History of the Indian Wars | Full Documentary

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  • čas přidán 17. 02. 2018
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Komentáře • 496

  • @MetalDetroit
    @MetalDetroit Před 2 lety +210

    Rumor has it that it’s impossible to do a documentary about native Americans without a flute playing.

    • @dannyk7226
      @dannyk7226 Před rokem +5

      smh

    • @maineffects
      @maineffects Před rokem +3

      Why

    • @MetalDetroit
      @MetalDetroit Před rokem +4

      @@maineffects seriously ?

    • @danmorals9697
      @danmorals9697 Před rokem +3

      🤣😂😅

    • @jesseandrews7200
      @jesseandrews7200 Před rokem +4

      Watch the Russell Means doc AMERICA IS THE NEW REZERVATION when he's talking at Wounded Knee you can hear muskets and cannons in the background.residual energy.

  • @amadeus_ex7505
    @amadeus_ex7505 Před 4 měsíci +3

    This is THE best documentary on CZcams related to this subject, no cringe acting, just facts and some footage interlaced

  • @nathitshabalala5414
    @nathitshabalala5414 Před 2 lety +18

    This documentary gave me a lot of perspective.

  • @spoopyidk
    @spoopyidk Před rokem +16

    Wish the History channel had these documentaries still

    • @AKJames762
      @AKJames762 Před rokem +5

      So do I. I miss turning on History or National Geographic and seeing an actual documentary at all. I'm so sick of reality shows. Imo proliferation of reality shows was the end of good programming like this.

    • @jackmiller2404
      @jackmiller2404 Před rokem +1

      They still have documentaries. They just replaced effort, and actual facts with aliens. Enjoy! 👽

    • @TubbyDubby
      @TubbyDubby Před 6 měsíci

      Have you seen the men who built America Frontiersman from 2018? That’s still in my book?

    • @BarnabyBaltimoron
      @BarnabyBaltimoron Před 2 měsíci

      I subscribe to their app called History Vault. It has all the great documentaries from the early 90’s to early 2000’s. That is when they actually educated its viewers. Now it’s all this overly dramatized reality TV

  • @lw3646
    @lw3646 Před rokem +13

    Good documentary. I like the old ones.

    • @PhilMonthero
      @PhilMonthero Před dnem

      I will not apologise for having big tits a fat ass and a tight pussy and I of course never fart or burp or queef

  • @moistmike4150
    @moistmike4150 Před rokem +37

    As a teenager I was quite interested in tales of the American frontier. At one point I remember reading a book of short histories of the Indian Wars. One story in particular I wish I'd never read was about an American Army officer who was captured sometime in the early 1800's by an Iroquois war party. His own small band of soldiers had been killed during an ambush and he was the only survivor. The story was related by a French trapper who was friendly to the Iroquois in that area, but had no love for the Americans or British. Long story short, the Iroquois braves decided to burn the American alive. When the trapper told the officer that his fate was to be burned, he stated that he "would attempt to bear it bravely", but the trapper told him that it would be nowhere near a quick death, as the Iroquois truly enjoyed the spectacle of burning their captives slowly on a bed of coals where they would tie a man's hands behind his back and then rope him by his neck to a pole, but leave his feet and legs free. Then they'd watch him dance as he'd slowly roast to death over coals with just enough rope to allow him to put part of his body out of the intense heat, but not all of it. This led to a man "favoring" various parts of his body as the rest of him roasted in various places until the thousands of twists and turns to obtain some relief had finally caused every part of the man's surface to become charred, with the exception of his face and head; at which point the Iroquois would shove him to the ground and heap hot coals on his head to finish the deed. The "fun" was to see how long they could keep a man alive during this ordeal. The trapper related that it took this particular officer a day and a half to finally expire. I still have trouble grasping this level of evil and the knowledge that the native peoples of the Americas had been dealing out this sort of treatment to their rivals long before Europeans appeared on the scene has since destroyed any naive ideas of the "Noble Indigenous Peoples" B.S. you might hear from supremely ignorant people in our modern era.

    • @tuthuihfthjgfyh1922
      @tuthuihfthjgfyh1922 Před rokem +13

      Eh the Europeans did similar shit for just as long though

    • @andrewfreiji4647
      @andrewfreiji4647 Před rokem +10

      Well, the ancient Greeks would do similar. They would put a captive inside an iron bison statue and set a fire beneath it. Then they'd watch and enjoy as the captive essentially was cooked to death.
      I live in Atlanta Georgia. Contrary to what many think, a lot of native American people do live in Atlanta. They are from Mexico and central America, but nonetheless native American. Appearance very similar and in some cases the same as the muskogean people that lived here. The Choctaw that lived in Mississippi and called Mississippi Mississippi, migrated there during biblical times from Mexico. The accent that Choctaw people speak with in English is in fact very similar to that of northern Mexicans, like Gabriel Iglesias granted he is mostly white. So many native Americans do live here. I talk to them everyday. There is no difference between them and white people, or blacks, or any other people. They're culture is different, but shares many similar values that other cultures have. People have this almost puristic and wild view of native Americans. In fact they even call them native rather than just Americans. They're human beings just like any other group of people in the world. They aren't any different. They aren't better but they also aren't worse. Nor are they smarter or less smart. They are human like any other people.
      So I completely get what you're saying. However, like I said, the Iroquois weren't better but also weren't worse than the British. Medieval Europeans were every bit as brutal as the Iroquois

    • @brucetoo3294
      @brucetoo3294 Před rokem

      Spain was big on burning 'heretics" at the stake the same year the Aztecs killed their own captives. Today we watch TV and movies instead, but the level of violence is similar.
      The US kills hundreds of thousands of third world "enemies" every year--Iraq, Afghanistan. Who is more evil? Is it politics, human nature or economics?

    • @histochronos
      @histochronos Před rokem +8

      Iroquois were relatively tame compared to the Comanche. I mean I had no clue how sick Geronimo had been, hanging children from meat hooks?! WTF
      There is a level of depravity that exists in all humankind.

    • @antirealist
      @antirealist Před rokem +10

      I think the point to be taken here is that all humans have the capacity to do abhorrent things and that native Americans are no exception to that. Moreover, these atrocities committed by native Americans bring much needed balance to the vastly one sided "peaceful, innocent Native vs racist, evil European" narrative that is so pernicious right now (see: land acknowledgements).

