are constantly being let down by everything and everyone. but i want to leave you with this. america s exceptionalism has always been soun by the ordinary americans who summoned courage in the face of fierce opposition to rewrite destiny. it s crazy horse fighting for the sioux nation at the battle of little big horn and winning. it s the hundreds of faceless women who gathered at seneca falls telling the world they d had enough of being treated as second class citizens. it s fred kartamatsu who refused to accept his racist imprisonment in a japanese american internment camp. it s the freedom riders who faced violence and death because they refused to accept america s dehumanizing policy of segregation. it is the young activist named john lewis who led hundreds of marchers over the edmund pettis bridge which helped deliver the voting rights act.
impression. demonizing elizabeth warren as pocahontas constantly. we have navajo code breakers in the white house. doing the whole pocahontas trope stereotyping. if he didn t mean that, he should put a tweet saying my gosh, shouldn t have done that. en i think it s fair game for him to mock elizabeth warren s kind of phony native american heritage claim and might make a joke, could she be the first native american president. i think that s within the bounds of decency, but when you start belittling, earlier, he belittled the big battle of little big horn and now trail of tears. a precedent that says nothing about native american history and is just trying get barroom laughs using his twitter account. thank you. very much. coming up next, tax return
i september kaying, but you have to see this you have to see this. this 2007 she is put in touch with a montana rancher, state senator, and gallery owner who agrees with her, brad hamlet. how did you find out about this collection? i got a call from a friend, who mentioned david humphreys miller, i read that book, i thought it did a lot to resolve that happened at the battle. i was more intrigued when i found out there was sketches from life he did. he caught their soul, a moment in time that nobody else was bothering to do. that was one reasons that it is valuable. jamie: they start working with a new appraiser, barbara stone, a former museum curator who started her own art consulting firm in denver, declares the
his shot may have changed battle. the officer fell into little bighorn, they retrieved him, and then turned and went up the hill, and that seemed to change the whole tide of the battle from attack to retreat. jamie: did this young artist solve a 60-year-old mystery? who killed custer? david travels back and forth between south dakota and ohio, and learns 13 tribal languages, and is adopted by a sioux warrior, he draws dozens of sketches, and portraits of indians from numerous tribes, many confirm white bull s story. this is the indian side of the steer, what they said happened that day, you better pay attention to 2, because they were there.
what make one artist s work worth millions and another next to nothing? this includes indians from the battle of little bighorn. a california court valued atlanta $2 $1,000, the heir 20,000, th heir launches on a qt to prove them wrong. you made your own investment. not just your time but in the frames, how much was that. cost is about 50,000. but i felt we had to do it to show value of it. jamie: you are now financially invested in it as well as