they do not have anything today.

Túpac Isaac II

Juan Esteban Yupanqui Villalobos.

http://juanestebanyupanqui.blogspot.com

Tata Noah

He was not very tall, but he was considered more Indigenous that other people from our country. His skin was almost white, like a Creole’s, and his eyes were the color of the sky. Some of his children took the same eye color. He was my Tata Noah, the grandfather of my father, chief of Indigenous communities of Mollepata and Mollebamba. He was always working, whether in the fields that the villagers had dedicated to him, or at home using our machine to make ice cream with fruit. It was what I liked best as a child; the frozen fruit was so diverse and delicious. I always remember my grandfather Noah in the largest room of the house, with his ice cream maker.

The favorite of all Tata Noah’s children was my grandfather, his eldest son, who followed the tradition of our ancestors and married his first cousin, who gave birth to my father. I became his favorite when I was born.

I heard my Mamacona Herlinda say that Tata Noah cried when I was born because I was bleeding in the eye. He went into the hills for several weeks to conduct a ceremony to the ancestors and to ask our Apus (spiritual leaders) to heal me of what I was born with. He was gone for a month, and when he returned, he was very emaciated by fasting for his beloved grandson, but he was happy because the coca leaf had indicated to him that it was a sign: it was the beginning of the era of the condor, and this knowledge is a legacy, known only to the elect people of panakas, transmitted from generation to generation as a duty.

My friend was named Yume, which means, "He who keeps the sacred." I gave him another name: Tachito, because of his stooped and silent gait, and he always called me "Child." I do not know why. After that, all the people called me "the Child." Why could they not call me by my name, like everyone else? When we went down to the communities where my Mamacona Herlinda had her fields, all the people there called me "The Child." Every morning a man named Eulalia brought me milk from alpacas, and I would drink it still warm. He would say, "My daughter Herlinda, I brought this milk for the Child." And then she took us to the kitchen, where we were invited to eat the cushalito, a potato soup with spices.

My Tata Noah was old, but was always was traveling to the Apus of the Cordillera Blanca to bring ice from the glacier make the ice cream. He would leave the town of Santiago with his herd of llamas, donkeys, and horses to bring the ice down. It was a beautiful sight: my Tata with his particular attire, his poncho brown with gold edging out, hurrying toward the snowcapped mountains. All the people from the town would face toward Cabracay to see him off, waving.

My grandfather walked with a very long stick adorned with many allegories. Tata Noah told me long ago that it represented our true nation, which was all unknown, because many of those living in the village had given in to the viciousness of the white people and did not follow the customs of our fathers. That hurt my Tata, so when I arrived, he ever and ever told me many things and stories of our nation, which was not recognized by the whites. He made me grab the big stick of authority as chief Apu, symbolizing the only legacy we had for our nations, and he told me that I had to realize their dreams because his body would turn to dust again.

The day he left this world is a painful memory. His body had the smell of flowers and he had a big smile. I did not get the big stick of our nations, because I thought at the time that it should remain in the hands of my great grandfather, because our nations were still slaves in the Western world. I only said, “Goodbye, Tata Noah.”

Juan Esteban Yupanqui Villalobos
Tupac Isaac II
http://www.culturalsurvival.org/publications/cultural-survival-quarterly...

Juan Esteban Yupanqui Villalobos is a direct descendant of the Inca’s Panaca of Tupac Yupanqui, ruler of Tawantisuyu. He was arrested and jailed as belonging to armed rebel groups for helping Indigenous communities in Jaén and San Ignacio defend their forests from international logging concessions, but was eventually released when the charges could not be proved. His poetry has been published in several languages, and he maintains his own website at http://juanestebanyupanqui.blogspot.com/

http://juanestebanyupanqui.blogspot.com/2010/02/tata-noe.html

Live video coverage from people in Madison, WI statehouse

This--- is fucking awesome.
This video amazing. Madison, Wisconsin- small victories tonite. Republican defects in statehouse. People are holding out to stay overnight without the grace of Scott Walker. Cops promise to not take people out of statehouse.

video: http://qik.com/video/38026093/untitled

This is some website where you upload video directly from your phone. I have no idea how this works. Good to see the people get a few victories and persist in the good fight.

