America was built on two monumental crimes: the genocide of the Native American and the enslavement of the African American. The tendency of official America is to memorialize other peoples’ crimes and to forget its own - to seek a high moral ground as a pretext to ignore real issues.
Mahmood Mamdani
I have never seen such perfect sentences.
(via freedominlibya)
(via jamaicanblackcastoroil)
If you blame Native American communities for their poverty, remember that the entire continent was stolen from them.
If you blame Black American communities for their relative poverty, remember that Black Americans were stolen from a continent, trafficked, and enslaved for nearly 300 years.
Tell me again about how your family ‘started from nothing’ when they immigrated. Didn’t they start from whiteness? Seems like a pretty good start.
The American Dream required dual genocides, but tell me again about fairness and equal opportunity. Tell me about democracy, modeled after the Iroquois Confederacy. Tell me your proud heritage, and I will show you the violence that made it so.
(via bingwi)
We Were Children (by TurtleIslandNewsDaily.info)
a First Nations film about the boarding school experiance.
trigger warning for abuse.
(Source: youtube.com, via bingwi)
We Were Children (by TurtleIslandNewsDaily.info)
a First Nations film about the boarding school experiance.
trigger warning for abuse.
(Source: youtube.com, via rematiration-deactivated2013111)
The Infamous Government Order Mandating Forced Haircuts For Native Americans
Commissioner of Indian Affairs William Atkinson Jones sent this letter to superintendents of all federal reservations and agencies in January 1902. The notorious missive soon became known as the
(via bingwi)
from Wikipedia
“A treaty is an express agreement under international law entered into by actors in international law, namely sovereign states andinternational organizations. A treaty may also be known as an (international) agreement, protocol, covenant, contract,convention,pact, or exchange of letters, among other terms. Regardless of terminology, all of these forms of agreements are, under international law, equally considered treaties and the rules are the same.[1]
Treaties can be loosely compared to contracts: both are means of willing parties assuming obligations among themselves, and a party to either that fails to live up to their obligations can be held liable under international law.”
“
Treaties and indigenous peoples[edit source | editbeta]
Treaties formed an important part of European colonization and, in many parts of the world, Europeans attempted to legitimize their sovereignty by signing treaties with indigenous peoples. In most cases these treaties were in extremely disadvantageous terms to the native people, who often did not appreciate the implications of what they were signing.
In some rare cases, such as with Ethiopia and Qing Dynasty China, the local governments were able to use the treaties to at least mitigate the impact of European colonization. This involved learning the intricacies of European diplomatic customs and then using the treaties to prevent a power from overstepping their agreement or by playing different powers against each other.
In other cases, such as New Zealand and Canada, treaties allowed native peoples to maintain a minimum amount of autonomy. In the case of indigenous Australians, unlike with the Māori of New Zealand, no treaty was ever entered into with the indigenous peoples entitling the Europeans to land ownership, under the doctrine of terra nullius (later overturned by Mabo v Queensland, establishing the concept of native title well after colonization was already a fait accompli). Such treaties between colonizers and indigenous peoples are an important part of political discourse in the late 20th and early 21st century, the treaties being discussed have international standing as has been stated in a treaty study by the UN.
United States[edit source | editbeta]
Prior to 1871 the government of the United States regularly entered into treaties with Americans of the United States but the Indian Appropriations Act of March 3, 1871 (ch. 120, 16 Stat. 563) had a rider (25 U.S.C. § 71) attached that effectively ended the President’s treaty making by providing that no Indian nation or tribe shall be acknowledged as an independent nation, tribe, or power with whom the United States may contract by treaty. The federal government continued to provide similar contractual relations with the Indian tribes after 1871 by agreements, statutes, and executive orders.[10]”
In case you forgot
Bet they don’t tell you about that in your textbooks…
(via raw-r-evolution)
There’s a stereotype that black people are lazy. I don’t know if that’s true, but I know white people went all the way to Africa to get out of doing work.
Lance Crouther (via rattlingbone)
Sometimes you read something and your whole perspective of a situation changes. This is one of those things.
(via interactivesleep)




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The gifs
(via sharvondaphotog)




this needs just be an automatic reblog. i am about to que this shit for a daily post.
(via you-want-to-be-god)
(via raw-r-evolution)
Historically speaking, we went from being Indians to pagans to savages to hostiles to militants to activists to Native Americans. Its five hundred years later and they still cant see us. We are still invisible.
(via indigenousambition)
<3 i want to have a child like him
fucking reminder next time a white person complains about free loading natives, next time a white person complains about latin@s coming to europe, fuck you.
This.
(via baapi-makwa)
12 Years A Slave
The trailer is finally here and boy it looks terrific!
(via veryfemmeandantifascist)














