Skip to comments.
Thanksgiving holiday is misconstrued (Ithaca Prof: holiday means racism, genocide, etc.)
The Ithacan | Park 269 ^
| November 16, 2006
| By Brooke Hansen / Guest writer
Posted on 11/17/2006 12:18:08 PM PST by Behind Liberal Lines
The celebration of a mythical Thanksgiving did not happen in this country for several hundred years after the event, by which time American Indians had been colonized, assimilated and removed from many of their ancestral lands, usually through dubious treaties and other means that are still being questioned today. Thanksgiving has been further colonized by capitalism in recent times, further removing us from the true meanings of thanksgivings that Native people honor on many occasions throughout the year.
Much like American-Indian mascots, people say that American Indians are being honored by the remembrance of that first Thanksgiving, which children purportedly embody with their construction paper and dyed chicken feather headdresses. If we want to honor American Indians, we need to take a deep look at the genocide that was perpetrated against them, the dishonest taking of Indian lands, the horrific conditions that churches and the U.S. government put them through in the Native boarding schools, and the current struggles for land, sovereignty and cultural survival.
Brooke Hansen is an associate professor of anthropology. E- mail her at kbhansen@ithaca.edu.
(Excerpt) Read more at ithaca.edu ...
TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; News/Current Events; US: New York
KEYWORDS: cityofevil; ithaca; liberalidiots; thanksgiving
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20, 21-40, 41-60, 61-80 ... 101 next last
To: Behind Liberal Lines
All I can say is that we're planning to victimize another turkey this Thanksgiving.
21
posted on
11/17/2006 12:26:21 PM PST
by
Cicero
(Marcus Tullius)
To: Behind Liberal Lines
Find some actual excerpts from Plymouth Colony Governor William Bradford's diary HERE
|
"Private property is the most important guarantee of freedom." -- F.A. Hayek "Property must be secured, or liberty cannot exist." -- John Adams "The true foundation of republican government is the equal right of every citizen in his person and property and in their management." -- Thomas Jefferson "No freedom is secure if your property rights are not secure." -- Neal Boortz "If you can't own (and use) property, you are property." - Wayne Hage
|
22
posted on
11/17/2006 12:26:22 PM PST
by
FreeKeys
("Property must be secured, or liberty cannot exist." -- John Adams)
To: Behind Liberal Lines
Leave to Cornell University to save the turkeys with an offer of tenure.
23
posted on
11/17/2006 12:26:47 PM PST
by
.cnI redruM
(2008 is another day and another battle.)
To: Behind Liberal Lines
I'm just thankful that this guy isn't one of the relatives I'll be dining with next Thursday.
To: Behind Liberal Lines
The celebration of a mythical Thanksgiving did not happen in this country for several hundred years after the event ...
Brooke, you ignorant yankee. The first Thanksgiving took place in 1619 at the
Berkeley Plantation, Virginia.
To: Behind Liberal Lines
Yeah, the only holiday the Indians celebrated was the one to commemorate when those noble natives, the Iroquois, managed to completely wipe out their neighbors, the Eries. But they didn't have a word like genocide to throw around back then.
That and when they took some white captive to burn at the stake. That was always cause for a celebration, and a chance for the women to have a little fun with fire and teach the kids how to torture people.
Oops, I bet the prof never heard of that part...
26
posted on
11/17/2006 12:30:49 PM PST
by
Kenton
To: Behind Liberal Lines
Miserable people who just can't shut up and enjoy a holiday...
27
posted on
11/17/2006 12:31:42 PM PST
by
Lunatic Fringe
(Say "NO" to the Trans-Texas Corridor)
To: Behind Liberal Lines
As a retired college history teacher I can guarantee you that this kind of tripe originates in the misplaced pride of someone who thinks the ignorant masses don't know as much as he or she does. "Intellectuals" particularly those of a leftist persuasion--have an (ignorant) pride in what they think they know and presume radical positions on that knowledge to basically impress themselves, their peers, parents and perhaps their pets. Much of what originates from the academy in history is generally motivated by these same behaviors and it shameful that academics lack intellectual integrity to the extent that all they can do is to nod their heads in some sort of ideological consensus. History can be spun and there are many academics who have made lucrative careers in doing so.
28
posted on
11/17/2006 12:35:35 PM PST
by
yetidog
To: Behind Liberal Lines
If we want to honor American Indians, we need to take a deep look at the genocide that was perpetrated against them, the dishonest taking of Indian lands, the horrific conditions that churches and the U.S. government put them through in the Native boarding schools, and the current struggles for land, sovereignty and cultural survival lose our shirts at one of their casinos.
29
posted on
11/17/2006 12:38:35 PM PST
by
Argus
To: Rummyfan
I fail to see how it can be considered a field of study. Is it in being able to date things that makes it acceptable? Anybody can dig up some bones from 4,500 years ago.
30
posted on
11/17/2006 12:38:57 PM PST
by
wastedyears
("By failing to prepare, you are preparing to fail." - Benjamin Franklin)
To: Behind Liberal Lines
Hanson sounds like he might be a racist and a bigot who has waaaaaay too much free time on his hands. He needs to get a REAL job. He doth whine too much.
31
posted on
11/17/2006 12:39:20 PM PST
by
FlingWingFlyer
(America! It's off with the desert BDUs and on with the lavender burqas!!!)