Seed Swap. Sat. Feb 19, 11-2 pm

The second ever of the century-- Seed Swap!!!

Saturday, February 19, 2011
11-2 pm

214 N. Washington Street, Carbondale, IL
(1/2 block North of Town Square Market)

Do you grow your own food?
Are you a beginning or experienced seed saver?
Come share knowledge and seeds.
No experience, or seeds required.

All vegetable and flower seeds or starts welcome
Learn about open pollinated, heritage and "true" varieties
Learn about how to save your own seeds
Bring images from your garden last year to share on our wall of green

*** 12:00 - Talk by Vinny Porbaznik of Dayempur Farm on saving and breeding seeds.

*** 12:45 - Presentation by Orlan Mays on the youth gardening program in Carbondale.

*** 1:00 - Demonstration by Steve Smith of Hollow Pumpkin Farm on how to start seeds indoors, potting mix, and timing for different varieties!

sponsored by YOU!

Exit Through the Gift Shop Fri Feb 8 7 pm

super movie Friday. let them eat cracklet them eat crackBanksy is a graffiti artist from the UK known for his satiric and beautifully executed political cartoons. His work humorously, scathingly addresses social themes such as war, poverty, greed, inequality and hypocrisy through a combination of well-chosen subjects and very tactical placement. In Exit through the Gift Shop, graffiti art as a contemporary practice is put under critique- is it possible to have real political impact if the artist’s work also serves the market through the art gallery scene? This is a hilarious video and an up to date critical survey of the current high-art graffiti scene that features many artists and their work. Introduced and discussion following with Wendy Weinhold, and a special consideration for the audience—what shall we do on the Big Muddy Independent media’s external walls? Come down for the movie before heading (for those who are) to Love at the Glove.

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Sexual assault and threats in Carbondale

