Posted on 02/08/2005 7:54:20 AM PST by freespirited
No good story here for either group.
Professor Churchill is The Pig...
By fueling the need to Jerry Springer this guy we are probably increasing his profile and speaking fees.
No thanks - I'm out.
In those days people were scared to death of smallpox, almost like fear of AIDS today. I would think any commander telling his troops to handle "smallpox blankets" would have a mutiny on his hands.
"No good story here for either group"
Good story for the American government
My Title: US Government actively inoculating Indians against small pox 1838
Title: Letter from Dr. Joseph R. DePrefontaine To Indian Agent, Upper Missouri (Joshua Pilcher)
Date: 1838-07-09 Volume: G Page: 135
Author(s): Dr. Joseph R. DePrefontaine
Recipient(s): Joshua Pilcher (Indian Agent, Upper Missouri)
Contents: Verifies letter from Pilcher to Clark dated Sept, 1838 as to the difficulty in estimating the number of Indians vaccinated for smallpox. Does estimate that 3,000 were inoculated.
Description: Copy of letter. 1p.
Comments: Dr. DePrefontaine was hired to innoculate Indians in the fight against smallpox.
Well, that's not quite right either. While the precise details of viral transmission weren't known, it was known that you could get sick from close proximity to other infected people and their garments, blankets, etc. But the idea that there was any wide effort to do this to American Indians with smallpox-infected cloth is AFAIK not well-supported.
I don't think I made that exact assertion but the Supreme Court disagrees with you, Professor Katz's comments notwithstanding Academic Freedom You might also check out Tenure
Well they knew enough about smallpox to inoculate by the end of the 18th century. Washington had the troops in the Continental army inoculated during the Revolutionary war.
Consider all the leftist liberals you know and know of. Can't that be said about them all? To live in a land of fantasy, avoiding unpleasant facts and denying those you bump into, would indicate mental and emotional instability by its very nature.
Tammy Bruce describes the liberal mindset so beautifully in her book The Death of Right and Wrong.
She calls them malignant narcissists who are trying to work out their problems through societal experimentation.
I was thinking the same thing thing.
Mandan had earlier exposure and was in decline by 1837 (only 350 men alive).
http://www.mhanation.com/main/history/history_mandan.html
After the smallpox reduced the villages on the west to five, the five went up to where the others were, in the neighborhood of some Arikara, and settle in two villages. A great many Mandan had died and they were no longer strong and fearless. They made an alliance with the Arikara against the Sioux. All this happened before 1796 and is chronicled in Henry and Schoolcraft. Lewis and Clark found the two villages one on each side and about fifteen miles below the Knife River. Both villages consisted of forty to fifty lodges and united could raise about three hundred and fifty men. Lewis and Clark describe them as having united with the Hidatsa and engaging in continual warfare against the Arikara and the Sioux.
The description given by Lewis and Clark agrees with the conditions two years later when Henry visited them. In 1837, smallpox attacked them again, raged for many weeks and left only one hundred and twenty-five survivors.
I'm maintaining a running log of the controversy here at my blogsite.
Agreed, although I never knew you were in.
I was pinged
Regent,Please take a serious look at the research conducted by Thomas Brown in the attached document. If the attachment was blocked for some reason, please read the same paper here: http://hal.lamar.edu/~browntf/Churchill1.htm In it, you will find ample reason to terminate Ward Churchill from the employ of Colorado State University. His comments regarding the 9/11 terrorist attacks on the United States notwithstanding, he simply shouldn't be a professor of anything.
Ward Churchill is a fraud. He is not deserving of association with the name of Colorado State University, nor certainly of tenure among honorable academic professionals. I urge you to remove Mr. Churchill from the faculty of CU immediately to begin repairing the stain he has placed upon the reputation of your institution. No legal action of which he is capable can compare to the damage being done by his continued employment there.
As, ken21, I especially liked this:
...prestige and legitimacy often accrues to those who most successfully express an oppositional identity."Oppositional identity"! I hadn't realized there was a name for the disease, which I've always attributed just to being a self-loathing ass.
This paper of Mr. Brown is very powerful. Churchill flaunts his acquittal in the disruption case, and Mr. Brown has just pulled the rug on it. Shall we assume that the Regents have a copy of this? Just in case, I sent one off, and another copy to my uncle in Denver, a UC graduate and son of a 1950s regent, who will make sure they see it.
Thanks, freespirited!
I don't want to be responsible for raising this guy's speaking fees and adding to his wealth. Ignoring is sometimes the best punishment.
There is a degree of momentum here that I never would have imagined. I would not be surprised if Ward Churchill
is dismissed at CU. Ever since the Rosenberg debacle, Hamilton was on notice and yes they chose to do it again, oops.
In 1736 I lost one of my sons, a fine boy of four years old, by the small-pox, taken in the common way. I long regretted bitterly, and still regret that I had not given it to him by inoculation. This I mention for the sake of parents who omit that operation, on the supposition that they should never forgive themselves if a child died under it; my example showing that the regret may be the same either way, and that, therefore, the safer should be chosen.
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