Matt Walsh The Real History of the American Indians

1srelluc

Diamond Member
Joined
Nov 21, 2021
Messages
74,633
Reaction score
110,466
Points
3,488
Location
Shenandoah Valley of Virginia
What do Snow White, Cinderella, and smallpox blankets have in common?
They’re all fairytales.

In this episode of "Real History," Matt Walsh rips apart the myth of peaceful, noble Indians who were supposedly victimized by evil white settlers.

It’s time to ditch the self-loathing propaganda designed to demoralize us and replace it with raw, unfiltered history that radical academics don't want you to see.



Quite the informative piece by Walsh, well worth the hour spent to watch when you get time to watch it.

All in all, the NAs should be thankful they were allowed to survive in the numbers they did.
 
What do Snow White, Cinderella, and smallpox blankets have in common?
They’re all fairytales.

In this episode of "Real History," Matt Walsh rips apart the myth of peaceful, noble Indians who were supposedly victimized by evil white settlers.


It’s time to ditch the self-loathing propaganda designed to demoralize us and replace it with raw, unfiltered history that radical academics don't want you to see.



Quite the informative piece by Walsh, well worth the hour spent to watch when you get time to watch it.

All in all, the NAs should be thankful they were allowed to survive in the numbers they did.


That guy gets it.
 
Indigenous Americans were victimized by unscrupulous white Euro-Americans.

And Matt Walsh is right that the natives were not pacificists.

Neither were the Euro-Americans.
 
Go explore the ruins of the Southwest and it's obscenely clear, like a slap to the face, that the builders were living in a high-threat total warfare environment.

To anyone with the barest hint of tactical training or experience, the construction screams brutality with the voices of endless victims of untold suffering.

No parent willingly chooses to raise children on a cliff edge the width of my bed, with a sheer drop of hundreds of feet, just because they feel like it. They did it because the alternative was death or worse. The hostility is palpable, like walking in the remnants of trench warfare.

You don't have to build in such a way unless you feared for your life from other warlike tribes.

R.2b36745ecee1c02dc1223d26dbf9c7cd
 
Go explore the ruins of the Southwest and it's obscenely clear, like a slap to the face, that the builders were living in a high-threat total warfare environment.

To anyone with the barest hint of tactical training or experience, the construction screams brutality with the voices of endless victims of untold suffering.

No parent willingly chooses to raise children on a cliff edge the width of my bed, with a sheer drop of hundreds of feet, just because they feel like it. They did it because the alternative was death or worse. The hostility is palpable, like walking in the remnants of trench warfare.

You don't have to build in such a way unless you feared for your life from other warlike tribes.

R.2b36745ecee1c02dc1223d26dbf9c7cd

Actually, those fortifications were built by the Anasazi, who were probably the most war-like tribe.

There's even evidence they engaged in Cannibalism before other tribes wiped them out.

 
Back
Top Bottom