🔊 @IntuitiveEarth • Live Collaborative Media • Intuitive Public Radio Earth • IPR •••
24 subscribers
712 photos
87 videos
12 files
917 links
Welcome to this Intuitive Earth.

@IntuitiveEarth • Live Collaborative Media • Intuitive Public Radio Earth • IPR ••• Intuitive.pub/Earth

This social space supports oxytocin pathway repair and individualized creative healing.
Download Telegram
Protect Indigenous Women

5/5/21 by Matika Wilbur, Desi Rodriguez Lonebear & Adrienne Keene

https://www.allmyrelationspodcast.com

Web player: https://podcastaddict.com/episode/122713798
Episode: https://pdcn.co/e/www.buzzsprout.com/262196/8465977-protect-indigenous-women.mp3

Since the onset of colonization Indigenous women have experienced violence with reckless abandon, today it is a public health emergency. Traditionally, many of our Native societies are matrilineal but settler colonialism has disrupted our traditional value systems. These shifts have tragically contributed to the epidemic of violence we see committed against our women and Two Spirit relations. The issue is systemic and this episode discusses how we must hold systems and people accountable. Mary Kathryn Nagle (Cherokee) is a playwright and lawyer with Pipestem Law, a firm dedicated to legal advocacy for the safety of Native women and tribal sovereignty. She represents families of victims and has testified before Congress for the Violence Against Women Act (VAWA). Her perspective on the legal issues regarding MMIW expounds how tribal sovereignty and jurisdiction is so important in combatting the crisis. She also explains how political participation and allyship is necessary to fight subversive systems which propagate violence. Abigail Echohawk (Pawnee) is Director of the Urban Indian Health Institute and a leader in the movement to bring visibility to MMIW through political advocacy work, data, and research. Her organization conducted a seminal report on the crisis to better understand the prevalence of the crisis which has harmed our relations for 500 years. This episode is raw, real, and heart wrenching. The crisis must be addressed and we need allies to join us in making it visible so we can all take action. We need to hold non-Natives upholding these systems accountable. Further, we need Natives to step into roles of political power to demand change. Every statistic represents a Native woman. We must honor and protect our sisters. No more stolen sisters. Links and Resources

Fill out our form Letter in support of VAWA Urban Indian Health Institute Pipestem Law Public Law 280 National Indigenous Women’s Resource Center Mary Kathryn Nagle New Yorker Article Montana Community Foundation Sovereign Bodies Institute All My Relations is Listener Supported Become a Patron: https://www.patreon.com/allmyrelationspodcast

Follow AMR on Instagram

Matika on Instagram

Desi on Instagram

Music
Special thanks to Antone and The West Shore Canoe Family & Joanne Shannendoah

AMR Team

Creative direction, sound engineering, and editing: Teo Shantz Film Editing: Jon Ayon Sound production: y Max Levin Development Manager: Will Paisley

Production Assistant: Kristin Bolan Director of Business Development: Edison Hunter Social Media Intern: Lindsey Hightower Research Intern: Keoni Rodriguez 2nd Editor: Carly Sjordal Sales and Marketing Intern: Jamie Marquez-Bratcher Support the show (https://www.paypal.me/amrpodcast)
Increasing populations of abused and intersectionalized people being fed to active human trafficking operations put a terrible strain on all environments and prevent us from addressing the issues that directly concern the health and thriving of the earth. • Zia • 20210507-120912 • https://t.me/s/IntuitivePublicRadio/7808https://t.me/s/UrgentHelpersNeeded/1175https://t.me/s/IntuitiveEarth/1838 ••
🔈🔈#Llamamiento 22 de Mayo
Día Global de lucha #BastaDeTerricidio
Convoca:Movimiento de Mujeres Indígenas por el Buen Vivir

Desde el Sur de Indoamérica al Mundo, el Movimiento de Mujeres Indígenas por el Buen vivir propone #BastaDeTerricidio

Estas palabras no salen de nuestras bocas, nuestros labios son habitados por el silencio. Las palabras salen de nuestros pies. Porque cuando la boca se cansa de gritar y su sonido se vuelve inaudible, es necesario entonces hablar con los pies.

Es por eso que caminamos. Para que nuestros pies cuenten lo que a nuestras palabras no se les ha permitido narrar.

Nuestros pies esculpidos por el viento, endurecidos por los pétreos senderos de la lucha cotidiana por sobrevivir. Nuestros pies envueltos a veces en harapos, a veces desnudos, racializados, pisoteados, afeados, pero no vencidos. Fuertes para seguir caminando, enraizados en la tierra.

