Tuesday, February 23, 2010

A New World Record Set By Olympic Athlete Kim Yu-na!!!!

 
[image is from here]
Caption to this photograph from 2009:
Congrats to South Korean Yu-Na Kim for winning the 2009 World Figure Skating Championships at Staples Center in Los Angeles. She became the first female skater to score over 200 points. Next stop: 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver.

The rules for international figure skating have changed over the last few years, requiring intricacy of elements, and brilliant athlete Kim Yu-na, of Korea, is a stand-out, breaking all records for a Woman's Short Program with a score of 78.50.


CONGRATULATIONS, KIM YU-NA!!!! And good luck in the Long Program!

Kim Yu-na to Begin Quest for Gold in Short Program
ListenListen

FEBRUARY 24, 2010 08:07

World figure skating champion Kim Yu-na takes her first step toward the Olympic gold medal today at Pacific Coliseum in Vancouver with the short program.

Kim is far stronger in the short program than in free skating, whose competition starts Friday. In the eight competitions she has taken part in over the last two seasons, she has lost just once in the short program, and her sole loss was by just 0.56th of a point.


Kim did her free skating program at her official practice yesterday partly due to her confidence in the short program. She practiced her short program and free skating twice in her four official practices from Sunday.

In contrast, rival Mao Asada of Japan practiced her short program three times in her four official practices.

Kim and Asada skated in the same practice session for the first time yesterday. Kim was in her usual tracksuit but Asada wore her short program costume.


Both focused on jumping. Kim practiced her trademark triple lutz-triple toe loop combination and Asada on the triple axel.


The two competitors also played a mind game. Though they ran into each other several times, they never made eye contact. They instead just cast side glances at each other while talking with their coaches.

Both declined to hold interviews after their first practice day. Given Kim’s dominance in the short program, Asada says she can win only if she does well in the event.




An Experience of Genocidal Atrocity: Uranium Poisoning and the Right to Life for Indigenous North Americans

 
[image is from here]

Genocide is happening in what is termed the Third World and the Fourth World. What will the so-called First and Second World do about it?

What I am reminded of again and again, by activist work and struggles identified below, is how, for some white radical feminists, "pornography" is often focused on a lot as a serious social matter. And it is: any multi-billion dollar industry manufacturing misogyny and racism, and heterosexism, is seriously oppressive and violating of women's human rights, particularly when part of a larger system of gross sexist and racist subordination of women, and mass enslavement and murder of women. 

And for many women of color, uranium poisoning is far more pressing. And for many women of color access to clean water is. And for many women of color surviving men's military wars is. And for other women of color working to rebuild governments so that they are inclusive of and respectful of women's experiences and needs for freedom from male dominance are critical areas of focused activism.

As Audre Lorde noted, "gender" is not the only matter which negatively impacts women. Women are harmed by more than gender hierarchy in the form of male supremacist practices and institutions. Women are harmed by racism. Women are harmed by poverty. Women are harmed by anti-Indigenous warfare and genocide. Genocide is, always, gynocidal.

When I think about my own areas of profeminist focus, pornography and interpersonal sexual violence have been central in my work. In the last five years especially, I have become increasingly aware of what women face that is lethal, dangerous, horrendously oppressive and harmful that is not "pornography and interpersonal sexual violence". I recognise my own privileges in "deciding" what to focus my energy on exposing and challenging. My regional, class, gender, and race privileges have meant that I can completely ignore what happens to most women--to women of color around the world--and consider myself a radical profeminist. This is no longer an option: to focus on what impacts white women with class and regional privileges isn't unimportant. "If it hurts women, feminists are against it" was something Andrea Dworkin once noted. Politically enforced race, as well as sex, hurts women. To not see and attend to this is to be racist and white supremacist, in the view of this blog's host.

What follows is from *here*. Thank you very much, Brenda!

Tuesday, February 23, 2010


Uranium Mining Begins at Grand Canyon

Uranium Mining Begins at Grand CanyonThousands of Claims Threaten Public Health and Sacred Lands

By Klee Benally

Indigenous Action Media
(http://www.indigenousaction.org/)
Photo (R): Havasupai gathered near Red Butte at the south rim of the Grand Canyon in July to oppose Denison Mines new uranium mining. Photo Brenda Norrell.
GRAND CANYON, Ariz. -- In defiance of legal challenges and a U.S. Government moratorium, Canadian company Denison Mines has started mining uranium on the north rim of the Grand Canyon. According to the Arizona Daily Sun the mine has been operating since December 2009.

