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Largest Child-Sacrifice Graveyard Strikes Huge Blow to Native American Innocence Myth
pjmedia.com ^ | 11/1/2019 | Tyler O'Neil

Posted on 11/02/2019 11:18:31 AM PDT by rktman

click here to read article


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To: rktman
"Two hundred and fifty skeletons of children"

That would be a slow day at the typical Planned Parenthood office.

21 posted on 11/02/2019 11:59:10 AM PDT by UnwashedPeasant (Trump is solving the worldÂ’s problems only to distract us from Russia.)
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To: rktman

bmp


22 posted on 11/02/2019 11:59:36 AM PDT by gattaca ("Government's first duty is to protect the people, not run their lives." Ronald Reagan)
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To: rktman

“Not our North American peaceful, loving, caring ones...”

Yes. Look up the Cahokia Mounds burial pits. Once the largest center of incipient North American Native civilization. They could have become Ur if they hadn’t died out before Columbus came.

I, of course, didn’t include Mexico as part of North America because of racism or something...


23 posted on 11/02/2019 12:02:22 PM PDT by VanShuyten ("...that all the donkeys were dead. I know nothing as to the fate of the less valuable animals.")
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To: rktman

I once had a working partner on a job site who was half Cherokee and some other tribe. He said he was rejected by both on account of that.

After a few days working together, I told him how he had completely shattered the noble red man/at one with nature myth. He only laughed.


24 posted on 11/02/2019 12:07:36 PM PDT by odawg
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To: rktman

Any man or woman is capable of savagery. Just empty the grocery store and watch what happens.


25 posted on 11/02/2019 12:08:05 PM PDT by lurk
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To: rktman

This is why I never eat Indian Tacos.

You never know who might be in them.


26 posted on 11/02/2019 12:09:23 PM PDT by blueunicorn6 ("A crack shot and a good dancer")
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To: Mount Athos

Find some history books about the earliest days of the founding of Texas. And read about the Comanches and what they did to the settlers. One of their favorite things was to capture a man and cut off his arms and cook them over a fire and eat them right there with him alive. That was in the early 1800s not a thousand years ago.


27 posted on 11/02/2019 12:09:54 PM PDT by Federal46 (federal 46)
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To: Mount Athos

actually cannibalism and human sacrifice were pretty common among american indians in both north and south america.

that said, human sacrifice was common in europe before christianity. as well human sacrifice was common in oceana africa and asia before christianity.

the abolition of official human sacrifice throughout the world is probably the most significant thing that Jesus did.


28 posted on 11/02/2019 12:10:29 PM PDT by ckilmer
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To: rktman; Elsie
A group called "The People" were here in Southern Utah. This book contains 116 original images of this group. Members of the southern Paiute nation were instrumental in guiding John Wesley Powell in his exploration of the region from 1872-1875.By 1875 the Mormons who had been previously driven off by the Kaibab Band returned and took over the territory.


29 posted on 11/02/2019 12:11:45 PM PDT by Utah Binger (Mount Carmel Utah: At the Maynard Dixon Home and Studio)
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To: Ruy Dias de Bivar

In number 29 I intended to go further with the Anasazi information regarding their rituals. Glad you covered it.


30 posted on 11/02/2019 12:15:18 PM PDT by Utah Binger (Mount Carmel Utah: At the Maynard Dixon Home and Studio)
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To: rktman

What the aboriginal inhabitants of North and South America, commonly referred to as “Indians”, are today, came from vastly different origins themselves, some from Asia, some crossing the Pacific from the Melanesian archipelagos of Oceania, and even some few crossing what was then a land bridge covered with glacier from Europe, And they came in several different waves, some much later than others.

In the territorial area of the United States alone, there were some 400 or more distinct groups at the time of Columbus, many of whom undertook mutual battles of extinction with each others. Just consider the differences that were between the Navajo and the ancient cliff dwellers, known as the Anasazi. For centuries, perhaps, the Navajo harassed the Anasazi, until the Anasazi undertook an extermination program on the Navajo, catching them, killing them, cooking them and eating the stew, tossing away their bones. Even today, the Navajo speak in hushed tones, of “the old ones”, never referring to them openly, as the Anasazi cursed the Navajo for all eternity.

