Many Native American tribes, including the Five Civilized Tribes and the Seminole Nation, enslaved foundational Black Americans and have systematically excluded Black tribal members from resources and benefits through discriminatory policies like the Daw Rolls, despite historical treaties that guaranteed their rights; this exclusion continues today as tribes deny Black members access to reparations, land, and tribal membership despite their documented contributions and legal protections.
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CLASSIC | Native Americans try to CHECK Beyonce but PROCEED to get COOKED by a Black American!Added:
Beyonce, what the [ __ ] We're the enemy, [ __ ] Did we come to your [ __ ] country to bother y'all? We are not the ones that jumped on some ships and cross the whole [ __ ] ocean to go kidnap y'all and bring you back in chains. That wasn't us. We're not the ones that slaved y'all out for 400 years. We were the ones standing next to you while they were slaving y'all out. That was the most tonedeaf [ __ ] I've ever seen from Oh lord. And this is why this is why y'all are the enemy. Number one, you're the enemy because you like to play dumb when it's convenient. Let's be clear.
She said they didn't jump on ships to go enslave us. No. No. You were enslaving the indigenous black brothers and sisters here. Okay? You were switching sides here. Understand that black people were in this country. And I break this down every video or mostly every video before the slave ships. Okay? Let's be clear. Columbus even said that your ancestors said the red-skinned natives that black skinned people had come trading in gold tip spears. Okay, we understand the literary works of people like Giovani Vericino, Antonio Pifetti to talk about black men or indigenous black people being in this country being some of the first natives that they met.
We understand and see the works of people like PGF van when he went down to Georgia and painted the Uchi nation. We see the works of Lewis Cororus when he went out to the far reaches of California in the Pacific and he painted many of the indigenous black people of California. Okay, the only Indians. So, let's be clear. You're playing dumb and many red natives play dumb in order to remove the indigenous black presence in this land. Okay? And you were part of that enslavement. All right? You enslaved and helped to enslave many of the black indigenous people like during the Yamasi war of 1715. See, the Yamasi were black Indians of South Carolina who went to war with the British colonists for enslaving their people. You dig? And they had packs with other red natives.
Okay? It was during this war that they wiped out about 7% of the white British people in the colony that is now South Carolina. Okay? They were winning the war and it wasn't until the red natives, her people, switched sides. They reiged on their deal, you dig? and fought against the Yamasi and which led to their demise. Okay, that led to their demise. Hell, even modern day or more modern times, many of these native tribes go out their way to remove the indigenous black people out of their tribes. We're going to touch on that later. And then number two, the obvious thing, clearly this woman has never picked up a history book and she doesn't know that all of the five civilized tribes and others enslaved foundational black Americans. Okay? They enslaved foundational black Americans and they were some of the biggest slaveholders in the Americas. Okay? So let's be clear. Even when you look at the works uh by our good esteemed sister Alina Roberts out of she's a professor at the University of Pittsburgh and we could pull this up. She says in her book I've been here all the while black freedom on native land. At first their adoption of slavery at first she's speaking of the Native Americans their adoption of slavery was not about white supremacy but rather an attempt to assimilate into white European society.
Okay. Y'all have always gone out your way to assimilate into white European society and ally with the white supremacists. Okay? So many of you are one and the same. Even a lot of those reservations now it's a bunch of $5 Indians controlling and kicking out black people out the damn tribe. So stop it. Okay? Stop it. You fought in the Confederacy.
And even those native tribes who fought with the Union, many of them were slave owners like some of those chalk talk chiefs like Greenwood Laflur.
Now family, this is Greenwood Laflur.
And I know about him because my parents are actually from Greenwood, Mississippi. The town that is named after him, which sits in the floor county that is named after his last name. Okay. He was one of the big chalk chiefs out there in Mississippi, the Mississippi Delta. Okay.
And it says, and this is just in a basic Wikipedia search, that he died a few months after the war, the Civil War they're speaking of, ended at at the age of 65. He left an addition to his mansion in the state of 15,000 acres and 400 slaves. Okay? He was a huge slave owner down there in the Mississippi Delta. He was chalk tall, but he aligned himself with the Union. So, even the ones of you who aligned yourself with the union uh were slave owners as well.
So, let's be clear.
>> Okay, y'all need to pick up a history book. But let her continue.
>> Celebrity, especially somebody like you.
But I'm glad I'm glad that now we see you for who you really are and we see everything for what it really is.
