Herrera v. Wyoming: Can U.S. Void Any Tribe’s Treaty? – The Atlantic

Herrera v. Wyoming, an Indian treaty-rights case argued in the Supreme Court last Tuesday, revolves around a basic of federal Indian law: No promise to Indian people actually binds the United States. Congress can unilaterally void any treaty or agreement. The only limit on this power so far has been a requirement that Congress say it is doing so. It is not supposed to act by “implication.” 

…Herrera and the tribe argue that the hunt was legal, because the 1868 Treaty of Fort Laramie guarantees the Crow “the right to hunt on the unoccupied lands of the United States so long as game may be found thereon, and as long as peace subsists among the whites and Indians on the borders of the hunting districts.” When Herrera was brought to trial, however, the state court refused to hear his argument. The treaty, the court said, was invalid under a 120-year-old Supreme Court case.

Herrera v. Wyoming: Can U.S. Void Any Tribe’s Treaty? – The Atlantic

Why is this an issue? It’s so embarrassing to be a citizen of the United States sometimes…

Brie Larson inspires GoFundMe effort to send young girls to see ‘Captain Marvel’

Brie Larson inspires GoFundMe effort to send young girls to see ‘Captain Marvel’ | TheHill

Cool. When I was young, our school brought us all out to see a Spike Lee film. I still vividly remember it. IT was an experience I wouldn’t have had if the school hadn’t made it happen.

….Another thing for young people I think there should be more of.

molly on Twitter: “this man is my hero”

https://twitter.com/dyonvi/status/1086817631380877313

molly on Twitter: “this man is my hero https://t.co/upvmEMX9kD”

Huh, I’m not against justice either. In fact, if that misguided twat got in my young child’s face talking about murder and calling women who choose not to use their own (as in owned solely by them!) body to carry a fetus to to term murderers I wouldn’t have been so restrained.

Go, Dad! Your daughter has a fierce ally in you.

Advocate hopeful Indigenous newborn taken by authorities to be returned to family this week

A total of 354 infants were removed from their families in Manitoba in 2017, 87 per cent of them First Nations; and 259 remained in care 12 months later, putting them on the fast-track for permanent wardship.

The members of the baby’s family, including the mother, said in a news conference Friday that officials with Manitoba’s CFS told them she was removed from St. Boniface Hospital because her mother appeared intoxicated when she arrived at the hospital. The mother vehemently denied this, saying doctors and nurses allowed her to breastfeed, which they would have stopped had they believed she had been drinking.

Advocate hopeful Indigenous newborn taken by authorities to be returned to family this week – The Globe and Mail

Screwing over indigenous peoples, it’s not just an American thing!

Ex-RNC chair rips GOP senators for allowing Trump to lift Russia sanctions: ‘It’s all collusion’

Ex-RNC chair rips GOP senators for allowing Trump to lift Russia sanctions: ‘It’s all collusion’ | TheHill

The time for you to speak out was in the fall of 2106, motherfucker. You didn’t. You chose party over country and you did not speak up. You missed your chance to act with honor and patriotism! Sit down and shut the fuck up, collaborator!

On Martin Luther King Jr. Day, remembering the women civil rights leaders left out of spotlight

Those unsung women activists included: Daisy Bates, Ella Baker, Septima Poinsette Clark, Diane Nash, Fannie Lou Hamer, Gloria Richardson, Amelia Boynton Robinson, and Anna Arnold Hedgeman.

They led Freedom Rides; organized citizenship and freedom schools; persuaded poor, rural blacks to try to register to vote; fought for economic justice; organized political parties; lost their jobs; went to jail — and were beaten while there.

On Martin Luther King Jr. Day, remembering the women civil rights leaders left out of spotlight

mmmhmmmm

The Trump administration quietly changed the definition of domestic violence.

The previous definition included critical components of the phenomenon that experts recognize as domestic abuse—a pattern of deliberate behavior, the dynamics of power and control, and behaviors that encompass physical or sexual violence as well as forms of emotional, economic, or psychological abuse. But in the Trump Justice Department, only harms that constitute a felony or misdemeanor crime may be called domestic violence. So, for example, a woman whose partner isolates her from her family and friends, monitors her every move, belittles and berates her, or denies her access to money to support herself and her children is not a victim of domestic violence in the eyes of Trump’s Department of Justice.

The Trump administration quietly changed the definition of domestic violence.

aghhhhhhhhh