The Biden Administration now requires all agencies to consider indigenous knowledge in their work and has created 200 “co-stewardship agreements” with Indian tribes to manage federal lands using indigenous knowledge. It has also shoveled an astounding $830 million into indigenous knowledge grants—enough money to put many indigenous scholars onto permanent welfare. “It is essential that we do everything we can to ensure that Indigenous Knowledge helps guide our ongoing work as stewards of public lands and waters,” gushed Interior Secretary Deb Haaland in 2023.
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Thursday, April 11, 2024
The Bitterroot of Indigenous Knowledge
Acommon claim of advocates of “indigenous knowledge” is that it provides a useful complement, or even a preferable alternative, to “Western science.” Unlike the limited methods of Western science, we are told, indigenous knowledge is an invitation-only potlach of multiple “ways of knowing.” Failing to heed the nostrums of these ancient native secrets supposedly risks social collapse and planetary disaster.
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indigenous knowledge? when will the carving out of beating hearts to keep the sun shining start?
ReplyDeleteI wonder how that "Indigenous Knowledge" and "stewardship" applies to all the meth cooking sites they keep finding in the woods on one of our local reservations.
ReplyDeleteIndian tribes indigenous knowledge?? ...Whisky good, casinos better...
ReplyDelete@Luis-WhatEver
Back in the early 1950s I always knew Chief Thunderthud was right up there with Confucius as the epitome of indigenous wisdom.
ReplyDeleteBecause indigenous knowledge is responsible for the numerous, technologically advanced civilizations we were built on, like Wakanda.
ReplyDeleteSquatters in the White House psychic friends network.
ReplyDeletePeyote is a hell of a drug.
ReplyDeleteWe are well and truly fooked. - Nemo
ReplyDeleteWhen we were building industries and railroads, they lived in teepees and cooked over buffalo shit fires.
ReplyDeleteIndigenous knowledge my ass.