
UGH!


Maybe JG's not faking the ignorance.Scooter wrote:It's been a while since Joe has gone into full-on Mickey the Dunce mode...

Because he used it as an insult?Joe Guy wrote:Could someone explain how President Schlump's Pocahontas statement was "racist"? I'm watching CNN now and Don Lemon, Anderson Cooper and all of the panelists (other than Trumpists) are calling it a racial remark.
http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/senat ... le/2629853"I am very proud of my heritage," Warren told NPR in 2012. "These are my family stories. This is what my brothers and I were told by my mom and my dad, my mammaw and my pappaw. This is our lives. And I'm very proud of it."
In that account and others, a genealogist traced Warren's Native American heritage to the late 19th century, which, if true, would make her 1/32 Native American. (However, the legitimacy of those findings has been debated.)
The Washington Post's "Fact Checker" page has actually decided against judging the issue at all, offering "no rating" and, in a piece Tuesday, suggesting "readers to look into it on their own and decide whether Trump's attacks over Warren's background have merit."
Harvard Law School in the 1990s touted Warren, then a professor in Cambridge, as being "Native American." They singled her out, Warren later acknowledged, because she had listed herself as a minority in an Association of American Law Schools directory. Critics note that she had not done that in her student applications and during her time as a teacher at the University of Texas.
Warren maintains she never furthered her career by using her heritage to gain advantage. [Obviously she thought being a "minority" professor at Harvard Law would give her some sort of "cache" otherwise, why do it at all?]




Lord Jim wrote:In any event, I'm sure Trump would much rather have them talking about this than the latest developments in the Mueller investigation...

And should be taken with 1/32nd of a grain of salt.Lord Jim wrote:But I think trying to characterize his referring to Warren as "Pocahantas" as "racist" is pretty thin gruel...
I guess that depends on whether or not you want them to be offended.Big RR wrote:and if they weren't offended joe, then all is well?
Trump said a very stupid thing. He brought up the nickname he has been using for Elizabeth Warren. If he called her "Broken Rubber", I might agree with you.Big RR wrote:Using Pocohontas is like calling a native American tonto or chief; it should be avoided because it is not appropriate, whether or not someone there is offended or not is pretty immaterial--just like calling blacks Sambo or calling hispanics Pancho or Pepe.
He thought he was being funny. Do you think it would have been more appropriate if Trump had said, "Although, we have a representative in Congress who has been here a long time ... longer than you -- they call her Elizabeth Warren!"?Big RR wrote:At least extend to them the same courtesy of calling them by their proper name, just as we do to everyone else.
The Cherokee Nation emphatically disagrees with you, Jim:Lord Jim wrote:Even if her unverified claim to be 1/32nd American Indian is accurate, for a person who is 1/32 anything to try to use that to define them in a way that would give them the right to call themselves a "minority" trivializes the whole concept of "minority" and invites criticism and ridicule...
Source.Citizenship
Cherokee Nation citizenship law is set by tribal law. There is no minimum blood quantum required for citizenship. Tribal citizenship requires that you have at least one direct ancestor listed on the Dawes Final Rolls, a federal census of those living in the Cherokee Nation that was used to allot Cherokee land to individual citizens in preparation for Oklahoma statehood in 1907.
To be eligible for Cherokee Nation tribal citizenship, you must be able to provide documents that connect you to a direct ancestor listed on one of the Dawes Final Rolls of Citizens of the Cherokee Nation. To be eligible for a federal Certificate Degree of Indian Blood, you must demonstrate through documentation that you descend directly from a person listed on the Dawes’ “by Blood” rolls. This group of census rolls were taken between 1899-1906 of Citizens and Freedmen residing in Indian Territory (now northeastern Oklahoma). If your ancestor did not live in this geographical area during that time period, they will not be listed on the Dawes Rolls.
Of course it's racist; Trump was doing nothing other than mocking Warren's claimed ethnic ancestry. If she wants to identify herself as a descendant of Cherokees based on her own family's account of their history, who is Trump to say anything about it? The fact that he even chooses to comment on it is race-baiting and obnoxious. Whether it's "as bad" as other racially/ethnically inflammatory comments he has made is rather beside the point; it's all of a piece with him. And it provides his overtly racist supporters with permission to express their own bigotry in even cruder terms. It's disgusting all around.Lord Jim wrote:But I think trying to characterize his referring to Warren as "Pocahantas" as "racist" is pretty thin gruel...
Let me tell you something about Don Lemon...I'm sure Don Lemon and others are working hard behind the scenes...



Well, I can certainly understand why The Cherokee Nation would want to cast as wide a net as possible in allowing people to claim some level of "citizenship" as a Cherokee...(1/32, 1/64, or 1/128, or 1/256)Cherokee Nation citizenship law is set by tribal law. There is no minimum blood quantum required for citizenship.



Of course he did; and if he called Obama Sambo, or used another name for another ethnicity, he probably would have thought he was being funny as well--so what? Being funny (even when actual) is not an excuse for being a jerk.He thought he was being funny.