Podcasts about lakota nation

Indigenous people of the Great Plains

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Best podcasts about lakota nation

Latest podcast episodes about lakota nation

Code Switch
Revisiting the fight over the Lakota language as Trump targets "divisive narratives"

Code Switch

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 16, 2025 41:32


As the Trump administration targets the Smithsonian Institute for "divisive narratives" and "improper ideology," it got us thinking about how we preserve our history and everything that builds it, like language. So we're revisiting an episode from last year from the Lakota Nation in South Dakota over language — who preserves it, who has the right to the stories told in it, and who (literally) owns it.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy

Thunder Bay
Code Switch: In Lakota Nation, People Are Asking: Who Does a Language Belong To?

Thunder Bay

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2024 40:24


Today we're bringing you something a bit different, made by our friends at NPR's long-running, award-winning podcast, Code Switch. Many Lakota people agree: It's imperative to revitalize the Lakota language. But how exactly to do that is a matter of broader debate. Should Lakota be codified and standardized to make learning it easier? Or should the language stay as it always has been, defined by many different ways of writing and speaking? We explore this complex, multi-generational fight that's been unfolding in the Lakota Nation, from Standing Rock to Pine Ridge.Subscribe to Code Switch, and hear more episodes at: https://www.npr.org/podcasts/510312/codeswitch Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

OMEGAMAN (TM) with Shannon Ray Davis
"Report from Lakota Nation" / Jerome Slidesoff / Omegaman Episode 11315

OMEGAMAN (TM) with Shannon Ray Davis

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 19, 2024 46:00


"Report from Lakota Nation" / Jerome Slidesoff / Omegaman Episode 11315 Recorded 10-18-2024 on OMEGAMAN

First Voices Radio
07/07/24 - Chief Arvol Looking Horse

First Voices Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 15, 2024 54:53


Host Tiokasin Ghosthorse's guest for the full hour on Sunday is Chief Arvol Looking Horse. Chief Looking Horse was born on the Cheyenne River Reservation in South Dakota. His primary responsibility is serving as the 19th Generation Keeper of the Sacred White Buffalo Calf Pipe – a role he was given at the age of twelve making him the youngest pipe keeper in Lakota history. As keeper of the sacred Pipe he also serves as the spiritual leader to the Lakota, Dakota and Nakota Nation and advocates for the restoration of the Lakota Nation's rights to the Black Hills—as guaranteed by the 1868 Laramie Treaty. Tiokasin and Chief Arvol Looking Horse talk about the white buffalo calf that was born in Yellowstone on June 4 and the significance of this birth to not only for the Lakota but other people and what it means to the world. “We knew in our ceremonies that something was going to happen (on June 4) because they say that when you follow the spirit, the spirit will meet you halfway... This is a very powerful time. All my life, I heard this in ceremony but I never thought my whole life that this was going to happen. I feel her (Mother Earth's) spirit is very strong and we need all people all over the world to stand with us and protect her. That's the message — when the white buffalo calf with black nose, eyes and hooves, many white animals will be born all over the world. The elders said we need to protect all the white animals being born. We need to protect the peace leaders because we're in a very powerful time right now that every person – to find peace within yourself and then peace to the world because what is happening is not good.” — Chief Arvol Looking Horse Production Credits: Tiokasin Ghosthorse (Lakota), Host and Executive Producer Liz Hill (Red Lake Ojibwe), Producer Karen Martinez (Mayan), Studio Engineer, Radio Kingston Tiokasin Ghosthorse, Audio Editor Kevin Richardson, Podcast Editor Music Selections: 1. Song Title: Tahi Roots Mix (First Voices Radio Theme Song) Artist: Moana and the Moa Hunters Album: Tahi (1993) Label: Southside Records (Australia and New Zealand) 2. Song Title: Kothbiro Artist: Ayub Oganda Album: The Constant Gardiner (1993) Label: Real World Records 3. Song Title: What've I Done to Help? Artist: Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit Album: Reunions (2020) Label: Southeastern Records AKANTU INTELLIGENCE Visit Akantu Intelligence, an institute that Tiokasin founded with a mission of contextualizing original wisdom for troubled times. Go to https://akantuintelligence.org to find out more and consider joining his Patreon page at https://www.patreon.com/Ghosthorse

Interdependent Study
Return the Black Hills to the Lakota

Interdependent Study

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 19, 2024 28:50


The Lakota tribe continues to fight to protect their sacred land in the Black Hills to this day. Listen as Aaron and Damien discuss the documentary Lakota Nation vs. United States, directed by Jesse Short Bull and Laura Tomaselli, which chronicles the history and lived experiences of the Lakota tribe and Indigenous communities in the United States as well as their fight to reclaim control of the Black Hills of South Dakota and for Indigenous peoples' rights and environmental justice, and what we learn and take away from this compelling film in our continued work for social justice and collective liberation. Follow us on social media and visit our website! ⁠⁠Patreon⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠, ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Website⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠, ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Instagram⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠, ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠TikTok⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠, ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Threads⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠, ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Twitter⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠, ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Facebook⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠, ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠YouTube⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠, ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Leave us a voice message⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠, ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Merch store⁠⁠

Reveal
A Battle Over Preserving the Lakota Language

Reveal

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 12, 2024 40:20


Many Lakota people agree it's imperative to revitalize their language, which has declined to fewer than 1,500 fluent speakers, according to some estimates. But how to do that is a matter of broader debate and a contentious legal battle. Should Lakota be codified and standardized to make learning it easier? Or should the language stay as it always has been, defined by many different ways of writing and speaking? The NPR podcast Code Switch explores this complex, multigenerational fight that's been unfolding in the Lakota Nation, from Standing Rock to Pine Ridge. Support Reveal's journalism at Revealnews.org/donatenow Subscribe to our weekly newsletter to get the scoop on new episodes at Revealnews.org/newsletter Connect with us on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram

BodhiSpeak
Politics and Consciousness Raising with Professor Denise Walsh of the University of Virginia

BodhiSpeak

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2024 80:40


- Politics and Consciousness  - Social Responsibility  - Community action against facism and populist oppression - Islamaphobia and the Burkha ban in France  *Correction and edit - Nathan Phillips, mentioned in the podcast, is of the Omaha Nation - not the Lakota Nation 

Code Switch
Who does language belong to? A fight over the Lakota Language

Code Switch

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2024 39:15


Many Lakota people agree: It's imperative to revitalize the Lakota language. But how exactly to do that is a matter of broader debate. Should Lakota be codified and standardized to make learning it easier? Or should the language stay as it always has been, defined by many different ways of writing and speaking? We explore this complex, multi-generational fight that's been unfolding in the Lakota Nation, from Standing Rock to Pine Ridge.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy

Sarah Westall - Business Game Changers
Analysis of the ICJ Ruling on Genocide in Gaza w/ Prof. Francis Boyle

Sarah Westall - Business Game Changers

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2024 30:20


Professor Francis Boyle joins the program to discuss the Genocide in Gaza and the ruling by the UN International Court of Justice (ICJ). The ruling deals with the filing by South Africa accusing Israel of genocide in Gaza against the Palestian people. Many consider Boyle to be the foremost expert in the world on the ICJ concerning genocide. He was the first person in history to win a case against genocide since the courts were originally formed in 1921. In fact, he won 3 times over the Bosnian genocide. Professor Boyle is also considered the foremost expert on Bioweapons after he wrote the US bioweapon legislation. You can learn more about Boyle on his University site at https://experts.illinois.edu/en/persons/francis-a-boyle Links mentioned in the show: Sign up for Marjory Wildcraft's FREE seminar at SarahsBackyardFarm.com Learn more how you can convert your IRA or buy precious metals by emailing info@MilesFranklin.com - tell them ‘Sarah sent me” and get the best service and prices in the country. Consider subscribing: Follow on Twitter @Sarah_Westall Follow on my Substack at SarahWestall.Substack.com See Important Proven Solutions to Keep Your from getting sick even if you had the mRNA Shot - Dr. Nieusma MUSIC CREDITS: “In Epic World” by Valentina Gribanova, licensed for broad internet media use, including video and audio       See on Bastyon | Bitchute | Odysee | Rumble | Youtube | Tube.Freedom.Buzz     Professor Francis Boyle Biography Francis Boyle is a professor of international law at the University of Illinois College of Law. He received an AB (1971) in Political Science from the University of Chicago, then a JD degree magna cum laude from Harvard Law School, and AM and PhD degrees in Political Science from Harvard University. He practiced tax and international tax with Bingham, Dana & Gould. Professor Boyle serves as counsel to Bosnia and Herzegovina and to the Provisional Government of the Palestinian Authority. He also represents two associations of citizens within Bosnia and was involved in developing the indictment against Slobodan Milosević for genocide, crimes against humanity, and war crimes in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Over his career, he has represented national and international bodies including the Blackfoot Nation (Canada), the Nation of Hawaii, and the Lakota Nation, as well as numerous individual death penalty and human rights cases. He has advised numerous international bodies in the areas of human rights, war crimes and genocide, nuclear policy, and bio-warfare. From 1991-92, he served as Legal Advisor to the Palestinian Delegation to the Middle East Peace Negotiations. Professor Boyle served on the Board of Directors of Amnesty International, as a consultant to the American Friends Service Committee, and on the Advisory Board for the Council for Responsible Genetics. He drafted the U.S. domestic implementing legislation for the Biological Weapons Convention, known as the Biological Weapons Anti-Terrorism Act of 1989, that was approved unanimously by both Houses of the U.S. Congress and signed into law by President George H.W. Bush. EDUCATION AM, PhD Harvard University JD Harvard Law School AB University of Chicago AREAS OF EXPERTISE Constitutional Law (U.S. Foreign Affairs) Human Rights Jurisprudence U.S. Foreign Affairs  

Hearts & Daggers
Ep. 52: Debut Authors (Lunar Love + Winter Counts)

Hearts & Daggers

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 2, 2024 48:37


Summary: Welcome to year three of Hearts & Daggers, friends! We are so delighted you are along on this ride with us. To get 2024 started, Holly and Devin are digging into books by debut authors. There may be nothing more impressive that someone who puts their heart and hard work on the line to publish their first book. It's not only difficult to get published in the first place, but once your book is out there are thousands if not millions of people who experience your finished work. Holly and Devin both love reading debuts, finding that the more diverse voices added to the canon the more they enjoy diving in.  Topics Discussed: The Heart (3:45): Devin discussed Lunar Love by Lauren Kung Jessen, an enemies-to-lovers centered around Olivia Huang Christenson and Bennett O'Brien as they go head-to-head in a competition to see whose Chinese zodiac matchmaking approach is best. Liv is working hard to maintain the traditions of her grandmother's matchmaking business and Bennett has launched a new dating app that recommends matches using the Chinese zodiac. Devin's key takeaways were: The crux of the romance and the plot of the novel is the push/pull between tradition and innovation. How can one maintain culture via traditional practices and where should technology and new perspectives impact those traditions?  Devin is year of the Horse and Holly is year of the Snake, but either had been exposed very much to the Chinese zodiac before Devin read this book; Kung Jessen pulls from her Chinese-American heritage to add a unique cultural and historical perspective to the novel without making it seem like a lesson at school. Lunar Love was a bit light on the romance side and not very steamy. That being said, it was built authentically through Liv and Bennett's competition. Reading how each of them watched each other on dates that they themselves orchestrated and the complicated feelings there was especially enjoyable.  The Dagger (19:22): Holly discussed Winter Counts by David Heska Wanbli Weiden, a crime thriller following Virgil Wounded Horse as he delivers vigilante justice for his Lakota Nation community when the American legal system and the trivial council fall short. When heroin makes its way onto the reservation and directly impacts Virgil's nephew, his career in vigilantism suddenly becomes personal. Holly's key takeaways were: This novel was not only an extremely solid debut, but an important fresh voice for the triller genre; it was character-driven and a slower build in terms of action, but Holly read it in a day and found it was impossible to put down.  Winter Counts explores themes of justice and the corruption that can preclude real accountability and fairness within not only the federal policing system as it interacts with the Native communities, but also the tribal councils themselves and the cascading impacts it has on the people. Through Virgil and the other characters of the book, Weiden explores not only how personal history and trauma influence perspectives and actions but also the challenges of maintaining and evolving cultural identity and traditions for the Native communities in the modern era.  Hot On the Shelf (35:26): Holly: The Eyes Are the Best Part by Monika Kim Devin: The Priory of the Orange Tree by Samantha Shannon What's Making Our Hearts Race (41:29): Holly: Rewatching Avatar: The Last Airbender Devin: The Old Man and the Pool by Mike Bribiglia   Instagram: @heartsanddaggerspod Website: www.heartsanddaggerspod.com   If you like what you hear, please tell your friends and rate and review us on Apple Podcasts and Spotify so that we can find our perfect audience.  

