David Wilkins in ICT on the Nooksack Disenrollments

Here.

An excerpt:

To her credit, it appears that the Chief Judge was attempting to console the disenrollees and explain a decision that gravely disappointed them. Unfortunately, she also utilized words that profoundly diminished indigenous sovereignty:
“While the Court recognizes the important entitlements at stake for the proposed disenrollees, this is a fundamentally different proceeding than a loss of United States’ citizenship…. In the case of tribal disenrollees, the disenrollee loses critical and important rights, but they are not equal to the loss of U.S. citizenship. A person who is disenrolled from her tribe loses access to the privileges of tribal membership, but she is not stateless. While she loses the right, for example, to apply for and obtain tribal housing through the Tribe, her ability to obtain housing in general is unaffected. Though she loses the right to vote in tribal elections, she does not lose the right to vote in federal, state, and local elections. While the impact on the disenrollee is serious and detrimental, it is not akin to becoming stateless.” (Emphasis mine.)

Whatever one’s views on the way each Native nation chooses to exercise their sovereignty with regard to defining membership, the judge’s view of Native nationhood is chilling. By ruling that the termination of a Native person’s citizenship is “not equal to the loss of U.S. citizenship” and the loss of tribal membership is “not akin to becoming stateless,” she places Native citizenship in a position squarely inferior to U.S. citizenship. The implications are profound. It is not realistic to expect to maintain true government to government relations with states and the federal government if we begin by diminishing our own status as citizens of sovereign nations.

 

Read more at http://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/2013/11/07/disenrollment-disaster-my-citizenship-better-yours

Jezebel: Tanning Salon Excited Indians Brought “Sexy Color” to First Thanksgiving

Here.

Two Important ICT Commentaries on Michigan v. Bay Mills

The first commentary is from Native Nations Institute commentators Ryan Seelau and Dr. Ian Record:

Will the Supreme Court Use Bay Mills Case to Blow Up Tribal Sovereignty?

Read more at http://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/2013/11/05/sovereign-immunity-and-bay-mills-case-how-tribes-can-prepare

 

The second commentary is from Gabriel Galanda and Ryan Dreveskracht of Galanda Broadman:

The Bay Mills Buck Stops With NIGC

Read more at http://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/2013/11/06/bay-mills-buck-stops-nigc

WaPo: D.C. Council Calls Out Washington Football Team Nickname

Here.

An excerpt:

“Enough is enough — the name must go,” said David Grosso (I-At Large), who first introduced the name-change resolution in May.

The version of the “Sense of the Council to Rename the Washington National Football League Team Resolution of 2013” approved by the council was worded less strongly than the original, which called the team name “insulting and debasing.” But Grosso pulled few punches in comments on the council dais.

The notion that the “Redskins” name should be kept as a symbol of the team’s heritage, he said, “is akin to saying to the Native American people . . . your pain has less worth than our football memories.”

David Grosso is a hero to Turtle Talk.

Salon’s Vault: 1922 Monitoring of Indian Reservations

Here.

Tulsa World Article on the Standing Our Ground for Veronica Brown Group

Here.

Stand Our Ground will become a permanent program under the umbrella of the Lenapeowsi Foundation, a nonprofit group that teaches stomp dancing and other elements of tribal culture.

Veronica was enrolled in a stomp dance class, and that’s how Michael, as the foundation’s executive director, got to know her Cherokee family.

“I got to looking at the case and realized there were some major issues,” she said. “Then I realized that it wasn’t just this one case.”

While drawing attention to specific adoptions that might seem questionable, Stand Our Ground will also push for at least two specific reforms.

First, state officials should improve oversight of the Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children, a law that has been passed in all 50 states to regulate the movement of children across state lines in adoption cases.

“Oklahoma seems to be in the practice of signing ICPCs retroactively, after children have already left the state,” Michael said. “That needs to stop.”

Secondly, all birth parents — even fathers — should have to appear in front of a judge to surrender their rights before an adoption moves forward, Michael said.

 

Michigan SCT Funds Peacemaker Court in Washtenaw County (Judge Tim Connors)

Here.

An excerpt:

Judge Timothy Connors is a trial court judge in Washtenaw County. His project, a peacemaking court, was also chosen for funding. It will use Native American principles to resolve disputes.

“This commitment by the Michigan Supreme Court is another important step in improving outcomes for children, families, and communities in our state courts,” Connors said.

Orcas Circle Ferry as it Transports Tribal Artifacts to Bainbridge Island

Here.

orcas

That used to be my ferry!

Jeffrey Nelson Opinion Piece on TIGA

Here (subscription required but you can sign on for free trial):

Indian law attorney Jeffrey Nelson looks at the new Tribal Internet Gaming Alliance and its impact on the tribal gaming landscape