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Judi Lynn

(160,415 posts)
Wed Nov 26, 2014, 06:01 PM Nov 2014

Celebrating the Genocide of Native Americans

November 26, 2014
Thanksgiving

Celebrating the Genocide of Native Americans

by GILBERT MERCIER


The sad reality about the United States of America is that in a matter of a few hundreds years it managed to rewrite its own history into a mythological fantasy. The concepts of liberty, freedom and free enterprise in the “land of the free, home of the brave” are a mere spin. The US was founded and became prosperous based on two original sins: firstly, on the mass murder of Native Americans and theft of their land by European colonialists; secondly, on slavery. This grim reality is far removed from the fairytale version of a nation that views itself in its collective consciousness as a virtuous universal agent for good and progress. The most recent version of this mythology was expressed by Ronald Reagan when he said that “America is a shining city upon a hill whose beacon light guides freedom-loving people everywhere.”

In rewriting its own history about Thanksgiving, white America tells a Disney-like fairytale about the English pilgrims and their struggle to survive in a new and harsh environment. The pilgrims found help from the friendly and extremely generous Native-American tribe, the Wampanoag Indians, in 1621. Unfortunately for Native Americans, the European settlers’ gratitude was short-lived. By 1637, Massachusetts governor John Winthrop ordered the massacre of thousands of Pequot Indian men, women and children. This event marked the start of a Native-American genocide that would take slightly more than 200 years to complete, and of course to achieve its ultimate goal, which was to take the land from Native Americans and systematically plunder their resources. The genocide begun in 1637 marks the beginning of the conquest of the entire continent until most Native Americans were exterminated, a few were assimilated into white society, and the rest were put in reservations to dwindle and die.

When Christopher Columbus “discovered” the Americas in 1492, on his quest for gold and silver, the Native population, which he erroneously called Indians, numbered an estimated 15 million who lived north of current day Mexico. It was, by all considerations, a thriving civilization. Three hundred and fifty years later, the Native American population north of Mexico would be reduced to less than a million. This genocide was brought upon the Natives by systematic mass murder and also by disease, notably smallpox, spread by the European colonists.

Columbus and his successors proto-capitalist propensity for greed was foreign to Native Americans. They viewed the land as tribal collective ownership, not as a property that could be owned by individuals. “Columbus and his successors were not coming to an empty wilderness, but into a world which, in some places, was as densely populated as Europe, and where the culture was complex, where human relations were more egalitarian than in Europe, and where the relations between men, women, children and nature were more beautifully worked out than perhaps in any other places in the world.” wrote Howard Zinn in his masterful A People’s History of the United States.

More:
http://www.counterpunch.org/2014/11/26/celebrating-the-genocide-of-native-americans/

21 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Celebrating the Genocide of Native Americans (Original Post) Judi Lynn Nov 2014 OP
or not. that christian conquest stuff has been abandoned by many people now viewing thanksgiving as msongs Nov 2014 #1
all non native American should live on reservations NoJusticeNoPeace Nov 2014 #2
Oh bullshit. GGJohn Nov 2014 #7
Native Americans stole the land from themselves? NoJusticeNoPeace Nov 2014 #8
Most americans living today had nothing to do with this. GGJohn Nov 2014 #9
The land belongs to the Native Americans, all of it NoJusticeNoPeace Nov 2014 #10
Well then, I guess that includes me and most others, GGJohn Nov 2014 #11
I have a personal rule about talking to people that are likely to never change their minds NoJusticeNoPeace Nov 2014 #12
I choose not to also, but your suggestion that all non native americans be forced to live GGJohn Nov 2014 #13
+++, yes, that is why I also refuse to 'celebrate' thanksgiving. nt ellenrr Nov 2014 #14
I Assume... Sparhawk60 Nov 2014 #19
No, I have not, neither have I reimbursed African Americans or Japanese Americans NoJusticeNoPeace Nov 2014 #21
Ownership is Sweeney Nov 2014 #16
I am in full agreement with the article... malthaussen Nov 2014 #3
We Sweeney Nov 2014 #17
at what point do we draw a line .... Sparhawk60 Nov 2014 #20
thankstaking unionthug777 Nov 2014 #4
, blkmusclmachine Nov 2014 #5
thanks. I always share these 2 articles by Robert Jensen ellenrr Nov 2014 #6
So glad to have read this information. Thank you. n/t Judi Lynn Nov 2014 #15
My Beaver hat Sweeney Nov 2014 #18

msongs

(67,336 posts)
1. or not. that christian conquest stuff has been abandoned by many people now viewing thanksgiving as
Wed Nov 26, 2014, 06:08 PM
Nov 2014

just another chance to hang out with family and friends in appreciation of the good parts of their lives

GGJohn

(9,951 posts)
7. Oh bullshit.
Thu Nov 27, 2014, 11:41 AM
Nov 2014

Last edited Thu Nov 27, 2014, 01:28 PM - Edit history (1)

Most of non native americans had nothing to do with this.
BTW, I am a native american, I was born in this country which makes me a native american.

