Honestly, I’ve been staring into the abyss of history lately, and it is the most black-pilling experience of my life.
I’ve been reading about the mechanics of the Native American genocide, and once you get past the sanitized high school history version, you realize something terrifying: it is literally the blueprint for everything happening in Gaza right now. The reservation system was the prototype for the open-air prison.
It wasn’t just “war” or “conquest.” It was a calculated design of administrative violence. Putting people on reservations wasn’t just about land theft; it was about destroying self-sufficiency. They slaughtered the buffalo and the caribou not just for sport, but to force proud, independent nations onto government rations. It was the weaponization of hunger—replacing nutrient-dense traditional diets with flour, lard, and sugar. It was a “caloric genocide” designed to create a permanent underclass dependent on the very state that wanted them dead.
Looking into the Inuit tribes up north is absolutely soul-crushing. It wasn’t just America—Canada and Denmark joined in too. They used infrastructure as a weapon, forcing people into prefab housing that rotted from the inside, stripping away their language, and demanding they submit to “whiteness” just to access basic survival needs. It was the industrialization of misery.
But the thing that’s really messing me up is the intellectual theft at the heart of it all. Once you view America through a Native lens, the “sanctity of the constitution” looks like a farce.
We watch politicians debate “liberty” and “governance” without realizing they are cosplaying with stolen tools. The Founding Fathers didn’t invent American democracy; they plagiarized it from the Haudenosaunee Confederacy (The Iroquois). Franklin and Jefferson sat with Indigenous leaders, took their structure of federalism and checks and balances, stripped out the matriarchy, the stewardship of the land, and the moral core, and watered it down to protect white property owners.
It’s all just so fake. We are living in a country that is essentially a crime scene pretending to be a civilization. Every monument, every law, every “American value” is built on top of a graveyard they refuse to acknowledge.
If you haven’t looked into the Missing Matoaka Project or the MMIW (Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women) crisis, you need to. It exposes the continuous line of violence—from the child trafficking victim they rebranded as “Pocahontas” to make colonizers feel better, to the thousands of Indigenous women missing today while the media looks the other way.
Resources:
- Missing Matoaka Project – The truth about Pocahontas.
- Native Women’s Wilderness (MMIW) – The ongoing crisis.
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