Red, white and blue: A strategy for survival as Native Americans navigate 250 years of history
Original article ↗B.I.A.S. ANALYSIS
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LEFTCENTERRIGHT
Signal breakdown
Heuristic (v1/v3)
0.00 · CENTER
ML v2 (DistilBERT)
0.000 · CENTER
Ensemble
0.000 · CENTER
🏦 Source Intelligence
Rolling outlet bias
CENTER LEFT
avg -0.311
291 articles tracked
7-day bias trend
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Article Excerpt
By Susan Montoya Bryan SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) — Swiftly marching toward westward expansion, the United States in the 1800s brought with it a tidal wave of displacement and cultural suppression for Native Americans. A century of broken treaties already had spawned distrust of the federal government, and widespread forced assimilation was accelerating. With shifting cultural and social circumstances came declining populations. Survival was hanging in the balance. Renowned for their masterful beadwork, Lakota women had a strategy. Incorporating symbols of American patriotism into their work was more…
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Jun 18, 2026