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The Domination Chronicles Podcast

The Domination Chronicles Podcast

By: DOMINATION CHRONICLES
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The Domination Chronicles is podcast where Steven T. Newcomb (Shawnee/Lenape) and Peter d’Errico examine how domination shaped the legal and political foundations of the United States.

You can find transcripts and show notes at our website: www.dominationchronicles.com

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Biological Sciences Political Science Politics & Government Science World
Episodes
  • Episode 23: Bishops, Papal Bulls, and the Problem of Domination
    Jun 25 2026

    In this episode, Peter d’Errico interviews Steve Newcomb about a May 2026 Catholic bishops’ symposium on the Doctrine of Discovery in Edmonton, Alberta. Steve reflects on the event, the call to revoke Inter Caetera, and the danger of language that hides domination behind softer terms such as “discovery,” “renunciation,” and “reconciliation.”



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    57 mins
  • Where Are We Now? Why Domination Is the Beginning of the Conversation, Not the End
    Jun 8 2026

    In this episode of Domination Chronicles, Steven T. Newcomb and Peter d’Errico explore why “domination” has become a slogan instead of a serious inquiry—and why language, law, history, and power must be carefully unpacked.



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    55 mins
  • Episode 21: “Tribal Sovereignty” 101: Limited Sovereignty, Federal Domination, and the Language Trap
    May 25 2026

    In this episode, Steven T. Newcomb and Peter d’Errico return to one of the most repeated phrases in federal Indian law and public advocacy: “tribal sovereignty.” But what does the phrase actually mean within the legal framework of the United States?


    Steve and Peter argue that “tribal sovereignty” is an oxymoron when it is defined by federal anti-Indian law as “limited sovereignty” or as sovereignty that the United States has not yet extinguished. Drawing on definitions of sovereignty from Jean Bodin and Sterling Edmonds, they explain that sovereignty means a claim of supreme and unlimited authority. If Native nations are said to be sovereign only to the extent that the United States permits, then the phrase no longer describes free and independent existence. It describes domination.


    The conversation turns to Felix Cohen’s Handbook of Federal Indian Law, often treated as the “Bible” of federal Indian law, and examines how its framework converts original Native independence into a legal system of U.S. supremacy. Steve and Peter also discuss treaty rights, land claims, religious freedom, consultation, “federal lands,” and the danger of accepting the opponent’s premise.


    The episode concludes with a discussion of the Pe’ Sla / Black Hills drilling controversy and how legal and environmental advocacy can unintentionally reproduce the very domination framework it seeks to resist.


    Resources mentioned:

    Felix Cohen, Handbook of Federal Indian Law

    Pe’ Sla drilling analysis

    Complaint filed in the Pe’ Sla case



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    Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/dominationchronicles/exclusive-content
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    1 hr and 7 mins
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