New Sci-fi Story
in the
January/February
Issue of
Called
The Noise & The Silence
On the Interzone site:
scroll to the bottom of the page to order an individual copy.
Or from Weightless
Books here.
The story takes place in a city on a desert planet (a lot like where I live, oddly enough). Life there is dominated
by what is called "The Wall" - a projection that screams and shouts from
public and private walls twenty-four/seven.
Thus, The Noise.
The story follows two people who used to be a part of a
movement called "The Silence."
The Silence was a freedom and justice movement where huge
groups of people gathered in the streets
and simply stood in silence.
The Silence made its
first appearance in my book
On the Side
of the Crow.
Interesting note
(I wasn't aware of this until a couple of weeks ago):
One man in Turkey
(performance artist Erdem Gunduz)
began standing in silence in Istanbul in 2013,
protesting government brutality,
and spurred large
groups of people to stand in silent protest
across other Turkish cities.
The
Interzone issue
includes stories by Julie C. Day, Michael Reid, Mel Kassel,
Val Nolan and
T.R. Napper
**********************
And this from Amnesty International
USA
about the current state of the Dakota
Access Pipeline:
"The Army Corps of Engineers’
Environmental review of the pipeline is still open for public comment. Amnesty
International will be filling a submission soon. We need you to send in a
comment too.
We must hurry, because at any time the Army Corps may decide to stop the review, as President Trump requested in his memo. The more submissions the Army Corps receives, the more likely it is they will continue their review and take human rights into account.
Here’s how to submit a comment to the Army Corps of Engineers review of DAPL:
We must hurry, because at any time the Army Corps may decide to stop the review, as President Trump requested in his memo. The more submissions the Army Corps receives, the more likely it is they will continue their review and take human rights into account.
Here’s how to submit a comment to the Army Corps of Engineers review of DAPL:
- Send an email to Mr. Gib Owen at gib.a.owen.civ@mail.mil.
- Please use “NOI Comments, Dakota Access Pipeline Crossing” as the subject of your email.
- Read the Army Corps of Engineers’ notice about the review here.
- Please note that what you submit will likely be made public. Consider this before providing any personal information in your submission.
- Please let me know if you submitted a comment by emailing iar@aiusa.org.
- Here’s an example of what you can write, along with your own personal views. Please make your email personal:
Thank
you for conducting an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) review of the Dakota
Access Pipeline crossing of the Missouri River at Lake Oahe. This review must
take into account the serious concerns of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe, as
well as downriver Indigenous Peoples and other communities, about the impact of
the pipeline on the right to access to water, right to a healthy environment,
Indigenous rights, cultural rights, Treaty rights and other human rights
recognized in international law.
Furthermore, the Army Corps should expand the EIS review to include the entire pipeline, not just the Missouri River crossing at Lake Oahe, and take into account the concerns of all people who may be affected.
Regardless of the outcome of the EIS review, the government should seek the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe’s free, prior and informed consent (FPIC) before any permits for the pipeline are issued or any construction takes place. The requirement for FPIC in such circumstances is enshrined in international law. The EIS is not sufficient to fulfil the human right of Indigenous People to have decision making power on issues that may harm their rights.
The U.S. government must respect, protect and fulfill the human rights of Indigenous Peoples, including those of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe."
Furthermore, the Army Corps should expand the EIS review to include the entire pipeline, not just the Missouri River crossing at Lake Oahe, and take into account the concerns of all people who may be affected.
Regardless of the outcome of the EIS review, the government should seek the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe’s free, prior and informed consent (FPIC) before any permits for the pipeline are issued or any construction takes place. The requirement for FPIC in such circumstances is enshrined in international law. The EIS is not sufficient to fulfil the human right of Indigenous People to have decision making power on issues that may harm their rights.
The U.S. government must respect, protect and fulfill the human rights of Indigenous Peoples, including those of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe."
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