Thursday, March 29, 2007

about free thinking/speaking/acting

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Reply to an email by Halima Christy, host of Sage Health Online, member of the Free Speech Movement.

Halima,

Theoretically, I agree with the Free Speech Movement.

Here's my issue: the infrastructure is not in place to support it.

Our culture DOES NOT encourage THINKING freely, for damn sure.

Education is so bad that less than 30% of kids in Detroit graduate with a High School diploma.

Video games, released by Bill Gates' (Mr. Philanthropy) company give bonus points if the player "kills" prostitutes.

We don't have an informed democracy; lobbiests control the GOP, thanks to Rove et al; GOP spin doctors are calling people faggots and "immoral."

Mega churches get federal funding for social "services" which promote homophobia and sexism, not to mention superstition and doomsday prophesies. AND they own TV channels & radio stations for which -- apparantly -- Liberal faiths have nothing to offer by way of equal time or alternative channels. Example: WHY, after all these years, does not the Unitarian Universalist Association produce a Liberal broadcast???

I was just verbally assaulted by a drunk when I walked to the corner restaurant for a hamburger. I expect such things on the streets. But I don't want it in my house!

I know: just turn off the radio. Right. Some solution.

Our culture is SATURATED with visciousness, terror and hate.

I won't question Street Beat, its personnel or its program content . . .

IF

IF I see a genuine, heart-felt commitment to generating even MORE, local programming in which such issues are addressed in a SERIOUS attempt to HEAL some of this venom! Or, at least, invite an attempt at such dialogue.
And I don't mean some ivory-tower, upper-middle-class academician, pontificating the illusion of "objectivity" on NPR news.

And I DON'T mean some sanctimonious, holier-than-thou, I-know-more-than-you-do, Chicken Little commentator for the Party Line of the Left, either.

When I produced KUNM's segment of the live, national call-in show for the Homelessness Marathon, Queer kids from the streets walked into the studios of KUNM for the first time and "spoke truth to power" to an enthusiastic audience. Street hookers, drug dealers, incest survivors... people who are affected intimately by hate speech FINALLY had a venue to express their joys and sorrows. It's one of the greatest accomplishments of my life.

What have we contributed to the Homelessness Marathon since?

And I'm NOT saying I'm Saint Rogi, avenger of the downtrodden and that all programming on KUNM should be done the way I do it.

It doesn't MATTER to me WHO produced that program; it matters to me that it WAS PRODUCED.

IF we, as KUNM, have a commitment to address these life-and-death issues, to contribute even more to an informed democracy, to spotlighting aspects of our community infrastructure which are disintigrating from neglect and corruption, to encourage the genius of our fellow New Mexicans -- if that, then I have no problem with occasional, problematic lyrics in music programming (and, yes, Don, especially spoken word programming.)

I still assert that it seems healthier, to me, to attract a thousand people who'd donate a dollar each than to pander to ONE donor of a thousand dollars (because of the potential for undo influence, corruption, etc.)

The way to attract those thousand people is to address their issues: the issues that put their daughters in danger as they walk to school, that endanger their sons with violent behavior and emotional disability, that take money from their wallets and food from their tables.

That's my opinion.

Believe me, I'm accustomed to rough language. I can dish it out, too. No problem.

I want safe harbor for every aspect of our community: respect, dignity, education, inspiration.

I know: I'm living in a fool's paradise. It's not going to happen, right?

Well, it won't happen if I don't try to make it happen.

We've got Ann Coulter to teach us how to call people faggots.

I'm just wondering if we need KUNM to do it, too. At least, do we need KUNM to broadcast such things WITHOUT any discussion, dialogue, examination, conversation?

PS, Don: I was using the term, "gangsta cRap," to describe a SUBGENRE of hiphop, not the entire genre. I'm sorry that wasn't clear in my writing, but that's what I mean.

And, Bob, as to the issue of self defense, I do defend myself. But some people can't. Those people still deserve the right to walk to the store in peace. That's all I'm saying.

Monday, March 26, 2007

"gangsta" cRap on KUNM

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My problem with "gangsta" cRap music (institutionalized exploitation by white, recording executives who only see the bottom line and RESTRICT diversity of opinion/expression in the hiphop genre) is that it CONSCIOUSLY encourages oppression, racism, sexism, Black-on-Black violence, internalized racism & self-hatred (drug use, alcoholism, measuring success by "bling" intead of moral integrity, REFUSAL of fatherhood, unsafe sex, etc.)

Shakespeare utilized violence for artistic effect, for social commentary as WELL as for entertainment. I believe the same could actually be argued for "Mack the Knife," which was one of my favorite, childhood songs, too, by the way. I was a strange child.

The Bible is part historical record, part allegory, part morality apologia and part Entertainment Tonight (in my opinion, informed by several years' study for the ministry.)

Sure, there are lots of socially-unconscious examples of icky subjects in art. Picasso exploited the hell out of women. Most commercial, motion pictures still ARE racist and sexist.

In the "gangsta" cRap industry, people are making CONSCIOUS decisions to promote the WORST forms of oppression, of the very people they've pimped out to record it!

It is institutionalized hate speech. It is designed to produce contempt, anger, hatred (all masquerading for fear, I believe) between people.

My neighbor just pulled up. He blasted his sound system. Racial and gender epithets filled our flower-dotted street. Threats of the most hideous tortures and abuses bounced off our neatly-painted walls.

A fetid, murky fog of hell settled over our street. Neighbors looked at each other in our yards with such helpless grief. We don't want to hear it. We don't want our kids to hear it. It's toxic.

I can't WAIT 'til that pack of yahoos gets evicted!

There's a difference between art and propoganda and hate speech. Yes, they often lop over onto each other.
But this is BRANDED hate speech. It depends on racism, homophobia, mysogyny, violence and internalized versions of the above to prosper.

I can't justify giving it more air time than it already gets.

Subscribing to KUNM is a lot like paying taxes. Oh, it's more voluntary, sure. But I can't earmark that my taxes not pay for nukes and health clinics that won't discuss birth control and "faith-" based Queer bashing in homeless shelters. And I can't tell the Development or Programming Departments, "hey, can my money go to generating original Queer and feminist programming, and not hate speech?"

I know we're in the middle of a pledge drive, and these are dangerous words. I've already alienated KUNM management a lot with my raggedy, off-the-wall self.

