Native Opinion Episode 186 THE TIME HAS COME FOR YOUTH AT THE TABLE. How To Reach Our Show: E-Mail: hosts@nativeopinion.com Twitter: @nativeopinion Facebook: facebook.com/nativeopinionpodcast/ Our Website: nativeopinion.com CALL OUR SHOW! Click or Tap to call: 860\u2013800\u20135595 ________________________________________________________ Listen LIVE every Saturday Morning, 9am Eastern Standard Time Through Our Website or via the SPREAKER APP SUBSCRIBE to our Podcast! Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Stitcher, i-Heart Radio, Spotify Radio Public or wherever you get your favorite podcasts from\u2026 ________________________________________________________ PLEASE help grow our show! Share us with your friends!. Tell folks you heard about something on Native Opinion, or give us a review in i-tunes or on Facebook! It truly does help our show get discovered! ________________________________________________________ Episode Summary Lots of stuff to unpack in this episode\u2026 Co-host Michael Kickingbear is back with Storiesssss\u2026 Perfume company Dior commits appropriation, The Nipmuc Nation Buys Land in Petersham and Poor reservation roads making it harder for students to learn\u2026 Plus Listener feedback and other Native News ________________________________________________________ The Native Opinion theme song \u201cHonor The People\u201d is by Casper Loma Da Wa. FIND THE SONG AND MORE OF HIS MUSIC HERE: ________________________________________________________ ARTICLES DISCUSSED IN THIS EPISODE: \u2018We\u2019ve got to let the past go\u2019: Catawba Indian Nation Chief talks about the future Nipmuk group buys land in Petersham for cultural center. TV host issues tearful apology after saying her black co-anchor looks like a gorilla\u2026. Poor reservation roads make it harder for students to learn. Native Americans living in rural America are being left behind in today\u2019s digital age. ________________________________________________________ Another Company yet again Appropriating Naitve American Culture\u2026this time its Dior, the \u201cparfume\u201d company\u2026 Francoise Demachy Sad attempt to justify his product \u201cSauvage\u201d Dior Criticized for Appropriating Native American Culture With \u2018Sauvage\u2019 Fragrance Ad. Sanders Kennedy: \u201cDIOR Cancelled For Indigenous Cultural Appropriation In New Ad Campaign For \u2018Sauvage\u2019 Fragrance\u201d WATCH HERE:. ________________________________________________________ 1619\u2026 Truth regarding Slavery In America\u2026 Example of Whites HATING True American History: The Misguided Focus on 1619 as the Beginning of Slavery in the U.S. Damages Our Understanding of American History Building a nation where \u201cWe the People\u201d truly means: ALL the People\u2026 MarkCharles2020. Listen to our Interview with Mark Here. ________________________________________________________ One Reason American Politics are Corrupt: Commission on Presidential Debates. ________________________________________________________ FEATURED RECODING ARTIST: ARTIST: Marcia Chum TRACK: Undone BIO: Marcia Chum is a captivating, Indigenous folk-pop singer-songwriter with an earthy, resonant voice, who was born in Kapuskasing and raised in Timmins, in Northern Ontario. Of Cree heritage, Constance Lake First Nations, Chum is a traditional hand drum singer from the age of 14. She took up pop music when her father showed up at her place one day with a guitar, and told her to learn it. \u201cIt was a hard beginning, but I was eventually able to express myself in a way that I didn\u2019t think I could. When you\u2019re born with a purpose it will find you no matter what. I wasn\u2019t planning on music but music found me,\u201d says Chum. Describing herself as ambitious, friendly, and confident, Chum has had her singing voice compared to that of Buffy Sainte-Marie and Stevie Nicks. The veracity of that comparison is evident in her current single and video, \u201cUndone,\u201d which examines the way bad timing can circumvent a possible romantic relationship, and how being hurt in love can prevent people from risking the prospect of loving again. Find out more Kutupitush! (Thank You!) for listening!