Thursday, October 7, 2021

Weasaw, a Shoshone Native American man. - Rose & Hopkins - 1899

 


3 comments:

  1. We expect his descendants to start paying reparations to blacks brought into his country by people that took away his country from him.

    (Can your brain handle this? I am having a hard time, but it is the truth).

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  2. Looks almost exactly like my biological father. I never met him, just saw one photo. He was from Chihuahua, Mexico. Well, that's the rumor anyway.

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  3. It is WRONG to continue referring to American Indians as "Native American", as it implies that the rest of us who are native Americans do not belong here in our own Country.

    The misnomer, "Native American", just as all so-called "politically correct" corruption of our English language, is a Communist Party invention intended to distort our history and foment ethnic dissatisfaction and hostility.

    Scientists, the Book of Mormon, and even the oral traditions of the American Indians acknowledge that ancestors of American Indians migrated to this continent from elsewhere.

    We members of The Church of JESUS CHRIST of Latter-day Saints recognize that the Garden of Eden was located in what is now the United States of America, prior to the continents being divided, which would mean that all races of mankind has its origins in America.

    After the continents were divided and after the great deluge, refugees from the the Tower of Babel sailed to America from the Old World, as documented in the Book of Mormon.

    Also, Viking and Irish monks both established colonies and left artifacts in America (i.e., tomorrow, Saturday 09 October 2021, is "LEIF ERIKSON DAY", commemorating the Viking discovery of America in 1000 A.D.!), although those colonies did not survive.

    A disabled war veteran, I was born and raised in the United States of America, and my European ancestors were here long before there was a United States of America.

    Ironically, my father was Cherokee, but I am not, for I was born without any American Indian blood in my veins, and so, Cherokee law does not recognize my adoption.

    But, I am indeed, a "native American"!

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