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Colorado and the Holocaust
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05-01-2008 9:42 PM
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Skivvy Stacker


- Joined on 07-13-2004
- Hastings, Minnesota USA
- Posts 5,099
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Re: Colorado and the Holocaust
Well gee, haven't you read your history books? We loaded the Indians onto trains and took them to the rez to gas them. We had them in labor camps, and extermination camps. Our forebears wore uniforms with crooked crosses on them. They would raid a teepee late at night and remove all the Indians inside. The one's we didn't gas we worked to death in the labor camps, or shot down with machine guns. And even though NONE of my ancestors took part in this I am still to blame because before I was born I didn't warn them not to do it. I am so ashamed.
There is no "I" in "team", but there are four of them in "platitude-quoting idiot."
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fseals


- Joined on 10-24-2002
- Pecos, TEXAS USA
- Posts 1,815
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Re: Colorado and the Holocaust
Political correctness run amuck. "The resolution says Europeans intentionally caused many American Indian
deaths and that early American settlers often treated Indians with
"cruelty and inhumanity." " Strange, there is no mention of cruelty and inhumanity perpetrated against early settlers, not to mention other Indian Nations. I think it ironic that a Comanche state representative introduced the legislation, since the Comanche were notorious warriors who raised hell not only with Texas settlers, but with other Indians and the Mexicans. (I live on the western edge of the Comanche Trail).
Frank
“There ain’t no ticks like poly-ticks. Bloodsuckers all.” —Davy Crockett
“A fool and his money are soon elected.” —Will Rogers
"A free people ought not only be armed and disciplined, but they should have sufficient arms and ammunition to maintain a status of independence from any who might attempt to abuse them, which would include their own government." - George Washington
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j


- Joined on 04-12-2004
- , Ga USA
- Posts 854
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Re: Colorado and the Holocaust
ttp://www.dickshovel.com/ComancheTwo.html
The bended knee is not a tradition of our Corps." (General Alexander A. Vandergrift, USMC, to the Senate Naval Affairs Committee, 5 May 1946.)If we don’t believe in freedom of expression for people we despise, we don’t believe in it at all.
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cathal57


- Joined on 03-19-2003
- Elgin Ok
- Posts 1,433
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Re: Colorado and the Holocaust
EVERY MAN IS BORN TO BE FREE, BUT MOST SELL THEIR LIBERTY CHEAP, FOR THOSE WHO DON'T, THE EAGLE IS THEIR SYMBOL
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slugdog


- Joined on 06-08-2003
- Jeff Davis' Clanton, Alabama
- Posts 1,931
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Re: Colorado and the Holocaust

There is no comparison between the natural movement of people across the world and Genocide. Had the "native americans", {who wiped out the people who were living here before they got here}, reacted different to settlers moving into their area, a lot of what took place would not have. That's totally different than a people who plan before hand to totally wipe out a group of people for ideological reasons. The Colorado politicians should leave that peace pipe alone before they go into session.
"Indeed I tremble for my country when I reflect that God is just". --Thomas Jefferson
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Cannonball


- Joined on 10-25-2002
- Murfreesboro, TN USA
- Posts 770
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Re: Colorado and the Holocaust
Just more "Hate America First"!
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j


- Joined on 04-12-2004
- , Ga USA
- Posts 854
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Re: Colorado and the Holocaust
Do you truly believe that had the Native Americans had the ability that they would not have wiped out every person who was not "Indian", and then continued to wipe out any tribe not their own?
The bended knee is not a tradition of our Corps." (General Alexander A. Vandergrift, USMC, to the Senate Naval Affairs Committee, 5 May 1946.)If we don’t believe in freedom of expression for people we despise, we don’t believe in it at all.
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Dosrios


- Joined on 06-11-2006
- San Antonio,
- Posts 1,680
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Re: Colorado and the Holocaust
Paco, an interesting aside to this very interesting thread (Dickshovel ??) is the historic marker on the side of the highway (can't remember the number) between Bandera and Kerrville. It's at a pass through high hills, named "Bandera Pass," and according to the inscription, Bandera got its name from a treaty in the early 1700s between local Spanish military to the South and the Comanches to the North in that part of Texas, establishing the pass, marked with a flag ("bandera"), as the boundary between the two groups.
Alex Ole grunt from Lavaca County, Texas 
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Big Al


- Joined on 09-17-2006
- Florida
- Posts 1,911
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Re: Colorado and the Holocaust
slugdog:

There is no comparison between the natural movement of people across the world and Genocide.
Sluggy, the PC Police always miss the point. Nomadic tribes--and that includes our ancestors in Europe--have been displacing other tribes ever since we learned to walk on two feet. You run out of game in your territory, you move onto somebody else's territory and if they don't like it you fight them. The loser moves off and displaces somebody else. The same thing happened in this country. Indians displaced other Indians...alot of times wiping them out. Our ancestors came in and displaced them. We will be displaced someday. Many think it is already happening.
___________________________________ The Lord Giveth, The M-60 Taketh Away "War means fightin...and fightin means killin." -- Nathan Bedford Forrest "Some people just need killin'...Maybe you're one of 'em." --- John Wayne
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Big Al


