Tagged: Red dot or feather RSS

  • thaswassup 4:25 pm on November 5, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: Fuckin pilgrims, Red dot or feather, Self-determination   

    Obama: US must reverse course with Indians 

    By BEN FELLER, Associated Press Writer Ben Feller, Associated Press Writer 50 mins ago

    WASHINGTON – President Barack Obama assured American Indians on Thursday that they have a place in his White House and on his agenda, telling tribal leaders their marginalized community deserves more from its government.

    “I get it. I’m on your side,” Obama told the largest gathering of tribal leaders in U.S. history.

    Obama devoted part of his own time Thursday and even more of his administration’s attention toward renewing relations with American Indians. He opened a conference that drew leaders from 386 tribal nations — the first meeting of its kind in 15 years — and he ordered every Cabinet agency to take more steps toward more cooperation.

    The president returned to the event at the Interior Department late in the day for closing remarks, as scheduled, but he altered his message to address a deadly shooting rampage at the Fort Hood Army base in Texas. He said his administration would get answers to every question about the incident.

    Obama’s outreach to tribal leaders amounted to a campaign promise kept from a president who got significant support from Native Americans on his way to the White House.

    It comes as American Indians remain entrenched in a class-action lawsuit against the federal government, claiming the government has long swindled them out of land royalties.

    Obama said he didn’t blame tribal leaders for skepticism about another politician offering hopeful words. But he said he has no interest in going through the motions of just holding a summit with them.

    The president seemed to connect best when he told his audience that he was like them: an “outsider” who grew up without a father, moved around a lot, and understood what it was like to struggle and be ignored.

    “You will not be forgotten as long as I’m in this White House,” Obama said to a sustained ovation.

    Whether that promise results in action over the next few years will be the test. In a question-and-answer session, audience members pressed Obama for government help on a litany of matters, from more respect for sovereignty rights to environmental cleanup to concerns about offshore drilling.

    One leader pleaded with Obama to find a way to make the federal commitment lasting, so that it would not be at the whim of White House elections. In the process, the speaker predicted Obama would win re-election, which apparently stuck with the president as he pledged to enforce the laws of the land.

    “For the next eight years — the next four years at least, let me not jump the gun,” Obama said, catching himself. He finished the thought more narrowly by saying that for “the next three years and one month” of his term that he would ensure a new relationship is in place.

    During the conference, agency officials and tribal leaders discussed problems facing American Indians, including economic development, education, health care, public safety and housing.

    The president signed a memo calling on every cabinet agency to give him a detailed plan to improve the relationship between the government and tribal communities.

    He has made good on pledges to hold the summit and to give American Indians a prominent voice on his senior staff — and he reminded the audience of that.

    “We respect you as a man of your word,” responded Jefferson Keel, president of the National Congress of American Indians.

     
  • thaswassup 7:18 pm on October 15, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , Indigenous Peoples, Native Americans, Red dot or feather   

    “Pocahottie” Costume 

    Description on website: No campfire. No stringing beads. No shucking corn in this Pocahottie Pow Wow costume! The work is done and it’s time to play cowboys and Indians, only this time the Indian picks the cowboys she wants. Put the wow in pow wow and practice some native American rituals in this sexy Pocahottie costume. Is that an ear of corn in your pocket or are you just glad to see me?

     
  • thaswassup 3:39 pm on July 28, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: Red, Red dot or feather,   

    Maine Indians want athletes honored 

    By GLENN ADAMS, Associated Press Writer Glenn Adams, Associated Press Writer 1 hr 26 mins ago

    INDIAN ISLAND, Maine – Leaders of Maine’s Penobscot Indian Nation say it’s time for a pioneering baseball player from their tribe to be properly recognized for his contributions to America’s pastime.

    Penobscot Chief Kirk Francis and tribal Rep. Wayne Mitchell, who gathered with other tribal members at the grave of Louis Sockalexis, also reiterated their request to the Cleveland Indians to stop using the caricature of a grinning Chief Wahoo on players’ uniforms and team publications.

    Sockalexis played professional baseball for the Cleveland Spiders from 1897-1899 and batted .338 in 66 games in his first season.

    A resolution passed June 12 by the Maine Legislature calls Sockalexis the “first known American Indian to play major league baseball” and the inspiration for the team name Indians, which was officially adopted in 1915. The resolution also criticizes Sports Illustrated for not including Louis or his cousin Andrew, who competed in the Olympic marathon in 1912, on its list of Maine’s 50 greatest athletes, and asks that the magazine “correct the oversight.”

    “They were always talked about in my upbringing on the reservation,” said Francis, adding “they truly were heroes in this community.”

    But Francis and Mitchell said the contributions of the two athletes have been largely overlooked by baseball and the media.

    “To me, their accomplishments went far beyond their athletic prowess,” said Francis.

    Sports Illustrated spokesman Scott Novak said the magazine has “great respect for the Sockalexis cousins. In fact, Louis was profiled by SI in 1995.

    “These lists are very subjective in nature and if SI produces a similar feature, we will surely give them the utmost consideration which they deserve,” Novak said.

    Mitchell said the Penobscots first asked the Cleveland Indians in 2000 to stop using the Chief Wahoo image, “a bucktoothed cartoon face Indian that they wear on their uniforms.”

    “We felt then as we do now, that it was ignorant and disrespectful,” Mitchell said. “But that franchise completely ignored our request … and showed their complete disregard for us, and their disrespect.”

    Messages left with Indians’ spokesman Bob DiBiasio and were not immediately returned.

    The Penobscots’ resolution also asks the National Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, N.Y., to formally recognize Sockalexis as the first American Indian to play major league baseball. Baseball author Ed Rice, who also spoke at Tuesday’s event, acknowledged that Sockalexis did not play enough games to qualify for the hall itself.

    But “Sock broke the red color line” in baseball and opened the door to other Native Americans who played, Rice said.

    James Madison Toy, who played for Cleveland a decade before Sockalexis, was said to be of Sioux ancestry but he never publicly acknowledged his Indian heritage. Toy’s 1919 death certificate lists his race as white.

    Sockalexis’ meteoric career was cut short by alcoholism and he died at age 42 on Dec. 24, 1913, according to the state of Maine Web site. In 1934, the state erected a stone marker to replace the wooden cross that had marked his grave.

    Andrew Sockalexis finished fourth in the 1912 Olympic marathon in Sweden and second in both Boston Marathons in which he competed. He died of tuberculosis at the age of 27 in 1919.

    Source: Yahoo News

     
  • thaswassup 11:09 pm on July 24, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: Clothing, Racist Mascots, Red dot or feather,   

    King of Cleveland by Pennant Race 

    lebron_indians

    Item description from Turntable Lab:

    What do you get when you combine the most offensive logo in sports with the greatest player in basketball?

    Answer: The gas face.

     
    • sherpaco 4:51 pm on August 6, 2009 Permalink | Reply

      I kind of want that shirt now.

  • thaswassup 10:48 am on July 24, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: K-Pop, Red dot or feather,   

    MC Mong – Indian Boy 

    H/T to Khingz

     
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