Episodes

  • How Shellmound Narratives Get Misrepresented
    Apr 6 2026

    How do shellmound narratives drift away from evidence and become accepted as fact?

    This episode explains how shellmounds are frequently misrepresented when documentation, maps, and archaeological records are selectively used or ignored. We break down how assumptions turn into stories, how repetition replaces verification, and why symbolic narratives often overshadow documented Indigenous history.

    The episode clarifies why accurate interpretation of shellmound sites matters for burial protection, consultation, and respect for real tribal authority, and how misrepresentation can erase living Native communities while claiming to honor them.

    Understanding these patterns helps listeners recognize why evidence, records, and accountability are essential when interpreting Indigenous sites and history.

    New episodes drop every Monday.

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    3 mins
  • Why Self-Authorization Fails
    Mar 30 2026

    Why doesn’t personal documentation authorize leadership or political authority?

    This episode explains why self-authorization fails in any system of real governance. We break down how genealogy reports, DNA tests, and other individualized artifacts are often misused to justify representation, leadership, or decision-making power. While these materials can describe personal ancestry, they cannot grant authority over others or replace collective processes.

    The episode clarifies how real tribal authority is created through enrollment, consent, elections, and continuity, and why bypassing those structures causes confusion, displacement, and harm to sovereign tribal governments.

    Understanding the difference between evidence and authorization helps listeners recognize why authority must always be collective, not individual.

    New episodes drop every Monday.

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    3 mins
  • How Schools Misteach Bay Area Native History
    Mar 23 2026

    Why do so many students leave school with a distorted understanding of Bay Area Native history?

    This episode explains how simplified curricula, outdated sources, and unverified narratives enter classrooms and become treated as fact. We break down how errors get repeated through textbooks, lesson plans, and cultural programming, and why the absence of tribal records and consultation leads to long-term misinformation about Indigenous governance, identity, and place.

    Understanding how these mistakes happen helps educators, parents, and allies recognize the importance of verified sources and documented tribal authority when teaching Native history.

    New episodes drop every Monday.

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    3 mins
  • Why the Confederate Villages of Lisjan Did Not Exist Before 2018
    Mar 16 2026

    When did the Confederated Villages of Lisjan actually come into existence, and why does the timeline matter?

    This episode examines the documented record and explains why CVL did not exist prior to 2018. We break down what constitutes historical continuity for a tribal government, how timelines can be retroactively constructed, and why the absence of earlier records, governance structures, or collective political activity is significant when evaluating claims of tribal authority.

    Understanding timelines and documentation helps listeners distinguish between historically continuous tribal governments and recently formed organizations that present themselves as something older than the record supports.

    New episodes drop every Monday.

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    4 mins
  • Why the West Berkeley Shellmound Was Misidentified
    Mar 9 2026

    Why has the West Berkeley Shellmound been so widely misunderstood?

    This episode explains how historic shellmound locations can be misidentified when maps, records, and archaeological documentation are not carefully examined together. We break down how assumptions harden into narratives, how repetition replaces verification, and why misidentification has real consequences for Native history, burial protection, and consultation.

    Understanding how this shellmound was misidentified helps listeners see why evidence, records, and documented continuity matter when interpreting Indigenous sites.

    New episodes drop every Monday.

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    3 mins
  • How “Lisjan” Was Reconstructed (Incorrectly)
    Mar 2 2026

    Where did the term “Lisjan” come from, and how did it become widely misused?

    This episode explains how a single historical reference was taken out of context and gradually transformed into a modern identity claim. We break down how place-based terms can be mistaken for tribal names, how interpretation errors compound over time, and why repeating unverified reconstructions creates confusion about real tribal history and governance.

    Understanding how this reconstruction happened helps listeners recognize the difference between documented tribal identities and narratives built through repetition rather than records.

    New episodes drop every Monday.

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    Not Yet Known
  • How Nonprofits Impersonate Tribal Authority
    Feb 23 2026

    How do nonprofit organizations come to be seen as tribal authorities when they are not?

    This episode explains the common ways nonprofits imitate the appearance of tribal government. We break down how boards, titles, cultural programming, and public messaging can be used to imply sovereignty without citizens, elections, or continuity. The episode also explains why this confusion is harmful, and how it redirects authority, resources, and decision-making away from real tribal governments.

    Understanding these patterns helps listeners spot red flags and support Indigenous sovereignty responsibly.

    New episodes drop every Monday.

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    3 mins
  • Why Identity Claims Without Government Structure Fall Apart
    Feb 16 2026

    What happens when identity claims are not backed by a functioning government?

    This episode explains why Indigenous identity alone does not create tribal authority. We break down how real tribal nations are defined by governance, citizenship, and continuity, and why groups built on personal identity claims or cultural affiliation collapse under scrutiny when they lack elections, enrollment, or political structure.

    Understanding this distinction helps listeners recognize why legitimate tribal authority cannot rest on self-identification or symbolism, and why government structure is essential to sovereignty.

    New episodes drop every Monday.

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    2 mins