5 Plain Questions
Chief Arvol Looking Horse

5 Plain Questions

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 20, 2023 49:23


Chief Arvol Looking was born on the Cheyenne River Reservation in South Dakota. His primary responsibility is serving as the 19th Generation Keeper of the Sacred White Buffalo Calf Pipe – a role he was given at the age of twelve making him the youngest pipe keeper in Lakota history. As keeper of the sacred Pipe he also serves as the spiritual leader to the Lakota, Dakota, and Nakota Nation and advocates for the restoration of the Lakota Nation's rights to the Black Hills—as guaranteed by the 1868 Laramie Treaty. He grew up in an era of religious suppression, where traditional Lakota ceremonies were outlawed in both the US and Canada from the early 1900's until the Indian Religious Freedom Act in 1978. His family was forced to hold Sundance, sweatlodge, vision quests, and healing ceremonies underground for fear of arrest by the police. Arvol's advocacy of environmental and Indigenous rights and issues has been recognized globally as a recipient of the Wolf Award of Canada, the Juliet Hollister Award, a Non-Governmental Organization with Consultation Status with the United Nations Economic and Social Council. He is also the author of White Buffalo Teachings and a guest columnist for Indian Country Today. Since 1990, Arvol has also devoted himself to facilitate healing to all people and cultures through several sacred Prayer Rides on Horseback including The Annual Wintertime Chief Bigfoot Memorial Ride to Wounded Knee in order to mend the Sacred Hoop that was broken during the Massacre in 1890, The Unity Ride from B.C. to Six Nations in the early 2000s whose purpose was to heal historical trauma through the land and animals, and since 2005, he has supported and participated on the Dakota 38 Ride that takes place every December from South Dakota to Mankato, Minnesota to honor the memory of the 38 + 2 Dakota men who died under order of President Abraham Lincoln the Day after Christmas in 1862 in what was the largest mass hanging in U.S. history.

On Documentary
Jesse Short Bull & Laura Tomaselli on Directing "Lakota Nation vs. United States"

On Documentary

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 18, 2023 40:07


In this episode, I talk with filmmakers Jesse Short Bull and Laura Tomaselli on the production and reception of their feature documentary "Lakota Nation vs. United States."Official website: www.lakotanationvsus.movieLaura Tomasellis website: www.lauratomaselli.comThank you for listening. Please subscribe to keep up to date with new episodes. If you enjoy this podcast, please leave a review.“On Documentary” podcast page: www.adamjamessmithfilm.com/on-documentaryAdam James Smith's Instagram: www.instagram.com/ajsfilmContact: ajsfilm@alumni.stanford.edu

Afterthoughts
Recommend or Refute | The Boogeyman, The Old Way, The Fall of the House of Usher, Lakota Nation vs. United States

Afterthoughts

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2023 74:26


Ryan's gone missing, but John and Dixon are holding down the fort with two new movies each. John discusses the latest Stephen King adaptation The Boogeyman (2023), as well as Mike Flanagan's new Netflix project The Fall of the House of Usher (2023). Dixon delves into some Nicolas Cage schlock with The Old Way (2023) and marvels at the tragic beauty of Lakota Nation vs. United States (2023).

In Creative Company
Episode 978: Lakota Nation vs. United States - Jesse Shortbull & Laura Tomaselli

In Creative Company

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 14, 2023 25:43


Q&A on the film with co-directors Jesse Shortbull and Laura Tomaselli. Moderated by Lily Gladstone. A chronicle about how the Lakota Indians fight to reclaim control of the Black Hills. Investigates how the sacred land was stolen in violation of treaty agreements and feature interviews with Indigenous citizens. An IFC Films release.

Ground Work
What Are the Stories We Tell, the Stories We Don't Tell, and Why? The Cost of Free Land with Rebecca Clarren

Ground Work

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 5, 2023 78:41


In this episode Kate is joined by author Rebecca Clarren to explore her book Cost of Free Land; Jews, Lakota, and an American Inheritance. The Cost of Free Land explores an entwined history; one of Rebecca's Jewish ancestors and their land in South Dakota and the Lakota that had been forced off that land by the US government. In the podcast, Rebecca explores the profound role of storytelling and history in shaping cultural narratives across different communities within the broader tapestry of history in America - touching on both the stories passed down through her family and the stories she uncovers through the course of the book in speaking with members of the Lakota Nation and uncovering history. They discuss the importance of the stories that are told and those that remain untold, considering their lasting impact on future generations and how personal and cultural narratives intertwine to inform our understanding of the present. Throughout, the deep complexities, and atrocities, of history and the intergenerational effects of historical events are explored - illuminating the stories we may not have heard in classrooms or textbooks and what actions and responsibilities we can take as we work towards healing. Find Rebecca Clarren:The Cost of Free Land: Jews, Lakota, and an American InheritanceInstagram: @rclarrenWebsiteResources Mentioned: Reconciliation RisingIndian Land Tenure FoundationLandbackBooks Mentioned:Hitler's American Model by James WhitmanLearning from the Germans by Susan NeimanCaste by Isabel WilkersonControl by Adam RutherfordSupport the Podcast:SubstackLeave a one-time TipCurrent Discounts for MBS listeners:15% off Farm True ghee and body care products using code: KATEKAV1510% off Home of Wool using code KATEKAVANAUGH15% off Bon Charge blue light blocking gear using code: MINDBODYSOIL15

A long way from the block
Ep. 87-Make room in the mouth for grass—my conversation with Layli Long Soldier

A long way from the block

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 22, 2023 140:08


In this episode, I sat down with Layli Long Soldier in her Albuquerque studio to talk about her upbringing. I spoke with the Oglala Lakota poet, writer, artist, and activist about some of the history of broken treaties experienced by Native peoples. We discussed the 2022 documentary "Lakota Nation vs. United States," a film in which she plays a major role, and her response to the 2009 U.S. Congressional apology to all Native peoples. We talk about the craft of poetry and her approach to writing. Lastly, we discuss her latest book of poetry, titled "Whereas."

Earthkeepers: A Circlewood Podcast on Creation Care and Spirituality
93. Truth-Telling and Restorative Justice: The Myth of the First Thanksgiving, with Lenore Three Stars and Robbie Paul

Earthkeepers: A Circlewood Podcast on Creation Care and Spirituality

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2023 37:29


Every culture has core stories - mythologies that have everything to do with group identity. Sometimes those stories are connected to national holidays, as in the case of the American holiday called Thanksgiving. But who gets to determine what those core stories should be? In this episode we welcome two wise women who have made it their life's work to serve as truth-tellers, and advocates for the stories of Native peoples that are seldom heard. Lenore Three Stars of the Oglala Sioux Band of the Lakota Nation, and Robbie Paul of the Nez Perce People, are here to help us to understand the importance of knowing, telling, and listening to each other's stories--in ways that bring healing and restoration.  Note: If you or someone you know is suicidal, call one of the numbers listed on this website. If someone is in IMMEDIATE danger, please call your local emergency number. Lenore Three Stars Oglala Sioux Website Robbie Paul Nez Perce Nation Founding director of Native American Health Sciences at WSU SpokaneOregon Health Sciences UniversityNez Perce Appaloosa Horse ClubLinkedIn Mentions: National Museum of the American Indian American Indian Perspectives on Thanksgiving More resources about Thanksgiving: x, x, x, x, x Doctrine of Discovery Indian Removal Act Nez Perce War Standing Rock Cheyenne River Agency Pine Ridge Little Bighorn Manifest Destiny Ghost Dance Religion and Wounded Knee MassacreSupport the Earthkeepers podcast Keywords: revisionist history, epigenetics, intergenerational trauma, Native boarding schools, residential schools, decFind us on our website: Earthkeepers Support the Earthkeepers podcast Check out the Ecological Disciple

Bloody Awesome Movie Podcast

This week, we review THE MARVELS and deliver our thoughts on the 33rd MCU installment. We also review HAUNTED ULSTER LIVE, discuss the strikes ending, and more! Review of The Marvels Director, writer, and cast provided by IMDb.com IMDb.com Synopsis: Carol Danvers gets her powers entangled with those of Kamala Khan and Monica Rambeau, forcing them to work together to save the universe. RATINGS: 62% RT critic 84% RT audience 50 Metascore, 6.2 IMDb user score 3.0 Letterboxd In theaters now Concessions of a Cinephile In this segment, we switch to movie-motivated conversations of a large variety that could include headlines, trailers, top five lists, best of, competitions, etc…. Matt and Jonathan discuss a small indie film making its rounds on the festival circuit Haunted Ulster Live The end of the strike! Media Consumption Movies, TV, Video Games, Music, Podcasts (not ours), etc that we use to pass the time Matt's consumption The Horror Show, Double Toasted Scream, Haunted Ulster Live Loki E1 and 2 Jon's consumption Blank Check - Empty Man and Gone Girl Reality, Poor Things, May December, Lakota Nation vs. United States, Story Ave, Four Daughters, Maestro, Thanksgiving, Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes, Beyond Utopia MK1 - Omniman Listen on ⁠Spotify⁠ | ⁠Apple Podcast⁠ BAMP on⁠ Twitter⁠ | BAMP on⁠ Instagram⁠ |⁠ TeePublic Merchandise⁠ Jon on⁠ Twitter⁠ | Jon on⁠ IG⁠ | Jon on⁠ Letterboxd.com⁠ Matt on⁠ Twitter⁠ | Matt on⁠ IG⁠ | Matt on⁠ Letterboxd.com⁠⁠ BerkReviews.com | WhatIWatchedTonight.co.uk --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/bloody-awesome/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/bloody-awesome/support

Mike, Mike, and Oscar
SAG Strike Ends, Marvel's Striking Out - ORC 11/11/23

Mike, Mike, and Oscar

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 10, 2023 65:04


What Is This Episode - Top of Show . THE SAG AFTRA STRIKE IS OVER: Strike Stats and Deal Points Generally - 1:26 The AI Protections - 3:46 Pay Raises; What SAG Didn't Get - 8:10 Did SAG Win? And What This Means for Awards Season - 11:51 . AWARDS NEWS AND NOMS: European Film Award Noms Have Anatomy vs Green Zone - 14:26 British Ind Film Awards Honor Rye Lane as Nom Leader - 19:17 Hollywood Music and Media Noms - 22:13 Barbie Dominates the Movie Grammy Noms - 26:58 . FILM REVIEWS/WHAT WE'RE WATCHING: AlsoMike Reviews The Marvels - 29:11 MMO on Nyad - 35:38 MMO on Quiz Lady - 39:17 MMO on Fingernails - 41:30 AM on Sly - 43:55 AM on Squaring the Circle - 45:52 AM on Lakota Nation vs the US; The League - 46:37 AM on Priscilla - 48:45 Mike1 Runs Down His Quarantine Watch List - 54:13 . . Your Homework/LEAVE US 5 STARS! - 1:02:00

Dakota Datebook
October 20: The Treaties of October 1865

Dakota Datebook

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 20, 2023 3:05


In 1854, white settlers were beginning to travel through present-day North Dakota. As a result, whites and Lakota Bands began clashing. Before then, the Lakota Nation was divided into many factions, but this conflict brought them together by the 1860s. They later divided again over internal conflicts.

