Indigenous Peoples and Human Rights

March 6, 2026


Trees at Sand Creek Massacre. Longest Walk 2 Northern Route Photo by Brenda Norrell


The history of the Smithsonian Institution, like the history taught in US classrooms, is largely one of deception and fiction

The Smithsonian exploits Native American culture and covers up its history of grave robbing and paying bounty hunters for Native skulls -- while refusing to return Native American remains. Indian country media is part of the cover-up with its public relations spin promoting the Smithsonian.


By Brenda Norrell, Censored News, 
March 16, 2011


The Smithsonian's dark history includes the collection of American Indian brains for a racist experiment that claimed to reveal the relationship between race and intelligence. Brains were collected for bounty.

One of the massacres where this sinister collection of skulls was carried out was at Sand Creek in Colorado, a brutal massacre where fleeing Cheyenne and Arapaho women and children were murdered in 1864. The following article is republished, so the facts will not be forgotten, with a special thank you to the late Pawnee professor James Riding In who provided much of the information.

After the publication of this article, I wrote the Smithsonian and asked if it was true that more than 10,000 Indian skulls remained at the Smithsonian. There was no response.

March 4, 2026

Gary Farmer is Featured at Bioneers 2026 in Berkeley: 'We Survived the Apocalypse: Lessons in Resilience'

 

Gary Farmer. Photo credit: Nadya Kwandibens, Red Works Photography

Gary Farmer Featured at Bioneers 2026 in Berkeley, 'We Survived the Apocalypse: Lessons in Resilience'

By Brenda Norrell, Censored News, March 1, 2026

BERKELEY, California -- The grand man of Indigenous jazz, Gary Farmer, is featured at this year's Bioneers Conference in Berkeley during March. Sounding out in his keynote address on opening day, Farmer will speak on "Change Has Got to Come." Then, the iconic soul of Powwow Highway, Farmer, is featured on the panel discussion, "We Survived the Apocalypse: Lessons in Resilience."

Joining a long list of Indigenous change makers and musicians this year, Farmer speaks on March 26, the first day of the Bioneers annual conference in Berkeley, March 26 -- 28. 

"Revolution from the Heart of Nature," is this year's Bioneers focus.

Mohawk Nation News 'Old Indigenous Wisdom'


Read the article at Mohawk Nation News

March 3, 2026

Epstein's Rolodex: New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson on Epstein's Short List

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Epstein's Rolodex: New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson on Epstein's Short List 

By Brenda Norrell, Censored News, March 3, 2026

Epstein's Rolodex, the short list of his contacts, is among his final emails.

Before being arrested on his flight arrival in New York, Epstein sent a media man a list of his prime targets and friends.

On this short list, among the so-called royalty, and former presidents of world governments, was Bill Richardson's name. It shows that Richardson wasn't just an e-mail buddy, he was a prime player in Epstein's world.

February 28, 2026

Phoenix and Tucson: Epstein's Dark Dollars: ASU, the Media, and the Slippery Slope of Non-Profits

 

Photo from the 2014 gala: Epstein on the left, ASU's Lawrence Krauss in the center, and psychologist Steven Pinker on the right.

Dark Dollars: Epstein and The Slippery Slope of Non-Profits: Epstein's contacts in Phoenix and Tucson

By Brenda Norrell, Censored News, March 1, 2026

Jeffrey Epstein's funding for Arizona's largest universities, funneled through non-profits, reveals the slippery slope of non-profits, academia and the media. The non-profit money flow reveals how Epstein, as a sex offender, hid his donations to colleges. These were donations to buy access and power, while promoting genetics, cyber currency, and A.I., artificial intelligence.

Before he was sent to prison, Epstein supported projects at Arizona State University in the Phoenix Valley, and was present at an ASU event. Meanwhile, in Tucson, Noam Chomsky, relied on Epstein for advice on financial matters, and met with Epstein.

In Epstein's world, the targets were from every arena, from Hollywood producers, to the head of the United Nations and academia. In Epstein's world, sex trafficking was both an industry and insurance for blackmail. Girls and women were disposables in a world of horror.

The Spider Web: Dark Dollars