Radio Renaissance - Jared Taylor - "You Stole America from the Indians" Aired: 2021-05-11 Duration: 06:39 === Indians Fighting Indians (04:21) === [00:00:04] Hello, I'm Jared Taylor with American Renaissance. [00:00:07] If you ever get into a debate about immigration and say you want whites to remain a majority in the United States, someone will tell you that white people don't really have a right to America because we took it from the Indians. [00:00:20] Let me explain just how stupid this argument is. [00:00:23] First of all, does anyone think the Indians didn't take land away from each other or simply exterminate each other? [00:00:30] There's a place in South Dakota In the mid-1300s, [00:00:55] long before Columbus. [00:00:57] When white people showed up, They found that Indian tribes were battling each other constantly. [00:01:03] The French explorer Pierre Lavanderdry was one of the first Europeans to learn about the Assiniboine Cree and the Sioux. [00:01:12] In 1743, he reported that, quote, from time immemorial they have been deadly enemies. [00:01:18] A French priest wrote about a battle in 1742 in which the Assiniboine Cree killed or captured 270 Sioux. [00:01:27] That would have been the population of an entire village. [00:01:30] At about the same time, the Crow Indians drove the original Indian settlers out of the Yellowstone Valley. [00:01:36] It's a pleasant place, as you can see. [00:01:39] And they found themselves surrounded by hostile tribes. [00:01:42] As the years went by, they would very likely have been exterminated, except that they had an alliance with, guess who? [00:01:49] It was the U.S. cavalry who protected them from their enemies. [00:01:54] The Muscogee and the Choctaw had a land dispute and in 1790 slaughtered nearly 500 of each other in a single battle. [00:02:03] Also in the 18th century, the Blackfoot tribe took the land of the Kootenai and the Flathead Indians and part of the Shoshone lands at the foot of the Rockies. [00:02:14] In arid parts of the southwest, the Hopi and the Zuni fought each other over arable land. [00:02:20] As for the Comanche, After they got horses, they drove the Osage, the Cheyenne, and the Arapaho out of their hunting grounds. [00:02:28] During the Civil War, the Comanche pushed white settlers in Texas 100 miles back to the east. [00:02:35] They raided as far as 400 miles into Mexico, where they took thousands of slaves. [00:02:41] Parts of northern Mexico were almost completely depopulated because of Comanche raids. [00:02:47] But let's get back to the Sioux. [00:02:49] They called themselves Lakota. [00:02:52] which means allies. [00:02:53] Other tribes called them Sioux, a name the Ojibwa first gave them, which means snakes or enemies. [00:03:01] They were originally from the Great Lakes, but were pushed west by the Ojibwa and the Cree. [00:03:06] Over a period of 200 years, they fought at least 28 different tribes and drove the following people off their land: the Pawnee, the Ponca, the Arikara, Iowa, Mandan, Hidatsa, [00:03:22] Assiniboine, and the Crow. [00:03:24] The Sioux lands recognized in an 1868 treaty with the U.S. government, which you can see in yellow, were all taken from other tribes who were there first. [00:03:33] The biggest battles the Lakota Sioux fought against the U.S. Cavalry, including the Battle of the Little Bighorn, were over land that originally belonged to other Indians. [00:03:43] Further west, in Montana, in 1866, the Pagan Indians killed more than 300 of their enemies, the Crow and the Grovantres, in just a single battle. [00:03:54] This is more than the highest estimated casualty counts for Indians in any engagement with the U.S. Army. [00:04:02] Did you know that after contact with whites in the 19th century, more Indians in the west died fighting each other than died fighting whites? === Indigenous Rights and Immigration (02:28) === [00:04:10] I sure didn't until I started looking into this. [00:04:13] So yes, we took the land from the Indians, and they fought like hell to keep it. [00:04:18] But no one ever says the Indians didn't have the right to defend their land just because they took it from somebody else. [00:04:24] No one says that. [00:04:26] All around the world, people are living on land they took from other people. [00:04:30] Does that mean they don't have rights to it? [00:04:33] All of North Africa, for example, was conquered by the Arabs, who forced the locals to convert to Islam or die. [00:04:41] Does that mean Morocco, for example, isn't allowed to have an immigration policy because the people living there now took the land from somebody else? [00:04:50] European history is an endless story of conquest. [00:04:53] Before the First World War, Hungary was three times bigger than it is today. [00:04:58] It was officially carved up in 1920. [00:05:01] So does that mean that the Slovaks, the Romanians, and the Croatians who helped themselves to huge chunks of Hungary can't have an immigration policy? [00:05:10] And who's this guy? [00:05:12] He's Augusto Piña Nieto, the president of Mexico. [00:05:17] Take a good look. [00:05:18] Does he look like this guy, for example? [00:05:21] This is a real native Mexican. [00:05:23] Here are more indigenous Mexicans. [00:05:25] And here is the current Mexican cabinet. [00:05:29] They don't look like native Mexicans either, do they? [00:05:32] The guy who looks the most like a native Mexican is the one in the upper left-hand corner, Miguel... [00:05:37] Chong. And the only reason he looks like an Aztec is because he's half Chinese. [00:05:43] And here's President Peña Nieto with his wife, Angelica. [00:05:48] Maybe I just can't see straight, but she doesn't look much like this lady, who is a Mexican Indian. [00:05:55] Or these ladies, who are also indigenous. [00:05:58] Could it possibly be that Mexico's rulers took Mexico from the Indians too? [00:06:03] Oh, no, no, no. [00:06:04] That would mean they couldn't have an immigration policy. [00:06:07] But just see what happens to you if you try to immigrate illegally into Mexico. [00:06:13] So you see, this idea that history disqualifies white Americans from deciding who lives here is baloney. [00:06:21] It's an argument people use only against whites. [00:06:25] It's just one more double standard intended to browbeat whites into thinking they have no right to survive as a people. [00:06:34] Don't fall for it. [00:06:35] But do subscribe to our YouTube channel.