Affirming the sovereign powers of American Indian tribes, a U.S. appeals court on 8/23/2005 ruled the Navajo tribe may prosecute American Indian activist Russell Means even though he is not one of its members...
Tribe may prosecute famous American Indian activist - Yahoo! News
Russell,
ReplyDeleteMaybe the Navajo Reservation is one place you should fear to tread!
S. McClain
Russell,
ReplyDeletePerhaps the Navajo Reservation is one place you should fear to tread!
IN MY BOOK, RUSSELL MEANS IS A TRUE WARRIOR. AND A FINE HUMAN BEING. I ADMIRE HIS COURAGE AND WOULD LIKE TO SAY "GO RUSSELL"""
ReplyDeleteMaybe Russell Means should get his ''Great White Hope'' Ward Churchill to defend him?
ReplyDeleteRussell Means is a troublemaker. Nuff said.
ReplyDeleteRussell Means has always been a troublemaker. Send him back to the rock he crawled out from under. Just as we don't need Farrakhan, we don't need Means. Us Navajo are well to be rid of them.
ReplyDeleteLong after we're gone Russell Means will live on, for our children to read about.
ReplyDeleteThe L.A. Times has described him as the most famous American Indian since Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse. Russell Means is a natural leader. His fearless dedication and indestructible sense of pride are qualities admired by nations worldwide. His vision is for indigenous people to be free... Free to be human, free to travel, free to stop, free to trade where they choose, free to choose their own teachers ~ free to follow the religion of their fathers, free to talk, think and act for themselves and then they will obey every law or submit to the penalty. The most difficult lesson of all is to respect your relatives' visions.
ReplyDeleteThe L.A. Times has described him as the most famous American Indian since Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse. Russell Means is a natural leader. His fearless dedication and indestructible sense of pride are qualities admired by nations worldwide. His vision is for indigenous people to be free... Free to be human, free to travel, free to stop, free to trade where they choose, free to choose their own teachers ~ free to follow the religion of their fathers, free to talk, think and act for themselves and then they will obey every law or submit to the penalty. The most difficult lesson of all is to respect your relatives' visions.
ReplyDelete