I have posted on this
topic in the past and it is good to see someone else step up and
support an original population of between 30 to 100 million for the
Americas before Columbus. This has been put out of our collective
consciousness for way too long.
What we are sharply
reminded of is that the occupation of the Americas took place a step
behind the population decimation brought on by the plague brought
with the initial visitors. One needs to merely recall that Columbus
himself benighted directly from this effect. The island he landed on
had thousands who easily would have overcome the Europeans sooner or
later. Yet they went extinct almost immediately.
Once this had happened,
European slaving eliminated much of the remaining populations while
occasional fresh plagues stalked the those out of touch. It was all
pretty horrible, but the Americas were depopulated by plagues and
nothing else. As also hinted at here, the Indians themselves
survived largely through hybridization.
As also discussed here
premodern European society made the settled Indian life way
attractive if only because they took baths.
Without the plagues,
European trading factories would have soon emerged and perhaps a
history comparable to the rest of western so called colonization.
That is an elitist enterprise at best. No great movement of peoples
would ever have taken place.
6 Ridiculous Lies
You Believe About the Founding of America
By:Jack
O'Brien, Elford
Alley May 15, 2012 2,891,610 views
When it comes to the
birth of America, most of us are working from a stew of elementary
school history lessons, Westerns and vague Thanksgiving mythology.
And while it's not surprising those sources might biff a couple
details, what's shocking is how much less interesting the version we
learned was. It turns out our teachers, Hollywood and whoever we got
our Thanksgiving mythology from (Big Turkey?) all made America's
origin story far more boring than it actually was for some very
disturbing reasons. For instance ...
#6. The Indians
Weren't Defeated by White Settlers
The Myth:
Our history books
don't really go into a ton of detail about how the Indians became an
endangered species. Some warring, some smallpox blankets and ...
death by broken heart?
When American Indians
show up in movies made by conscientious white people like Oliver
Stone, they usually lament having their land taken from them. The
implication is that Native Americans died off like a species of
tree-burrowing owl that couldn't hack it once their natural habitat
was paved over.
But if we had to put
the whole Cowboys and Indians battle in a Hollywood log line, we'd
say the Indians put up a good fight, but were no match for the white
man's superior technology. As surely as scissors cuts paper and rock
smashes scissors, gun beats arrow.
That's just how it
works.
The Truth:
There's a pretty
important detail our movies and textbooks left out of the handoff
from Native Americans to white European settlers: It begins in the
immediate aftermath of a full-blown apocalypse. In the
decades between Columbus' discovery of America and the Mayflower
landing at Plymouth Rock, the most devastating plague in human
history raced up the East Coast of America. Just two years before the
pilgrims started the tape recorder on New England's written
history, the
plague wiped out about 96 percent of the Indians in Massachusetts.
[This
pretty well explains the long gap between the direct discovery of the
East coast and the first direct settlement - arclein]
In the years before
the plague turned America into The Stand, a sailor
named Giovanni
da Verrazzano sailed up the East Coast and described it as "densely
populated" and so "smoky with Indian bonfires" that
you could smell them burning hundreds of miles out at sea.
Using your history books to understand what America was like in the
100 years after Columbus landed there is like trying to understand
what modern day Manhattan is like based on the post-apocalyptic
scenes from I Am Legend.
Historians estimate that before the plague, America's population was anywhere between 20 and 100 million (Europe's at the time was 70 million). The plague would eventually sweep West, killing at least 90 percent of the native population. For comparison's sake, the Black Plague killed off between 30 and 60 percent of Europe's population.
While this all might
seem like some heavy shit to lay on a bunch of second graders, your
high school and college history books weren't exactly in a hurry to
tell you the full story.
Which is strange,
because many historians believe it is the single most important event
in American history. But it's just more fun to believe that your
ancestors won the land by being the superior culture.
European settlers had
a hard enough time defeating the Mad Max-style stragglers of the
once huge Native American population, even with superior technology.
You have to assume that the Native Americans at full strength would
have made shit powerfully real for any pale faces trying to settle
the country they had already settled. Of course, we don't really need
to assume anything about how real the American Indians kept it,
thanks to the many people who came before the pilgrims. For instance,
if you liked playing cowboys and Indians as a kid, you should know
that you could have been playing vikings and Indians, because that
shit actually happened. But before we get to how they kicked Viking
ass, you probably need to know that ...
