Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another attempt to ruin a holiday by shaming Americans.
Get your own holiday to cry over.
America does have a dark past. We should reflect on the massive human cost of building this country.
-Mayflower descendant
The funny thing is that the most obnoxious commenters on this topic likely arrived more than one hundred years after your family.
I arrived 44 years ago, almost to the day. What’s your point? I give two figs what some internet cosplay Mayflower descendant says? That entitles them to what, exactly, in terms of moral authority or understanding of the situation?
Best I can tell from your perspective an actual Mayflower descendant is up to their elbows in blood and owes all kinds of land and reparations. You should go over her house and take what you want from her garage. Leave me out of it. I’ll be sitting comfortably in my house with friends and family, drinking wine and watching football, thanking the good Lord I managed to navigate UMC American life without being indoctrinated to feel so much shame and joylessness about my country, culture, and self.
Enjoy your day of mourning.
None of what you’re enjoying would be possible without the genocide of indigenous people (and enslaved people). Pretty sh1tty you won’t even *acknowledge* that.
It’s not about shame, it’s about awareness and acknowledgement.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fixating on just one narrow piece of anything—including history—misses the big picture.
Yes, the Europeans who settled coastal MA and the colonizers who followed ultimately fought over land.
But our American history also includes defeating the British crown and building a new country that established a democracy and rule of law never before seen.
^^^
That never would have happened had we stayed in Europe. And it’s kind of a big deal.
It obviously wasn’t all good.
Slavery and the related human rights abuses that came with it and the inequality that wasn’t addressed until the 1960s are shameful.
But things are getting better. They usually do if you study history rather than fixate and navel gaze.
The point is to NOT fixate on the manufactured story of “the pilgrims and the Indians”.
Listen to the other perspectives and experiences.
- and also to give the land back to its rightful owners.
Yay, whatever tribes managed to be in ascendency at whatever arbitrary date PP chooses are entitled to the land. The tribes that they stole it from and tried to eradicate can then demand the land back. The tribes that those tribes stole the land from can then claim it back from the tribes whose land was stolen by the tribes who had their land stolen by settlers. We can keep playing this game until we can track down whoever has feet that fit the White Sands footprints. It will be like modern day Cinderella, but with more victimhood
Ok. Give them all a big chunk of land and let them decide how to break it up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fixating on just one narrow piece of anything—including history—misses the big picture.
Yes, the Europeans who settled coastal MA and the colonizers who followed ultimately fought over land.
But our American history also includes defeating the British crown and building a new country that established a democracy and rule of law never before seen.
^^^
That never would have happened had we stayed in Europe. And it’s kind of a big deal.
It obviously wasn’t all good.
Slavery and the related human rights abuses that came with it and the inequality that wasn’t addressed until the 1960s are shameful.
But things are getting better. They usually do if you study history rather than fixate and navel gaze.
The point is to NOT fixate on the manufactured story of “the pilgrims and the Indians”.
Listen to the other perspectives and experiences.
- and also to give the land back to its rightful owners.
Yay, whatever tribes managed to be in ascendency at whatever arbitrary date PP chooses are entitled to the land. The tribes that they stole it from and tried to eradicate can then demand the land back. The tribes that those tribes stole the land from can then claim it back from the tribes whose land was stolen by the tribes who had their land stolen by settlers. We can keep playing this game until we can track down whoever has feet that fit the White Sands footprints. It will be like modern day Cinderella, but with more victimhood
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fixating on just one narrow piece of anything—including history—misses the big picture.
Yes, the Europeans who settled coastal MA and the colonizers who followed ultimately fought over land.
But our American history also includes defeating the British crown and building a new country that established a democracy and rule of law never before seen.
^^^
That never would have happened had we stayed in Europe. And it’s kind of a big deal.
It obviously wasn’t all good.
Slavery and the related human rights abuses that came with it and the inequality that wasn’t addressed until the 1960s are shameful.
But things are getting better. They usually do if you study history rather than fixate and navel gaze.
The point is to NOT fixate on the manufactured story of “the pilgrims and the Indians”.
Listen to the other perspectives and experiences.
- and also to give the land back to its rightful owners.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fixating on just one narrow piece of anything—including history—misses the big picture.
Yes, the Europeans who settled coastal MA and the colonizers who followed ultimately fought over land.
But our American history also includes defeating the British crown and building a new country that established a democracy and rule of law never before seen.
^^^
That never would have happened had we stayed in Europe. And it’s kind of a big deal.
It obviously wasn’t all good.
Slavery and the related human rights abuses that came with it and the inequality that wasn’t addressed until the 1960s are shameful.
But things are getting better. They usually do if you study history rather than fixate and navel gaze.
The point is to NOT fixate on the manufactured story of “the pilgrims and the Indians”.
Listen to the other perspectives and experiences.
- and also to give the land back to its rightful owners.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Indigenous groups and land-back advocates believe so, and they will gather at the rock called Plymouth to demonstrate.
Should we at least change the name?
Let those grifters go live in some remote mountain the way their primitive ancestors did. There's plenty of land in the world -- who's stopping them?
Oh really? Where in the world can a person freely immigrate to that also has an intact ecosystem that happens to align with the generational knowledge of specific plants and animals found in North America?
Oh, you assume everyone is as lazy as you are.
Newsflash: life here hundreds of years ago was short, hard and brutal. People had to adapt all the time. There's plenty of space today for people with a similar work ethic to that of the long-lost ancestors of today's casino monopolists.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fixating on just one narrow piece of anything—including history—misses the big picture.
