Quick Note: Why that I am so adamant about the use of the word "Indian". I seen, part of, (could not watch as the continued use if the word "Indian") a TV show last nite in which people were being killed and the native people were suspects. You see, the "red-necks" quoted on how them thare injines were merciful killers. Well, in fact, it was the white man who started the killing as when they moved out west, the "settles claimed the land on which the natives had lived for thousands of years . But when the "heathen red-skinned devils' interceded, they were simply shot and scalped , in order to collect the $5 bounty like any varmint. The "Indians" would have one if they had modern warfare like th Winchester,"The Gun that won the West" just like the "South" had lost, in the Civil War.
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You know, when I was young,little boy, being a "red- blooded" boy, I played "Cowboy and Indians". Even though we did not have a TV., I had seen many programs and some movies about the "west". So, like most people, I was brainwashed about them dirty Injunes. Then a few years later, I seen a movie in which the "Indians were lamenting their dead. "Wait a minute, you mean to tell me that these people are people"? From that point on my train of thought changed as I became aware of the truth. By the way, do you really think that we, (usn's), would have dropped an Atomic bomb, (oh oh, now the CIA will pick on the key word "bomb") on the white "Christians" in Europe?
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I just seen an cartoon in which the natives (Indians) were watching the ships form Espana approaching and one said "see I told you that we should have built a fence"!
You see, we just marched in and took over the/ their land. Just think, what if someone was to come to your home and said "get out, this is MY home"! (By the way, the
ships had to anchor out as their draft would not allow the ship to dock. The solderers "Marines", s (cops) as they were called as they debarked via the water. The people
had never seen a horse before and whith the shinning armor, the people thought that they must be Gods. ( The horse is not indigenous to this continent) Well the rest is
history. When the people thought to protest the taking over of their land, the "good god fearing Christens" killed the natives just like they did vidth wolfs or as we do now
ved ants, rats, birds and all kinds of life, med poison, (the irony is that we are only killing ourselves), that are harmless, (ants). So we killed the local people like rats and
stole their land.
Of course, you have all heard the story of how the dumb Italian thought that he had landed in India, and that the people were friendly, (they actual helped the "Foreigners")!
You know, the reason that I keep harping on this is that we have to stop killing people, in the middle east, like the Deauth cops did in Eastern Europe, (Holocaust), under the excuses that they believe in a different "god"!
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My doctor is an Indian, no, not an "American" Indian, notwithstanding that the word "America" is from Europe. Today, as I was waiting in the waiting room, a man came into the room whith a loose turban. It reminded me of one of my crazy buddies who always used to say "Rag heads", so one day I asked him what he meant. Then I was thinking of South Africa that was taken over by the Europeans. I'm surprised that they did not build a fence to keep the native people out. However, the native people finally took back their country. (Ever hear of the "Rabbit Fence" in Australia?)[Book/movie]. Israel built a fence to keep out the native people of that country. Now we (U.S.'NS) are building a fence to keep out the people whose land was taken from them by the greedy European "Christens".
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Subject: "Indians"
(#)There a plaque in front of the Stockton Ca. Town hall, which reads, "in 1844, this is the first public building built by "Joe" who was murdered by "Indians".
So. Being as how no one understands my objections, I decided to copy a few documents to enlighten the ignorant,arrogant and egotism of local (city), county,state and federal governments. (Sorry about multiple letters as I forgot how to make a file.) More to follow. Woody
Alspaugh www.hope05.org. ( Of course this includes the BIG money controlled"news media")!
This is an except for the "Declaration of Independence"
1.He has excited domestic insurrection among us, and has endeavored to bring on
the inhabitants of our frontiers the merciless Indian savages, whose known rule of warfare is an undistinguished destruction of all ages, sexes, and conditions.
Spanish California
Illustration II : Isle of Cuba [Cortez Expedition]. Engraving. From Histoire de la Conquete du Mexique by Anotonio de Solis y Rivadeneyra, 1691. LC-USZ62-3011. #6595.California's contact with Europeans began in the mid 1530s when Cortez's men ventured to Baja
California. Not until 1542 did Spaniards sail north to Alta California, and Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo's expedition of that year made landings as far north as modern Santa Barbara.
Still, more than two hundred years passed before Spain made any concerted effort to colonize the coastal regions Cabrillo claimed for the crown. Coastal winds and currents made the voyage north difficult, and Spanish captains failed to find safe harbors for their crafts. Baja
California became the northwest limit of Spanish colonization, and even there, efforts to settle the area and bring native tribes to Christianity and European ways were halfhearted at best. Not until the Seven Years War (1756-1763) realigned European alliances and their
colonial empires did Spain seriously attempt to assert control of Alta California.