Nuestros pies recuperan la dignidad y nos llevan a pisar sobre las huellas ancestrales, para que desde el fondo de la memoria recuperemos el horizonte del #BuenVivir como Derecho.

Desde el 14 de marzo nos echamos a andar como quien al tranco va, despacito pero firme. Hemos recorrido hermosos paisajes atravesados por dolor, clamor y lucha. Nutriéndonos de esas fuerzas que emergen desde la tierra y desde los pueblos.

📌Llegaremos el 22 de Mayo a #BuenosAires para decir Basta De Terricidio! Un Basta, que se irá nutriendo de acciones colectivas y voluntades humanitarias y de la articulación global para terminar con tanta muerte.

⚠️¿Acaso crée este sistema perverso, los detentores del poder, los mentores de la muerte que nada hemos aprendido desde la conquista del continente hasta ahora?

No estamos sólo frente a un problema de carácter climático, sanitario o económico, una vacuna no lo resuelve, tampoco una ley. La enfermedad más letal ha sido imponer una normalidad, construida en oposición al orden cósmico, quebrantando la relación armónica y de reciprocidad con la Tierra. Durante este tiempo los #femicidios, #feminicidios, #travesticidios y #transfeminicidios aumentaron. El #ecocidio pasó un límite de perfidia e impunidad que mostró no sólo la indolencia del sistema, sino que los terricidas están dispuestos a todo para alimentar su insaciable avaricia.

La cultura del odio ha sido emplazada desde los poderes religiosos, destituyendo la del amor y respeto entre géneros, pueblos y naturaleza, nuestra espiritualidad clandestina es hostigada por las religiones opresoras financiadas por el #extractivismo genocida.

Desde hace siglos el sistema imperante ha determinado el segmento de la humanidad que desea eliminar. El #genocidio es llevado a cabo con la complicidad de todos los gobiernos del mundo. Somos conscientes de que el #terricidio no se resolverá con una ley, ya que es la sumatoria de todas las maneras de asesinar las diferentes formas de vida que ha planeado y ejecutado hasta aquí esta matriz civilizatoria impuesta.

La solución es una absoluta y total revolución. Nosotras la venimos caminando en cada recuperación territorial, en cada ceremonia ancestral que levantamos, en la recuperación y el fortalecimiento de nuestra medicina ancestral. En la defensa activa de la vida y de los territorios. Sin embargo, seguirá siendo insuficiente si no nos entramamos para tejer juntes, recuperando el arte de habitar que en #indoamérica nuestros antepasados nos legaron.

Entendemos que este no es el mejor momento ni el contexto adecuado para salir de los territorios. Sin embargo si nos quedamos en casa nos siguen matando.

Llegaremos a Buenos Aires el 22 de Mayo, hemos elegido esta fecha como nuestro primer grito de libertad, el de la plurinacionalidad de los territorios.

Las mujeres indígenas somos portadoras de mensajes cósmicos que vienen anunciando lo que sucederá si no hacemos nada. Es necesario una revolución verdadera que interpele esta matriz civilizatoria enferma y con ella el poder como idea y como orden.
https://nma.org/category/reclamation/
found this
crucial for healing land
and much prayers
National Mining Association
Reclamation Archives - National Mining Association
Since 1978, more than 2.8 million acres of mined lands have been restored for wildlife areas and wetlands, recreation areas, economic development park...
"A second problem is the sheer number of abandoned sites, andcorrespondingly, the potentially staggering cost of remediation. According tothe Mineral Policy Center, a group that conducts research about mining, thereare over one-half million abandoned and inactive mine sites across 32 states,including almost 15,000 with water contamination problems (see Table). Theofficial estimate—admittedly a rough one—from the federal Bureau of LandManagement is that there are between 100,000 and 500,000 abandonedhardrock mines on the public lands administered by that Bureau.6 The ArizonaState Mine Inspector’s Office estimates that Arizona alone may have up to27,000 abandoned sites.7 The BLM estimates that about 5 percent ofabandoned mines are causing or could cause environmental damage, mostlywater pollution.8Current policy does not seem to address these problems very well. In thewords of one critic, “After the mining is over, federal policy seems todisappear, and reclamation becomes a patchwork of local arrangements andaccommodations and economic pressures. . . . Only when the patchwork failsdoes the federal government come back in with the Superfund laws and itslawsuits. By then, of course, the wealth is long gone, and only theenvironmental costs and impacts remain"
sounds so similar to other problems we know

