You are currently browsing the Fourth World Eye weblog archives for the day August 19, 2007.
- Artby - Guest Contributor (2)
- Artby - Jay Taber (43)
- Artby - Mirjam Hirch (31)
- Artby - Rudolph Ryser (66)
- Arts and Culture (31)
- Daily (267)
- Economy (11)
- Environment (20)
- FW Geo-Politics (39)
- Health (13)
- Law & Justice (3)
- Media (4)
- People (12)
- Political (20)
- Political Economy (11)
- August 21, 2008: Spirit of Lakota
- August 20, 2008: To Poison the Womb of Time
- August 19, 2008: Seeds of Sociality
- August 18, 2008: Working Outside the System
- August 17, 2008: Choosing Life Over Money
- August 16, 2008: An Illustrative Example
- August 15, 2008: Protecting Indigenous Property
- August 14, 2008: Terror in the Tribes
- August 14, 2008: Congress of Nation and States
- August 13, 2008: Real News
Archive for August 19, 2007
On the Warpath
August 19, 2007 by Jay Taber.
In this 2005 Mother Jones article by Julia Whitty, we meet Blackfeet Nation banker Elouise Pepion Cobell, who has made it her mission in life to recover the $176 billion of Indian trust fund money lost, looted, and mismanaged by the U.S. government. 40 years into her battle with the Department of Interior, this great-granddaughter of the legendary Blackfeet warrior Mountain Chief, is closing in on what federal judge Lamberth termed, “an utterly depraved bureaucracy withholding payments from people struggling to survive.”
The Blackfeet, a quarter of whom died in the 1883 Winter of Starvation and were buried in mass graves by U.S. soldiers, have endured much. As Elouise Cobell put it, “I’m fighting for them, fighting the same government that tried to get rid of this entire race of people.”
Today, as Congress and the White House try to weasel out of this obligation, claiming the United States of America cannot afford to pay the money back, we are heartened that Ms. Cobell is still on the warpath. As she notes, “It’s not your money and never was.”
Posted in Artby - Jay Taber, People, Daily | Print | No Comments »