Watch This
The Exorcist: Believer scares up no. 1 at box office

Watch This

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2023 13:32


Lil Rel Howery stars in the movie The Mill, where he mysteriously wakes up in a prison cell that turns out to be part of his corporate training — but he'll be 'terminated' if he's not a top-performing employee. The documentary The Matthew Shepard Story: An American Hate Crime looks back on the horrific beating and murder of Matthew Shepard, 25 years ago. For Indiginous Peoples Day, the documentary Lakota Nation vs. United States examines the systemic colonization of the Lakota people. Plus, Hollywood trivia, This Week in Entertainment History, and entertainment headlines, including The Exorcist: Believer's big weekend at the box office, Jessica Lange on why she wants to quit acting, and Vanna White is back on Wheel of Fortune after missing a week because of COVID. More at ew.com, ew.com/wtw, and @EW on X (formerly Twitter) and @EntertainmentWeekly everywhere else. Host/Writer/Producer Gerrad Hall (@gerradhall); Producer: Ashley Boucher (@ashleybreports) and Alamin Yohannes (@AlaminYohannes); Editor: Samee Junio (@it_your_sam); Writer: Dustin Nelson. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Uncut & Real Raw With Clinton Anderson
Ep 12: A Conversation With Mo Brings Plenty

Uncut & Real Raw With Clinton Anderson

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2023 85:49


Actor and consultant Mo Brings Plenty joins Clinton to discuss his upbringing in the Lakota Nation, what led him to becoming an actor, his role on Yellowstone and his love of horsemanship. 

Fast Politics with Molly Jong-Fast
Rick Wilson, Amy Walter & Jesse Short Bull

Fast Politics with Molly Jong-Fast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 21, 2023 52:25 Transcription Available


The Lincoln Project's Rick Wilson skewers the leaked Ron DeSantis debate strategy. Cook Political Report Editor-in-Chief Amy Walter analyzes the latest polls. Lakota Nation member Jesse Short Bull details his documentary 'Lakota Nation vs United States'.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

KUCI: Film School
Lakota Nation vs. United States / Film School radio interview with Co-directors Jesse Short Bull & Laura Tomaselli

KUCI: Film School

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 24, 2023


“the most sacred place on earth,” the birthplace of the Lakota that has shaped thought, identity and philosophy for the Očéti Šakówiŋ since time immemorial-the life-giving land known as the Black Hills. Yet with the arrival of the first Europeans in 1492, the sacred land has been the site of conflict between the people it has nurtured, and the settler state seeking to exploit and redefine it in its own image. Lakota Nation vs. United States is a searing testament to the strength of the Oyate nation and the people. It is also a visually stunning rejoinder to the distorted imagery of a people and culture long shaped by racist mainstream films, art, books and history taught to our children. In spite of the string of broken treaties or the action of war criminal General Custer at Little Big Horn or the slaughter of millions of buffalo or forced removal of native children into government run “boarding” schools the Oglala Tetonowan Oyate have survived. Lakota Nation vs. United States is a lyrical and provocative testament to a land and a people who have survived removal, exploitation and genocide--and whose best days are yet to come. Co-directors Jesse Short Bull (Istinma) and Laura Tomaselli (MLK/FBI) join us for a conversation on the powerful familial connection that Jesse has the battle of Little Big Horn, how and why the American government ignored or violated recognized treaties before the ink was dry, and how the political, economic and cultural violence against the Oyate remain firmly embedded in the policies of the state and federal government to this day. For more go to: ifcfilms.com/lakota-nation-vs-the-united-states And still more go to: lakotanationvsus.movie

Movie Madness
Episode 399: We Choose To Accept Some Of These Movies

Movie Madness

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 15, 2023 111:41


There's one big movie hitting theaters this week but Erik Childress and Steve Prokopy still have eight other titles to talk about. They include a look back at their biggest disagreement of the year from Sundance (Theater Camp) while Steve checks out a great cast goes looking for healing elsewhere (The Miracle Club). Then they look at a trio of documentaries from the treatment of the American Indian (Lakota Nation vs. United States) to black players and baseball (The League) and Alex Winter's examination of the first of two deadly algorithms this week (The YouTube Effect). Next it is on to fictional horror from an estranged couple stuck together (Quicksand) to the blind leading the blind without Sandra Bullock (Bird Box Barcelona) and a low-budget film crew plagued by zombies (Final Cut). Of course they would not let you go without discussing the latest in a franchise that has somehow managed to exceed expectations over and over. Does the latest live up to the name? (Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning, Part One). Then one last thing as the duo serve up their mock ballots for the best performances and movies of the year at the mid-way point. 0:00 - Intro 1:45 - Theater Camp 14:22 - The Miracle Club 21:42 - The YouTube Effect 34:30 - Lakota Nation vs. United States 43:18 - The League 53:10 - Quicksand 1:02:27 - Final Cut 1:12:42 - Bird Box Barcelona 1:24:02 - Mission: Impossible - Dead Reckoning, Part One 1:39:14 – The Mid-Year Ballot 1:46:49 - Outro

CinemAddicts
Lakota Nation vs. The United States, The Flood, The Channel, Final Cut, Bird Box Barcelona

CinemAddicts

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2023 79:02


Movies reviewed on episode 198 of CinemAddicts are Lakota Nation vs. The United States (18:10), The Flood (52:11), The Channel (45:29), Final Cut (30:50), Bird Box Barcelona (38:35), and Sound of Freedom (10:04).What's in the Box review is of Beasts of the Southern Wild (57:01).**CinemAddicts Patreon Member receive a Bonus Episode per month and Exclusive Movie Spoilers discussed by the actors, filmmakers, and us!!1.  Subscribe to our CinemAddicts YouTube Channel2. Like Our CinemAddicts Facebook Page3. Join our CinemAddicts Facebook Group for daily movie recommendations!4. Questions/comments email us at editor@deepestdream.com5. Our website for entertainment news, reviews, and podcast coverage is Find Your Film: https://findyourfilms.com/6. Contact Bruce Purkey for some What's in the Box? recommendations: brucepurkey@gmail.com8. Eric Holmes can be reached at hamslime@gmail.com9. Anderson Cowan's latest project is Loaded for Bear: The Documentary. For info and support: https://loadedforbeardoc.com/10. Atty's Antiques is on Facebook MarketplaceSupport the show

Veterans  Radio
Wounded Knee Medals of Honor Revisited with Dwight Mears

Veterans Radio

Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2023 42:00


Dwight Mears is a researcher, military awards writer, retired Army Major, lawyer and librarian.  He recently published a proposal on how the military could re-evaluate the Medals of Honor issued after Wounded Knee in 1890 as the Lakota Nation has advocated and various members of Congress have supported in "Remove the Stain" proposed legislation for years.  Mears explains to host Jim Fausone that  panel of historians could review in context and make recommendations.

Tactical Magic Podcast
E.207 Medicine Ceremony w/ Metsa Nihue

Tactical Magic Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 16, 2023 28:49


Metsa Nihue is an internationally known healer who specializes in indigenous wisdom and lineages. He lived and trained in the Peruvian Amazon for fifteen years under the guidance of the Quechua-Lamistas (keh-choo-uh luh-mees-tuhs), Aguarunas, and the Shipibo (she-pee-boh) indigenous peoples. He has since been in practice leading ayahuasca retreats and plant medicine rituals in South America and building awareness in communities from the US, Europe, and Canada for more than twenty years.   He comes as the most highly recommended practitioner by many accredited scholars and leaders in the field of psychedelic study. Metsa is a Reiki master healer, a Sun Dancer with the Lakota Nation, he is initiated in the Bwiti tradition and ceremonies of Iboga in Gabon, and is part of the Native American Church of the Denee Nation. He is also connected to the psilocybin traditions of the Mazatec people of Mexico. He brings these lineages and practices together as a way to understand the power of healing transmission, helping to awaken our western culture to a collective consciousness resonance.   Get access to Metsa Nihue's free mini-course “We Are All Related” here:  https://metsa-nihue.mykajabi.com/we-are-all-related   Support indigenous cultures to keep their medicine way traditions alive:  https://www.sacredwaysfoundation.org/

Your Call
Lakota Nation vs. US follows fight to reclaim Indigenous land

Your Call

Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2023 52:02


The new documentary highlights the Lakota Nation's ongoing struggle to reclaim the Black Hills, which was stolen in violation of treaty agreements with the US.

Farms. Food. Future.
Bridging the Digital Gender Gap

Farms. Food. Future.

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 27, 2023 73:41


In this podcast we look at International Women's Day 2023, which explores the impact of the digital gender gap, speaking to IFAD's Ndaya Beltchika. We also talk to ecommerce professional, Shelley Burich, from Samoa, and Elsie Du Bray from the Lakota Nation in North America about food sovereignty. We hear about the latest on the ever changing donor landscape with IFAD's Ron Hartman. Then, as he hits the winter season, we check in for the next instalment of Max Cotton's voyage of self-sufficiency in the UK. And we finish off with a new episode in our Bangladesh climate change series. Plus we find out more from a young female indigenous persons activist in Colombia. This is Farms.Food.Future – a podcast that's Good for You, Good for the Planet and Good for Farmers brought to you by the International Fund for Agricultural Development. For more information: https://www.ifad.org/podcasts/episode41 https://www.donorplatform.org https://www.ifad.org/gender https://www.vaoalavanilla.com https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCU8qcCdvbfID4bZro8mHemw https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCaeowFACztxKCwj8viBrvnw  

Die Reportage - Deutschlandfunk Kultur
Kulturelles Erbe der Native Americans - Der Kampf um die Rückgabe heiliger Objekte

Die Reportage - Deutschlandfunk Kultur

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 26, 2022 29:48


Mehr als 100 Jahre hat sich niemand in der US-Provinzstadt Barre daran gestört, dass gestohlene Artefakte der Lakota Nation als Kuriositätenkabinett präsentiert wurden. Nun fordern Native Americans ihre Kulturschätze zurück.Von Nora Sobich www.deutschlandfunkkultur.de, Die ReportageDirekter Link zur Audiodatei

Die Reportage - Deutschlandfunk Kultur
Kulturelles Erbe der Native Americans - Der Kampf um die Rückgabe heiliger Objekte

Die Reportage - Deutschlandfunk Kultur

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 26, 2022 29:48


Mehr als 100 Jahre hat sich niemand in der US-Provinzstadt Barre daran gestört, dass gestohlene Artefakte der Lakota Nation als Kuriositätenkabinett präsentiert wurden. Nun fordern Native Americans ihre Kulturschätze zurück.Von Nora Sobich www.deutschlandfunkkultur.de, Die ReportageDirekter Link zur Audiodatei

SDPB News
Lakota Nation Invitational poetry slam highlights young voices | Dec 19

SDPB News

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2022 8:44


Each day, SDPB brings you statewide news coverage. We then compile those stories into a daily podcast.

