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08/03/2026

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🎂The beloved actor Sam Elliott was born in Sacramento, California on this day in 1944. He turns 81 today! 🤠 🎉❤️Get yours...
08/03/2026

🎂The beloved actor Sam Elliott was born in Sacramento, California on this day in 1944. He turns 81 today! 🤠 🎉❤️
Get yours tee 👉 https://nativerites.com/dear-racist-in-america-you-live-on
Samuel Pack Elliott (born August 9, 1944) is an American actor. He is the recipient of several accolades, including a Screen Actors Guild Award and a National Board of Review Award.
He has been nominated for an Academy Award, two Golden Globe Awards, and two Emmy Awards. Elliott was cast in the musical drama A Star Is Born (2018), for which he was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor and the corresponding prizes at the Critics' Choice Movie Awards, Screen Actors Guild Awards. He also won a National Board of Review Award. Elliott starred as Shea Brennan in the American drama miniseries 1883 (2021–2022), for which he won the Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Miniseries or Television Movie.
Elliott is known for his distinctive lanky physique, full mustache, and deep, sonorous voice. He began his acting career with minor appearances in The Way West (1967), Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969), season five of Mission: Impossible, and guest-starred on television in the Western Gunsmoke (1972) before landing his first lead film role in Frogs (1972). His film breakthrough was in the drama Lifeguard (1976). Elliott co-starred in the box office hit Mask (1985) and went on to star in several Louis L'Amour adaptations such as The Quick and the Dead (1987) and Conagher (1991), the latter of which earned him a Golden Globe nomination for Best Actor – Miniseries or Television Film. He received his second Golden Globe and first Primetime Emmy Award nominations for Buffalo Girls (1995). His other film credits from the early 1990s include as John Buford in the historical drama Gettysburg (1993) and as Virgil Earp in the Western Tombstone (also 1993). In 1998, he played the Stranger in The Big Lebowski.
In the 2000s, Elliott appeared in supporting roles in the drama We Were Soldiers (2002) and the superhero films Hulk (2003) and Ghost Rider (2007). In 2015, he guest-starred on the series Justified, which earned him a Critics' Choice Television Award, and in 2016 began starring in the Netflix series The Ranch. Elliott subsequently had a lead role in the comedy-drama The Hero.
❤️𝗜 𝘁𝗵𝗶𝗻𝗸 𝘆𝗼𝘂 𝘄𝗶𝗹𝗹 𝗯𝗲 𝗽𝗿𝗼𝘂𝗱 𝘁𝗼 𝘄𝗲𝗮𝗿 𝘁𝗵𝗶𝘀 𝗧-𝘀𝗵𝗶𝗿𝘁 👇
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1880s, North territory. Cool looking. All nice hair just like east Asians.
07/03/2026

1880s, North territory. Cool looking. All nice hair just like east Asians.

Very worth reading❤️Actor, film director, film producer and musician Keanu Charles Reeves (Keanu Charles Reeves),Missed ...
04/03/2026

Very worth reading❤️
Actor, film director, film producer and musician Keanu Charles Reeves (Keanu Charles Reeves),
Missed the first 20 minutes of the party dedicated to the end of filming of his new movie at one of the clubs in New York.
He waited patiently in the rain to be let in.
No one recognized him.
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The club owner said: “I didn't even know Keanu was standing in the rain waiting to get in - he didn't say anything to anyone.”
"He travels by public transport."
"He easily communicates with homeless people on the streets and helps them."
- He was only 60 years old (September 2, 1964)
- He can only eat hot dogs in the park, sitting among normal people.
- After filming one of the "Matrix", he gave all the stuntmen a new motorcycle - in recognition of their skills.
- He gave up most of the salaries of the costume designers and computer scientists who drew the special effects on "The Matrix" - deciding that their share of the film's budget was assessed short.
- He reduced his salary for the movie "The Devil's Advocate" to have enough money to invite Al Pacino.
- Almost at the same time his best friend passed away; His girlfriend lost a child and soon died in a car accident, and his sister suffered from leukemia.
Keanu didn't fail: he donated $5 million to the clinic that treated his sister, refused to be filmed (to be with her), and founded the Leukemia Foundation, donating significant amounts from each fee for the movie.
You may have been born a man, but stay a man..
Also read about Keanu
Keanu Reeves' father is of Hawaiian descent...
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On July 21st, 1979 Jay Silverheels, became the first Indigenous Native to have a star commemorated on the Hollywood Walk...
03/03/2026

