The Secrets of Native American Farming| The Three Sisters & Thanksgiving’s True Roots

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  • Опубликовано: 22 янв 2025

Комментарии • 11

  • @geedee2420
    @geedee2420 Месяц назад +1

    It is vital that we always vote in our local elections, especially for rural communities.
    Do Not let "Others" choose your Sheriff, Prosecutor, Judges, County Supervisors, Town Council Members, Mayor, School Board Members, Planning-Land Use Commission Members, Water Board Members, and other local Officials for you.
    Collaborate with your family friends and neighbors and vote as a block in order to put good freedom loving American Conservative Candidates into your local government. Rebuild your local government from the very lowest levels first and then work up from there.
    We need good freedom loving American Patriots who share our values and who will stand in the gap on behalf of our children, grandchildren, and the future generations who will follow after us.

    • @LowEffortGardening
      @LowEffortGardening  Месяц назад +1

      Happy Thanksgiving, Geedee! Thanks for sharing what you believe in and thank you for voting.

    • @geedee2420
      @geedee2420 Месяц назад

      @LowEffortGardening ... Thank you and I also subscribed 👍🏽

  • @peterbreis5407
    @peterbreis5407 Месяц назад

    Co-operative, sympathetic, sharing Indians saved the arse of individual selfish, greedy Pilgrims.
    Bad move.

    • @ramtharthegreat
      @ramtharthegreat Месяц назад

      Enjoy your legends. Real history disproves your bigotry. A single, homeless native, Squanto, shared the knowledge he had learned while in Europe with the pilgrims in exchange for safety from the other local tribes.

    • @peterbreis5407
      @peterbreis5407 Месяц назад

      @@ramtharthegreat You mean Tisquantum who had been slaved by Thomas Hunt and sold to the Spanish, and lived with the Pokanokets who were protecting him?

    • @ramtharthegreat
      @ramtharthegreat Месяц назад +1

      @LowEffortGardening it is well known that on August 14, 1621 a group of pilgrims went and freed the captured Squanto from kidnapping by a nearby tribe, disproving the "selfish, greedy pilgrims" trope. When he met them on March 16, 1621, it was before the pilgrims planted anything, disproving trope that the pilgrims couldn't figure out how to do anything and got taught by Indians "saving the arse of" the pilgrims. Squanto definitely helped, but it wasn't like he swooped in and saved them at the last minute. Also, the pilgrims FOUND the corn they planted in the 1621 season in a cave. They later found out which tribe the corn belonged to and reimbursed them. But again, it wasn't like the "sympathetic" Indians took pity on the pilgrims and brought them corn to help them. The trope that Europeans in 1620 had no idea how to grow food is ridiculous if you just pause and think about it. Edward Winslows letters are a source, as well as this article about squanto, the pilgrims and farming: www.jstor.org/stable/1740002

    • @ramtharthegreat
      @ramtharthegreat Месяц назад

      @peterbreis5407 yes, or "Tasquantum", or "Tantum" as he is variously referred to in the historic record.

    • @peterbreis5407
      @peterbreis5407 Месяц назад

      @@LowEffortGardening Read the Tisquantum article in Wikipedia.