Native America Calling - The Electronic Talking Circle
Wednesday, December 14, 2022 – 45th Lakota Nation Invitational: sports, culture, and education

Native America Calling - The Electronic Talking Circle

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 14, 2022 55:19


The 45th annual Lakota Nation Invitational (LNI) in Rapid City, SD is underway and hundreds of Native athletes are not letting a little winter storm get in their way. What started as a basketball tournament in 1977 is now a not-to-be-missed five-day event that includes multiple sports including wresting, volleyball, and cheerleading and cultural competitions for hand games, language, and archery. Today on Native America Calling, Shawn Spruce talks with Chuck Wilson (Lakota from the Rosebud Sioux Tribe), president of the board for LNI; Bryan Brewer (Oglala Lakota from Pine Ridge), founder and director of LNI; Kellee Brewer (Oglala Lakota), coordinator of the Cheerleading championship at LNI; and Corey YellowBoy (Oglala Lakota), coordinator of the Lakota Language Bowl at LNI, about the evolution and importance of this event.

Native America Calling
Wednesday, December 14, 2022 – 45th Lakota Nation Invitational: sports, culture, and education

Native America Calling

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 14, 2022 55:19


The 45th annual Lakota Nation Invitational (LNI) in Rapid City, SD is underway and hundreds of Native athletes are not letting a little winter storm get in their way. What started as a basketball tournament in 1977 is now a not-to-be-missed five-day event that includes multiple sports including wresting, volleyball, and cheerleading and cultural competitions for hand games, language, and archery. Today on Native America Calling, Shawn Spruce talks with Chuck Wilson (Lakota from the Rosebud Sioux Tribe), president of the board for LNI; Bryan Brewer (Oglala Lakota from Pine Ridge), founder and director of LNI; Kellee Brewer (Oglala Lakota), coordinator of the Cheerleading championship at LNI; and Corey YellowBoy (Oglala Lakota), coordinator of the Lakota Language Bowl at LNI, about the evolution and importance of this event.

First Voices Radio
07/17/22 - Jesse Short Bull, Dr. Tink Tinker

First Voices Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 18, 2022 57:35


In the first half-hour Tiokasin welcomes film Director Jesse Short Bull. Jesse wrote and produced the 2013 short Istinma, set in the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation of South Dakota. A graduate of the Institute of American Indian Arts in Santa Fe, New Mexico, Jesse received a 2016 Sundance Institute Native American and Indigenous Program Development Grant and also attended the Creative Producing Summit at Sundance. In 2014 he was part of the effort to change the name of Shannon County to Oglala Lakota County in South Dakota. Currently employed by the Oglala Lakota tribal government, Jesse is a member of the board of the Black Hills Film Festival. With the First Peoples Fund, Jesse leads youth filmmaking workshops in the Oglala Lakota Nation. Lakota Nation vs. United States - directed by Jesse Short Bull and Laura Tomaselli - had its world premier on June 11, 2022 at the Tribeca Film Festival. View the trailer here: https://youtu.be/HtK5JPZx_XMIn the second half, returning guest Dr. Tink Tinker is the Clifford Baldridge Emeritus Professor of American Indian Cultures and Religious Traditions at Iliff School of Theology in Denver, Colorado. He is a citizen of the Osage Nation (wazhazhe) and has been an activist in urban American Indian communities for four decades. He joined the faculty at Iliff School of Theology in 1985 and brought an American Indian perspective to this predominantly euro-christian school. Dr. Tinker is committed to a scholarly endeavor that takes seriously both the liberation of Indian peoples from their historic oppression as colonized communities and the liberation of euro-christian (White) Americans, the historic colonizers and oppressors of Indian peoples, whose self-narrative typically avoids naming the violence committed against Indians in favor of a romance narrative that justifies their euro-christian occupancy of Indian lands.Production Credits:Tiokasin Ghosthorse (Lakota), Host and Executive ProducerLiz Hill (Red Lake Ojibwe), ProducerMalcolm Burn, Studio Engineer, Radio Kingston, WKNY 1490 AM and 107.9 FM, Kingston, NYTiokasin Ghosthorse, Audio EditorMusic Selections:1. Song Title: Tahi Roots Mix (First Voices Radio Theme Song)Artist: Moana and the Moa HuntersAlbum: Tahi (1993)Label: Southside Records (Australia and New Zealand)(00:00:22)2. Song Title: Feels Like SummerArtist: Donald Glover (Childish Gambino)Album: Summer Pack (2018)Label: Wolf+Rothstein/Liberator Music(00:28:25)AKANTU INSTITUTEVisit Akantu Institute, an institute that Tiokasin founded with a mission of contextualizing original wisdom for troubled times. Go to https://akantuinstitute.org/ to find out more and consider joining his Patreon page at https://www.patreon.com/Ghosthorse.

BETTER with Mark Brand
Sarah Eagle Heart - TRUTH TO POWER

BETTER with Mark Brand

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 19, 2022 66:16


Sarah Eagle Heart is an Emmy-Award Winning Social Justice Storyteller and—in all seriousness—a true Social Justice Warrior. She's the co-CEO of Return to the Heart Foundation, which, if we pause right there to experience the name alone, we feel the power, the empowerment, the justice, the heart, the truth.As the co-CEO of Return to the Heart Foundation, Sarah works tirelessly to enable and empower the very necessary visibility of Indigenous womxn. I've looked up to Sarah Eagle Heart and her work for many years now, making it a deep honor to have her here with us today.In our conversation, you'll hear her begin with a greeting that reverberates past your ears, beyond your mind, and into your body's knowing of where we come from as people—historically, ancestrally, culturally, environmentally, spiritually. Sarah's traditions carry a reverence for truth that, when heard with the ear of your nervous system, injects itself into the very bones of our being— easily and quickly. Making it so much more simple for us to disperse truth from lie—be it lies of capitalism, lies of racism, lies of a lack, and the list goes on as long as the trail of tears.  Longer, even. Returning to truth is sacred work. Amplifying that truth, those stories, those peoples, so that we can return to a real care for our planet, our community, ourselves….. THAT is the sacred work we'll hear about today from Sarah Eagle Heart. This is a very special episode. And it's an honor to have you listening with us today. WORKS: - Emmy-Award Winning producer of Crow: the Legend, inspired by the Native American legend - co-CEO of Return to the Heart Foundation - Co-author of “Warrior Princesses Strike Back: How Lakota Twins Fight Oppression and Heal through Connectedness,” written with her identical twin sister and psychotherapist, Emma Eagle Heart–White  - Co-producer, “Lakota Nation vs. the United States,” a feature-length documentary chronicling the Lakota People's present-day quest to reclaim the sacred land called Black Hills - former, CEO of Native Americans in Philanthropy, a national nonprofit that focuses on investment in Native American communities - Board Member, Women's March - Board Member, National Native American Boarding School Healing Coalition - Board Member, We Stand United Tools You'll Get from This Episode: - Tools to address the root causes of racism - The importance of acknowledging Indigenous history and how honoring this history leads to the changes we need - Wisdom behind the importance of acknowledging the land you live on - How to transfer TALK into ACTION - Steps to decolonize your life and decolonize your work - Understandings that enable us to lean into conflicting history, become comfortable sitting in discomfort, fear, and truth to enable safety for people who have had to live without safety for centuries LAND ACKNOWLEDGMENT: BETTER is recorded on the unceded and ancestral territory of the hən̓q̓əmin̓əm̓ and Sḵwx̱wú7mesh speaking peoples, the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam), Sḵwx̱wú7mesh (Squamish), and səlilwətaɬ (Tsleil-Waututh) Nations, and has been stewarded by them since time immemorial. BETTER with Mark Brand is produced by Pamela Rothenberg of I HEAR YOU STUDIOS and Adam Karch with Orbyt Media

Geopolitics & Empire
Francis Boyle: We Are in a War Against the Scientific Elite, This is WWIII

Geopolitics & Empire

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2022 52:43


Francis Boyle discusses how the U.S. and China collaborated on the development of the COVID-19 gain-of-function bioweapon. The elites in both Beijing and Washington have more in common with each other than with their own people due to their totalitarian mentality. The mandates are a clear violation of the Nuremberg Code and constitute a crime against humanity (e.g. murder, extermination, inhumane acts committed against civilians). Governments are persecuting their own citizens just like the Nazi government persecuted German Jews. We are seeing a Nazi mentality at work by all governments enforcing these frankenshots, the Nazi philosophy of "useless eaters" and depopulation. It is impossible to create a vaccine for SARS-CoV-2 if it is a bioweapon. The biowarfare simulations are war games that go live and monkeypox is another bioweapon released just as voting is underway to give WHO totalitarian powers and set up a global medical police state and tyranny. In his book he argues principles of international law that can be used internationally to try and stop this. We are seeing a war against humanity by the scientific elite, this is World War III. Watch On BitChute / Brighteon / Rokfin / Rumble Geopolitics & Empire · Francis Boyle: We Are in a War Against the Scientific Elite, This is WWIII #298 *Support Geopolitics & Empire! Become a Member https://geopoliticsandempire.substack.comDonate https://geopoliticsandempire.com/donationsConsult https://geopoliticsandempire.com/consultation **Visit Our Affiliates & Sponsors! Above Phone https://abovephone.com/?above=geopoliticseasyDNS (use code GEOPOLITICS for 15% off!) https://easydns.comEscape The Technocracy course (15% discount using link) https://escapethetechnocracy.com/geopoliticsPassVult https://passvult.comSociatates Civis (CitizenHR, CitizenIT, CitizenPL) https://societates-civis.comWise Wolf Gold https://www.wolfpack.gold/?ref=geopolitics Websites University of Illinois College of Law https://law.illinois.edu/faculty-research/faculty-profiles/francis-boyle Publications https://law.illinois.edu/faculty-research/faculty-profiles/francis-boyle/#publications Books on Amazon https://www.amazon.com/Francis-Anthony-Boyle/e/B001IYV7E0 Resisting Medical Tyranny: Why the COVID-19 Mandates are Criminal https://www.amazon.com/Resisting-Medical-Tyranny-COVID-19-Mandates/dp/1957807121 About Francis Boyle Francis Boyle is a professor of international law at the University of Illinois College of Law. He received an AB (1971) in Political Science from the University of Chicago, then a JD degree magna cum laude from Harvard Law School, and AM and PhD degrees in Political Science from Harvard University. He practiced tax and international tax with Bingham, Dana & Gould. Professor Boyle serves as counsel to Bosnia and Herzegovina and to the Provisional Government of the Palestinian Authority. He also represents two associations of citizens within Bosnia and was involved in developing the indictment against Slobodan Milosević for genocide, crimes against humanity, and war crimes in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Over his career, he has represented national and international bodies including the Blackfoot Nation (Canada), the Nation of Hawaii, and the Lakota Nation, as well as numerous individual death penalty and human rights cases. He has advised numerous international bodies in the areas of human rights, war crimes and genocide, nuclear policy, and bio-warfare. From 1991-92, he served as Legal Advisor to the Palestinian Delegation to the Middle East Peace Negotiations. Professor Boyle served on the Board of Directors of Amnesty International, as a consultant to the American Friends Service Committee, and on the Advisory Board for the Council for Responsible Genetics. He drafted the U.S. domestic implementing legislation for the Biological Weapons Convention,