On July 21st, 1979 Jay Silverheels, became the first Indigenous Native to have a star commemorated on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.
Harold Jay Smith, was a full-blooded Mohawk, born May 26th,1912 on the Six Nations Indian Reservation in Ontario, Canada.
He excelled in athletics, most notably in lacrosse.
In 1931 he was among the first players chosen to play for the Toronto Tecumsehs, where he earned the nickname "Silverheels".
And in 1997 he was inducted into the Canadian Lacrosse Hall of Fame as a veteran player.
In 1938, he placed second in the middleweight class of the Golden Gloves tournament.
This led to his working in motion pictures as an extra and stuntman in 1937.
Billed variously as Harold Smith and Harry Smith, before taking the name Jay Silverheels.
He appeared in low-budget features, mostly Westerns, and serials before landing his much loved and iconic role as Tonto on national tv from 1949 until 1957 along with two movies.
In the early 1960s, he was a founding member of the Indian Actors Workshop, in Echo Park, Los Angeles. Where Native actors refine their skills.
Today the workshop is still a well established institution.
Silverheels died on March 5, 1980, from stroke, at age 67, in Calabasas, California. He was cremated at Chapel of the Pines Crematory, and his ashes were returned to the Six Nations Reserve in Ontario

02/03/2026

In the silence of the winter plains, wisdom is drawn not from words, but from the land itself. Guided by ancestors, bonded by brotherhood, and protected by spirit, they read the earth like a sacred map—where every mark tells a story, every step honors tradition, and every journey is a promise to survive, remember, and rise.











Why Isn’t This Map in the History Books?By the age of 10, most children in the United States have been taught all 50 sta...
01/03/2026

Why Isn’t This Map in the History Books?
By the age of 10, most children in the United States have been taught all 50 states that make up the country. But centuries ago, the land that is now the United States was a very different place. Over 20 million Native Americans dispersed across over 1,000 distinct tribes, bands, and ethnic groups populated the territory.
History is not there for you to like or dislike. It is there for you to learn from it. And if it offends you, even better. Because then you are less likely to repeat it. It’s not yours for you to erase or destroy.
❤️Thank you for taking the time to view my article!🔥
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28/02/2026

America 💛
By remembering the first caretakers
and building resilient families,
we rise into tomorrow united in hope.

Exactly
28/02/2026

Exactly

25/02/2026

America 💛
By listening to Indigenous voices
and standing up for our families,
we create a future where we rise as one.

HONORING THE WARRIORS OF RESISTANCE For more than 500 years, Indigenous peoples across the Americas have fought not for ...
22/02/2026

HONORING THE WARRIORS OF RESISTANCE
For more than 500 years, Indigenous peoples across the Americas have fought not for conquest, but for survival — for land, for dignity, for sovereignty, and for future generations.
From the northern plains to the Andes, from the Caribbean to the Great Lakes, these leaders stood against empires, armies, and systems designed to erase them.
They fought not because they hated what stood before them,
but because they loved what stood behind them —
their people, their ancestors, and the land that shaped them.
Among them were:
Crazy Horse – Lakota warrior who defended the Black Hills
Zapata – champion of land and freedom in Mexico
Geronimo – Apache strategist who resisted U.S. and Mexican forces for decades
Pontiac – Odawa leader of a powerful intertribal uprising
Tecumseh – Shawnee visionary who united tribes into a confederacy
Tupac Amaru – Incan descendant who led a massive rebellion against Spanish rule
Enriquillo – Taíno leader who fought Spanish oppression in the Caribbean
Chief Joseph – Nez Perce diplomat who defended his people with unmatched dignity
Different homelands. Different languages. Different eras.
One shared struggle: to remain who they were in a world that demanded they disappear.
Today, we remember them not as relics of war,
but as ancestors of resistance —
as veterans of an unending fight for Indigenous survival, self-determination, and cultural memory.
We do not glorify war — we honor the courage to exist when existence itself was resistance.
To all our ancestors who carried the fire through centuries of darkness:
We remember. We are still here. And we continue the fight — not with bullets, but with language, land, culture, and truth.

In the deep wood, the air holds its breath,and gold dust floats like slow prayers.A man sits steady on the ground,fringe...
21/02/2026

In the deep wood, the air holds its breath,
and gold dust floats like slow prayers.
A man sits steady on the ground,
fringe and beadwork catching the last warm angles of day.

A drum rests in his lap, round as a small moon,
skin pulled tight over silence,
waiting for the first true strike
to wake the roots.

Behind him, a bear rises like a mountain that walks,
fur dark with the weight of seasons,
eyes fixed beyond the trees
as if guarding the path nobody names.

Leaves turn and fall in small spirals,
not rushed, not lost,
just returning to the same old lesson
about letting go.

The feather by his shoulder trembles once,
then settles,
like a thought finding its place
after long travel.

No shout, no hurry,
only the patience of a watchful back,
only the drum that remembers
how to speak without words.

Some nights, strength is loud.
This one is not.
This one is the quiet agreement
between heartbeat and wilderness.

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