When Will There Be a Native American President?


Pinterest.

Pinterest.

Gyasi Ross has a great article up on the possibilities and problems of a Native president, When Will There Be a Native American President? [Part 1] ‘Sigh,’ It’s Gonna Be Awhile…  Click over to read the whole thing, because I’m only going to include part here.

QUESTION:

Can we honestly tell our beautiful and brilliant Native children that, in 2016, they can grow up and be President of the United States of America?

SHORT ANSWER:

Probably not. Based upon the evidence (as opposed to optimism or good feelings), America does not seem to fully accept Natives as real-life human beings — thus it will likely be a few generations before we can seriously contemplate that.

After this, Ross takes some time to explain the normalization which has taken place in regard to Black people, Hispanic people, and Women. No, things aren’t all cherries and thornless roses with these groups, but they have been included enough in pop culture, normalized enough, that it’s not a complete shock for people to see any one of these peoples in high office.

But what about Natives?

Unfortunately, it looks like that’s still a long ways off. Here are a few reasons why.

First, Americans still have not normalized interactions with Natives.  This is manifest in many ways in pop culture today—pop culture is very important toward normalizing a group of people. For example, for decades there are have been movies where a black person plays a president on-screen, making folks more comfortable with the idea.  There have also been movies where women and Latinos/as, Asians play presidents, and every other role under the sun.  That gets rid of the sticker shock of seeing a person of that group in that position.  Moreover, it’s also not unusual to see folks from all backgrounds acting as a different ethnicity or in a leading role where race is not contemplated.  For Natives, though? Not so much. Natives are still a novelty, a character to be played on-screen and not just an ethnicity that a person happens to be. There is no Fresh off the Boat or Chico and the Man or Blackish or The Jeffersons or The Cosby Show for Native people. Plus, the prospect of a Native playing, for example, a President? Hasn’t been on the radar, even in the most subversive of films.

Natives have largely been only deemed competent to play a Native no matter how incredible that Native actor is. “How well can you be a Native, Native person?”

Similarly, in my work as a writer and commentator, I largely am asked to only comment or write about “Native stuff.”  Now, I love commenting and writing about “Native stuff” but I’ve also found that “Native stuff” is a HUGE category. It’s ALL Native stuff! Whether we’re talking about national politics to public school funding to infrastructure and trade policy.  Now, similar to acting black folks, women, Latino/a, Asians, etc. are all considered competent to speak about things that are outside their communities and universal. It is not one bit unusual for a black person, a woman, a Latino/a or an Asian to comment or write on national news. For Natives? Not so much. It’s still a novelty and Natives are not deemed competent to have opinions on matters that are universal and aren’t uniquely Native.

We can’t speak about things that are just “human” or “American.”  It would be hard enough for a Native person to get a role as a doctor or teacher on TV, much less a Native President.

We also see it in regards to our tragedy.  Simply stated, the mainstream largely does not care or cannot relate to Native pain or outrage. The mainstream ignores the structural and institutional barriers, for example, that allow Native women to be raped at a rate exponentially higher than other women. It likewise ignores those same structural barriers that forbid Native nations from prosecuting outsiders who peddle drugs and/or murder our people.  Those same structures then, adding insult to injury, refuse to utilize its own resources to prosecute those bad actors, allowing them to prey upon our communities with impunity.

But nobody mentions that outside of our communities. If they do mention our communities, they mention the poverty without explaining how those barriers help to create and sustain that economic poverty.

As shown above, there is a perception that Natives cannot partake in these larger conversations.  As we discussed, there is a lack of empathy or understanding about our communities.  When those two things are combined with the mathematical fact that Natives are a tiny percentage of the population, it doesn’t bode well for a Native rising to be President anytime soon.  At some point, it’s a humanity question as it was for women, black folks, Latino/as, etc.; are Natives reflective enough of America generally to sometimes not be considered “Native” and instead just “human?”