https://www.perc.org/wp-content/uploads/old/rs01_1.pdf
Protect Indigenous Women

5/5/21 by Matika Wilbur, Desi Rodriguez Lonebear & Adrienne Keene

Web player: https://podcastaddict.com/episode/122713798
Episode: https://pdcn.co/e/www.buzzsprout.com/262196/8465977-protect-indigenous-women.mp3

https://allmyrelationspodcast.com

Since the onset of colonization Indigenous women have experienced violence with reckless abandon, today it is a public health emergency. Traditionally, many of our Native societies are matrilineal but settler colonialism has disrupted our traditional value systems. These shifts have tragically contributed to the epidemic of violence we see committed against our women and Two Spirit relations. The issue is systemic and this episode discusses how we must hold systems and people accountable. Mary Kathryn Nagle (Cherokee) is a playwright and lawyer with Pipestem Law, a firm dedicated to legal advocacy for the safety of Native women and tribal sovereignty. She represents families of victims and has testified before Congress for the Violence Against Women Act (VAWA). Her perspective on the legal issues regarding MMIW expounds how tribal sovereignty and jurisdiction is so important in combatting the crisis. She also explains how political participation and allyship is necessary to fight subversive systems which propagate violence. Abigail Echohawk (Pawnee) is Director of the Urban Indian Health Institute and a leader in the movement to bring visibility to MMIW through political advocacy work, data, and research. Her organization conducted a seminal report on the crisis to better understand the prevalence of the crisis which has harmed our relations for 500 years. This episode is raw, real, and heart wrenching. The crisis must be addressed and we need allies to join us in making it visible so we can all take action. We need to hold non-Natives upholding these systems accountable. Further, we need Natives to step into roles of political power to demand change. Every statistic represents a Native woman. We must honor and protect our sisters. No more stolen sisters. Links and Resources

Fill out our form Letter in support of VAWA Urban Indian Health Institute Pipestem Law Public Law 280 National Indigenous Women’s Resource Center Mary Kathryn Nagle New Yorker Article Montana Community Foundation Sovereign Bodies Institute All My Relations is Listener Supported Become a Patron: https://www.patreon.com/allmyrelationspodcast

Follow AMR on Instagram

Matika on Instagram

Desi on Instagram

Music
Special thanks to Antone and The West Shore Canoe Family & Joanne Shannendoah

AMR Team

Creative direction, sound engineering, and editing: Teo Shantz Film Editing: Jon Ayon Sound production: y Max Levin Development Manager: Will Paisley

Production Assistant: Kristin Bolan Director of Business Development: Edison Hunter Social Media Intern: Lindsey Hightower Research Intern: Keoni Rodriguez 2nd Editor: Carly Sjordal Sales and Marketing Intern: Jamie Marquez-Bratcher Support the show (https://www.paypal.me/amrpodcast)
Every person who recieves this

Bring your car and listen

Learn to prevent human trafficking and help victims recover

Learn to restore income participation and resilience in your community spaces

Immediate need & nourishment for participants in every location

Our network is based on Telegram messenger

Talk with us on Telegram every day

Tell us when you're available to use your car to help

Great success imminent!

Be in contact via Max: t.me/maxmorris

Voicemails only to 412-326-9313

Leave a text or voice message for the public radio via 412-353-9378

Chat on Telegram at t.me/s/IntuitiveDispatch & t.me/s/IntuitivePublicRadio

Gratitude.

Blessings.

https://t.me/s/PittsburghIPR/2468 ••
Forwarded from 🔊 Repeater IPR • Community Needs & Solutions Repeater • @IntuitivePublicRadio & Network-Wide • @IntuitiveSignal • IPR •••
Alexandra Horowitz: The World According to Your Dog

5/12/21 by Species Unite

https://www.speciesunite.com/podcast/alexandra-horowitz

Web player: https://podcastaddict.com/episode/123038444
Episode: https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/speciesunite/Ep6.x_AlexandraH_interview.mp3?dest-id=834548