First Voices Radio
04/24/22 - Deborah Anderson, Scott Frazier

First Voices Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2022 57:37


In the first segment, Tiokasin speaks with award-winning filmmaker and photographer Deborah Anderson, director, producer and writer of the new documentary film, Women of the White Buffalo. The film shows the lives of the modern day Native women as we listen to their stories of loss, suicide, murder and epidemic meth addiction among their community, mirrored by their deep ancestral roots, traditional ceremony, prayer and hope. Women of the White Buffalo features testimonials from nine women from the Lakota Nation, ranging in age from 10 to 98, living on the Pine Ridge and Rosebud reservations in South Dakota. Deborah's work has graced the covers of pop music albums and magazines, as well as the walls of an expansive clientele of private homes and landmark hotels worldwide. Of Indigenous, Black, Irish and Scottish descent, her photographic work has hung in galleries both in Europe and the US, including the world-class Leica Galleries, which have hosted three shows for her Women Of The White Buffalo series. More information at https://womenofthewhitebuffalo.com/homeIn the second segment, Tiokasin speaks with Scott Frazier, a Santee and enrolled Crow Tribe citizen. He is currently Executive Director and Indigenous Liaison for Project WET, and recently he formed a new company called Project Indigenous, with the mission of promoting wellness, diversity and environmental consultation to Indigenous peoples. Tiokasin and Scott discuss the 150th anniversary of Yellowstone National Park, which is taking place in 2022. As a highly accomplished and driven leader, Scott keeps a rigorous schedule of public speaking engagements and guest appearances teaching Native environmental education. He has been involved in buffalo issues for many years. When asked what his perspective is as a Native person on water, wellness, and environmental issues, he says: "To me all things on this planet are earth, wind, fire and water. Different proportions, of course, but maintaining a relationship to all… In the Native perspective of nature, we are all part of nature… We are not just observers." More information can be found at https://projectindigenous.comProduction Credits:Tiokasin Ghosthorse (Lakota), Host and Executive ProducerLiz Hill (Red Lake Ojibwe), ProducerMalcolm Burn, Studio Engineer, Radio Kingston, WKNY 1490 AM and 107.9 FM, Kingston, NYTiokasin Ghosthorse, Audio EditorMusic Selections:1. Song Title: Tahi Roots Mix (First Voices Radio Theme Song)Artist: Moana and the Moa HuntersAlbum: Tahi (1993)Label: Southside Records (Australia and New Zealand)(00:00:44)2. Song Title: The CleansingArtist: John TrudellAlbum: Tribal Voice (1983)Label: Effective(00:26:50)3. Song Title: Lakota LullabyArtist: Unknown (Note: If anyone knows the artist and other information about the song, please send Tiokasin an email at tiokasin@gmail.com)Album: N/ALabel: N/A(00:29:58)AKANTU INSTITUTEVisit Akantu Institute, an institute that Tiokasin founded with a mission of contextualizing original wisdom for troubled times. Go to https://akantuinstitute.org/ to find out more and consider joining his Patreon page at https://www.patreon.com/Ghosthorse.

Cosmic Reality Podcast
"COSMIC REALITY CHRONICLES" 10/20/15 - Barbara Threecrow

Cosmic Reality Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 19, 2022 64:53


"Cosmic Reality Chronicles" with Nancy Hopkins, Walt Silva and guest Barbara Threecrow is of the Lakota Nation and shared so many wonderful stories. The conversation focused on reconnecting with the ancestral knowledge, Tribal Consciousness, prophecy of the 5th World, Crop Circles, extraterrestrial and inner earth civilizations civilizations and Dr. John Mack. Before we can go further we must understand what our beginnings were really all about. https://www.cosmicreality.net/cosmic-reality-blog/cosmic-reality-radio-show-october-20-2015 Walt Silva: http://www.newparadigmtools.net/  NANCY'S BOOKS https://www.cosmicreality.com/books--blogs.html SHUNGITE STORE: https://mysticalware.com ARCHIVES: https://www.cosmicreality.com/archives.html PODCASTS: https://pod.co/cosmic-reality-radio Healing Tones: https://www.cosmicreality.net/cosmic-reality-blog/healing-tone Music by Renate Jett, Jett Music https://myspace.com/jett4music/music/songs Cosmic Reality Group - https://www.facebook.com/groups/504212719691742/ Shungite Reality Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/713944828952438

The Race to Value Podcast
Genocide by Bureaucracy: The Healthcare Plight of Native Americans, with Dr. Terry Knapp

The Race to Value Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2022 64:16


This week on our show we have Dr. Terry Knapp – Founder, Director, and Chief Medical Officer of CareSpan Holdings, Inc.  Dr. Knapp has a storied 50-year record of achievement in health care and business. His company CareSpan provides a comprehensive, integrated digital healthcare “Clinic-in-the-Cloud” solution by creating unfettered access to care for the underserved, with an emphasis on the care of chronic illness. Dr. Knapp has devoted his life to working with native peoples throughout the world and deeply understands the health problems and impediments to better healthcare that afflict Native Americans.  In this episode, he is here to share his views in order to raise awareness for the plight of indigenous peoples in our country who are receiving sub-standard care. There are some deeply emotional moments in this episode, as he discusses the failures of healthcare delivery as promised by the U.S. government more than 100 years ago. He describes American Indians that are dying a slow and agonizing death.  Their land – a reservation – is a concentration camp where they are treated as third-class “citizens” by receiving medical care that is killing them. He talks about the bureaucracy of the Indian Health Service, the failure of the IHS to provide enough good doctors, the lack of choices by patients, and the lack of respect for Native American ways by a health system that ignores their culture. He discusses the denial of access to modern medical care and posits that the Indian Health system actually makes them sicker by exacerbating psychological trauma and socioeconomic challenges associated with their physical imprisonment (as seen by rates of substance abuse and mental illness). The inhumane treatment that Dr. Knapp has observed firsthand has made him speak out about what he sees as a slow-moving but progressive bureaucratic genocide of our Indigenous peoples. The Native American phrase Mitakuye Oyasin means “all my relations”.  This is said at the end of every prayer in the Lakota Nation, and it reminds us at all times to honor all of our relations – past, present, and future. This transcends our human relatives and includes our relation to all of creation – the water, the plants, the animals, and the Creator. Indigenous people think intergenerationally as well, by honoring those in the past, present, and future. In thinking of value-based care, how can we consider all of our relations – which includes Native Americans who have suffered irreparable harms from a deeply flawed healthcare system? Episode Bookmarks: 02:00 Introduction and Background to Dr. Terry Knapp 03:50 Dr. Knapp is speaking out after seeing firsthand the inhumane treatment of our Indigenous peoples by the healthcare system 05:20 The Native American phrase Mitakuye Oyasin (“all my relations”) as a reminder that value-based care must consider all of our relations – including Native Americans who have suffered irreparable harm 07:10 Dr. Knapp discusses his medical training and life's work to make a social impact as a surgeon, inventor, and entrepreneur 13:00 Insights as a cancer patient led him to develop a “clinic in a cloud” integrated digital care company (CareSpan Health) that leverages technology to enable health equity 14:45 The catastrophically high rate of COVID-19 cases and deaths in the Native American population (and similarities to the 1918 flu pandemic) 15:15 Tribal healthcare facilities are underfunded (in 2017, US healthcare expenditures were $9,207 per capita but only $3,332 per capita for Indian Health Services) 15:50 Unethical medical practices of the past (e.g. Native American women undergoing forced sterilizations in the 1960s and 1970s) 16:20 Dr. Knapp's early experiences in treating the Yurok and Hupa tribes in California as a medical resident 18:00 Treatment of disadvantaged people in Mexico, Peru, Ecuador, Columbia, Chile, and other parts of Central America

The Laura Flanders Show
Uncut Full Conversation: Sunny Red Bear, NDN Collective's Director of Racial Equity

The Laura Flanders Show

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2021 32:27


The following audio exclusive  features the entire uncut interview with NDN Collective's Director of Racial Equity, Sunny Red Bear of the Lakota Nation.  Excerpts of this interview were included in our recent special  “LANDBACK! A Tipi Town Approach to Healing & Homelessness”.   In this special feature, Laura traveled to the sacred Black Hills of South Dakota where NDN Collective is reclaiming ancestral lands to address homelessness, addiction and violence against Native Americans.  Laura reported on  Camp Mniluzahan, a tipi village built on tribal trust land, that welcomed hundreds of unhoused Indigenous people and others in the Rapid City area in the dead of winter last year.   Catalyzed in 2020, by an action in which Land Defenders blocked former President Donald Trump's road to Mount Rushmore, this Landback campaign is about reclaiming, along with stolen land, native ceremonies, spirituality and traditions of community care. If you're a listener or a viewer, you spend time with us. Many of you have for years. So how about taking a few minutes to give us the support we need to keep doing what we do… Only a few minutes from you, pledging $3 or $5 or $12 a month, will keep us going all year. Go to Patreon.com/theLFShow and join our media team and support movement building.  Thanks!

Out of the Blocks
Arlo & Lei Ann, Then & Now

Out of the Blocks

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2021 33:51


We reconnect with Arlo Iron Cloud, our partner at KILI Radio, The Voice of the Lakota Nation, on the Pine Ridge Reservation. He tells us how life has changed for him and his family over the past few years. We also check back in with Lei Ann Shiramizu in Seattle's Chinatown International District to hear how she and her neighbors have coped with the pressures of the pandemic.

Right On The Mark
Episode 13 featuring Michael Martin Murphey 3 of 3

Right On The Mark

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 25, 2021 36:22 Transcription Available


In this week's part 3 of a 3-part interview, Michael Martin Murphey and host of ROTM, Keith Mark talk about Native American culture and why Murph was adopted into the Lakota Nation.They discuss how the pandemic affected his annual concert tour schedule and what Murph did to stay connected to his audience and feed his love of entertaining.They reflect on the variety of projects they have worked on together including Murph providing the narrator's voice for a movie Keith produced titled, “A Thanksgiving Classic”. This program was inspired by a short story Keith wrote about his childhood and aired on Outdoor Channel. Murphey donated his time and talent to provide the narration for the movie.Keith also produced a DVD of Murph's “Cowboy Christmas” which was filmed live at the Paramount Theater in Austin, TX and also aired on Outdoor Channel and Public Television. Finally, Murph donated his time to entertain a number of private audiences for Hunter Nation to help raise interest and awareness for the non-profit, grassroots organization fighting to protect every hunters rights.Sponsor Links:Hunter Nation -  HunterNation.org            Kings Camo - KngsCamo.com            Mossy Oak - MossyOak.com/      Guest Links:All Things Murphey - MichaelMartinMurphey.comMurph's Music                                 Murph's Tour Info                                 Murph's Western InstituteMurph's Chuckwagon Show

The Extreme History Project: The Dirt on the Past
Ridgeline: A Story of Justice with Michael Punke

The Extreme History Project: The Dirt on the Past

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2021 72:11


Join us for our conversation with author Michael Punke on his new book, Ridgeline, a novel that details the story of the Fetterman fight or the Battle of One-Hundred-in-the-Hands. In 1866, with the country still reeling from the Civil War, the U.S. Army established Fort Phil Kearny in the home of the Lakota Nation. In his book, Punke tells the story of the months leading up to this battle between the U.S. Army and the Lakota, Cheyenne, and Arapahoe. The result was what we now know as the Battle of One-Hundred-in-the-Hands. Michael talks with us about the book, his processes, the characters, the diversity of the west at this time, and why this story is still important today. Michael is the author of several books including The Revenant, a #1 New York Times bestseller and basis for the Academy Award–winning film.    To Learn More: We highly recommend Michael's other books including The Revenant: A Novel of Revenge, Last Stand: George Bird Grinnell, The Battle to Save the Buffalo, and the Birth of the New West, and Fire and Brimstone: The North Butte Mining Disaster of 1917. 

