A program like this was long overdue. I am glad that MSNBC makes a great effort to have adequate coverage of issues that affect the black population, and include adequate representation of black commentators. But I had often wondered why this effort didn't include the indigenous people of the US. Keep up the good work! Hope there will be more along these lines! And more on the Latino population (by the way, many of those people arriving at the border are in fact Indigenous people from Mesoamérica and South America), even Middle East!
Please don’t go mainstream. Pave your own way, i.e. Daily Wire, The Blaze, etc. please please make a new all original network. That would be awesome!!!!
These are Native Indigenous women from tribes that have lived on this continent for thousands of years before white settlers, Spanish, Portuguese, Africans, Chinese and more came to or were brought here. And, yes, while many Afro's had integrated into tribes because of slavery and after the Civil War, this is unrelated. Please try and understand and don't be part of the many who still try to silence their voices. You might want to read An Indigenous Peoples' History of the United States.
I’m curious why Afro is such a specific concern for you when the spotlight is on the general indigenous women? Indigenous women barely have a voice and it’s sad to read this criticism of a specific voice within our community not being heard…
Thank you for your video, but I have a question based on “What is the appropriate way to refer to native people in our various communities”: how does one person know that the other person is native indigenous, especially if the two persons are strangers? It’s my understanding that Law Enforcement is trained on NOT to “racial profile” a person. Recently, I had the opportunity to speak with, what I thought was an African-American woman, the conversation was all in Spanish. We spoke, but I dared not have asked where she was from. The lady could’ve been Native Indigenous! And, if this person was, I don’t know if it would’ve made a difference concerning our conversation.
Amazing to have THIS conversation!!!
Thank you for sharing. I am looking forward to watching and learning. ❤️
A program like this was long overdue. I am glad that MSNBC makes a great effort to have adequate coverage of issues that affect the black population, and include adequate representation of black commentators. But I had often wondered why this effort didn't include the indigenous people of the US. Keep up the good work! Hope there will be more along these lines! And more on the Latino population (by the way, many of those people arriving at the border are in fact Indigenous people from Mesoamérica and South America), even Middle East!
Please don’t go mainstream. Pave your own way, i.e. Daily Wire, The Blaze, etc. please please make a new all original network. That would be awesome!!!!
💙💙🤍🤍🇺🇸🤍🤍💙💙 excellent
WHERE ARE THE AFRO INDIGENOUS WOMEN?
These are Native Indigenous women from tribes that have lived on this continent for thousands of years before white settlers, Spanish, Portuguese, Africans, Chinese and more came to or were brought here. And, yes, while many Afro's had integrated into tribes because of slavery and after the Civil War, this is unrelated. Please try and understand and don't be part of the many who still try to silence their voices. You might want to read An Indigenous Peoples' History of the United States.
I’m curious why Afro is such a specific concern for you when the spotlight is on the general indigenous women? Indigenous women barely have a voice and it’s sad to read this criticism of a specific voice within our community not being heard…
Thank you for your video, but I have a question based on “What is the appropriate way to refer to native people in our various communities”: how does one person know that the other person is native indigenous, especially if the two persons are strangers? It’s my understanding that Law Enforcement is trained on NOT to “racial profile” a person. Recently, I had the opportunity to speak with, what I thought was an African-American woman, the conversation was all in Spanish. We spoke, but I dared not have asked where she was from. The lady could’ve been Native Indigenous! And, if this person was, I don’t know if it would’ve made a difference concerning our conversation.
IN YOUR HEAD
@@Koraeffect He's a hotep. He thinks blacks are the real Natives.