
On whether or not this was a racial slur, you stand with eiher the Navajo Nation or with Sarah Huckabee Sanders. Your choice.


I stand with the Diné.Scooter wrote:On whether or not this was a racial slur, you stand with eiher the Navajo Nation or with Sarah Huckabee Sanders. Your choice.
Wow, I had no idea that The Harvard Law School was such a hot-bed of anti-American Indian bigotry...disparaging someone for having the courage to assert their identity in the face of persecution




How would we know if Warren was hiding 1/32nd of her heritage?rubato wrote:The same people who mock and condemn Warren for publicly embracing her heritage would mock her for "hiding" it if she didn't.
And yet you never miss an opportunity to claim that your "people" came from the steppes, even though your genetic testing shows no link to Central Asia. Yet you insist it is true only because, in what passes for your mind, that would make your ancestors a "purer" form of Caucasian.liberty wrote:I have a quarter Amerindian ancestry, my daughter has an eight and my granddaughter has a sixteen; none of us claim to be Indians, not that we are ashamed of it.
What makes you think that’s funny?Joe Guy wrote:
Did I mention that I'm 1/32nd sexually harassed?
http://www.sacbee.com/news/nation-world ... 29953.htmlGenealogist Chris Child of the New England Historic Society looked into Warren’s background and found a document stating that she has a great-great-great-grandmother who is Native American, which would make her 1/32 Cherokee, NPR reported.
But Child told NPR that it would take more research to confirm that finding. Later, the New England Historic Genealogical Society has backtracked on Child’s finding, according to the Atlantic, saying there is "no proof that Elizabeth Warren's great-great-great-grandmother O.C. Sarah Smith either is or is not of Cherokee descent.”
Well, that's certainly something everyone can agree on.MajGenl.Meade wrote: Whatever, he is still a racist boor.