21st Century Music, Art and Design

Conscious Music, Progressive Politics, Inspiring Art

Robbie Robertson and Bob Dylan

Robbie Robertson and Bob Dylan

Yuya Joe College's Facebook Wall

Flag of Earth

Flag of Earth
by James Cadle, modified by inclusion of NASA image of our planet

Occupy Toronto Market Exchange

mediaINDIGENA

Thursday, November 24, 2011

Pliancy Props to Pliny

by Yuya Joe College, with a nod and a wink to Pliny the Younger

Pliancy

As wax by pliancy shapes our world with our commands
Inspired and formed to beauty 'neath an Artist's hands
Mars sings soulful while chaste Minerva dances in the wind
She knows the fire of Venus, and the charms of the Sun

We are not alone as we quench the raging flame
The sacred fountain pours her friendly stream
Sweetly gliding through the flowery green
She nods refreshingly o'er the smiling scene

The square the park the youth spring for hope
Wisely flexible, the higher calling now the start
Receiving impressions of love and of art
This year coming is the birth of humanity

The Transit and the darkness shall pass
Humanikind will prevail

Friday, November 11, 2011

Rock Reunions: Black Sabbath, Van Halen, Utopia and Stone Roses

As I post we are about half an hour from the announcement of the Black Sabbath reunion, at least that seems to be what the countdown clock on their homepage would indicate.

Van Halen's reunion is to be announced November 30th at the Grammy Nominations Concert, plus Stone Roses, the influential Manchester UK band, has just announced they will be playing their local Heaton Park venue June 29 and 30, 2012 before embarking on a world tour.

Finally, the brilliant Todd Rundgren is talking up a reunion of his seminal Utopia band.

Thursday, November 10, 2011

Nuit Blanche street art by Alan Webb and Christine Leu




Yonge Street art installation in front of old Sam the Recrod Man store


Architect / Artist team LeuWebb created this retor Yong Street installation for Nuit Blanche 2011. As I both donated and and sold records to the project, I feel like I am a part of it and even nicknamed it Guten Golona (analog Gutenberg); enjoy the pics, and congrats to Alan and Christine!!




Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Occupy Wall Street; Crucial American Movement

by E. Henry SchoenbergerEntrepreneur, financial specialist, writer and author

Our country is in a crisis. There exists a terrible mismatch between the ultra rich and the 99 percent of us who are not driven by unbridled greed.

The root cause of the problem: a nation that was deregulated at the expense of the conscience of our country and at the expense of the fabric of the American Dream -- deregulated for Wall Street mega-banks and multinational corporations who care nothing for people sleeping in tents or without jobs in foreclosed lives.

Occupy Wall Street is a tide of upheaval and alienation, much like the other crucial movements in our past that led to a more equal and fairer American society. The history of these movements in America began more than 200 years ago with a revolution against the tyranny of King George, who wanted to extract as much money from the colonies as possible. It includes the Civil War and Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation; Women's Sufferage (remember that not too long ago, women were not allowed to vote); and the Civil Rights Movement, which recognized that the Emancipation Proclamation needed teeth.

The civil Rights Movement was fundamentally about human rights, and Occupy Wall Street is also about human rights. It is about how most Americans really do not have a voice in our democracy because government has not protected the public, but favored the 1 percent who bankroll our elected officials.

"Nonviolent direct action seeks to create such a crisis and foster such attention that a community which has consistently refused to negotiate is forced to confront the issue. It seeks to so dramatize the issue that it can no longer be ignored."

- MLK

To understand the need and raison d'etre for the Occupy Wall Street Movement, it is important to remember the above quote from a letter, which the Rev. Martin Luther King wrote from the confines of a cell in the Birmingham Jail on April 16, 1963.

Dr. King was right -- and this new movement should be a wake-up call for Congress. In this country, preserving freedom to allow Capitalism to flourish is vital, but it should not trump the protection of the public good. Citizens have a right to have their economic and societal well-being protected ahead of Big Money. It's that simple.

We are not alone. Many other people in countries around our ever-smaller globe are marching for the same right, based on the same gravitas and reasons.

Now is the time for another Great American Movement, a new moment of truth for our country. And the scions of Wall Street watching from their lofty piles of money, deep in their sociopathic hearts, must know. Jeffrey Immelt, our President's jobs czar, also should know.

Wall Street is emblematic of Congress' concern for the interests of special interests, promoted by highly paid lobbyists for Wall Street and Big Business. And this sad reality has become palpable to 99 percent of Americans, who have decided not to take it anymore.

Today, our society has become -- of the lobbyists, by the ultra rich and for the ultra rich.

We are a living example of capitalism gone awry -- living in an economy that has been laid to waste by deregulating the barriers against greed erected in the aftermath of the Great Depression. We are living in a society controlled by lobbyists -- an army of mercenaries with cash as their weapons -- who are conducting a war on behalf of Wall Street Banks, Big Business and Big Money.

Capitalism is not the problem -- the problem is that its actors have been motivated by personal greed and nothing else. Financial capital is being turned away from real investments that create jobs and toward financial investments that create billions of net worth but no capital formation to create jobs. American multinational corporations that have generated enormous profits continue to ship middle-class jobs overseas for cheap labor, along with profits to avoid taxation here. Immelt, our jobs czar and CEO of GE, has proposed being allowed to bring all the untaxed profits home without any tax, nor any guarantee of how that money will be actually be spent.

Shortly after Adam Smith''s time, it became apparent that a totally free economic system unleashed powerful forces that were not always good. So the notion of total hands off was addressed and modified by the English Factory Act of 1833, which established a system of inspectors to prevent the abuse of child and women labor.

The past should serve as prologue. But for the past 30 years, Congress has gone back to the hands-off notions that caused our Great Depression and led to the Sherman Anti-trust Act and the Glass-Steagal barriers between banking and taking investment risks.

"Free the Market" became the cry of Wall Street-Mega Bank Holding Companies, Big Business and the Big Money supporting all the lobbyists. The new Republicans have supported the drive to totally free Capitalism at the clear expense of the Public Good, and the Democrats have either been unwitting participants or worse.

There has always been a tension between Capitalism and the Public Good. In the United States this crested when Herbert Spencer, the 19th Century British philosopher, postulated his theory of Social Darwinism based on the ethic of "survival of the fittest." This had nothing to do with Darwin, but only with providing a moral basis for the unbridled greed of Capitalism. And this moral was adopted by men like Andrew Carnegie and Rockefeller to justifytheir infinite avarice without one shard of concern for the public. Robber-baron greed was at the expense of the workers necessary to grow their personal riches, no matter what the consequences. Social Darwinism was simply -- public interest be damned!

There is a quote from the Declaration of Independence that is important to revisit: "He (the King of Great Britain) has refused to assert to laws, the most wholesome and necessary for the public good."

Therefore, this country was founded on the franchise that Americans have the right to expect laws to be enacted for the Public Good; and an expectation under the surface of things, to have the government protect the public.

And now a majority of Americans feel disenfranchised! Just like at the time of the Civil Rights Movement -- when Lyndon Johnson, a Southerner, supported the movement to end the inequalities based on color alone. Johnson forcibly pushed legislation through Congress knowing that it was right and knowing it would cost the Democratic Party the South.

So, once again, the time has come for another crucial American Movement that represents the real spirit of how Americans pull together when glaring inequalities threaten the American Dream.


Henry Schoenberger is the author of the new book, 'How We Got Swindled By Wall Street Godfathers, Greed & Financial Darwinism - The 30-Year War Against The American Dream,' which will be available in November.