But I live on less than seven hundred dollars a month. And I gotta wonder, am I supporting something that supports me if I subscribe? I mean, am I REALLY? 'cuz hundreds of thousands of dollars to NPR and Performance Today could SURE buy a LOT of alternative news (like WINGS, the international women's news broadcast) and could sure fund a LOT of locally-produced programming that's part of the solution, not part of the problem.

I'm just asking.

Friday, March 23, 2007

It's Friday night

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. . . and people are tired.

Let's not get too cranky about the whole Street Beat thing, ok? We're all trying to do good radio. It's just that we don't agree on what that means. Let's not spill each others' blood, in an attempt to make our points. I guess I'm to blame, too, since mine was the first, very assertive opinion. I'm sticking to it, by the way.

I understand the value of free speech, believe me. I would have been active as a volunteer several years earlier, if not for the General Orientation I experienced under a different Volunteer Coordinator.

When discussing the concepts of obscenity and indecency (our policies have modified since then, btw), I became concerned as to the viability of discussions of human sexuality. Specifically, I was concerned that any programming about safe sex for women -- especially Lesbians -- couldn't be broadcast, except during Safe Harbor hours. How does one discribe the placement of a dental dam on female genitalia, the use of female condoms, etc., without mention specific body parts? How could one broadcast a story -- either during regular news broadcasts or during Women's Focus -- without getting the FCC on our backs?

My concerns were met with silence by the Coordinator and by sniggers by the potential volunteers assembled. I stopped attending Orientations and didn't volunteer at the station until several years later. It was an uncomfortable experience.

We need more, not less, conversations among ourselves as to our motivations, visions, etc. for KUNM and its programming.

Nobody's suggesting micromanaging programmers, or the Program Director, for that matter.

See, for me, this isn't an intellectual exercise in philosophy. I've attended too many memorials, made too many hospital visits, cried over too many news stories of hate crimes to be "objective" on these issues.
Frankly, I question the very concept of "objectivity," as portrayed by the Academy. I have a sneaking suspicion this so-called, "objectivity" IS an opinion, even though it's concidered bad form to admit it.

I don't want my speech curtailed, for sure. I always think I'm right. And I want others to hear my opinions, and those of people I respect.

'course, I'd say that, for the most part, I'm pretty responsible about my speech. I realize it's not just a right; it's a responsibility.

I hate being called epithets. I hate hearing others called epithets. I SERIOUSLY believe it leads to physical violence and discrimination.

I also think a bunch of white business dudes are pimpin' angry Black men who can rhyme to sell CDs to angry white men who can't. I don't wish to encourage that dynamic. Yes, I, too, saw that PBS special on hypermasculinity and latent homoeroticism in cRap music.

I wish we could have this discussion on air. I wish we could have it on Street Beat.

Anyway, this email's too long.

We all have a commitment to KUNM; we just have different approaches. Frankly, I think it's good for the station & its programming that we DON't agree on the approaches, but all approach.

I'm trying my damnedest to appreciate the fact that people with whom I SERIOUSLY disagree are just as committed -- probably more so -- as I am to the station.

Have a good weekend, everybody.

Thanks for caring SO MUCH about KUNM.

Tuesday, March 20, 2007

KUNM Show Promotes Discrimination

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A volunteer at KUNM posted an email to the volunteers' ideas list, with a link to a letter in the UNM "Daily Lobo"

KUNM Show Promotes Discrimination
http://media.www.dailylobo.com/media/storage/paper344/news/2007/03/19/Opinion/LateNight.Kunm.Show.Promotes.Discrimination-2780196.shtml


The Program Director replied with some limp arguments about how the program in question, "Street Beat," is broadcasting programming that wouldn't be heard anywhere else.

Here's my reply:

I have a great idea!

Let's get some students, volunteers and community members with an interest in art for a project!

Let's send them out with dump trucks and shovels to collect feces from male bovine.

We'll have them bring it up to the 3rd floor lobby in wheelbarrows and smear it all around the lobby, leaving big piles for people to walk through!

It'll be an art installation.

True, people will slip and fall in it. It'll cause diseases. Lots of people will suffer, because the smell will drift all around the community. It'll affect progamming, staff efficiency and the number of people willing to either volunteer at, or contribute to, the station. We'll have a pretty bad reputation, all over the state. It'll be dangerous and counter-productive.

But we'll say it's art and freedom of speech, even though everybody else calls it a steaming pile of bullshit.

If Nazis broadcast that crap, someone would complain to the FCC and we'd lose our license. That's in addition to the protesters outside.

We're just lucky so few people even listen to a program that's produced by people who don't even interface with the KUNM community, staff, listeners or other volunteers.

People are DYING from hate speech. We need the air time for REAL programming.

As to outreach and inclusiveness, we need to look to our own house. When a former Volunteer representative to the radio board can sit in a General Meeting and blithely question the capabilities of a staff member, simply because that person has no bachelors degree, without any interest in that person's life story, AND that person is Black, AND it is said in the presence of another staff member who is struggling to complete said degree, how can we not say we've alienated the hell out of the community we're supposed to be serving? Prejudging people, based on tickets, economic privilege, ranks and credit ratings is just as oppressive as racism, sexism and homophobia. Nobody -- including me -- challenged that person in that General Meeting. It has been a source of constant shame and frustration for me, ever since.

I can't worry about the consequences. The State of New Mexico, PARTICULARLY Gay men in rural areas, NEED a voice, not excuses.

Friday, February 09, 2007

NPR/PBS funding

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George W. Bush is trying--yet again--to slash funding for NPR and PBS.
This week, Bush proposed a new budget with devastating cuts to public
broadcasting [1]. "Sesame Street" and other ad-free kids' shows are under
the knife. So is the independent journalism our country needs.

Enough is enough. We've fought this fight before and won--but we can't
afford the risk anymore. With the new Congress, we can make sure this
never happens again. We need Congress to insulate NPR and PBS from the
political winds.

We can make it happen if enough of us sign this petition: "Congress must
save NPR and PBS once and for all. Congress should guarantee permanent
funding and independence from partisan meddling." Clicking here will add
your name to the petition:

http://civ.moveon.org/publicbroadcasting/o.pl?id=9851-3948011-VGljuSqZQ6yWqFJDA.vKvw&t=2

After you sign, please forward this email to your friends, family, and
co-workers to keep this campaign going. We'll deliver the petition to
members of Congress as they consider Bush's budget--offering a public
counterpoint to this dangerous attack.