  • @JerryEricsson
    @JerryEricsson Před rokem +9

    Very interesting, I served with the 3rd Cav from my return from Vietnam in 1971 to my discharge in 1973 during that time we moved from Fort Lewis Washington to Fort Bliss Texas. I loved the Cav, but we worked our rears off getting training from the Mountain warfare in Washington to Desert Warfare in Texas. We were preparing for the wars in the Middle East. When I re joined the Army I returned to Bliss but was assigned to the 11th ADA. The Cav was but a shadow of itself having been pretty much in the desert during my 1 year as a civilian. I was happy with my new assignment.

    • @themaestro3034
      @themaestro3034 Před rokem +3

      Thats neat but this video is about native americans not vietnam or the middle east or bedtime for bonzo or whatever else youre talking about thanks ✌️

    • @donthasselthehoff5753
      @donthasselthehoff5753 Před 7 měsíci

      Disgusting.

    • @user-ok8yq6nc6x
      @user-ok8yq6nc6x Před 7 měsíci +2

      ​@themaestro3034 You're a bit slow huh? 3rd cav fought the natives so this is relevant

  • @orboakin8074
    @orboakin8074 Před 2 lety +39

    Amazing documentary! I dare say, this is the best native American documentary I have seen, besides Dan Carlin's Apache Tears. It is so objective, well researched and presented. Plus, it does away with the stupid long-held leftist notion that Native Americans were just peaceful nomads who were genocided by "evil white people" rather than that they were a warrior society that warred with each other and the Europeans, Mexicans and later Americans. Both sides killed each other and committed atrocities against each other. It was not as one-sided as the left made me believe. They even made peace and sometimes assimilated into the other groups and civilizations. So basically, they were like almost every other group of humans in history.

    • @bobjilesen8450
      @bobjilesen8450 Před 2 lety +8

      Great comment. Great documentary.

    • @bdoon51
      @bdoon51 Před 2 lety

      Reality is that these types of actions, movements and changes had been going on in Europe, Africa and Asia for thousands of years...Romans good example of military, cultural and social imperialists...much better than Americans. How about the so-called civilized British Empire? qThe Brits and French had many more people under their boot than the Germans ever did but in America, a Briish influenced society, the Kaiser and his "Huns" were propagandized as the evil ones.

    • @felixusbrendelus6357
      @felixusbrendelus6357 Před 2 lety

      Only naive and uneducated people (left or right) would agree that there is such a "long-held notion" of native americans, let alone believe it. But only a freaking hypocrite could come to such an conclusion, as they realize their childish idea of native americans is nonsense.

    • @Ryk_StayToFye
      @Ryk_StayToFye Před 2 lety +4

      I disagree with your entire comment. America has a scare that will never heal unless the steal from the Indigenous people are corrected. Turtle Island were the nation. Before the invasion. The wars between themselves had nothing to do with the Europeans.

    • @williaminus6545
      @williaminus6545 Před 2 lety

      You like it because it is pro-White and one-sided, Sad.

  • @Gypseygirls
    @Gypseygirls Před 3 lety +16

    Excellent documentary.....ty...

    • @PhilMonthero
      @PhilMonthero Před dnem

      I have breast implants

    • @PhilMonthero
      @PhilMonthero Před dnem

      And now I have very large breasts I also have a pet alligator that sometimes fucks me

  • @MikeStoneJapan
    @MikeStoneJapan Před 7 měsíci

    Saw this one yt ages ago and have been looking for it ever since. Many thx to the uploader. Downloading this for posterity

  • @Kowalaman72
    @Kowalaman72 Před rokem

    Amazing video. Please upload more. Thank you. Made my day

  • @newyardleysinclair9960
    @newyardleysinclair9960 Před 2 lety +5

    Never self disarm

  • @nanciehuaracha6079
    @nanciehuaracha6079 Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you 😊

  • @bdoon51
    @bdoon51 Před 2 lety +26

    Phenomenal yes but there were 200 years of "Indian Wars" before these wars even started. In fact, in 1791,the Native victory at the Battle of the Wabash in Ohio made Little Big Horn look like small potatoes.

    • @AyebrohamLincoln
      @AyebrohamLincoln Před rokem

      Those would be the colonial Indian wars not the US Indian wars

    • @Sarcaztyc
      @Sarcaztyc Před rokem +1

      @@AyebrohamLincoln I’m confused by your statement is it directed towards the 200 year statement or the year and battle he presents, if the it’s 200 years I think he’s referring to the natives constantly fighting before anyone even got here. However if you’re talking about the battle of wabash that would be a US Indian battle

    • @kevinmurphy4595
      @kevinmurphy4595 Před rokem

      @@Sarcaztyc Im with you. I do believe that battle cost the US soldiers more than "900" fatalities !.....

    • @Mike-mb8oy
      @Mike-mb8oy Před rokem

      @B Doon it would be cool if you did a video about it!

    • @warsofparadigm
      @warsofparadigm Před 7 měsíci

      There wars before 1791 not mentioned in this. Tribes not mentioned either. This documentary leaves a lot to he desired.

  • @ronaldronca6060
    @ronaldronca6060 Před rokem +21

    "Sometimes the clans were made up of families, sometimes not" other than a few really stupid phrases, this is an excellent documentary.

    • @cdb5961
      @cdb5961 Před 11 měsíci

      No, it's just you.

    • @idkidk7650
      @idkidk7650 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@cdb5961I’m native myself and let me tell you this documentary is funny😂

    • @GigaChadBrooskie
      @GigaChadBrooskie Před 7 měsíci

      He said sometimes related through marriages and sometines not, you're stupid.

    • @GigaChadBrooskie
      @GigaChadBrooskie Před 7 měsíci

      @@idkidk7650 yeah i bet you're only 0.001% and calls yourself "native" and is an expert of everything about native americans.

    • @idkidk7650
      @idkidk7650 Před 7 měsíci

      @@GigaChadBrooskie no, both of my parents are native, I’m very brown. I’m Tsimshian from a Rez in Alaska.

  • @IE9799
    @IE9799 Před 2 lety +14

    Phenomenal documentary.

    • @samuraikyokkan
      @samuraikyokkan Před rokem

      Whats only touched upon is how often the treaties were broken by the Indians, and how many times the US turned the other cheek on small skirmishes and robberies. The indians had no real means of managing their people, so rogue actors often broke the peace, pushing the Army to go after that cow theif that sparked the end of the Oregon trail peace.

