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The Brave-Hearted Women: The Struggle at Wounded Knee – Shirley Hill Witt (1976)

“The established media focused their attention on who they judged to be the leaders and organizers — that is, Native American males. Their cameras and tape recorders only grazed the faces of Martha Grass from Oklahoma or Ann Jock from Akwesasne or the many strong women who like Anna Mae Pictou breathed life into an idea.”

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The Killing of Leo LaChance – Ron Bourgeault (1994)

“Why, after killing an Indian, was an avowed political racist charged with manslaughter instead of murder and sentenced to a short prison term? Why was there no trial and no opportunity for a court to publicly examine the crime and Nerland’s political activities?”

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Chronology of Oppression at Pine Ridge (1977)

This violent state repression consisted of dozens of murders and assaults, including an assault on a non-Native legal defence team.

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Palm Island Insurrection (2005)

Hundreds of residents of the Aboriginal community of Palm Island, Australia, burned down the local police station, court building and the housing barracks of local police officers on November 26, 2004, after a coroner’s report on the police custody death of island resident Mulrunji Doomadgee, a 36-year-old Aboriginal man, was read aloud to a community meeting.

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What is the Meaning of Sovereignty? – Sharon H. Venne (1998)

“We continue to live the laws of Creation. Is it enough to save the earth from destruction? As the disease of greed spreads itself like a blanket smothering all of the Creation’s breath.”

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The Last Indian War – Janet McCloud (1966)

“Janet McCloud was a political force not to be ignored, as she defined an American Indian political agenda that addressed police brutality, race, economics and gender…”
– Agnes Williams, Seneca Nation

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Breaking out of the Ghetto – Jean Weir (1988)

“The struggles taking place in the inner city ghettos are often misunderstood as mindless violence. The young struggling against exclusion and boredom are advanced elements of the class clash. The ghetto walls must be broken down, not enclosed.”

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Marxism and Native Americans – Reviewed by Howard Adams (1984)

“In the attempt to be intellectual, the authors’ writings are largely incomprehensible within the context of Marxism and Native Americans.”

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Against Imperialism: International Solidarity and Resistance – Endless Struggle (1990)

“But such a simplistic analysis ignores the patriarchal & racist ideological basis that makes up the domination & expansion of capitalism. Today, capitalism shapes & effects our cultural & social relationships like no other social culture has.”

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The Mexican People are Suited to Communism – Ricardo Flores Magón (1911)

“Four million Indians live in Mexico who, until twenty or twenty-five years ago, lived in communities possessing the lands, the waters, and the forests in common. Mutual aid was the rule in these communities…”

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