Congress can protect NPR and PBS from future cuts. The long-term solution
to save public radio and TV is to:

* fully restore this year's funding
* guarantee a permanent funding stream free from political pressure
* reform how the money is spent and keep partisan appointees from
pushing a political bias

Bush's budget would cut federal funds for public broadcasting by nearly
25% [1]. According to PBS, the cuts "could mean the end of our ability to
support some of the most treasured educational children's series" like
"Sesame Street," "Reading Rainbow," and "Arthur." [2]

As telecommunications chair Rep. Ed Markey said, "In a 24-7 television
world with content often inappropriate for young children, the public
broadcasting system represents an oasis of quality, child-oriented
educational programming. We owe America's children and their parents this
free, over-the-air resource." [1]

The cuts could also decimate one of the last remaining sources of watchdog
reporting on TV--continuing the partisan war on journalism led by the
ex-chair of public broadcasting, Ken Tomlinson [3]. More people trust
public broadcasting than any corporate news media [4]. President Bush
would rather undermine our free press than face reporters who are asking
tough questions.

Let's put an end to the constant threats to NPR and PBS. Let's ask
Congress to guarantee funding and stop partisan meddling. Clicking here
will add your name to the petition:

http://civ.moveon.org/publicbroadcasting/o.pl?id=9851-3948011-VGljuSqZQ6yWqFJDA.vKvw&t=3

Thank you for all you do.

--Noah, Marika, Eli, Adam G. and the MoveOn.org Civic Action Team
Thursday, February 8th, 2007

P.S. Our friends at Free Press have more on how to save NPR and PBS once
and for all:

http://www.freepress.net/publicbroadcasting/=policy

Sources:
1. "Bush Proposes Steep Cut to PBS Funding," TV Week, February 5, 2007
http://www.tvweek.com/news.cms?newsId=11508

2. PBS' Ready to Learn program (funds "Sesame Street" and other children's
shows)
http://www.pbs.org/readytolearn/

3. "Tomlinson Slinks Away," MediaCitizen, November 3, 2005
http://www.moveon.org/r?r=2347&id=9851-3948011-VGljuSqZQ6yWqFJDA.vKvw&t=4

4. "2005 'Open to the Public' Objectivity and Balance Report," Corporation
for Public Broadcasting, January 31, 2006
http://www.cpb.org/aboutcpb/goals/objectivity/

Friday, February 02, 2007

Lots of winter projects

My g/f & I are planning a 10-day trip, traveling the Santa Fe Trail from
here in Albuquerque all the way to Kansas City and back. We're shooting
video for an Independent Study project of hers at college. It'll be a
video documentary, based on a radio play she produced several years ago.

So, the truck needs cleaning out; bedding and cooking utensils need
washing; goats & chickens need extra feed (so do cats). Clothes need
packing; cameras need batteries, film, etc.

It's a lot of work. As usual, she can't help, because she works full
time and has other classes, too.

It's her last semester. She'll graduate, with honors, in May. Maybe then
I can fall apart! I've never known her without tremendous pressure on
her.

Besides all that, Dudette at http://net4tv.com Games has offered me a
job, writing about WebTV stuff for her users. I'll have a blog; it'll
have a forum, so readers can reply, etc. I'm also helping her set up
online greeting cards and email signatures.

So, I've been awful busy!

BTW: I'll be gone from the 9th through the 19th of February. We're
taking the WebTV and a small TV set with us. We'll periodically stay in
hotels. That way, we can post still photos online, check email, etc.
I'll try to post in my newsgroup and blogs then, but who knows?

Mostly, we'll be sleeping in the truck, on an air mattress, in February.
We go through Colorado, Oklahoma, Kansas, Missouri and, of course, New
Mexico. Nothing like a camping trip, in the DEAD OF WINTER! brrr.

Monday, January 29, 2007

Help Journalist Fight Army Subpoena

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Help Journalist Fight Army Subpoena

Hi all:

As you may know, I've been subpoenaed by the Army totestify about an interview I did with 1st Lt. EhrenWatada, the first officer to publicly refuse to deployto Iraq.

I have taken the position that it's not a journalist'sjob to participate in the government prosecution ofpersonal, political speech, and that the subpoenaserode the barrier between press and government, chillspeech, stifle debate and subvert the notion of apress free of government meddling.

I've gotten really amazing and diverse support: fromthe National Press Club issuing a release last weekdenouncing the subpoenas, to antiflag posting amessage on their blog doing the same! I'm asking thatyou all do two things, if you are willing to spend afew quick minutes lending a hand.

First, go to the web site http://www.defendthepress.org/ to send a letter to theArmy and the Pentagon asking that they drop thesubpoenas of journalists in the Lt. Watadacourt-martial. Also, you can sign onto the journalistopen letter calling on the Army to "back off." :)

Second, please send an announcement/alert to your ownfriends, colleagues, lists and networks. I would loveto be be able to deliver thousands of emails andletters to the Army by the end of the week, and Ireally need help getting that accomplished! I'vedrafted up a sample alert below. Feel free to edit atwill and send out to whomever you'd like!

Also, free free to call or email off list if you haveany thoughts or questions.Thanks so much for your help with this!

