Aaron Huey: America's native prisoners of war
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- treewolf39
- added this
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- groups:
- Community, Current Cultural Issues, Sundancer
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- tags:
- Rape, Genocide, American Dream, American Indians, 3 more
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Butch_Campbell
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Not to long ago I got on a girls case about her constantly putting biblical quotes on Facebook. It amazed me how little she knew about the pain Christians had caused American Indians since they came to this land and deemed all Indians savages. And the more I hear people saying that Christ is the answer I sit back and wince that this is not true for everybody. Especially all the American Indian tribes.
- 1 year ago
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Butch_Campbell
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AndrewEss
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Butch_Campbell:
Try this one on her 'who crucified Jesus', the answer is of course democratic christians. The republican (Not that America is anywhere near a republic form of democracy anymore, even under pseudo republicanism, it's just a label of federalism). As far as the crucifixion goes, it was a common form of punishment those days, extremely slow and painful (reseach the method), but it was not of the Romans making, they themselves as the story is told vindicated Jesus, he was innocent of any crime. When the argument was placed back in the demokratic hands of the christians and jews, they chose mob rule to make a choice. They exonerated a real criminal and placed Jesus in his stead. That is a reflection of political democracy in American mob rule, the squeakiest and most vociferous public voices used as vehicles to create wealth and control for others.
Similarly with the Indians who had no concept of property rights, an alien technology built on killing trees to create pieces of paper that create wealth for others. (Tree killing is a indirect cost of the legal system and bureaucrats in the US and worldwide. Just food for thought.), brought to the land of those who were truly free. Imagine if you will, that you traverse land for many an aeon without hindrance and all of sudden a guy appears with others to tell you you are trespassing, they hold in front of you a piece of paper to state they have a stake or grub in some land or their land as they stated. As the story goes from my forebears, they without understanding or knowledge of what the instrument of paper meant, ignored it as a defacto statement it made no sense. To the continued irritation and vexation of the stake holder/s. Until one day as the clan was passing through on a seasonal move, they are picked off one by one in an ambush. The survivors who lived to tell the tale say this was happening all over at the time, the government was using the righteous and so called legal squatters to clean out the Indians or any natives under a clean hands doctrine. The chief of our clan had in his possession a similar document which stated a legal right of way, that dissappeared or never existed, but was claimed to be signed by the county magistrate of the time.
It is all related to one of the old charter doctrines of racial potency, the Indians who were basically just like many tribes throughout the world semi Nomadic, were required to be routed for establishment of legal property, their classification as a race was docile and impotent. It is the same classification given to the chinese, which as a result favored the Japanese as a race. Molding the events that unfolded to create the modern world as we know it.
If we even to the effort today to look at the division of land, how it is coded and its valuation. We will see that under current laws, no one person actually owns anything, it is a legal manuscript of illusion, you only have rights to rent by forfeiture and interest payments. Even if you buy it outright !
However all this can be understood in the book written by Thomas Malthus, which indirectly explains how the process works, I believe the book is called the 'nature of rents'. To create the cultural environment we also need human agents or an agency, in this case as always the legal profession. Especially having learned it's lesson of the past, have worked tirelessly to simply become the peoples spokesperson, and represented by having control of all things. Not even the the Christians have figured out that their Lord is a seeing eye of an Egyptian God, after all just pick up one of these instruments of federal scrip or credit, on it you will see quite clearly the exact words, In God we trust. Whose God ! Quite simple the counting house of mammon and those who represent it, by that simple act we forget by our actions who we are subservient to and how by deceit we are represented. By consent however it is construed we did not dissent, and so it is with politics and the ever burgeoning legislatures whose task it is to create new and innovative forms of revenue and taxation. Nothing more and nothing less.
- 1 year ago
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AndrewEss
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nanac
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America is a fraud..We have a lot to account for..How can we lecture other countries on the principles of a democracy, when our history is less than admirable....
