Amadeus Finlay

The Scaffolding of Society: Celebrating Rhode Island’s mental health services

Rhode Island’s mental health organizations are among the state’s most under-recognized heroes, yet when events such as those that unfolded in Westerly on December 19 reawaken discussions on psychological wellbeing, it sharply puts into focus not only why Rhode Island needs mental health organizations, but also that their work is not defined by any single […]

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Voices of Turtle Island: An Indigenous women roundtable on identity, place and culture

Rhode Island may not strike you as a place of great migration, but for three Indigenous women hailing from distinct communities across the country, life in this corner of Turtle Island (North America) brings unique challenges and discoveries. And it’s not simply Indian Country vs. settler land; each Indigenous community has its own cultures and […]

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In Fourteen Hundred Ninety-Two: Columbus raped and pillaged, too

Indigenous People’s Day Let’s make no mistake about this. FUCK Columbus. He was, and ever will be, a murderer, a rapist and an enslaver, an unwashed pervert with baggy clothes and shit hair … but to actively celebrate this man, well ladies and gentlemen, that’s akin to cheering Hitler during Yom Kippur, or giving Ted […]

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Decaying Icarus: Paranormal tales from an airplane graveyard

The rusted frame of a nosecone pokes out of a tangle of vines and long grass, permanently grounded, never to fly again. Behind, a cross-section of a narrow body jet slowly sinks into the soft undergrowth, another resident of the airplane graveyard deep in the backwoods of South County. But don’t go grabbing your passport […]

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Education and Empowerment: Narragansett tribal learning

Of all the words of strength and unity heard in Indian Country, “empowerment” is one of the loudest. Stemming back to the Indigenous civil rights movements of the 1960s, empowerment represents a sense of self and civic pride — the reclamation and preservation of tribal governance, identity and community after centuries of loss and erosion. […]

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