PART I. Heyoka
John LeKay: Can you
please introduce yourself.
William Under Baggage:
Today is April 24th, I believe, 2006; I'm sitting here with a friend
that does an online website about indigenous issues that is named
Heyoka magazine.com. I want to talk about myself a little bit first.
My name is William Under Baggage. Literally, translation means
carrying the burden. I have an organization called Indigenous
Nations Network. We use this network to advise, inform and
educate. First each other - the native peoples of this land.
Secondly, to educate the larger population - the Americans - beyond
that, the world. So I'm sitting here today, talking about a few
issues - but first I want to touch base on what heyoka means. In
Lakota, Heyoka is a contrary. In society, certain things that are
done require an alternative way of thinking and doing things. Some
people call it a clown. It, he, she uses humor and
addresses issues when things are very serious. Such as in ceremonies
when serious things are happening. The heyoka is very active in the
ceremonies. Very visible in our society. The heyoka address things
that are very pertinent to society; sometimes not in the way that
people think about. So we would like to acknowledge that the heyoka
is a very powerful entity within our society. The heyoka is a very
necessary part of our society because it brings issues in a
different manor, rather than going through the traditional "Eyapaha"
(the traditional announcers of the community). The heyoka brings up
issues that make you look at yourself, the contrary of yourself and
the contrary of what the world is doing, and what the world and
society has done. So, the heyoka in itself is very necessary
and we believe that through using this magazine, in the sense that
we have a friend that is willing to use a voice, as the heyoka, the
contrary way of addressing things, but also as a way to address
issues.
Racism
John LeKay: We talked a
little bit about this earlier, about racism in this country - Racism
towards your Lakota culture and various cultures throughout the US.
Can you please tell me something about your personal experiences
with this; being born and growing up in this county and what this
means to you?
William Under Baggage: I
want to give a little bit of a background about race, ethnicity
(ethnocentrism and cultural centrism). First of all, we have to
understand that when the ancestors of the Europeans came to the
shores of the United States - what they were feeling was
racism towards them as spiritual societies, as religious societies.
When they left Europe, Europe was at it's worst time - the dark
ages. So when they left Europe they had warfare on their mind
already. When they came to the United States to conquer the
shores of America, what we call Turtle Island; they
came here with the explicit knowledge that they were going to take
this land in the name of the Queen. So already, they have an idea
that they were exploring. Actually, Christopher Columbus was lost
and was looking for India. So, just in the term itself -
"Indian" that they gave us, is very very wrong. We are not
"Indians".
Just in the beginning of
history of America, race was a very important factor in how they
conquered the people that they encountered. So race, racism, they
felt that they were better than the indigenous people that lived
here. I use indigenous in the sense that we are from this
continent. Most people refer to themselves as Native Americans - "
Indian" - is a term that is going out of style. Other people use it
today because that is what people have called us for the past two
centuries, or more, three centuries. So many people are used to
calling themselves Indian. I have never considered myself an Indian.
I was raised in the manner to consider myself a Native American, or
indigenous. The term Indian itself is race related. Today, race in
this country has a connotation of who is better than who. So when
Americans use the term Indian, it is not necessarily such a good
term. In another society such as Mexico and further south, "Indio"
is not such a good term; it is also used in a racist way to belittle
someone. Racism has been very very endemic in this society
where people think it's natural to be racist towards other
nationalities. As far as Native America was concerned, race was used
to oppress us, because we natives have a different color skin, brown
considering that the most European ancestry has very light skin,
what most people refer to as white. So racism has been prevalent in
many many issues across the United States and beyond. Where it's a
tool, used to oppress us. Through economic means, through spiritual
means. Religions used race in the sense that when the Jesuits were
accompanying the armies, the militia, to conquer a nation, the
Jesuits were used and usually they were white priests that were used
to basically giving the last rights to the people that the military
were intending to either massacre or remove. This happened all
across the eastern seaboard; the Atlantic coast where a lot of the
native people that lived in certain valuable areas were; places that
were coveted. So when racism was used in that manner, they would
bring in the priests to give the last rites to the people that were
being removed or killed. So in that sense, racism began way back
then.
At Some point
somebody told me something that sticks in my mind. They say
that "you could of had with love what you took with greed".
