Thursday, October 8, 2015

Crispus Attucks was a Black Native American Indian!?

Good Morning from first I heard of this in Upper Darby!
BRIEFLY!? While reading through the website for the Praying Indians of Natick I came across THIS;
VETERANS

A warrior is defined as a soldier and a soldier is defined as a warrior.
A veteran is one that has served as such.  We honor all warrior soldiers and veterans.  

Let us not forget that while we partake of bread at home there are those that see that we eat it in
safety. The return of our warriors is always a time of great joy and great honor.  However, let us continue to look toward those who are serving.  Let us not forget that while we partake of bread at home, there are those that see that we do so in safety.

CRISPUS ATTUCKS, the first to fall in the Boston Massacre, was of Natick Praying Indian and Black ancestory.

The Natick Praying Indian Tribe joins the Boston Equal Rights League each year for their celebration of Crispus Attucks Day (March 5th)

NATICK INDIAN PLANTATION &
NEEDHAM WEST MILITIA COMPANIES


Natick Praying Indian tribal members contribute to the re-enactment of the Boston Massacre each year as Crispus Attucks and participants with professional historical re-enactors.  
          
For extensive fascinating historical information go to the Natick Indian Plantation and Needham West Militia Companies
This is the first I've heard of Crispus Attucks being a Black Indian and a Praying one at that. On the real? In high school? Myself and MOST of the Black Students, had ZERO RESPECT for Crispus Attucks. I'm not even gonna lie, even as I type this, only thing going through my mind is;
Sellout-ass-nigger.
O_O

It's knee-jerk. A knee-jerk reaction, because all I see is the STEREOTYPICAL Black-slave running to go jump up into some shit for Whites, as if he's done ANY WORK on what ANY OF THIS WILL DO FOR HIM AND HIS. The very first time I read about Crispus Attucks I thought he was White. It wasn't till I was in 9th grade that I finally saw the fool was Black. And I was like, really? Sigh.....

Now? Mind you, this is the fucked up shit that Whites create with the way they've set all of this up. Sure! You can scream till you're blue in the face how "American" you are, as a Black Person. But I've often found anytime I ask NON-NAZI-AMERICANS ABOUT BLACK INVENTORS? INTELLECTUALS? MOST foreigners can't name ONE. NOT ONE. And I've had some GREAT CONVERSATIONS, especially with some South Koreans, some of whom ARE/WERE TEACHERS IN SOUTH KOREA! And said UP FRONT!

"I'm sorry, Shawn, but? I...? Don't have a clue who any of these people are you are talking about. Nor the fact that they created such critical things." MANY OF THEM SAID THEMSELVES "Wait, why would you not push this information when these people created such things that benefit beyond America? Seems kind of intentional omits."

Bottom line. You have to be mindful of what you're signing on for or getting yourself into, otherwise!? You can't blame anyone but yourself if you find out too late that the Cause you're down for? Isn't exactly DOWN FOR YOU. Crispus Attucks? I've never liked him as a HISTORICAL FIGURE. Because I saw him for what he was, a tool by White Abolitionist to flash around and talk about in a manner that has always rubbed me the wrong way. He's a safe Negro, ready to jump into shit without his Captain America Nazi-Shield and get his dumb-ass blasted back to the stone age for nothing!
>_<
Dummy.
I fuckin hate hollow tokens to NOTHING IMPORTANT.
Guy didn't even get buried with fuckin honors nor has he been moved to a place for honored dead, JUST!? So you know. So SO MUCH for his MASSIVE CONTRIBUTION! Why!? You know, why the fuck are we so fuckin DESPERATE FOR DUMB RECOGNITION THAT WE SKIP THE PART ABOUT;
Where is THE PROOF that what We just did was SO IMPORTANT?

The guy didn't even get buried with honors. They stuck with the times, can't bury him with Whites AND MIND YOU THIS IS BOSTON! This isn't some WHITE NAZI-SOUTHERN CITY HERE. Just so you know and just so you're REMINDED OF THAT. So they DON'T stick him in a grave with honors, like I'm certain they did the Whites who got BLASTED UP! Now, how many CENTURIES HAS PASSED NOW!? Did THEY MOVE HIM to a grave of HONOR!?
I'm willing to bet, NO! So thennnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnn, fuck does he matter again, for?
I mean, BESIDES CATCHING A FUCKIN BULLET WITH HIS BODY!?
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH!
O_O?
Should I laugh at that?
DAMN RIGHT I SHOULD! HAHAHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH!
Wait?

