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Revolutionary Left Radio

The American Indian Movement (AIM)

Revolutionary Left Radio

Breht O'Shea

Communism, Politics, Liberalism, Society & Culture, Philosophy, News, History, Leftwing, Socialism, Marxism

4.83.4K Ratings

🗓️ 23 August 2020

⏱️ 168 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this fascinating episode Nick Estes, Historian, author of "Our History is the Future" and co-founder of The Red Nation, joins Breht to discuss the history and legacy of the American Indian Movement, including the history of indigenous resistance in America, the origins and ideology of AIM, the Siege of Wounded Knee in 1973, the FBI's COINTELPRO, the Reign of Terror, and SO much more.

This is a collaborative project between Rev Left Radio and The Red Nation Podcast

Learn about, join, and/or support the Red Nation HERE

Find Nick on Twitter HERE

Please Support Rev Left Radio HERE

Outro Music: 'The Resistance' by Snotty Nose Rez Kids (ft. Drezus)

LEARN MORE ABOUT REV LEFT RADIO: www.revolutionaryleftradio.com

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

On a cold night in February 1973, a caravan rolled through the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota.

0:25.0

The cars were packed with 200 Indians, men and women, local Oglala Lakota and members of the Urban Milligent Group, the American Indian Movement.

0:36.0

They headed toward the hallowed brown to Guamjit Nguyen, the site of the last massacre of the Indian Wars.

0:45.0

Going into Wounded Knee that night, when it was dark and scary, we were clinging to our weapons tightly.

0:54.0

There was a full moon and we knew that a battle was going to come.

0:59.0

I was sitting there thinking of some of these young men that are around me, am I committing them to die?

1:09.0

I was ready to do whatever it takes for change. I didn't care.

1:14.0

I had children and for them, I figured I could make a stand here.

1:20.0

They were up to no good. Why would they be traveling in a caravan with all these weapons and all these Molotov cocktails if they weren't going to engage in some kind of destructive activity?

1:33.0

By the 1970s, native people, once masters of the continent, had become invisible, consigned to the margins of American life.

1:44.0

Their anger and frustration would explode in Wounded Knee.

1:49.0

We were about to be obliterated, cultured. Our spiritual way of life, our entire way of life was about to be stamped out.

1:59.0

And this was a rebirth of our dignity and self-pride.

2:04.0

For the next 71 days, Indian protesters at Wounded Knee would hold off the federal government at gunpoint.

2:13.0

Media from around the world would give the siege day by day coverage, and Native Americans from across the nation would come to Wounded Knee to be part of what they hoped would be a new beginning.

2:29.0

The message that went out is that a band of Indians could take on this government.

2:37.0

To come so high this day, a Geronimo sitting bull, crazier, and we had ours.

2:58.0

Hello everybody and welcome back to Revolutionary Left Radio.

3:02.0

On today's episode, we have a really, really fascinating one for you.

3:06.0

We have on the historian and author of our history is the future Nick Estes to talk about the American Indian movement.

3:15.0

And more broadly than that, the massive history that goes back centuries in this country of settler colonialism and the historical place that movements like aim played and continue to play in that broader history.

3:30.0

We even connect aim up with current day movements, the George Floyd protests, for example, exploded out of Minneapolis.

...

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