  • @Chase_baker_1996
    @Chase_baker_1996 Před rokem +2

    I actually had this documentary

  • @helloicanseeu2
    @helloicanseeu2 Před 3 měsíci

    tyty great documentary

  • @hopinmytimemachine986
    @hopinmytimemachine986 Před 3 lety +26

    Great documentary

  • @cassiegoslin4621
    @cassiegoslin4621 Před rokem +2

    I had to watch this for school

  • @GbawlZ
    @GbawlZ Před 8 měsíci +2

    To those who are upset that they were conquered: they would have been conquered no matter what, that's what happens in the world when you are weak and possess land that everyone wants. It shows how naive some people are to think they could just keep the continent of North America to themselves forever without being challenged for it. The Native American tribes still in existence in the US today get massive subsidies and autonomy from the US Government, but they choose to integrate into the American way of life, no one forces them. One tribe even owns the Hard Rock Cafe, worth billions, and receives annual annuity payments every year of their lives from the government.

    • @lukeskinwalker922
      @lukeskinwalker922 Před 6 měsíci +1

      This was inevitable. The United States was not an established civilization at this time. The settlers wanted change and the Natives didn’t. It wasn’t the first or last time that a pre-civilization land that would engage in a war like that. For those who use the excuse that English wasn’t the first language of the U.S. did they forget that Mexicans use the language of the people who conquered, enslaved, massacred, and brought plague to their people? No one mocks or insults them for that but in the case of the U.S. it somehow makes them the laughing stock. Let’s not forget that the Natives were at least actually allowed to fight back, they weren’t perfect saints themselves, and the settlers are the people who are responsible for the Natives having access to firearms. You don’t see today’s illegals from down south giving us firearms to fight them back with if we were even allowed to defend ourselves like the Natives were.

  • @mrwesleyrainrain
    @mrwesleyrainrain Před 10 měsíci

    Great history

  • @TubbyDubby
    @TubbyDubby Před 6 měsíci

    Nice!

  • @TubbyDubby
    @TubbyDubby Před 6 měsíci +1

    I can’t recommend the Book “ CraZyhorse, the strange man of the Ogalalas” enough, for more of a native perspective of the “ Indian wars” Excellent!

  • @bayernfan1960
    @bayernfan1960 Před 3 lety +18

    The Indians did not have an effective immigration policy.

  • @friscostreetstories5403
    @friscostreetstories5403 Před rokem +3

    I wish greed hadn't taken over and every treaty broken. Imagine if we would have given them their own nation , like a whole state or something. I wonder if that would have helped.

    • @jeanneserrano3397
      @jeanneserrano3397 Před 11 měsíci

      How charitable "of us" huh? Actually, look up the sovereignty our Founding Fathers had forged for the destiny of this Republic, each state is in actuality, its own nation; the federal gov were supposed to be the EMPLOYEES of We-The-People, but while NONE OF US WERE WATCHING, secret sessions of congress over the past century flipped that reality for us all, until we WAKE UP. Fat chance of that, considering how: Starting with treasonous passage congressionally of the GENOCIDE TREATY of 1988 onward, allowing our gov to LEGALLY kill We-The-People, (of course, UNLAWFUL Constitutionally) then the FALSE FLAG coup d'etat PSY-OP called 9/11, and the cowardice of the American People (NOT first responders) since, it has been a deluge of assaults upon Americans by their own gov, with the WHO (World "health" Org) orchestrating HIV/AIDS by distributing it globally, and now COVID, BUT it was the American People themselves who were WILLFULLY (that means a C-H-O-I-C-E to be) IGNORANT (means unaware of facts involved) the Constitution gave them the FREEDOM TO REFUSE A MANDATED JAB, CLUELESSLY complied with that blatant intimidation ~ to the DISGRACE OF OUR NATION and permanent compromise to the DNA of humanity, which the Deep State minions of the newworlddisorder will use to turn mankind into AI automatons once it merges with quantum computers. Sounds like cultural karma to me, folks, for seizing an entire continent of over 200 Native Nations by The Crown and The Vatican ~ as ongoing!

    • @donthasselthehoff5753
      @donthasselthehoff5753 Před 7 měsíci

      @@jeanneserrano3397 This video is about what your ancestors did in the Americas. No one gives a damn about your colonialist conspiracies.

  • @trukeesey8715
    @trukeesey8715 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Navajo Dine with sand "paintings" are like Tibetan Dine with sand "paintings".
    Listen to Prem Rawat!

  • @scotthamilton3314
    @scotthamilton3314 Před rokem +2

    So....Europeans were experiencing the industrial age. Indians were going from eating horses....to riding them. How could they of lost???

    • @strongheartwoman1931
      @strongheartwoman1931 Před 7 měsíci

      LOL, your "civilized" people are eating bugs and lab grown meat now, in 2023. Congrats on your "advanced civilization".

  • @robertharrison1601
    @robertharrison1601 Před 9 měsíci

    To this Day . Stared & spangled

  • @nicholasrodriguez4990
    @nicholasrodriguez4990 Před 2 lety +17

    Respect to the red man he was worthy

  • @johnholdson7630
    @johnholdson7630 Před 2 lety +7

    Why is there and why do we have to watch two of the same sex kissing in commercials.

    • @ancestralabundance
      @ancestralabundance Před 2 lety

      Hahaha.

    • @HighStakesDanny
      @HighStakesDanny Před rokem

      Pay for premium or else you are subject to American Lobby Groups and their Messages. Right now, Trans rights and gay rights are a big lobby. If ppl didn't shit on those folks, you wouldn't see an ad. Basically, there has to be an oppressed group to have a "fight for rights" in the first place.

  • @Silentbet1of
    @Silentbet1of Před rokem +1

    Trail of a thousand tears 😭 hurts more after this they never mentioned that the land was already occupied and the people who lived here had cultural differences then their own, instead they say the Indians ( which they don’t call them self )
    It’s the name given to them by the white, as they all had names for them selfs we generically call them this to se humanize them and it works…so sad 😢

  • @biker944
    @biker944 Před 3 lety

    cool

    • @PhilMonthero
      @PhilMonthero Před dnem

      I will give you my pussy Scott if you do

  • @sheilahendrix5935
    @sheilahendrix5935 Před rokem +2

    May 💛God💛 Be ❤️With 💙Everyone💛 Always ❤️Much💙 Love Blessings 💚Always ☺️ ✌️ 💯 ❤️ 🎇 🌈 ☺️ ✌️ 💯 🌐💚💜💜💜💛💛❤️❤️💛💛❤️

  • @ivancastro365
    @ivancastro365 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Why is there so little content on this?

    • @BostonsF1nest
      @BostonsF1nest Před 4 měsíci

      Because history is written by the victors. All the Indians got for their kindness was genocide and a few casinos.