>> You said what you said. You did what you did. Now stand on that [ __ ] >> Yes, ma'am. And and we're going to definitely stand on that. We're going to stand behind our sister Beyonce and we're going to stand on our true history and we're going to stand on the fact that we all we got and we all we need.
Y'all ain't praying. No, y'all ain't scaring nobody. Okay, y'all ain't scaring nobody. You dig? But here's another so-called native. And this this is a woman and you can look at her family. Uh she's claiming to be Native American, but we all know about the dolls rolls. And if you don't, we'll get into that later. and we're going to show some videos on that. But let's see what she has to say.
>> Beyonce's Buffalo Soldier shirt. What do I have to say about it as a native person?
Um, what I have to say about it is that I think that you should donate to a missing and murdered indigenous women's resource center. Um, such as the Coalition to Stop Violence Against Native Women or, um, the National Indigenous Women's Resource Center.
Um, there's also places like Not Our Native Daughters that um work to end the violence that native women suffer on a regular basis. Native women are 10 times more likely to be murdered, not just violence. Four out of five indigenous women experience sexual assault in their lifetime. Sexual violence in their lifetime or just violence period.
And um they're 10 times more likely to be murdered than the national average. And there are currently 5,000 missing indigenous women.
And if we're using the actual number, it's 5,712.
That's what I have to say about it.
>> Oh. Oh lord. And this is what I have to say to you, little Missy, little Sarah Lee, who claims to be Native American, you know. Um, number one, we don't owe you anything. Beyonce does not owe you a donation of anything, especially when many of your local tribes, your so-called cousins, cuz I'm going to assume you're native. Okay? Even though you don't have the complexion for the correction, but you dig. Um, many of your native tribes and your cousins go out their way to kick out the indigenous black people in the tribe. Deny us of resources. Uh, rob us of our identity and our heritage. Now you want to talk about donate to something. Donate to the indigenous women. Highlight these crimes. These are the missing indigenous women. No, no, no, no, no. I need you to hold your own nuts and handle that. You dig? Cuz y'all say this is your country.
So [ __ ] I need y'all to summon some of that Apache or Comanche energy and get some straightening and get some justice for yourself. Beyonce doesn't have to do that. Beyonce is a foundational black American and we have our sisters back.
Her commitment is to her community.
Okay? Her commitment is to her community. And especially when not only do you kick many of these natives out the tribe, but you don't honor many of the treaties that you have in place with black freemen in the US government now, like the treaty of 1866.
Okay, that said we were supposed to get some of those tangibles and resources and I haven't even dived into or I already talked about uh the enslavement of our people. You dig? Y'all go out your way to kick us out the tribe and then you want to turn around and start talking about some donate this, donate that. Let me show you what I'm talking about, family. Here's exhibit A. This is the black seinals. They they've been kicking out the black seinals out the tribe since the damn 70s and 80s. Let me show you this. In recent years, Indian tribes across the country have reaped windfall profits, usually from gambling operations, and some, like the Simol Nation of Oklahoma, from belated government payouts for lands taken hundreds of years ago. But what makes the Simols unique is the fact that this tribe, unlike any other, has existed for nearly three centuries as a mixture of Indians and blacks, runaway slaves who joined the Indians as warriors in Florida. Together they fought government troops in some of the bloodiest wars in US history. In the late 1830s, the Simols lost their land and were forced to a new Indian home in what is now Oklahoma. Over the years, some of them intermarried, and that blurred the color lines even further. Now, the government is paying the tribe $56 million for those lost Florida lands.
>> By the way, fair use, YouTube, fair use.
>> And the money is threatening to divide a nation. Talk to Simol Chief Jerry Haney.
He says the black members are no longer welcomed by many in the tribe. After 300 years together, the chief says the tribe wants them to either prove they're Indian or get out.
What are you hoping that the black seolles will do now? Are you hoping they will just pack up and go away?
>> I would hope so.
>> So, if they're black and they can't prove that they have Indian blood, go away. Basically, that's what we're saying.
>> Boy, he was straight forward with it.
Wendy, family, straight face basically.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Just Just go away. Just leave. Just leave. Okay.
>> Harsh words from the seol chief for the 2,000 black members of this mixed Indian tribe. In response, they say they're just as much seol as he is.
>> I fished in these woods. I hunted in these woods. I went to stone dances just like the regular seinals did and I never knew I was any different for a long time.
