blueharvest
Avenger
- Joined
- May 8, 2008
- Messages
- 16,028
- Reaction score
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- Points
- 103
The stupidest thing you've heard (from the GOP) so far.The stupidest thing I've ever heard.
The stupidest thing you've heard (from the GOP) so far.The stupidest thing I've ever heard.
Lol, very true!The stupidest thing you've heard (from the GOP) so far.
I'm dubious about that myself.So a black man hung himself? In Georgia? And it wasn't a lynching? Does anyone else find that just the least bit unlikely?
Body By Bannon?White supremacist fitness clubs are fat-shaming Trump supporters and plotting a race war
A network of white supremacist fitness clubs is spreading across the US, recruiting men to prepare for what they believe will be a race war.www.businessinsider.com
The US has violated almost every treaty they ever made with all the Native Americans.Why a Native American Nation Is Challenging the U.S. Over a 1794 Treaty
The Onondaga have asked an international commission to find that the United States violated a treaty guaranteeing the nation 2.5 million acres of land.www.nytimes.com
The US has violated almost every treaty they ever made with all the Native Americans.
I would love to see the tribes get what they deserve. We've screwed them over time and time again when we weren't outright murdering them. One of our biggest shames besides slavery.Speaking of which...
Congress considers fulfilling 200-year-old promise to seat Cherokee Nation delegate
The Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma is moving a step closer to having a promise fulfilled from nearly 200 years ago that a delegate from the tribe be seated in Congress.www.pbs.org
Give the Cherokee Nation a Seat in Congress
The tribe has renewed its push to get a delegate in the House of Representatives, and the law is on its side.newrepublic.com
Hope they win.Why a Native American Nation Is Challenging the U.S. Over a 1794 Treaty
The Onondaga have asked an international commission to find that the United States violated a treaty guaranteeing the nation 2.5 million acres of land.www.nytimes.com