Asclepias
Diamond Member
I bet that dumbass censored feels pretty stupid right about now.You dont eat humans either but the pilgrims did exactly that.You don't eat animals that are historically companions to man.... time of that companionship historically, and traditionally, predates all religions. They do not call dog mans best friend without reason.
they were feral savages
The idea that there were man-eating pilgrims is nothing new, but American History courses in U.S. schools typically make no mention of it. Still, many historical accounts mention settlers (though her perhaps not pilgrims proper), turning to cannibalism for survival, particularly as the winter months approached.
In the United States, Americans commonly trace the Thanksgiving holiday to stories of a 1621 celebration at the Plymouth Plantation. According to national myth, it was here that the Plymouth settlers held a harvest feast after a successful growing season, but the holiday was documented as being in practice as early as 1607, including in Jamestown (founded in 1607), Virginia as early as 1610 or before.
The historical record is chilling. Early Jamestown colonist George Percy wrote of a “world of miseries,” that included digging up corpses from their graves to eat when there was nothing else.
When the 8216 Pilgrims 8217 Ate Human Flesh On Thanksgiving Political Blind Spot