Source: HuffingtonPost.com

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Your Right Hand

You held me in your hand
I clung to your head
Scratching your scalp
Caring not scaring

I waited for your touch
U enthralled the boy
U reached inside
Grasped me firmly

Shook me with motion
Passionate devotion
Loving explosion
Gentle sleep

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

American Autumn of Inspiration spurs United for Global Change movement

Saturday October 15th protests in 719 cities, 71 countries



On October 15th people from all over the world will take to the streets and squares.

From North America to Asia, from Africa to Europe, Australia, Central and South America, people are rising up all over this beautiful planet to to claim their rights and demand a true democracy. Now it is time for all of us to join in a global non-violent protest.

The ruling powers work for the benefit of just a few, ignoring the will of the vast majority and the human and environmental price we all have to pay. This intolerable situation must end.

United in one voice, we will let politicians, and the financial elites they serve, know it is up to us, the people, to decide our future. We are not goods in the hands of politicians and bankers who do not represent us.

Time and water are running out, the Earth is heating up, and it is time for a global green revolution, a grassroots movement, a coalition of diverse forces with common goals. We want a more humane, equitable, just and sustainable society.

On October 15th, we will meet on the streets to initiate the global change we want. We will peacefully demonstrate, talk and organize until we make it happen.

It’s time for us to unite. It’s time for them to listen.

People of the world, rise up on October 15th!

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Giving Thanks for Heather

by Yuya Joe College

I'm still afraid of love
Even after all these years
Even after all these tears
You're still with me my dove

You gave up your career and your friends
For four newborn babies
And a dad with a bottle in one hand
A guitar in the other

Maybe it is a miracle
We made it thru togetha
Maybe I didn't tell you enough
How much we meant to each other

I showed you honey
I stayed by your side
I love you honey
I need you beside me

The nights are getting colder
Whether we were born for one another
Or just learned to live this way
We're blessed by the lord of the stars tonight

With children, family, music, and love
Giving Thanks, for our daughters and sons
And most especially, my loving wife Heather

Saturday, October 08, 2011

Do not act corruptly in the land

Excerpt from La Heavana Music Part III - Chapter Seven, Part III - Signs of Itopia:

Do not act corruptly in the land, making mischief. Therefore, pray to Jah on our behalf to bring forth for us, out of what the earth grows, of its herbs and its cucumbers and its garlic; cabbages and carrots, potatoes, lentils and onions. For every green herb We shall have for meat. Moses was surprised at such devotion and said, Will you exchange that which is better for that which is worse? Enter unto Tafari, so you will have what you ask for. May the LORD bless this land, with precious dew from heaven above, deep waters that lie below. May the rebellious return, and May He cause to grow for you thereby plentiful herbage, olive trees, and palm trees, and the grape vines, and trees of all the fruits that make Life sweet. A sign for a people who reflect. He has made subservient for you the night and the day; the sun and the moon, and the stars are made subservient by His commandment. Signs for a people who ponder.

Online text of La Heavana Musica, by Yuya Joe College

Thursday, October 06, 2011

Greenpeace rising from the dead!

It was a delight to see Greenpeace back in the news the past couple of days, with a variety of campaigns moving forward and the Mattel / Barbie effort reaping some choice organic fruit. Here are some Greenpeace stories hitting news outlets this week:

Greenpeace forces Mattel to use ethical packaging for Barbie dolls


Greenpeace protesting Koch Industries for pollution and Iran dealings


Greenpeace Canada opposes new nuclear reactors in Ontario

Tuesday, October 04, 2011

Foods from India that promote health

10 Indian foods and spices to help weight loss

Turmeric : Curcumin, the active component of turmeric, is an object of research owing to its properties that suggest they may help to turn off certain genes that cause scarring and enlargement of the heart. Regular intake may help reduce low-density lipoprotein (LDL) or bad cholesterol and high blood pressure, increase blood circulation and prevent blood clotting, helping to prevent heart attack.

Cardamom : This is a thermogenic herb that increases metabolism and helps burn body fat. Cardamom is considered one of the best digestive aids and is believed to soothe the digestive system and help the body process other foods more efficiently.

Chillies : Foods containing chillies are said to be as foods that burn fat. Chillies contain capsaicin that helps in increasing the metabolism. Capsaicin is a thermogenic food, so it causes the body to burn calories for 20 minutes after you eat the chillies.

Curry leaves : Incorporating curry leaves into your daily diet can help you lose weight. These leaves flush out fat and toxins, reducing fat deposits that are stored in the body, as well as reducing bad cholesterol levels. If you are overweight, incorporate eight to 10 curry leaves into your diet daily. Chop them finely and mix them into a drink, or sprinkle them over a meal.

Honey, garlic and cabbage are all healthy choices


Garlic : An effective fat-burning food, garlic contains the sulphur compound allicin which has anti-bacterial effects and helps reduce cholesterol and unhealthy fats.

Mustard oil : This has low saturated fat compared to other cooking oils. It has fatty acid, oleic acid, erucic acid and linoleic acid. It contains antioxidants, essential vitamins and reduces cholesterol, which is good for the heart.

Cabbage : Raw or cooked cabbage inhibits the conversion of sugar and other carbohydrates into fat. Hence, it is of great value in weight reduction.

Moong dal : The bean sprouts are rich in Vitamin A, B, C and E and many minerals, such as calcium, iron and potassium. It is recommended as a food replacement in many slimming programmes, as it has a very low fat content. It is a rich source of protein and fibre, which helps lower blood cholesterol level. The high fibre content yields complex carbohydrates, which aid digestion, are effective in stabilising blood sugar and prevent its rapid rise after meal consumption.

Honey : It is a home remedy for obesity. It mobilises the extra fat deposits in the body allowing it to be utilised as energy for normal functions. One should start with about 10 grams or a tablespoon, taken with hot water early in the morning.

Buttermilk : It is the somewhat sour, residual fluid that is left after butter is churned. The probiotic food contains just 2.2 grams of fat and about 99 calories, as compared to whole milk that contains 8.9 grams fat and 157 calories. Regular intake provides the body with all essential nutrients and does not add fats and calories to the body. It is thus helpful in weight loss.

Monday, October 03, 2011

HuffPost: Canada's shrinking Arctic ice shelf

Two ice shelves that existed before Canada was settled by Europeans diminished significantly this summer, one nearly disappearing altogether, Canadian scientists say in new research.

The loss is important as a marker of global warming, returning the Canadian Arctic to conditions that date back thousands of years, scientists say. Floating icebergs that have broken free as a result pose a risk to offshore oil facilities and potentially to shipping lanes. The breaking apart of the ice shelves also reduces the environment that supports microbial life and changes the look of Canada's coastline.

Luke Copland is an associate professor in the geography department at the University of Ottawa who co-authored the research. He said the Serson Ice Shelf shrank from 79.15 square miles (205 square kilometers) to two remnant sections three years ago, and was further diminished this past summer.

Copland said the shelf went from a 16-square-mile (42-square-kilometer) floating glacier tongue to 9.65 square miles (25 square kilometers), and the second section from 13.51 square miles (35 square kilometers) to 2 square miles (7 square kilometers), off Ellesmere Island's northern coastline.

This past summer, Ward Hunt Ice Shelf's central area disintegrated into drifting ice masses, leaving two separate ice shelves measuring 87.65 and 28.75 square miles (227 and 74 square kilometers) respectively, reduced from 131.7 square miles (340 square kilometers) the previous year.