Can a Native person represent America?  Stupid question. OF COURSE. The truth is, Natives are the story of America and are more America than America. Natives are America’s dental record and thumbprint and spinal cord. You cannot intelligently tell the story of America without Native people being one of the main characters.  Yet, it seems like mainstream America is a ways away from recognizing that truth.

When Will There Be a Native American President? [Part 1] ‘Sigh,’ It’s Gonna Be Awhile…

Comments

  1. Kengi says

    Fuck. Once again waiting for the painfully slow process of basic humanity to seep into humans.

  2. says

    It occurred to me the other day that I think Adam Beach in Suicide Squad is the first First Nations person to play a major role in a major superhero film. I’m curious if the film will address that or if the audience will just read him as Latino.

    All I know right now is that he’s the only reason I’m even slightly interested in seeing that movie.

  3. says

    Tabby @ 3:

    It occurred to me the other day that I think Adam Beach in Suicide Squad is the first First Nations person to play a major role in a major superhero film. I’m curious if the film will address that or if the audience will just read him as Latino.

    I think a fair amount of people know Adam Beach is an Indian, but I doubt most know his tribal identity, Salteaux. While Beach was utterly geeked out at getting a part in Suicide Squad, he did roll his eyes at the character he got, saying “yeah, I’m Slipknot. The Indian gets to play the guy good with ropes.”

    Indian Country is geeking out over Jason Momoa getting the role of Aquaman, too. Momoa is indigenous Hawaiian, and he’s very involved in indigenous activism.

  4. says

    rq:

    Now this, this will be so amazing on a lot of levels. When it comes to pass. When.

    It won’t happen in the life I have left. We are far, far, far from this even being a probability. As I mentioned in another thread, 2016 is the only the second time Indians have been allowed into the political conventions as press, last time was 2008. Journalists at ICTMN are not allowed permanent press passes like other news orgs, because the Oneida nation, owners of ICTMN, are considered to be a foreign government. There is simply no area where Indians are treated normally.

    Indians are still used as mascots, and ugly ones (new post coming about that one), considered to be the ‘noble savage’ still, or Indians aren’t Indian enough, going by Trump, and it never fucking ends.

  5. rq says

    … A foreign government? The mind simply boggles.
    I know it’s far from being a probability or even a possibility, and that is nauseating, but I do hope it’s something that, maybe, my children will see, and I certainly hope they recognize the significance, when it does happen.

  6. Ice Swimmer says

    A foreign government and at the same time under the federal jurisdiction and citizens (or subjects) of USA. I guess this an application of “the science of logic”, making contradictory demands so it’s impossible for you to exist.

  7. says

    Ice Swimmer:

    I guess this an application of “the science of logic”, making contradictory demands so it’s impossible for you to exist.

    Pretty much.

  8. wsierichs says

    Well, we have had a vice president, Herbert Hoover’s vp, Charles Curtis, who was part American Indian. But he does not look like the stereotypical Indian, so most people probably paid little attention to that part of his ancestry. I suspect he would have gotten nowhere in politics if he’d looked “Indian.” It would be interesting if he somehow had become president, but I doubt anyone outside of some historians would consider him to be the first Native American president.

  9. chigau (違う) says

    Caine #5
    Journalists who work for foreign governments can’t get permanent press passes?
    What about the BBC? CBC?
    or is that rule a special one just for Indians?

  10. says

    Chigau:

    or is that rule a special one just for Indians?

    It seems that it’s only applicable for Indians. BBC and CBC are mainstream media, so I expect they get okayed, but I’m not positive about that.

  11. Crimson Clupeidae says

    Well, considering the recent Ms. Universe is a first nations lady (I forget the tribal affiliation), and uses her position to actually speak out on behalf of native americans and first nations….and people lose their shit because of it.

    ….I’m not gonna hold my breath.

  12. Crimson Clupeidae says

    Yeah, much like the BLM, she makes very simple, uncontroversial statements (like the fact that the whitehouse was built by slaves kind of simple facts) and so many people are going apeshit, the usual suspects mostly (old white priviliged dudes)….

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