This was to be done through a combination of military forts (presidios) and mission churches overseen by Franciscan fathers led by Junípero Serra. In 1769, the first parties set north from Baja California, and the line of Spanish settlement along the coast was inaugurated
when soldiers and priests established a presidio and mission church at San Diego. By the end of the Spanish colonial period, Alta California had three more presidios (at Monterey, San Francisco, and Santa Barbara) and no fewer than twenty-one missions. In addition to the
missions, where the Franciscans ministered to local converts, and the military presidios, small towns or pueblos sprang up. The earliest of these were associated with the missions and presidios, but in 1777 an independent civil pueblo was created at San Jose, and others
followed. The pueblos tried to attract settlers with land grants and other inducements and were governed by an alcalde (a combination of a judge and a mayor) assisted by a council called the ayuntamiento.
The Spaniards, of course, were hardly the first to discover this land of wonder and extremes. The earliest Californians were adventurous Asians who made their way across the Bering Straits to Alaska thousands of years ago when a warmer climate and a now-vanished land
bridge made such travel easier. These men and women and their descendants settled North and South America, spreading out to form the various nations and tribes whom the first European visitors to this hemisphere dubbed "Indians." The mountain ranges of the Pacific
Coast isolated these early settlers from the cultures that developed in neighboring Mexico and the western United States. Thus, the early population of California bore little physical resemblance to the Native Americans of the Great Plains and apparently shared no ties of
language or culture with these nations. California's rugged topography, marked by mountain ranges and deserts, made it difficult for her indigenous groups to travel great distances, and the region's native peoples were even isolated from each other, tending to live in large
family groups or clans with little political structure, unlike the larger tribes and nations to the east. As European settlement came late to California, her natives were also denied access to the newcomers' horses, whose runaways fathered the wild herds that gave Great Plains
tribes new mobility as early as the sixteenth century. Thus divided and isolated, the original Californians were a diverse population, separated by language into as many as 135 distinct dialects. Tribes included the Karok, Maidu, Cahuilleno, Mojave, Yokuts, Pomo, Paiute, and
Modoc. On the other hand, the mountains that divided the groups made extensive warfare impractical, and the California tribes and clans enjoyed a comparatively peaceful life.
The region's lack of rain during the growing season meant that agriculture was not a practical means of livelihood for early Californians, but the gentle climate and rich soil enabled these groups to live by skillfully harvesting and processing wild nuts and berries and by
capturing the fish that crowded the streams. The acorn, leached of toxic acids and turned into meal, was a staple of the diet of most California native peoples. Indeed, the first English-speaking Europeans to encounter California Native Americans were so struck by their focus
on gathering nuts from the ground and unearthing nutritious roots that they nicknamed them "Diggers," and "Digger Indian" became a vague nickname for many of the groups.
An ample food supply, temperate climate, and absence of wars contributed to a large, healthy population. It has been estimated that when Europeans first came to California, the native population was probably close to 300,000--13 percent of the indigenous peoples in North
America.
Human occupation of California has increasingly altered the state's natural resources since the first human occupation of the land 11,000-12,000 years ago (Eargle 1986). The number of Native Americans at the time of European or European-American contact is estimated
at 300,000. Today the human population of the nation's most populous state is nearing 32 million and is likely to continue increasing.Before European contact, more than 100 Native American tribes inhabited California (Rawls 1984). They modified local landscapes by
burning vegetation and by hunting and gathering. Tribes in the northwest part of the state were culturally similar to those of the Pacific Northwest. The northeast part of the state was thinly populated, and life there was difficult because of the harsh climate. Peoples of the
Central Valley lived a relatively sedentary, peaceful life. Their staple food was meal made from acorns of the valley oaks. Southern California was the most populous part of the state, especially along the coast, where people survived primarily on marine resources.Although
the first Spanish explorers reached California in 1542, and Sir Francis Drake landed near San Francisco Bay in 1579, European colonization did not begin until the Spanish Franciscan missionaries arrived in 1769 (Rawls 1984). Over the next few decades, the Franciscans
built 21 missions along the coast from San Diego to San Francisco. These missions served religious and secular purposes: to protect Spanish interests in the area, as well as to convert the natives to Christianity and make them "useful" citizens of the Spanish empire. Native
Americans were relocated near the missions and forced to work. Nearly two-thirds of the native population died as the result of introduced diseases (Rawls 1984).