Omega Man Radio with Shannon Ray Davis
Episode 8209 - Report from the Lakota Nation - Jerome Slidesoff

Omega Man Radio with Shannon Ray Davis

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2021 34:36


Episode 8209 - Report from the Lakota Nation - Jerome Slidesoff Recorded 3-19-2021 on OMEGAMAN omegamanradio.com

OMEGAMAN (TM) with Shannon Ray Davis
Episode 8209 - Report from the Lakota Nation - Jerome Slidesoff

OMEGAMAN (TM) with Shannon Ray Davis

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 19, 2021 35:00


Episode 8209 - Report from the Lakota Nation - Jerome Slidesoff Recorded 3-19-2021 on OMEGAMAN omegamanradio.com

Talking Taiwan
Ep 107 | Auntie Sewing Squad 2: Supporting Communities on the Fringe Through Caring

Talking Taiwan

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 14, 2020 53:10


A note from Talking Taiwan host Felicia Lin:   Kristina Wong and Valerie Soe are back to talk about the Auntie Sewing Squad. When they were last here (on episode 75) the Auntie Sewing Squad was about two months old with over 600 members. A lot has happened with the Auntie Sewing Squad since then. As you listen to the episode, you might be wondering why is there a dog crying in the background as Kristina talks to us? And what major announcement is Valerie going to make about yet another off-shoot project? You might want to go back and listen to episode 75 first or at least read this description of the Auntie Sewing Squad from their website:   The Auntie Sewing Squad was founded on March 24, 2020 by performance artist and comedian Kristina Wong as a casual effort to connect with other friends sewing homemade masks for essential workers due to the Federal Government’s failure to prepare them with proper personal protective equipment.   Auntie Sewing Squad has been featured on CNN, NBC, KCRW, Washington Post, Good Morning America and many more. We Go Down Sewing, a cross between an anthology, memoir, and a visual record of the work of the Auntie Sewing Squad will be published in Fall 2021 by University of California Press. The Aunties also collaborated with the Kronos Quartet on the film “Radical Care: The Auntie Sewing Squad” which uses music by Kronos and testimony and footage provided by the Aunties. We are a college course at San Francisco State University. We also have hosted two rounds of an online summer mask sewing camp for kids. Our relationship with various First Nations has extended to include fundraising and sending them sewing and relief supplies. We have sent several vans filled with sewing and hygiene supplies to the Seamstresses United Navajo & Hopi Nation for distribution throughout both reservations.   Here’s a little preview of what we talked about in this podcast episode:   How the Auntie Sewing Squad has developed and changed since we last spoke How Kristina’s role has changed How masks, mask wearing and mask making have become a political statement How the Auntie Sewing Squad’s work is about supporting communities forgotten by the federal government such as first nations, incarcerated communities, poor communities of color, migrants at the border How sewing masks is a political statement for many of the aunties The Auntie Sewing Squad’s Core Values The Auntie Sewing Squad’s fiscal sponsor Art2Action which allows donations received by the Auntie Sewing Squad to be tax deductible Historian Shakedown Auntie Rebecca Solnit The Karl Marx quote that applies to the Auntie Sewing Squad How Auntie Care started with an offering of hand salve The Auntie Sewing Squad’s collaboration with the Kronos Quartet on the eight-minute short film, “Radical Care: The Auntie Sewing Squad” The press that the Auntie Sewing Squad has received Kristina’s Good Morning America appearance The coat and clothing drives that the Auntie Sewing Squad has organized for Lakota Nation and the Navajo Nation The book about the Auntie Sewing Squad, We Go Down Sewing The full-length documentary film about the Auntie Sewing Squad that’s in the works The crazy requests for masks that the Auntie Sewing Squad still receives Monk robe fabric that was donated to make masks How the Auntie Sewing Squad has become a sort of national network that supports various communities in need- from people affected by California wildfires to migrants in need of masks in Tijuana How Kristina’s show and live tour “Kristina Wong for Public Office” became a Zoom and an online experience The Auntie Sewing Squad’s Kid Sewing Summer Camp   Related Links:   The Auntie Sewing Squad’s website: http://auntiesewingsquad.com/   The Auntie Sewing Squad’s Core Values: http://auntiesewingsquad.com/about/#ourcorevalues   The Auntie Sewing Squad on Instagram: www.Instagram.com/AuntieSewing   Auntie Sewing Squad Facebook group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/2764362993676831/   Auntie Sewing Squad Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/auntiesewing   The Auntie Sewing Squad’s YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCQrlwkZu_l6F1d9D_M5ZnGQ     Ways to donate to the Auntie Sewing Squad: Tax-deductible donation link thanks to Art2Action who has waived the fiscal sponsor fees:  https://donorbox.org/auntie-sewing-squad   Kristina Wong PayPal General Donations using (Friends & Family):  k@kristinasherylwong.com   Kristina Wong Venmo General Donations HERE: “GiveKristinaWongMoney”     Kristina Wong with set pieces from her show “Kristina Wong for Public Office” Kristina Wong’s website: http://kristinawong.com/   Kristina Wong’s Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/ilovekristinawong/   Kristina Wong’s YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCYVB9LCGQewhp4LxlachKPQ   Kristina and Valerie’s previous Talking Taiwan interview about the Auntie Sewing Squad: https://www.talkingtaiwan.com/auntie-sewing-squad-combats-covid-19-one-mask-at-a-time-ep-75/     Valerie with a screen shot of “Radical Care: The Auntie Sewing Squad”   Valerie Soe’s blog: https://beyondasiaphilia.com/   Valerie’s previous Talking Taiwan interview about her documentary film, Love Boat Taiwan: https://www.talkingtaiwan.com/love-boat-taiwan-interview-asian-american-studies-professor-film-maker-valerie-soe-ep-66/     We Go Down Sewing, a cross between an anthology, memoir, and a visual record of the work of the Auntie Sewing Squad will be published in Fall 2021 by University of California Press   The Tom’s model: https://bit.ly/3oPzNUJ   Art2Action’s website: http://www.art2action.org/   Art2Action’s Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/art2action/       Kronos Quartet musician wearing a mask made by the Auntie Sewing Squad   Kronos Quartet musicians wearing masks made by the Auntie Sewing Squad   The Kronos Quartet: https://kronosquartet.org/     Historian Shakedown Auntie Rebecca Solnit’s article for The Guardian, “The way we get through this is together: the rise of mutual aid under coronavirus,” which features a mention of the Auntie Sewing Squad: https://bit.ly/2LDuK8d

Relational Artistry Podcast
BOL 08 - The Powerful Journey Of A Sun-Dancer, Fire Keeper, & Leader In The Ceremonial Realm with Uncle David Warren Goodknife

Relational Artistry Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 22, 2020 47:20


In this week's episode, Host Eddy Martin Graham, had the sincere honor of interviewing a widely respected Elder of the Lakota Nation named Uncle David Warren Goodknife. Uncle is an experienced Lodge Leader, Fire keeper and Lodge Builder, with over 28 years of practice in the ceremonial realm. He is a veteran Sun Dancer and Fire Chief with over a dozen hundred facilitations that he has lead and been a part of. His wisdom is poured through this podcast, providing us with insight into current world affairs, his journey on overcoming addiction into sobriety through the sun dance, and of the importance of honoring the sacred among us.  You can contact him at @healingsacrament on Instagram and his website at Remedyrolls.com

The Future Is Beautiful with Amisha Ghadiali
Tiokasin Ghosthorse on Earth Languages, Consciousness And Indigenous Intelligence - E107

The Future Is Beautiful with Amisha Ghadiali

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 7, 2020 91:12


Can Earth raise our consciousness into living lives of true reciprocity? In this episode Amisha speaks with Tiokasin Ghosthorse, member of the Cheyenne River Lakota Nation of South Dakota and a Sundancer in the cosmology of the Lakota Nation. He has a long history with Indigenous activism and advocacy, and is an international speaker on Peace, Indigenous and Mother Earth perspective. He is the founder, host and executive producer of “First Voices Radio”. In 2016 Tiokasin received a Nomination for the Nobel Peace Prize.  Amisha and Tiokasin journey along a stream of consciousness guided by Tiokasin's Indigenous cornerstones and his fluid interbeing with Earth and Cosmos. Tiokasin opens up a portal to the Lakota understanding of innocence and elemental consciousness that we can receive by Earth listening to us and teaching us to hear our hearts lessons through its abundant gifts. He reveals how we have constructed systems of fear that condition us to speak tactically, economically and anthropocentrically, instead of naturally. He shares insights into the world of Lakota language, an Earth language of indigenous intelligence embedded in verbs, motion and action that speaks to three dimensions, that knows no war nor gender, and is created to relate and not divide or exclude.  Tiokasin's shares that the Corona virus is presenting us with 33 intelligences brought to us at this time to expand our consciousness and to see our future within the Earth. We learn that we can grow to understand the virus in new forms; a pathway to understand the tools and energy of the earth to grow our relationship to the cosmos, and expand us into beings that are guided by the gifts of the stars to live a life of true reciprocity.   This podcast is part of a collaboration with St Ethelburgas called ‘Listening To Each Other, Listening to Earth'. Links from this episode and more at www.thefutureisbeautiful.co 

1080 KYMN Radio - Northfield Minnesota
Prairie Island Indian Community Buffalo Project part 2 of a 3 part series

1080 KYMN Radio - Northfield Minnesota

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 12, 2020


In March of 1992 the Prairie Island Indian Community accepted a male bison bull, 6 years old, from the Lakota Nation of South Dakota. The Prairie Island Indian Community Tribal Council and Elders of the community supported the establishing of a bison herd on their own tribal lands.  The community purchased additional bison cows in 1993.

Voices of COVID-19
Resistance and Resilience: COVID on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation - Helene Gaddie (Part 1 of 2)

Voices of COVID-19

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 14, 2020 20:37


The Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota is home to more than 19,000 members of the Oglala Lakota Nation. It is one of the poorest communities in the United States and has the lowest life expectancy in the country. The Tribe prides itself on its resilience. For generations, the members have fought through poverty, oppression, discrimination and a long history of broken treaties and aggression from the United States government. Now they are being faced with another potentially devastating invader: COVID-19. Thanks to quick action by tribal leadership, the Reservation went on lockdown early.  At the time of this recording the Reservation had seen around 100 cases of the virus.  Still, the residents know that even a small outbreak in their community could have grave consequences.In this episode, Brian Lucas interviews Helene Gaddie, a member of the Oglala Lakota Nation and a resident of Pine Ridge. Helene and her husband run a non-profit called, Generation Indigenous Ways, which runs camps for American Indian Youth focusing on integrating science curriculum with traditional Native values and practices. Since the outbreak, Helene has been part of an Indigenous Response effort, reaching out to people across the reservation to offer education and support.Because of the many issues related to the pandemic and life on the Pine Ridge Reservation, we are breaking this interview into two episodes.  In this episode, Helen talks about the lockdown of the reservation and how the pandemic may be an opportunity for the Lakota Nation to reconnect with its roots. 

It's On The List Podcast
Episode 33. Jeff Rosenstock, "Worry" And Life During Wartime!!!!!!!!!!!!!

It's On The List Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2020 67:47


**POST SHOW NOTE** The Black Hills Legal Fund is in support of the Lakota Nation. Six Grandfathers (which was defaced to make Mount Rushmore) is sacred land to the Lakota Sioux. I (Mason) apologize for any incorrect attribution to the land at the end of the show, and please reach out to me via instagram DM or the show's email if there needs to be any further clarification or correction made in the notes. Donate to the Black Hills Legal Fund: https://bhlegalfund.org/# National Resource List: https://linktr.ee/NationalResourcesList Black Owned Bookstore Bot: (409) 404-0403 ------------------------------------------------------------------ Days after completing separate moves, the Tired Boys are back with a discussion of Jeff Rosenstock's Punk opus "Worry." and Todd Solondz's 2009 dark comedy "Life During Wartime". Join us on: Twitter: twitter.com/itsonthelistpod
 instagram: www.instagram.com/itson_thelist/
 facebook: https://www.facebook.com/everybodywants2getonthelist/
 email the show: everybodywants2getonthelist@gmail.com Mason's other podcast, The Barn: @thebarnpodcast Noah’s Other Podcast, My Favorite Podcast: https://www.instagram.com/myfavorite_podcast/ Noah’s writing: https://noahmarger.wordpress.com/ Noah's Letterboxd: letterboxd.com/moahnarger/
 Mason's Letterboxd: letterboxd.com/MasonMaguire/ Noah's Instagrams: www.instagram.com/noahdotmarger/ www.instagram.com/ylg.world/ Mason's Instagrams: www.instagram.com/hotdogdebicki/
www.instagram.com/goodskytonite/ It's on the (Play)List: open.spotify.com/playlist/4MO0fkK…1YTemtnQfOTzNQiw

So What?
Ep. 18 - Hoisted by her Noem Petard

So What?

