G
gritzle70
Guest
This is just such perfect way to show the many levels by which the the Consortium and its human elites work. All I can see when I read this is:
1) Destroying the Eskimo culture which is based on sharing and caring - the opposite to predatory capitalism
2) Driving the people off their land through poverty and depletion of their resources and, thus, forcing them to give up their independence by having them adopt "modern" technologies to survive. How long before McDonald's moves in?
3) Recruiting from poor minority groups who usually join the military because they see it as their only escape from poverty.
4) Once the men (native national guard) have been deployed to Iraq, then FEMA moves in and takes over their lands (think "New Orleans") and Big Oil comes in and starts drilling.
5) But most disturbing of all is that they will place the Eskimos in an environment which will deliberately kill them off. (This is exactly what they did with the remaining Native Americans, who have the highest rate of diabetes in the country - from eating junk food which is all they can afford).
Not only that, but in Iraq, the the Eskimo troops will be exposed to DU. So for those who return alive, there is a high probability that they and their spouses (whom they will contaminate) will die from radioactive poisoning; and that their children will be born with horrific birth defects as seen in Iraqi infants.
Just another example to me of how they want to enslave us by destroying or manipulating our DNA structure and our ability to give birth to healthy offspring.
Link not available
Major call-up of Eskimos for duty in Iraq could cause hardship on the homefront
Monday June 19, 2006
By MARY PEMBERTON
Associated Press Writer
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) Military families across America often endure hardship when a loved one ships out. But there are not many places in the U.S. where those left behind have to chop ice out of the tundra for drinking water and make sure the freezer is well-stocked with walrus and seal meat.
The first major call-up of National Guard reservists from rural Alaska since World War II could mean sacrifice and upheaval for Eskimo villages that practice subsistence hunting and gathering in some of the most remote and unforgiving spots in the nation.
Eric Phillip's job in the small Yup'ik Eskimo village of Kongiganak in southwestern Alaska is to hunt walrus, seal, mink, otter, geese, ducks and other animals to provide food for his immediate family and other relatives. With Phillip shipping out, his wife and their two young sons will be moving to the city of Bethel, about 70 miles away.
''Out here it is harder for them to live alone,'' Phillip said. ''In the village we don't have water. We have to go to the tundra and chop ice for water and melt it, and we don't have flush toilets. It is hard for a single parent to live around here in the village.''
Similar stories are being told in Eskimo villages across the vast state, in places with names like Alakanuk, Emmonak and Manokotak, as 670 soldiers from some of the most hard-to-reach places in the nation head to Iraq and Afghanistan.
Six men headed to Iraq are from Scammon Bay, a Yup'ik Eskimo village of about 520 people in western Alaska where residents rely mostly on subsistence hunting and fishing. Families left behind will now rely more on each other, another time-honored tradition in rural Alaska. The village will take care of them.
''Everybody shares food really well out here. It is a custom,'' said Darlene Cholok, whose husband, Thomas, is one of those going to Iraq. ''Our community is so close-knit and everyone is practically related in some way that there is a lot of support.''
While Alaska's National Guard does an excellent job of helping its military families, it will be particularly tough for these soldiers and their families, because they live in such inaccessible areas, said Pete Mulcahy, executive director of Armed Services YMCA of Alaska. That makes it more difficult to arrange help for them, he said.
''These guys have a bigger challenge,'' he said. ''Even a remote village in Texas is still on the road grid.''
Amy Chikigak of the Yup'ik Eskimo village of Alakanuk is preparing to say goodbye to her husband, Vernon. She said she is not worried about food. Their freezers are full of seal, whale, fish, geese, swans and berries. The village store also is pretty well-stocked.
''We have vegetables and stuff like that, mashed potatoes for our fried moose,'' she said. ''We have macaroni and cheese, and that always helps, too.''
She and the three children, ages 12, 9 and 7, are going to remain in the village. If she runs short of anything, her mother and father and brothers will provide, she said.
Chikigak is more concerned about learning how to use the chainsaw to cut wood to heat the steam bath. She also wants to be able to run the boat so she can take the children on summer picnics: ''I will have to force myself to learn and I will still panic.''
Before leaving for Iraq and Afghanistan, the troops will get three months of training, which will include getting used to hot weather at Camp Shelby in Mississippi.
Maj. Stephen Wilson, who returned from a one-year stint in Iraq in 2005 and is overseeing the deployment of seven soldiers from Barrow, 340 miles north of the Arctic Circle, said the Alaskans should do well once they adjust to the 120-degree heat in Iraq. In Barrow the northernmost city in the United States the temperature doesn't get much higher than the low 50s in the summer, and often drops below freezing at night.
Maj. Mike Haller, a Guard spokesman in Anchorage, said about 35 percent of the approximately 4,000 National Guard members in Alaska are Native, well above their 19 percent share of the state's population.
Being in the National Guard is a rite of passage for many young Alaska Natives, Haller said, a tradition that started during World War II when Alaska was still a territory. In that war, the state's National Guard troops fought in both Europe and the Pacific, and some were stationed in Alaska's Aleutian Islands to guard against the Japanese.
Besides honor and tradition, service in the Guard brings in money that comes in handy in the villages, where jobs are hard to come by and food and other goods are expensive.
As for the dangers that await the troops in the Mideast, Staff Sgt. William F. Brown, the leader of the Barrow troop and 29-year guard veteran, said he has faced fear before and beaten it.
Brown recounted a whaling trip about 10 years ago when a polar bear came within about 30 feet. Brown was about to grab his gun when the whaling captain told him to relax.
''He said, 'Don't show no fear, don't be scared. They're like dogs, they pick up your scent and take advantage of your fear,''' Brown said. The polar bear ''just stood up, sniffed and walked away. Ever since then I've been teaching myself not to be scared, to show no fear.''
