I am glad that @ewarren said she was sorry today for the the harm that she caused, but without her using her platform and power to repair that harm the apology falls flat. What does she need to do next? I'm gonna get specific... #THREAD
Warren has perpetuated misinformation about Cherokee identity that directly undermines tribal sovereignty. Her "apology" didnt set the record straight, bc most ppl still think she has a Cherokee ancestor, the DNA test proved it, and White ppl claiming to be Cherokee need no proof
Here is what she said today:
“I know I’ve made mistakes. I am sorry for the harm that I have caused. I have listened and I have learned a lot.”
Here's what she needs to say:
"I was told a story as a child that my family had a Cherokee ancestor. I now know that story is not true. I am not Native American, I am not "part Cherokee" and my family is not Cherokee. My family and I are White.
In October of 2018 I took a DNA test to try and prove that my family's story was true. The DNA test proved nothing, because only tribal affiliation and kinship prove Cherokee identity, not race or biology. Equating Cherokee identity with the results of a DNA test is wrong.
It was not only my fault, but my privilege to never question what my parents told me. Research on my genealogy going back over 150 years does not reveal a single Native ancestor. Like many people who grew up with such stories, mine was never true.
Native Nations are not relics of the past, but active, contemporary, and distinct political groups who are still fighting for recognition and sovereignty within the United States. Those of us who falsely claim Native identity undermine this fight.
I will continue to use my platform to support Native issues and policies. And I will continue to correct any stereotypes and misinformation about Native identity that I helped promote."
See the difference? One names and then addresses the harm caused and one, well, doesn't.
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How can Trump go to war with Iran without Congress’s approval? Did you know U.S. presidents going back to George Washington have fought undeclared wars? And it all started as wars with Indigenous Nations. The first undeclared wars the U.S. fought were with Indigenous nations.
These wars were not insignificant, but reshaped U.S. war power, presidential powers, our democracy and the continent. At the end of the Revolutionary War, Congress disbanded the army. Distrustful of centralized power after the tyranny of King George, our founders elected to
keep a small number of enlisted men, but not a large standing army. In 1 battle with the Miami Confederacy, over 90% of US soldiers were killed or injured–effectively wiping the American army out. War with Indigenous nations is why we have a standing military & why it is so big.
Nat'l advocacy orgs:
NCAI: oldest & largest Native advocacy org in the U.S. Like the ACLU for Indian Country. ncai.org
NIWRC: A nat'l coalition of tribal & state-based programs working 2 end domestic & sexual violence against Native women niwrc.org
Two weeks ago today, the Supreme Court of Muscogee Nation affirmed the citizenship rights of freedmen descendants. After decades of disenfranchisement, freedmen descendants are now eligible for tribal citizenship. How did we get here? Here’s a little history lesson 🧵:
In the early 1800s Muscogee, Cherokee, Chickasaw, Choctaw, and Seminole Nations adopted chattel slavery from the US South. Partially for this reason, our nations came to be called the loaded moniker “the Five Civilized Tribes.”
Some ppl say our tribes’ version of slavery was “nicer” than the U.S. There is no “nice” way to treat a human like property. In Cherokee, Chickasaw, Choctaw and Muscogee Nations, enslaved people weren't allowed 2 read, write, sing hymns, or sit at the same table as their owner.
People are talking about genocide as if it is a rhetorical or moral debate. It is a legal term–a crime defined under international law. South Africa and nine other countries have charged Israel with the crime of genocide at the International Court of Justice...🧵
That body issued a preliminary finding it was plausible Israel committed genocide and ordered Israel to take measures to prevent genocide from happening–like stop blocking humanitarian aid. Israel ignored the order.
If the genocide convention is to mean anything, the appropriate public response is to call for Israel’s blockade & the starvation of civilians to end. Even if you’re personally not ready to call it genocide, the plausibility of genocide should be enough to take steps to stop it.
(1/6) Why the federal funding chaos disproportionately affects Native Americans:
(2/6) The Trump layoffs, funding freezes and executive orders disproportionately affect tribes. Tribes rely on federal funding to administer healthcare, schools, food programs, police departments and more.
(3/6) This funding isn’t welfare or a handout. It is a treaty right, enshrined in our constitution as the “supreme law of the land”. In exchange for billions of acres, tribes received assurances the U.S. would provide things like food or education.
(1/x) So much of what is happening in our present stems from what we have not resolved in our past.
(2/x) In our self-conception, America is a beacon of democracy for the rest of the world. Even when our founding sins are recognized, we like to believe things have gotten better. The story we tell ourselves is one of progress. In reality, our government committed genocide.
(3/x) It has never reformed itself or changed its laws to prevent such atrocities from happening again.
So now, when our government wants to ban Muslims from entering our country, suspend the international rules of war to fight terror, detain enemy combatants indefinitely, put...