Happy Indigenous People's Day!

The real Americans have were very accommodating to the white immigrants.

Now it is time for the white immigrants to be more thankful.

Sorry, dude, but that's debatable. I will agree wholeheartedly that the indigenous peoples were fighting an invasion of illegal immigrants.

Maybe if they'd built a wall from Maine to Florida the white man would have gone home???

EJ_n_ecWsAEIOlZ.jpg
 
We should eat food on Indigenous Peoples' Day. Another food holiday would be a wonderful thing.

Beef Jerky and blueberries? Roast cottontail? For a weak beer we could just use Coors.

https://www.archaeologicalconservancy.org/?wpfb_dl=58 page 12
Analyses of ceramic samples by
Sandia National Laboratory suggest that groups living in central
New Mexico some 800 years ago may
have produced a type of fermented
corn beverage long before the European introduction of grapes and wine
to the Americas.
 
Beef Jerky and blueberries? Roast cottontail? For a weak beer we could just use Coors.

https://www.archaeologicalconservancy.org/?wpfb_dl=58 page 12
Analyses of ceramic samples by
Sandia National Laboratory suggest that groups living in central
New Mexico some 800 years ago may
have produced a type of fermented
corn beverage long before the European introduction of grapes and wine
to the Americas.
I’ll take bison, elk, moose, wild turkey, wild rice, peanuts and pumpkin, please
 
Bull Shit

18 U.S. Code § 1111 - Murder


If u commit murder on that land does it not fall under U.S Federal law etc

Okay so tax them for murders. WTF does this have to do with their fair use of their own land?

Why do you suck up to that Stolen Valor Cocksucker Terry O'Brien?

nope, image removed.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
I’ll take bison, elk, moose, wild turkey, wild rice, peanuts and pumpkin, please

All good eats. Goober peas not only sustained the Army of the Confederacy, but it's because of the Civil War that peanuts became a major food crop.

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/arts...war-how-peanuts-fed-the-confederacy-70737510/
Before the Civil War, peanuts were not a widely cultivated crop in the United States—Virginia and North Carolina were the principal producers—and were generally viewed as a foodstuff fit for the lowest social classes and for livestock. When they were consumed, they were usually eaten raw, boiled or roasted, although a few cookbooks suggested ways to make dessert items with them. The goober pea’s status in the Southern diet changed during the war as other foods became scarce. An excellent source of protein, peanuts were seen as a means of fighting malnutrition. (And they still are, with products such as Plumpy’nut being used in famine-plagued parts of the world.)
 
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