Denison plans on extracting 335 tons of uranium per day out of the "Arizona 1 Mine", which is set to operate four days per week. The hazardous ore will be hauled by truck more than 300 miles through towns and communities to the company's White Mesa mill located near Blanding, Utah.

After being pressured by environmental groups, U.S. Secretary of Interior Ken Salazar initially called for a two-year moratorium on new mining claims in a buffer zone of 1 million acres around Grand Canyon National Park, but the moratorium doesn't include existing claims such as Denison's. The moratorium also doesn't address mining claims outside of the buffer zone.

The Grand Canyon is ancestral homeland to the Havasupai and Hualapai Nations. Although both Indigenous Nations have banned uranium mining on their reservations the U.S. Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management may permit thousands of mining claims on surrounding lands.

Due to recent increases in the price of uranium and the push for nuclear power nearly 8,000 new mining claims now threaten Northern Arizona. Uranium mined from the Southwestern U.S. is predominately purchased by countries such as France (Areva) & Korea for nuclear energy.

In July of 2009 members of the Havasupai Nation and their allies gathered for four days on the South Rim of the Grand Canyon at their sacred site Red Butte to address the renewed threat. Red Butte has long been endangered by the on-going threat of uranium mining.

Under an anachronistic 1872 mining law, created when pick axes and shovels were used, mining companies freely file claims on public lands. The law permits mining regardless of cultural impacts.

OBAMA APPROVES NEW NUCLEAR REACTORS AND INCREASED NEED FOR URANIUM

Currently there are 104 nuclear reactors in the United States which supply 20% of the U.S.'s electricity. In January the Obama administration approved a $54 billion dollar taxpayer loan in a guarantee program for new nuclear reactor construction, three times what Bush previously promised in 2005.

Since 2007, seventeen companies have now sought government approval for 26 more reactors with plans to complete four by 2018 and up to eight by 2020. New reactors are estimated to cost more than $12 billion each.

Although nuclear energy is hailed by some as a solution to the current U.S. energy crisis and global warming, those more closely impacted by uranium mining and transportation recognize the severity of the threat.

THE COLORADO RIVER, WATER & URANIUM'S DEADLY LEGACY

Uranium is a known cause of cancers, organ damage, miscarriages & birth defects.

Drilling for the radioactive material has been found to contaminate underground aquifers that drain into the Colorado River, and sacred springs that have sustained Indigenous Peoples in the region. In addition, surface water can flow into drill holes and mine shafts which can also poison underground water sources.

Emerging in the Rocky Mountains in North Central Colorado and winding 1,450 miles to the Gulf of California, the Colorado River is held sacred by more than 34 Indigenous Nations. The Colorado also provides drinking water for up to 27 million people in seven states throughout the Southwest.

The river that carves the Grand Canyon has been extensively used by the agricultural industry and cities that are dependent for drinking water, so much so that it now ceases to flow to the Gulf of California, forcing members of the Cocopah Nation (The People of the River) in Northern Mexico to abandon their homelands and relocate elsewhere.

Today there are more than 2,000 abandoned uranium mines in the Southwest. U.S. government agencies have done little or nothing to clean up contaminated sites and abandoned mines. At Rare Metals near Tuba City on the Diné (Navajo) Nation a layer of soil and rock is the only covering over 2.3 million tons of hazardous waste. A rock dam surrounds the radioactive waste to control runoff water that flows into nearby Moenkopi Wash. Throughout the Diné Nation, Diné families have been subject to decades of radioactive contamination ranging from unsafe mining conditions to living in houses built from uranium tailings. Well water is documented by the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) as undrinkable in at least 22 communities such as Black Falls on the Dine’ Nation. According to the EPA, "Approximately 30 percent of the Navajo population does not have access to a public drinking water system and may be using unregulated water sources with uranium contamination." Flocks of sheep and other livestock still graze among radioactive tailing piles and ingest radioactive water.

According to the Navajo Nation up to 2.5 million gallons of uranium contaminated water is leaching out of the Shiprock Uranium Mill near Shiprock, New Mexico into the San Juan River every year. At the Church Rock Mine in New Mexico, which is now attempting to re-open, up to 875,000 cubic yards of radioactive waste continue to contaminate the land.