Sarah Olson
http://www.freepresswg.org/
http://www.defendthepress.org/

Thursday, January 18, 2007

plantation mentality

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Date:Tue, 16 Jan 2007 15:55:46 -0800From:"Rogi Riverstone"Subject:Re: [KUNMIDEAS-L] Fwd: plantation MentalityI just lost my free speech to blog. Google boughtBlogger. Now, I can't access it from my WebTV. I mustuse a computer. I'm privileged; most webtv users don'town and can't afford a computer. Their blogging issilenced.See: http://msntv.blogspot.com/Rogi Riverstonehttp://rriverstone.comDate:Tue, 16 Jan 2007 16:42:37 -0800From:"megan kamerick"Subject:Re: [KUNMIDEAS-L] transcript of moyers speechit's herehttp://www.commondreams.org/views03/1112-10.htmMegan--- Halima Christy wrote:>> tried to send this earlier-- hope you are tuned> in to this->> --- the forwarded message follows ---> > From: "Halima Christy" > Subject: plantation Mentality> Date: Tue, 16 Jan 2007 11:46:44 -0700>> hi-> i just heard a very unusual media speech- on> "Democracy> Now"> (on TV- 10am Ch27 in Abq) by BILL MOYERS at the> Media> Conference in Memphis-->> Moyers passionately spoke- fire in his belly!--> about> --'elite plunder' of the very rich across the boards> in US> --- in everything, including radio, tv , cable,> and they are going after internet more than we> dreamed...> -- conspiracy of the rich> --"The American Dream vs The Gospel of wealth" (a> book)> --Censorship of Knowledge in the Media for last 50> years> -- Oligarchy's 'view from the top' in all media, and> the> effect it has repressing democracy> --Media language concealing reality> -- time to challenge the "Plantation mentality' we> are all> being subjected to by Washington & the corp> media> -- great book called "Digital Destiny"- must read> for> media lovers>> It seems like Moyers really did listen to Jos> Campbell and> to> many of the healers in both of his historic series> in the> 80's> while so many others were opting into the yuppie> dream....> Moyers> talks about salvaging freedom of the press with> digital-> even tho> the corp plundering has started--> R Murdoch bought 'myspace', and Google already> bought> Utube, etc, etc-->> Moyers notes that with digital, 'everyman' has a> pen, is a> Tom> Paine, and corp cannot be the only storywriters...>> Hoping that we all understand the nefarious> ramifications> of> the 'plantation mentality', Moyers said maybe the> civil> rights> movement in media starts when we stand up from our> obsequious> labors and realize " this ain't the product of> intelligent> design">> He spoke of the original goals for radio- "classroom> for> the Air",> and how they were exchanged for commercial> sponsorship> goals in the> 40's and 50's....>> THIS is a GREAT speech, not to be missed by anyone> who> values> Free Speech in any form. As one who worked in the> FSM-> the Free Speech Movement> meetings started in the house next to mine on> Carleton> Street,> and i have never fully recovered from that blast of> intelligence-> listening to Mario Savio, (whom i sometimes think> of as> the> 'last best orator), and the others, being present at>> Sproul Hall Plaza> from the first FSM demonstration on== with all the> police> tear gas> attacks and arrests, etc etc--> i don't get to hear GREAT SPEECHES nearly enough--> most> politicians> and media people seem possessed with serious early> Alzheimer's..> (except for public media, bien sur),> and the ONLY national TV show (are there others?)> worth> attention> seems to be DEMOCRACY NOW-- which helps me> to believe that free speech/democracy is just> temporarily> comatose..>> THIS Bill Moyers speech is GOOD FOR THE INTELLIGENT> HEART....>> TREAT YOURSELF to some sane and brilliant thinking-->> listen today> at 4 pm on www.KUNM.org (Albq time) if you are out> of the> area,> to Bill Moyers on "Will the media foster democracy> or> quench it?">> Health democracy for all,>> Halima

Thursday, October 19, 2006

On Behalf of Journalism: A Manifesto for Change

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It's nice to know someone besides FAIR and Bill Moyers are keeping an eye on the "historical influences of 'Entertainment Tonight'" (quote from "Broadcast News") and corporate takeover of media.

This is from theAnnenberg Public Policy Center.

Entire documment here: http://www.annenbergpublicpolicycenter.org/Overholser/20061011_JournStudy.pdf

Excerpt:

Propositions
In June 2005, a group of journalists, scholars and others concerned about the challenges confronting
American journalism gathered at the Annenberg Public Policy Center of the University of Pennsylvania.
The nine propositions below served as starting points for their discussion.

• A greater role for nonprofits – organizations such as the Center for Public Integrity, the St. Petersburg Times
and National Public Radio, along with foundation support – could help lift all media.

• Citizens of a democracy have a responsibility to be informed. Media literacy courses, stronger civics
education and other tools can create the environment of vigorous debate in which the press can thrive.
• Our society would be better served if journalists could make their voices heard more effectively –
in response to freedom of information challenges, reporters threatened with jailing, concerted
efforts at misrepresentation of the press, and so forth.

• The media can significantly strengthen their own position by doing a better job of holding themselves
accountable and making their work transparent.

• The essential role of a free and responsible press must be made a primary concern of the public.
Only they can protect and sustain it. The discussion must be brought to public attention.

• More responsible corporate governance among media companies is essential if the costly work of
original journalism is to be sustained.

• In this period of challenge and change, journalists would profit by seeking a clearer common understanding
of ethics and good practices, and a deliberate recommitment to journalism’s public-service role.

• New forms of media, the engagement of a richer array of people in producing media, and new ways of
using media are transforming the landscape. An understanding of these changes, their potential
and the challenges they pose, is essential to addressing the problems and opportunities confronting
journalism.

• The government role in protecting, regulating, and supporting a free and responsible press demands
thoughtful consideration and public discussion.

Tuesday, July 04, 2006

Wounded Warriors on FSRN

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"Wounded Warriors: Native American Veterans with PSTD" is being carried now on FSRN.org. They bought it from me for a 4th of July special.

I have to tell you, hearing someone from KPFA in Berkley, CA announcing my humble offering was a thrilling and humbling experience for me.

Listen to it here: http://www.fsrn.org/news/20060704_news.html.

Thursday, May 25, 2006

Wounded Warriors: Native American Veterans with PTSD

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Wounded Warriors: Native American Veterans with PTSD

Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, PTSD, affects thousands in the USA. Many of those impacted by PTSD are military Veterans. A disproportionate number of those Veterans are Native American. US Department of Veterans Affairs and US Census figures list approximately one hundred, sixty thousand living Veterans of Native identity. This means a full ten percent of all living Native Americans are Veterans. Comparisons to the general population show that nearly three times as many Natives served in the armed forces as non-Natives, per capita.

In this documentary, producer Rogi Riverstone spoke with three men whose lives are affected by PTSD.

Dave Fero, Ph.D. is the Mental Health and Behavioral Sciences Service Line Manager at the Northern Arizona VA Healthcare System, Prescott, Arizona

Michael Villanueva, Ph.D. conducts research on PTSD. His projects have collected data on both Hopi and Zuni veterans.

Bruce King is a Viet Nam veteran, an artist and a member of the Oneida Nation, living in Santa Fe, New Mexico.

