The 7Th Generation Podcast

Dr. B

The 7th Generation Podcast dives into a wide range of topics, including health and fitness, popular culture, race and ethnicity, and society's most pressing issues. Combining elements of sociology, psychology, and history, we offer insightful analysis and practical advice. Each episode blends deep dives into current events, critical discussions on identity and social justice, and personal anecdotes, aiming to engage, educate, and inspire listeners to think critically about the world around them.

  1. 24 APR.

    Extractive Capitalism and the War on Indigenous Sacred Places

    In this episode, I take a deeper look at the fight to protect Oak Flat and Chaco Canyon and what these struggles reveal about modern colonialism, extractive capitalism, and the continued assault on Indigenous sacred places. For Indigenous peoples, sacred places are not just historic sites or scenic landscapes. They are living places of ceremony, prayer, memory, identity, and connection. They are tied to ancestors, cultural survival, and spiritual responsibility. Yet again and again, Native communities are forced to defend these places from corporations and governments that see land only through the lens of extraction, profit, and control. I talk about why Oak Flat is sacred to Apache peoples, why Chaco Canyon remains deeply important to Pueblo peoples and other Indigenous communities, and why these struggles are part of a much larger fight over land, sovereignty, and the right of Native peoples to protect what is sacred. I also discuss the importance of Land Back, tribal sovereignty, and Indigenous stewardship. The truth is that Indigenous peoples are the original caretakers of these lands, and their ways of relating to the earth offer a very different vision from the greed-driven logic of western capitalism. This conversation is about more than two places. It is about what kind of world we want to live in. A world where everything is for sale, or a world where sacred places, Indigenous life, and the land itself are treated with respect. Support Apache Stronghold. Support the defense of Chaco Canyon. Stand with Indigenous peoples protecting sacred land across Turtle Island.

    29 min
  2. 6 APR.

    Indian Slavery, Colonial Violence, and the Southwest

    This episode is a personal and historical reflection on Indian slavery in the Southwest, especially in New Mexico and Colorado, where many of my ancestors are from. While recovering from back surgery, I began digging deeper into my genealogy and uncovered something deeply painful: one of my ancestors was kidnapped and sold. That discovery led me further into the hidden history of Indigenous captivity, forced labor, colonial violence, and the systems that reshaped Native life in the Southwest. In this podcast, I discuss the history of Indian slavery in New Mexico, the meaning and limits of the colonial label genízaro, the Spanish caste system, the kidnapping of Indigenous people, and the brutal treatment of Indigenous women under colonial rule. I also reflect on my own shock at how much I still did not know, and why I feel called to keep learning, keep digging, and keep sharing this history. This is not the final word on the subject. It is the beginning of a deeper conversation. Too many people were never taught that Indigenous people in the Southwest were captured, sold, baptized, renamed, forced into labor, and folded into colonial society through violence. Too many families are still carrying the afterlife of that trauma without fully knowing the story behind it. I believe learning this history helps us better understand Indigenous pain, survival, resistance, and the long shadow of colonialism across generations. I’ll be returning to this topic in future episodes. If this conversation resonates with you, leave a comment and share your thoughts. #IndianSlavery #IndigenousHistory #NewMexico #NativeAmericanHistory #Southwest #Genizaro #ColonialViolence #Decolonization #DrBTeaches

    31 min
  3. 3 FEB.

    You’re No Indian: The Disenrollment Crisis Nobody Wants to Talk About

    https://www.patreon.com/c/u40108333 Support the work on Patreon: In this episode, I’m sharing my thoughts after watching the documentary You’re No Indian at a screening here in the Central Valley. This film is a heavy but necessary look at disenrollment and how it impacts Native families and tribal communities across the country.Disenrollment is often talked about like it’s just an administrative issue, but the reality is deeper. It can mean people being banned from their own communities, cut off from services and resources, and in some cases even evicted from their homes. The human cost is real, and it hits even harder when you personally know people involved. I know many of the individuals featured in this film, and I’ve seen firsthand how committed they’ve been to their communities.In this review, I also talk about the tension that sits at the center of this issue. I’m a firm believer in tribal sovereignty and I believe tribes have the inherent right to determine citizenship. At the same time, some disenrollment cases can feel deeply unjust, especially when due process is unclear or inconsistent. And we also have to be honest that there are two sides to these stories. It’s possible that some people seeking enrollment are doing it mainly for benefits rather than cultural connection, and it can be incredibly difficult to determine legitimacy because of complicated histories and messy records.We also get into blood quantum, why it’s a colonial tool, and how it can fracture families and be weaponized in disputes. And I address what the film argues is driving disenrollment in many cases, greed tied to casino money, per capita payments, and the consolidation of power.This is not an easy conversation, but it’s a necessary one. My hope is that we can have more healthy discussion around this topic without outsiders using it as an excuse to attack Native sovereignty.The film is not available for streaming yet and is currently being shown through limited theaters and select screenings, so if you get a chance to see it, I encourage you to go and then start a respectful conversation in your own circles.Drop your thoughts in the comments, but keep it respectful. What does justice and due process look like inside tribal sovereignty#YoureNoIndian #Disenrollment #TribalSovereignty #IndigenousRights #IndianCountry #NativeVoices #NativeJustice #BloodQuantum #Decolonize #LandBack #CentralValley #DrBTeaches

    19 min
  4. 27 JAN.

    DHS and ICE operations in Minnesota and more thoughts!

    In this episode of the 7th Generation Podcast, Dr. B talks straight about the climate we’re living in right now and why so many people feel unsafe in this settler state. This is not a neat, one topic conversation. This is a jump around episode, because that’s what reality feels like right now. Different headlines, same pattern. Dr. B starts with the DHS and ICE operations in Minnesota and the fear they’re producing in communities. Then he connects it to the harassment of Peter Yazzie, a Diné man detained despite his citizenship and documentation, and to the near deportation of a Salt River Pima Maricopa tribal citizen that was brushed off as a “clerical error.” Dr. B breaks down why these stories hit Native people differently, because we already know what it means to be treated like you do not belong on your own land. From there, the episode turns to the rise of boarding school denialism in Canada and why denial is not “just opinion,” it’s violence. It is erasure. It is a push to make the public forget what happened to Indigenous children so the system can keep harming Indigenous people with less resistance. Dr. B also brings in the story of Jim Thorpe to show how institutions have always been willing to strip Native people of recognition, dignity, and truth, then offer a late correction like it fixes the damage. The throughline is clear. When power feels threatened, the state tightens its grip. Enforcement escalates. History gets denied. And everyday people are left to carry the fear. This episode is a reminder to stay informed, stay connected, protect your community, and stop acting shocked when the system shows you what it is. The mask is slipping. Pay attention. Topics coveredDHS and ICE operations in MinnesotaFort Snelling as a trauma site and why this hits Native communities so hardThe detention of Peter YazzieThe near deportation of a Salt River Pima Maricopa tribal citizenBoarding school denialism in Canada and why denial is harmJim Thorpe and the long history of institutions doing Native people dirtyWhy people feel unsafe right now and what we do with that truth

    27 min

Om

The 7th Generation Podcast dives into a wide range of topics, including health and fitness, popular culture, race and ethnicity, and society's most pressing issues. Combining elements of sociology, psychology, and history, we offer insightful analysis and practical advice. Each episode blends deep dives into current events, critical discussions on identity and social justice, and personal anecdotes, aiming to engage, educate, and inspire listeners to think critically about the world around them.

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