I do find the word Podia to be one of quite a paradox. It is in itself as I pointed out, acknowledging native ancestry to some degree; yet condemning them for it being distant. That would as I have also pointed out be untraditional, and almost Euro in concept.
...The persecution of somebody is mixed is by default persecuting them for the various ills that have been brought on by colonization.
...I do think the man still has a lot of support from the Indian community. Though I concede he has a lot that dislike him and feel he is a fake.
Since I was the first one in here to start using PODIA, I guess I should explain further.
It continues to amaze me how incredibly sensitve PODIAs are and how quick they are to claim "prejudice" "racism" and even "persecution" for things which are nothing of the kind.
Does using the term PODIA cause anyone to get lynched?
To be confined on a reservation with no choice?
To get rounded up in concentration camps and gassed?
No, no, and no. I challenge you to point out
any harm of
any kind that's been done by the term.
I actually started using the term because some other super sensitve PODIAs were oh-so-offended by the far more widely used term for them, thinbloods.
Both thinblood and PODIA simply reflect what the connection of some to their NDN ancestors is, thin or distant. There's not even a sense of mild dislike from those using the terms, just a noting that, after all, someone claiming a great-grandmother was NDN and wanting to know more is often reaching across a great distance (both in time and culture) with some difficulty.
To me both terms sound pretty darn sympathetic, and yes, traditional. Elaborate terms to denote your relations and the degree of those relations are very traditional.
I've avoided getting bogged down in talking about Churchill because I'm pretty bored with him, and frankly, discussing someone whose mostly concerned with getting attention rather than the causes he claims to favor seems like playing into his hands.
But just like with Yeagley, the fact is that regardless of his ancestry actually being NDN or not, he's not culturally NDN, not culturally Cherokee or any other tribe. His views are about as untraditional as you can get, revelling in the deaths of others.
And he doesn't have the support of hardly any NDNs outside of some in the Denver urban NDN community.