Showing posts with label Real History. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Real History. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Black History and White Lies

It's a little late now that Mr. Lincoln's birthday is over and all the jewish media outlets waxed poetic about the connection between the White House nigger and Lincoln, but I found this article at the Institute of Historical Review and thought it would be good to give our readers a real history lesson and to arm them with the truth when this subject comes up in conversation or during a debate with the true haters.

In mid-May 1862, Lincoln received a paper from Reverend James Mitchell that laid out arguments for resettling the country's black population:60

Our republican system was meant for a homogeneous people. As long as blacks continue to live with the whites they constitute a threat to the national life. Family life may also collapse and the increase of mixed breed bastards may some day challenge the supremacy of the white man.

Mitchell went on to recommend the gradual deportation of America's blacks to Central America and Mexico. "That region had once known a great empire and could become one again," he stated. "This continent could then be divided between a race of mixed bloods and Anglo-Americans." Lincoln was apparently impressed with Mitchell's arguments. A short time later, he appointed him as his Commissioner of Emigration.


How prophetic. Other men saw the same thing, Thomas Jefferson among them. But the allure of riches were too much for the capitalist elite, so here we are today, our national life collapsing, and mixed breed bastards along with enemy aliens ruling over us. You see, most of our ancestors lived for the moment and didn't stop to think even 150 years into the future and now, because of their failure to do the right thing, a sea of blood awaits our redemption.

The sins of the fathers really are visited upon the children.

If we are to be honest with ourselves, Lincoln's assassination was the worse thing that ever could have happened to this country. There would not have been a reconstruction and he just might have succeeded in removing the majority of the negros from North America. Every White person at one time or another has dreamed of that scenario.

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Bin Laden's Message To The American People

We should have heeded his words. Did you know about this interview back in '98? Of course not. The jews who control the media didn't want you to know this, so that they could have their war in which YOUR people could die for THEM.

Do you disagree with anything he says here?

The American people, by and large, do not know the name bin Laden, but they soon likely will. Do you have a message for the American people?

I say to them that they have put themselves at the mercy of a disloyal government, and this is most evident in Clinton's administration ... . We believe that this administration represents Israel inside America. Take the sensitive ministries such as the Ministry of Exterior and the Ministry of Defense and the CIA, you will find that the Jews have the upper hand in them. They make use of America to further their plans for the world, especially the Islamic world. American presence in the Gulf provides support to the Jews and protects their rear. And while millions of Americans are homeless and destitute and live in abject poverty, their government is busy occupying our land and building new settlements and helping Israel build new settlements in the point of departure for our Prophet's midnight journey to the seven heavens. America throws her own sons in the land of the two Holy Mosques for the sake of protecting Jewish interests. ...

The American government is leading the country towards hell. ... We say to the Americans as people and to American mothers, if they cherish their lives and if they cherish their sons, they must elect an American patriotic government that caters to their interests not the interests of the Jews. If the present injustice continues with the wave of national consciousness, it will inevitably move the battle to American soil, just as Ramzi Yousef and others have done. This is my message to the American people. I urge them to find a serious administration that acts in their interest and does not attack people and violate their honor and pilfer their wealth. ...


More here...

Saturday, August 16, 2008

Thirty Years of Army Life on the Border

Comprising descriptions of the Indians nomads of the plains; explorations of new territory; a trip across the Rocky mountains in the winter; descriptions of the habits of different animals found in the West, and the methods of hunting them; with incidents in the life of different frontier men, &c., &c./ By Colonel R. B. Marcy.
Author: Marcy, Randolph Barnes, 1812-1887.

Wonder what it was like to explore the frontier? To come face to face with Plains Indians? Hunt and survive in an unknown land? Want to know what your ancestors went though so that you might have a better life?

This first book, written by Colonel Randolph B. Marcy, covers his time out on the plains before the civil war as a member of the US Army, when that Army was working for the interests of White men. This is a fascinating look back to when we were young, white and free.

I can't cut and paste any representative chapters as it is scanned OCI, but will provide the link and a discription of the Author. I hope you all enjoy it.

Source

A brief bio of Colonel Marcy:

MARCY, RANDOLPH BARNES (1812-1887). Randolph Barnes Marcy, United States Army officer and Western explorer, was born on April 9, 1812, in Greenwich, Massachusetts, the eldest son of Leban and Fanny (Howe) Marcy. On July 1, 1828, he entered the United States Military Academy at West Point, where he graduated twenty-ninth in the class of 1832. On July 1 he was brevetted a second lieutenant in the Fifth Infantry. In 1833 he married Mary A. Mann, the daughter of Gen. Jonas Mann of Syracuse, New York. The couple had three children. Marcy was promoted to the substantive rank of second lieutenant on November 25, 1835, to first lieutenant on June 22, 1837, and to captain on May 18, 1846. With the exception of two brief tours as a recruiting officer in the East, he spent this period on the northwest frontier in Michigan and Wisconsin. During the Mexican Warqv he served with Gen. Zachary Taylor'sqv army, which saw action at the battles of Palo Alto and Resaca de la Palma.qqv Again detached for recruiting duty, Marcy returned to Texas in 1847, and in 1849 he determined the route of the Marcy Trail, from Fort Smith to Santa Fe. In 1851 he commanded Gen. William G. Belknap'sqv escort on the tour that selected the sites for forts on the Texas frontier.