  • @Christionbridges
    @Christionbridges Před 2 lety +1

    🙏❤️🙏

  • @TubbyDubby
    @TubbyDubby Před 6 měsíci

    As a Coloradan, I’m glad I’m not one of those lunkheads who don’t know anything about the history of my state, thanks this documentary!!

  • @MothaLuva
    @MothaLuva Před 3 lety +18

    Nice documentary.
    The US Army riding units are Ca-Val-ry. Not Calvary. The calvary is a hill where a church is sometimes built.

    • @miloss5419
      @miloss5419 Před 2 lety

      Lol!

    • @markcynic808
      @markcynic808 Před 2 lety +2

      Calvary is where Jesus was crucified. Also known as Golgotha (the place of skulls). It was situated just outside the walls of Jerusalem.

    • @MothaLuva
      @MothaLuva Před 2 lety +1

      @@markcynic808 Yes, that too.

    • @swtbbyjms3806
      @swtbbyjms3806 Před 2 lety +1

      @@markcynic808
      Another myth story. There are no contemporary sources of the biblical story.

  • @John-rw5jr
    @John-rw5jr Před rokem

    It’s crazy how history holds keys if you can find them
    I am sorry for not knowing

  • @jokekelleey2071
    @jokekelleey2071 Před 2 lety

    Wow where you live completely different now

  • @jokekelleey2071
    @jokekelleey2071 Před 2 lety

    The way this guy talks and the music is great for sleeping music don't listening to him while you're driving

  • @charlesbullghost5491
    @charlesbullghost5491 Před rokem +2

    The us military campaigns against sittingbull's warriors during the Canadian border exile in Montana territory of 1879 - 1881 col. Bearcoat miles large military forces with crow Indian scouts attack sittingbull's hunkpapa Lakota hunting bands. Known as the battle of the milk River July 17th 1879. The fierce battle Miles forces finally drove sittingbull's warriors north to the Canadian border. The Lakota sioux Indian War party attack civilian hay cutters on the powder River, January 27th 1880. A company of us soldiers and crow scouts fought sittingbull's hunkpapa Lakota warriors, the battle of pumpkin creek February 7th - 8th 1880 near the tongue River. Us soldiers crossed the frozen river fire their powerful weapons over an hour on the chief gall's hunkpapa and Oglala Lakota sioux encampment also near the Canadian border. The battle of the popular river January 2nd 1881 the Lakota sioux people escape north to surrounding hills. A Lakota woman screaming to end the fighting she was hit by a bullet later she died of her wounds! The Lakota finally surrendered chief gall look like a old Roman General when he handed his weapon to the American commander. The soldiers made the poor Lakota sioux people walk over twenty miles in sub zero temperatures to fort Burford ND were they became prisoners of war! Sittingbull's finally surrendered July 20th 1881 ending the last great sioux war!

  • @kkeshavvraastogi99
    @kkeshavvraastogi99 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Very Underated and far better than a Stupid fiction movie 👏👏👏👏 .

  • @mildredpierce3400
    @mildredpierce3400 Před 2 měsíci

    The flute rocks

  • @rizon72
    @rizon72 Před rokem +2

    The brutal truth is the war was pretty much lost by the Natives before Columbus ever sailed. It has to do with everything from culture and technology, to animals and even geography which all worked against the natives when fighting the Europeans.
    Once the first established city for trade, colonization, exploration, etc, was done by the Europeans the war was lost. The question wasn't if it was lost, but how long it would take.

    • @pax2902
      @pax2902 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Disease defeated the Indigenous people of the Americas. Jarred Diamond, who wrote "Guns, Germs, Steel" said that Europeans would have had small enclaves along the coast except that typhus, TB, Smallpox, etc wiped out 90% of Native Americans.

    • @rizon72
      @rizon72 Před 11 měsíci

      ​@@pax2902 As I said, culture, technology, animals and geography which worked against the natives. Especially when it came to diseases and the ability of the natives to fight those diseases.
      The moment the first established city for trade/colonization/etc was maintained it was over for the Natives.
      You may not like it, but the Natives never had a chance once that happened.

    • @milin7120
      @milin7120 Před 9 měsíci

      Had d ice age megafuana never gone extint giving natives horses n beast of burden maybe history would be different hell why not war mastodons like India had war elephants

    • @Whoyouwishyouwere
      @Whoyouwishyouwere Před 5 měsíci

      ​​​@@rizon72it was actually mostly a function of charitability and disease. Most tribes were peaceful and entered negotiations. Outlier bands or outlaws usually conglomerated to raid other tribes. They made peace with Europeans for centuries and wanted to avoid fighting.
      Germ theory wasn't discovered until the 1800s. When the Europeans came they had a tough time subjugating hunter gatherers and the Europeans had no chance at winning a war against them so they subjugated more peaceful tribes that were agricultural based. The Spaniards never could subjugate the Apache, Utes, and Comanches so they had to rely on diplomacy and deceit. They were simply allowed to create their settlements via permission.
      The British had a tough time living on the land and had to supplement their crops with Native hunting skills and gathering. Without this, they wouldn't have survived. Europeans were also used as cannon fodder in many instances where Natives allied with them to help fight other Natives. Prior to European colonization, Natives fought each other tooth and nail for resources and viewed Europeans as inferior to them because they weren't anywhere near as atheltic as them. They weren't seen as threats because their complete ineptitude at fighting guerilla war. European armor means nothing if you burn their crops and raid them whenever you wanted and constantly psychologically tortured them because of the fact. Spaniards and Mexicans had this problem in the 1700s and had to rely on Comanche help to fight the Apache.
      Europeans often had to rely on tribal hatred to survive.
      Europeans weren't nearly as much a problem as is usually assumed. It was miscalculations and hatred between tribes that allowed the Europeans to wiggle their way in. Again, if tribes wanted to run out Europeans, they would have. But the Apache preferred to raid and take from settlements rather than outright kill everyone.
      And it's also the fact Europeans had a higher birthrate which hunter gathering tribes didn't care to compete with. It really wasn't until the Europeans invented the repeater rifle that technology and a large European population that things became too difficult to overcome which were also in the 1800s.
      Because muskets aren't anymore valuable than bow and arrows or tomahawks --- in fact, they were inferior because it took longer to reload and they make unnecessary noise while bow and arrows are rather quiet. Technology actually favored Native Americans for the first two hundred and fifty years since Columbus appeared. Horses weren't a factor in the mountains or jungle. They only worked in the Plains but even then you had to guess correctly where the Natives actually were and since they had scouts they usually knew what Europeans were planning.
      If the Natives didn't want any Europeans on the continent then the Eurpeans couldn't have done anything until they actually invented the repeater rifle and even then they would have to seek them out in foreign lands. It was literally luck --- being at the right place at the right time ---- that allowed the Europeans to win.

