Message from @Hagre
Discord ID: 525797981199269888
My people came from the superior agriculturalists
what the fuck are "superior agriculturalists"?
What r u even talking about @Similar Scowl
I ain’t black wtf
what does this do with having to develop modern infrastructure?
what does this do with modernization?
dude you are so out of the loop please quiet
We knew more shit about growing food than y’all shit we showed y’all
Na faggot @Similar Scowl
growing food isn't going to help modernization
I’m a traditionalist
especially if you don't have the same tools being developed in Europea and Asia
That’s westernized thinking
"westernized thinking"
its fucking common sense
I don’t think In the same vein as you all y’all are thinking In the white people way
what?
Just ignore it
I’m thinking from the indian point of view
It has an iq of 70
Who let the Mongrel out of his cage?
Lol ur name is familiar @The Big Oof
@The Big Oof is this guy LARPing or something?
Na we massacred y’all too @Hagre
Its just depressing
@Hagre No, he's just fucking stupid
who is "we"
This is me
i'm not white
He doxxed himself not that long ago
<:GWcorbinHolyFuck:384871347756728321>
i'm Ethiopian
and.... he just did it again
I’m cheyenne seminole and creek
We wuz Nativez!!!
lmao
@turdlicka420 you thought I was white?
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)