In March 1852 Marcy was assigned the command of a seventy-man exploring expedition across the Great Plains in search of the source of the Red River and directed to "collect and report everything that may be useful or interesting." Second in command of the Marcy expedition was Capt. George B. McClellan,qv who later became his son-in-law and during the Civil Warqv his commander. Among Marcy's scouts was Jim Ned,qv a Delaware Indian whom Marcy called "the bravest warrior and the most successful horse thief in the West." Between May 2 and July 28, 1852, Marcy's party crossed a thousand miles of previously undocumented Texas and Oklahoma territory, discovering numerous valuable mineral deposits as well as twenty-five new species of mammals and ten of reptiles. Marcy also recorded a prairie dogqv town that covered 400,000 acres. He reportedly discovered the sources of both forks of the Red River, as well as the Palo Duro and Tule canyons, which he became the first white man to explore. The expedition encountered and documented the little-known Wichita Indians and compiled the first Wichita dictionary. It also returned with information on Cynthia Ann Parker.qv Eastern newspapers erroneously reported that Marcy died at the hands of the Comanches. Marcy's 1852 expedition has been called the most significant of his career and "the best organized, best conducted, and most successful" venture into the region to that date. It was the first to locate the headwaters of the Red River, which Zebulon M. Pike, Stephen Long,qqv and Thomas Freeman (see CUSTIS, PETER) had all previously searched for and failed to find. Marcy's report on his expedition, Exploration of the Red River of Louisiana, In the Year 1852...With Reports on the Natural History of the Country, supplemented by a handsome collection of lithographs, was published in 1853. It quickly became a classic of Western Americana.

In 1854 Marcy surveyed Indian reservations in northern and western Texas, and in 1856 he explored the headwaters of the Big Wichita and Brazos rivers. His report of the 1856 expedition was published by the United States Senate. In 1857 he served briefly against the Seminole Indians in Florida and accompanied Gen. Albert Sidney Johnston'sqv expedition against the Mormonsqv later that year. During that campaign he received national fame for a winter march of over a thousand miles to secure relief for Johnston's army, which was stranded without supples in the Utah mountains. After this adventure Marcy was recalled to Washington to prepare a semiofficial guidebook for the War Department. The result, The Prairie Traveler (1859), was an excellent compendium of such practical hints for travelers about what equipment to carry, methods of organizing a wagon train, and techniques of avoiding Indian attacks, as well as detailed notes on thirty-four of the most important overland trails. On August 22, 1859, Marcy was promoted to major and assigned as regimental paymaster.

With the outbreak of the Civil War, he was promoted to colonel and named inspector general of McClellan's Army of the Potomac. From September 23, 1861, through July 17, 1862, and again from September 13, 1862, through March 4, 1863, he served as acting brigadier general of volunteers. He was brevetted brigadier general in the regular army "for gallant and meritorious service in the field" and major general of volunteers on the same day, March 13, 1865, "for faithful and meritorious service during the war."

From 1863 through 1878, the year of his wife's death, Marcy served as inspector general of various departments of the army, and in 1871 he accompanied Gen. William T. Shermanqv on his fact-finding tour of the Texas frontier. On December 12, 1878, he was promoted to the regular rank of brigadier general and was named inspector general of the army. General Marcy also prepared two volumes of reminiscences, Thirty Years of Army Life on the Border (1866) and Border Reminiscences (1872), which contain much Texas material. He retired from the army on January 2, 1881, and died on November 22, 1887, at his home in West Orange, New Jersey.

BIBLIOGRAPHY: Dictionary of American Biography. Grant Foreman, Marcy and the Goldseekers (Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1939). Francis B. Heitman, Historical Register and Dictionary of the United States Army (2 vols., Washington: GPO, 1903; rpt., Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1965). W. Eugene Hollon, Beyond the Cross Timbers: The Travels of Randolph B. Marcy, 1812-1887 (Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1955). John H. Jenkins, Basic Texas Books: An Annotated Bibliography of Selected Works for a Research Library (Austin: Texas State Historical Association, 1983; rpt. 1988). William B. Parker, Notes Taken during the Expedition Commanded by Capt. R. B. Marcy (Philadelphia: Hayes and Zell, 1856; rpt., Austin: Texas State Historical Association, 1984).