South Dakotans

Oyateunderground-Siyotanka: A Voice from Within

Wanbli WiWohkpe (James Starkey) has been making a series of videos. This is one of them. James makes and plays his own traditional flutes often out of found objects.

Commentary;

Wanbli WiWohkpe grew up on the streets of Rapid City, an illegal squatter town built in the Sacred Homeland of the Lakota Nation.
Growing up amidst what was commonly called “The Feud”, Wanbli WiWohkpe was caught between two worlds: the wasicu world of academia, where he excelled and blossomed, and the world of the reality around him, where he was looked down upon for who he and his Family were.
Wanbli WiWohkpe saw the utter disrespect afforded the Indigenous Male. He was told constantly in school to eschew his kin, and to grab hold of the American Dream.
Through a series of events, Wanbli WiWohkpe chose instead to follow his older brother, Warren Rich, and the two became very close, almost as if they melded into one person. He learned to be strong, to be swift, and to be loyal.
The Youths ultimately became entangled in the system of incarceration perpetuated by the Invader/Occupier. The Youths grew into Men, and the violence continued and escalated. Knowing something was amiss and unable to articulate what, these Men learned to lash out upon others of their kind. A tragic spiral of lateral violence continued unabated until they were all again incarcerated by the illegal squatter government.
Wanbli WiWohkpe went to prison for 1st Degree Manslaughter in 1986.
In the subsequent years, Wanbli WiWohkpe has seen those closest to him as a Youth perish. Most escaped their oppression via suicide. None lashed out at the Invader/Occupier in the terrible ways other oppressed Nations do. None went amongst the Invader and exploded. None took the Occupier with them to their death.
Instead, being from a beautiful People not familiar with domestication, a People not wishing to inflict damage upon their tormenters; not wishing anything from their tormenters but for the torment to cease, they imploded.
They imploded and they continue to implode. The Invasion/Occupation continues unchecked, and the Lakota Nation, especially the Lakota Male, remains pauperized.
Our Lives were stolen by the Occupier. Every thing the Invader has is stolen.
Every bite of food, every warm bed, every happy home, every scrap of power, every nuance of anything enjoyed by the Invader is taken directly from the Health of the Indigenous. The Invader’s prosperity is taken directly from the Hearth and Home of the Lakota Nation. A Hearth and Home now non-existent as the Lakota People wander their own Homeland as homeless.
As the fortunate give thanks for the blessings of God and their American Dream, the Lakota Nation, the less fortunate, continue to simply exist as pesky and useless vermin in the Occupier’s world.
Through Lakol Wicohan, the Friendly Lifeways of the Lakota Nation, Wanbli WiWohkpe began to see. He began to understand the difference between his Nation and the Occupier. He committed himself to Sundance and Vision Quest, and now after completing 4 years of Sundancing and a 4 day Vision Quest, Wanbli WiWohkpe has made a true Relative with the Siyotanka, the Ancient Lakota Flute.
Wanbli WiWohkpe believes the Siyotanka is part of Lakota Man Power, a component of our Being that has been kept from us. To label the Siyotanka as a “courting flute” and to play it as feebly as “Native American Flute” players do, keeps us emasculated as Indigenous Males.
Look around, most “Native American Flute” makers/players are not Indigenous, and those famed Indigenous flute players often play a non-Indigenously made flute.
The Invader/Occupier is literally chopping off a part of us, emasculating us; thereby rendering us impotent. Wanbli WiWohkpe has learned directly from the Winged and Four Legged just how to play the Siyotanka, how to regain Lakota Masculinity, and how to Heal.
OyateUnderground Productions: World Class Representin’.

Wanbli WiWohkpe, he emaciapelo

Rounds Turns it up a notch

All of sudden, Mikey becomes Mr. Glass half empty;

PIERRE, S.D. – Gov. Mike Rounds says next year will bring the “worst budget scenario that we have seen,” and he doubts there will be much of an increase in state funding of schools.

But Bill Thompson is ready to set him straight,

Democratic state Rep. Bill Thompson of Sioux Falls, who is on the House education committee, said education is an investment.

“In the House, there are too many people who see education as an expense, and that’s the basic philosophical difference,” he said.

It would make no sense for Rounds to cut education even if the budget is tight, according to Thompson, a retired teacher.

“My question to the governor would be, ‘Is education your No. 1 priority?’ It should be, in terms of economic development and in terms of how much of the state budget that goes toward education,” he said. “Education is not frosting; it’s absolutely crucial and should be the last area for where we look in terms of cuts.”

I’m gonna say it, it is time for the minority Democrats to grow a sack and go after this Governor like pitbulls, without lipstick. Bill has a good start, and he is respected enough to take the bull by the horns.

I think we should change the name of SD to 50th

South Dakota Ranks Last in Non-Partisan Survey of Transparency, Accountability, and Limits in Government  
“Walking away from reform is not an option,” SDCAC says 

 

Pierre, SD -  South Dakota ranked 50th out or all 50 states in a recent survey of openness and government integrity.  

 

The Better Government Association, an independent and non-partisan government watchdog group, released their 2008 survey findings on transparency, accountability, and limits in government.  The survey ranked each of the 50 states in five areas of law: open records, whistleblower protections, campaign finance, open meetings, and conflicts of interest. 

 

“South Dakota didn’t beat out any other state” said BGA Executive Director Jay Stewart, “and there is clearly a lot of room for improvement.  If you look at the percentage score, South Dakota received 32%, the equivalent of a F letter grade, hardly a cause for celebration.”

 

South Dakotans supported open government reforms in a June 2008 McLaughlin & Associates scientific public opinion poll.  Over 70% of those polled supported reforms that would: stop taxpayer dollars from being used for lobbying and political campaigns, stop politicians from handing out “pay-to-play” government contracts, making the relationships between government contractors and elected officials transparent, stop golden parachutes, and placing the current common sense public disclosure laws and ethics reforms at federal level in South Dakota law. 
  
Lee Breard, Executive Director of the SD CAC, said, “Clearly from this study there is a problem and polling shows there is overwhelming public support for reform.  South Dakotans largely agreed with the major concepts in Initiated Measure 10 but obviously believed the initial approach was flawed”  
 
“Now is the time to take the issue of openness and transparency in government back to the people and the peoples’ representatives,” said Breard.  “While voters were confused with the specific language of Measure 10, largely due to the $1 million TV campaign by National Education Association union officials in Washington, D.C., fighting to preserve the status quo, there is overwhelming public support for openness and reform.”
 
“With South Dakota ranked last in openness and integrity clearly the status quo is not acceptable and just walking away from common sense reform is not an option,” said Breard. 

 

Breard noted that in an editorial, the Black Hills Pioneer agreed.


“After seeing efforts to open government fail during the 2008 legislative session, we have to agree that the Better Government Association has a point,” the Pioneer said.  “South Dakotans may be open, friendly people, but their government is closed and hostile to anything it perceives as an intrusion on its authority.  The report makes it clear that South Dakota has failed to adapt to modern demands for openness.”

“Measure 10, which was resoundingly defeated last week, was supposedly an effort to create a more open government,” the Pioneer continued.  “It had many flaws, but its central point was worthwhile: far too much happens behind closed doors in this state, be it government contracts — ‘millions are awarded annually in no-bid processes’ — pardons and court proceedings.”
http://www.bhpioneer.com/articles/2008/11/12/opinion/editorials/doc491b11c81bd27205749055.txt

  
Follow this link to read the full report from the
Better Government Association.  

 

 

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