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Reflecting on the 2018 Texas Election Results as Queer Latina Canvasser

Nov 26, 2018 / Erica Gonzalez / Our Folks Blog
Election results came around the same time that 5,200 U.S. military troops were deployed along the border of my home, the Rio Grande Valley. The Rio Grande Valley is the southernmost tip of Texas along the U.S./Mexico border. The area, aka the RGV, is the poorest area of the country with a Latinx population of … Read More
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My Experience as a Latinx Woman in Sports

Nov 23, 2018 / Erica Gonzalez / Our Folks Blog
I have played soccer for 19 years of my 23 on this planet. I even went on to play for my University’s women’s soccer team as a goalkeeper all four years. The University of Texas Pan-American (now UT Rio Grande Valley) are in the NCAA Division 1 Western Athletic Conference. I was also a part … Read More

A Reflection On The Midterm Elections

Nov 20, 2018 / Clarissa Brooks / Our Folks Blog
The midterm elections were a tough time for anyone invested in seeing progress for reproductive rights. While most were focused on candidates, wins in the House of Representatives and the Senate, many narrowly missed reproductive rights amendments that passed that set states back years in regards to protecting the safety of those seeking effective reproductive … Read More

It Was Never A Secret

Nov 19, 2018 / Anna Khan / Our Folks Blog
Victoria’s Secret chief marketing officer Ed Razek has come under fire after an interview with Vogue where he insinuated that trans and plus-size models are not attractive enough to be a part of the “fantasy” of their brand. The brand has been met with criticism since his comments, and #boycottvictoriassecret was a trending topic on … Read More

The Science Behind Telemedicine Abortion: Filling in Health Care Gaps

Nov 02, 2018 / Dené Dryden / Our Folks Blog
For people seeking abortion care in rural areas and/or states with few abortion clinics, telemedicine abortion is a way to increase access to this particular form of health care. Telemedicine abortion involves the prescription of the two medications that induce an abortion before 10 weeks gestation when the provider and the patient are in different … Read More
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Alabama Amendment 2 and Other Trigger Bans: A Poem

Nov 01, 2018 / Phoenix Fogarty / Our Folks Blog
They’re coming They’ll say they don’t want to control our bodies They just want to protect the innocent The pure, the precious, the untouched, unborn The hardworking, the virtuous, the God-fearing men They’re here, If they’re “woke” they’ll preach protection But he calls my “protection” “abortion-inducing pills” He who lays the law of the land, … Read More

Freedom and Power - A Scary Combination

Oct 31, 2018 / Anna Khan / Our Folks Blog
In honor of Halloween, I want to dive into a particular idea presented in Netflix’s Chilling Adventures of Sabrina. I started watching the show expecting it to use the idea of witches and using magic as some sort of metaphor for feminism while also vilifying people of color (spoiler alert: I was half right). But I want … Read More

Are You Doing Your Work? Understanding the True Meaning of Reproductive Justice

Oct 29, 2018 / Reilly Wieland / Our Folks Blog
Today’s feminists have a tendency to throw around words like “intersectionality,” but rarely seem to understand the complexities of its implications. We give lip service to women of color by calling ourselves “intersectional feminists” when in reality, we misunderstand the larger context of the discussion. In this same vein, we equate work regarding reproductive rights … Read More

Call (Out) Your Senators

Oct 17, 2018 / Anna Khan / Our Folks Blog
When Elizabeth Warren released a statement on her recent DNA test to confirm her Native American heritage, it took me back to elementary school, middle school, high school, really even today, to all the times white people would claim similar heritage: “I’m 5% French, 60% Scottish, 12% Native American, blah, blah, blah…” Even as a … Read More

When Elizabeth Warren released a statement on her recent DNA test to confirm her Native American heritage, it took me back to elementary school, middle school, high school, really even today, to all the times white people would claim similar heritage: “I’m 5% French, 60% Scottish, 12% Native American, blah, blah, blah…” Even as a young person with no clear understanding of heritage and culture, it always bothered me to hear these long, meaningless percentages. Growing up as a brown person, I’ve always been brown. And they, no matter how many percentages they’ve got up their sleeves, have always been white.

