 Primitive accumulation of capital through slave trafficking, piracy and the like generated the resources for the first capitalist enterprises. It also entailed the seizure of lands from the indigenous population, which continues to this very day. Over the last half-century, neoliberal policies have centralized power and wealth in the hands of a few, while dispossessing many, including indigenous communities throughout the continent. Professor David Harvey calls this accumulation by dispossession. Just like 500 years ago, indigenous communities today are resisting not only the intrusion of capitalist enterprises into their territory that destroy their resources, life cycles, living spaces and culture, but also resisting the military that is deployed at the service of transnational capital. Indigenous communities are proving how wrong the champions of materialistic values have been in thinking that industrial growth is tantamount to progress. A progress that supposedly improves the quality of life of the people. We now know that materialism is not the road to happiness and it sounds sustainable because it leads to the destruction of all human life. We have so much to learn from indigenous populations that center their worldview on a community-based, ecologically balanced and culturally respectful way of life. Despite historical oppression, indigenous people are resisting, not only for themselves, but for humanity. Here we have resisted, here we have fought, here we think of living well, out of the capitalist world, but if you don't think of it on the other side of the world, if you continue to choose with that democracy to presidents like Trump, if you continue to feed colonialism, capitalism, consumption, individualism, our struggle has no sense because they are going to end up with our peoples. Today we give thanks to all indigenous people for standing up for justice against the US war machine and corporate greed. War is not life.