The Anasazi, it seems, did not survive to the present day, for only the ancient cliff dwellings attest to the fact they were ever here. They were supposedly related to the resent day Pueblo people, who now live peaceably with the Navajo.

Or consider the Cheyenne of Wyoming, who were subject to border raids by the neighbors, the Crow. In one dramatic confrontation at a mountain called Crow Heart, a band of young Crow males was captured by the Cheyenne, and the Cheyenne chief asked the Crows who their leader was. All the Crow willingly pointed him out, and he was brought before the Cheyenne chief. Upon affirming that he was, in fact, the leader, the chief plunged a knife into the chest of the young Crow, pulled out the still beating heart, and took a bite out of it. His mouth dripping with the blood of the unfortunate Crow, the chief turned to the rest of the Crow, and told them, go back and tell your people what you have seen here today.

The Crow never bothered the Cheyenne after that.

And these were just two incidents, among what must have been innumerable times when differences were settled with combat, or stealth, or downright treachery.


31 posted on 11/02/2019 12:22:05 PM PDT by alloysteel (Nowhere in the Universe is there escape from the consequences of the crime of stupidity.)
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To: rktman

We sacrifice more babies in America than were ever by pre Columbian Americans.


32 posted on 11/02/2019 12:22:26 PM PDT by Meatspace
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To: rktman

Yes they were. They were the happy children of the forest who sang and danced with animals who could also sing and dance.


33 posted on 11/02/2019 12:27:31 PM PDT by jmacusa ("If wisdom is not the Lord, what is wisdom?)
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To: frank ballenger

I’m pretty sure that should Lizzy be elected she’ll be taking the axe to all sorts of people, laws and institutions.


34 posted on 11/02/2019 12:32:04 PM PDT by Paladin2
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To: frank ballenger

“He had hot coals placed on his head. His feet were literally burned black by a flat shovel blade heated in a fire. A 10 year old boy was told to bite off his fingers but failed on most of them. to laughter.
Scalding hot water was poured over him. They cut his arms and pulled out the tendons. They rammed a pointed rod into his body from below. Finally they beheaded him.”

It was excruciating to listen to him tell his story. /s


35 posted on 11/02/2019 12:35:07 PM PDT by faucetman (Just the facts, ma'am, Just the facts)
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To: rktman

The Europeans weren’t an “evil people”, the Indians weren’t an “evil people”, they were just PEOPLE.


36 posted on 11/02/2019 12:40:36 PM PDT by faucetman (Just the facts, ma'am, Just the facts)
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In the US Indian organizations confiscate any finds and judges uphold the confiscations on the grounds of cultural sacraments or some non-sense. This stops all studies into these ancient sites that preliminary findings shown they nothing to do with their culture.

American Indians where not the natives of north America. The courts are helping bury this fact

37 posted on 11/02/2019 12:51:30 PM PDT by Steve Van Doorn (*in my best Eric Cartman voice* 'I love you, guys')
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To: Paladin2

The Warren tribe supporters would absolutely not hesitate to do the same to non compliant Americans.


38 posted on 11/02/2019 12:56:06 PM PDT by patriotfury ((May the fleas of a thousand camels occupy mo' ham mads tents!))
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To: rktman

Lol


39 posted on 11/02/2019 1:00:37 PM PDT by ConservativeMan55 (In America, we don't do pin pricks. But sometimes we elect them.)
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To: alloysteel

Hernando de Soto was the first European explorer to come through what is now the State of Georgia (1540).

He found many settlements of various unassociated tribes of people, throughout his travels.

In one village, the people lived on the site of large earthen mounds.
They were asked how and why the mounds were built.
It was a mystery to those people,
who said their tribe had been living there for many many years,
but the mounds were already there when they arrived.

Where did the mound builders go?
Likely wiped out by some other tribe many years earlier.


40 posted on 11/02/2019 1:06:59 PM PDT by Repeal The 17th
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