And that itself is a statement that very well reflects today's
attitude about natural resources, environmental injustice and
environmental racism. So when we look at race and how it was used;
yes the European cultures consider themselves civilized. They look
at us as uncivilized. Racism was used to oppress people, to remove
people from their aboriginal homeland. So racism is very prevalent
in this society today where laws were enacted to keep races apart. I
was very aware of that as a child when we went off the reservation
and society around us were mostly white. They did not like us; they
did not really allow us into their communities, to go shopping, to
go do things; so we were kept away from these communities by just
the fact of the color of our skin. By that, also many people were
killed because of the color of their skin.
So racism today has a
big part in the separation of societies here in this land we call
the United States of America.
John LeKay: Do you think
it's the educational system is one of the reasons why this is
perpetuated?
William Under Baggage:
Yes, education was deprived us; education was used in a sense to
keep us illiterate - to not understand the laws of this land; to not
be able to understand English. Education, as a racist tool was used
to keep the indigenous populations very illiterate so they would not
understand that the laws were being made against us. So education
has a very important factor in that it was used in order to be able
to dominate somebody. When I think about education, I myself don't
have a secondary education. I graduated from high school, but I was
not taught the right process of education so that I could not
succeed in post secondary education. I could not succeed in college.
Therefore I could not educate myself or become higher than what I am
now . I don't have any degrees. I don't have anything that tells me
that I am equal to somebody that has two PhDs, MAs or a bachelors or
any of that; but that's how education was used as a tool to oppress.
Natural resources
John LeKay: Going back
to what you said earlier about racism and natural resources; do you
think much of this oppression began with the discovery of gold in
the Black Hills? In terms of racism, it seems to serve a
purpose; being that some people benefit from this racism being
instilled.
William Under Baggage:
Yes, in the sense that most native nations had treaties with the
United States government as known in popular culture. Every
treaty was broken. So racism played a very important factor in the
extraction of natural resources such as gold, which is very valuable
in some societies' minds. When I think of natural resources, I think
of mother earth and how mother earth feeds and clothes us, provides
us sustenance. Gives us energy to live by. I'm very aware of that
when I come to New York City, because New York City does not produce
anything. New York City does not produce anything to benefit the
world. New York City consumes everything from the world; everything
is brought here. So when I look at the electricity, the light
switches, the water, the buildings that are made of rock and gravel
and concrete and steel. I look at the fact that Manhattan was here
and it was a very sacred place to the tribes that were here. So in
the sense of natural resources, it meant that we got to live on
mother earth in peace and harmony.
In the latter century -
as far as when gold was discovered here on this continent; not only
gold but other natural resources from our mother earth; such as
uranium, plutonium, zinc, silver, copper, molybdenum. All
these components of mother earth that are now called chemicals have
been used to oppress peoples, even more, because of economics. When
the European nations came here, they did not have anything. It was
mostly the Native American people that were producing items of
sustenance, such as the furs which the Europeans needed to live and
to survive. Also the corn and the squash and all the natural
things that they needed to live and to survive. But, it went one
step further when they started exploiting, when they started digging
holes in the ground. To create concrete, to create bricks, to create
things that were supposedly more durable and that could sustain in a
long term such as homes made of brick and steel. So, natural
resources to us have a very different connotation as far as the
usage of it. So when gold was discovered again it was a tool
to be used for race enhancement. The European decedents of these
people that came from other countries saw that this land was for the
taking, as they thought, because Native Americans were not utilizing
it to its fullest. So they thought that natives were not
productive members of society and therefore these materials such as
gold were used to enhance their selves; to make a better life for
themselves and gold had a monetary value. When we think of how that
was used, money was used as a tool to oppress people also in the
sense that most people, native peoples that lived on the lands,
usually had some sort of natural resource under it (coal, gold, or
silver) and these people were actually removed and replaced with
descendents of Europeans.
Dams and electricity
John LeKay: Were there
other natural resources?
William Under Baggage:
A very good example of other natural resources being exploited to
its fullest extent is the rivers that are dammed to extract
electricity. When rivers are dammed, natural things that live in
them like the fish can no longer run up these rivers, so natural
resources in the sense, to us, were something to protect, something
to cherish. I recently came back from the north west; the
Columbia River Gorge where three major dams, two of them produce
power, electricity as I video taped and understood how water was
used.
In the late 1800s, the
depopulations of the west, where the indigenous people lived started
with the process of removing these people off the land. To populate
and also to rapidly populate with pilgrims, with pioneers, with
farmers. Literally the land was fertile and lush - it could
grow anything. So when this population happened these farmers had to
be given water. So lakes and dams were confiscated to give the
farmers a way to rapidly populate, which meant they were having
children at a fast rate and outnumbered the native Americans.
