Just stop! She’s a fraud.
No. As you're aware she claimed that her family's oral history indicated distant Native American ancestry. We've long known she wasn't engaging in fraud when she said that, since various members of her family, including right-wing ones, have confirmed that her family's oral history did, in fact, indicate that. And now we know that oral history was correct -- that she does, in fact, have distant Native American ancestry.
How distant that ancestry is remains at issue -- the expert's report suggests it could be as close as six generations back (consistent with what she said of the oral history), or as far as ten generations back (though that would require multiple ancestors at that level to be Native Americans, to account for the portion of her DNA that has the Native American markers). She has about ten times the Native American markers as an average white person from Utah and twelve times as much as an average white person from England.
What the Moonie Cult's house paper (the Washington Times) and other right-wing rags rely on, to deceive the kind of people stupid enough to get their news from such sources, is a certain innumeracy from their readership. For example, the notion that she has about the same Native American DNA component as the average white person is simply false, if you look at the report itself. It's a politically calculated misinterpretation of the data -- basically, it assumes not only that her Native American DNA came from ten generations ago (the earliest of the range the report allowed), but also that it came from just one ancestor in that tenth generation (a possibility the report ruled out). In fact, either it came from later (as late as six generations ago), or it came from multiple ancestors at an earlier generation (e.g., several tenth-generation ancestors). Again, her total Native American DNA signature is about ten to twelve times the average for white people (depending on whether you compare against white people from Utah or from England).
The government form has been posted at least 3 times.
What government form? Could you link to it?
There is no DNA test for “Cherokee”.
Exactly, so there's no way to establish which Native American tribe or tribes her ancestors were from, at least at this point. However, in light of her family's oral history (which wound up being right about having Native American ancestry) and the geographic history of the family, Cherokee is a strong guess.
The great big point is she’s of a white European decent
She's a white person of both European and Native American descent, who correctly claimed she had distant Native American ancestors. For some reason, this has caused a real crying jag among the wingnuts.