“I can drive my car off a cliff and just leave it where it lay, the most I'll get is a littering fine, and if you throw your dog off the cliff the punishment is actually pretty similar. That's because they're the same type of thing to the law. So, unless you change that status, and you have people of course, who are thinking that there should be a status of kind of living property that might give them more attributes than my car has or my chair has; and then there are individuals who think they should be given the status of legal persons, which isn’t to say being people, but having rights of some sort. I think both of those are pretty intriguing offers. I think we're a little ways off from doing that, but boy, either of those would be a massive improvement in our societal treatment of these creatures. And of course, I don't think it's just restricted to dogs… It's been terrific to work with dogs for all these years, but I think this way about lots of non-human animals that we interact with, were we kind of get to use them sort of, for our sake. I would love to see some kind of sea change in thinking such that we don't get to use animals in the ways we do now, which are really abuses of animals.” – Alexandra Horowitz If you have any questions for your dog, Alexandra Horowitz is a pretty good place to start. She’s spent much of her life researching and writing about what it’s like to be a dog. She is the #1 New York times bestselling author of Inside of a Dog: What Dogs See, Smell, and Know; Our Dogs, Ourselves, Being a Dog: Following the Dog Into a World of Smell; and On Looking. She is a professor at Barnard College, Columbia University, where she teaches seminars in canine cognition, creative nonfiction writing, and audio storytelling. As Senior Research Fellow, she heads the Dog Cognition Lab at Barnard. I wish this conversation had lasted all day long as I had about 5 thousand more questions for Alexandra - mostly, everything I’ve ever wanted to ask my dog. Although, the time we did have together was pretty amazing and felt like an absolute gift.
Forwarded from 🔊 Afrika, Asia • @AfrikaIPR, @AsiaIPR • Intuitive Public Radio Afrika Asia • IPR ••
Fôli Kadi

4/29/21 by BTRtoday

https://www.btrtoday.com/listen/theafrobeatshow/foli-kadi

Web player: https://podcastaddict.com/episode/122447930
Episode: http://s3.amazonaws.com/btrmedia/AfrobeatShow042921.mp3

"DJ Meredith is taking you on a sonic adventure around the world on a journey through sound, introducing a fresh, new lineup of bands & artists from the most unexpected places on Earth! Let’s open the show with ‘Tinini Tanana’ by Okwei Odili + Aweto Band! Enjoy new & rare grooves as we check out Warsaw Afrobeat Orchestra, Dele Sosimi, Fely Tchaco and so much more!

00:00 - Mic Break
02:16 - Tinini Tanana (Nigeria/Brazil) - Okwei Odili + Aweto Band
06:26 - Invitation (GMGN Remix) (UK/Poland) - Warsaw Afrobeat Orchestra
12:02 - Turbulent Times (E Get As E Be) (Nigeria) - Dele Sosimi
21:38 - Ato Lagoh (Ivory Coast) - Fely Tchaco
25:59 - Mic Break
27:57 - Fôli Kadi (France/Mali) - Mawimbi feat. Fatim Kouyaté
32:11 - Ihabogi Rawaly (Spain/Guinea) - Kiko Navarro feat. Aboubacar Sylla
36:00 - Black Debtors (Nigeria) - Etuk Ubong
40:44 - Cubana (Italy) - Gerardo Frisina
46:29 - Mic Break
47:20 - Wipe Away Tears (UK) Nubiyan Twist
53:26 - Abakoro (Kenya) - Ngalah Oreyo feat. King Koko
58:56 - Basonyiwe (Germany/Uganda) - Ancient Astronauts feat. Spyda MC
62:54 - The Seed (Nigeria/USA) - Tony Allen & Jeff Mills
66:54 - Mic Break
67:36 - Barry Swing (Guinea) - Mamadou Barry
74:29 - Calling England Home (Trinidad & Tobago) - Anthony Joseph
80:34 - 419 Afrobeat (Nigeria) - Ayetoro feat. Tony Allen
88:22 - Timbavati Bounce - Thornato feat. Benjamín Vanegas
91:31 - Brebrebre (Ghana) - Pat Thomas & Kwashibu Area Band
96:52 - Mic Break
98:18 - Akafé (Ivory Coast) - Stanley Murphy
106:44 - Finish
"
03-13-19 Zia symbol: from sacred emblem to commercial exploitation

3/13/19 by Native Voice One - NV1

https://soundcloud.com/native-america-calling/03-13-19-zia-symbol-from-sacred-emblem-to-commercial-exploitation

Web player: https://podcastaddict.com/episode/65423972
Episode: http://feeds.soundcloud.com/stream/589547388-native-america-calling-03-13-19-zia-symbol-from-sacred-emblem-to-commercial-exploitation.mp3

Ever since a non-Native anthropologist lifted the sacred Zia symbol for the New Mexico state flag contest in the 1920s, it’s appeared on everything from beer labels to album covers to t-shirts. Rarely does anyone using it think to ask Zia Pueblo first. The tribe unsuccessfully tried to copyright the symbol. In recent years, the state of New Mexico has taken steps to formally recognize the symbol’s origin. We’ll explore its history, meaning and subsequent popularity.