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Indians Sitting bull
looks more like a girl than a chief. No wonder they LOST the war they declared against usa girl was in
charge. These savage pagan Indians who cut the legs off White Settlers, impaled
their torsos on carts, and rolled them around their teepees to torture them to
death, deserve NO RESPECT from ANY of us. The Noble Red Man
by Mark Twain
First published in The
Galaxy 1870 In books he is tall
and tawny, muscular, straight and of kingly presence; he has a beaked nose and
an eagle eye. His hair is glossy,
and as black as the raven's wing; out of its massed richness springs a sheaf of
brilliant feathers; in his ears and nose are silver ornaments; on his arms and
wrists and ankles are broad silver bands and bracelets; his buckskin hunting
suit is gallantly fringed, and the belt and the moccasins wonderfully flowered
with colored beads; and when, rainbowed with his war-paint, he stands at full
height, with his crimson blanket wrapped about him, his quiver at his back, his
bow and tomahawk projecting upward from his folded arms, and his eagle eye
gazing at specks against the far horizon which even the paleface's field-glass
could scarcely reach, he is a being to fall down and worship. His language is
intensely figurative. He never speaks of the moon, but always of "the eye
of the night;" nor of the wind as the wind, but as "the
whisper of the Great Spirit;" and so forth and so on. His power of
condensation is marvelous. In some publications he seldom says anything but
"Waugh!" and this, with a page of explanation by the author, reveals
a whole world of thought and wisdom that before lay concealed in that one
little word. He is noble. He is
true and loyal; not even imminent death can shake his peerless faithfulness.
His heart is a well-spring of truth, and of generous impulses, and of knightly
magnanimity. With him, gratitude is religion; do him a kindness, and at the end
of a lifetime he has not forgotten it. Eat of his bread, or offer him yours,
and the bond of hospitality is sealed--a bond which is forever inviolable with
him. He loves the dark-eyed
daughter of the forest, the dusky maiden of faultless form and rich attire, the
pride of the tribe, the all-beautiful. He talks to her in a low voice, at
twilight of his deeds on the war-path and in the chase, and of the grand
achievements of his ancestors; and she listens with downcast eyes, "while
a richer hue mantles her dusky cheek." Such is the Noble Red
Man in print. But out on the plains and in the mountains, not being on dress
parade, not being gotten up to see company, he is under no obligation to be
other than his natural self, and therefore: He is little, and
scrawny, and black, and dirty; and, judged by even the most charitable of our
canons of human excellence, is thoroughly pitiful and contemptible. There is
nothing in his eye or his nose that is attractive, and if there is anything in
his hair that--however, that is a feature which will not bear too close
examination . . . He wears no bracelets on his arms or ankles; his hunting suit
is gallantly fringed, but not intentionally; when he does not wear his
disgusting rabbit-skin robe, his hunting suit consists wholly of the half of a
horse blanket brought over in the Pinta or the Mayflower, and frayed out and
fringed by inveterate use. He is not rich enough to possess a belt; he never
owned a moccasin or wore a shoe in his life; and truly he is nothing but a
poor, filthy, naked scurvy vagabond, whom to exterminate were a charity to the
Creator's worthier insects and reptiles which he oppresses. Still, when contact
with the white man has given to the Noble Son of the Forest certain cloudy
impressions of civilization, and aspirations after a nobler life, he presently
appears in public with one boot on and one shoe--shirtless, and wearing ripped
and patched and buttonless pants which he holds up with his left hand--his
execrable rabbit-skin robe flowing from his shoulder--an old hoop-skirt on,
outside of it--a necklace of battered sardine-boxes and oyster-cans reposing on
his bare breast--a venerable flint-lock musket in his right hand--a
weather-beaten stove-pipe hat on, canted "gallusly" to starboard, and
the lid off and hanging by a thread or two; and when he thus appears, and waits
patiently around a saloon till he gets a chance to strike a "swell"
attitude before a looking-glass, he is a good, fair, desirable subject for
extermination if ever there was one. There is nothing
figurative, or moonshiny, or sentimental about his language. It is very simple
and unostentatious, and consists of plain, straightforward lies. His
"wisdom" conferred upon an idiot would leave that idiot helpless
indeed. He is ignoble--base
and treacherous, and hateful in every way. Not even imminent death can startle
him into a spasm of virtue. The ruling trait of all savages is a greedy and
consuming selfishness, and in our Noble Red Man it is found in its amplest
development. His heart is a cesspool of falsehood, of treachery, and of low and
devilish instincts. With him, gratitude is an unknown emotion; and when one
does him a kindness, it is safest to keep the face toward him, lest the reward
be an arrow in the back. To accept of a favor from him is to assume a debt