So water was used as a tool of warfare; where it was taken away from
us and given to the farmers that were populating the west. To this
day, I see how they use water. Electricity is one of the most
highly subsidized entities; energy, is subsidized by the federal
government. Again I'm going to use a couple of terms which may not
be correct and I can research this. But, the Bonneville Power
Authority is heavily subsidized and the water that comes from there
is natural, so to them its basically free energy. So greed in
that sense has taken over that. There are a certain few executives
in these power authorities that are now very highly compensated when
they didn't actually own this land; so they are literally making
money that they did not have before.
Reservations
Where did these people
go that used to live there, the tribes that lived there? Normally,
what they did was they rounded us up like animals and contained us.
The reservation is just another word for a concentration camp.
When they created these concentration camps to hold these native
peoples, usually they were in what most Americans considered,
unusable land. Badlands for instance is land that could not be
utilized to produce something. So they housed us in these very
oppressive conditions and that's where they put these native peoples
on these reservations, on what I call concentration camps, where
diseases were rampant. Then you put that many people close together
in something they don't understand; given rancid beef, given flour
that had bugs in it. All these things people had to survive on such
as animal fat, lard, white sugar, coffee. Everything that was bad
was given to us and our people are still suffering today because of
it.
PART III. Uranium and the
national sacrifice area
John LeKay: What
about the mining of uranium?
William Under Baggage:
Plutonium in its natural form is still dangerous, when it's
extracted and mined and purified; like uranium. The natural process
of mother earth is changed and today uranium is used in the sense
that it is a tool of maculation, a tool of oppression. I think
directly to Iraq and what's happening there now with Afghanistan;
where they are supposedly using these bombs called bunker busters.
To me that has an horrific image of these bombs that are dropped on
these people that are hiding out underground. Because these bombs
can actually kill without damaging a lot of the land, damaging a lot
of the buildings. These bunker busters are made mostly out of
fissure material; uranium, plutonium. The United States
is falsely telling people it's depleted. Uranium will never deplete.
Its half life is probably 500,000 years. I'm not sure of that but I
one time heard a person by the name of Helen Caldicott, speaking one
time at a place in the Black Hills, where many people gathered, a
year ago in the late 70s to discuss something known as the national
sacrifice area. Western South Dakota was considered a national
sacrifice area and that didn't come from us, that came from the
energy corporations that wanted to develop nuclear energy and
nuclear bombs and of course we all know what happens when nuclear
bombs are used on a society such as the Japanese that the bombs were
dropped on and how it obliterated whole cities, communities and
families. So natural resources in the extraction of uranium is very
dangerous. By dangerous, I mean its not only dangerous for the miner
extracting it, because there are many diseases that come out of the
poisoning and toxic material that people inhale. The miners
were inhaling this and later became very affected by this.
Iraq and depleted uranium
John LeKay: What about
the national sacrifice area?
William Under Baggage:
This term called national sacrifice area, it wasn't us that created
it. We would never sacrifice ourselves or our mother earth for the
enrichment of a few people such as Kerr McGee; the executives of
Kerr McGee and other organizations that have extracted and exploited
natural resources. These people didn't have this money to begin with
and now these people are filthy rich just from the fact that they
stole this material called nuclear uranium and plutonium. So I think
about that and I look at how its being used today, and how these
children are going to be suffering, not just the children, but the
subsequent generations of these people the United States is dropping
these bombs on made of depleted uranium. These bullets that they are
firing are at Iraqi children, Iraqi citizens, have something that is
called depleted uranium inside these ammunition, and who authorized
that, who actually told them they could use these things in warfare.
I believe that there is
enough depleted uranium that they call nuclear waste in this
society; there is nowhere to put it - we can't send it off into
space, it will pollute space forever. So in a false sense,
they used this thing called depleted uranium on a society of people
that are going to suffer the next who knows how many generations.
Uranium and plutonium actually does one thing that is actually
devastating to the human body - it alters the DNA. It alters the
makeup of our bodies therefore affecting future generations
So when they turned this
place into a national sacrifice area, not only are they sacrificing
the lands but they are sacrificing generations to come. Because
these people will suffer. Also that the fact that this will not
affect the general population of the United States which is
Americans, which is white Americans, its not going to them, but it
will affect the people that are living on the lands near them.