"It has dramatically broken apart in two separate areas and there's nothing in between now but water," said Copland.

Copland said those two losses are significant, especially since the Ward Hunt Ice Shelf has always been the biggest, the farthest north and the one scientists thought might have been the most stable.

"Recent (ice shelf) loss has been very rapid, and goes hand-in-hand with the rapid sea ice decline we have seen in this decade and the increasing warmth and extensive melt in the Arctic regions," said Ted Scambos, lead scientist at the National Snow and Ice Data Center at the University of Colorado, remarking on the research.

Full article on disappearing Arctic ice in Canada

Monday, September 26, 2011

Decentralizing energy production democratizes Earth: Jeremy Rifkin

Today's Huffington Post includes a wonderful interview with the brilliant Jeremy Rifkin, who believes major changes are underway on this planet, and energy is the primary catalyst.

You suggest that the Third Industrial Revolution will be the last of the great industrial revolutions. Why?

The Third Industrial Revolution is the last stage of the great industrial saga and the first stage of the emerging collaborative era rolled together. It represents an interregnum between two periods of economic history -- the first characterized by industrious behavior and the second by collaborative behavior.

If the industrial era emphasized the values of rigid discipline and hard work, the top-down flow of authority, the importance of financial capital, the workings of the marketplace and private property relations, the collaborative era is more about creative play, peer-to-peer interactivity, social capital, participation in open commons and access to global networks.

The Third Industrial Revolution will move apace over the next several decades, probably peaking around 2050, and plateau in the second half of the 21st century. Already, in the shadow of its ascending bell curve, we can see a new economic era that will take us beyond the industrious mode that characterized the last two centuries of economic development and into a collaborative way of life. The metamorphosis from an industrial to a collaborative revolution represents one of the great turning points in economic history.

In your book, you introduce the notion of "lateral power," suggesting that it will soon displace traditional top-down power relationships and pave the way for a more distributed form of capitalism. What’s a shorthand way for understanding your notion of lateral power?

The democratization of energy has profound implications for how we orchestrate the entirety of human life in the coming century. We are entering the era of distributed capitalism. To understand how the new Third Industrial Revolution infrastructure is likely to dramatically change the distribution of economic, political and social power in the 21st century, it is helpful to step back and examine how the fossil fuel–based First and Second Industrial Revolutions reordered power relations over the course of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.

Fossil fuels -- coal, oil and natural gas -- are elite energies for the simple reason that they are found only in select places. They require a significant military investment to secure their access and continual geopolitical management to assure their availability. They also require centralized, top-down command and control systems and massive concentrations of capital to move them from underground to the end users. The ability to concentrate capital -- the essence of modern capitalism -- is critical to the effective performance of the system as a whole. The centralized energy infrastructure, in turn, sets the conditions for the rest of the economy, encouraging similar business models across every sector.

The emerging Third Industrial Revolution, by contrast, is organized around distributed renewable energies that are found everywhere and are, for the most part, free -- sun, wind, hydro, geothermal heat, biomass and ocean waves and tides. These dispersed energies will be collected at millions of local sites and then bundled and shared with others over an energy internet to achieve optimum energy levels and maintain a high-performing, sustainable economy. The distributed and collaborative nature of the TIR energies and infrastructure favors lateral rather than hierarchical command and control mechanisms. This new lateral energy regime, in turn, establishes the organizational model for the countless economic activities that multiply from it. In the new era, providers and users aggregate nodally in vast networks and carry on commerce and trade in commercial arenas that function more like commons than markets. A more distributed and collaborative industrial revolution, in turn, invariably leads to a more distributed and collaborative sharing of the productive wealth generated by society.

You argue that the "single most important factor in raising hundreds of millions of people out of poverty is having reliable and affordable access to green electricity." But nascent economic powerhouses in the developing world -- China, India, and others -- are largely following the Western model of fueling and growing their economies with cheap, fossil-fuel based electricity. How does that dynamic get altered?

Universal access to electricity is the indispensable starting point for improving the lives of the poorest populations of the world. Because renewable energy -- solar, wind, geothermal, hydro and biomass -- is widely distributed, a Third Industrial Revolution is ideally suited to take off in the developing world. Although a lack of infrastructure is often viewed as an impediment to development, what we are finding is that, because many developing nations are not saddled with an aging electrical grid, they can potentially "leapfrog" into a Third Industrial Revolution. In other words, by building a new, distributed electricity system from scratch -- rather than continuing to patch up an old and outworn grid -- developing countries significantly reduce the time and expense in transitioning into a new energy era. Moreover, because of the distributed nature of the Third Industrial Revolution infrastructure, risk can be more widely diffused, with localities and regions pooling resources to establish local grid networks and then connecting with other nodes across regions. This is the very essence of lateral power.

Other parts of the globe, particularly Europe, appear to grasp the trends and solutions you suggest in your book. Why are Americans lagging in this regard?

One of the reasons an overarching new economic game plan has never been rolled out is not just because we need to cut back public spending and reduce government deficits, but because the administration is missing, to quote former president George W. Bush, the "vision thing." Whenever President Obama mentions his green economic recovery, he rattles off a laundry list of programs and initiatives his administration is either doing or proposing. The president also takes every opportunity to visit a solar or wind turbine park, a factory manufacturing solar panels or a car company testing electric vehicles to demonstrate his sincere commitment to a green economic future.

What Obama is lacking is a narrative. We are left with a collection of pilot projects and siloed programs, none of which connects with the others to tell a compelling story of a new economic vision for the world. We’re strapped with a lot of dead-end initiatives, wasting billions of dollars of taxpayer money with nothing to show for it. If President Obama clearly understood the underlying dynamics of the five-pillar infrastructure of the next great industrial revolution and how the parts connect, he might have been able to sell the American public on a comprehensive economic plan for the country’s future.



Jeremy Rifkin (born January 26, 1945) is an American economist, writer, public speaker, political advisor and activist. He is the founder and president of the Foundation On Economic Trends. Rifkin's work explores the impact of scientific and technological changes on the economy, the workforce, society, and the environment.

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Japanese protest nuclear power in Tokyo

50,000+ rally for a cleaner, greener Japan


By MALCOLM FOSTER, Associated Press

TOKYO (AP) -- Chanting "Sayonara nuclear power" and waving banners, tens of thousands of people marched in central Tokyo on Monday to call on Japan's government to abandon atomic energy in the wake of the Fukushima nuclear accident.

The demonstration underscores how deeply a Japanese public long accustomed to nuclear power has been affected by the March 11 crisis, when a tsunami caused core meltdowns at three reactors at the Fukushima Dai-ichi complex.

The disaster - the worst nuclear accident since Chernobyl - saw radiation spewed across a wide part of northeastern Japan, forcing the evacuation of some 100,000 people who lived near the plant and raising fears of contamination in everything from fruit and vegetables to fish and water.

"Radiation is scary," said Nami Noji, a 43-year-old mother who came to the protest on this national holiday with her four children, ages 8-14. "There's a lot of uncertainty about the safety of food, and I want the future to be safe for my kids."

Police estimated the crowd at 20,000 people, while organizers said there were three times that many people.

In addition to fears of radiation, the Japanese public and corporate world have had to put up with electricity shortages amid the sweltering summer heat after more than 30 of Japan's 54 nuclear reactors were idled over the summer to undergo inspections.

Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda, who took office earlier this month, has said Japan will restart reactors that clear safety checks. But he has also said the country should reduce its reliance on atomic energy over the long-term and explore alternative sources of energy. He has not spelled out any specific goals.

Monday, September 12, 2011

Peach Nectar Divine

Aroma of the peach
Nostrils flaring with glee
Tongue flickering in and out
Dreamy moist pleasure
On a hot summer day

Only your nose knows
Though your lips gently quiver
Melting into your sweetness
Revelling in your juices

Round firmness in my hands
Tasting the mango mama
Burying my face in your honey
Peach nectar divine


Yuya Joe College
September 8, 2011

Sunday, September 04, 2011

Prayer for Our Grandchildren: Children of Children

Although our grownup kids are all in their early twenties and we do not yet have any grandchildren, with two boys and two girls the possibility certainly exists that we will be grandparents someday. Early this morning I was thinking about what I would say to them...


Children of Children

Believe in your dreams

Respect yourself and others

Travel

Play sports and music

Sing

Explore your creativity

Grow food

Love your Family

Draw and paint

Study what you love

Enjoy concerts

Appreciate Friends

Share



- Yuya Joe College, September 4, 2011 (for our future grandchildren)

Thursday, September 01, 2011

Tar Sands Oil: Dirtiest Fuel on Earth

Al Gore opposes new oil pipeline


The following post appeared on Al Gore's personal blog yesterday:

The leaders of the top environmental groups in the country, the Republican Governor of Nebraska, and millions of people around the country -- including hundreds of people who have bravely participated in civil disobedience at the White House -- all agree on one thing: President Obama should block a planned pipeline from the tar sands of Alberta to the Gulf of Mexico.

The tar sands are the dirtiest source of fuel on the planet. As I wrote in Our Choice two years ago, gasoline made from the tar sands gives a Toyota Prius the same impact on climate as a Hummer using gasoline made from oil. This pipeline would be an enormous mistake. The answer to our climate, energy and economic challenges does not lie in burning more dirty fossil fuels -- instead, we must continue to press for much more rapid development of renewable energy and energy efficient technologies and cuts in the pollution that causes global warming.


- Al Gore, August 31, 2011

Monday, August 29, 2011

Being a parent to grown-up kids

Be there for emergencies, share leisure time together


There are two different things I'd like to convey with this blog post:

Staying together for the kids

A) If you have young children, and your marriage isn't great and you feel that the only reason you are staying together is "for the kids" then stick with that idea for now. As your kids get older, especially after they reach their 20s, you'll find that you and your spouse have more time for each other again and the closeness you originally had can re-emerge. Also, if a lot of your kids move out within a short period of time, consider getting a dog, as it will keep the activity level up in the house, and make you less lonely.


Benefits of grown-up offspring

B) If you think that you'll be done raising your kids once they reach 18 or 20 years old, think again. We have 2 boys and 2 girls all in their early twenties. Both of the girls have called us screaming and crying in the middle of the night within the past year, one that ran into an abusive taxi driver who abandoned her on the side of Highway 404, and the other was physically assaulted by her now ex-boyfriend. Each of these instances meant running out the door and driving at high speed in the middle of the night to the location where the daughter was ... very scary both times.

With our sons, there was a moment when one of them was 15 or so and he really really needed my encouraging words and hug, and it frightens me to think of how he would have felt had I not been there to show him the love and support he deserved (he is a fantastic young man).

Regarding our other son, I can't think of any instance where I have had to come to his rescue, emotionally or otherwise, however with him that is not the story. This son and I go to concerts together and play guitar / jam quite frequently, so even though he may not have needed me around as much as the others, the key is we enjoy spending time together and my quality of life is so much higher because of the activities we share an interest in.


In summary, if you feel you are staying together "for the kids," that may be a better idea than you can understand at this stage in your marriage, so don't be ashamed of that, just be loving to your children and kind and respectful to your spouse.

Your kids will soon be grown-ups, and if you show them the love and respect they all deserve, then you will have raised your future best friends, and there's no greater reward or feeling in life.

Except maybe Grandchildren, though we're not there yet...

Monday, August 22, 2011

Mary Spencer fights the good fight, mentors Cape Croker kids




If there's anything I admire in this world, it's a gal who knows her roots and honours her father by continuing his mission, and if she can throw a mean right hook, well, that's pretty cool too!

Here is a story about Canadian Olympic gold medal hopeful Mary Spencer who regularly takes time out from her busy life to travel many hours to Cape Croker reserve near Wiarton, Ontario, where she hangs with the kids, brings boxing equipment and generally continues the benign tradition of her dad, who was Ojibway and was the United Church minister on the reserve.


By Randy Starkman
TheStar.com Olympic Sports Reporter


Mary Spencer is a true freedom fighter

WIARTON, ONT.—For Canadian gold medal hopeful Mary Spencer, the road to the 2012 London Olympics runs right through the Cape Croker Indian Reserve.

The three-time world champion, in heavy training for the Olympic debut of women’s boxing next summer, somehow finds the time to drive 10 hours here and back from Windsor — at least once a month — to hang out with “her kids” on the reserve.

On a recent visit, one perfect summer’s day, Spencer and the native children she mentors go out for a run, paddle canoes, play volleyball and tuck into a barbecue together. It’s as though Christmas has come early to Cape Croker, and not just because the champ has brought four cartons of new boxing gear.

From the moment she arrives, Spencer draws the kids like a magnet. They crowd around, vying for attention, peals of laughter echoing along the shores of Georgian Bay. The youngest literally hang off her as they splash in the water.

“I’m a leech!” cries Breanna Watkinson, who attaches herself to Spencer during a swim. But they all seem to get some quiet time with her, too, teens and younger ones alike, including 8-year-old Halle Johnston, who skips rocks with Spencer as they wait for the canoeing to commence.

Spencer asks Johnston about school: “I like it, but there’s bad kids there. They call me names.”

“But you don’t listen to them, do you?”

The visits have an extra meaning for Spencer because her father, Cliff, who is Ojibway, was a United Church minister at Cape Croker when Mary was younger.

“I feel like this is my own version of it, that I can come out and hang out with the kids and be there for them if they need advice or show them stuff, teach them stuff,” she says. “It’s almost the same thing. That’s the way I kind of see it, a ministry of sorts.”

A ministry it may be, but there is no preaching. Mary has an easy rapport with the children, many of whom she’s known for years.

“Do you ever swear?” Daisy Jones asks as they come out of the water.

“No,” says Spencer

“I don’t believe you,” says Jones. “You said the word sh-ts.”

“That’s because you guys were trying to drown me,” laughs Spencer.

While the visits are exhausting — for all involved — Spencer says she easily gets back just as much as she gives. Spending time at the reserve replenishes her spirit in a way little else can.

“I think about when I was a kid . . . little things that somebody probably didn’t think would make a big impression on me, but it did,” she said. “So, I’m hoping these are the kinds of days that these kids are going to remember. . . . They’re having a lot of fun while doing things that are good for them.”

Spencer says her obvious bond with the young ones here comes naturally.

“Coming back to Cape Croker is special for me just because some of these kids are my cousins, their parents knew my parents or know me. I feel like I’m at home when I’m here.”

It’s all a far cry from Spencer in the ring, a fearsome opponent who has been known to send a message with more than her fists. She won her third world title by dismantling reigning world champion Jinzi Li of China last fall in the Barbados 14-2 in the final — a feat made more impressive by the fact she moved up in weight class from 66 to 75 kilos, because there are only three women’s Olympic divisions.