Let’s forget about how this is a simple tactic to show that Senator Warren can stand up to Trump, as anyone with an even passing familiarity with American media could have predicted that his response would almost certainly denounce whatever it is she was saying, whether it be about her genetic background or the daily weather forecast. Let’s even forget about the fact that the geneticist claims that the results only suggest that she has Native American blood, and it could be as little as 1/1024th. It doesn’t really matter to me if she’s 1/50th or 1/25th. Elizabeth Warren is a white woman, and I only have to take one look at her, her status, her career, to see that she has no idea what it means to be a member of the Cherokee tribe.

The Cherokee Nation criticized Warren’s decision to take a DNA test as a way to claim connection to them in anyway, given that sovereign tribal nations create their own legal citizen requirements. Senator Warren responded, clarifying that the test doesn’t confirm any tribal affiliation and that she doesn’t classify herself as a Native in the Senate. It’s pretty clear that Senator Warren only did this DNA test to undermine Trump and build her own platform, but that doesn’t change the fact that her actions are racist and could threaten the Indian Child Welfare Act. But let’s back up a little bit.

Turns out there’s a reason that I heard so many kids at my schools in Mississippi and Georgia claim Cherokee heritage growing up. The Cherokee tribe was native to the Southeast up until the Trail of Tears, and years before then, intermarriage between Cherokee people and Southern settlers was common. However, it wouldn’t be until the Civil War that Southern people would ever acknowledge such relations in the public. The South, at this point in time, viewed the Cherokee people with more sympathy, considering they now felt that the situation they were in — the Civil War, which threatened to take away slavery from them — was reminiscent of the Cherokee tribe fighting for their own rights. They had tried to overcome government tyranny and failed just as the Confederacy had failed to do so.

This newfound admiration led to Southern people announcing their Cherokee heritage with pride, but no, not as some way to acknowledge their own hand in the events that lead to the Trail of Tears, but as a way to reaffirm their own Southern heritage. Yes, a Southern person claiming Cherokee heritage started as a way for them to assert their Southern heritage. The tradition continues today as any white person with family from the South can tell you. When Senator Warren tells us that her family has told her all her life that they have Cherokee blood, she is simply confirming the history of her family’s strong support of slavery in the past. The same support those ancestors showed for millions of indigenous people to be forced out of their homes.

The Indian Child Welfare act, enacted in 1978, protects the children of indigenous people from being removed from their homes and adopted by other people. A federal judge in Texas has recently denounced the act for prioritizing race over the child’s “best interests”. Did Senator Warren think about how her claims of having Cherokee heritage could affect this situation, with several families of indigenous people in fear of losing their children?

If Senator Warren were to run against Trump in 2020, I would definitely vote for her. She supports abortion rights, LGBTQ+ rights, the DREAM act, gun control, and hasn’t referred to white supremacists as fine people. But calling her out on racist actions isn’t shutting her down as a potential candidate. I criticize her, because I want her to be better. I want her to understand the history behind what she’s saying, and how not acknowledging the implications of her actions can harm people.

My presidential candidate from 2016, Secretary Hillary Clinton, recently stated that she thought Bill Clinton’s affair with Monica Lewinsky was not an abuse of power, as Lewinsky was an adult. If she were president today, she would certainly need to be reprimanded for actions like that. Just as Trump should be reprimanded for everything he’s said, ever, but well…

If Senator Warren or Secretary Clinton’s remarks bother you too much to ever support them in any way, I hope their actions encourage you to run in your local elections, or support a local candidate who doesn’t have as many resources as the people already in power. Donate your time or money to the campaign of an indigenous person in your region. Call your senators. Let them know you demand more from them.

 

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