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  • Christina Fallin: Trailer On Oklahoma Governor’s Mansion Grounds Must Go

    Christina Fallin has to move the trailer she located on the grounds of the governor’s mansion in Oklahoma back in April. Her mother, Mary Fallin, is Oklahoma’s governor.

    Governor Fallin says she was simply trying to be a good mom when Christina Fallin asked if she could park a “nice trailer” there back in April. The governor assured the media the trailer cost no more than having Christina live inside the governor’s mansion with her.

    “My Oklahoma values … is to take care of your family,” Fallin said in a recent live TV interview.

    “My daughter a couple of months ago came to me and said she was in between living arrangements,” the governor added. “She does have a very nice trailer that she bought” but didn’t have a place to park it. “And so I told her you can park it in the back of this lot, not seen to the public eye, and store it there.”

    Christina Fallin is 28 years old. She is a musician, artist, and a consultant.

    No Oklahoma laws prohibit Christina Fallin’s trailer from being parked on the grounds of the governor’s mansion, however the administrative rules of the Oklahoma Capitol-Medical Center Improvement and Zoning Commission bars mobile homes from being used in the area.

    Despite it being a “nice trailer,” it looks like Christina Fallin’s trailer must go.

    It will be interesting to learn in the coming days if Governor Fallin tries to pull any strings so her daughter’s trailer can say, and if Christina Fallin winds up moving inside the governor’s mansion if and when the trailer is removed.

  • Christina Fallin: Native American Insult or Art?

    An Oklahoma news station tell us that Christina Fallin, the daughter of Oklahoma governor Mary Fallin, has recently come under fire for an Instagram picture that involves her wearing a Native American headdress. The almost-authentic looking red-and-white headdress was posted on Fallin’s band Facebook on Thursday with the caption “appropriate cultivation.”

    It has since been taken down due to the uproar, but Fallin hasn’t backed down from the picture stating that she “feels a connection to the Native American culture.” She also posted a letter on Facebook stating:

    “we feel that it would not be honest if we did not admit publicly that a woman in a headdress can be a very beautiful thing. You can keep your distance from something your whole life out of fear that you might taint it, or that it might taint you. Or you can embrace it and let it affect you. We chose to live our lives in the latter category.”

    It seems as if Fallin and her band hold ideals that may not mesh with some, and that her status as a governor’s daughter may be causing more scrutiny that it would another indie band such as this one, for instance:

    Still, No Doubt, a major pop band attempted the same thing to be shot down in earlier times. Native Americans, however, are seeming to become more active of the treatment of their culture, and are not letting it fly. The fact that many Native Americans have been misplaced in the state of Oklahoma may also add more insult to the injury. Wado, a writer for NativeAppropiations.com, states the reasoning behind the strong negative reactions:

    But here’s the thing: my tribe is not there by chance or by choice, my tribe, and the vast majority of the other Natives peoples in Oklahoma, are there by force and by trauma. In 1830, the US government and Andrew Jackson passed something called the “Indian Removal Act,” which resulted in the removal of thousands and thousands of Native peoples from their homelands in the southeast. You know where those Native peoples were forced to march? Oklahoma. Though it was referred to as “Indian Territory” then. So all that “Native American culture” you’ve been able to come in contact with? It’s thanks to violence, colonialism, and genocidal policies. It’s not an innocent cultural exchange.

    What do you think? Although musicians such as Afrika Bambaataa and others are known for wearing a Native American headdress for years with no criticism, do you feel as if the treatment of Christina Fallin is unfair?


    Image via Oklahoma News on 6