Rather than go out and celebrate, Spencer had a plan. She made sure she woke up first thing the next morning to go for a run around the hotel complex where the athletes were staying, hoping opponents would see her.

“My whole reasoning for that is, I want them when they get in the ring with me to be okay with losing to me, to be okay with giving up when they should be pushing harder,” she told the Star at the time. “I want them to think I’m supposed to win.”

To the other boxers, Spencer is simply the reigning world champ and the one to beat. But there is another part of her identity she would like the world to know about.

“I remember every time I used to represent a native team, whether it was a basketball team or a volleyball team, there was just that sense of pride,” she says. “I think other native athletes need to feel that sense of pride when they see me competing, the same way other Canadians do. There should be something special for aboriginal Canadians.”




That something special is evident to 8-year-old Halle, who was on the receiving end of the pep talk about bullies at school. What’s so special about the boxer’s visits to Cape Croker?

“She’s fun, she’s cool and she’s awesome,” says Halle.

Jennifer Johnston, Halle’s mom, says what Spencer provides, apart from the laughs and chats, is inspiration.

“The kids really love her. I see a huge difference in the kids that do go. She’s a good inspiration to the children here. They look forward to having her,” she says. “Every month, they make sure they ask when she’s coming and they’re waiting for her, they’re waiting at the door with open arms and great big ‘I love you’s.’ ”

The boxer is slowly drawing more kids out to the group. On this day, 5-year-old Madeline Linklater turns up because she wants to meet Spencer after seeing her featured on TSN. She shyly hands Spencer a note and picture she has made in a handmade envelope. It wishes her good luck at the Olympics and shows a podium with a medal and boxing gloves.

Spencer keeps it real with the kids with an easy laugh and a self-deprecating sense of humour. They talk about anything and everything.

Some of the kids struggle with motivation and get into trouble, something that Spencer can definitely relate to having grown up in a housing project in Windsor. She’s reluctant to delve into her misspent youth too deeply, but admits she skipped more classes than she ever attended and even failed gym.

Her transformation happened the moment she stepped into a boxing ring.

“Boxing for me was almost supernatural,” she said. “I started boxing and it was like ‘Okay, this is what you’re going to do and you’re going to make sure you become a champion.’ Day one, I wanted to be a champion. I was serious about being a champion.

“Some things took time to change, like my group of friends. That took a bit of time. . . . If you’re doing something right, other things just won’t mix with it. Eventually things just turned around.”

It’s a powerful story, one that takes on more resonance for the kids here as they realize she is just like them. They are following her every step of the way, and recently went to watch her fight in Wasaga Beach. The community has started talking about trying to raise money to send some of the children to the London Olympics, although they say it’s unlikely to happen.

But the kids will be in London, anyway, just as they were in Barbados when Spencer went up against the reigning world champion from China.

“As I was walking up to the ring, I was imagining that these kids were in the stands, that they were watching this fight and I needed to win because they needed to see me win, they needed to know that I was going to win,” Spencer says.

“It just carries that extra weight when you’re trying to reach out to someone or trying to do something. . . . I remember thinking about them going into that final, so of course it fuels the fire.”

As this day draws to a close, Spencer reluctantly pulls herself away from “her kids.” After they’ve all jumped off a concrete pier into the cool waters of Georgian Bay, the fighter prepares for the five-hour-plus drive back home to Windsor.

The young ones and teens, exhausted after being put through their paces, are loathe to see her go.

But they know she’ll be back.


Help Mary Spencer represent Canada in London's 2012 Olympics - Donate Today!

Sunday, August 21, 2011

Brantford and the Yuya Joe blog



Those of you who know me and my music may wonder where the fascination with Brantford and Six Nations comes from. It is a deeply-rooted sentiment, only coming to fruition in recent months.

My dad is from Charlottetown, PEI, and my mom grew up in Grand Falls, New Brunswick. Each of those towns is a magical memory and a living part of me, as my summers were spent in and around them. I used to spend time at the Tomlinson dairy farm in Arthurette, not far from Grand Falls, and in Prince Edward island my personal Echo Beach, my own Some Beach Somewhere is Brackley Beach, just north of the capital. Cavendish Beach and the Anne of Green Gables area are more well known, but Brackley offers miles of unspoiled ocean shoreline, completely open to the public and left with natural dunes.

I grew up in Hamilton, Stoney Creek, Kitchener and Burlington, Ontario, where my family moved when I was 8 and the town I spent my formative teen years in. We lived at 455 Maple Avenue, just around the corner from Joseph Brant Museum, which I visited many times, studying and memorizing all the exhibits, buying soapstone and postcards to carry the vibes home with me.




Six Nations Chiefs meeting in Brantford


The main thoroughfare in downtown Burlington is Brant Street, which was once the brightest street in North America at night, the primary hospital is Joseph Brant, so I grew up with his iconic legacy in my mind and soul and all around me.



Tom Longboat is a local legend in the Hamilton and Brantford areas, and people who know about his exploits still believe that Tom was one of the greatest athletes humanity has ever produced.








Then of course there is Robbie Robertson of The Band, whose Mom was from Six Nations. Robbie grew up in Toronto but he spent his childhood summers on the Six Nations Reserve near Brantford with his mom's family, and the deep resonance of his music emanates from a cross pollination between the Toronto and USA sounds, and the soulful music of North America's Native Peoples.




Bob Dylan and Robbie Robertson at The Band's Last Waltz concert





In the Spring of 2011 I helped my dad and stepmom move from Burlington to Brantford, and as I already had several cousins living there, it has now joined Burlington, Grand Falls, Charlottetown and Orillia (where my mom has lived for the past 25 years) as my family "hometowns."

If you know of any Brantford-area or Six Nations blogs I can add here, please make suggestions in the comments section below.

Peace 2 All.

Yuya Joe



Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Buddhism and Ecology; WHY Buddha touched our Earth


Engaged Buddhism means the activities of daily life combined with the practice of mindfulness - Thich Nhat Hanh

by John Slaney and David Loy, HuffPost Green

In one of Buddhism's iconic images, Gautama Buddha sits in meditation with his left palm upright on his lap, while his right hand touches the earth. Demonic forces have tried to unseat him, because their king, Mara, claims that place under the bodhi tree. As they proclaim their leader's powers, Mara demands that Gautama produce a witness to confirm his spiritual awakening. The Buddha simply touches the earth with his right hand, and the Earth itself immediately responds: "I am your witness." Mara and his minions vanish. The morning star appears in the sky. This moment of supreme enlightenment is the central experience from which the whole of the Buddhist tradition unfolds.

The great 20th-century Vedantin, Ramana Maharshi said that the Earth is in a constant state of dhyana. The Buddha's earth-witness mudra (hand position) is a beautiful example of "embodied cognition." His posture and gesture embody unshakeable self-realization. He does not ask heavenly beings for assistance. Instead, without using any words, the Buddha calls on the Earth to bear witness.

The Earth has observed much more than the Buddha's awakening. For the last 3 billion years the Earth has borne witness to the evolution of its innumerable life-forms, from unicellular creatures to the extraordinary diversity and complexity of plant and animal life that flourishes today. We not only observe this multiplicity, we are part of it -- even as our species continues to damage it. Many biologists predict that half the Earth's plant and animal species could disappear by the end of this century, on the current growth trajectories of human population, economy and pollution. This sobering fact reminds us that global warming is the primary, but not the only, extraordinary ecological crisis confronting us today.