Nuclear waste dumping and
reservation shopping
One good instance of
that is happening today and is something that the United States
government and the nuclear regulatory agency and all these power
authorities that use nuclear energy - that create the waste. There
was something the United States government and a few of these
agencies were doing a few years back. 10 years ago I believe or
somewhere round there; they were wanting a place to dump this
nuclear waste and the national sacrifice area was one of them and
many people came to protest that. We actually stopped that process
for a while, I know they are going to be bringing that up again.
Because they could not put it there, they had to go shopping for
someone who would accept this nuclear waste and of course they will
never bring it to Washington DC and put it in the Mall and I think
they should because that's the most secure place in the world.
There's 24 hour guards there with very big open space, and nobody
lives there so it would not affect anybody. So I think they should
bring this waste to Washington DC and bury it under the Washington
monument. Also when I think about that it angers me because I know
the fact that some people accepted the fact that the United States
government went reservation shopping. To actually offer these tribes
that are very destitute, very poverty stricken; when you are put on
a land that doesn't produce any viable means of sustenance, food.
These people are very desperate and hungry and so when they went
reservation shopping for a place to dump this nuclear waste; they
went across the United States and approached every tribe and offered
them financial rewards millions of dollars. And of the course, the
money isn't theirs to begin with so they don't care how they spend
it. So they went reservation shopping to dump this nuclear waste, in
the false image that Native Americans care about the land.
Therefore, we can dump this nuclear waste on them and they will take
care of it. I think that is horrific. That's environmental racism.
Once again race also
comes into this factor . Why did they not go to Pennsylvania, why
did they not ask the Quakers and the Catholics to actually host this
nuclear waste. Why did they not ask every wealthy community around
Harvard and Yale and Stanford to accept this nuclear waste and that
is racism. So when I think about how these subsequent generations of
people that are going to be affected; one of the tribes that
actually accepted it is out in Nevada called Sculls Valley.
Again, nuclear energy companies are looking for how to get rid of
their waste. It's not just trash that you can recycle. Not just
trash you can take and bury and in a few years it will disintegrate.
Nuclear waste will last forever. Nuclear waste will damage the water
around it. Nuclear waste will damage the people around it. When one
of the tribes accepted millions of dollars to host something called
the monitored nuclear waste retrieval and deposit; which is very
false. They just want to store it there and never retrieve it nor
redeposit it elsewhere.
What's happening now
across the United States is nuclear energy companies are trucking
very dangerous nuclear waste across America on our federal highway
systems. We do not know what these trucks look like. They wont tell
us. they wont show us what these trucks look like. Imagine a train
hitting one of these trucks, busting apart one of these containers
that transport this nuclear waste. What's going to happen to this
community. Because they are going right through these big cities in
the United States. When I think about nuclear waste, to me it's not
a sense that it came out of the land.
Navajo and mining and birth
deformities
One good example is
where they took it from. The corporations went to what is supposedly
unusable land. Un-arable land. For instance, they went to one
of the nations that they attacked, the Navajo. Commonly known
amongst the indigenous peoples as the De nee. They went out there to
extract, mine uranium out from under their land. Therefore they took
a huge amount of land away from them and also when you mine, it
requires a huge amount of water. So that water is now
contaminated by nuclear waste. But what happens to the people; the
miners. The people that mined this were not necessarily people of
European descent. But mostly indigenous peoples that lived around
there that had, through economic hardship, had to take the nearest
job available. A lot of these people die horrible deaths. Leukemia,
cancers, and with other diseases which are man made. These things
did not come from the environment. They came from man made
materials. So the disease some of these people walked with, altered
their DNA and of course when the DNA is altered these children come
out deformed. So a high rate of deformations of babies came out from
around these areas that are mined.
So when I think of a
genocide of a people, this is supposedly one of the easiest ways to
exterminate somebody, which is to use the natural resources. Of
course you don't have to use militias to exterminate somebody, you
can use uranium to exterminate a whole race of people. So that's
what's been happening across this land is being dumped back upon the
native societies that cherish mother earth; in this false image of
indigenous people being care takers of the lands. Makes me angry
that somebody could actually think like that.
So again uranium.
Where is it mined? How is it used and how is it deposited
after it's usefulness?
