I won’t miss an opportunity to ridicule, mock, accuse, or call them what they are whether it resonates or not.
I’ve as much on Franklin street in the midst of their Minneapolis stronghold and I’ll continue to do the same in this blog or any venue that is available.
I believe as nations and a distinct people we are in a fight for survival- a continuation of the last five centuries and one I take very seriously.
The faces and intent of our adversities may have changed but the reality has not.
Now they exist among us within our communities as well-I’m realistic enough to understand that we can no longer roam free and live as we once did, but that doesn’t translate to embracing assimilation or putting a price tag on ourselves, our children, or our traditions.
I believe we should adopt what serves us just as we did the horse, iron pots and kettles, and leave the rest behind-most importantly drugs and alcohol.
If we are to be a sovereign people we must be self reliant-that takes a communal effort and desire, not being led around by an organization whose priority is self perpetuation.
Not role playing, posturing, or emulating a system that has taken everything from us, and yet desires more.
LOL! Got a kick out of, “Amazing what 35 years of federally-enforced sobriety can do for you!” Just being a Native American makes a guy like him the cause celebre of guilt-ridden rich liberals, no matter who he really is, or what he’s done. (After all, what’s a little murder between friends?)
By the way, N. Morgan, you post Native American related things. I don’t know if you’ve seen this, but I believe this is a real sketch of Crazy Horse. In an article I read about this sketch, the face structure is a dead ringer for photographed cousins of his. Now, Crazy Horse would have been worth springing from prison! It’s odd that I found this picture to perfectly match what I’d always thought he may look like. There’s a serious depth and strength of character you can see in this image.
That’s all Leonard is, willing to even murder his own people. I just posted a link below to pictures of a couple of Crazy Horse’s cousins. That sketch really is awesome, in that you can confidently say it’s him. Crazy Horse was quite a guy, of mythical proportions, in reality.
Wish I could find the original article, but here are a couple links to pictures of two of Crazy Horse’s cousins who were photographed, Kicking Bear and Touch the Clouds. You can very well see the same bone structure as the sketch of Crazy Horse, so much so they could have even been brothers:
There’s also that other guy, Ward Churchill, who it’s said by some is a complete fake, maybe some Native American souvenirs and friends, but blood? He doesn’t seem to be able to prove it very well! Hmmm… Actually, he seems too arrogant to be anything but a fake.
And not only the total resemblance of the cousins to the Crazy Horse sketch, the sketch was from information of a sister of Crazy Horse, who vouched for it being accurate, said the sketch is him.
LOL! Got a kick out of, “Amazing what 35 years of federally-enforced sobriety can do for you!” Just being a Native American makes a guy like him the cause celebre of guilt-ridden rich liberals, no matter who he really is, or what he’s done. (After all, what’s a little murder between friends?)
By the way, N. Morgan, you post Native American related things. I don’t know if you’ve seen this, but I believe this is a real sketch of Crazy Horse. In an article I read about this sketch, the face structure is a dead ringer for photographed cousins of his. Now, Crazy Horse would have been worth springing from prison! It’s odd that I found this picture to perfectly match what I’d always thought he may look like. There’s a serious depth and strength of character you can see in this image.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Crazy_Horse_sketch.jpg
He is a psychopathic killer. Leonard, I mean.
I used to be the their old story, but now I know the truth.
That picture is awesome!
That’s all Leonard is, willing to even murder his own people. I just posted a link below to pictures of a couple of Crazy Horse’s cousins. That sketch really is awesome, in that you can confidently say it’s him. Crazy Horse was quite a guy, of mythical proportions, in reality.
Wish I could find the original article, but here are a couple links to pictures of two of Crazy Horse’s cousins who were photographed, Kicking Bear and Touch the Clouds. You can very well see the same bone structure as the sketch of Crazy Horse, so much so they could have even been brothers:
http://www.buffalobillfilm.com/wp-content/gallery/buffalo-bill-in-scotland-images/kicking-bear.jpg
http://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bestand:Touch_the_Clouds_1877a.JPG
For this reason, I don’t doubt the accuracy of the Crazy Horse sketch at all, though I can be a skeptical person.
They are awesome, those pictures!
He has never been proven to be of any nation, they have lied about it.
The records were checked. Just like Russell Means lied about his heritage.
He was Nakota, not Lakota. He’s grandfather was white, also, another fact he fudged on.
There’s also that other guy, Ward Churchill, who it’s said by some is a complete fake, maybe some Native American souvenirs and friends, but blood? He doesn’t seem to be able to prove it very well! Hmmm… Actually, he seems too arrogant to be anything but a fake.
And not only the total resemblance of the cousins to the Crazy Horse sketch, the sketch was from information of a sister of Crazy Horse, who vouched for it being accurate, said the sketch is him.