which you can never repay to his satisfaction, though you bankrupt yourself
trying. To give him a dinner when he is starving, is to precipitate the whole
hungry tribe upon your hospitality, for he will go straight and fetch them,
men, women, children, and dogs, and these they will huddle patiently around
your door, or flatten their noses against your window, day aft er day, gazing
beseechingly upon every mouthful you take, and unconsciously swallowing when
you swallow! The scum of the earth! And the Noble Son of
the Plains becomes a mighty hunter in the due and proper season. That season is
the summer, and the prey that a number of the tribes hunt is crickets and
grasshoppers! The warriors, old men, women, and children, spread themselves
abroad in the plain and drive the hopping creatures before them into a ring of
fire. I could describe the feast that then follows, without missing a detail,
if I thought the reader would stand it. All history and honest
observation will show that the Red Man is a skulking coward and a windy
braggart, who strikes without warning--usually from an ambush or under cover of
night, and nearly always bringing a force of about five or six to one against
his enemy; kills helpless women and little children, and massacres th e men in
their beds; and then brags about it as long as he lives, and his son and his
grandson and great-grandson after him glorify it among the "heroic deeds
of their ancestors." A regiment of Fenians will fill the whole world with
the noise of it when they are getting ready invade Canada; but when the Red Man
declares war, the first intimation his friend the white man whom he supped with
at twilight has of it, is when the war-whoop rings in his ears and tomahawk
sinks into his brain. . .. The Noble Red Man
seldom goes prating loving foolishness to a splendidly caparisoned blushing
maid at twilight. No; he trades a crippled horse, or a damaged musket, or a
dog, or a gallon of grasshoppers, and an inefficient old mother for her, and
makes her work like an abject slave all the rest of her life to compensate him
for the outlay. He never works himself. She builds the habitation, when they
use one (it consists in hanging half a dozen rags over the weather side of a
sage-brush bush to roost under); gathers and brings home the fuel; takes care of
the raw-boned pony when they possess such grandeur; she walks and carries her
nursing cubs while he rides. She wears no clothing save the fragrant
rabbit-skin robe which her great-grandmother before her wore, and all the
"blushing" she does can be removed with soap and a towel, provided it
is only four or five weeks old and not caked. Such is the genuine
Noble Aborigine. I did not get him from books, but from personal observation. Return to Twain's
Indians - Show quoted text Lakota withdraw from treaties, declare
independence from U.S.
The
Lakota Sioux Indians,
whose ancestors include Sitting Bull, Red Cloud and Crazy Horse, have withdrawn
from all treaties their forefathers signed with the U.S. government and have
declared their independence. A delegation delivered the news to the State
Department earlier this week. Portions
of Nebraska, South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana and Wyoming comprise Lakota
country, and the tribe says that if the federal government doesn't begin
diplomatic discussions promptly, liens will be filed on property in the
five-state region. Here's the news release. "We
are no longer citizens of the United States of America and all those who live
in the five-state area that encompasses our country are free to join us,"
said Russell Means, a longtime Indian rights
activist. "This is according to the laws of the United States,
specifically Article 6 of the Constitution," which states that treaties
are the supreme law of the land. "It
is also within the laws on treaties passed at the Vienna Convention and put
into effect by the U.S. and the rest of the international community in 1980. We
are legally within our rights to be free and independent," he added during
a press conference yesterday in Washington. The
new country would issue its own passports and driver licenses, and living there
would be tax-free, provided residents renounce their U.S. citizenship, he said,
according to a report from Agence
France-Presse. The
Lakota say the United States has never honored the pacts, signed with the Great Sioux Nation in 1851
and 1868 at Fort Laramie, Wyo. "We
have 33 treaties with the United States that they have not lived by. They
continue to take our land, our water, our children," said Phyllis Young,
who helped organize the first international conference on indigenous rights in
Geneva in 1977. Means
said the "annexation" of native American land had turned the Lakota
into "facsimiles of white people." In
1974, the Lakota drafted a declaration of continuing independence. Their cause
got a boost in September, when the United Nations adopted a non-binding declaration
on the rights of indigenous peoples. The Bush administration opposed the
measure. (1855
portrait of Sitting Bull by David Frances Barry, Library of Congress) |
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Modified Tuesday, November 02, 2010 Copyright @ 2010 by Fathers' Manifesto & Christian Party |