In Part One,
we will examine the challenges faced by Native American Veterans with PTSD, and those who care for them. Airs Sunday, May 28 at 12:30pm on Singing Wire, KUNM 89.9fm http://kunm.org

In Part Two,
we will hear the experiences of Native American Veterans who seek healing from PTSD. Airs Sunday, June 4 at 12:30pm on Singing Wire, KUNM 89.9fm http://kunm.org

Tuesday, May 16, 2006

I'd like to thank the little people

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... and the trolls, elves, sprites and fairies, too.

Subject: Independent producer award
Date: Tue, 16 May 2006 16:52:44 -0600

Congratulations! Your independent producer application has been
approved.

The award amount is $900, plus expenses up to $277 (don't ask me how we
came
up with that figure)

Please write back to me to confirm that you accept the award; and also
confirm what your production deadline is.

Keep in mind that if you have trouble meeting your deadline, you can
apply
for one extension of up to 3 months.

Thanks,

Marcos Martinez
Program Director, KUNM-FM
MSC06 3520
University of New Mexico
Albuquerque, NM 87131-0001

Tuesday, April 18, 2006

Peace Talks, Gandhi

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I should've been posting these every month! Here's this month's Peace Talks transcript. I do them for Paul Ingles. His link is at the bottom of this page.

04-06

DEAR: Gandhi practiced and engaged the theory of peace and justice as the world had never seen before. Dr. King later said shocking things about Gandhi: that Jesus showed the idea, but Gandhi gave us the method. He said that Gandhi unpacked the life of Jesus more than anybody in history.

BOSS: Essentially, what he was doing was seeking the spiritual roots of political struggle.

DEAR: Which King said no one had ever done before. That is why Gandhi broke new ground, in so many ways. That is probably his greatest contribution. Everybody said he was a spiritual person, practicing politics. He said he was just a regular politician, trying to be a saint. In any case, he was combining the two. He was seeking God, the God of peace and justice. He concluded that he could not live in the Himalayas. He had to be with the poorest of the poor. He had to confront evil and injustice and resist war. He had to practice perfect nonviolence and love and what he called pitting his entire soul against evil, in pursuit of the truth.

Wow! We do not have anybody on a scale like that today, working for political change, on behalf of all people, but doing it from an interfaith perspective, doing it as a deep contemplative. He spent two or three hours a day in prayer for fifty years, making the connections that the God of peace is in this movement for justice. That is the way he talked. It was a great, great contribution to the world.

BOSS: He was a big influence on Martin Luther King, who came upon his life and his teachings. Apparently, King, prior to reading Gandhi, understood the ethics of Jesus as being effective only in individual relationships. He did not see it in terms of a much larger picture, in terms of social reform.

DEAR: Right. That is the way most Christians in the United States still understand Jesus, unfortunately. That’s why Mahatma Gandhi and Dr. King are critically important – to everybody, but especially to Christians –because Gandhi is saying, “if you want to follow Jesus, you have to be engaged in the world.” You have to resist war and injustice. Otherwise, you are certainly not following the nonviolent Jesus and you are not seeking God’s reign of peace. It is very political language that is, by and large, still rejected. Gandhi said that Jesus was the most active person of nonviolence in the history of the world. The only people on the planet who do not know that Jesus was nonviolent are Christians. King was very inspired by that. My friends and I are, too to say that, “Well, if you’re going to be a Christian, you’ve got to practice nonviolence.” Gandhi shows us how to do that.

___________________________________________
BOSS: I know you have many memories of your grandfather. Can you start by sharing with us one that is particularly vivid for you?

Gandhi: I think the most vivid memory I have of living, as a young boy, with him was his lesson in anger management. I was a very angry, young man when I was growing up in South Africa. I became a victim of prejudices, was beaten up by whites, and then by Blacks, because both did not like the color of my skin. It filled me with a lot of rage. I wanted, “eye-for-an-eye” justice. That is when my parents took me to him in India. I had the opportunity to live with Grandfather.

The first lesson he taught me was to understand that anger, and being able to channel that anger into positive action. He said that anger is like electricity. It is just as useful and just as powerful, if we use it intelligently. It can be just as deadly and destructive, if we abuse it. Just as we channel electricity, bring it into our lives and use it for the good of Humanity, we must learn to channel anger in the same way. We can use that energy for the good of Humanity, rather than abuse it. He taught me how to channel anger, how to write an anger journal – with the intention of finding a solution. I did this for many years. It helped me considerably in understanding and channeling the energy into positive action.

BOSS: How old were you, when you got to live with him?

GANDHI: I was twelve, when I went to him and I lived there for about eighteen months.

BOSS: I’ve been told the story – I haven’t heard you tell it, and I’m sure you’ve told it many times – about you, doing your lessons and tossing the pencil away. Could you share that with listeners?

GANDHI: Yes! I think that story really brought to me the profundity of his philosophy of nonviolence. Until then, I had a limited understanding of nonviolence – as we all have, today – and that is “nonviolence” being the opposite of “violence.” Our concept of violence is the physical use of violence: fighting, killing, murders, rapes and all that.

This incident happened when I was coming back from school. I had a little pencil in my hand and I threw that pencil away because I thought it was too small for me to use. That evening, when I asked him for a new pencil, instead of giving me one, he subjected me to a lot of questions. He wanted to know how the pencil became small. Where did I throw it away: that sort of thing. I could not understand why he was making such a fuss over a little pencil – until he told me to go out and look for it.

I said, “You must be joking! You don’t expect me to look for a little pencil in the dark!”

He said, “Oh, yes, I do. Here is a flashlight. Take this and go out. Look for the pencil.”

I must have spent about two hours, searching for it.

When I finally found it and brought it to him, he said, “Now, I want you to sit here and learn two, very important lessons. The first lesson is that – even in the making of a simple thing like a pencil – we use a lot of the world’s natural resources. When we throw them away, we are throwing away the world’s natural resources. That is violence against Nature. The second lesson is that, in an affluent society, we can afford to buy all these things in bulk. We over consume the resources of the world. Because we over consume them, we are depriving people elsewhere of these resources and they have to live in poverty. That is violence against Humanity.”

That was the first time I realized that all these little things that we do, every day, consciously and unconsciously, are all acts of violence: either violence against Nature, or violence against other human beings.

