only the native has true rest
https://thepietypoet.blogspot.com/2021/11/winona-laduke-vs-b-lacksneak.html
Winona LaDuke vs B LackSneak
Winona LaDuke to Biden: Honor the Treaties, Stop Line 3
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Sep 21, 2021
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Honor The Earth
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Northern Minnesota, a massive tar sands pipeline is set to cross hundreds of bodies of water. It's threatening everything Honor The Earth founder
Winona LaDuke and the Anishinaabe people hold sacred.
a border is a stopgap, desperate and futile attempt to externalize self restraint .. something that never can be imposed from without .. on the other hand .. wher'er a border is possible .. 'terrapi' is possible ... and re-ed is no unnecessary luxury. Study volition and if you do that 'rite', you'll begin and end with rocks.
Nut Production in New York: Past, Present, Future
Lamoka Lake Site 5thou before Christ .. Dunsfort Pa is half a millenium before present count
the 27th is my favorite minute ...
http://soilandhealth.org/01aglibrary/010175.tree%20crops.pdf
john w hershey [1900-1947] Downingtown Pa Nursery
john w hershey Downingtown Pa Nursery
Dee Brown room
https://arstudies.contentdm.oclc.org/digital/collection/findingaids/id/7078
https://cals.org/blog/dee-browns-typewriter-rewriting-native-american-history
Dorris Alexander "Dee" Brown (February 29, 1908 – December 12, 2002) was an American novelist, historian, and librarian. His most famous work, Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee (1970) details the history of American expansionism from the point of view of the Native Americans.
Dee Brown (writer) Dee Brown Encyclopedia of Arkansas
Personal life
Dee Brown (writer) mediaeconomistcomsitesdefaultfilescfimages
Born in Alberta, Louisiana, a sawmill town, Brown grew up in Ouachita County, Arkansas, which experienced an oil boom when he was thirteen. Brown's mother later relocated to Little Rock so he and his brother and two sisters could attend a better high school. He spent much time in the public library. Reading the three-volume History of the Expedition under the Command of Captains Lewis and Clark helped him develop an abiding interest in the American West. He also discovered the works of Sherwood Anderson and John Dos Passos, and later William Faulkner and Joseph Conrad. He cited these authors as those most influential on his own work.
Dee Brown (writer) Saga of the Sioux An Adaptation from Dee Brown39s Bury My
While attending home games by the Arkansas Travelers baseball team, he became acquainted with Chief Yellow Horse, a pitcher. His kindness, and a childhood friendship with a Creek boy, caused Brown to reject the portrayals of Indian peoples as violent and backward, which dominated American popular culture at the time.
He worked as a printer and reporter in Harrison, Arkansas, and decided to continue his education at Arkansas State Teachers College in Conway, Arkansas. His mentor, the history professor Dean D. McBrien, helped set him on the road to becoming a writer. They traveled west along with other students on two occasions in a Model T Ford. On campus Brown worked as editor of the student newspaper and held a student assistantship in the library. The latter convinced him that he should become a librarian.
In the midst of the Great Depression he set out for George Washington University in Washington, D.C. for graduate study. Brown worked part-time for J. Willard Marriott, took classes, and married Sally Stroud (another graduate of Arkansas State Teachers College drawn to Washington by the New Deal). Eventually he found a full-time position and became a librarian for the U.S. Department of Agriculture from 1934 to 1942. He lived at 1717 R Street NW, in the Dupont Circle neighborhood.
Brown's first novel was a satire of New Deal bureaucracy, but it was not published due to the bombing of Pearl Harbor. The publisher suggested "something patriotic" instead. He responded with Wave High the Banner, a fictionalized account of the life of Davy Crockett (who was an acquaintance of his great-grandfather). A few months after its publication, he was drafted into the U.S. Army where he met Martin Schmitt, with whom he collaborated on several works after the war. During the war, Brown worked for the United States Department of War as a librarian and never went overseas.
From 1948 to 1972, he was an agriculture librarian at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, where he had gained a master's degree in library science, became a professor, and raised a son, Mitchell, and daughter, Linda, with his wife Sally.
As a part-time writer, he published nine books, three fiction and six nonfiction, by the end of the 1950s. During the 1960s, he completed eight more including The Galvanized Yankees, which Brown described as requiring more research than any of his other books, and The Year of the Century: 1876, which he described as his personal favorite.
In 1971 Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee became a best-seller. Many readers assumed that Brown was of Indian heritage but he was not. He did come from a family with deep history on the frontier.