    • @rizon72
      @rizon72 Před 5 měsíci

      @@Whoyouwishyouwere As I said, and you are proving, the war was lost before the Europeans even set sail.

  • @BostonsF1nest
    @BostonsF1nest Před 4 měsíci +1

    Those aren’t Buffalo. Only Bison are native to North America. Two totally different animals.

  • @Gypseygirls
    @Gypseygirls Před 3 lety +11

    I love the narrator....

  • @KoolT
    @KoolT Před rokem +2

    Fetterman committed suicide bc they would torture them to death

  • @suskagusip1036
    @suskagusip1036 Před 5 měsíci

    I saw that movie of Geronimo. I have no words. Imagine you were the respected leader of your tribe and end up in the hands of the Europeans like nobody. These Native Americans has the DNA of my Ancestors in the Asia/Pacific. Lapulapu that killed Magellan has the same looks and clothing with these native Americans. It has similarities with the Igorot tribes too. Passing by these planes nowadays it looks dead. The villages left their in New Mexico many are abandoned. It's a shame. I bet these planes were all busy with different tribes and villages. Their culture is now just a history.

  • @dessypitt8958
    @dessypitt8958 Před 11 měsíci

    No mention of smoke signals

  • @joyceperkins1314
    @joyceperkins1314 Před rokem

    At 56:17 were the bird and singing was I thought that they were hurt and it was scary my Cherokee mom said it was how they sing and pray

  • @RonMeadows-ri1ec
    @RonMeadows-ri1ec Před 2 měsíci

    Wouldn't it be a better world if people found ways to help each other and treat each other well than to kill and steal from one another.

  • @user-fd3gl5ul6u
    @user-fd3gl5ul6u Před 5 měsíci

    Right , North American Indian stories told without the sound of a flute, are not official.
    It's like having Christmas without a Christmas Carol.
    It's like having the 4th of July without fireworks and BBQ's.
    It's like having Thanksgiving without a stuffed Turkey.
    It's like having Easter without a Bunny and some dyed Eggs.
    It's like having Ground Hog day without having a ground hog.
    It's like having New Year's day without a Ball drop.
    It's like having Halloween without Trick or Treat candy, and weird costumes.
    Stuff American Indian people doesn't care to make sense of.
    Ni Heyoka Belo.

  • @Mark-ej4uf
    @Mark-ej4uf Před 7 měsíci

    just to remind you we are in winter, as such I will only watch northern indians documentaries.

  • @Adventure_fuel
    @Adventure_fuel Před rokem +1

    This documentary shows the nuance of the Indian and American war.

  • @KingDavidProject
    @KingDavidProject Před rokem

    It's over?

  • @charliefoster3221
    @charliefoster3221 Před 2 lety +8

    ALL respect for my First Nations ancestors. Have a good sleep, we will see each other again. Thank you. Have a good day.

    • @GbawlZ
      @GbawlZ Před 8 měsíci +1

      You will see them "again"? You have a CZcams account with a picture of a Beagle for a profile picture, you live in the year 2023 like the rest of us.

  • @jokekelleey2071
    @jokekelleey2071 Před 2 lety +1

    The part about the teepeus was really kind of boring

  • @samuraikyokkan
    @samuraikyokkan Před rokem

    What caused the Anasazi to disappear? 2:00 mark

  • @eamon5468
    @eamon5468 Před 2 lety +3

    the pueblo people were documented raising and proliferating horses through trade with other tribes. its at the point of factual error and not just simply glossing over to say they were "sedentary people" who just let the horses go.

  • @jesseandrews7200
    @jesseandrews7200 Před 2 lety

    theres a reason why the sioux was last introduced.rst

  • @Millers-B-Movie-Drive-In
    @Millers-B-Movie-Drive-In Před 2 měsíci

    Every single documentary today seems to play music the entire time. Every once in a while is one tning, but i find it terribly annoying when it goes on for entire video.

  • @MetalDetroit
    @MetalDetroit Před 2 lety +6

    I’d love to watch this whole thing. Half hour in, I cannot take any more of the F’n flute.

    • @anorak6584
      @anorak6584 Před 2 lety +2

      Damnit!! I didn't even notice til you brought it up. Now it's ruined 😂

    • @MetalDetroit
      @MetalDetroit Před 2 lety +1

      @@anorak6584 Lol - sorry

  • @KoolT
    @KoolT Před rokem

    2:15 why calvary COMMITTED suicide

  • @jesseandrews7200
    @jesseandrews7200 Před 2 lety

    its also pronounced as Zues territory 12 Titon mountains.

    • @Ryk_StayToFye
      @Ryk_StayToFye Před 2 lety

      Americans are in denial. Truth is America will never truly be blessed unless this wrong is corrected. Sadly truth being the greed has gotten so great it is impossible to fix. Our United States President position should only be held by a Native American Descendant.

  • @timettinger2017
    @timettinger2017 Před měsícem

    The Earth is all that lasts, read it

  • @peterjensen3076
    @peterjensen3076 Před 3 lety +11

    Objective? The indian terror is often mentioned; the angloamerican actions are not seen as terrorising.
    How come? But agree that it's a convenient and entertaining storytelling.

    • @deadreckoning292
      @deadreckoning292 Před 2 lety

      Awe, Pete
      Everything has to be about “inequality and racism”, huh?
      Sounds like you have a case of self hate and loathing.
      FYI..Native Americans committed just as many atrocities as the early settlers did, and then some. Work through your pain.

    • @peterjensen3076
      @peterjensen3076 Před 2 lety +6

      @@deadreckoning292: This is not about races, it is about inequality and the abuse of power.
      Self hate? Not really - I didn't take part in the angloamerican terror, but I would be stupid not to recognize that it happened.

  • @Hahaalot
    @Hahaalot Před 3 lety +2

    Lol the Narrator. Jet and the narrator of Outlaw star. #Animenerd

  • @jokekelleey2071
    @jokekelleey2071 Před 2 lety +1

    I think those Buffalo skins and animal hides smelled really bad all the time

  • @oldsalt7534
    @oldsalt7534 Před 2 lety +5

    What we did to the Native Americans was incorrigible.