In July 1979 a dirt dam breached on the Navajo Nation at a uranium processing plant releasing more than 1,100 tons of radioactive waste and nearly 100 million gallons of contaminated fluid into the Rio Puerco (which ultimately flows into the Colorado River) near Church Rock, NM. This was the single largest nuclear accident in US history. Thousands of Diné families that live in the region, including those forced to relocate from the Joint Use Area due to coal mining, continue to suffer health impacts resulting from the spill.

In 2005 the Diné Nation government banned uranium mining and processing within its borders due to uranium's harmful legacy of severe health impacts and poisoning of the environment. And yet, high cancer rates, birth defects and other health impacts still bear out the uranium industry's dangerous legacy.

NUCLEAR WASTE & INDIGENOUS SACRED LANDS

Today the US has nearly 60,000 tons of highly radioactive spent nuclear waste stored in concrete dams at nuclear power plants throughout the country. The waste increases at a rate of 2,000 tons per year. Depleted Uranium (DU) is a byproduct of uranium enrichment and reprocessing which has controversial military uses including armor piercing projectiles. DU has been found to cause long-term health effects ranging from harming organs to causing miscarriages and birth defects.

In 1987 Congress initiated a controversial project to transport and store almost all of the U.S.'s toxic waste at Yucca Mountain located about 100 miles northwest of Las Vegas, Nevada. Yucca Mountain has been held holy to the Paiute and Western Shoshone Nations since time immemorial.

In February 2009 Obama met a campaign promise to cut funding for the multibillion dollar Yucca Mountain Nuclear Waste Repository project. The controversial project was initially proposed in 1987 with radioactive waste to be shipped from all over the U.S. via rails and highways. Currently a new proposal for an experimental method of extracting additional fuel from nuclear waste called "reprocessing" renews the threat to desecrate the sacred mountain on Western Shoshone lands.

Western Shoshone lands, which have never been ceeded to the U.S. government, have long been under attack by the military and nuclear industry. Between 1951 and 1992 more than 1,000 nuclear bombs have been detonated above and below the surface at an area called the Nevada Test Site on Western Shoshone lands which make it one of the most bombed nations on earth. Communities in areas around the test site faced exposure to radioactive fallout which has caused cancers, leukemia & other illnesses. Western Shoshone spiritual practitioner Corbin Harney, who has since passed on, helped initiate a grassroots effort to shutdown the test site and abolish nuclear weapons.

Indigenous Peoples in the Marshall Islands have also faced serious impacts due to U.S. nuclear testing. In her book, Conquest: Sexual Violence & American Indian Genocide, Andrea Smith reports that some Indigenous Peoples in the islands have all together stopped reproducing due to the severity of cancer and birth defects they have faced.

CONTINUING RESISTANCE

In March 1988 more than 8,000 people converged for massive 10 day direct action to "reclaim" the test site, nearly 3,000 people were arrested. Groups such as the Nevada Desert Experience (NDE) and Shundahai Network continue their work to shut down the test site and resist the corporate and military nuclear industry.

Throughout the 1980's a fierce movement of grassroots resistance and direct action against uranium mining near the Grand Canyon had taken shape, galvanized by the Havasupai, Hopi, Diné (Navajo), Hualapai tribes and a Flagstaff group, Canyon Under Siege. Prayerful and strategic meetings were held once a year throughout the 80s. In 1989 a group known as the 'Arizona 5' were charged for eco-actions including cutting power-lines to the Canyon Uranium Mine. Attributable in some part to the resistance and but mainly to a sharp drop in the price of uranium, companies like Dennison were forced to shut their mines down.

Mt. Taylor, located on Forest Service managed lands in New Mexico between Albuquerque and Gallup, has also faced the threat of uranium mining. The mountain sits upon one of the richest reservers of uranium ore in the country, it is held holy by the Diné, Acoma, Laguna, Zuni & Hopi Nations. In June 2009 Indigenous Nations and environmental groups unified to protect the holy Mountain and through their efforts Mt. Taylor was given temporary protection as a Traditional Cultural Property.

For 7 years Indigenous People from throughout the world have gathered to organize against the nuclear industry at the Southwest Indigenous Uranium Forum on the Acoma Nation.

At the 2006 Indigenous World Uranium Summit on the Diné Nation, community organizations such as Eastern Navajo Diné Against Uranium Mining (ENDAUM) joined participants from Australia, India, Africa, Pacific Islands, and throughout North America in issuing a declaration demanding "a worldwide ban on uranium mining, processing, enrichment, fuel use, and weapons testing and deployment, and nuclear waste dumping on native lands."

