Win / Conspiracies
Conspiracies
Communities Topics Log In Sign Up
Sign In
Hot
All Posts
Settings
All
Profile
Saved
Upvoted
Hidden
Messages

Your Communities

General
AskWin
Funny
Technology
Animals
Sports
Gaming
DIY
Health
Positive
Privacy
News
Changelogs

More Communities

frenworld
OhTwitter
MillionDollarExtreme
NoNewNormal
Ladies
Conspiracies
GreatAwakening
IP2Always
GameDev
ParallelSociety
Privacy Policy
Terms of Service
Content Policy
DEFAULT COMMUNITIES • All General AskWin Funny Technology Animals Sports Gaming DIY Health Positive Privacy
Conspiracies Conspiracy Theories & Facts
hot new rising top

Sign In or Create an Account

6
"The first Thanksgiving proclaimed by the settlers was in 1637 by the governor to celebrate the massacre of 700 Pequot men, women and children." (media.conspiracies.win)
posted 1 year ago by Hakuna9matata 1 year ago by Hakuna9matata +7 / -1
11 comments download share
11 comments share download save hide report block hide replies
Comments (11)
sorted by:
▲ 3 ▼
– Lord_Cthulhu 3 points 1 year ago +3 / -0

We need all tribes disbanded and their assets seized... current tribal leaders need to face the firing squads or lethal injection. Tribal members must be cowed or expelled from the borders of the US.

permalink save report block reply
▲ 1 ▼
– freedomlogic 1 point 1 year ago +1 / -0

I wish you felt as strongly about native americans, as you did the rich who control our lives lol.

permalink parent save report block reply
▲ 3 ▼
– Lord_Cthulhu 3 points 1 year ago +3 / -0

What sort of retarded comment is this? Maybe I DO feel the same way??

permalink parent save report block reply
▲ 0 ▼
– Hate4_Zetetics 0 points 1 year ago +2 / -2

Why would it matter? You just sound like angry adolescent skinhead

permalink parent save report block reply
▲ 2 ▼
– freedomlogic 2 points 1 year ago +2 / -0

Are you sure about that? There seems to be a mismatch from what I have learned, and what we are told.

Sure, the rich wanted the indians shit, but not all colonists were like that. ...

https://minerdescent.com/2010/05/15/john-wing-ii/

In 1637, ten influential citizens from Saugus had petitioned the General Court of Plymouth Colony to found a new settlement on Cape Cod. Whether their decision to settle in that area was influenced by Rev. Stephen Bachiler’s attempt to found a settlement at Mattacheese (now Yarmouth) is not known.

The land there was perhaps no more inviting for agricultural purposes than that which then generally engrossed attention within the jurisdiction of the Massachusetts Bay Colony, but it had some advantages for fishing purposes, it was not encumbered by heavy forests, it was easy of cultivation, it might be had free by all acceptable occupants, and the Indians in possession of it were remarkable for their uniform friendship for the English.

Some apprehensions began early to be felt that the Indians of the West were hostilely inclined toward the settlers, and a law was enacted to prevent all Indians from having the use of firearms. A number of persons were complained of (about 1642) for allowing Indians to use such weapons even in hunting. Among these were the Assistant Governor Freeman and John Wing for lending guns to Indians.

Indeed there are some indications that for an indefinite time before this he had purchased and lived upon a piece of land in the vicinity. It was in the northern part of the town, in the neighborhood of the sea coast. The Indians were then and for some time afterwards numerous in that region, but they were peaceable and never engaged in any hostile proceedings against the English. The precise spot on which John Wing settled is supposed to have been a high piece of land surrounded by swamp or meadow land, subsequently called “Wing’s Island,” about a mile northeast of the present town of Brewster.

In 1677, at a town meeting May 30, “the townsmen of Yarmouth did forewarn John Wing and our neighbors of Sawfucket from purchasing any lands in the bounds of our township of any Indian, or to take any possession thereof from them as being contrary to Court order. The order here referred to was one which prohibited any pnvale purchases from the aboriginal possessors of the soil; in the first place because no private Indian was really the owner of tribal lands in severally, and in the second place because advantage was often taken of Indians by selfish and dishonest persons.

It appears, however, that some transactions of this kind were allowed, especially with certain chiefs or sachems, who were actual owners of individual property. The very transaction here alluded to was subsequently allowed, and became the legal title to a large body of land. In the Book of Evidences of lands for the jurisdiction of New Plymouth there is recorded a deed of land, of which the following is the purport, viz: On the first of March 1676/77, John Wing and John Dillingham, in behalf of themselves and others’ associated with them, (viz: Thomas Clarke, Kenelm Winslow, Paul Sears and Ananias and Joseph Wing,) purchased of Robin (Indian), of Maltacheese, and Sarah his wife, daughter of Nepaitan, sachem of Mattacheese. of Samson, of Nobscusset, and Panasamust his wife, and of Ralph of Nobscusset, and Menetatomust his wife, other daughters of Nepaitan; all that tract of land, both upland and meadow, which they had in common or partnership lying in Saquetucket in the liberties of Yarmouth between the place commonly called Bound Brook on the west, and the middle of Saquetucket river on the east.

Funny how my ancestors didnt kill or steal the indians shit, they actually treated indians like human beings and bartered with them. But im supposed to feel bad about what the rich do? lol?

