 I'm going to say this, that when you're truthful and honest with yourself, when you don't lie to yourself, then you don't lie to the Creator or God, and then you don't lie to people when you talk to them. And when you walk like this, when you're truthful and honest with yourself, people will trust you because you have to earn trust, and this is how trust comes back. But yet each individual has to make this change. Nobody could do it for you. Only you could do this because nobody could walk in your shoes but you. So it's up to this two-legged earth man, human being, to make a change. And when they put us under democracy and taxation, it's an IME system. Why in these big cities people or neighbors don't even know their neighbor's name. That's an IME system. So it's time for truth and like this, and when these red nations hear everything as we and us, you always thought of somebody else. So by being under this system that they put us under, if you're going to think of others, think of our grandmother earth, that we walk on every day, time to defend her and like this. But again, each individual has to do this. Nobody could do it for you. So it's time for truth now and like this. It's time to heal our grandmother and like this. But it's up to us to do this. And then it's time to look at each other at your heart, not the color of your skin or like that. So these kind of things I was told to remind the world when we started. So like I said, just a 253rd time, 11 of them was in Europe. We went to Europe last summer, eight of them in Norway, one in Stockholm, Sweden, Copenhagen, Denmark and London, England. So they heard it over there, part of it heard it over there. The same team, what I'm telling you here. But we're told to do this with truth, no more assumptions and like that, that this book came out in 2016, almost three years now, coming, almost three years now, coming. So some of you might have read it or like that. This is where we ask, if you have any questions pertaining to a book or the family or anything like that, now is the time to ask and like this and we'll answer. So in our culture, our language, our nation, when we say, Opila, it means the crazy horse family thanks you. So thank you this evening for listening to the family and you guys all have a safe journey home and like this, but it's time for questions. So if you have any questions, it's time to ask. Yes. Are you afraid of, because we all know the U.S. government doesn't keep the treaties, are you afraid of this court case that they might find a way? I mean, when this country declared war on the Lakota Nation under international laws, when two countries, one declared war on the other one, all treaties, agreements, anything made between those two countries become null and void in a court of law. So when they declared a war on our people, everything that the government made, these treaties and like this, are no good. So we already won our case against the Harnab Buying Company. And now it's our nation or anybody of these red nations that have been claiming my family and grandfather, now it's time to show your proof. And this is laws that this country made. And coming from a federal agency, as truth, we could say we're the most regulated people on this earth. Because we live by federal, state, tribal, county and city laws that apply to us every day. So when I said that in Oklahoma, this elder native man was sitting in the front, he raised his hand. He said, me, he said, I live by six laws. Because I also live by my old ladies' law too. So I'm more regulated than you. And like that. But in our culture, humor is medicine. And when you laugh, there's no stress. It's good medicine. But these are laws that they taught us, put us under. We live by, if we break it, you're incarcerated. So these laws apply to them also, not just us. We're not separate. Like this. So they're going to get tested. This government, yes. Your grandfather's name, Crazy Horse, came from his family. Why was he called Crazy Horse? Okay, this is what the public didn't know. The name Crazy Horse is our family name. Our family name, that's in our family. Representing the name. The grandfather had at first, he was the first Crazy Horse, 1700 to 1825. The father carried it from 1825 to 1858, he was the second Crazy Horse. What the world all knows is the warrior, 1858 to 1877, when he got assassinated. But under our traditional laws, when he got assassinated, he couldn't pass a name on. Because he just had a daughter that was three years old when she left for the other side. So when Alakota can pass his name on under traditional law, the name comes back to the parents. 1877, that's his father was here at that time, so he got his name back. So he handed it back into the family where today a grandson in our family carries the name. One of my younger brothers is Crazy Horse for the Crazy Horse family. So as truth, as long as the Crazy Horse family is here, Crazy Horse is alive and well in our family. And we're not like Europeans where you use one name and you use it for hundreds of years. Yeah, and also we don't use greats in front of our grandfathers or grandsons or like this, our grandchildren. That's European. You're either a grandfather or a grandson or a grandmother or a granddaughter like that. Yes. Can you say where the origin of the name of the Crazy Horse family? By the grandfather. He was the first to carry it. So how he got the name is what you're asking? Yes. His horse was like how he was. He was fearless. In battle, he wanted to be the first one there and like this. And his horse was the same way. But his horse was like a big dog. He was protective. Nobody could get close to him. He'll get in between him and like this. And nobody could ride him on the Ecamp. And in battle, you'll jump off a cliff. You'll jump off a cliff. And like this, his horse was just like how he was. Why he was named Crazy Horse. And that's how the name came. I mean the original. Yes. That's the original name. How he got it. So in our culture, there could be 10 brothers and sisters. They could all have a different kid name and also a different adult name. And this is what throws people off. Because we're not European. Yeah. I have a linguistics question. So I know that each tribe has a different language. So what my question is, when they had to trade, how would they communicate? Was there one national tribe's