To: Behind Liberal Lines
On an only partially related note, do we have an official FR Thanksgiving recipe thread this year?
32
posted on
11/17/2006 12:40:55 PM PST
by
Buck W.
(If you push something hard enough, it will fall over.)
To: Southside_Chicago_Republican; FlingWingFlyer
He is probably a she, given that the first name is "Brooke"
To: LongElegantLegs
...thought it was more of "Thank God we didn't ALL die" from the pilgrims. Yes, the Pilgrims were expressing gratitude to God for blessing them with survival, a pretty good harvest that first year & peaceful relations with the (prone to violence) Natives (who had NO concept of land ownership).
God is receiving far shorter shrift than the Native Peoples from many of our post-modern 'Thanksgiving' Day celebrations!
34
posted on
11/17/2006 12:43:33 PM PST
by
O Neill
(Aye, Katie Scarlett, the ONLY thing that lasts is the land...)
To: Behind Liberal Lines
I have Mohawk,Irish,Dutch, and Anglo ancestry. My nation backed the Brits in the revolution and got creamed for it. The Indians were not a peace loving people, they fought other Indian nations for land like any other empire of the time did. They allied with various colonial powers to fight the others for privilege from the allied power. About the best way I can put it is imagine 200 years from now you are reading a text book about Iraq and it refers to the Iraqi's "as a peace loving people who never quarreled with each other until the imperialist Americans ventured in" same shit has happened with the Indians.
Have a happy thanksgiving and rejoice that our for fathers overcame a enemy whose sole aim was total domination of the land by any means necessary and I ain't talking about the British, because with out them we may be speaking Mohawk right now :)
35
posted on
11/17/2006 12:44:43 PM PST
by
spikeytx86
(Pray for Democrats for they have been brainwashed by their fruity little club.)
To: Behind Liberal Lines
"If we want to honor American Indians, we need to take a deep look at the genocide that was perpetrated against them, the dishonest taking of Indian lands, the horrific conditions that churches and the U.S. government put them through in the Native boarding schools . . . "
If there had been genocide, we wouldn't have given them land and they wouldn't now exist in greater numbers than before the "genocide." Yes, things were done then - such as the boarding schools - which now seem wrong, but they were considered benign and even enlightened by the people who implemented those policies.
The conquest of the American Indian only seems barbarous because it was one of the most recent historical instances of that particular type of conquest, and a relatively benign form, compared to most conquests known to history. And how can we have "taken" lands for which - by the Indians' own admission - they had no concept of ownership?
36
posted on
11/17/2006 12:45:46 PM PST
by
Steve_Seattle
("Above all, avoid the moor, where the powers of darkness are exalted.")
To: Behind Liberal Lines
The Liberal Creed
1) Every country but this one is wonderful, especially France.
2) Every time but this one was wonderful, except here.
3) If you feel good about your country or yourself, you are not fully educated.
4) If you are not riddled with self-doubt as to what is right and what is wrong, then you think in dangerous black-and-whites and must be a evil Bible thumper.
5) If you do not feel guilty about all the horrible things your ancestors did that you are responsible for, you must be an evil white Republican.
6) If you are in some way enjoying your life, it must be because you are exploiting others, and you need to be fined a great deal of money to be given to others who didn't work for it.
7) If you have ever been fired because you didn't show up, didn't speak the language, couldn't do basic math, were disrespectful of customers and coworkers, it must be management's fault.
8) You may worship only the God of Tolerance. You have no right to an opinion on anything mentioned above if it in any way would make others feel bad about themselves, because we want everyone to feel positively about themselves, you ignorant, evil, small-minded, wicked, judgmental, bigoted, privileged, elitist, Christian bastard.
37
posted on
11/17/2006 12:47:05 PM PST
by
50sDad
(I respect other religions by allowing them the right to worship. But they still are wrong.)
To: wastedyears
Anthropology went off the rails with Margaret Mead and her mentor/girlfriend and their paleolib protofeminist claptrap. It hasn't been the same since. I'll bet there isn't 1 in 10 anthropologists today that doesn't have, or wish they had, a shrine to her in their offices.
38
posted on
11/17/2006 12:47:19 PM PST
by
SargeK
To: wastedyears
Anybody can dig up some bones from 4,500 years ago.I'm proof of that. I have mastadon bones...10,000 years +
Is ah now an anthropolollolologist?
39
posted on
11/17/2006 12:47:50 PM PST
by
digger48
To: Behind Liberal Lines
Harvest festivals have been celebrated around the world for millennia, long before anybody landed a ship in what is euphemistically known as the 'New World'.
Thanksgiving is nothing new and greatly predates even the invention of writing. Over the centuries, these festivals have been accompanied by rituals, and feasting, and general merry-making to the point of excess.
Why does anyone begrudge the self-satisfied bourgeoise a day, or a long weekend, of excess of food consumption, football watching, and yes, exuberance in vulgar display in conjunction with extravagance in conspicuous wastefulness. Got to hand to it to a society that knows how to indulge themselves.
40
posted on
11/17/2006 12:48:16 PM PST
by
alloysteel
(Facts do not cease to exist, just because they are ignored. - Aldous Huxley)
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20, 21-40, 41-60, 61-80 ... 101 next last
Disclaimer:
Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual
posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its
management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the
exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson