Posted on 06/22/2015 8:33:12 AM PDT by Citizen Zed
James Swan parked his old Dodge alongside the South Dakota visitor center, where grungy hippies were sprawled on a lawn and passing around a feather. The two-dozen vagabonds are planning to unleash thousands of their brethren into the Black Hills for prayer and free thinking. But Swan wasnt feeling the peace and love.
We dont want you here. You have no fking respect for Lakota people! the 54-year-old Native American yelled into a mic attached to his truck. His T-shirt bore another message: portraits of warriors who had shellacked the U.S. Army in the Battle of Little Bighorn, alongside the words Original Homeland Security.
They arent listening to anybody, Swan told The Daily Beast of the phalanx of graying flower children and their next-generation recruits. This might work for them everywhere in other states, but theyre dealing with Lakotas now.
Were a warrior society, he added. We dont want violence, but this is our culture, our sacredness and we will protect it.
Swan is not a tribal council representative and does not speak for the Sioux. That isnt stopping him from fighting the Rainbow Family of Living Light, a counterculture group thats held annual gatherings in national forests every July since 1972 to pray for world peaceand deliver drugs, nudity and sometimes murder and other crimes in their wake.
To some Lakota, the love fest threatens to desecrate the sacred Black Hills National Forest, where 5,000 to 20,000 hippies are expected to dig trench latrines, fire pits and kitchens. Swan and his band of activists with the United Urban Warrior Society say theyre planning a blockade and will remove the bums.
Youre not a tribe, Swan added. Youre fricking fruitcake people.
(Excerpt) Read more at thedailybeast.com ...
“Its my body and you arent allowed to say anything.
Here’s how: “When you pay to clothe it, feed it, and house it it’ll be your body. Until that day your ass is mine.”
L
I’m familiar with how the Army operated and its goals. I know the goal of the Army was not maximum survival but winning, if winning was possible. Custer was aggressive and he bit off more than he could chew, but it was NOT obvious - not to him and not to many others.
Custer was fighting to win. Given the numbers he encountered and their equipment, it was a long shot - but a long shot gets its best chance with aggression, not caution.
“You claimed that “no historian” agreed with me.”
Who? Who seriously thinks Custer knew exactly what he was riding in to? Yes, he knew there would be a lot - as the Army had often encountered before. He did not know total numbers, their equipment, and he did not know they would fight as aggressively as they did. Gen Crook had learned that lesson a week earlier, but there was no way for Custer to know it.
He wasn’t there to play it safe. Had he realized the full extent, his actions might have been different, but various officers and men learned just what they were facing at different stages in the fight.
You wrote: “From his vantage point above the encampment he would have had ample time to understand the tactical situation and to withdraw. Nobody who has been there could possibly think otherwise.”
Having read the accounts of men who were there, NO ONE understood the tactical situation in a timely manner. And since they were there at the time, I give greater weight to what THEY SAY than to what you claim is obvious to any visitor.
This statement, like so much that you presume, is false. My father, who will be 90 on Thursday, took a horse tour of the battlefield with me and my three brothers on June 25th, 1975, as a birthday present. In those days, the Crow Agency ran horseback tours of the battlefield. I have been back there several times since, with my own family. Haven't checked if the tours still run, but maybe you can get one. When Colonel Custer reached Weir Point, there were not "thousands" of men present. Even so, hundreds of cavalrymen on horse back would not have obscured Custer's view from above the Sioux camp.
I know the goal of the Army was not maximum survival but winning, if winning was possible. Custer was aggressive and he bit off more than he could chew, but it was NOT obvious - not to him and not to many others.
Thanks for demolishing your own point and making mine.
The culture of the US Army, Custer's own undeniably fierce courage, his wife's political ambitions, and his belief that his soldiers were worth ten Indians apiece all contributed to the terrible decisions that he made that day. And you will find many more historians who agree with that point of view than yours. As for the testimonials of men made in the postmortem, I'm inclined to disbelieve them, since they had so much to lose by admitting that the tactical situation turned out exactly as the scouts had insinuated it would.
As a Catholic, I tend toward a certain degree of bloodthirstiness. As popes said in sending Crusaders against the Muslims: Deus vult! (God wills it!).
You underestimate the Spanish. Unlike the English, the Spaniards did not believe in race-baed slavery and racial harmony (and intermarriage) in their former colonies worked much better than race-based slavery o the English from which the USA suffers to this day.
The hippies were pigs and nuisances in their youth. This bunch occupying the Black Hills are pigs and nuisances now. As Mr. Swan so eloquently said: You are not a tribe. You are frickin' fruitcakes! That about covers it. Like the ancient Spartans, they can go home (NOW!) with their shields or on them. They are nothing more than members of the wierdo American community.
Some here have claimed that the Lakota forfeited their rights t 7.7 million acres by attacking the Crow who were not parties to the Treaty of Laramie. I don't know from personal knowledge but the Wikipedia article on the Fort Laramie Treaty of 1868 mentions the land given the Lakota but nothing about that concession ever being abrogated.
The Lakota, Cheyenne and Arapaho were allied for as long as anyone knows in intramural warfare against the Crow and the Blackfeet. The Wikipedia article makes no mention of any agreement of the Lakota not to make war against the Crow or the Blackfoot. It would be like seeking the agreement of Italian Americans never to eat tomato sauce.
fricking fruitcake people
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Ha ha ha ha! From the Land of Fruits and Nuts.
A case where Smell-A-Vision is a bad idea.
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