Friday, April 19, AD 2024 7:22am

Indians

 

Dave Griffey at Daffey Thoughts takes a look at the erroneous views of Indians popularized by contemporary Leftists:

The lie of multiculturalism for Columbus Day

Is best displayed in this, that popped up on a history Facebook page I follow:

You see that?  I hope this is fake and no actual Indian ever said this.  But if it’s genuine, then Indians were … perfect.  Without sin.  Never did anything wrong.  Wonderful.  Fabulous.  Better than Jesus.   Just like those Bushmen in The Gods Must Be Crazy.  There simply was no sin, evil or wrongdoing before Europeans came to the lands. So says this meme that strongly suggests it’s the opinion of an American Indian. 

Which is stupid, wrong, a lie and false.  Indian culture was like any and all cultures.  It had plenty of wars, genocide, slavery, imperialism, conquest, thieving, wrong doing and politicking that would make Machiavelli blush.  Just like all tribes and cultures and kingdoms and nations since the beginning of time. 

Multiculturalism was supposed to teach us Western children of Western Imperialism what the world was really like.  It functioned under two basic premises. One, that us Americans (and Westerners in general) never knew Western culture did anything wrong or bad.  Two, our views of the world were skewed because of our racist imperialism imposing our ideas of the world on the world instead of seeing the world from its own vantage point.

Therefore, there were two solutions.  First, emphasize, perhaps over emphasize (can you really overemphasize?), the sins of America and the West to wake people up to our own imperfections and egregious sins.  And second, allow other cultures to tell us just what their cultures and civilizations were really like. 

On the surface, the first solution doesn’t appear terrible.  Repentance and admitting to sin is a very Christian, and hence Western virtue, as long as it is done with the correct purpose in mind.  The second was a problem from the beginning.  It should be obvious that simply asking American Indians or Hindus or Africans or Japanese or Muslims or any people in the world about their own culture might actually meet with the same skewed or dishonest picture that Americans were supposed to have.  Especially since cultural repentance and admitting ancestral and cultural sin is not a universal trait. 

But so it was, and so it is.  When my son had a cultural anthropology class, the line was already moved from my anthropology classes in college.  Back then, it was ‘who are we to judge?’  In fairness, that was also how we were told to look at our own sins: the Inquisition, the Witch Hunts, Slavery.  We condemn the sins but not the sinners.  

Today, we condemn the sins and sinners of the West, and go beyond simply not judging the sins of the rest of the world to almost embracing them.  In my day, we said human sacrifice or infanticide or child sacrifice were bad, but we don’t judge the Aztecs or the Celts or the Native Americans who did such things.  In my son’s class, they don’t even know why we’re fussing.  After all, in their course the question of human sacrifice itself is up for debate.  We know Global Warming is the threat of the ages and too many people are causing the world to die.  Therefore, it’s perfectly acceptable to look at those Aztecs or Celts and think they may have been on to something when it comes to population control. So said his class’s discussion.  

Because we know from Multiculturalism, if it ain’t Western, it’s good.  We know this because people from those cultures are happy to say so.  Likewise, the idea that those things like child sacrifice or terminating the weak and sickly were bad comes from old white Western, Christian ideals.  And we know those were always and altogether bad.  Therefore, it’s time to give sacrificing the baby to the fires a second look.  After all, if the worst civilization in history – Western that is – said it was bad, there might be something to it after all!

Happy Columbus Indigenous Peoples Day.  Celebrated not despite the savagery and barbarism of those non-Western cultures, but increasingly because of them. 

Go here to comment.  John Wayne in the movie McLintock (1963) was closer to an accurate portrayal of Indians in the late nineteenth century.  Defeated peoples but still proud.  Contemporary Leftists on the other hand tend to perpetuate the Myth of the Noble Savage which has been with us since the eighteenth century, a myth as false as a similar myth would be about the Noble European.

As for the poster:  Criminals among Indians were exiled from the tribes or executed. Minor offenses could be taken care of by paying agreed compensation. Most tribes had strong concepts of private personal property and woe betide those who stole. Familial groups tended to look out for each other, with outsiders lucky if they were not plundered and murdered with rape thrown in if the outsider was female, unless she was kept as a slave for the tribe.  The Spanish brought the horse to North America and the Indian tribes of the plains, capturing such horses, produced some of the finest light cavalry the Earth has ever seen. Almost all tribes had some concept of money as a means of exchange. Indians, like all people at all times, had their virtues and their vices, often differing from tribe to tribe. Western Leftists reduce them into stick figures to belabor their own societies.