Klee Benally (Diné) is a collective member of Indigenous Action Media, on the Board of Directors of the Shundahai Network, and is a musician with the group Blackfire.
Author Mary Sojourner assisted editing this article. For further information and action:
Southwest Research and Information Centerhttp://www.sric.org/
Shundahai Networkhttp://www.shundahai.org/
The Center for Biological Diversityhttp://www.biologicaldiversity.org/
Uranium Watchhttp://www.uraniumwatch.org/
World Information Service on Energy: Uranium Project
http://www.wise-uranium.org/
Western Mining Action Networkhttp://wman-info.org/
Network Sortir du Nucléairehttp://www.sortirdunucleaire.org/
Sources:
Addressing Uranium Contamination in the Navajo Nation - Map of contaminated wells
http://epa.gov/region09/superfund/navajo-nation/contaminated-water.html
Tuba City Mill Site
http://www.eia.doe.gov/cneaf/nuclear/page/umtra/tubacity_title1.html#_ftn51
EPA summit addresses uranium cleanup
http://www.gallupindependent.com/2008/08august/081408epa.html
Conservation groups challenge uranium mining threat to Colorado River
http://www.lasvegassun.com/news/2008/sep/30/conservation-groups-challenge-uranium-mining-threa
A peril that dwelt among the Navajos - L.A. TImes - November 19, 2006http://articles.latimes.com/2006/nov/19/nation/na-navajo19
Uranium Mining & Milling
http://www.wise-uranium.org/indexu.html#UMMCI
Colorado River Facts
http://www.azhumanities.org/movingwaters/faq.html
Nuclear power inches back into energy spotlight
http://www.usatoday.com/money/industries/energy/environment/2009-03-29-nuclear-power-energy-return_N.htm
AREVA: France’s nuke power poster child has a money melt-down
http://acdn.france.free.fr/spip/article.php3?id_article=506&lang=en
Environmental Working Group - January 2008 - Report: Grand Canyon Threatened by Approval of Uranium Mining Activities
http://www.ewg.org/reports/grandcanyon
Shiprock Mill Site
http://www.eia.doe.gov/cneaf/nuclear/page/umtra/shiprock_title1.html
Grand Canyon Trust
http://www.grandcanyontrust.org/
The Center for Biological Diversity
http://www.biologicaldiversity.org/
Las Vegas Review: Yucca Mountain seen as possible reprocessing site
http://www.lvrj.com/news/yucca-mountain-seen-as-possible-reprocessing-site-83787692.html
Southwest Research and Information Center
http://www.sric.org/
Nuclear Free Futurehttp://www.nuclear-free.com/
Klee Benallyindigenousaction@gmail.com
http://www.indigenousaction.org/ - Independent Indigenous Mediahttp://www.oybm.org/ - Indigenous Youth Empowerment!http://www.savethepeaks.org/ - Protect Sacred Placeshttp://www.taalahooghan.org/ - Flagstaff Infoshophttp://www.blackfire.net/
CENSORED NEWS: This uranium mining, transport and processing threatens the water supply and health of Paiute, Havasupai, Hualapai, Navajo and Ute in this immediate region, as well as visitors, other residents and those living along the Colorado River.

GRAND CANYON TRUST: "Denison Mines, a Canadian company, recently revived operations at the Arizona 1 uranium mine on the Arizona Strip adjacent to Grand Canyon. This industrial activity threatens not only the visitor experience at Grand Canyon National Park, but the water supply for twenty-five million people in Nevada, southern California, and Arizona, as well as seeps and springs in the park. Worse yet is the fact that much of the uranium will be shipped to Korea."
Uranium Mining in Region Resumes
By CYNDY COLE
Arizona Daily Sun
Driven by a rebound in prices, uranium mining has resumed in northern Arizona after a hiatus of about 20 years.
Employees working for Denison Mines began removing high-grade ore at the Arizona 1 mine north of the Grand Canyon in late December, according to the company’s president, and trucking it to a mill near Blanding, Utah.
The mine is about 45 miles southwest of Fredonia in Mohave County, and about 10 miles from the boundary for Grand Canyon National Park. Read more ...
TELL DENISON TO STOP:
Denison Mines is mining uranium on the lands of the Havasupai, Hualapai and Paiute at the Grand Canyon; Ute and Navajo in Utah and First Nations in Saskatchewan. TELL THEM TO HALT: Denison Mines Corp. Atrium on Bay 595 Bay Street, Suite 402 Toronto, ON, Canada M5G 2C2 Telephone: 416-979-1991 Fax: 416-979-5893 info@denisonmines.com