Has Mara taken a new form today -- as our own species? Just as Mara claimed the Buddha's sitting-place as his own, Homo sapiens today claims, in effect, that the only really important species is itself. All other species have meaning and value only insofar as they serve our purposes. Indeed, powerful elements of our economic system (notably Big Oil and its enablers) seem to have relocated to the state of "zero empathy," a characteristic of psychopathic or narcissistic personalities.

The Earth community has a self-emergent, interdependent, cooperative nature. We humans have no substance or reality that is separate from this community. Thich Nhat Hanh refers to this as our "inter-being": we and other species "inter-are." If we base our life and conduct on this truth, we transcend the notion that Buddhist practice takes place within a religious framework that promotes only our own individual awakening. We realize the importance of integrating the practice of mindfulness into the activities of daily life. And if we really consider Mother Earth as an integral community and a witness of enlightenment, don't we have a responsibility to protect her through mindful "sacred activism"?

This year the U.S. president will determine whether or not to approve a proposed pipeline, which will extend from the "great American carbon bomb" of the Alberta Tar Sands to the Texas oil refineries. The implications are enormous. The devastation that would result from processing and burning even half the Tar Sands oil is literally incalculable: the resulting increase in atmospheric carbon would trigger "tipping points" for runaway global warming. Our best climate scientist, NASA's James Hansen, states that if this project alone goes ahead, it will be "game over" for the Earth's climate. This is a challenge we cannot evade. It is crucial for Buddhists to join forces with other concerned people in creative and resolute opposition to this potentially fatal new folly.

As the Buddha's enlightenment reminds us, our awakening too is linked to the Earth. The Earth bore witness to the Buddha, and now the Earth needs us to bear witness -- to its dhyana, its steadfastness, the matrix of support it continually provides for living beings. New types of bodhisattvas -- "ecosattvas" -- are needed, who combine the practice of self-transformation with devotion to social and ecological transformation. Yes, we need to write letters and emails to the President, hopefully to influence his decision. But we may also need to consider other strategies if such appeals are ignored, such as nonviolent civil disobedience. That's because this decision isn't just about a financial debt ceiling. This is about the Earth's carbon ceiling. This is about humanity's survival ceiling. As the Earth is our witness.

John Stanley & David Loy are part of the Eco-Buddhism Project.

Friday, August 05, 2011

HuffPost: Civil Disobedience Key To Climate Change Action?


On Dec. 19, 2008, a 27-year-old man named Tim DeChristopher, troubled by American energy policy and its contribution to global warming, broke the law.

He did so by attending a federal auction in Utah, where energy developers were bidding on parcels of Utah wildland that the Bush administration had made available for oil and gas development. DeChristopher bid aggressively, driving up the price of some parcels and winning 14 of his own -- some 22,000 acres in all -- to the tune of $1.8 million. He had no means to pay.

"I understand that prison is a very horrible place," DeChristopher told me last fall, when I had a chance to sit down with him for a lengthy interview. "But I've been scared for my future for a long time. And I think the scariest thing that I see is staying on the path that we're on right now. Obedience, to me, is much scarier than going to prison."

He faced 10 years and some $750,000 in fines.

On Tuesday, the now 29-year-old DeChristopher, who was convicted in March of two felonies associated with his exploits, was sentenced to two years in prison and was promptly taken into custody. He also faces $10,000 in fines.

The judge had barred DeChristopher's defense team from explaining to the jury why he disrupted the auction -- because he saw the auction as both illegal and contributing to the "exacerbation of global warming and climate change," according to court documents.

"We're not here about why he did it," U.S. District Judge Dee Benson said at one point during the trial. "We're here about whether he did it."

He did.




DeChristopher's actions have prompted comparisons to Herny David Thoreau's refusal to pay taxes in protest of slavery, and even to Rosa Parks' refusal to be relegated to the back of the bus because she was black. And indeed, it has been a feature of many social movements, when legal avenues have been tried and exhausted -- and when it becomes clear that the system is set up to efficiently deflect and patiently defer demands for change -- that individuals and groups, dedicated to a cause, decide it's time to start peaceably breaking some rules.

For a growing number of Americans concerned about climate change -- and frustrated by the lack of action in Washington -- that time has come.

"People who understand the depth of the climate crisis have long since changed their light bulbs and their lifestyles," said Bill McKibben, an environmentalist and climate activist, "and they know that moral witness is the next step towards shifting our society on a sustainable path."

Part of bearing moral witness involves ignoring certain rules about congregating in front of the White House, and McKibben is among those leading an event next month that aims to do just that.

In this case, the group's target is the Keystone XL pipeline project -- a contentious proposal to build a pipeline from the tar sands of Alberta, Canada, to the Texas Gulf Coast. Environmentalists abhor the tar sands, a gooey mix of sand and oil that requires copious amounts of water, energy -- and greenhouse gas emissions -- to produce.

James Hansen, the NASA scientist and the godfather of the modern climate movement, laid out the stakes in an essay published at Climate Story Tellers in June: "If emissions from coal are phased out over the next few decades and if unconventional fossil fuels -- including tar sands -- are left in the ground, it is conceivable to stabilize earth’s climate," Hansen wrote. "Phase out of emissions from coal is itself an enormous challenge. However, if the tar sands are thrown into the mix, it is essentially game over."

The Keystone project hinges on State Department approval, and while opponents have managed to slow down that agency's deliberations, Secretary of State Hilary Clinton has said in the past that she is inclined to approve it. Pressures have also come from business lobbies like the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, which has called for swift approval of the pipeline, and congressional Republicans, who pushed a bill through the House on Tuesday that would require the State Department to make a decision by Nov. 1.

In a clarion call dubbed Tar Sands Action, Hansen, McKibben and other environmental leaders are soliciting volunteers to descend on Washington at any point between Aug. 20 and Sept. 3. They plan to make their opposition to the pipeline known by occupying the pavement directly in front of the White House -- an area with specific rules regarding demonstrations, including an edict that protesters keep moving.

From the invitation:

[I]t’s time to stop letting corporate power make the most important decisions our planet faces. We don’t have the money to compete with those corporations, but we do have our bodies, and beginning in mid August many of us will use them. We will, each day, march on the White House, risking arrest with our trespass. We will do it in dignified fashion, demonstrating that in this case we are the conservatives, and that our foes — who would change the composition of the atmosphere -- are dangerous radicals. Come dressed as if for a business meeting — this is, in fact, serious business.

And another sartorial tip — if you wore an Obama button during the 2008 campaign, why not wear it again? We very much still want to believe in the promise of that young Senator who told us that with his election the ‘rise of the oceans would begin to slow and the planet start to heal.’ We don’t understand what combination of bureaucratic obstinacy and insider dealing has derailed those efforts, but we remember his request that his supporters continue on after the election to pressure his government for change. We'll do what we can.


Not everyone thinks nonviolent disobedience is the answer.

Former Salt Lake Mayor Rocky Anderson, a climate change activist himself, told The Deseret News on Monday that he thought DeChristopher's actions were useless. "I doubt his actions convinced one person who did not already agree urgent action needs to be taken to protect our climate," Anderson was quoted as saying.

And Bjorn Lomborg, the Danish political scientist and climate gadfly, perhaps best known as the author of the books “The Skeptical Environmentalist" and "Cool It," said in an email message that he also doubted the effectiveness of such forms of protest.

