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LTC Stephen F.
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Edited >1 y ago
Thank you, my friend Lt Col Charlie Brown for making us aware that on November 26, 2019 President Donald Trump "signed an executive order establishing a task force to address the rash of violence against missing and murdered American Indians and Alaska natives, an issue the administration has been focusing on in recent months. The executive order comes after Attorney General William Barr's rollout of a nationwide plan on Friday.
Mr. Trump was joined by Barr and several administration officials when signing the executive order, as well as a number of Native American tribal leaders. Mr. Trump told reporters present that executive action on the issue "should've been done a long time ago."
Shannon Holsey, president of the Stockbridge-Munsee Community Band of Mohican Indians, said in a statement after the executive order was signed that it was an "important first step."

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1SG Steven Imerman
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There is a movie from 2-3 years ago that addressed this issue, Wind River. I thought it was great, the critics were not so thrilled.
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SCPO Morris Ramsey
SCPO Morris Ramsey
>1 y
I saw that movie.
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CPT Lawrence Cable
CPT Lawrence Cable
>1 y
I liked the movie, but I'm not sure that it really emphasized the issue. American Indian women have a much higher murder rate and violent crime rate than other women's demographic groups. The other thing is that the race of the perpetrator is usually not the same as the victim, which is not the case in almost every other demographic. Hopefully this bill will correct some of this gross injustice.
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1SG Steven Imerman
1SG Steven Imerman
>1 y
The last shot of the movie is a written statement on the screen stating that missing persons statistics are kept by the FBI for every demographic group except for Native American women, whose numbers remain unknown. The author said in a press conference his intent was to highlight the high numbers for Native American women being raped and murdered both on and off the reservation. I thought it was pretty powerful, but it was not a documentary.
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Jennifer Lee (Doerflinger) Hill
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It makes me see red! No matter WHAT he does, the President's wrong. He's a good man, has a good heart, & was ELECTED because he was NOT a politician! The only mainstream news that sees any of his achievements is Fox, but the one that is really in his corner, that has "eyes to see", is the Epoch Times.
I cannot bear to read the news. It leaves me in despair, not only for the USA, but for Westend Civilization.
Every Republic has been destroyed by insiders. Look at the brainwashing of children in public schools &, later, in universities! If something doesn't happen to bring the populace to its knees, we're lost.
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Jennifer Lee (Doerflinger) Hill
Jennifer Lee (Doerflinger) Hill
>1 y
And on a positive note, this is an area that needs light shone on it. Drug & alcohol abuse & physical, mental, & physical abuse are rampant on all the local Reservations. There is such despair, as they see no way out, except for those who work for the gold mines & don't drink the money away. They are solid & strong.
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SSgt Richard Kensinger
SSgt Richard Kensinger
>1 y
Jennifer Lee (Doerflinger) Hill - And suicide rates of men are disproportionately high.
Rich
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Jennifer Lee (Doerflinger) Hill
Jennifer Lee (Doerflinger) Hill
>1 y
SSgt Richard Kensinger oh, so true, SSGT. Alcoholism, drugs & despair were the primary symptoms of the Reservation system, when I was a child. Mom would quickly move us on, when some poor man was at the bottom of a delivery staircase, or in an alley, or, God forbid, under a car. Our local large town/micro-city encompasses a reservation of Shoshone & Paiute Indians & we saw that all too often.
These days, among the younger population, drugs, mixed w alcohol, seem to be the choice. Rarely, anymore, do we see unconscious men huddled at the bottom of stairwells, at least in the main downtown area. That doesn't mean the problem has been solved; rather, it is more that these people are put in jail.
Mental health services are hard to come by, locally, & the providers are buried with cases.
Having had my own struggle w PTSD, my heart goes out to the men & women caught in this horrible cycle. They're often the victims of violence & abuse, which fuels their substance abuse.
Elko, NV does NOT have the climate to be without shelter. Winters vary, but we regularly find homeless men frozen to death, most Winters. The City fathers have a dreadful procedure for opening the doors if the warming shelter. It has to be 0*F before they will allow the shelter doors to open & volunteers must either be men or have a man there. I think having multiple women working together for safety, could keep the doors open when no men are available.
Forgive my rattling on, but I've watched this horror since I was a child, when there were no helps of any kind. NV made a political decision in the 60s to not be CA & not be a welfare state. Obv., that decision has been amended, somewhat, but rural areas still give the homeless, if they're lucky, a hot meal & a bed, if traveling by auto, enough gas to get to the next town & that is it.
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SSgt Richard Kensinger
SSgt Richard Kensinger
>1 y
You are not "ranting", you are providing your observations and experience. BTW, alcohol itself is highly connected to suicide. Women attempt more often while men are more likely to complete.
Rich
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