Hmmmmmmmm? You know what, I had to put on my White-Thinking Cap, and it dawned on me that Crispus Attucks...? Since he IS nothing but a Magical Negro, a TOKEN NEGRO, then? You know what? He probably IS buried someplace he normally wouldn't be, because he serves the ulterior motive-purpose of showing THE RIGHT BEHAVIOR for Blacks. We should jump into shit with no thought about whether it is good, bad or OTHER, for us as a whole. Noooooooooh, noooooh, I think Attucks MIGHT BE BURIED with some sort of SOMETHING. Because he represents the way that We as Blacks are supposed to act where it is BENEFICIAL TO WHITES AND WHITES ALONE. Oh and here's a video on Magic Negroes, how I hate Magic Negroes;
Crispus Attucks?
He's kind of like Expendable Negro-Soldier #2. Where at least we know his name, Expendable Negro-Soldier #1? We don't even know who the fuck that guy was. And if you don't know these are play on words based on Yugioh-cards and something I've seen from time to time where Whites create Race Card Memes for the lulz and lol.
-_-

I only know what lulz and lol are because I have to be able to understand the codes, SON! HAHAHHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH! And that was a Dave Chappelle reference with the whole, son, thing. Yeahhhhhhhh, I know, it doesn't work right when done in type and not actual video and/or audio. Here's some information on Crispus Attucks and why when I typed his name just now was I thinking of this;
That...? That can't be good, can it. That I thought of Cookie Crisp cereal, when I typed Crispus Attucks. Yeah, I'm gonna shut up now. HERE IS THE ARTICLE;
Crispus Attucks (c.1723—March 5, 1770) may have been an Native American slave or freeman, merchant seaman and dockworker of Wampanoag and African descent. His father was an African-born slave and his mother a Native American.[2] He was the first casualty of the Boston Massacre, in BostonMassachusetts,[3] and is widely considered to be the first American casualty in the American Revolutionary War.
Aside from the event of his death, along with Samuel Gray and James Caldwell, little is known for certain about Attucks.[4] Despite the lack of clarity, Attucks became an icon of the anti-slavery movement in the 18th century. He was held up as the first martyr of the American Revolution, along with the others killed. In the early 19th century, as the abolitionist movement gained momentum in Boston, supporters lauded Attucks as anAfrican American who played a heroic role in the history of the United States.[5]
Historians disagree on whether Crispus Attucks was a free man or an escaped slave, but agree that he was of Wampanoag and African descent.[citation needed] Two major sources of eyewitness testimony about the Boston Massacre, both published in 1770, did not refer to Attucks as "black" nor as a "Negro";[citation needed] it appeared that Bostonians of European descent viewed him as being of mixed ethnicity.[citation needed] According to a contemporary account in the Pennsylvania Gazette (Philadelphia), he was a "Mulattoe man, named Crispus Attucks, who was born in Framingham, but lately belonged to New-Providence, and was here in order to go for North Carolina . . ."[6] Because of his mixed heritage, his story is also significant for Native Americans.[7]
He appears to have been born a slave from Framingham, Massachusetts. His father married a woman who originated from the Natick Tribe during 1723,[8] possibly on Hartford Street. Framingham had a small population of black inhabitants from at least 1716. Attucks was of mixed African and Native American parentage and was descended from John Attucks, of Massachusetts who was hanged during King Philip's War.[9]
In 1750 William Brown, a slave-owner in Framingham, advertised for the return of a runaway slave named Crispus. Attucks's status at the time of the massacre as either a free black or a runaway slave has been a matter of debate for historians. However, his descendants maintain he was a slave and ran away sometime in his late 20s.[citation needed] What is known is that Attucks became a sailor and he spent much of the remainder of his life at sea often working on whalers, which involved long voyages. He may only have been temporarily in Boston in early 1770, having recently returned from a voyage to the Bahamas. He was due to leave shortly afterwards on a ship for North Carolina.[10]
Arguing the soldiers fired in self-defense, John Adams successfully defended most of the accused British soldiers against a charge of murder. Two of the soldiers were found guilty of manslaughter. Faced with the prospect of hanging, the soldiers pled benefit of clergy, and were instead branded on their thumbs. In his arguments, Adams called the crowd "a motley rabble of saucy boys, negros and molattoes, Irish teagues and outlandish jack tarrs."[11] In particular, he charged Attucks with having "undertaken to be the hero of the night," and with having precipitated a conflict by his "mad behavior."[12]
Two years later United States Founding Father Samuel Adams, a cousin of John Adams, named the event the "Boston Massacre," and helped ensure that it would not be forgotten.[citation needed] Boston artist Henry Pelham (half-brother of the celebrated portrait painter John Singleton Copley) created an image of the event.[citation needed] Paul Revere made a copy from which prints were made and distributed. Some copies of the print show a dark-skinned man with chest wounds, presumably representing Crispus Attucks. Other copies of the print show no difference in the skin tones of the victims.[citation needed]
The five who were killed were buried as heroes in the Granary Burying Ground, which also contains the graves of Samuel AdamsJohn Hancock, and other notable figures.[citation needed] While custom of the period discouraged the burial of black people and white people together, such a practice was not completely unknown.[citation needed] Prince Hall, for example, was interred in Copp's Hill Burying Ground in the North End of Boston 39.[citation needed]

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