    • @ShawGS70
      @ShawGS70 Před 2 lety +2

      And what the the Indian did to themselves and settlers was incorrigible. Don't paint them as angelic. What makes the red man red? Blood. And they shed more than their fair share.

    • @oldsalt7534
      @oldsalt7534 Před 2 lety

      ​@@ShawGS70 They were here first and we were stealing their land and their homes. How do you feel about blacks and Asians?

    • @multipass2567
      @multipass2567 Před 2 lety +4

      @@ShawGS70 Typical yank defence 😂

    • @dennisdonnelly7794
      @dennisdonnelly7794 Před 2 lety

      Wow you must be old

    • @dennisdonnelly7794
      @dennisdonnelly7794 Před 2 lety +1

      Exactly when in history where humans good to each other get over it

  • @jesseandrews7200
    @jesseandrews7200 Před rokem +1

    not 60 years from 1492 till the systemic genocide of COVID over 600 years and we're still eating snake as the BUFFALO NATION.TITON LAKOTA SIOUX

  • @dennisdonnelly7794
    @dennisdonnelly7794 Před 2 lety +1

    Did the blackfeet wear shoes

  • @thomasgronek6469
    @thomasgronek6469 Před 11 měsíci +1

    I have heard that the language of the Native Americans was a primitive broken Russian, which would make some sense if the Americas was settled by people who had migrated across the Bering Strait. Any input or feed back would be greatly appreciated, thanks

  • @julierobertson9397
    @julierobertson9397 Před 3 lety +7

    Well done (although I understand there are no authenticated photos of Crazy Horse). This video made me heartsick. There's a principle in the Bible that says "Return evil for evil to no one." If it had been applied by BOTH sides, all the pain and horror would have ended before it started.

    • @legacykings1602
      @legacykings1602 Před 2 lety +4

      True. But I believe the Apache did to those, what they did to us. So much death for nothing but land. The Native people surrendered for me/ us the children. I see that now. But where you from? I’m a Robertson too, San Carlos Apache.

    • @matthewgordonpettipas6773
      @matthewgordonpettipas6773 Před 2 lety +2

      @@legacykings1602 Or the Apache tortured because that was part of their culture at the time. Don't sit there and pretend they only started after the Whites came.
      The Apache fought the Comanche and other tribes for their lands, and they treated them the same way. And the Comanche nearly wiped them out if I'm not mistaken.
      Stop whitewashing history and just admit both sides did horrible things just because they could.

    • @G.IJoshua
      @G.IJoshua Před 2 lety +3

      @@matthewgordonpettipas6773 except one committed genocide the other used guerilla tactics to face a larger industrialized force. You are years of research away from perspective, good luck buddy

    • @josephvillines9766
      @josephvillines9766 Před 2 lety

      To start of with the blood did only happen when the whites came ...and who taught that we fought with each not saying we didnt ..but the question would be wouldn't it make sense that the govenment used agents as be gov officials as well turning our own against each other for their own gain kinda like they do now with all the cointelpro ...they use like they use us now ...be smarter

    • @G.IJoshua
      @G.IJoshua Před 2 lety

      @@KyL6067I don't feel like teaching you, but whatever. Natives were here and thriving, other than a pandemic, for thousands of years. We show up, now they are reduced to nothing. Their own in fighting never resulted in any danger to the race as a whole.

  • @johnwauters8576
    @johnwauters8576 Před 2 lety +1

    I found u look

  • @John3.36
    @John3.36 Před 2 lety +2

    Civilizations that rivaled Europe? These guys never invented the wheel.

    • @seraphx26
      @seraphx26 Před rokem +1

      It's amazing the blatant nonsense that is put into documentaries lol.

    • @Whoyouwishyouwere
      @Whoyouwishyouwere Před 3 měsíci +1

      That's because wheels were useless in their terrain and they didn't care to carry a lot of luggage.

  • @jokekelleey2071
    @jokekelleey2071 Před 2 lety

    Why did we always adopt the Indian names are the titles whatever the Indians called the white man that's like a part of History we never forget that title

  • @Pickledsundae
    @Pickledsundae Před 2 lety +2

    SOOOO BIASED
    Tho it does.make me.wanna go out and play cowboys and indians

  • @jamdee2237
    @jamdee2237 Před 2 lety

    .

  • @user-fd3gl5ul6u
    @user-fd3gl5ul6u Před 5 měsíci

    The Sioux Indian men wore their hair down and loose not because of humility.
    It was because it was a custom and an Indian male wearing his man hair long, had tribal meaning, but you have to be Indian to know these things.
    Did the white man wear his facial hair growth long out of humility?
    So why would a white man's narrative of an American Indian long hair be told as being the meaning of a humiliating gesture?
    Lies, lies, lies!
    Itonsni Woshiche belo.
    ❤🔥🏹

  • @The-Music-Archive
    @The-Music-Archive Před 4 měsíci

    This documentary is boro bayar bugo yaray thu amaan, thararan thararan thararan thararan thararan thararan thararan thararan, shrung dey paizeb dhi alamuna laila laila, pavroro kida kada muna laila, pavroro kida kada muna laila.

  • @cuddy3471
    @cuddy3471 Před 2 lety +1

    “The Indian wars” not the “invasion” or “ethnic cleansing” got it.

  • @KoolT
    @KoolT Před rokem

    Custer scary looking like my x

  • @jerrygilliland674
    @jerrygilliland674 Před 3 lety +6

    Is that guy at 1:00:21 a stoner? I dunno but seems like a stoner to me lol...

  • @theccpisaparasite8813
    @theccpisaparasite8813 Před 2 lety +8

    Quite a bit left out about the genocidal wars that the natives waged against each other and the now extinct and unmentioned tribes. A bit light on what the natives really were. A little too much "Dances with Wolves" not enough reality of the genocidal raping, pillaging, and kidnapping cultures that they really were. These were more akin to the Vikings than what this is portrayed.

    • @Ryk_StayToFye
      @Ryk_StayToFye Před 2 lety

      Sound as if you are in denial of the cowardly steal by Columbus and his heavily armed people. As he pretended to befriend the Indigenous people. Instead using their kindness for weakness to steal their lands. What the Native people did among ans to each other were their own business. Turtle Island were their discovery. It had nothing to do with what the Europeans. I am ashamed of the behavior, the greed of the Europeans that still haunt this place now called America. And will be the reason this place will fall. Because the amount of greed will never allow the wrong done to the Indigenous people, to be corrected. Not to mention slavery of the African to build up this stolen America committed by the Europeans in this same stolen nation. What's even sadder is they still think they deserve privileges. They now even claim the blood of the Indigenous nation. I am thankful to be a descendant of the African slave that gave without taking anything.