- 1 year ago
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nanac
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AndrewEss
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In commerce the allodial rights of first natives passes with the last full blood capable of signing a continuance of accepted rights on federal territory, nowhere else ! Those unincorporated territories belong to the us states and indians may only and ever be visitors on land that was once forever free. Many have signed an agreement in the past and continue to in perpetuity even today. But those folks live in glass teepee's, Yet all that matters is those media pro voices are silenced by the very thing that makes this all futile. Empty promises and dreams.
It is the smart business people with willing US court officers be they federal or state cohorts that have subjugated not only the so called Indians, but will also bring down the same on it's current general contemporary population. In the cold light of day everything is for sale, that is the basis of American culture. Just make sure that you have a judicial official watching your back for their part of the bigger cut. Even the white mans history is reinvented for the sake of posterity. We live in the age of serpent tongues and masses of litigious toilet paper, but that litigation in the name of a greater business now owns fully one third of all US territory. It owns more than sixty percent of US families, and controls all of welfare. With the current economic climate we should begin to understand that nothing in US territory is actually owned by anyone, it is all administered. You can only rent your space and be productive, nothing more and nothing less. Whether you live in solid gold houses or in one of the poorer downtown outhouses they call efficiencies. it is a far cry from the promised land that is only a constitutional theory. Even for whitey, the sad thing of course is they think the franchise casino's are not owned by a south korean nationwide. That the nations most profitable transit roads are not owned by the spanish and the italians. The food industry likewise franchised, as is the deluded consumer. But of all things one thing to remember is nothing like this can happen in America, the media states so, in all of it's revisionist transmissions.
- 1 year ago
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AndrewEss
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galwayman
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This countries conduct toward the Native Americans is beyond doubt plain evil in act and deed!
- 1 year ago
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galwayman
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treewolf39
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galwayman:
No truer words were ever written! +^'d
- 1 year ago
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treewolf39
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MotherForTruth
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Destruction of Natives always saddens me. There must be something we can do.
- 1 year ago
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MotherForTruth
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DogBoy
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Those same politics are alive an well today perhaps somewhat evolved.
- 1 year ago
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DogBoy
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jiojkpopok [removed]
- This comment has been hidden for review.
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jiojkpopok [removed]
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idealist
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jiojkpopok:
your definitely part of the problem, i know you will laugh at this comment if you ever visit this page again
- 1 year ago
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idealist
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idealist
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the more you know........... damn that depressed me greatly.
- 1 year ago
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idealist
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silentlyslithering67
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Those are my people he's talking about. I'm from Batesland, the town where they showed the bison in someone's backyard. We were wronged, but it's difficult to 'give back the Black Hills' at this point. There are good people who live here. How could we relocate thousands of innocent families? It's also difficult to come up with some sort of settlement price. Think of all the resources that were exploited since the Laramie treaties. Gold, timber, coal, livestock, water, tourism....Billions?
- 1 year ago
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silentlyslithering67
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AJILIVIZION
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I saw this weeks ago. Aaron Huey's lecture saddens me. It hurts to know that as I type this in my comfortable living situation, there are natives of this land suffering out there right now. I would like to point out how the mentality towards the natives transcends American psyche towards supporting occupations all across the globe. This explains the general acceptance of Zionists that took over land belonging to Palestinians. People will brush it off as if Palestinians simply lost the battle for land against "Jews"---just like the natives lost the battle for these lands against "Americans". This is why I seek a world after American imperialism.
- 1 year ago
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AJILIVIZION
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treewolf39
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AJILIVIZION:
I saw this weeks ago as well. I was so sickened by it that I could not even post it. BUT after the Brazilian Dam post and some of the comments I thought maybe someone could learn something about the real poor in the greatest nation on earth. (Sarcasm)
- 1 year ago
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treewolf39
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JanforGore
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Our perpetual disgrace as a nation.
- 1 year ago
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JanforGore
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Progresshiv
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My friend was arguing with his mother (a woman in her late 70s), telling her we had wronged the native Americans. She replied, "But we won!"
- 1 year ago
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Progresshiv
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freecrack
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maybe in another 200 yrs we can start to do the right thing?
- 1 year ago
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freecrack
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treewolf39
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freecrack:
No shit. We wouldn't want to start to soon.
- 1 year ago
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treewolf39