Then, to drive home this message, he made me draw a family tree of violence -- on the same principles as a genealogical tree -- with Violence as the grandparent with two off springs: Physical Violence and Passive Violence. Every day, before I went to bed, I had to examine everything that happened during the day, analyze it and put it in its appropriate places on that tree. If it were the kind of violence where physical force was used, it would go under Physical Violence. If it was the kind of violence where no force is used, and yet I have been able to hurt people, then it would go under Passive Violence. When I began to do this, within a few months I filled up a whole wall in my room with acts of passive violence. That is when I realized how much passive violence we commit.

Then, Grandfather explained to me the connection between the two.

He said, “We commit acts of passive violence all the time, every day, consciously and unconsciously. That generates anger in the victim. The victim, then, resorts to physical violence to get justice.”

Passive violence fuels the fires of physical violence. So, logically, if we want to put out the fire of physical violence, we have to cut off the fuel supply. Since the fuel supply comes from each one of us, we have to become the change we wish to see in the world.

BOSS: That is rather profound, for a young boy, isn’t it?

GANDHI: It is! I just regret the fact that I was not old enough to understand, at that time, how profound this lesson was. It took me many years to understand it, as I grew up.

___________________________________________
BOSS: Can you give us a couple of examples of how we can apply Gandhi’s teachings to our everyday lives?

DEAR: If you will look at his life, you will see that he was up at four in the morning, for one hour of silent prayer with his friends, reading from all the different scriptures. He did it again at 5:00pm – every day, for forty or fifty years. He would say we have to be contemplatives of nonviolence: people of prayer, really going deep into the spiritual depths of peace, justice and nonviolence. Gandhi’s main teaching is about nonviolence. To be human, to be a spiritual person, is to be a person of nonviolence. All of us, wherever we are, can step back for a moment and think, “How do I practice nonviolence?” or, “Where am I being violent?” Those are very important, spiritual questions. I think we live in a culture of violence. It is totally the norm now. Gandhi was calling us to nonviolence as a way of life. You look within and you see, “I could be more nonviolent, to myself, in this area of my life,” and try to do that. You can look at your family: “Am I being perfectly nonviolent to my spouse, my children, my parents?” You try to be more and more nonviolent: never to hit another person or hurt another person, ever again – to practice nonviolent love toward those around you. Wind that vision to your local community, to your job, to your faith community, to be nonviolent toward everybody there. Really be conscious that you are on a journey of nonviolence: that means to reflect on your life and your behavior. Then, you come to the conclusion – like Gandhi – that nonviolence is not passivity. It does not mean just sitting back and doing nothing. If the world really is a world of war and total violence, then nonviolence is engaged love and truth. As you reach out with nonviolence to everyone around you, get involved with nonviolent peace and justice groups around you and take a stand – perhaps on one issue. No one can do everything, but everybody has to do something. Get involved in one cause to try to disarm the world in one way.

BOSS: Do you believe that Gandhi’s teachings can be effective in some of the world’s conflicted areas? In other words: the relevance of Gandhi for our world, right now?

DEAR: I believe that nonviolence is the only effective solution. In fact, violence has failed. It does not work. War does not work. Violence, in response to violence, only leads to further violence.

Gandhi said, “An eye for an eye makes the whole world blind.”

Wars cannot bring peace; they only sow the seeds for future wars. Certainly, wars cannot stop terrorism, because war is terrorism. Violence is just a never-ending, downward spiral. Nonviolence breaks it, stops it. The problem is that it is rarely tried, in a public way, as Gandhi or Dr. King or South Africa showed. But it is happening. We need to organize it more, as a methodology.

What I am saying is, I think nonviolence always works.

Peace Talks, Gandhi

You are reading http://rriverstoneradio.blogspot.com/

I should've been posting these every month! Here's this month's Peace Talks transcript. I do them for Paul Ingles. His link is at the bottom of this page.

04-06

DEAR: Gandhi practiced and engaged the theory of peace and justice as the world had never seen before. Dr. King later said shocking things about Gandhi: that Jesus showed the idea, but Gandhi gave us the method. He said that Gandhi unpacked the life of Jesus more than anybody in history.

BOSS: Essentially, what he was doing was seeking the spiritual roots of political struggle.

DEAR: Which King said no one had ever done before. That is why Gandhi broke new ground, in so many ways. That is probably his greatest contribution. Everybody said he was a spiritual person, practicing politics. He said he was just a regular politician, trying to be a saint. In any case, he was combining the two. He was seeking God, the God of peace and justice. He concluded that he could not live in the Himalayas. He had to be with the poorest of the poor. He had to confront evil and injustice and resist war. He had to practice perfect nonviolence and love and what he called pitting his entire soul against evil, in pursuit of the truth.

Wow! We do not have anybody on a scale like that today, working for political change, on behalf of all people, but doing it from an interfaith perspective, doing it as a deep contemplative. He spent two or three hours a day in prayer for fifty years, making the connections that the God of peace is in this movement for justice. That is the way he talked. It was a great, great contribution to the world.

BOSS: He was a big influence on Martin Luther King, who came upon his life and his teachings. Apparently, King, prior to reading Gandhi, understood the ethics of Jesus as being effective only in individual relationships. He did not see it in terms of a much larger picture, in terms of social reform.

DEAR: Right. That is the way most Christians in the United States still understand Jesus, unfortunately. That’s why Mahatma Gandhi and Dr. King are critically important – to everybody, but especially to Christians –because Gandhi is saying, “if you want to follow Jesus, you have to be engaged in the world.” You have to resist war and injustice. Otherwise, you are certainly not following the nonviolent Jesus and you are not seeking God’s reign of peace. It is very political language that is, by and large, still rejected. Gandhi said that Jesus was the most active person of nonviolence in the history of the world. The only people on the planet who do not know that Jesus was nonviolent are Christians. King was very inspired by that. My friends and I are, too to say that, “Well, if you’re going to be a Christian, you’ve got to practice nonviolence.” Gandhi shows us how to do that.

___________________________________________
BOSS: I know you have many memories of your grandfather. Can you start by sharing with us one that is particularly vivid for you?

Gandhi: I think the most vivid memory I have of living, as a young boy, with him was his lesson in anger management. I was a very angry, young man when I was growing up in South Africa. I became a victim of prejudices, was beaten up by whites, and then by Blacks, because both did not like the color of my skin. It filled me with a lot of rage. I wanted, “eye-for-an-eye” justice. That is when my parents took me to him in India. I had the opportunity to live with Grandfather.