Corporate media and ignorance
John LeKay: What do you
believe are the reasons for us not hearing about these serious,
dangerous issues in the mainstream media?
William Under Baggage:
Mainstream media. First of all, the mainstream media as we know it
are controlled by a very few people. Very wealthy families that made
their wealth exploiting natural resources. Initially, some of
these families exploited the trees to make newspapers and they
inserted their opinions about what news should be. So when some of
these families got wealthy exploiting natural resources such as
trees, they became extremely wealthy. Then they could control
the dissemination of information, so of course when people are
greedy and they do not want anyone else to have that same pot of
gold. they are going to lie to people, they are going to misinform
people. So this is how the American people are misinformed and
uneducated about issues. Basically, controlling the minds of many
many people and this is called population control. When you can
control the information that is given to a society at large and
manipulate that information, you can actually uneducate somebody.
Keep them ignorant, keep them to the point where racism is still
very much a part of this. When you keep a population uneducated,
ignorant - they will do anything they are manipulated to. As a
tool, the mainstream media is still used as such. To keep people
ignorant so they only want to cover issues such as movies, mover
stars. Mainstream media will not cover itself. They will not
cover ideas that they are spreading misinformation. I see that today
with this Iraq war, we don't see the actual pictures of the bombs
being dropped on children. They wont show us that but they'll
show us a picture of president Bush standing on a ship saying
mission accomplished. I say mission unaccomplished. I say
nothing has been accomplished. All that's been accomplished is
nothing but genocide.
So mainstream media will
not pay attention to the issues of society, because they are
deceiving us.
Information highway
John LeKay: Do you think
that we are finally at a time where the ugly truth the mainstream
media has been suppressing and all these things we have talked
about, will start to reveal itself through this information highway
and the use of the internet?
William Under Baggage: I
do believe that because it is an alternative way of disseminating
information. This inter-highway that many of us travel, we no longer
pick up newspapers and these mass media, what I call these weapons
of mass deception really deceive the American public . So I believe
the internet can actually awaken people and educate people, that in
the past were not able to access information. Of course this
information is not going to reach the poor population because they
don't have access to the internet. They don't even have laptops or
they don't even have a PC in their homes.
So it's not going to
reach them but in the sense it can educate the masses of the
population, that we can actually turn things around, such as my
voice being heard across the world. We look at the networks of
people that are being created, just by educating each other, in our
own communities by using the internet to educate each other about
issues that affect each of our communities.
In the sense that these
networks have been created, we are much more educated as a society,
about indigenous America, native America, or as in popular culture
known as Indians. When we think about using the internet to
disseminate more information, we are able to share information
on a more rapid basis. We turn on the internet and have many forms
of information coming at us immediately. Today many people use the
internet as a sole means of educating themselves as far as issues
concerning America and beyond that, the globe.
Poverty and removal
John LeKay: How would
you describe some of the living conditions and the poverty in some
of these reservations; such as Pine Ridge for example?
William Under Baggage:
Yes, its horrific. We are still living in a third world
country where access to clean water is not available and abject
poverty, where people, have to eat whatever they can find. In
contrast to 100 miles away from Pine Ridge was one of the hugest
gold mines in the world, in the western hemisphere, controlled by an
organization called Homestake mines; which is a subsidiary of a
larger multi-national corporation that is actually doing that across
the world. Still extracting gold. Huge amounts of it and not giving
it back. The Black Hills were confiscated after a treaty with the
United States government was signed in 1868, where it left a huge
amount of land to the Lakota nation, but also we've got to remember
the other nations. Not just the Lakota used the Black Hills as a
spiritual area. People did not just go there to extract gold. People
came there to pay respects to the creator. They came to a very
spiritual sacred place, where people only came to hunt, to fish or
to practice their spiritual rituals, to be able to communicate with
God, the creator. So when that was confiscated, not only did it
affect my people the Lakota, but it affected many plains tribes
across that region.
The whole region people
came there and the false sense that a lot of these tribes did not
get along was manipulated again. It was a lie that was perpetrated.
To confiscate that land. Yes, we all got along and yes there
was also some tribal warfare, but I don't think it was on the scale
that is perpetrated now that most plains tribes were enemies. I
don't believe that, because today you can see that. I have Crow
brothers, I have Owbibwy brothers and sisters that consider
themselves relatives. We know that was in effect before this divide
and conquer tactic worked. When I look at the land that most of my
people live on, again it was very usable land but beneath that land
lie natural resources, such as uranium and now they are looking at
something that is called zeolite. Zeolie is one of the very
few compounds that is known to disable uranium. This is the
compound they use to lien nuclear beds with, what they sit on. It's
called zeolite. So that's another new mineral that's being mined and
of course it's very abundant under Pine Ridge.
