Native Americans exerted their political power in the 2020 election. A record-breaking six Native-Americans were elected to Congress and Native American votes tipped the scales in Arizona - which went blue for only the second time in seventy years. And U.S. Representative Deb Haaland (D-NM) is on President-elect Biden's short list to be Secretary of the Interior.
Native Americans made big gains in the 2020 election. Yet, Native Peoples are still largely invisible in American culture. Centuries of "colonialism" that separated Indigenous People from their families, their culture, and their land, led to intergenerational trauma from which they are still recovering. Yet, they remain resilient against continued attacks on their land and a trail of broken promises.
Today, we look at the emerging power of Native Americans in the context of centuries of systemic racism and cultural erasure.
GUESTS:

Two thumbs up: A show all about fingers
50:00

All calls: Boomy babers are the ones who worry about the mail
48:59

The value of expertise in a world where everybody knows everything
49:59