"Climate change has dropped down the political agenda, so I can perfectly understand why activists would turn to measures to attract more attention to it," Lomborg said. "But unfortunately, more attention is not what is actually needed to solve this problem — there has already been plenty of global attention focused on promises of carbon cuts that just haven’t happened. What is needed is a focus on smarter, more effective solutions than carbon cuts."

The solution, Lomborg added, involves increases in investment of green energy research and development, so that it eventually becomes cheaper than fossil fuels. But that is "not an easy policy to convert into activism," he said. "It’s hard, I guess, to chain yourself to an increased R&D budget."

But then, such policies are precisely what Americans of all stripes, who are fed up with political inertia in Washington, say they are hoping to nudge by risking arrest -- or even prison, in DeChristopher's case.

"I think that one of the things that critics need to remember is that civil disobedience has always played a role in social movements," said Lindsy Floyd, a program coordinator with the Environmental Humanities Education Center and an organizer with Peaceful Uprising, a group co-founded by DeChristopher after his action at the lease auction. The group's first core principle: "We refuse to be obedient to injustice."

Floyd said she was "sick of signing petitions and 'liking' things on Facebook," adding that her contributions to nonprofit groups working to preserve Utah wilderness have proved ineffectual.

"The system in place is designed to limit our effectiveness as citizens and agents of change," she said. "To critics, I ask: if not civil disobedience, then what?"

Watch video of interview with environmentalist Tim DeChristopher

LIVE Webcam inside Nova Scotia lobster trap



Nova Scotia webcams live lobster trap images

Thursday, July 07, 2011

Bobby Kennedy Jr pushes clean water

For the sake of the USA, North America and indeed the direction of the planet at large, let us hope President Obama earns a 2nd term, and that he is followed in office by someone as thoughtful and insightful as Robert Kennedy, Jr. What follows is a Huffington Post article about how USA industry reps are weakening clean water enforcement, threatening the lives of man and animal alike.

Assault on Clean Water is Attack on Democracy


By Robert F. Kennedy, Jr

Like the 104th Congress when Republicans controlled the House of Representatives, the House today is swinging a sledgehammer at a cornerstone of contemporary American democracy and undermining the most extraordinary body of environmental law in the world.

Chief among the attacks is HR 2018, known as the "Clean Water Cooperative Federalism Act of 2011." The bill, currently working its way through the House, hogties the federal government's role in administering the federal Clean Water Act and gives states a veto power over a host of critical water quality decisions that the Clean Water Act currently authorizes the Environmental Protection Agency to make. This approach will foster a 1950s-style race to bottom as shortsighted and self-interested state politicians dismantle their clean water laws in order to recruit filthy polluters.

Corporate polluters -- through massive campaign donations and relentless fear-mongering -- can easily dominate the state political landscapes. Their indentured servants in Congress -- many flying the Tea Party banner -- are working to disrupt the existing balance between state control and federal oversight in our environmental laws by returning us to the days of limited federal supervision -- a time when local government was on the side of polluters in a partnership that was stealing people's livelihoods, their recreation, their health, safety, property values and their childhoods.


State regulation of water led to rivers on fire and near death for Lake Erie

The original drafters of the Clean Water Act were keenly aware of the problems inherent in leaving all responsibility to the states. Prior to 1972, that scheme had ignited rivers and firestorms and left Lake Erie declared dead. We saw the results first hand here on the Hudson River in the 1960s -- where hundreds of fishermen lost their jobs because their beloved waterways had become too polluted to allow anyone to safely eat the fish. The Clean Water Act, enacted shortly thereafter, created a beautifully simple yet powerfully effective tool to help address these problems: a federal safety net for water quality that guarantees a minimum level of protection to all Americans, no matter where you live. And for nearly 40 years this approach has been working.

Indeed, the Clean Water Act is one of our most important environmental laws, and it is a model -- both in the U.S. and abroad -- for achieving a sensible balance between state officials' familiarity with local conditions and the important role the federal government plays in protecting all citizens from a race-to-the-bottom by polluters and politicians intent on short term gain at the expense of local communities and long-term prosperity.

Having this shared authority is essential because state agencies face intense pressure to ignore the Clean Water Act in favor of the most powerful corporate interests. It is no coincidence that many of the bill's sponsors are from states where EPA has used its authority under the Act in recent years to make sure minimum levels of protection are achieved, such as West Virginia and Florida.

Unfortunately, HR 2018 rewards states for their past failures and rolls back the clock nationally by promoting an agenda that benefits only those who seek to pollute our waterways -- not the communities that depend on them.

Representative Tim Bishop of New York, to his credit, offered an amendment in committee that would have protected water bodies that serve as drinking water supplies, flooding buffers, recreation destinations and habitat for fish and game prized by anglers and hunters from these sweeping rollbacks. But sponsors of the bill would have none of it -- further revealing their disinterest in the protection of the American public from the threats of water pollution.

Poll after poll shows the public's support for clean water. The American people didn't stand for these congressional attacks to our environmental laws in the mid-1990's. And we must not stand for them today.

Saturday, June 25, 2011

In ancient Egypt, Joseph wore a coat of many colours

Eighteenth Dynasty rulers figure prominently in Old Testament and Koran


Yuya of the Eighteenth Dynasty has been clearly linked to Joseph of the Old Testament by Ahmed Osman, and his research was followed up splendourifiously by the eminent Pope Charles of the late 20th Century Dynasty that carried into the 21st Century. As the Papal scribe explored in detail the connections between Yuya / Joseph and the 18th Dynasty luminaries, wide-ranging familial relations were discovered that had resulted from this Union of the House of Joseph and the House of David.

There was an additional benefit of discovering the link between Asenath's Hebrew name and her Egyptian name, Tuya, which previously seemed difficult to connect. Now that we know Ashurnasirpal's wife was named Asherah / Ashratu, the Assyrian equivalent of Asenath, her four main names will henceforth be considered as Asenath / Asherah / Ashratu / Tuya, though she was also known to many cultures by even more names, as illustrated below.

Queen Asherah aka Asenath Ashratu Tuya (aka Athirat, Ashtart, Ishtar, Elat, Asertu, Ashtoreth / Hertu, Qudshu, Qodesh)

Daughter of Potiphera (read Pharaoh Poti, Thutmose IV)

Wife of Yuya Joseph Tushratta (aka Yusuf / Asurnasirpal)
- mother of Queen Tiye Zipporah
- mother of Prince Aanen Manasseh (aka Shaulmaneser III)
- mother or stepmother of Aye Ephraim

Tuya and Yuya were parents of:

Daughter: Tiye aka Zipporah / Jochebed / Jezebel / Joacaste / Merope / Naamah
(mother of Moses / Akhenaten, grandmother of Joshua / Tutankhamun)

Son: Ephraim aka Aye / Sheshonq I / Sheshonq I / Ahab / Asa / Aya / Ayyab / Lab'ayu / Addaya / Rib-Addi / Shaul, Jerimoth, Nebat II / Ithra / Jethro / Eleazar / Nimshi / Ahilud / Hobab / Jeremoth / Je-rimoth / eastern Jahrammat

Son: Manasseh aka Shalmaneser III Aanen, Aaron, Manasseh, Menasseh, Asuraballit, Mery-Re, Ashuraballit, Ilu-KabKabu, Belus, Bel, Amon, Amariah, Amarnappa, Amon-appa, Jeroboam I

In the political / military world, Tuya Asherah's daughter Tiye was wife to two Pharaoh's, plus mother of two and grandmother of at least one (Tutankhamun).

