Ann Coulter presents indignation for a vile position about killing the Native Americans
Ann Coulter faces a violent reaction for a violent comment on the Native Americans.
On Sunday, the extreme right -wing expert published a video of the professor at the University of Minnesota and member of the Navajo nation Melanie Yazzie discussing decolonization and climate change at a 2023 conference.
“We did not kill enough Indians,” Coulter wrote in the publication since Delted.
The comment caused a rapid conviction of indigenous leaders and others.
Chuck Hoskin Jr., chief of the Cherokee Nation, described the publication “Beyond Abhorrent” and “Dangerous hate speech” in a Facebook statement.
“The Coulter Declaration, at the height, is a negligible rhetorical shot in the first villages of this continent, designed to dehumanize and reduce our ancestors and put us at risk of more injuries,” he wrote.
“We have faced enough from that from the foundation of this country,” Hoskin continued. “This type of rhetoric has fed the destruction of tribes, their ways of life, languages and cultures, the violation of the rights of the treaty and the perpetuation of violence and oppression.”

Rich Polk through Getty Images
Hoskin added how Coulter’s words “did not take place in a vacuum”, but are produced in the midst of an increase in attacks against marginalized people, “it used to write down political points, advance in political agendas and, sometimes, to scare people to advance all that and more.”
“The country often seems to be on the verge of political violence,” he wrote. “Coulter’s publication encourages him implicitly.”
Although he acknowledged the temptation to ignore that rhetoric, Hoskin warned against letting hate speech is not controlled.
“We can get used to frequent attacks and see in silence while this group and that group is dehumanized and decreases,” he said. “Hate in the public will become white noise, accepted as ‘as it is’. Alternatively, we can speak against that.”
“What Ann Coulter said is ruthless, vicious and should be repudiated by people in good faith regardless of philosophy or political party,” Hoskin continued. “Some things are simply wrong and we cannot validate it through our silence.”
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Asking others to join him to speak, he said that he was still “optimistic that people of good will between parties, religions, philosophies, regions, races and political status can work to unify the country” and reject Coulter’s comments.
The vice president of the Wichita tribes and the affiliates Tasha Mousseau also called Coulter for invoking a deeply dated colonial mentality.
“In the Indian country, either in the western sense with education or retaking our traditions and learning our languages, we say that we are the wildest dreams of our ancestors,” Kosu’s public radio in Oklahoma told Public Radio. “I would say that she is the wildest dreams of her ancestors. She is what the colonizers would like to continue in this country.”