Yes, the Europeans who settled coastal MA and the colonizers who followed ultimately fought over land.
But our American history also includes defeating the British crown and building a new country that established a democracy and rule of law never before seen.
^^^
That never would have happened had we stayed in Europe. And it’s kind of a big deal.
It obviously wasn’t all good.
Slavery and the related human rights abuses that came with it and the inequality that wasn’t addressed until the 1960s are shameful.
But things are getting better. They usually do if you study history rather than fixate and navel gaze.
The point is to NOT fixate on the manufactured story of “the pilgrims and the Indians”.
Listen to the other perspectives and experiences.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Indigenous groups and land-back advocates believe so, and they will gather at the rock called Plymouth to demonstrate.
Should we at least change the name?
Let those grifters go live in some remote mountain the way their primitive ancestors did. There's plenty of land in the world -- who's stopping them?
“Grifters”
Are you seriously this depraved?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Indigenous groups and land-back advocates believe so, and they will gather at the rock called Plymouth to demonstrate.
Should we at least change the name?
Let those grifters go live in some remote mountain the way their primitive ancestors did. There's plenty of land in the world -- who's stopping them?
Oh really? Where in the world can a person freely immigrate to that also has an intact ecosystem that happens to align with the generational knowledge of specific plants and animals found in North America?
Anonymous wrote:Fixating on just one narrow piece of anything—including history—misses the big picture.
Yes, the Europeans who settled coastal MA and the colonizers who followed ultimately fought over land.
But our American history also includes defeating the British crown and building a new country that established a democracy and rule of law never before seen.
^^^
That never would have happened had we stayed in Europe. And it’s kind of a big deal.
It obviously wasn’t all good.
Slavery and the related human rights abuses that came with it and the inequality that wasn’t addressed until the 1960s are shameful.
But things are getting better. They usually do if you study history rather than fixate and navel gaze.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You cannot fault the Europeans, who at the time did not understand the germ nature of disease, for the killing of natives who had no immunity to European diseases. The stories of Europeans deliberately bringing smallpox to natives were true, but they were the exception not the rule. In the 14th Century Europeans nearly all went extinct during the Black Death--who you gonna blame for that?
We can certainly fault them for violence and oppression.
Who cares? Everyone who did whatever bad things you want to list is long dead.
My family came to this continent in 1981. I don't have any responsibility or guilt for something that was done by people centuries ago.
One of the great things about the US is that you're not held guilty for the sins of your ancestors.
It’s not about personal guilt or responsibility. It’s doing what we can to acknowledge the massive wrongs committed by our government and to fix what we can. Being part of this country’s future means dealing with this country’s past.
I have no interest on dwelling on the past. Thanks.
You get the bad with the good. It’s not a la cart.
Wrong! I’m doing a great job of celebrating the good and mostly ignoring the bad. Thanks for coming, though.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. Screw off. We don’t care about your pet political causes and the gaping hole in your personality that causes you to promote this kind of stuff. Don’t care about about the claims and fairy wishes of indigenous groups or “land-back advocates”. We tolerate some of this crap in the name of good manners and being charitable. But there’s a limit.
It is a glorious day of national Thanksgiving. I am very grateful that European religious settlers founded the greatest civilization on earth, committed by its founding documents to ideals that were never, not once, within the founding spirit of any prior society.
And not for nothing, but if the North American indigenous peoples had had the ability to cross the Atlantic and the firepower, once there, to seize land and conform the local peoples to their customs, they would have done so without question. Many were very warlike and inclined toward expansion and capture on the continent. (As were most cultures of the era.) We just happen to be much more advanced and way better at war.
To the victor belongs the spoils.
Maybe tangential but what are these "ideals" that you say were never within the "founding spirit" of any society?
I don't think we need to ban Thanksgiving, but maybe we do need to do a WAY better job at education....
Can you name a single society with those ideals at it's core?
I asked you to name the ideals you are talking about. You didn't.
I'm also confused if these are the ideals of the Puritan religious separatists in Massachusetts Bay or the speculative capitalists who settled the Jamestown Colony? Or are we talking about the ideals of the Founding Fathers, who voted to codify the enslavement of human beings into the nation's founding documents (which was, I have to admit, a first among nations)?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You cannot fault the Europeans, who at the time did not understand the germ nature of disease, for the killing of natives who had no immunity to European diseases. The stories of Europeans deliberately bringing smallpox to natives were true, but they were the exception not the rule. In the 14th Century Europeans nearly all went extinct during the Black Death--who you gonna blame for that?
We can certainly fault them for violence and oppression.
Who cares? Everyone who did whatever bad things you want to list is long dead.
My family came to this continent in 1981. I don't have any responsibility or guilt for something that was done by people centuries ago.
One of the great things about the US is that you're not held guilty for the sins of your ancestors.
Are you a citizen? Then you are a member of the government that has inherited the treaties with the tribes that are being violated today. Sorry!
I'm not a member of any government, and I don't have any responsibility, or sense of guilt, for what some people did decades or centuries ago.
You can keep saying I should care about this, and I'll keep telling you I won't.
And there's nothing you can do about it.
If you are white, you are responsible. Period!
How about, no?
Wait hold on, let me check. Still no.
And no.
I can do this all day.
Anonymous wrote:I want to have Thanksgiving in September, during an actual harvest period, and not in the run-up to Christmas. It's stupid to have it in November.