 

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Philip Nachazel
Philip Nachazel
Monday, October 11, AD 2021 9:13am

The narrative is so tiresome..and now with CRT…the narrative has teeth. It’s bitten into centers of indoctrination, businesses and government agencies.

What a time.

The link I’m posting isn’t expressing a hatred towards the Indian. As a matter of fact two elders from the Chippewas tribe stood with me as we protested the Government funding of abortion in 2012…Defund Planned Parenthood campaign.
They shared their views of taking a life out of the womb and out of the creator’s world. They were converts to Christianity and drove just over an hour to be present for this protest at the Open Space in Traverse City.
Impressive to me.
They were well into their twilight years.

I do recall that they spoke of injustices that have been going on since the dawn of man. How only in Christianity does man have a true chance to change. To be better than his sins. To be forgiven. To forgive.
Standing next to them was a Joy that I’ll never forget.

Years ago a tribal leader, overseeing the businesses of Turtle Creek and Leelanau Sands casinos as well as other important aspects of the tribe was found guilty of sexual relations with minors. He was sentenced.
Last week he was found dead in his cell.

Pray for his soul.

This is what the narrative doesn’t showcase.

The great beauty and love of a True God who’s self sacrifice has brought about the salvation of souls. Forgiveness. Mercy. Self sacrifice.
Love of neighbor. Purgatory.
Hospitals, orphanages, schools.
Freedoms.

Christopher Columbus.
I thank you.
Please intercede for this Indian;

https://upnorthlive.com/news/local/former-tribal-leader-dies-after-being-found-unresponsive-in-prison-cell

Don L
Don L
Monday, October 11, AD 2021 9:31am

The left can’t decide whether it supports idigenous peoples or are in support of illegal immigration which, by definition, works against any so-called indigenous peoples. BTW, the “Native -Americans”, as we all know –came over from Asia via the land bridge and (to use leftist thinking) stole the land from the “equal species” animals that were indigenous here.

Rudolph Harrier
Rudolph Harrier
Monday, October 11, AD 2021 11:16am

Movies such as Jeremiah Johnson or The Outlaw Josey Wales clearly differentiate between various Indian tribes and point out different attitudes and concerns that different tribes had. That was before people were multicultural. Now all Indians are treated as one homogeneous mass.

David WS
David WS
Monday, October 11, AD 2021 5:21pm

Highly recommend “Mayflower: Voyage, Community, War ” by Nathaniel Philbrick… its a very human story and eventual tragedy.
When the Pilgrims arrived at Plymouth they found a native village deserted as a plague had swept through the previous year. If not for the previous plague and the available village and food stores, they would not have survived.
The Wampanoag become friends and allies with the Pilgrims in both a bid for control over the area and a hedge against the Wampanoag traditional enemy -the Narragansett. The Wampanoag wanted technology for which they sold land, until there was no more to sell. The early friends saved each others lives, but their grandchildren became enemies, often over envy, pride and greed… both sides.
If there was one thing though which proved to be the natives downfall it was their susceptibility to European diseases and as the author puts it “a young man who survived the crossing, married and had 10 children, each of his children had 8 children.. and they all needed farms.”

David WS
David WS
Monday, October 11, AD 2021 5:27pm

On a lighter note, it’s strange that no one every corrected Christopher Columbus, even after it was well known the name stuck. All it would have taken was:
“Indians?// Chris I don’t think this is India… “

T. Shaw
T. Shaw
Tuesday, October 12, AD 2021 4:57am

Let’s Go, Brandon!

Of course, like everything else 99% of all Columbus’ alleged [guilty until proven innocent] crimes gains humanity are 100% false as is the fake nonsense they preach about the Edenic indigenous peoples . . .

Re: The Plains Indians Wars: Red Cloud was the only Indian leader that beat the US Army and they had to agree to his terms.

Later in end of his life, Red Cloud converted to Catholicism. In fact, he made persistent requests for Catholic missionaries and the rescinding of federal restrictions on Catholic evangelization.

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