Message from @Hagre
Discord ID: 525799258855571459
Why would i get kicked bro
you trying to be an American Black or something?
because you have down syndrome
literally
people who talk like that are retarded, I swear
blAck PeopLE Dumb And LoW Iq~!1!!1!
I grew up in a ghetto area y’all wouldn’t survive in my hood
Ur all pussies
Lol
You went to prison and are proud of it
I wish I could be like you dude
so cool
@turdlicka420 i grew up in Africa - what's your point?
I know u would bro
Y’all wouldn’t survive in my shoes
i can tell you right and right now, that Africa is much worse than the ghetto lmao
Idgaf about Africa
and that you wouldn't last a goddamn day
I’m talking about turtle island
U wouldn’t last 1 day on my rez
also, who the hell is gonna be proud of going to jail?
He is
there's nothing positive about this
of course IQ isnt a fixed thing
white supremacist are retarded ass bitches anyway usually
its a permanent stain on your record
Who said IQ was fixed? @cmad
I’m of the superior race
is that why your race was massacred?
My race wasn’t massacred we still here yalls was tho
December 21st, 1866: Today is the 149th anniversary of the great victory of Lakota, Cheyenne and Arapaho warriors over US soldiers near Fort Phil Kearny, Wyoming. Captain Wm J. Fetterman and all his 80-man command were killed in a battle remembered (depending which side you were on) as "the Fetterman Massacre" or "The Hundred in the Hands". Leaders on the native side included Red Cloud and High Backbone (among the strategic leaders shaping the battle) and 26-year old Crazy Horse, cementing his reputation as tactical leader of the party that successfully decoyed Fetterman's command into ambush beyond reach of reinforcements. Here we have another of Paul Goble's masterful variations on Indian artistic conventions, depicting the attack on the post wood train that started the fateful ball rolling that December a.m. (Pilamayayelo Kingsley)
“The fetterman massacre”
Y’all got fucked up today
Hahahahah
i didn't say wiped out or anything along those lines
i said massacred
as in suffering heavy losses
December 21st, 1866: Today is the 149th anniversary of the great victory of Lakota, Cheyenne and Arapaho warriors over US soldiers near Fort Phil Kearny, Wyoming. Captain Wm J. Fetterman and all his 80-man command were killed in a battle remembered (depending which side you were on) as "the Fetterman Massacre" or "The Hundred in the Hands". Leaders on the native side included Red Cloud and High Backbone (among the strategic leaders shaping the battle) and 26-year old Crazy Horse, cementing his reputation as tactical leader of the party that successfully decoyed Fetterman's command into ambush beyond reach of reinforcements. Here we have another of Paul Goble's masterful variations on Indian artistic conventions, depicting the attack on the post wood train that started the fateful ball rolling that December a.m. (Pilamayayelo Kingsley)
Read this