no one here did that.
sauce it and date it or stfu
no one alive today did that. Whatever crime that other poster 's ancestors did are not listed either.
it's a common tactic for marxists to leave a litiny of imaginary crimes.
you know exactly what the tactic is your feigned 'just wow' is further communist fud.
PS: I note that you can't sauce it nor are you the one who posted that.
'just wow'
boo boo hoo crimes happened 300 years ago
boo hoo hoo.
why does one post such crap?
because it's got nothing.
people did things different 300 years ago.
everything was different. the imagined sainted 'natives' of that time had just as much that they did that could be considered criminal.
but the marxist gives the litiny of 'you live on stolen land.'
they ignore that Iroquois didn't get their land stolen.
feigned outrage over selected imaginary crimes statement of false moral superiority 'just wow'
oh no the small piece of imaginary history that you know gets no respect. We're all supposed to weep on cue for a picture of an old map.
history is full of atrocities.
you only post this stuff because you are communist shills.
PS: America wasn't a think in 1753.
how could it be 'Americans'? why didn't you say 'British'?
because your narrative it to make America look bad because you're uneducated shills who only do a partial history.
Just wow!
the cry of the false piety of partial historians and their selective presentation of history when others don't cry on cue.
Just wow!
the cry of one who is upset that people who know history are unphased by their litanies of selective history selected and taylored to make America look bad.
from Google AI:
These are results for list known Iroquois atrocities done by iroquois against others
Search instead for list known Iroquois attrocities done by iroquios against others
AI Overview
Before discussing historical conflicts, it is important to note that the term "atrocity" is modern. In the context of 17th-century Indigenous geopolitics, actions were often driven by "mourning wars"—raids to replace lost kin by adopting or ritually executing captives. Later conflicts, particularly during the American Revolution, were brutal frontier engagements.
The Beaver Wars (17th Century)
During the 17th century, the Iroquois (Haudenosaunee) Confederacy vastly expanded their territory to control the lucrative fur trade and secure European firearms. This expansion resulted in the displacement, assimilation, and destruction of several neighboring Indigenous nations.
Destruction of the Huron (Wendat) Confederacy (1649): Pressured by epidemics and divisions, the Hurons were attacked and driven from their traditional homelands by large Iroquois war parties. Iroquois raiders burned villages, targeted missionaries (such as Jean de Brébeuf and Gabriel Lalemant) for severe ritual torture, and forced survivors to flee or be absorbed into the Iroquois tribes.
The Neutral Nation (1650–1651): The Iroquois invaded the territory of the neighboring Neutral Confederacy, destroying their villages, killing or capturing thousands of their people, and completely dispersing the tribe.
The Erie Confederacy (1654–1656): Following a two-year war, the Iroquois largely decimated and absorbed the Erie tribe, putting an end to their confederacy.
Susquehannock War (1670s): The Iroquois aggressively attacked the Susquehannock tribe, eventually forcing them to relocate and submit to Iroquois authority.
Ritual Torture and Captive Practices
Detailed accounts by European observers (such as the Jesuit missionaries in the Jesuit Relations) and Indigenous oral histories document the harsh practices the Iroquois sometimes inflicted on captured enemies, spies, or rival warriors.
Ritual Execution: Captives who were deemed unfit for adoption into the tribe were frequently subjected to prolonged, agonizing torture—including burning and mutilation—over several days. This was considered a religious and communal ceremony in which the fortitude of the captive was tested, and the spiritual power of the enemy was absorbed.
The American Revolution (18th Century)
During the American Revolutionary War, four of the six Iroquois nations (primarily the Seneca, Cayuga, Onondaga, and Mohawk) allied with the British, leading to destructive partisan warfare along the colonial frontier.
The Cherry Valley Massacre (1778): A joint force of Loyalists and Iroquois warriors (predominantly Seneca and Mohawk) attacked the settlement of Cherry Valley, New York. During the raid, non-combatants—including women and children—were deliberately targeted and killed alongside Continental soldiers, and the village was burned to the ground.
The Wyoming Valley Massacre (1778): Though primarily executed by British Loyalists alongside Seneca warriors, the event became known on the frontier as one of the most brutal raids on American civilian settlements.
If you are interested in a specific time period or region, let me know. I can provide more details on:
The economic and political motives behind the Beaver Wars.
Details about the Sullivan Expedition, which was the retaliatory campaign against the Iroquois.
Captivity narratives from survivors of these conflicts.
just wow
>>24813745
false complement met with a fake solute?
those who claim to be 'a lot smarter' are often shown not to be.
humility is better than pride and hubris.
he's 'a lot smarter' but not smart enough to be humble.
the shill 'day shift/night shift' nonsense is designed for division. See how this one is part of that effort.
that psyop was odious from the beginning which is why it should be rejected and all 'day shift/night shift' nonsense is best filtered.
day-shift shills are just as useless and needing a filter as night-shift shills as are all division-shills.
just wow
don't tell people what they care about.
your non sequitur is more 'I'm OK / You're NOT OK' nonsense.
if one could analyze their 'contribution' and their 'payoff' (from Welfare) one would probably find that all the listed 'ethnicities' take more than they give.
narcissistic insistence on it's own infallibility is a tell that it is a script.