October 9: Caroline Doctorow & Mick Hargreaves in Concert for WPKN

WPKN presents Caroline Doctorow and the Steamrollers 

with a solo appearance by Mick Hargreaves 

Saturday, October 9 at 8pm 

Jeff’s Kitchen at the Hayground School

151 Mitchell Lane, Bridgehampton.  

A benefit for listener-supported WPKN Radio

Tickets $25 at the door.

Reserve at rootsmusicfest@gmail.com

or call 631-259-2482

 

Caroline Doctorow:

With a soft and mesmerizing voice Caroline Doctorow (http://www.carolinedoctorow.com/) has established herself as a leading force on the folk music scene as she gains momentum with each new album she releases. Her voice has been called wondrous and velveteen. Her albums appear regularly on the top of the folk music radio airplay charts.  She regularly tours with her band "The Steamrollers" comprised of Gary Oleyar, Andrew Carillo and Mick Hargreaves.

 

 Mick Hargreaves:


Mick Hargreaves (www.mickhargreaves.com) is a busy singer-songwriter and in-demand session bassist whose 2009 single release is "Bridget" backed with "Can't Keep Track of You Blues" 








Caroline and Mick are heard every first Saturday of the month at 7pm on the Song Trails Radio Hour (http://thesongtrailsradiohour.blogspot.com) on WPKN Radio. They feature roots-based artists and highlight local Long Island musicians.   

 

Listener Supported WPKN at 89.5 FM


has been described as a station whose importance is out of proportion to its small signal in our area.  WPKN serves most of Suffolk County and streaming at www.wpkn.org,  the rest of the globe, with a diverse selection of musical genres (Jazz, Blues, Folk, Rock, Classics, Reggae and more) and public affairs programs (East End Ink, Tidings from Hazel Kahan, Between The Lines, Free Speech Radio News). The station is almost completely funded by listener contributions and takes no corporate advertising or underwriting. 

Letter to Southampton Press: Cigarette Tax Is Destructive and Will Not Work

September 18, 2010

Dear Editor:

At this writing the proposed New York state tax on cigarettes sold on Indian reservations to non-Indians is tied up in the courts.  What would happen if most of the population of Southampton should lose their jobs?  Would that warrant headlines and marching in the streets? This is the prospective faced by a large portion of the118 residents of the Shinnecock and Poospatuck reservations on Long Island.

NY State has a 9 billion deficit,  A re-instatement of the stock transfer tax - New York  State presently collects a very small tax on each stock transfer, but then rebates the tax, now in excess of $16 billion annually - or an increase in the tax on incomes of $250k or greater would bring in more that the $200 million that might be collected by taxing cigarettes sold on reservations. 

But whether any sales will be made on the reservations without the price advantage now
enjoyed by Native smoke shops is questionable.

The real reason for the legislation which has been proposed for years is to reward the convenience store supporters of the powers in Albany.   This can only bring more poverty and its resultant increase in drugs and crime  to our area.  

I looked for news about this impending disaster in the local media and found none. 

Two weeks ago New York's Mayor Michael Bloomberg, a friend of a large player in upstate convenience stores, recalling the days when states paid for Indian scalps, told a radio host that he had advised the Governor to 

"get yourself a cowboy hat and a shotgun. If there’s ever a great video, it’s you standing in the middle of the New York State Thruway saying, you know, ‘Read my lips – the law of the land is this, and we’re going to enforce the law." 

Apparently racist speech directed at  our native neighbors is acceptable.  Not a word about this was in the downstate papers. Where is the outrage?

Anthony Ernst

Pat Young: Suffolk Congressional Race Has Anti-Immigrant Overtones




Chris Cox is running hard against Congressman Tim Bishop in one of the few swing Congressional seats in New York. The First CD in eastern Suffolk County has changed hands repeatedly over the last several decades.
The district has a strong tea party faction organized around Glenn Beck’s 9/12 group. The faction incorporates many activists from the area’s well developed anti-immigrant organizations. The district was the scene of multiple attacks on Latino immigrants in 2007 and 2008, culminating in the killing of Marcelo Lucero in 2008.
Cox has announced he will “stand with the tea party” on the immigration issue. He recently released a statement praising Arizona’s SB 1070 law which was recently enjoined by a Federal court. Cox said:
“I know how hard so many people have fought to become citizens of this country, and I know that we need to secure our borders. That’s the obligation of the federal government and the federal government has failed. God Bless Arizona for standing up and trying to protect its citizens!”
After the law was stayed in July because of its dubious constitutionality, Cox said:
“The Arizona legislature passed common-sense legislation to protect their citizens because the Federal government has completely failed to secure our borders.  Along with Governor Jan Brewer…, I am deeply disappointed that a Federal judge has blocked key provisions of Arizona’s law.  The citizens of Arizona have been subjected to criminal aliens, including violent drug gangs, because our borders are porous.  As a Member of Congress, I will support legislation to strengthen border security and enforce Federal immigration laws.  Unlike Tim Bishop who wants to reward illegal immigrants with citizenship under what he calls ‘Earned Legalization,’ I support the rule of law and I oppose amnesty.”
Cox is an odd source of such a hard line. He is the grandson of disgraced former President Richard Nixon who was saved from jail by a presidential pardon, a sort of one-man amnesty.
Cox’s father, Ed cox, is the head of the state Republican party. Ed Cox led the failed effort to convince Republicans to nominate virulently anti-immigrant Suffolk County Executive Steve Levy for governor.




Cowboys and Indians - Where is the Outrage?