GGJohn

(9,951 posts)
11. Well then, I guess that includes me and most others,
Thu Nov 27, 2014, 01:30 PM
Nov 2014

I was born in america, therefore that makes me a native american.

NoJusticeNoPeace

(5,018 posts)
12. I have a personal rule about talking to people that are likely to never change their minds
Thu Nov 27, 2014, 01:34 PM
Nov 2014

on any subject.

It causes high blood pressure and headache.

I choose not to celebrate the murder, rape and practical annihilation of the people who rightfully own the land we all sit on...

GGJohn

(9,951 posts)
13. I choose not to also, but your suggestion that all non native americans be forced to live
Thu Nov 27, 2014, 01:36 PM
Nov 2014

on reservations is ludicrous, considering most living americans had nothing to do with the plight of the American Indian.

 

Sparhawk60

(359 posts)
19. I Assume...
Fri Nov 28, 2014, 10:21 AM
Nov 2014

So, what tribe did you turn your home over to? I assume you also turned over all your personal property as well? If you truly believe what your wrote, don't you have a moral obligation to return what ever stolen property you can?

NoJusticeNoPeace

(5,018 posts)
21. No, I have not, neither have I reimbursed African Americans or Japanese Americans
Fri Nov 28, 2014, 12:40 PM
Nov 2014

the billions I/We owe them, because I cant do it myself, it has to be a joint effort.

Denying the FACT that this nation was created by rape, murder and theft, why would anyone want to take a position that either denies that or misdirects from that fact, especially on what I thought was supposed to be a liberal board?

Next, somebody here is going to tell me what happened in Murrieta earlier this year was OK...

Sweeney

(505 posts)
16. Ownership is
Fri Nov 28, 2014, 02:04 AM
Nov 2014

only more rights in something than a disinterested party can claim. The place is still up for grabs along with the rest of the world.

malthaussen

(17,174 posts)
3. I am in full agreement with the article...
Wed Nov 26, 2014, 07:00 PM
Nov 2014

... I would point out, however, that most land around the world has been seized from the indigenus people, and genocide is as old as humanity. Let us not forget that the very first books of the Bible, upon which all three of the greatest monotheistic religions in the world are based, detail the history of just such a land-grab and genocide, and justify it as the will of god.

So my question is this: at what point do we draw a line in history, and say "after this point, genocide, slavery and land-seizure are crimes, but before this point, anything goes?" We are all descended from slaves, just as we are all descended from kings. Which geneology should we emphasize?

-- Mal

Sweeney

(505 posts)
17. We
Fri Nov 28, 2014, 02:13 AM
Nov 2014

can't say for the future, and a fast fish is only as fast as the man fast to him is strong. You can see even in the Bible a real concern for the legal justification of theft. Abraham is shown bargaining for the Grave of Sarah. and the seller very aware that it would give the buyer rights in that land that were expanded in time to be the state of Israel. If the seller knew what he was selling he might better have cut his own throat.
Sweeney

 

Sparhawk60

(359 posts)
20. at what point do we draw a line ....
Fri Nov 28, 2014, 10:23 AM
Nov 2014

right after I get mine. lol Just joking , you raise a very valid point...at what point do we stop living in the past?

Sweeney

(505 posts)
18. My Beaver hat
Fri Nov 28, 2014, 02:31 AM
Nov 2014

is a prize. I can point to it and tell people that rodent killed all the Indians. We know starvation, hogs, disease, and gun powder played a part, but to have the beavers with which Hatters made a superior felt hat, the natives became the agents of their own destruction. These were stone aged people. To have cloth which they thought better than any skin, needles, thread, iron pots and pans, steel knives, fire arms, the death of the beaver, themselves, or others was thought a small matter. The number of natives killed by white is likely very small compared with the number killed by other natives for trade goods.
Many of the raids in the southwest were in search of hoop iron. The movie scenes of smoldering wagons is not that far off. The native would burn barrels and wagon wheels to recycle the hoop iron as arrow heads and knives. Even the field museum in Chicago has examples of indian arrows with metal heads obviously unaware of what a change that represents.

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