Nomad
Verified User
I'm going with "Make America wonderful again."
I like that.
I prefer Make America Weird Again.
I'm going with "Make America wonderful again."
I like that.
Yeah, that has a ring to it.I prefer Make America Weird Again.![]()
Can you spell Tecumseh?Let's pretend they wouldn't have killed them if they weren't.
Michaeltardalo.
I could take a motherfucking sledgehammer to a Tecumseh mower I used to have that gave me like.. blood blisters on my thumb n stuff.Can you spell Tecumseh?
Best English written by any goat fucking rag head I've ever heard of living in their own country.Welcome, besides having to dig through Legion's stupid troll posts, it's not that bad. Legion is currently pretending to be an Iranian extremist, so just ignore him, and you'll do fine.
FYI! Tecumseh didn't make lawn mowers !I could take a motherfucking sledgehammer to a Tecumseh mower I used to have that gave me like.. blood blisters on my thumb n stuff.
Yeah, you had to prime the carb and crank it and maybe it would go, or not.
A higher percentage of NOT, that hunk of junk!
Made me my 1st outside money though.
Bullshit.FYI! Tecumseh didn't make lawn mowers !
What slavery and torture? Are you talking about the Incas and the Mayans? They are nothing that Columbus encountered. Columbus, as far as I remember, landed on what is today's San Salvador, as well as other areas in the West Indies. That's probably why they are called the West Indies. Slavery, etc was introduced to the islands by Europeans. I don't recall Columbus actually landing in what we physically know as America.
Bad day at the office, Damocletus?I am talking about what Columbus found. You should educate yourself with more than what you read from sources with a political agenda.
Although many were killed by the Euros, and some intentionally infected, 90% of Native American deaths were from contact with nasty diseases imported from Europe...which, in turn, had imported them from Africa or the Far East.Lets pretend millions weren't murdered by the European invaders
Wow. That explains why all the MAGA morons and other enemies of the Constitution don't know shit about history.You do not like the response and therefore do not care to learn. This is not a history website, it is political and I have no responsibility to teach you a thing about it. I already talked about what he found when he got here, it was not all the Taino, there was conquest, slavery and cannibalism among the native populations before he got here and observed by others in that time...
Read more, do better and, like you would suggest to the right wing "nut jobs", educate yourself.
Or you can just be ignorant and maintain a belief that Columbus was "bad mm'kay" because you want to believe that the society that was built here is bad. I do not care to become your history teacher.

So you think that what Columbus found was "wonderful"? Are you ignorant or do you just love slavery and torture?
The Brits were big on indentured servitude...especially for "lesser races" like the Irish and the Scots. Agreed the New World wasn't any different when it came to assholes-in-charge. They had wars, slaves and torture. Humans being humans.Slavery and torture were the Spaniards' gig, along with genocide. That's not to say the new world was a garden of Eden. It was populated by humans with all the flaws and virtues we have.
Damo couldn't explain what slavery and torture he was talking about among Native Americans. I know there were some tribal conflicts but slavery and torture weren't part of it. He then took exception when I said Columbus discovered the West Indies and might not have landed in America. He said I need to stop partaking in politically biased sources. I guess I'll have to tell those textbook writers and internet historians that they aren't white-washing enough of American history.Slavery and torture were the Spaniards' gig, along with genocide. That's not to say the new world was a garden of Eden. It was populated by humans with all the flaws and virtues we have.
Tecumseh March 1768- October 1813!Bullshit.
Tecumseh Small Engine Parts and Repair Information | TecumsehEngineParts.com
TecumsehEngineParts.com is your source for parts, information and repair help for Tecumseh small engines.www.tecumsehengineparts.com
S. C. Gwynne's book "Empire of the Summer Moon" told how Native American tribes were vicious, torturous and slavers. There was no such thing as "the noble savage". People are people. LOLDamo couldn't explain what slavery and torture he was talking about among Native Americans. I know there were some tribal conflicts but slavery and torture weren't part of it. He then took exception when I said Columbus discovered the West Indies and might not have landed in America. He said I need to stop partaking in politically biased sources. I guess I'll have to tell those textbook writers and internet historians that they aren't white-washing enough of American history.