Last week on February 8, I invited someone to go see "Creation" over at Morris Library with me. We went, watched the movie and had fun. Before I had met this guy and I had helped this guy go to COLA, I thought I would see him again, I figured I would because we have a class at the same time in the same area. It just so happened that a few days later we saw each other again in the computer lab where he asked if I had a Facebook and told me to give him my e-mail. Usually this isn't a big deal. Actually it turns out that we were taking the same kung fu class, it was pure coincidence. I thought neat, I think this guy is cool, he's nice and funny. We chatted online on Facebook, and he displayed homophobia, I never really realized I was a sexual object or an "opportunity" until he said " I guess that ruins my chances" after I told him I'm a lesbian. He continued to be condescending. I asked him, he agreed he was being "condescending", he apologized. I said ok. I asked him are we still on for tonight, he said sure, and we met up. I understand he has some aggression issues considering he was telling me so, but I guess he, started "playfully" punching me and I said ok, I'm gonna punch back, I punched back, "kiddingly". I got tired of it, "could you stop?" I asked. He imitated one last time than he finished. I was getting upset. He was really annoying and un-friendly. Very aggressive and not to mention, hostile. When the movie finished we left, he said he was going home and I went to go get a cup of coffee. While I'm waiting in line, he comes around the coffeeshop and fakes a punch me in the stomache, says "Bad reflexes", and I say "I'm pretty sure you weren't going to punch me." and he says "Don't be so sure of that", I ask "are you threatening me", he says " Yeah". Out of the corner or my eye, I noticed the woman standing in front of me, slightly turn around, simultaneously I began to look around and I felt so silent when I wanted to scream, "Help". I didn't though. He says "I'm just trying to help." I don't think that's help.
Let's skip forward to February 12 and another event. I was at my friends birthday party and I was dancing with my girlfriend. We were having a blast! It was such a great party. My girlfriend and I had made our way to a more quiet room, where there was less people. We were making out, enjoying each other's pleasure, expressing our sexuality, it's Valentines weekend most couples do. We just do it because we like to. So we were minding our own business when this hand creeps up along my back and suddenly he feels up my boob, meanwhile saying "oh yeeaaah... ALRIGHT!" I don't know this man. He has a beer filled cup in his, I doubt it was soda when his girlfriend ended up screaming "he's drunk!". Anyways, so I turn around and give a blatant command. DONT YOU EVER FUCKING TOUCH ME AGAIN. I made a mistake. I had a chance to hit him. I made a mistake, and didn't. He replies, "Oh it was just a joke, but have a goodnight!". I was distressed, scared and silenced for about thirty minutes. I had to go find my friends. I had to talk. It was Michael who I talked to and we concluded that action would be best. He said he would confront him about it, while I stood there and confronted him too. I thought he had exitted when at that moment he walked right by and I look at Michael with big eyes (I think so) and say "That's him." He says are you sure? I said YES. Michael said he did not appreciate him feeling me up and I stood there terrified. This man was drunk and said "I did not do that!!" He blatantly lied. He lied. He lied. He lied. I was there I felt his hand on my boob. WHY was he lying??!! I was angry. I am angry. He pushed michael out of his way and when he swung at Michael, he nearly got my girlfriend in her temple ( I didn't learn this until after the fact ) We ran after him outside and as I yelled "Take a fucking hike you sexual predator", his girlfriend defended him. "HE'S DRUNK!" "HE'S DRUNK!" "HE WAS JUST TRYING TO GET BY!!" I incisively said "He was just trying to get by me, right?! Which is why once he felt my boob and I confronted him he went the OTHER direction, That doesn't make any sense!!" They receded around the house...I was so angered. "Where is Michael?" I thought. I went around the houses corner to the parking lot to find the meanest man getting into his car, the drivers seat. He was about to leave, nonetheless drunk. Michael was still confronting him, he turned on his car, he was about to pull out and michael was walking in front of his car trying to get him to go. I think he was going to get his license plate number, he turned on his car, "VRRRRRRRRROOOOM", revs his engine and JOLTS forward nearly hitting Michael, I'm throwing my cup(edited typo, "car" to cup; Mon. 4:46p.m. Feb. 14) at this guys car he was still wet after I bashed him in the back with a plastic cup full of beer. He parks the car, gets somewhat out, I started to approach him yelling at him to get the fuck out of here, to leave, Michael's yelling at him, my girlfriends coming around the corner, his brainwashed drone is yelling at him to get back into the car. Him and his buddies leave.
That's two threats in one week. I have never been more scared in my life. I am front out of state, I have no one close to me, family-wise. I am threatened. I am frightened. I am silenced. I am not ready to fight. I will not be threatened. I will not be frightened. I will not be silenced. I am going to fight back. Do not fuck with me. The name of the threatener will irk me and I will never forget the license plate number. This has all happened around the area of Carbondale. I would like to raise awareness about this type of institutional silencing, this prejudice and inequality. For whatever reason, both of these males felt the ability to overpower me in my action and voice. I'm not going to stand for it any longer, if you want to, fight back with me.

I Know I'm Not Alone with Michael Franti. Fri Feb 4 at 7 pm

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Depressed by the war? So are we! Guest host Alex Paul of WDBX presents I Know I’m Not Alone, a feature documentary by musician and activist Michael Franti of Spearhead. Shot on a 3- week journey to Iraq and the Palestinian Occupied territories in 2004. Franti writes, "This film came out of my frustration with watching the nightly news and hearing generals, politicians, and pundits explaining the political and economic cost of the war in the Middle East, without ever mentioning the human cost. I wanted to hear about the war by the people affected by it most: doctors, nurses, poets, artists, soldiers, and my personal favorite, musicians."