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OCTOBER 2015


23 The Family Trust Numismatic


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“But how could I protect it and how could I strengthen it? With a lot of vegetables. So I went to a [clinic] in Arizona to reverse my diabetes. When I checked in there my glucose was 405— that’s the sugar reading. And after the very fi rst week that I was in there, I was on a juice fast of nine vegetables. And my glucose went from 405 to 95. ... I think if I checked [my glucose] right now it would be around 120. Anything below 140 for me is a safe zone.” “We had two walks and a motorcycle run [to educate Indian communities about diabetes]. A lot of old timers now, they’re taking their medication but they’re also drinking beer. And that’s the worst thing that can happen. Even if you drink one beer you negate what the insulin supposed to do for you. A lot of them are dying with amputations ... it’s a pandemic. So I emphasize changing the diet and exercise. I‘ve walked across this country seven times.” “Next year I’m going to do a walk against


drugs. When I walk, especially in the Montana area and North Dakota, my friends say ‘Dennis there’s another issue that’s much stronger than diabetes. There’s a lot of drugs up here’. ... Drugs cause suicide and depression.” “I would like to see us develop the food too.


Visiting Rene’s [Locklear White] house a couple years ago I was amazed at their corn. I was standing in their cornfi eld and I was raising my hand, and [the corn] was still higher. I estimated it to be like 15 feet. I’m not lying. And that’s when I thought, ‘Wow, that’s what we should all do, is have this kind of program. Growing our own food.’” “We have land. ... I said every native family in


America could be sitting down right now to our own food that we’ve grown.”


Similarities with the civil rights movement and incidents in Ferguson and Baltimore


“When AIM was formed in 1968, we had


already pinpointed the [top] issues. ... The fi rst priority was police brutality. ... We marched on the police department [in Minneapolis] that night. ... The chief came down, but he defended his police department. He said ‘I know all my men, and I know none of them have a bone of racism in them’... So we took pictures all weekend long, because he wanted some proof of brutality. And Monday morning we came back. We put out probably about 40 volunteers with cameras on Friday, Saturday and Sunday, and collected all that information before we went to see him, and we had over 500 photographs. … Pushing and shoving, hitting with night sticks, hitting in the ribs, hitting in the kidneys. [The police chief] suspended six police offi cers. … [But] it’s still the norm. The community knows that if they’re getting drunk in the bars out there they’re going to run into brutality.”


The Washington Redskins name and mascot


“Racism goes on with professional teams and college teams. Even many years before I formed the American Indian Movement that was an issue that a lot of us talked about.” “I think the fans are part of the racist picture.


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