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2020 24:45


In this episode, Mr. Burak discusses COVID stats (1:48), unemployment at Great Depression levels (2:58); White House aides test positive for coronavirus (4:40), Trump's Death Star (5:10), massive school funding cuts possible (6:30), South Dakota Governor Noem's fight with Lakota Nation (10:05), Ireland returns a 170 year old favor (13:25), what he's watching right now (14:40), and funny Psych Corner (15:25). --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

Franklin (MA) Matters
FM #261 VFJ Renovations 5/01/20

Franklin (MA) Matters

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2020 27:09


FM #261 = This is the Franklin Matters radio show, number 261 in the series. This session of the radio show shares my conversation with Jessi and Vinny Faneule, of VFJ Renovations. We had our conversation via virtual conference bridge to adhere to the ‘social distancing’ requirements of this pandemic period. I was excited to have this call as I say during the session (in my words, and butchering theirs) they had me with the line in their essay that I shared here earlier: “getting back to where we were is complicated, and begs the question: Was where we were, where we want to be?” We discussed their raised garden bed initiative, to empower us with gardening. Note: in reviewing the recording, we realized that the mention of “Richard” Means was really Russell Means, the American Indian activist and actor. Russell’s father was of the Ogala band of the Lakota Nation. The quote mentioned is a paraphrase of the text that can be found in Russell's autobiography. The full quote is also included below. The recording runs about 25 minutes, so let’s listen to my conversation with Jessi and Vinny -------------- The essay that got me excited https://www.franklinmatters.org/2020/04/voices-of-franklin-get-back-to-where-we.html Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/VFJ-Renovations-336675640619192/ VFJ Renovations webpage and ordering process https://www.vfjrenovations.com/empower-with-gardening-initiative Russell Means - wikipedia entry https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russell_Means Autobiography https://www.amazon.com/Where-White-Fear-Tread-Autobiography/dp/0312147619 The text as quoted during the recording: "We knew the universe and how it includes and interacts with our Grandmother. Before I was six years old, my grandparents and my mother had taught me that if all the green things that grow were taken from the earth, there could be no life. If all the four-legged creatures were taken from the earth, there could be no life. If all the winged creatures were taken from the earth, there could be no life. If all our relatives who crawl and swim and live within the earth were taken away, there could be no life. But if all the human beings were taken away, life on earth would flourish. That is how insignificant we are." We are now producing this in collaboration with Franklin.TV and Franklin Public Radio (wfpr.fm). This podcast is my public service effort for Franklin but we can't do it alone. We can always use your help. How can you help? - If you can use the information that you find here, please tell your friends and neighbors - If you don't like something here, please let me know Through this feedback loop we can continue to make improvements. I thank you for listening. For additional information, please visit Franklinmatters.org/ If you have questions or comments you can reach me directly at shersteve @ gmail dot com The music for the intro and exit was provided by Michael Clark and the group "East of Shirley". The piece is titled "Ernesto, manana" c. Michael Clark & Tintype Tunes, 2008 and used with their permission. I hope you enjoy! ------------------ You can also subscribe and listen to Franklin Matters audio on iTunes or your favorite podcast app; search in "podcasts" for "Franklin Matters"

Omega Man Radio with Shannon Ray Davis
Episode 7067 - Report from the Lakota Nation - Jerome Slidesoff

Omega Man Radio with Shannon Ray Davis

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 22, 2020 64:51


Episode 7067 - Report from the Lakota Nation - Jerome Slidesoff Recorded 3-20-2020 on OMEGAMAN omegamanradio.com

OMEGAMAN (TM) with Shannon Ray Davis
Episode 7067 - Report from the Lakota Nation - Jerome Slidesoff

OMEGAMAN (TM) with Shannon Ray Davis

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2020 65:00


Episode 7067 - Report from the Lakota Nation - Jerome Slidesoff Recorded 3-20-2020 on OMEGAMAN omegamanradio.com

A Pen And A Napkin
A Pen And A Napkin-Episode #23 Larry Luitjens

A Pen And A Napkin

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 17, 2020 75:48


If you win 748 games, you're doing something right. Legendary South Dakota boys coach Larry Luitjens discusses losing a job, his relationship with the Lakota Nation, working through tragedy, practice setup, organizing his programs and the importance of great assistant coaches. Terrific pod!!!

Storys From The Standing Buffalo Clan Of The Oglala Lakota Nation
These are short storys told by the standing buffalo clan. Of the Lakota nation.

Storys From The Standing Buffalo Clan Of The Oglala Lakota Nation

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 6, 2020 18:16


This is story details the symbolism of our Peace pipe. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/john1861/support

American Indian Airwaves
Remembering the Wounded Knee Massacre of 1890 & the Wounded Knee Occupation of 1973

American Indian Airwaves

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 23, 2019 58:01


December 29th of this year marks the 129th year anniversary of the Wounded Knee Massacre whereby the United States 7th Calvary stopped Spotted Elk, Miniconjou and Lakota Ghost Dancers, and community members from returning home to Pine Ridge, now located in South Dakota. Near the Wounded Knee Creek, Spotted Elk and community members were stopped by the United States 7th Calvary during a time when the United States government essentially banned all Native American traditions. Shortly after the initial encounter, a scuffle ensued and resulted in the U.S. 7th Calvary open firing and killing over 300 Indigenous women, children, and men. The Wounded Knee Massacre of 1890 is often inaccurately characterized as the last battle between American settler colonialist and Indigenous peoples and their respective First Nations. However, throughout the generations until early 1973, with little to moderate change of Indigenous peoples' conditions, Native Americans continued to struggle as the United States continuously failed to honor any of its signed and ratified treaties while sustaining protracted policies of genocide and assimilation. In a response to rampant civil and human rights violations of Pine Ridge residents, over 200 members of the American Indian Movement and supporters occupied Wounded Knee in the Lakota Nation from February 27th, 1973 to May 8th, 1973 in a 67-day military standoff with tribal and U.S. government officials, which quickly drew international and domestic support from people, organizations, and foreign governments throughout the world. At the time, the American Indian Movement and supporters were responding to traditional Lakota community members request for protection from elected tribal chairman, Richard “Dickie Wilson”, whose administration, along with United States government's support, was rife with corruption, nepotism, and violence. Subsequently, the 67-day standoff eventually resulted in a negotiated settlement between the American Indian Movement and the United States government on May 8th, 1973.

American Indian Airwaves
State of Emergency in the Lakota Nation & the Poor Peoples Campaign in Pacoima, CA - (4/4/2019)

American Indian Airwaves

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2019 59:07


“4-Week State of Emergency in the Oglala Lakota Nation & Highlights from the Poor Peoples Campaign in Pacoima, CA Public Hearing on Homelessness & Poverty” Parts 1:___________________________________ Helene Gaddie (Oglala Lakota Nation) is a community member, long time activist, and continues to work tirelessly, along with other Indigenous community members to provide basic human services to Pine Ridge citizens of the Oglala Lakota Nation. For the past four weeks, the Oglala Lakota Nation in Pine Ridge, SD has been enduring a four-week state of emergency resulting from two massive cyclones with blizzard conditions, freezing temperatures; snow, sleet, rain and flooding causing over 1,500 Oglala Lakota citizens to be displaced from their, scores of community member without drinkable water and adequate shelter and heat and/or skyrocketing electricity bills, plus community members in need of basic human necessities and services. Tune in to hear about the severity of issues and equally important what people can do help, plus more. To date, the Oglala Lakota Nation has not received any state and federal (FEMA) assistance. Sign the petition demanding the United States federal government send and provide emergency services and supplies. Emergency Contact Information: http://www.oglalalakotanation.info, https://www.oglalaoyankerelief.org, or call OST Emergency Management at 605-867-5011. https://www.lakotalaw.org/our-actions/empowering-the-people-of-the-oglala-sioux-tribe?ms=web-home Part 2: ___________________________________ Highlights from the 4/9/2019 Poor Peoples Campaign Public Hearing on Homelessness and Poverty in Pacoima, CA. An estimated one out of every five Telfair Elementary School students are homeless and others living in extreme poverty – too many of those children and their parent are Indigenous. In addition, according to the 2018 United Nations “Report of the Special Rapporteur on extreme poverty and human rights on his mission to the United States of America” it is underestimated that: “The 2016 poverty rate among American Indian and Alaska Native peoples was 26.2 per cent, the highest among all ethnic groups” and Indigenous peoples also have the highest unemployment rate of any ethnic group; 12% compared to the national average of 5.8 per cent; for more info: (https://digitallibrary.un.org/record/1629536/files/A_HRC_38_33_Add-1-EN.pdf). Parts 3:___________________________________ Trini Rodriguez, poet, co-founder of the TiaChucha Cultural Center and Bookstore, and a principal organizer for the forthcoming Poor Peoples Campaign Public Hearing on Homelessness and Poverty in Pacoima, CA on Tuesday, 4/9/2019. With an estimated one out of every five Telfair Elementary School students homeless and others living in extreme poverty, Trini joins us for the final segment of the program to discuss the significance of the Public Hearing, how numerous Indigenous children in public school are denied basic living necessities and in need of humanitarian assistance, and what will transpire at Poor People's Campaign on Homelessness and Poverty in Pacoima, CA; plus more. Information for the Public Hearing is here: https://www.facebook.com/events/275964423343334/ American Indian Airwaves regularly broadcast every Thursday from 7pm to 8pm (PCT) on KPFK FM 90.7 in Los Angeles, CA; FM 98.7 in Santa Barbara, CA; FM 99.5 in China Lake, CA; FM 93.7 in North San Diego, CA; FM 99.1 KLBP in Long Beach, CA (Mondays 3pm-4pm); WCRS FM 98.3/102.1 in Columbus, OH, and on the Internet at: www.kpfk.org. Archived American Indian Airwaves programs can be heard here: https://www.kpfk.org/on-air/american-indian-airwaves/

Joyous - a Seaside Center, Rev. Christian Sorensen podcast

www.SeasideCenter.org Today’s message from Dr. Christian Sorensen was recorded April 28th, 2019 and it’s titled Healing for the Earth affirming I walk in balance with the Earth! Today we welcome the talent and voice of Keith Leon who can be found on his website at Leon Smith Publishing. Dr. Christian’s Corner Earth Day occurred last week. The Seaside Sisters, under the guidance of Kalli Holmes Sorensen, created a beautiful evening of rituals with the fire pit and water blessing. The chanting led by Flossie Park and the drumming and earth blessing from Gary Palisch, a Native American from the Lakota Nation, was transcendent. As Easter so closely preceded Earth Day this year, I felt a few words about our Mother Earth today was still in order. I am always inspired when I spend some time reconnecting my heart, soul, and mind with our beautiful planet that so incredibly supports our life as we live and walk on her "surface." Today begins the gathering of our offerings of meals/events for Gourmets for God. This is the time of the year we ask you to create a meal to share with members and friends of Seaside. It is a great way to connect with people and deepen friendships with fellow community members. Next month we will open up silent bidding to auction off the seats at your event. In six weeks, on Friday, June 14, Lisa Nichols will be speaking at Seaside. She is one of our nation’s leading inspirational speakers for the corporate world. She became well known for her spiritual work on Oprah when she first visited her after appearing in the movie - “The Secret.” Today, after the second service, is our first volunteer meeting to support this event. I invite you to join me and Kay Samuelson, RScP for a short gathering in the Emerson Room. Come visit us on our website SeasideCenter.org and you can always join us in Encinitas, California on a Sunday sometime where we always great music, a spirited message and a joyful, loving, vibrant community that await you.