1) Destroying the Eskimo culture which is based on sharing and caring - the opposite to predatory capitalism
2) Driving the people off their land through poverty and depletion of their resources and, thus, forcing them to give up their independence by having them adopt "modern" technologies to survive. How long before McDonald's moves in?
3) Recruiting from poor minority groups who usually join the military because they see it as their only escape from poverty.
4) Once the men (native national guard) have been deployed to Iraq, then FEMA moves in and takes over their lands (think "New Orleans") and Big Oil comes in and starts drilling.
5) But most disturbing of all is that they will place the Eskimos in an environment which will deliberately kill them off. (This is exactly what they did with the remaining Native Americans, who have the highest rate of diabetes in the country - from eating junk food which is all they can afford).
Not only that, but in Iraq, the the Eskimo troops will be exposed to DU. So for those who return alive, there is a high probability that they and their spouses (whom they will contaminate) will die from radioactive poisoning; and that their children will be born with horrific birth defects as seen in Iraqi infants.
Just another example to me of how they want to enslave us by destroying or manipulating our DNA structure and our ability to give birth to healthy offspring.
Link not available
Major call-up of Eskimos for duty in Iraq could cause hardship on the homefront
Monday June 19, 2006
By MARY PEMBERTON
Associated Press Writer
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) Military families across America often endure hardship when a loved one ships out. But there are not many places in the U.S. where those left behind have to chop ice out of the tundra for drinking water and make sure the freezer is well-stocked with walrus and seal meat.
The first major call-up of National Guard reservists from rural Alaska since World War II could mean sacrifice and upheaval for Eskimo villages that practice subsistence hunting and gathering in some of the most remote and unforgiving spots in the nation.
Eric Phillip's job in the small Yup'ik Eskimo village of Kongiganak in southwestern Alaska is to hunt walrus, seal, mink, otter, geese, ducks and other animals to provide food for his immediate family and other relatives. With Phillip shipping out, his wife and their two young sons will be moving to the city of Bethel, about 70 miles away.
''Out here it is harder for them to live alone,'' Phillip said. ''In the village we don't have water. We have to go to the tundra and chop ice for water and melt it, and we don't have flush toilets. It is hard for a single parent to live around here in the village.''
Similar stories are being told in Eskimo villages across the vast state, in places with names like Alakanuk, Emmonak and Manokotak, as 670 soldiers from some of the most hard-to-reach places in the nation head to Iraq and Afghanistan.
Six men headed to Iraq are from Scammon Bay, a Yup'ik Eskimo village of about 520 people in western Alaska where residents rely mostly on subsistence hunting and fishing. Families left behind will now rely more on each other, another time-honored tradition in rural Alaska. The village will take care of them.
''Everybody shares food really well out here. It is a custom,'' said Darlene Cholok, whose husband, Thomas, is one of those going to Iraq. ''Our community is so close-knit and everyone is practically related in some way that there is a lot of support.''
While Alaska's National Guard does an excellent job of helping its military families, it will be particularly tough for these soldiers and their families, because they live in such inaccessible areas, said Pete Mulcahy, executive director of Armed Services YMCA of Alaska. That makes it more difficult to arrange help for them, he said.
''These guys have a bigger challenge,'' he said. ''Even a remote village in Texas is still on the road grid.''
Amy Chikigak of the Yup'ik Eskimo village of Alakanuk is preparing to say goodbye to her husband, Vernon. She said she is not worried about food. Their freezers are full of seal, whale, fish, geese, swans and berries. The village store also is pretty well-stocked.
''We have vegetables and stuff like that, mashed potatoes for our fried moose,'' she said. ''We have macaroni and cheese, and that always helps, too.''
She and the three children, ages 12, 9 and 7, are going to remain in the village. If she runs short of anything, her mother and father and brothers will provide, she said.
Chikigak is more concerned about learning how to use the chainsaw to cut wood to heat the steam bath. She also wants to be able to run the boat so she can take the children on summer picnics: ''I will have to force myself to learn and I will still panic.''
Before leaving for Iraq and Afghanistan, the troops will get three months of training, which will include getting used to hot weather at Camp Shelby in Mississippi.
Maj. Stephen Wilson, who returned from a one-year stint in Iraq in 2005 and is overseeing the deployment of seven soldiers from Barrow, 340 miles north of the Arctic Circle, said the Alaskans should do well once they adjust to the 120-degree heat in Iraq. In Barrow the northernmost city in the United States the temperature doesn't get much higher than the low 50s in the summer, and often drops below freezing at night.
Maj. Mike Haller, a Guard spokesman in Anchorage, said about 35 percent of the approximately 4,000 National Guard members in Alaska are Native, well above their 19 percent share of the state's population.
Being in the National Guard is a rite of passage for many young Alaska Natives, Haller said, a tradition that started during World War II when Alaska was still a territory. In that war, the state's National Guard troops fought in both Europe and the Pacific, and some were stationed in Alaska's Aleutian Islands to guard against the Japanese.
Besides honor and tradition, service in the Guard brings in money that comes in handy in the villages, where jobs are hard to come by and food and other goods are expensive.
As for the dangers that await the troops in the Mideast, Staff Sgt. William F. Brown, the leader of the Barrow troop and 29-year guard veteran, said he has faced fear before and beaten it.
Brown recounted a whaling trip about 10 years ago when a polar bear came within about 30 feet. Brown was about to grab his gun when the whaling captain told him to relax.
''He said, 'Don't show no fear, don't be scared. They're like dogs, they pick up your scent and take advantage of your fear,''' Brown said. The polar bear ''just stood up, sniffed and walked away. Ever since then I've been teaching myself not to be scared, to show no fear.''