language? When just the Red Nations were here, before anybody came to this continent, our universal language was Hand Talk. Oh, okay. Okay. We all talked with our hands. We motioned. So there could be all these different dialects, but they all used this as our universal language of these Red Nations. Yeah. Yes. Yes. More than 50 years ago, when I was a boy, my family went camping out west from Ohio. And we visited Mount Rushmore, but we were all more drawn to crazy horse under construction. And you could see this is the arm. This is where the horse will be. There was a hole through just barely. And I haven't been back since. The space is there. His arm is getting more detailed. The head of the horse is starting to take shape and like that. I mean, Mount Rushmore fits on my grandfather's cheek right here. So you know how big that sculpture is. That's the correct perspective. Yes. Yes. And like that. Yeah. Yeah. That lady back there asked. Oh, thank you. Was crazy horse ever considered by the people to be a holy man? All our people were spiritual people. We're a spiritual nation. So I don't know if we're out of those bookmarker things. A spiritual nation could never be defeated. So this is what our nation of Lakota, Dakota, Nakota were all spiritual people. So that stuff like that, Hollywood, you know, where there's a menace man. There's a holy man. There's a, yeah, like this. That's not how it was just for our nation. There was a way of living life 24, 7, 365 days a year. It wasn't a religion or anything. It was a way of living life. And this is how we walked on this earth without the 70 English words. And like that, you know, so everybody was like that. Yes. Earlier about who did me, about it being originally battled. But most of us in the history know that I was a massacre. I read somewhere that the soldiers that were awarded medals, they're being taken back. That's what they're asking now. But under the United States history, they called it a battle. You know, and then like Rotten and Fetterman fights, which were battles, they called it a massacre. Because, yeah, you know, because there were soldiers. They had guns, they had sabers, they had rifles, they had artillery, and they were trained to fight. And when they lost, they called it a massacre. And like this. So a lot of corrections for our nation is coming. And like this. Yes. Huh? Do you have the books here? Yes, up here. So when we're done, and we'll sign them when we're done. And like that. So, yes. We were at the Crazy Horse Monument. Yeah. And we learned a lot. One of the things that we had heard is that not all, that there's some criticism of Native peoples to have this monument, the way it is to comment about it. That's assumption. All the books written say he's no glala. That's not what he is. They didn't know that Kozak met with our family because he was supposed to tell nobody. And then when our family was in Haiti, so 2001, now we could tell the truth of why, how that amount came to be. And like this. Yeah, so I have a shirt like that too. Crazy Horse Monument. Yes. So it sounds like this is taking a very long time. How difficult is it for you? Waiting for... I mean, my grandfather waited 124 years to tell who we are. So we have to learn how to wait, call patients. They were patient for 124 years. So we just have to, but they can't stop truth. Truth is going to come, come out no matter what. Yes. What's the stress level like in your free-goal family while you were in Haiti? I mean, we'll laugh because look what this guy's writing, what he's saying, and like this. When you know the truth, you know everything else is assumption. Let's see how wild they get with the stories and like this. So we weren't, I mean, but to able, I mean, to listen to this stuff and then to walk away. Where now, show me your proof. What you're saying, and like this. When the real family stood up and like this. So I mean, it's, yeah. And this is where, because we were told to do this with truth. That as truth, a second ago is already in the past. You can't turn time back because it already happened. And this is where what we could control is now in the future, is what we can control. So this two-layered earth man, human being, now it's time to, now and the future. Think of that and like this. Because the second ago is already in the past and like that. Oh, okay. So this is where I would say that under democracy and taxation that they put our nation. If you think you own something, land or whatever, try not paying your taxes for one year. They'll come and foreclose you and give you somebody that will pay these taxes. So as truth under democracy and taxation, you don't own nothing. As truth. Like this. But I guess we only have 15 minutes left, so I guess that was the last question. But it's time to get books and sign. And we also do sometimes, I mean, we're willing to take pictures and like this and stuff. But also this world when they talk, they sometimes ask us about DNA. So when the Smithsonian returned some hares, I was taken in 1890 from Sydney Bowl when they returned it to his grandson. They took this hair to Copenhagen, Denmark, to one of the leading DNA experts of the world. And when they did the DNA on that hair and did his grandson's DNA, it matched. That was his grandfather's hair. But this person that did the DNA, he said, I did the DNA of this world. And the Asian, the African and the Caucasians all came from Europe, their DNA. These red nations here, their DNA is unique because you can't find it anywhere in this world of where they're at today. So when I heard my grandfather say we walked with the dinosaurs, they didn't lie to me. That's how long our people have been here, and like this. But with the exception of two tribes, their DNA has some Asian DNA in it, and that were the Hopi and Apache. So they're the ones that came across the Bering Strait. And up there, there's the same DNA of the Apaches up there in Alaska and like that. But this is a leading expert, one of the leading experts of the world of doing DNA. But you do DNA when you don't know who you are. But when you know who you are, you could prove it under the federal law and like this. You don't have to show your DNA because you know who you are and they know who you are. But when they don't know that's when they do these DNAs. But I guess, so thank you very much for listening to us. Thank you for coming.