Radio Free New Hampshire
RFNH Dr. Thomas Balistrieri - Indigenous initiation and modern society

Radio Free New Hampshire

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2019 120:36


Today I sat down with Dr. Thomas Balistrieri. Tom is a Professor of Psychology at Worcester Polytechnic Institute (WPI) and he has had a career built around counseling and mentoring people of all ages. Tom is one of the most insightful people that I know, and his experience in coaching human beings through difficult times is unique and invaluable. While Tom doesn't spend a lot of time promoting himself, he is frequently sought out by his peers, professional organizations and individuals seeking his help, guidance, historical perspectives and for public speaking events. You can find him on Facebook or by emailing him at thomas@ragspassage.com . Tom began his career as a therapist and over the years he has been a Director of Counseling at universities, a business consultant for a major corporation, a Dean of Students, a NCAA Division One Coach, and even a lobsterman on the Atlantic. Tom spent many months over several years learning the traditions of the Lakota Nation from Elders who found something unique in Tom. On this podcast he shares with us a little of what he has learned in the hopes that we might make our own lives better. I hope you enjoy.

Out of the Blocks
Pine Ridge Reservation, part 1: Meeting a Prayer Halfway

Out of the Blocks

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2019 43:10


We team up with Arlo Iron Cloud of KILI Radio, Voice of the Lakota Nation, for this listening tour of The Pine Ridge Reservation, a 50 by 100 mile stretch of land in South Dakota that's home to the Oglala Lakota people. In this episode, we meet a radio producer, a hip hop artist, a medicine man, a home builder, a tribal government leader, a powwow organizer, a painter, and a philosopher who’s chosen to live alone in a house with no electricity and no running water.

Unbroken Chain Podcast
Ep 10: The Big Project w Tepahteh Hutze

Unbroken Chain Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 10, 2018 74:05


Tepahteh Hutze, the “Oso,” is a medicine man who grew up in a family of curanderos from the Bear Clan who completed his first four day vision quest under the supervision of his grandfather at age six. As a young man he moved to United States and joined the Lakota Nation, following the teachings of Wallace Black Elk who adopted him as his grandson. Tepahteh's medicine and ways of life are deeply rooted in his practices of native ceremonies, including temescal(sweatlodge), limpias (cleanses), medicine plants, drum sessions, and energy healing. In this beautiful offering, he shares his philosophy on the ceremony of life, how to access the medicine we carry within us, why the word "disease" does not exist in his culture, and why we have come to live life on earth. Connect with Oso at www.tepahtehhutze.com and on instagram @tepahtehhutze. More podcasts at www.maurajames.com [Lakota ceremonial songs]

KILI Radio
Mornin' Squawk! 091018

KILI Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 10, 2018 59:52


Monday morning show on the Pine Ridge Reservation over the Voice of the Lakota Nation, KILI Radio 90.1FM The Rez 88.7 FM Rapid City!

Rebel Hearts with Kristie Reeves
Interview with Daniel Paul Nelson on Standing Rock, Broken Treaties and the Possibility of Healing our History

Rebel Hearts with Kristie Reeves

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 6, 2017 51:15


This week on "Rebel Hearts": Kristie speaks with Daniel Paul Nelson who works for the "Lakota People's Law Project" as well as "The Romero Institute", helping to fight climate change as well as injustices against native peoples. Daniel holds a BA in Political Theory from Harvard College and an MA in Social Science from the University of Chicago. The "Lakota People's Law Project" engages in ongoing efforts to reclaim ancestral lands, stop all threats to Lakota land and resources as well as work toward the revitalization of their people and culture.   In this interview we talk about the repeating and continuos story of broken treaties with the Lakota (amongst many other First Nations), from the Fort Laramie treaties that were signed in the mid 1800s and shortly disregarded afterwards to the most recent events at Standing Rock.    Daniel speaks on the current law suits against 300 water protectors and the work of the "Lakota People's Law Project" to have these charges dropped. He explains the legality around the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL), and what we can do when corporations place money above the well-being of people and the environment. Daniel talks about the environmental issues that we are facing and the need for change.    We talk about the significance of the events at Standing Rock, no matter whether they illuminated the injustice towards the Lakota Nation or the mistreatment of peaceful water protectors; at the same time, the people coming together during these events show us that healing is possible, the need to stand together and that we have the power to create change!

EARTH AID NOW!
CANUPA GLUHA MANI & THE INDEPENDENT LAKOTA NATION BRING JUSTICE FOR STOLEN LIVES

EARTH AID NOW!

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 16, 2017 115:00


The Cante Tenza Okolakiciye, or Strong Heart Warrior Society of the Independent Lakota Nation, is an ancient Lakota warrior society as well as a modern day human rights movement working to protect, enforce & restore treaty rights, civil rights, & sovereignty of Indigenous peoples across Turtle Island. Having previously contacted the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Office (UNHCHRO) on issues pertaining to Lakota/Indigenous peoples on Turtle Island, the ILN (Independent Lakota Nation) has formed the International Indigenous Human Rights Office (IIHRO) to monitor & address Indigenous human rights issues within Lakota & surrounding Indigenous territory. The IIHRO will address murdered & missing Indigenous peoples with the Justice For Stolen Lives investigation focusing on Indigenous people murdered by law enforcement; whose murders were never solved, or solved in contradiction of evidence going back to 1990. “The International Community is required to investigate a high capacity of unexplained deaths that occur randomly to Indigenous people at the hands of law enforcement,” explained Lakota Strong Heart Warrior leader Canupa Gluha Mani. “In the absence of International action, we will take it upon ourselves to investigate through the forming human rights office.” Canupa Gluha Mani calls "out to other Indigenous nations with the same circumstances of unexplained or uninvestigated deaths at the discretion of America’s policies and procedures of ethnic cleansing to hold the U.S. Government, states, and towns accountable.” The Independent Lakota Nation continues the inter-generational movement to assert Lakota independence and grows from past efforts by Lakota chiefs, elders, treaty councils, and more than 165 years of resistance to illegal settlement on unceeded Lakota territory.

EARTH AID NOW!
OYATE OTO EXPLAINS THE FORT LARAMIE TREATY FRAUD & NEED FOR LAKOTA UNITY NOW!

EARTH AID NOW!

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 2, 2017 94:00


Live from Albququerque, New Mexico with Nii Nee & Oyate Oto (Bernie). Grandfather of the Lakota Sovereignty Movement, Oyate Oto explains how he found a book written by a reporter at the scene who detailed how the Fort Laramie Treaty was executed fraudulently with the delivery of barrels of whiskey to the Treaty Camp and the inebriation of treaty signers who were dragged when passed-out to sign the treaty with pens held in their unconscious hands. Oyate Oto wanted others beyond him and a few others to know the truth. Also, we hear the music of Oyate from whom Carlos Santana got his sound.           

First Nations Health Authority audio
Tobacco Nation Episode 3 - Tradition

First Nations Health Authority audio

Play Episode Listen Later May 29, 2017 21:37


Paula Potter is part Cree, part Scottish and is from Lakota Nation. She grew up in Edmonton but has lived in Vancouver for a long time. Paula is part of the ‘Culture Saves Lives' movement. She leads sweats; she sun dances; she is a traditional pipe carrier. Paula does this to help Indigenous people reconnect with their cultures. Her sacred use of tobacco, handed down to her by her Indigenous grandmother during summer visits to Slave Lake in northern Alberta, helped her survive and overcome drug addiction. “Every morning, I would hold the tobacco and pray to my grandmother … I believe traditional tobacco helped keep me alive,” says Paula.

Talk World Radio
Talk Nation Radio: Francis Boyle on How to Impeach Trump

Talk World Radio

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2017 29:00


Francis Boyle is a professor of international law at the University of Illinois College of Law. Professor Boyle has served as counsel to Bosnia and Herzegovina and to the Provisional Government of the Palestinian Authority. He has represented the Blackfoot Nation, the Nation of Hawaii, and the Lakota Nation. He drafted the U.S. domestic implementing legislation for the Biological Weapons Convention, known as the Biological Weapons Anti-Terrorism Act of 1989. And he has been a strong advocate over the years for the proper use of the power of impeachment.

BeSimply Radio
BeSimly...Rosebud Lakota Nation {April and Cheyenne}

BeSimply Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2012 53:00


  ‘She', April and Cheyenne dive into their story of serendipity, Rosebud-Lakota Nation and the power of living bridging worlds.  This will be the first of a TBD series with April and Cheyenne to inspire others to consider the possibility that exists beyond the third dimension. Connect with April at Questioneers Cheyenne at Lonesome Hero Cheyenne's Art Music By: Ena Vie Earth Prayer Connect with 'She' Want to explore and reconnect with 'self' take a moment to work with Suzanne one-on-one explore your inner self, actualize your vision, move through a transition or reconnect with the alchemy of food. Seva Sessions and Gift Economy always given. Suzanne Toro Bare Naked Bliss Meditations-Audio Book BareNakeBliss e-book Facebook    Bare Naked Experience Twitter    &nb

Red Town Radio
Moses Brings Plenty (Lakota) - Here and There

Red Town Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 24, 2011 64:00


  Mo Brings Plenty is of the Lakota Nation born and raised on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota. He is a gifted musician, actor, model and devoted spokesperson who travels the nation advocating for the rights of his Indian community, focusing heavily on the safety and protection of his elders and the support and positive development of the youth. Mo takes a proactive approach in all that he does and is very much a visionary about what he as a spiritual Indian man with strong traditional values can bring forth to the continuation and revitalization of his Lakota culture and traditions. It is through sharing prayer, ceremony and talking with people that he endeavors to maintain a sacred way of life, that so many who have come before him have sacrificed to create. http://www.mosesbringsplenty.com/ Shining Elk Entertanment Group:  818-813-3701, michelleshiningelk@gmail.com

KPFA - Bay Native Circle
Bay Native Circle – August 1, 2007

KPFA - Bay Native Circle

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 1, 2007 8:59


An interview with filmmaker Jerry Clown about his recent film, Riding With Ghosts. "Riding with Ghosts" is a story of struggle and strength, pain and healing. This is a story of the Lakota Nation, straight from the voices of the people on the streets and reservations across South Dakota. Told from the mouths of grieving mothers, gang members, and earnest seekers, this film confronts the stereotypes which threaten to place the Lakota Nation forever on the shelf of tourist trinkets and cliches. The post Bay Native Circle – August 1, 2007 appeared first on KPFA.

KPFA - Womens Magazine
Women’s Magazine – July 2, 2007

KPFA - Womens Magazine

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 2, 2007 8:59


Africa Jones interviews the director of the documentary "Killers Paradise" a film about femicide in Guatemala; Kate Raphael talks with the activist group Breast Cancer Action about corporate sponsorship of breast cancer fund-raising and the upcoming Avon walk in San Francisco; Safi Wa Narobi speaks with Courtney Hermann producer of the film "Standing Silent Nation" about the Lakota Nation's struggle with the federal government over tribal sovereignty; and we will have a tribute to musician Joan Armatrading who will be playing in San Francisco this Tuesday night at the Great American Music Hall. The post Women's Magazine – July 2, 2007 appeared first on KPFA.

Omni Art Salon with Jeffrey Milburn » Omni Art Salon with Jeffrey Milburn

  Jeffrey dialogues with James Kleinert, filmmaker and US Freestyle athlete about his life before film, getting involved with the Lakota Nation,  growing up in Wisconsin, his awakened spirituality inspired from his work with Native American Cultures and his monumental work on his beautiful documentary, SPIRIT RIDERS.   SPIRIT RIDERS is an international award-winning documentary film about the birth of an American Indian peace movement, begun in 1990 by the Lakota Nation and its growth over the subsequent years.