Free Republic 2nd Qtr 2024 Fundraising Target: $81,000 Receipts & Pledges to-date: $35,069
43%  
Woo hoo!! And we're now over 43%!! Thank you all very much!! God bless.

Keyword: yanomami

Brevity: Headers | « Text »
  • Miners Explore Amazon Basin To Support "Green" Energy; New York Times Horrified

    08/04/2022 5:02:14 AM PDT · by MtnClimber · 29 replies
    Manhattan Contrarian ^ | 3 Aug, 2022 | Francis Menton
    The front page of today’s New York Times features a big article clearly intended to get the readers riled up about the latest environmental horror that must be stopped. The headline is “The Illegal Airstrips Bringing Toxic Mining to Brazil’s Indigenous Land.” Subheadline: “The Times identified hundreds of airstrips that bring criminal mining operations to the most remote corners of the Amazon.” Wow, this is bad. The airstrips are “illegal.” The mining is “toxic,” and not only toxic but also “criminal.” And it’s all happening in the most pristine place left in the whole world, the “remote corners of the...
  • Amazon Indian tribe hit by swine flu

    11/04/2009 6:50:31 AM PST · by Berlin_Freeper · 10 replies · 567+ views
    reuters.com ^ | Nov 4, 2009 | Reuters
    Swine flu has hit an isolated tribe of Indians in the Amazon jungle, with seven dying in the last two weeks, Survival International said on Wednesday. A further 1,000 members of the Yanomami tribe in Venezuela are believed to have caught the flu, the indigenous peoples rights group said. It is feared the flu could sweep through the area and kill many more Yanomami as the Indians have little resistance to introduced diseases. About 32,000 Yanomami live in the Venezuela-Brazil border region and form the largest relatively isolated tribe in the Amazon. Survival director Stephen Corry said the situation was...
  • Amazon tribe hits back at green 'colonialism'

    10/13/2007 10:00:05 PM PDT · by Lorianne · 5 replies · 81+ views
    Guardian Unlimited ^ | October 14 2007 | Juliette Jowit
    It's one of the most fashionable ideas to save the planet from global warming: buying up tropical rainforest to save it from destruction. Gordon Brown has even appointed the millionaire founder of one such charity, Johan Eliasch, as his special adviser on deforestation. But like all big ideas it is controversial, and this week a leading Amazonian campaigner will visit Britain to protest that this latest trend is linked to a health and social crisis among indigenous people, including sickness, depression, suicide, obesity and drug addiction. Davi Kopenawa, a shaman of the Yanomami tribe, will help launch a report that,...