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Recent Posts
- Migrating to Substack
- The many voices that called for Native genocide: A collection of quotes from the United States
- The Whiteness of Audubon’s Snowy Egret
- Book Review: Rebecca Nagle’s ‘By the Fire We Carry’ burns bright
- Women Leaders Are An Indigenous Tradition; Is It Time for a Woman US President?

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Category Archives: my own thoughts
The many voices that called for Native genocide: A collection of quotes from the United States
Below is a collection of quotes, mostly from politicians and newspapers, calling for or describing the genocide of Native Americans, from 1832 to 1891. That word didn’t evolve until the Holocaust. In the 1800s, the word was simply “extermination.” On … Continue reading
Posted in my own thoughts
Tagged ethnic cleansing, extermination, genocide, Holocaust, indians, native americans, Native history, redskins, US history, William Clark
4 Comments
The Whiteness of Audubon’s Snowy Egret
Nicolas Mirzoeff’s essay, The Whiteness of Birds, brought my attention to this painting. There are layers here that probably tell us more about people than the about the ecology of the bird – about white history, white nature, white autonomy, … Continue reading
Posted in my own thoughts
Tagged Audubon, black-history, haiti, print, Rice Hope Plantation, slavery, snowy egret
2 Comments
Book Review: Rebecca Nagle’s ‘By the Fire We Carry’ burns bright
Like Rebecca Nagle, I remember that Monday morning in July, 2020, glued to my laptop, waiting for news from SCOTUSblog. My first indication of the McGirt decision was a tweet from Nagle exclaiming that Gorsuch authored the decision. That was … Continue reading
Women Leaders Are An Indigenous Tradition; Is It Time for a Woman US President?
My essay, published Oct 9, 2024 by Native News Online, dives into the long tradition of women in social and political leadership roles in Indigenous societies, from time immemorial to the present. It can be found at the hyperlink above.
Posted in my own thoughts, news
Tagged history, leadership, Nancy Ward, Native America, Native News Online, tribes, women
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Another Native mass burial site hidden in plain sight
Last week I saw one of the largest mass burial sites in the United States. It is unmarked. The location is the fields among the rolling hills and gentle pastures just south of Charleston, Tennessee. This is where 9,032 Cherokees … Continue reading
Posted in my own thoughts
Tagged Cherokee, concentration camp, detachments, ethnic cleansing, Fort Cass, genocide, georgia, history, mass burial, mass grave, NAGPRA, native americans, stockade, Tennessee, Trail of Tears
8 Comments
Indian Removal and the Black Belt: Connecting ethnic cleansing and slavery
The 100-million-year story of the Black Belt, a crescent-shaped swath from Virginia to Louisiana, has been told many times – how a geological formation from the Cretaceous, visible today in the dark soils it created, can be seen in the … Continue reading
Sky Woman vs The Hillbilly: An Indigenous critique
The contradictions of JD Vance are well-known. He once called Trump “a bad man, a morally reprehensible human being.” Now he’s allied with Trump. He claims to come from a poor region, yet embraces policies that will further exploit and … Continue reading
Posted in my own thoughts
Tagged appalachia, hillbilly, hillbilly elegy, Indigenous Critique, j-d-vance, JD Vance, matriarch, sky woman, trump, women
4 Comments
Revelations about the Revolution: The Freedom to Steal Land from “Merciless Indian savages” was Key to the Declaration of Independence
My essay, published this morning (July 4, 2024) by Native News Online and Yahoo News, explores a central thesis in Ned Blackhawk’s award-winning book, The Rediscovery of American – that the American Revolution was primarily motivated by the desire to … Continue reading
Using blood quantum, will there even be a Seventh Generation?
This topic won’t go away until it goes away. So here goes. In The Truth about Stories (2003), Thomas King (Cherokee) discusses the blood quantum approach that the government of Canada uses to determine “status Indians,” whereby those born a … Continue reading
Posted in my own thoughts
Tagged blood quantum, enrollment, indigenous, native american, race, seventh generation, tribal citizenship, tribal sovereignty
1 Comment
How ignoring Indigenous Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK) set modern ornithology back a hundred years
This is a re-post from my other blog, The Cottonwood Post, which is focused on birds, birding, and environmental issues. Here I review a new book about the history of American ornithology — and all the stuff the early colonizers … Continue reading
Posted in my own thoughts
Tagged Audubon, birding, birds, Kaufman, ornithology, TEK, Traditional Ecological Knowledge
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