The first lesson he taught me was to understand that anger, and being able to channel that anger into positive action. He said that anger is like electricity. It is just as useful and just as powerful, if we use it intelligently. It can be just as deadly and destructive, if we abuse it. Just as we channel electricity, bring it into our lives and use it for the good of Humanity, we must learn to channel anger in the same way. We can use that energy for the good of Humanity, rather than abuse it. He taught me how to channel anger, how to write an anger journal – with the intention of finding a solution. I did this for many years. It helped me considerably in understanding and channeling the energy into positive action.

BOSS: How old were you, when you got to live with him?

GANDHI: I was twelve, when I went to him and I lived there for about eighteen months.

BOSS: I’ve been told the story – I haven’t heard you tell it, and I’m sure you’ve told it many times – about you, doing your lessons and tossing the pencil away. Could you share that with listeners?

GANDHI: Yes! I think that story really brought to me the profundity of his philosophy of nonviolence. Until then, I had a limited understanding of nonviolence – as we all have, today – and that is “nonviolence” being the opposite of “violence.” Our concept of violence is the physical use of violence: fighting, killing, murders, rapes and all that.

This incident happened when I was coming back from school. I had a little pencil in my hand and I threw that pencil away because I thought it was too small for me to use. That evening, when I asked him for a new pencil, instead of giving me one, he subjected me to a lot of questions. He wanted to know how the pencil became small. Where did I throw it away: that sort of thing. I could not understand why he was making such a fuss over a little pencil – until he told me to go out and look for it.

I said, “You must be joking! You don’t expect me to look for a little pencil in the dark!”

He said, “Oh, yes, I do. Here is a flashlight. Take this and go out. Look for the pencil.”

I must have spent about two hours, searching for it.

When I finally found it and brought it to him, he said, “Now, I want you to sit here and learn two, very important lessons. The first lesson is that – even in the making of a simple thing like a pencil – we use a lot of the world’s natural resources. When we throw them away, we are throwing away the world’s natural resources. That is violence against Nature. The second lesson is that, in an affluent society, we can afford to buy all these things in bulk. We over consume the resources of the world. Because we over consume them, we are depriving people elsewhere of these resources and they have to live in poverty. That is violence against Humanity.”

That was the first time I realized that all these little things that we do, every day, consciously and unconsciously, are all acts of violence: either violence against Nature, or violence against other human beings.

Then, to drive home this message, he made me draw a family tree of violence -- on the same principles as a genealogical tree -- with Violence as the grandparent with two off springs: Physical Violence and Passive Violence. Every day, before I went to bed, I had to examine everything that happened during the day, analyze it and put it in its appropriate places on that tree. If it were the kind of violence where physical force was used, it would go under Physical Violence. If it was the kind of violence where no force is used, and yet I have been able to hurt people, then it would go under Passive Violence. When I began to do this, within a few months I filled up a whole wall in my room with acts of passive violence. That is when I realized how much passive violence we commit.

Then, Grandfather explained to me the connection between the two.

He said, “We commit acts of passive violence all the time, every day, consciously and unconsciously. That generates anger in the victim. The victim, then, resorts to physical violence to get justice.”

Passive violence fuels the fires of physical violence. So, logically, if we want to put out the fire of physical violence, we have to cut off the fuel supply. Since the fuel supply comes from each one of us, we have to become the change we wish to see in the world.

BOSS: That is rather profound, for a young boy, isn’t it?

GANDHI: It is! I just regret the fact that I was not old enough to understand, at that time, how profound this lesson was. It took me many years to understand it, as I grew up.

___________________________________________
BOSS: Can you give us a couple of examples of how we can apply Gandhi’s teachings to our everyday lives?

DEAR: If you will look at his life, you will see that he was up at four in the morning, for one hour of silent prayer with his friends, reading from all the different scriptures. He did it again at 5:00pm – every day, for forty or fifty years. He would say we have to be contemplatives of nonviolence: people of prayer, really going deep into the spiritual depths of peace, justice and nonviolence. Gandhi’s main teaching is about nonviolence. To be human, to be a spiritual person, is to be a person of nonviolence. All of us, wherever we are, can step back for a moment and think, “How do I practice nonviolence?” or, “Where am I being violent?” Those are very important, spiritual questions. I think we live in a culture of violence. It is totally the norm now. Gandhi was calling us to nonviolence as a way of life. You look within and you see, “I could be more nonviolent, to myself, in this area of my life,” and try to do that. You can look at your family: “Am I being perfectly nonviolent to my spouse, my children, my parents?” You try to be more and more nonviolent: never to hit another person or hurt another person, ever again – to practice nonviolent love toward those around you. Wind that vision to your local community, to your job, to your faith community, to be nonviolent toward everybody there. Really be conscious that you are on a journey of nonviolence: that means to reflect on your life and your behavior. Then, you come to the conclusion – like Gandhi – that nonviolence is not passivity. It does not mean just sitting back and doing nothing. If the world really is a world of war and total violence, then nonviolence is engaged love and truth. As you reach out with nonviolence to everyone around you, get involved with nonviolent peace and justice groups around you and take a stand – perhaps on one issue. No one can do everything, but everybody has to do something. Get involved in one cause to try to disarm the world in one way.

BOSS: Do you believe that Gandhi’s teachings can be effective in some of the world’s conflicted areas? In other words: the relevance of Gandhi for our world, right now?

DEAR: I believe that nonviolence is the only effective solution. In fact, violence has failed. It does not work. War does not work. Violence, in response to violence, only leads to further violence.

Gandhi said, “An eye for an eye makes the whole world blind.”

Wars cannot bring peace; they only sow the seeds for future wars. Certainly, wars cannot stop terrorism, because war is terrorism. Violence is just a never-ending, downward spiral. Nonviolence breaks it, stops it. The problem is that it is rarely tried, in a public way, as Gandhi or Dr. King or South Africa showed. But it is happening. We need to organize it more, as a methodology.

What I am saying is, I think nonviolence always works.

"HOLD THE PRESSES!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"

You are reading http://rriverstoneradio.blogspot.com/

Michael Villanueva has contacted me. He is not Pueblo. By this picture, http://casaa.unm.edu/code/michaelvtxt.html, I think you can understand how I got the impression, though.... At least I'm reasonably sure he's a clown, if only part time...