In the spiritual realm, Asherah's memory was melded with and eclipsed by (in the pantheon of Goddesses) her granddaughter-in-law, Queen Shammuramat / Semiramis, who founded the Hanging Gardens of Babylon and created a lasting monument to her own name, "Heaven in the Sands" (Shammu-ramat). Tuya / Asherah's sons Aye (Ephraim) and Aanen (Manasseh) and their progeny more than made up for her fade from memory, as they and the Chosen changed the world forever.

The 9th Century BC will come to be viewed as the true beginning of monotheism, resulting from a melding of Egyptian / Ethiopian rites and teachings with those of Assyria / Mittanni, even then without insulting Mesopotamian / Babylonian ancestors. The Sun King Akhenaten professed worship of One God, and the Century of Peace between David and Joseph created the faith we know as Judaism, and laid the foundations for the emergence of Christianity in the First Century AD and Islam in the 7th Century AD.

Queen Asenath / Ashtoreh / Asherah / Ashratu or as I like to refer to her, Empress Tuya will be remembered forever as a formative lady in the annals of humanikind.

Peace 2 All

Monday, June 20, 2011

Oceans calling conscious Greens

Mississippi Empress

Nitrates and phosphates are fertilizing death
Running through rivers of sadness and loss
Shooting into the Gulf with toxic intention
Reorder priorities or find out the cost

I offer up a compost of tea and nutrition
As clean as the forest of joy we all lived near
Move forward quickly or dig in one spot
Let our Star warm our eyes and our ears

Yuya Joe College
June 20, 2011



Marine life threatened with mass extinction

NATIONAL ABORIGINAL DAY feat. Eagle & Hawk, TUE at Casino Rama

Eagle & Hawk Concert at Rama June 21st




This year's entertainment is Eagle & Hawk. One listen to Eagle & Hawk's distinctive sound and you'll be hooked. By blending inspired vision with musical talent, Eagle & Hawk have created a progressive style of 'rock' steeped in roots, fusion, and solid songwriting that continues to gain fans - and loads of fanfare - worldwide.



Rama Hall

From 12noon until 10pm First Nations vendors will be selling a wide variety of products including wood carvings, stained glass, clothing and much more.


Ballrooms - First Nations Workshops

Three unique workshops will be featured in the Ballrooms of Rama Hall running at various times, each lasting one hour.

These unique workshops are as follows:

Dreamcatcher Workshop 1 & 4pm

Dance Presentation with the Taabik Singers 2pm & 5pm

Hoop Dance workshop at 2pm

First Nations Cuisine Presentation 3pm & 6pm

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

500+ Quebec Police raid Mohawk reserves; Over pot???

QPP/RCMP overkill for tobacco and marijuana offences




According to ca.news.yahoo.com, in OKA, Quebec today there was a major police anti-drug operation, involving about 500 officers including the RCMP, is taking place today in Mohawk communities around Montreal.

A number of searches and arrests have been made in Kanesatake, Akwesasne and Oka.

Police say the operation involves organized crime and drug-trafficking — but they can't provide specifics yet on things like the number of arrests and the quantity of drugs seized. They are saying that 38 arrest warrants have been handed out, and that the seizures primarily involve marijuana.


Full Yahoo.com article on police raids at Mohawk reservations in Quebec

Friday, June 10, 2011

Eden Full is MY hero; Young inventor makes solar power more efficient


19 year old whiz awaiting patent for tracking invention


We don't often get good news stories with social, environmental and clean energy benefits, but the brilliant solar tracking technology developed by Eden Full is all that and more. The photovaoltaic solar energy tracking technology costs about one twentieth of traditional approaches, and Eden has even tested her trackers in Kenya!




Keep on inspiring people all over the world, Eden, stay well, and just be yourself!!!!

Peace from Thornhill,

Yuya Joe


Thursday, June 02, 2011

LEGALIZE IT: Global Commission on Drug Policy


Calls for drug policies based on methods empirically proven


NEW YORK, N.Y. - The global war on drugs has failed with devastating consequences for individuals and societies around the world, argues a new report to be released Thursday.

Compiled by the Global Commission on Drug Policy, which includes former heads of state, a former U.N. secretary-general and a business mogul, the report calls on governments to end the criminalization of marijuana and other controlled substances.

"Political leaders and public figures should have the courage to articulate publicly what many of them acknowledge privately: that the evidence overwhelmingly demonstrates that repressive strategies will not solve the drug problem, and that the war on drugs has not, and cannot, be won," the report said.

The 19-member commission includes former U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan and former U.S. official George P. Schultz, who held cabinet posts under U.S. Presidents Ronald Reagan and Richard Nixon. Others include former U.S. Federal Reserve chairman Paul Volcker, former presidents of Mexico, Brazil and Colombia, writers Carlos Fuentes and Mario Vargas Llosa, U.K. business mogul Richard Branson and the current prime minister of Greece.

Instead of punishing users who the report says "do no harm to others," the commission argues that governments should end criminalization of drug use, experiment with legal models that would undermine organized crime syndicates and offer health and treatment services for drug-users in need.

The commission called for drug policies based on methods empirically proven to reduce crime, lead to better health and promote economic and social development. The commission is especially critical of the United States, which its members say must lead changing its anti-drug policies from being guided by anti-crime approaches to ones rooted in health care and human rights.

"We hope this country (the U.S.) at least starts to think there are alternatives," former Colombian president Cesar Gaviria told The Associated Press by phone. "We don't see the U.S. evolving in a way that is compatible with our (countries') long-term interests."


USA White House disses report, misses point that US itself is misguided

The office of White House drug czar Gil Kerlikowske said the report was misguided.

"Drug addiction is a disease that can be successfully prevented and treated. Making drugs more available — as this report suggests — will make it harder to keep our communities healthy and safe," Office of National Drug Control Policy spokesman Rafael Lemaitre said.

That office cites statistics showing declines in U.S. drug use compared to 30 years ago, along with a more recent 46 per cent drop in current cocaine use among young adults over the last five years.

The report cited U.N. estimates that opiate use increased 34.5 per cent worldwide and cocaine 27 per cent from 1998 to 2008, while the use of cannabis, or marijuana, was up 8.5 per cent.


Source: Ca.News.Yahoo.com

Monday, May 23, 2011

ALL Women ARE Beautiful!!! Gorgeous Exotic Ladies


I know some idiot recently tried to state that beauty can be ranked scientifically by race, so I guess his mama never told him that beauty is in the eye of the beholder. Let's not justify such ignorance by paying it any further attention.

Please enjoy some photos, videos and weblinks of beautiful women from all over the world:



Awai Amidu, + More Beautiful Women from Ghana - Ghana's Top Actresses Models Singers Goddesses


Check out this rockin' video featuring gorgeous West African models and actresses, from Ghana to Nigeria and many more West African nations, praise Jah!






Jennifer Lopez - American Idol judge; Actress, Singer, Model














China's Hottest Supermodel, Ziyi Zhang







Superbabe Damaris Lewis, Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Model



Krystle Awurama Simpson, Miss Universe Ghana 2010 / West African supermodel






Jessica White, USA hottie, actress and supermodel






Melat Yante, Miss Ethiopia 2009





Ten Top Superbabes: 10 Most Compelling Beautiful Women




Lookin' good Melat!!!

Peace 2 All,

Yuya Joe College

Conscious Music Art Architecture

GreenDemocraticParty.ca

Visions of a Bright Green Future

MNN - Mohawk Nation News

Syria in Transition

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