
People of Color are not Grammatical Modifiers.
It is your honor, Mr. President I have a short story. In my late twenties, I worked a few summers at a now-defunct hardware chain […]
It is your honor, Mr. President I have a short story. In my late twenties, I worked a few summers at a now-defunct hardware chain […]
Not only are rivers, towns and tanks named after those who committed crimes against humanity against American Indians, they are honored. We’ll see. But hate […]
During the nineteenth century there were many conflicts between Indian nations and the Americans (settlers, militia, miners, military) which are called “wars” by historians and […]
Today, the Columbia River marks the boundary between Oregon and Washington. The river was named for the ship Columbia Rediviva whose captain, John Gray, sailed […]
Sealth was born about 1786. His father, Schweabe, was Suquamish and his mother, Scholitza, was Duwamish. As a young boy in 1792, he witnessed the […]
The Northwest Coast culture is located geographically along the Pacific Coast north of California and between the Cascade Mountains and the ocean. This area is […]
Among the tribes of the western portion of the Northeastern Woodlands, tobacco was an important ceremonial and trade plant. Tobacco smoking is a symbolic way […]
Nez Perce captives in 1877. On June 16, 1873, President Ulysses S. Grant issued an executive order barring white settlers from claiming title to northeast […]
Michelle Lujan Grisham (D. NM) Some good news today out of New Mexico: A new poll is shedding some insight into high-stakes races in New […]
At one time, Teotihuacán, was not only the largest city in Mexico, but also one of the largest cities in the world. Construction of this […]