No, the toughest part was etching the words "We will make you whole again" from the trunk of yellow cedar, said Alaska Native carver Mike Webber of Cordova.
Webber and others believe Exxon broke that promise, made to Cordova residents by a top company official after the 1989 Exxon Valdez spill, by refusing to pay affected Alaskans billions of dollars in punitive damages.
"It made me so angry it took me a week to carve those words out," he said.
Webber's Tlingit ancestors carved such poles to embarrass rich people who owed society, but such poles are rare today, he said.
4 comments:
Are you saying the Alaskan Natives are wasting their time with their traditional expression of moral disapproval? Funny to hear one Native dissing other Natives' culture.
A shame poll is intended to shame people by definition. You said it wouldn't work. To be specific, you said, "A totem pole more would amuse them than add any more 'shame'."
Let me reiterate that. You said, "The only thing that shames the white man is if his wallet is flatter than he would like." "The only thing"--a flattened wallet--doesn't include the Alaskan shame pole. If you're too stupid to realize it, you just said the pole won't work. Only a flattened wallet will work, in your anti-Native opinion.
That's not what the people who carved the pole believe. So whether you realize it or not, you just belittled their cultural practice. Oops.
Sorry, Russ, but you're in over your head here. As I've said before, don't say stupid or contradictory things and I won't have to point them out. Do say them and I will point them out...guaranteed.
I'm glad you think you've addressed the issue twice. I've pointed out how you said the pole wouldn't work twice--that only a flattened wallet would shame Exxon. Readers can judge for themselves whether you dissed another Native culture or not.
Longtime readers will note that you've dissed at least six or seven tribes that didn't meet your standard of Indian-ness. You know, the standard that you can't or won't articulate? What's one more slight after a half a dozen of them?
There's no reason to come up with new ways to note your shortcomings when I've nailed them already. As much fun as I have pointing out your mistakes and contradictions, I have better things to do with my time.
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