>> Our ancestors were some of the most fiercest fighters during the war >> during the Indian wars.
>> Yes. Due to the fact that they knew if they were recaptured they were going into slavery.
>> Back in slavery. Bud Crockett and his sister Polly Gentry trace their simol roots back to their great-g grandandmother Dora Davis who came to Oklahoma on the Trail of Tears. But family legend and physical resemblance aren't enough today. You have to be able to prove your Indian heritage, which is hard for most black simolles because of something called the Daw Rolls, a government census of sorts.
>> And this is the $5 Indian I was referring to, you know, where people white settlers. That's why a lot of these Native Americans on these reservations now, especially the ones that control the casinos and different things of that nature look white family.
They paid $5 to sign this doll's roles.
And that's what they go off of to determine whether somebody's native or not. All right, let's be clear.
>> It's created in the late 1800s, which separated the tribe into the blood or red seolles and the freedman or black simolles. Intermarriage made no difference as Polly and Bud discovered with their ancestors. If you had any black blood in you whatsoever, you were a freman.
>> So it didn't matter how much Indian blood you had, just any black blood, you went on a separate role, >> right?
>> And on the black simol role, it doesn't list that you have any Indian blood.
>> That is correct.
>> Mhm.
>> Absolutely, family. So there it is. They go out their way to kick out the black seinals out the tribe. And another thing I want to address just from hearing that video because a lot of them run this game of even that chief of the seminal nation, that [ __ ] chief, they play this whole game of Indian blood. You don't have any Indian blood. You don't have any siminal blood. There's no such thing as seinal blood. Simol is a Spanish corruption of the word simon.
That simply means runaway. Okay? Anybody who ran away at a certain point of time into Florida was considered a seinal.
Okay? There is no fixed siminal blood, you dig? That's not some old ancient indigenous tribe, you dig? That was an amalgamation of many different people.
Uh the Yamasi were part of the seinals.
The Yuchi were part of the seinals. Uh many of the [ __ ] tribes that were down in that area. Runaways from plantations were part of the seinals.
Okay? All of these people amalgamated together become the seinals. You dig?
So let's be clear. There is no such thing as indigenous or seinal blood. All right, that's cap. That's just another roadblock they try to put in a way to block foundational black Americans of their birthight. All right, but let me show you another one because you know that's not the only one that's from 2002. Let me show you another one.
>> The recent commemorations for the centinery of the Tulsa race massacre.
Black n >> fair use YouTube for educational purposes. Fair use fair use. Listen up.
Native Americans are a strong presence.
And as with the massacre of 1921, many in the US and elsewhere aren't even aware of their existence. Some Native American tribes long accepted black members. But in what's now Oklahoma, white settlers judged the tribes civilized because not only did they assimilate with the newcomers in dress and religion, but also in the adoption of black cattle slavery. After the civil war, the tribal nations abolished slavery as part of treaties signed with the federal government in 1866. Former slaves would be fully integrated and now known as freedman. And there was full integration and intermarriage. Legus Chau Perryman even served as the principal chief of the Creek Nation between 1887 and 1895.
>> We know that America Kohi was born in 1888. Uh she is an original enrolli of the Muscogee Creek Nation. Ronda Grayson's great-g grandandmother lived her whole life as a member of the Muscogee Creek tribe. But then in 1979, the Creek passed new laws decreeing that freed men were no longer tribal members.
The other tribes followed. Freedmen would lose their tribal voting rights as well as their housing, health, and other benefits.
>> Everyone should be outraged that this could happen in 1979.
>> Right, family? And there it is. So, like I said, these tribes, they've been kicking us out for decades now, removing us and trying to make sure we don't get any of those tangible resources, some of that reparations money that they get annually, that we don't get in control of some of those cenos or get access to some of that land out there. Uh, they've been going out their way to remove us from those tribes, even though they were enslavers and were supposed to uh make us part of some of those deals and land aotments that they get. family. That's why I say miss me with all this Beyonce need to donate and oh, she need to do something for indigenous women. [ __ ] y'all need to do something for us. You need to give us our debt that we are owed. Miss me with that. We don't owe you anything. Especially not for wearing no Buffalo Soldier shirt, but you you had some Negroes jumping out the window cuz you know, you always got some Negroes. They were jumping out the window trying to justify because a lot of foundational black Americans clap back at some of these so-called Native Americans about how they used to enslave us. Their people enslaved us. So, while you're wagging the finger at the Buffalo Soldiers, what about
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