fyi, I'm a Byrd Cherokee descendant of English/Cherokee ancestry through Brelands and Turners originally from Bertie County, NC, in the 1750's.
They stopped in Alabama for a time right before 1800 and had to get permission from the Creek Nation to pass through Alabama. I have
Turner ancestors buried in Washington County, Alabama across the border from Greene and Perry County, Mississippi. I'm noticing
a pattern here. Every time you've upped the ante whether it was validation from the Mississippi Band of Choctaws or showing
you the problems that the Mowas had with the BIA, you've been turned back. From the people I've listened to on here, outside of your
own respective tribes, you really don't know and you're extremely skeptical. I grew up between Coshocton and Newcomerstown, OH,
in 18th century Lenape Country. I was taught words like Muskingum, Tuscarawas, and Walhonding at three years of age.
We lived in Seneca-Cayuga and Wyandotte Country in Elyria, OH. We then moved to Taensa, Choctaw, Ouachita, and Natchez
country in Jonesville, LA, near Jena, LA when I was five and six. We then moved to Moss Bluff, LA, the home of the Attakapa,
Coushatta, and Redbones. From there we moved to Shreveport, LA, the former home of the Caddo Nation. I learned words
like Calcasieu, Catehoula, Atchafalaya, Natchitoches, and Tangipahoa, in LA as a child and Chickasawhay and Tchoufaboufas
in MS going to my grandparents. I learned something indigenous wherever I lived. I'm spent fifteen years educating myself
through tribal geography, ethnology, and linguistics, and later Indian law and the Choctaw language. None of what I know
was taught in my school or college years. I know what I'm talking about. I've spoken at Haskell about the Kansas Munsees
and Miami Tribe of Indiana in classes on Contemporary Issues and federal recognition. I have over 20 books on the MS, AL,
LA, and Okla Chahta people in my 300 book collection of ethnologies, law, civil rights, religion, and linguistics, of indigenous
peoples. I started off in 1994 memorizing tribes and can now name over 525 tribes off of the top of my head. Furthermore....