STFU, you Ignoramus Giganticus you.Wow. That explains why all the MAGA morons and other enemies of the Constitution don't know shit about history.![]()
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^You probably fapped to that, you sick fuck. Also, you proved the point you were disagreeing with.S. C. Gwynne's book "Empire of the Summer Moon" told how Native American tribes were vicious, torturous and slavers. There was no such thing as "the noble savage". People are people. LOL
Slavery among Native Americans in the United States includes slavery by and enslavement of Native Americans roughly within what is currently the United States of America....![]()
Slavery among Native Americans in the United States - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
...Many Native-American tribes practiced some form of slavery before the European introduction of African slavery into North America.[2][3]
The Haida and Tlingit peoples who lived along the southeastern Alaskan coast were traditionally known as fierce warriors and slave-traders, raiding as far as California. Slavery was hereditary after slaves were taken as prisoners of war. Among some Pacific Northwest tribes, about a quarter of the population were slaves.[5][6] Other slave-owning tribes of North America were, for example, Comanche[7] of Texas, Creek of Georgia, the fishing societies, such as the Yurok, that lived along the coast from what is now Alaska to California; the Pawnee, and Klamath.[8]
Torture among Native Americans has historical roots in the practices of various indigenous tribes, where it was often directed towards enemies, captives, and those who violated tribal norms. While some tribes, like the Pueblo Indians, reportedly engaged in little to no torture, others, particularly in the Eastern Woodlands and Plains cultures, practiced it more frequently....![]()
Torture among Native Americans | Religion and Philosophy | Research Starters | EBSCO Research
<p>Torture among Native Americans has historical roots in the practices of various indigenous tribes, where it was often directed towards enemies, captives, and those who violated tribal norms. While some tribes, like the Pueblo Indians, reportedly engaged in little to no torture, others...www.ebsco.com
...Torture took place in several varieties. Often the captors tied enemies to a stake or other framework and burned them with bonfires, firebrands, or coals. Stabbing, beating, and cutting the victims often occurred along with the burnings, as did mutilation and dismemberment. Torturers often shot arrows or, after obtaining guns, bullets into the suffering captives. Some of the unlucky experienced the horrors of feeling themselves disemboweled, flayed, or scalped while they were still alive. On many occasions, however, the goal of torture was not death. With such customs as the gauntlet, in which victims had to run or stagger through rows of kicking, punching, and beating tribal members lined up in parallel or spiral formations, a tribe was often testing captives as potential adoptees or slaves. If a captive showed pluck or fortitude, he or she might even be rewarded with freedom.
To individual tribal groups, torture probably had many and different meanings. On one level it was surely an expression of simple revenge. Yet for most groups, torture also served military, social, and religious needs. Tribes could earn a terrifying and fearsome reputation through renowned torture. Members who had not participated in the actual battle or capture could join communally in a torture ceremony. Many indigenous peoples also believed that enemies would haunt them in an afterworld, and mutilation would distinctly disable those enemies. Sometimes torture was propitiation of certain spirits, manitous, or windigos. Whatever the case, torture was not, as many European Americans feared and believed, random, unthinking violence, but rather a custom integrated into the tribal worldview.
You know absolutely wrong. Dutch already made a post about it, and fapped to it too.Damo couldn't explain what slavery and torture he was talking about among Native Americans. I know there were some tribal conflicts but slavery and torture weren't part of it. He then took exception when I said Columbus discovered the West Indies and might not have landed in America. He said I need to stop partaking in politically biased sources. I guess I'll have to tell those textbook writers and internet historians that they aren't white-washing enough of American history.