In 1973, Brown and his wife retired in Little Rock, Arkansas, where he devoted his time to writing. His later works include Creek Mary's Blood, a novel telling of several generations of a family descended from one Creek woman, and Hear That Lonesome Whistle Blow, which described the chicanery and romance surrounding the construction of the western railroads. His last book-length work, Way To Bright Star is a picaresque novel set during the Civil War. He never completed its sequel, which was to feature P. T. Barnum and Abraham Lincoln.
Brown died at the age of 94 in Little Rock, Arkansas.
https://twitter.com/DavidTreuer
David Treuer's rebellious new history of Native American Life, book review by Emily Witt, The New Yorker, February 6, 2019.
A New History of Native Americans Responds to 'Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee', book review by Ned Blackhawk, New York Times, January 20, 2019.
A New History of Native Americans Responds to ‘Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee’
In 1973, after a protest, members of the Oglala Sioux tribe march to the cemetery where their ancestors were buried.
By Ned Blackhawk
Jan. 20, 2019
THE HEARTBEAT OF WOUNDED KNEE
Native America From 1890 to the Present
By David Treuer
Illustrated. 512 pp. Riverhead Books. $28.
Over the past 12 months, Native American politicians, artists and academics have made uncommon gains. Indeed, Native American women helped to make 2018 the Year of the Woman. In November, New Mexican and Kansan voters elected Debra Haaland (Laguna Pueblo) and Sharice Davids (Ho-Chunk) to Congress, while voters in Minnesota elected Peggy Flanagan (Ojibwe) their lieutenant governor. In October, the sociologist Rebecca Sandefur (Chickasaw) and the poet Natalie Diaz (Mojave) won MacArthur Foundation Awards, while throughout the spring and summer, the playwrights Mary Kathryn Nagle (Cherokee), Larissa FastHorse (Lakota) and DeLanna Studi (Cherokee) had historic openings at Arena Stage in Washington, D.C., Artists Repertory Theater in Portland, Ore., and Portland Center Stage, respectively. From the cover of American Theater magazine in April to CNN on election night, the work of these eight dynamic Native women garnered national acclaim.
NYT
gab.com/channel/thealternativehypothesis
don't see nuttin till logged in
lbry://@TheAltHype#6/1_1#7
https://odysee.com/@TheAltHype:6
515 followers .. only 1 vid here
3rd of nov / 306 :: 100 / k64
LoT 17th SE :::: CTC Spectral 23 : 303dotSR
3rd of nov / 306 :: 100 / k64
LoT 17th SE :::: CTC Spectral 23 : 303dotSR
3rd of nov / 306 :: 100 / k64
LoT 17th SE :::: CTC Spectral 23 : 303dotSR
https://odysee.com/@TheAltHype:6/1_1:7
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZiLYKb7BM-0
THE COVID PROGRAM 1 - THE RUN-UP TO RELEASE
October 27th, 20214,687 views
things are looking grim indeed if on a thread like this nobody mentions George Webb's work thus far ... nnhour.com .. i've listened to all of it since early20 and i suggest yall begin to follow suit .. not to mention https://archive.org/details/a-quest-for-ethics
13 moons in 12 months - ia802804.us.archive.org
https://ia802804.us.archive.org › 33 › items › piety-Piet-mid-80s-to-2005 › ZioSemRus-13-16-Cernunnos.html
Cosmic Turtle Calendar: 20SPECTRAL : 303th dotSolarRound 2195d sinds .. Ryan Dawson before selling out -- 1.6K views -- Oct 26, 2019 -- 291:20 -- Vigilante Intelligence - 12.3K subscribers perused this thread and i'm sure yall agree on this much: the alphabet is a cupful of diamond shards that willl get your eyes ears, throat and lungs and ...
Samantha Bosco is a great redhead Cornell nutter
researchisnuts on twitter
sfb42@cornell.edu
https://ethnobiology.org/forage/blog/skarur-food-forest#comment-596
note snips on Cornell
in a comment thread:
you have 10 acres and waste your time with animations
of old timer telephone cord? figures. Did you read my account of the physics conf held at cornell zeitgleich (simultaneous) with a treecrop one? talk about skewy
disproportionation ... no wonder the gangsters dove
into digitizations of disparities like that. slitting throats
got old for them ---- November 21, 2009 2:23 AM
2011 - june 15th
spricket has hazel allergy .... i eat loads of very freshly
cracked hazels several times a week, ... own a book
about them being all over europe ouat (ewald
Koenneman is the author of books like that which i truely
admire ... like 'treecrops' from the 30s). I visited cornell
with a bunch of midwestern old timers .. nutpeople for
a conf. the one alongside on physics was 200 times as
large. that taught me not to expect too much.
https://twitter.com/ECOWARRIORSS/status/1455134472073003011
BC clearcuts .. in clearer and clearer starkness .. and we have to show for it 55 "quote tweets" ... wooot ????
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