- Joined on 09-17-2006
- Florida
- Posts 1,911
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Re: Colorado and the Holocaust
fseals:
Strange, there is no mention of cruelty and inhumanity perpetrated against early settlers, not to mention other Indian Nations. I think it ironic that a Comanche state representative introduced the legislation, since the Comanche were notorious warriors who raised hell not only with Texas settlers, but with other Indians and the Mexicans. (I live on the western edge of the Comanche Trail).
Amen, Frank. There are plenty of documented accounts of Indian's mutilating and torturing not only whites--but people of other tribes. Of warfare and displacement between tribes. And of course we have the Aztecs...they were real sweethearts.
No, white Europeans caused all the freakin problems. I wonder--just wonder--if the Japanese, say, had developed navigation and shipbuilding before the Europeans, and began exploration, how they would have treated our Native Americans?
The crazy thing about this is that Indians prided themselves on being warriors. The fierce fighters among them--and there were many--I don't think they'd want to be labled as weak innocent victims...catagorizing Native Americans this way detracts from their heritage and pride as skilled fighting men. By rushing out to "protect" them through all this legislation, the PC crowd is actually degrading them.
___________________________________ The Lord Giveth, The M-60 Taketh Away "War means fightin...and fightin means killin." -- Nathan Bedford Forrest "Some people just need killin'...Maybe you're one of 'em." --- John Wayne
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Dosrios


- Joined on 06-11-2006
- San Antonio,
- Posts 1,680
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Re: Colorado and the Holocaust
Al, your thought about the Japanese reminded me of a really interesting book, Guns, Germs And Steel , which posed the topic question, "Why didn't the Incan Atahualpa capture Charles IV of Spain?"
Why did European and Asian cultures, which had no head start on being human beings, become so far advanced over other distant cultures? It's a textbook, sort of, but interesting in limited doses. Basically, the author posits that since the European and Asian landmasses were contiguous, and generally on the same latitudes, facilitating travel and resulting in commerce, idea-trading, and exchanges of cultural and other ideas, the respective civilizations advanced faster than isolated ones which had to depend more on independent invention of technology.
Also, since keeping livestock was widespread, for the same reasons, mutated germs jumped to our early ancestors, killling a bunch, but inoculating the survivors. New World natives, among others, didn't have that advantage.
Alex Ole grunt from Lavaca County, Texas 
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Ajax_Girl


- Joined on 07-01-2003
- Columbia, Maryland USA
- Posts 4,869
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Re: Colorado and the Holocaust
While I don't necessarily "like" all the things the American Indians were put through, I think it is a stretch to compare it to hard, calculated genocide.
 "Said preacher maybe you didn`t see me throw an extra twenty in the plate, there`s one for everything I did last night and one to get me through today" The kids: Ike & Maike  
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fseals


- Joined on 10-24-2002
- Pecos, TEXAS USA
- Posts 1,815
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Re: Colorado and the Holocaust
Alex, I can't remember if it is Hwy 16 or 173 that goes over Bandera Pass, but I remember seeing the historical marker many moons ago (late 70's). I was very impressed by Bandera Pass, until I drove across the mountain between Leakey and Vanderpool.
Frank
“There ain’t no ticks like poly-ticks. Bloodsuckers all.” —Davy Crockett
“A fool and his money are soon elected.” —Will Rogers
"A free people ought not only be armed and disciplined, but they should have sufficient arms and ammunition to maintain a status of independence from any who might attempt to abuse them, which would include their own government." - George Washington
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Dosrios


- Joined on 06-11-2006
- San Antonio,
- Posts 1,680
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Re: Colorado and the Holocaust
My beautiful old Aunt Betty from Eagle Pass used to call that stretch "the Devil's Backbone." I've driven that road in a fog, and don't think I ever went over 10 mph.
Alex Ole grunt from Lavaca County, Texas 
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Skivvy Stacker


- Joined on 07-13-2004
- Hastings, Minnesota USA
- Posts 5,099
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Re: Colorado and the Holocaust
Dosrios:Al, your thought about the Japanese reminded me of a really interesting book, Guns, Germs And Steel , which posed the topic question, "Why didn't the Incan Atahualpa capture Charles IV of Spain?"
Why did European and Asian cultures, which had no head start on being human beings, become so far advanced over other distant cultures? It's a textbook, sort of, but interesting in limited doses. Basically, the author posits that since the European and Asian landmasses were contiguous, and generally on the same latitudes, facilitating travel and resulting in commerce, idea-trading, and exchanges of cultural and other ideas, the respective civilizations advanced faster than isolated ones which had to depend more on independent invention of technology.
Also, since keeping livestock was widespread, for the same reasons, mutated germs jumped to our early ancestors, killling a bunch, but inoculating the survivors. New World natives, among others, didn't have that advantage.
If I may put on my Anthropologists Pith Helmet for a moment I'd like to posit something as well. Suppose the Europeans, Japanese, or Space Aliens had NOT come to the North American continent? I feel that it may have taken some time, but ultimately the Indians here could have developed more advanced technology and ultimately would now be the ones building the roads, and daming the rivers and generally raising hell with the environment. The reason we do these things now is because we don't like living in drafty, dark, bear infested caves. I can't imagine the Indians liked living in teepees all that much either, and would have jumped at a chance to live in a split level rambler.
There is no "I" in "team", but there are four of them in "platitude-quoting idiot."
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