American Indians

I saw this political cartoon in a paper once...damned if I can find it on the net:

It takes place in a diner, with two rural white guys all agitated as one says to two Native Indians (not a direct quote), "y'all ain't even from here. Y'all came from Asia". One Native guy says to his friend, "Great! What does that make us now?" The other Native sarcastically replies, "I dunno. Trendy Chinese?"

Classic!
 
Not everyone who voted for Trump is a Trumpcuck. A lot of people just felt he was the lesser evil. I know lots of people who voted for Trump but accept that he should be impeached now. Trumpcucks are still in denial.

So, a Trumpcuck is not usually a voter? Few welfare recipients vote.
 
Counting coup was the winning of prestige against an enemy by the Plains Indians of North America. Warriors won prestige by acts of bravery in the face of the enemy, which could be recorded in various ways and retold as stories. Any blow struck against the enemy counted as a coup, but the most prestigious acts included touching an enemy warrior with the hand, bow, or coup stick and escaping unharmed.[1][2] Touching the first enemy to die in battle or touching the enemy's defensive works also counted as coup,[1] as did, in some nations, simply riding up to an enemy, touching him with a short stick, and riding away unscathed.[3] Counting coup could also involve stealing an enemy's weapons or horses tied up to his lodge in camp.[1] Risk of injury or death was required to count coup.[4]

Escaping unharmed while counting coup was considered a higher honor than being wounded in the attempt.[1] A warrior who won coup was permitted to wear an eagle feather in his hair.[1] If he had been wounded in the attempt, however, he was required to paint the feather red to indicate this.[1]

After a battle or exploit, the people of a band would gather together to recount their acts of bravery and "count coup". Coups were recorded by putting notches in a coup stick.[1] Indians of the Pacific Northwest would tie an eagle feather to their coup stick for each coup counted, but many nations did not do so.[1] Among the Blackfoot nation of the upper Missouri River Valley, coup could be recorded by the placement of "coup bars" on the sleeves and shoulders of special shirts that bore paintings of the warrior's exploits in battle. Many shirts of this sort have survived to the present, including some in European museums.[5]

Joe Medicine Crow (1913–2016) is credited with achieving the feat while serving with the US Army during World War II, as on one occasion he overpowered and disarmed a German soldier,[6] and later stole horses from an SS unit.[7]


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Counting_coup

Smacking Trump around the head would count.
 
I'm a white "illiberal" progressive, kid. The only time I hear/read someone calling New World indigenous ppl "American Indians" it's either in an older book or on some older person's social media or vid.

You're desperate to hang racism or some other nastiness on us. Clean your own party's closet out first. I can tell you which party is not favored by your kind.

I just started hearing people use American Indian in the past year. Prior to that, I grew-up hearing Native American. Naturally, I figured this had been vetted by progressive academics. It can't be due to accuracy, so, I am intrigued why.
 
How do you know humans didn't start in America?
There's no evidence that they did. All of the available evidence is that they started in Africa. Anything else is just wishful thinking.

Sent from my SM-G950U using Tapatalk
 
I saw this political cartoon in a paper once...damned if I can find it on the net:

It takes place in a diner, with two rural white guys all agitated as one says to two Native Indians (not a direct quote), "y'all ain't even from here. Y'all came from Asia". One Native guy says to his friend, "Great! What does that make us now?" The other Native sarcastically replies, "I dunno. Trendy Chinese?"

Classic!

Darn, too bad you couldn't find it.

The Reichwing racists' current insistence that European extermination of the New World's natives can be excused away with the lie that "they're not really native because they came here from somewhere else just like we did" is laughable at best.
 
I just started hearing people use American Indian in the past year. Prior to that, I grew-up hearing Native American. Naturally, I figured this had been vetted by progressive academics. It can't be due to accuracy, so, I am intrigued why.

If you hear it again, ask.
 
And what you apparently are unable to understand, is that "Native Americans" are no more or less an indigenous people, then the majority of people now living in the US.

Not correct. People born here are natives but they are not indigenous to the country, the only people indigenous to what is known as the US are the American Indians.

Indigenous peoples, also known as First peoples, Aboriginal peoples or Native peoples, are ethnic groups who are the original or earliest known inhabitants of an area, in contrast to groups that have settled, occupied or colonized the area more recently. Wikipedia

The definition of indigenous is something or someone who is native to an area or who naturally belongs there. An example of indigenous are the Native Americans of the United States.

Definition. Indigenous communities, peoples and nations are those which, having a historical continuity with pre-invasion and pre-colonial societies that developed on their territories, consider themselves distinct from other sectors of the societies now prevailing on those territories, or parts of them.
 
Darn, too bad you couldn't find it.

The Reichwing racists' current insistence that European extermination of the New World's natives can be excused away with the lie that "they're not really native because they came here from somewhere else just like we did" is laughable at best.

Well that is true 100's of thousands of years ago, what would become the American Indian were squatters. Just kidding about the squatters but I bet some here believe it. What do your text books say about when this continent saw it's first peoples?
 
Well that is true 100's of thousands of years ago, what would become the American Indian were squatters. Just kidding about the squatters but I bet some here believe it. What do your text books say about when this continent saw it's first peoples?

Same thing as generally-accepted knowledge: the first humans came here ~16-18,000 years ago, via the Bering land bridge.
 
Moronic paleface troll.

Such a comment, coming from a paleface troll, carries very little weight; especially when it comes from someone who's nothing more then troll shit..

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Darn, too bad you couldn't find it.

The Reichwing racists' current insistence that European extermination of the New World's natives can be excused away with the lie that "they're not really native because they came here from somewhere else just like we did" is laughable at best.

Such a comment was never said, you fucking cunt.

095ea45e2311cd42867eb1923bf858c3.gif
 
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