    • @theccpisaparasite8813
      @theccpisaparasite8813 Před 2 lety +4

      @@Ryk_StayToFye Of course it was their own business. And that business was inter-tribal genocide. The Europeans were simply the newest set of nomadic tribes. The only real difference was that they were a lot better at it than the natives were. Envy isn't a good look.
      I'm not ashamed of anything our ancestors did centuries ago. All cultures are imperfect and intensely flawed and are certainly prisoners of their times. You'd best get used to that. My sole point is just as the Europeans were trapped in that way of thinking, so were the genocidal natives. Your self-hating guilt over something you never did to a genocidal people of centuries ago is unproductive. The lesson to take away is that man is a savage creature and is trying to improve. The only real nation that doesn't seem to get that is China.
      There was no "wrong" done to the Amerinds. They merely suffered the fate that they inflicted on so many tribes before. I wouldn't worry too much about it. As a Yaqui myself, I know what my people were. Romanticizing them as you have, just blinds you to the reality. The "Dances with Wolves" way of life, was an aberration, not the reality. I'm sorry.

    • @JonathanMartin884
      @JonathanMartin884 Před rokem

      @@theccpisaparasite8813 I am not sure I agree with you that all Native tribes of North America were "genocidal." I am not disputing the fact that there was certainly conflict between tribes in many settings, and that generally these conflicts seems to be removed from the, as you call it, "Dances with Wolves" version of Indigenous American cultures and traditions. But, to just say that all tribes were trying to kill every other tribe and take their stuff seems to negate the history of intertribal trade that was also clearly happening. It also depends on what region of North America you are talking about, and while your characterization may be relevant to some areas, it is not relevant to all areas. Just going all the way to other side of the spectrum and saying all tribes were brutal to all other tribes and that all interaction was war, pillaging and rape is also not accurate.
      I also would posit that there are several regimes throughout other parts of Asia, Africa, Europe and the Americas that have similar problems as China. They are _not_ the only nation that doesn't understand human rights.

    • @theccpisaparasite8813
      @theccpisaparasite8813 Před rokem

      @@JonathanMartin884 'all' very true. Just most of them. Kidnapping of woman and children. Stealing their land. Exterminating the men. This as well as many other behaviors was just a part of life for the vast majority of people's. That movie "Dances with Wolves" always made tribal historians laugh with its romanticized version of the ancient Lakota lifestyle without the slightest irony of the fact that there were no horses in the Americas until the Spaniards brought them. But as you say, not all were violently genocidal people. The Navajo being relatively peaceful. Yet a vision of the the common violence is the tribe Apache ... which is the Navajo word for "enemy". They were, by and large, violent warlike people's

    • @theccpisaparasite8813
      @theccpisaparasite8813 Před rokem

      @@JonathanMartin884 there are many people who have no disregard for human rights ... China however represents ¼ of the population and is a threatening or coercing neighbors.

  • @jokekelleey2071
    @jokekelleey2071 Před 2 lety

    It's amazing how ignorant people were back then I don't mean to be disrespectful or anything illiterate but they had nothing they had absolutely nothing compared to today we have so much it's unbelievable watch the video about the beginning of the steam locomotive that's amazing too

  • @josephvillines9766
    @josephvillines9766 Před 2 lety +1

    Now they call us Mexicans Puerto Rican negros...and say the tribes disappeared...

  • @Luxington1
    @Luxington1 Před rokem +1

    Nothing about the Apache?

    • @lance5041
      @lance5041 Před rokem +1

      It mentions the Apache. Re-watch it.

  • @bfan6032
    @bfan6032 Před 2 lety +4

    so glad we won

  • @thenextshenanigantownandth4393

    Insane amount of Irish surnames in this documentary, the Irish role in American land grabbing seems to have been obscured, as is the earlier migrations of Irish folk. I have looked into records and several 10s of thousands of Irish surnames can be easily identified in colonial America. And no I don't mean scots-Irish, these people have Irish surnames and Irish ancestry, the scots Irish are scottush and English people who lived in ulster and don't have names like the ones in the documentary. The people here mostly have southern Irish ancestry who came from the famine from the 1840s, though some are native Ulster Irish. Makes sense the Irish migrated by the millions in the 1830s-1860s to escape the Famine, they were some of the main players of manifest destiny a term coined by Sullivan who was obviously Irish American. I read a book a while back called Beyond the American pale which talked about the Irish role in the westward expansion, but I would say the Irish were key players in this movement and infact their involvement and experiences where partly the reason for it, perhaps a way of proving themselves to the WASPS, and the frontier society had existed long before the scots Irish existed ,but again this isn't well studied, but one look at their surnames and ancestry shows an obvious hidden important history.
    Irish surnames Kearney, Fiztpatrick, Sheridan, Conors, fort mcdermit, Fort Riley, Harney, Meade, Mcgraw ect

    • @bobbilaval6171
      @bobbilaval6171 Před 3 lety +1

      I had not noticed until you mentioned it, but it makes sense to me. The Scots Irish were always used as a buffer along the frontiers. Military service has always been a path to success and self improvement, most often used by those without means.

    • @thenextshenanigantownandth4393
      @thenextshenanigantownandth4393 Před 3 lety +4

      @@bobbilaval6171 Seems American school system has told a few lies. Except these are Irish not scots Irish. Kearney, Fiztpatrick, Sheridan, Conors, fort mcdermit, Fort Riley, Harney, Meade, Mcgraw ect are Irish surnames not scottish. at the time they were catholic but soon alot of them lost their religion and became protestant. Makes sense millions of Irish had been immigrating to the us in the 1800s during and especially after the famine when the us had a very small population maybe 12 million and the Irish made up 2 million all Irish Catholic ancestry who were desperate and arrived from Ireland fleeing a famine in the 1830s-1840s, they were used by the wasps to take land from the native Americans and had called from experiences of the planation's in Ireland and the pale, the frontier element in Irish history, which long predate the existence of the scots-Irish. The Irish had a term for the British planters redcoats were the term originates from. They were used by Lincoln as soldiers arguably the largest group who fought in the civil war in many cases straight off the boat. The native Irish coined the term manifest destiny, Began settling and taking land from the native Americans after and before the civil war as fort points like an American pale.
      I think the perspective that needs to be looked at is the Irish element not scots Irish mythology.