Grindall Wing went by the name of Henry Wing. According to old family stories he left Vermont at age 18, moving to Ohio during the War of 1812. He was engaged with Capt. Reilly in shipping supplies to forts along the Maumee River and in surveying Ohio. He married Eleanor Frazee about 1824 in Columbiana Co., Ohio. They lived near Defiance for a year, moving in 1825 to a place near Ottawa, where he was the first permanent white settler. He was killed Sept 17, 1843 by a falling tree while building the Defiance-Ottawa Road.

I cant actually find any stories where the wings were involved with slaughtering indians lol.

Wings island still exists today and is owned by the cape cod museum, I believe. Or a national monument or something.

https://www.capecodmuseumtrail.com/walking-wing-island/

Its ironic that my family is very big on freedom and choice to choose what you believe. Its our core foundations.

Only to find out that its literally in my blood, ill tell you was my mind blown. Found this source a little while ago, I have no idea if its true or not, but it lines up with what I heard in the family.

This old and distinguished family dates back to the earliest of colonial days in America. And previous to its colonial settlement, it is possible to trace it back quite definitely into the remote and dim past. The founder of the family undoubtedly came into England with the Danish invasion about 950 A. D., a thousand years ago. Geoffrey Winge of Huntingdonshire, born about 1250, was one of the early Anglian ancestors of the present family. In England today there are two “Wing” parishes. One of them is in Buckingham and consists of the ancient and famed Wing Manor, once the property of Cardinal Wolsey; the other, in Rutland. Both have churches dating back to the twelfth century.

The name “Wing” is derived from the Danish word “vinge” meaning a “wing”; and one of the Vikings, who settled Iceland, was named “Voengr”, which means the same thing. In various English counties—Buckingham Huntingdon, Oxford, Kent—the name frequently appeared as Wynge, Winge or in other variations; and those bearing the name were for the most part of the landed gentry and yeomanry.

https://youtu.be/eHg5kJLkn08?t=116

"My name is john wing, wing is a chinese name, in chinese it means, the arm of a bird."

Yeah your right john.

permalink save report block reply
▲ 1 ▼
– Hate4_Zetetics 1 point 1 year ago +2 / -1

But I thought the government who wrote the history books was telling the truth that natives mostly died of "viruses" from Europeans. Jk, I know people can't get sick from viruses and the small pox thing was coverup for mass poisoning and mass murder

permalink save report block reply
▲ 1 ▼
– llamatr0n 1 point 1 year ago +2 / -1

Great. Give thanks for our glorious victory.

permalink save report block reply
▲ -1 ▼
– Hate4_Zetetics -1 points 1 year ago +1 / -2

You didn't do shit.

permalink parent save report block reply
▲ 1 ▼
– llamatr0n 1 point 1 year ago +1 / -0

Unlike you, eh.

Praise be.

permalink parent save report block reply
▲ 0 ▼
– Hate4_Zetetics 0 points 1 year ago +1 / -1

Bro, I'm 600 years old. I was there. We slaughtered them. And the trail of tears? Ya, they didn't get small pox, we poisoned their food and water.

Did the same all over the world where we went, killed the brownies, the old societies, burned their knowledge, and write a bunch a fake shit about how the US was started.

permalink parent save report block reply
▲ 1 ▼
– llamatr0n 1 point 1 year ago +1 / -0

mad respect

permalink parent save report block reply
▲ 0 ▼
– Hakuna9matata [S] 0 points 1 year ago +1 / -1

"The first Thanksgiving proclaimed by the settlers was in 1637 by the governor to celebrate the massacre of 700 Pequot men, women and children."https://www.today.com/news/news/many-native-americans-mark-thanksgiving-day-mourning-rcna6621

The Shocking Savagery of America’s Early History https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/the-shocking-savagery-of-americas-early-history-22739301/

For many Native Americans, Thanksgiving is a day of mourning https://www.cnn.com/2019/11/24/us/native-americans-national-day-of-mourning/index.html

National Day of Mourning (United States protest) https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Day_of_Mourning_(United_States_protest)

Disrupting Public Memory: The Story of the National Day of Mourning https://www.facinghistory.org/ideas-week/disrupting-public-memory-story-national-day-mourning

This week, the Council adopted a resolution recognizing November 28, 2024 as National Day of Mourning in the City of Boston. https://www.boston.gov/news/national-day-mourning

permalink save report block reply

GIFs

Conspiracies Wiki & Links

Conspiracies Book List

External Digital Book Libraries

Mod Logs

Honor Roll

Conspiracies.win: This is a forum for free thinking and for discussing issues which have captured your imagination. Please respect other views and opinions, and keep an open mind. Our goal is to create a fairer and more transparent world for a better future.

Community Rules: <click this link for a detailed explanation of the rules

Rule 1: Be respectful. Attack the argument, not the person.

Rule 2: Don't abuse the report function.

Rule 3: No excessive, unnecessary and/or bullying "meta" posts.

To prevent SPAM, posts from accounts younger than 4 days old, and/or with <50 points, wont appear in the feed until approved by a mod.

Disclaimer: Submissions/comments of exceptionally low quality, trolling, stalking, spam, and those submissions/comments determined to be intentionally misleading, calls to violence and/or abuse of other users here, may all be removed at moderator's discretion.

Moderators

  • Doggos
  • axolotl_peyotl
  • trinadin
  • PutinLovesCats
  • clemaneuverers
  • C
Message the Moderators

Terms of Service | Privacy Policy

2025.03.01 - nxltw (status)

Copyright © 2024.

Terms of Service | Privacy Policy