DECOLONIZE U.S. BRDR PRZNZ : #4, SERIES, FROM indigenous brdr narratives after the wall
To experience the community lands in the current period is to merely peer through and above the narrow gaps of thick steel bars. Indigenous peoples are being prevented access and movement to, from and across customary lands, and cultural property by U.S. legislation. Indigenous peoples’ concerted efforts to challenge the legality of U.S. deathscapes and settler ecologies/economies of war:
“i.e.: a technology-saturated ‘roof’ of militarized airspace,
filled with satellites,
space debris plummeting down
and being vaporated by
NASA Space Engineers in Florida
stadium lights,
and agents stalking indigenous women
under cover,
in the dark,
infrared radar,
watch towers, drones,
unmanned spy
aircraft, and cyber information
sharing crackdowns, spearheaded
through the “Virtual Border
Neighborhood Watch Program”,
“border radio interoperability”,
the “Texas Data Exchange” programs,
and “K-9 units”[1]
demands a critical genocide analysis in the context of indigenous peoples’ challenges to maintain safety, protection, and self-governance in our communities.[1][1] Margo Tamez, “decolonize u.s. brdr prznz: #4,” from indigenous brdr narratives after the wall, open access cyber-e-collection, Indigifem Blog, at.