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Editorials

Trump’s cabinet picks should concern everyone who is not a billionaire (Jan 2017)

By Cat Whipple Being a daily Facebook user, I read lots of anti-Trump (and some pro-Trump) posts. It’s alarming for me to see pro-Trump people telling us to “get over it” and “we won, you lost, move on” as though this were a football game. It’s scary to me, and many others, that the pro-Trump people […]

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Historical Trauma of the American Indian People

Historical trauma for American Indian peoples have encompassed wars, massacres, genocide, imprisonment, reservations, boarding schools and continued oppression and racism. The effects of historical trauma have had a horrific impact on the health and welfare of American Indian peoples for over 500 years – alcoholism and drug addiction, many health (including mental) issues, poor education, […]

Duty to Warn: Northern Minnesota and the PolyMet Project

PolyMet’s Tailings “Pond” could someday create a dead St. Louis River and a dying Lake Superior. Is that an acceptable risk to take? In the December 23rd edition of the Duluth News-Tribune, a staff writer, using the byline of “News Tribune”, wrote a Local News article with the title “EPA signals its support for final PolyMet review”. The […]

Attorney General Swanson does disservice to Minnesota

On October l6, Minnesota Attorney General Lori Swanson filed an appeal to the Minnesota Supreme Court in an attempt to overturn a recent MN Court of Appeals ruling, which revoked the Certificate of Need for the Sandpiper pipeline and required the Minnesota Public Utility Commission (PUC) to complete a full Environmental Impact Statement before proceeding […]

Governor Dayton’s Sandpiper comments lack common sense foresight

It is apparent from Governor Dayton’s recent announcement (in reaction to the Minnesota House Speaker’s allegations of appellate court meddling) that he supports the Sandpiper crude oil pipeline and that the Governor does not understand climate change, pipelines or the associated, compounded, environmental risks for Minnesota. Sandpiper, if approved, will be the first domino in […]

From the Editor's Desk: Sovereignty and responsibility

In this issue, we’ve explored the acts of Ojibwe citizens who are exercising their treaty rights by harvesting wild rice in off-reservation territory as well as the impacts of other tribes asserting their authority in economic, land and environmental concerns. One of the more outstanding speeches on the Rosebud Sioux Tribal Council floor while I […]

GUEST COLUMN: Trahant Reports

Presidential Debate season begins on Aug. 6 What do you do with sixteen candi­dates? It’s a thorny problem for Republi­cans. Why’s that? Because right now one of those candidates, Donald Trump, is loud enough to drown out all the other “major” candidates. Wouldn’t it be fun if the nomina­tion contest was more like a basketball […]

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From the Editor's Desk: Learning lessons from the past, going forward

Every six months, Isaac Iron Shell, Sr. would take his cattle to the stock mar­ket and sell what he could. Shortly there­after, his wife, Susan Standing Bull-Iron Shell would sit with her six children and go through the Sears-Roebuck and JC Penny catalogs and they would pick out dresses, shoes and coats for the coming […]

Letters: Welcome Back to MPS Native Families

It’s hard to believe we’re approaching yet another school year here in Minneapolis. Native families will spend this month scrambling to hold onto remnants of summer living while preparing their children for focusing on their academics. As the Family Engagement Coordinator for Minneapolis Indian Education, I would like to extend an invitation to connect with […]

From the Editor's Desk: Environmental stewardship is our legacy

My father was a man of great faith. Whether he expressed it in traditional spiritual practices, what we now call Wolakota, or through his Protestant Christian understanding, faith is what guided him by a set of principles of always being prepared. Once, when new cable and pipes were laid on the reservation, he clicked his […]

From the Editor's Desk: Health and wellness in one another

Whether we like it or not, addiction continues to be a theme in the Native American experience. Either by stereotyping of the “drunken Indian” or the daily struggles we endure, it has come to define our lives, sometimes for the good and sometimes for the bad. We may have personal stories of our misadventures with […]

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