So when they discover
very shortly, how valuable these minerals are, where are we going to
go next. Are they going to move us to New York City. Are they going
to move us to San Francisco, or Chicago, where the masses of the
immigrants come to because they have nowhere else to go to. They
have no homeland, they have no land in Virginia , Pennsylvania; they
have no summer homes in Colorado. Native peoples have been refuges
in our own homeland. When they remove us from our aboriginal
homelands that we consider a sacred place, a sacred land. When we're
disconnected from that and when we're removed, we no longer have
that within us so again, people are removed all the time; they're
re-moved such as what happened across the east coast where they
removed a lot of the populations and moved them out to middle
America, to Oklahoma where other tribes that were already existing
there were brought and forced upon these lands; and to this day we
see poverty; to this day we see racism against those people because
of the fact that this land is coveted; again as farmland, as
something to mine, or just land in itself that this population
explosion that is happening in the United States, people are
constantly looking for new land to move to. I had a real
estate agent tell me one day - they are not making any more dirt,
buy as much as you can now.
So again, people are
going to be removed and indigenous people have a right to be here, a
God given right - inherent right to occupy the land they live on;
and of course Native people always look at themselves as guardians
of mother earth; so we'll always have clean water; we'll always have
clean shelter, but that's not happening as when toxic materials are
being dumped on these lands; as in Pine Ridge in the past where test
wells were drilled to look for what's under that land and those
wells were never capped; they were looking for uranium, they were
looking for oil, they were looking for natural gas; and instead of
drilling and capping these wells they left them open; and therefore
when the seepage of these wells goes through different levels of
terrain, the aquifers; the water tables underneath the ground.
Right under South Dakota lies one of the hugest underground oceans
called the Ogallala aquifer which supplies most of the western
states with water underground and you can tap into the ground and
get up water within 20 feet in some places; so when these
exploration companies - these energy companies drilled these
exploration wells - they didn't cap them so these things are seeping
back into the water, and when uranium is dumped onto the land - it
seeps back into the water - and of course, many people are
uneducated about the affects of uranium and what it does to the DNA.
Lakota at the United Nations
John LeKay: Has
the UN been helpful with the situation of what's going on with the
uranium - do you know if they are aware of what's going on?
William Under Baggage:
I think they're aware of what's going on - but as far as the UN and
the body in itself; I think they are quite helpless; because one of
the biggest, richest, most powerful nations - the United States -
the UN Headquarters sits on the land of the United States - so we
think about power. The United States has a lot of power
and the fact that it's a military power - it's a way to control
populations. The United Nations has been helpful in the sense
that we can network there and get the word out amongst people's in
the world that these things are not right and when the United
Nations sits down - of course - they are trying to find a way to get
along better in the world - and when I think about the UN and has it
been helpful - I think it has been helpful in a sense that we can
network, we can advise each other, we can inform each other, we can
educate the general population of the world as to the conditions
confronting the indigenous peoples.
Right now at the UN -
there is a body under the Economic and Social Council of the United
Nations - there is a body called the United Nations Permanent Forum
on Indigenous Issues - and again a lot of these issues that confront
us today go back to the issue of exploitation where the World Bank
and a lot of these governing bodies - these controlling bodies have
a big say in how development affects these countries. And I
believe that there is no form of sustainable development -
there is no development that is sustainable to the world because of
course it is going to extract more natural resources to develop
whatever is being planned such as these huge damns that are taking
up a huge amount of land that indigenous peoples live on and mines
of course have a big effect on how indigenous societies can survive.
So yes, the UN has been effective in that sense, but I don't think
that as a policing agent it can't do anything because we know that
the United States has the ultimate say in military force; so as an
indigenous person I feel helpless sometimes going to the UN because
all we are is a voice and maybe if we scream loud enough at the top
of our lungs maybe that voice will be heard beyond just within the
walls of the UN and again when I think about the United Nations; we
are a fractured world, we are not united in any form and we are just
trying to address each other's concerns so yes, the United Nations
has been helpful in a sense that it gave us a voice but, we still
have no legal recourse within the United Nations.