Spanish California
Illustration II : Isle of Cuba [Cortez Expedition]. Engraving. From Histoire de la Conquete du Mexique by Anotonio de Solis y Rivadeneyra, 1691. LC-USZ62-3011. #6595.California's contact with Europeans began in the mid 1530s when Cortez's men ventured to Baja
California. Not until 1542 did Spaniards sail north to Alta California, and Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo's expedition of that year made landings as far north as modern Santa Barbara.
Still, more than two hundred years passed before Spain made any concerted effort to colonize the coastal regions Cabrillo claimed for the crown. Coastal winds and currents made the voyage north difficult, and Spanish captains failed to find safe harbors for their crafts. Baja
California became the northwest limit of Spanish colonization, and even there, efforts to settle the area and bring native tribes to Christianity and European ways were halfhearted at best. Not until the Seven Years War (1756-1763) realigned European alliances and their
colonial empires did Spain seriously attempt to assert control of Alta California.
This was to be done through a combination of military forts (presidios) and mission churches overseen by Franciscan fathers led by Jun�pero Serra. In 1769, the first parties set north from Baja California, and the line of Spanish settlement along the coast was inaugurated
when soldiers and priests established a presidio and mission church at San Diego. By the end of the Spanish colonial period, Alta California had three more presidios (at Monterey, San Francisco, and Santa Barbara) and no fewer than twenty-one missions. In addition to the
missions, where the Franciscans ministered to local converts, and the military presidios, small towns or pueblos sprang up. The earliest of these were associated with the missions and presidios, but in 1777 an independent civil pueblo was created at San Jose, and others
followed. The pueblos tried to attract settlers with land grants and other inducements and were governed by an alcalde (a combination of a judge and a mayor) assisted by a council called the ayuntamiento.
He has excited domestic insurrection among us, and has endeavored to bring on
the inhabitants of our frontiers the merciless Indian savages, whose known rule of warfare is an undistinguished destruction of all ages, sexes, and conditions.
Note
Not to mention the Bounty placed on the heads of these "heathen savages" by the GOOD God fearing "christens", by proving to have killed/murdered these redskined devials. (scalping)
These native people were only trying to protect THEIR land.
See/read "Winchester, the gun that won the West", by Williamson.
In the Stockton’s “record” on August 19 there was a “SanJoaquin Valley Brief”. It sates that some 50 farm workers became sick because of
“fertilizer” being sprayed in a near by field. In fact it was a herberside, Sulfur, which helps to stop mildew on the grapes. Daniel Betancur, a
county environment health investigator, stated that Sulfuric Acid is bad. No shit. However, unless the Sulfur was modified into an acid via the sun,
it was just plain Sulfur. Okay, so what you say? Well in the first place, the article is so UNIMPOTANT, that it didn’t even make the “Records”
poorly written “web site”. Besides this, who do you think were these “farmworkers”, people from Espana (Hispanic) or maybe they were from Rome
(Latinos). No I don’t think so. In all probability, there were mostly form Mexico and or Native Americans (Indians) or both who for thousands of
years have lived in what is now known as Mexico AND Kalifornia. By the way, I just love all the “political” (ash kissing) names generated first by the
unking British and later by the bloody U.S. news media. But the main thing is who gives a unk about farm workers regardless of their place of
origin! I DO! WOODY, The Great.
"Workers"
Indians" (Nov.,06)
Not withstanding my objection/fight against the use of the word "Indians", for this story I must use the term. Since the recent death of one of
my favorite movie actor('s?), I'm compelled to tell this story. There was an old ugly Indian that I had met in mikes. "Mikes" was my favorite
bar. This guy was so ugly that he would scare anyone he (so) chose. When I found out that he was one of the nicest men that I had ever met, I
got the idea, while drinking, to have some fun. Now you must understand that Stockton is a mud town, one of the "armpits of the world, filled
whith a lot of "okies" and Mexicans, but it was the "okie" bars that were the worse.
The were places such as the 1-11 club and "Arts" that if there weren't at least two fights a nite, it would be unusual. Whith "okies, they would
fight each other, brothers, sister's, cousins, uncles, mothers and sons, fathers etc. So I said "hey, want to have some fun?' "Okay" he says.
So we went to the toughest,
meanest "okie" bars. He would go in first and get in someone's "face". I would wait outside for a few minutes, the go in and sit away from him
and order a beer. When he was "terrorising", (the real meaning of the now new media's word), I would get up and pretend to give him a
"karate" chop and drag him out side. We
would laugh our asses off and then go to another place and repeat. When we ran out of places, I took him home. He lived way out in the
country,(I forgot where)
We had a few more beers in his old unpainted wood three story farmhouse and tossed the empty cans into a pile in the corner of the kitchen. I
Don't know what ever happened to him and whether he had indeed owned all the property. [No offence to any of my friends, this is just a
story!]