Sunday, April 16, 2006

Memorial Day documentary pitch

You are reading http://rriverstoneradio.blogspot.com/

Wounded Warrior: Native American Veterans Return to “The World”
By Rogi Riverstone
rriverstone at rriverstone.com

Like many soldiers returning from their war experience, Native American Veterans face the effects of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). Because many of them come from rural and reservation settings, Native American veterans find few support services. This makes them susceptible to what is known as “Sanctuary trauma,” defined as the worsening of psychological symptoms by a support system that fails a traumatized individual. However, there are a few researchers, healing specialists, and social servants who are working to improve reintegration for Native American Veterans by utilizing traditional, Native spirituality, ceremony and ritual into recovery and healing. Traditional reintegration ceremonies for Native warriors include trance and self-hypnosis, to recover subconscious trauma. These practitioners believe these traditional methods could also be beneficial to non-Native peoples who have suffered the effects of trauma.

I plan to interview Native healers, themselves Veterans, who work with Native Veterans. These include Albert Laughter (Navajo), medicine man and Michael Villanueva (Pueblo), Ph.D., CPT (USAR). Both integrate traditional methods with so-called, “Western” medicine. I hope to interview Steve Silver, Ph.D. from the National Center for PTSD (NCPTSD) Clinic at the Center for Veterans Affairs, who is involved in researching traditional Native healing. I will also interview local Native American Veterans about their experiences. I will incorporate healing songs, from a local, Native drumming group and ambient sounds from on-location field recordings to add color to the piece. Through interviews with Native Vets, service providers, family members and community members, we will also examine Native concepts of the role of the warrior, instruction in warfare, traditional values of battle ritual, and social reintegration ceremonies. These will be contrasted with Natives’ experiences with US military policies and procedures, which, some in this field say, exacerbate psychological damage.


I plan, as much as possible, to allow Native Veterans to tell their own stories, in their own words, with brief comments from Dr. Silver. I may open the piece with a brief passage from the novel, Ceremony, by Leslie Marmon Silko: about a Laguna service member returning from combat to his reservation and facing the traumas of his experiences.

This story is timely, as young men and women, Native and non-Native, return from wars in the Middle East and face the trauma of inadequate services at home. If their treatment incorporated traditional, Native techniques and practices, some say, the impact of their traumas could be used for healing, for themselves and their communities.

Friday, April 14, 2006

Native American Vets radio documentary


You are reading http://rriverstoneradio.blogspot.com/

Seeking Native American Veterans
Plus Families, Friends & supportive others
Willing to be interviewed
For a radio documentary
To be aired Memorial Day Monday, May 29, 2006

We want to hear your experiences, challenges, frustrations, needs. This is a half-hour piece, to be aired nationally, on affiliated, community radio stations. Your words will be heard with the respect, dignity and compassion you deserve. What do you want to say?

Also seeking local, Native American musicians, poets, spoken word artists with compositions about Native Warriors, Veterans, Peacekeepers, etc.

You will get credits and recognition for this national broadcast.

Contact: Rogi Riverstone
PO Box 4609 Albuquerque, NM 87196

Monday, April 10, 2006

Murrow Quotes



For Tom Trowbridge



“Just once in a while let us exalt the importance of ideas and information.”
“We cannot make good news out of bad practice.”
“We're going to go with this story. Because the terror is right here in this room.”
“Difficulty is the excuse history never accepts.”
“Our major obligation is not to mistake slogans for solutions.”
“We cannot defend freedom abroad by deserting it at home.”
“No one can terrorize a whole nation, unless we are all his accomplices.”
“We are in the same tent as the clowns and the freaks-that's show business.”
“Anyone who isn't confused really doesn't understand the situation.”
“If we were to do the Second Coming of Christ in color for a full hour, there would be a considerable number of stations which would decline to carry it on the grounds that a Western or a quiz show would be more profitable.”
"We must not confuse dissent with disloyalty.”



Tom,
I hold you in the highest regard.

Rogi A. Riverstone

Thursday, September 01, 2005

Katrina

You are reading http://rriverstoneradio.blogspot.com/

Is my credit card information secure?My donation was denied. Why?Can I cancel a donation?View All FAQsAmerican Red Cross Emergency Vehicles respond to disasters nationwide.Did you know... The American Red Cross provides assistance to people in need... free of charge... every single day!Donate by Phone Donate by Mail Donate Spare Change Donate In-Kind Products Donate Airline Miles Donate Stock Latest NewsPrivacy Policy Dear Rogi,Thank you for your generous gift to the American Red Cross 2005 Hurricane Relief Fund. This fund makes it possible for the Red Cross to help nationwide Hurricane disaster victims of 2005 with critical needs such as shelter, food, clothing, counseling and other assistance. It's because of the 2005 Hurricane Relief Fund that our response can be immediate regardless of its location or the community’s ability to financially support our efforts. Your generous support means the most to the families who rely on Red Cross to help them through some of the most difficult times of their lives. Please continue to visit us at http://www.redcross.org/ to see how we’re using your 2005 Hurricane Relief Fund donation to make a difference, and for the most current disaster updates and stories about the people being helped.Together, we can save a life.American Red Cross*************************************************To verify that your company participates in a matching gift program, please contact your human resource representative.Please print or save this message for your personal records.Donation InformationDonation Form:Hurricane 2005 Relief and other Related EventsThis organization's tax ID is:53-0196605This letter serves as the tax receipt for your gift. The American Red Cross is a tax-exempt, nonprofit organization as described in section 501(c) (3) of the IRS Code for 1984, as amended. Our tax identification number is 53-0196605. Adequate records will be maintained and made available to the IRS upon request. In accordance with IRS regulations, no goods or services were provided to the donor by the American Red Cross as part of this contribution.Your gift may be recognized in future Red Cross publications. If you prefer your gift to remain anonymous, or have questions about your gift’s designation, or would like to learn more about the services that the Red Cross is committed to providing, please call 1-800-797-8022.The American Red Cross is not a government agency and all Red Cross disaster assistance is free thanks to the generosity of people like you. The value of your donation is increased by the fact that the ratio of volunteer Red Cross workers to paid staff is almost 36 to one.Contributions to the American Red Cross, a tax-exempt organization under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, are deductible for computing income and estate taxes.© Copyright The American Red Cross. All Rights Reserved.