Many of us here actually do know Starhawk and other people from her community. As we live here in the U.S. I'm going to hazard a guess we actually know her far better than you do. So please understand that you are not educating or informing us here. You are not enlightening us or giving us any new information. What you are doing is coming into an Indian-run community and whitesplaining.
I would like to suggest a more balanced view of Starhawk (Miriam Simos).
Whitesplaining by a non-Native acquaintance who also has a personal stake in the b.s. Simos sells is not more "balanced" than the combined knowledge of our volunteer, grassroots group of Natives and non-Natives, including elders, a number of whom have known this person since the early 1980s.
By this I do not mean to question anything about the anger that she trespassed a native land and held her own kind of ceremony on it as part of a protest. I believe she apologised for that.
No, there was no apology. You go on to say that she should be allowed to apologize in private. No, she transgressed publicly, many times now, so it is appropriate to critique her public actions and public writings and photo ops on the topic.
But at the time of our early books neither Starhawk or I, or anyone else, had access to this kind of reasoned knowledge. That came later.
This is simply untrue. The newage and occult communities didn't know about the living traditions in the Celtic Nations and diaspora, and the misinformation promoted by occult groups has done a lot of harm and even displaced the real traditions among some who really should know better. Traditional people tend to shun Wiccans, newagers, pay to pray, and those who call themselves witches. This is true among traditional people in the Celtic Nations as well as in Native communities on Turtle Island.
What we did, though, is provide a much needed vision for our own people.
The amount of misinformation neopagans need to unlearn argues against that. Many of us here were exposed to that misinformation. I'd say most of it did, and still does,
far more harm than good. Some of the worst colonists at Standing Rock this summer were and are the neopagans (see the
Frauds and Exploiters Profiting or Promoting Themselves off NoDAPL thread). I'd say all you've done is give white people a boost in self-confidence as they run roughshod over Indians. And now you've come here to justify it and do it some more.
Starhawk and I are part of a movement to reclaim our own ancestral traditions, relearn native pride, body acceptance, and reject a foreign faith that serves the white master group. I think other native peoples might see a common pattern.
Non-natives on Turtle Island, or Americans who move to a Celtic Nation, are not "other native people" and it's racist to imply you are native because you are a neopagan. Wicca is not an ancestral tradition. Neopaganism is not "native pride". Most of what we see from that community is misappropriation and pretendians. You are not teaching us anything here; we have many survivors of that scene in our communities.
I'm not going to quote your long post about how white people have nothing ancestral to return to because it's simply not true. If you believe that it just means you're not part of the right community, haven't been accepted or trusted by the right people, or you haven't been willing to do the work. That kind of harmful disinformation is what leads white people to think they have no other choice than to steal from people of color. Just stop it.
Look, I'm not doing this to hurt your feelings, but your long rant whitesplaining and spindoctoring about neopaganism just shows that you didn't bother to do what we ask all new members to do here - to read the pinned threads and get up to speed. It's clear you didn't even read
this very thread you are commenting in. You are obviously diving right in to defend someone you like without understanding who we are and what we do, as well as the deep background people here have, including in the areas you are trying to "educate" us about. You may not realize it or consciously intend it, but you are being incredibly condescending.
As for babies and bathwater... Starhawk has "empowered" a whole lot of white people to follow her example to ignore Native leadership, to choose as a white outsider who is and isn't an Elder, and to violate Indigenous boundaries and tradition if she doesn't agree. That's not a baby or bathwater that helps Indigenous people.
On a personal note I will disagree with you about her fiction. I think some of her fiction has been inspirational in that it proposes a vision for the future that encompasses both the dystopian and the utopian. It's still appropriative and at times unintentionally racist in the way that most white liberal viewpoints are, but at least, unlike her other published work, it's clearly labeled as fiction.