SE Texas AIM

Genocide
COINTELPRO
Buffalo

AIM Logoİ

Statement of Intent
Joining Texas AIM
What is Aim?

We came together, four of us initially, committed to the ideal that Indian people need an ongoing presence to insure our well being, and that collectively, we could become something more than just the sum of our individual efforts. Immediately we were baptised by fire, and the fog of misinformation that engulfs anyone who stands against oppression, and assimilation. Over time, our efforts have made an impact throughout Indian country, from Texas, to Arizona, to Montana, and elswhere. We have endeavored to hold forth standards of conduct befitting a warrior society, so that our people have a representation of honorable people, willling to sacrifice whatever is necessary, whenever it is necesary.

Our efforts, and our travels have brought together an assortment of extraordinary individuals who are committed to each other, and our principles. We stand ready to defend those tenets of freedom and sovereignty the creator has given us, which cannot be taken away by any man. Through our spirituality, our traditions, and our commitment to the highest of ethics, we carry forth the bannerof steadfast determination that is the lineage of the American Indian Movement.

A CALL to end the "celebration" of 500 years of genocide

Statement of Intent

POSITION PAPERS

About the Bellecourts

Crimes Against Humanityİ

If an Agent Knocks

Leonard Peltier Defense Committee


This Chapter offers a Speakers bureau both locally and nationally. You can find out more about these services by sending an email from the link below.


For more information, contact: dodiefinstead@ev1.net


The media in recent years has kept us alert to details of global wars that involve "ethnic cleansing," as the term "attempted genocide" is currently euphemized. We tend to relegate such events to some place outside our own country, but here in our United States, many nations are facing extinction at the hands of industrial capitalist colonialism. For these nations live, or rather subsist, on lands where resources like oil and uranium generate a steady flow of dollars into the coffers of rich, white Americans. As pressure to flood, poison or eliminate huge tracts of inhabited Native lands continues, a number of tribal women have begun to speak out in resistance to the exploitation and pollution which directly affects their survival as sovereign nations.