SD Free Press: Sitting outside the 10 by 20 foot makeshift tent that has served as my home for the last 34 days on Mauna Kea, I watch the tent poles shudder to the concussion of US Army howitzer cannons firing live shells at their training grounds below. When the wind blows just right, from the south, the rattle of automatic rifle fire reaches the occupation. There’s no denying it: A war rages in Hawai’i. It’s a war on native peoples, a war on women, a war on the land, a war on life itself. The war did not start......
Read Complete Article at Water Conserve: Water Conservation RSS News Feed
Protecting Mauna Kea: This Is a War
Posted by SD Free Press: None Given on June 24th, 2015
You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.