On Monday, August 23 members of New York native nations (Unkechaug and Shinnecock included) protested on the steps of New York's City Hall in response to Mayor Michael Bloomberg's racist utterance.  "Bloomberg used imagery considered insensitive at best by tribal members when he suggested that Gov. David Paterson don a cowboy hat, grab a shotgun and stand in the Thruway to make sure tax law is implemented on Indian cigarette sales." according to the Albany Times-Union's James Odato.

Tiokasin Ghosthorse of First Voices Indigenous Radio included a report from Carole Woodward of Digital Radio Warrior Media from the rally including quotes from Chief Harry Wallace (Unkechaug) and Sr. Tribal Trustee Lance Gumbs (Shinnecock).  Also an interview with native blogger John Cain about native / NY State relations, cigarette tax questions and the Mayor's remarks.  These reports were carried on WPKN 89.5 Bridgeport on Thursday August 26.

From Indian Country Today: Where is America’s outrage?


“The use of force to subdue, dispossess, disempower and eradicate the Native American is a disgraceful part of American history and Mayor Bloomberg is encouraging its continuation.”

 Full article:

When New York Mayor Bloomberg asked Gov. Patterson to act like a cowboy to shut down the Seneca tobacco industry, little was heard from mainstream America to condemn such an outrageous statement.

The use of force to subdue, dispossess, disempower and eradicate the Native American is a disgraceful part of American history and Mayor Bloomberg is encouraging its continuation. The image of the cowboys shooting and killing Indians, defending settlers and moving them off their lands is the stuff of American legend. Indians were the villains of American expansionism and it created Manifest Destiny to justify their elimination.

America loves its cowboy image. Bloomberg wants to resurrect John Wayne as a solution to the “Indian problem.”

But if anyone in America should understand Native Americans, it should be Bloomberg. He is a part of an oppressed people: Persecuted, dispossessed and eradicated. Being Jewish, Bloomberg should feel the same way Native Americans do.

After all, to the Seneca and the Iroquois Confederacy or Haudenosaunee, northern New York state is our Israel. We are the freedom fighters and defenders of the land, not the cowboys. The cowboys are the invaders and looters.

We have lived in the area from time immemorial; we have a constitution predating European contact and a federation of nations that American founding fathers studied to replace a system based on a monarchy. We are an ancient people with our own language, customs, spirituality and government, living on our own homeland; our Israel.

Would Bloomberg accept Hamas enforcing tax collection in Israel? I don’t think so.

Yet that is the reality for Native Americans. America wanted our land and our natural resources, which made this the richest country in the world. Now America wants to continue the impoverishment of Native Americans by collecting its taxes by force.

Bloomberg’s blindness to our history must not be limited to only him. The rest of America seems not to care very much.

If the mayor had suggested that the Klu Klux Klan be sent in to collect taxes in Seneca territory, there would be outrage. His suggestion for the governor to act like a cowboy is comparable to sending in neo-Nazis to settle the “Jewish problem.”

Shocking as that may sound, this is the image from a Native American perspective.

Yet there is no outrage from mainstream America.

It is in the American culture to idolize the cowboy and villainize the Native American. Americans don’t see the comparison of Israel and the Jewish people to the reservations and territories of Native Americans. Or they refuse to see. It would be too painful or, more likely, too expensive. Or they do not want to offend the Jewish community?

It is okay to offend Native Americans. That is American culture.

When will America stand up for the rights and freedoms of Native Americans?

- Kenneth Deer
Kahnawake
© 1998 - 2010 Indian Country Today. All Rights Reserved
__________________________________________________________________________
From the article above:

“The use of force to subdue, dispossess, disempower and eradicate the Native American is a disgraceful part of American history and Mayor Bloomberg is encouraging its continuation.”

Article 4 and Article 7 of the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination deal with speech promoting or inciting racial discrimination.  The United States ratified the Convention in 1994, but took exception to the provisions in Articles 4 and 7 at the time, claiming the United States “does not accept any obligation under this Convention, in particular under Articles 4 and 7” and referred to the “extensive protections of individual freedom of speech” in the United States.  Free speech in the U.S.A. apparently includes hate speech or speech which incites racial discrimination.  In 2004, there was a ripple of protest, but no outrage when Governor Schwarzenegger claimed publicly, “The Indians are ripping us off.” And “they don’t pay their fair share.”  The situation in New York is similar.  The state wants to claim revenue that doesn’t belong to the state by undermining the source of income of
 Native peoples in the state.  In order to demonize Native people, hate speech seems to be considered fair game then and now.  Where is America’s outrage that public officials can use hate speech and that federal law outweighs international human rights law in allowing them to incite discrimination with impunity?

Artists United for Haiti


you are invited to
L’ESPOIR / HOPE
 East End Artists United for Haiti
to benefit
 ART INDIGÈNE Camp-Perrin, Les Cayes a year-long job training program in the arts for teens  
Saturday, August 28, 6 - 10 
BENEFIT PARTY & ART LIVE AUCTION  
Music * Food * Drink
$20 suggested contribution
Bidding begins at 7:15 PM
Friday, August 27, 5 - 8 
 ART PREVIEW
Bids will be accepted for the live auction
Ashawagh Hall, East Hampton, NY
Springs-Fireplace Road and Old Stone Highway
   Participating Artists:
   Shari Abramson, Tomas Bulher, Perry Burns, David Collins, Luigi Colarullo, Sally Egbert,
                 Ellen  Frank, Marc Antoine Gaston, Kimberly Goff, Jason Green, Whitney Hansen, Nicolette Jelen,               
   Nathan Slate Joseph, Teri Kennedy, Karin Mannix, Jane Martin, Barbara Maslen, Fulvio Massi,
   Paton Miller, Camille Perrottet, Maria Pessino, Vivian Polak, Gabi Raake, Christina Schlesinger,     
   Rosemarie Schiller, Rosario Varela, Todd C. Westphal