    • @raymcgeough8720
      @raymcgeough8720 Před 3 lety +1

      @@thenextshenanigantownandth4393 so what you’re saying is that Irish people joined the army and were ordered to take the land? So actually it was still the US government..

    • @thenextshenanigantownandth4393
      @thenextshenanigantownandth4393 Před 3 lety

      @@raymcgeough8720 Its not just that they were complacent but just as willing if not more so than the wasps. Sheridan famously said "The only good Indian is a dead Indian" A sentiment and phrase that has been uttered by Americans ever since used on a variety of peoples up to modern day, but originated from that Irish and Indian oppressive relationship or at the very least was popularized by Sheridan. Sheridan is one of the poster boy for this stuff, but he is far from the only Irish-American who went full in on manifest destiny, historians have been ignoring this hidden history for a long time, even when it gets mentioned it's often brief, yet the Irish-Americans were undeniably key players, although I'm not saying they're entirely to blame. The documentary didn't even mention that Fitzpatrick was born in Ireland, so he wasn't even American or Irish-American.

    • @raymcgeough8720
      @raymcgeough8720 Před 3 lety +3

      @@thenextshenanigantownandth4393 you know how many men have been credited to the saying “the only good Indian...”? I know at least 3. Sheridan makes it 4. Maybe they’ve been ignoring it because it’s completely irrelevant?

  • @Dylontso
    @Dylontso Před 3 lety +20

    We are actually called Natives not “Indians” Indians came from India. Not mad or anything but people just get that mixed up easily.

    • @markcynic808
      @markcynic808 Před 3 lety +9

      You're not native either.

    • @Dylontso
      @Dylontso Před 3 lety +3

      @@markcynic808 and how do you know that? My tribe is Nez Perce. And I live on the reservation in NM

    • @markcynic808
      @markcynic808 Před 3 lety +16

      @@Dylontso
      You're all Asian immigrants.

    • @Dylontso
      @Dylontso Před 3 lety +6

      @@markcynic808 fucking racist idiot Native Americans were here before you white people took the land from us. And yes I am Native American.

    • @toold45
      @toold45 Před 3 lety

      The Indian war was really the Gullah wars

  • @alexmazur1281
    @alexmazur1281 Před 2 lety +3

    God Bless our ancestors who upon arriving on completely unknown soil fought off the blood thirsty Siberian hordes and secured this land for future generations of Europeans

  • @antirealist
    @antirealist Před rokem +1

    I think the point to be taken here is that all humans have the capacity to do abhorrent things and that native Americans are no exception to that. Moreover, these atrocities committed by native Americans bring much needed balance to the vastly one sided "peaceful, innocent Native vs racist, evil European" narrative that is so pernicious right now (see: land acknowledgements).

  • @ElenaElena1
    @ElenaElena1 Před 3 lety +1

    PLEASE, Read my comments below.......under the name ELENA E.
    written by ELENA E.
    Four games were invented by Indigenous peoples.
    CHUNKEY or HOOP and Pole
    Mesoamerican ball game played with a heavy rubber ball.
    Lacrosse originated among Mohawk peoples.
    Shinny, a form of hockey among the SAUK, FOXES, and
    ASSINIBOINE PEOPLES.
    PLEASE READ THE ROOTS and BEGINNINGS of the ENTIRE HUMAN
    RACE BELOW written by ELENA E. and organized by ELENA E.
    "NATIVE AMERICAN WORDS OF WISDOM" Beautiful Melody.
    "SHAWNEE SIOUX WAR DANCE"

  • @heavinhellandearth5309

    North west south east go north apostlic God and the devil and Jesus Christ name amen for internity no matter what

  • @marshalkrieg2664
    @marshalkrieg2664 Před rokem

    Way overly romanticized and scrubbed up history of the plains Indians. They had a primitive culture and most of them tortured their captives to death.

  • @ervinhart1511
    @ervinhart1511 Před 3 lety

    Would you guys rate this pro-establishment/anti-establishment?

    • @G.IJoshua
      @G.IJoshua Před 2 lety +3

      It's just history, your perspective makes it either

    • @ervinhart1511
      @ervinhart1511 Před 2 lety

      @@G.IJoshua exactly. It's "his-story".

  • @sheilahendrix5935
    @sheilahendrix5935 Před rokem

    Peace❤️ and 💛Blessings💚 Too 💜My ❤️Brothers 💛May 💚God 💜Bless❤️ Everyone 💚Always 💜May God ❤️Bless 💛Everyone💜 Richly with 💛everything 💚they 💜need Always💛 Much💛 Love💜 Blessings 💚Always ☺️ ✌️ 💯 ❤️ 🎇 🌈 ☺️ ✌️ 💯 🌐💛❤️❤️💛💚💚💛💛

  • @mj12234
    @mj12234 Před 2 lety

    First mistake is the name "indian"... second is the british narrator.. this is BS

    • @jakefitzsimmons1213
      @jakefitzsimmons1213 Před 2 lety +2

      He isn't British

    • @MetalDetroit
      @MetalDetroit Před 2 lety

      And of course the music

    • @StevieZero
      @StevieZero Před 2 lety +3

      He doesn't even sound the slightest bit British

    • @alanboots1106
      @alanboots1106 Před rokem +1

      Not sure how you hear us Brits but we don’t sound like this….what…what….😂😂😂

  • @matthewgordonpettipas6773

    I think all the descendants of settlers killed or tortured should be compensated....I mean it's only fair right? If we're going after White people for what their ancestors did, then White people should be able to do the same and collect cash for the injustices that Natives did to innocent settlers.

    • @swtbbyjms3806
      @swtbbyjms3806 Před 2 lety +5

      The settlers were not innocent. They illegally trespassed and occupied native territories.

    • @TR-yi8up
      @TR-yi8up Před 2 lety +2

      You don’t need to capitalize ‘white’, Grand Wizard

    • @cherbalistic
      @cherbalistic Před 2 lety +3

      @@swtbbyjms3806 Historically speaking, it’s not illegal to conquer other lands and people. Native Americans were conquering other tribes long before settlers arrived. Settlers were just better armed. As happens when peoples conquer peoples.

    • @JA-ru3il
      @JA-ru3il Před 2 lety

      @@TR-yi8up 😂

    • @AKJames762
      @AKJames762 Před rokem

      @@TR-yi8up since the Associated Press has decided journalists now are to capitalize "black" in print/digital media, do journalists get inundated with some sort of black supremacist title? If black should be capitalized then why not White?