#5. Native Culture
Wasn't Primitive
The Myth:
American Indians lived
in balance with mother earth, father moon, brother coyote and sister
... bear? Does that just sound right because of the Berenstain Bears?
Whichever animal they thought was their sister, the point is, the
Indians were leaving behind a small carbon footprint before elements
were wearing shoes. If the government was taken over by hippies
tomorrow, the directionless, ecologically friendly society they'd
institute is about what we picture the Native Americans as having
lived like.
The Truth:
The Indians were so
good at killing trees that a team of Stanford environmental
scientists think they caused a mini ice age in Europe. When all of
the tree-clearing Indians died in the plague, so many trees grew back
that it had a reverse global warming effect. More carbon dioxide was
sucked from the air, the Earth's atmosphere held on to less heat, and
Al Gore cried a single tear of joy.
One of the best
examples of how we got Native Americans all wrong is
Cahokia, a massive Native American city located in modern day East
St. Louis. In 1250, it was bigger than London, and featured a
sophisticated society with an urban center,
satellite villages and thatched-roof houses lining the central
plazas. While the city was abandoned by the time white
people got to it, the evidence they left behind suggests a complex
economy with trade routes from the Great Lakes all the way down to
the Gulf of Mexico.
And that's not even
mentioning America's version of the Great Pyramid: Monk's Mound. You
know how people treat the very existence of the Great Pyramid in
Egypt as one of history's most confounding mysteries? Well, Cahokia's
pyramid dwarfs that one, both
in size and in degree of difficulty. The mound
contains more than 2.16 billion pounds of soil, some of which had to
be carried from hundreds of miles away, to make sure the city's giant
monument was vividly colored. To put that in perspective, all 13
million people who live in the state of Illinois today would have to
carry three 50-pound baskets of soil from as far away as Indiana to
construct another one.
So why does Egypt get millions of dollars of tourism and Time Life documentaries dedicated to their boring old sand pyramids, while you didn't even know about the giant blue, red, white, black, gray, brown and orange testament to engineering and human willpower just outside of St. Louis? Well, because the Egyptians know how to treat one of the Eight Wonders of the World. America, on the other hand, appears to be trying to figure out how to turn it into a parking lot.
In the realm of
personal hygiene, the Europeans out-hippied the Indians by a foul
smelling mile. Europeans at the time thought baths attracted the
black humors, or some such bullshit, because they never washed and
were amazed by the Indians' interest in personal cleanliness. The
natives, for their part, viewed Europeans as "just plain smelly"
according to first hand records.
The Native Americans
didn't hate Europeans just for the clouds of shit-smelling awfulness
they dragged around behind them. Missionaries met Indians who thought
Europeans were "physically weak, sexually untrustworthy,
atrociously ugly" and "possessed little intelligence in
comparison to themselves." The Europeans didn't do
much to debunk the comparison in the physical beauty department.
Verrazzano, the sailor who witnessed the densely populated East
Coast, called a native who boarded his ship "as beautiful in
stature and build as I can possibly describe," before presumably
adding, "you know, for a dude." This man-crush wasn't an
isolated incident. British fisherman William Wood described the
Indians in New England as "more amiable to behold, though
dressed only in Adam's finery, than ... an English dandy in the
newest fashion." Or, with the bullshit removed, "Better
looking than any of us, and they're not even fucking trying."
OK, now that we got
that out of the way, we can tell you about the historical
slash-fiction your history teacher forgot to tell you actually
freaking happened.
#4. Columbus Didn't
Discover America: Vikings vs. Indians
The Myth:
America was discovered
in 1492 because Europeans were starting to get curious about the
outside world thanks to the Renaissance and Enlightenment and
Europeans of the time just generally being the first smart people
ever. Columbus named the people who already lived there Indians,
presumably because he was being charmingly self-deprecating.
The Truth:
Here's what we know. A
bunch of vikings set up a successful colony in Greenland that lasted
for 518 years (982-1500). To put that into
perspective, the white European settlement currently known as the
United States will need to wait until the year 2125 to match that
longevity. The vikings spent a good portion of that time
sending expeditions down south to try to settle what they called
Vineland -- which historians now
believe was the East Coast of North America.
Some place the vikings as far south as modern day North Carolina.
After spending a
couple decades sneaking ashore to raid Vineland of its ample wood
pulp, the vikings made a go of settling North America in 1005. After
landing there with livestock, supplies and between 100 and 300
settlers, they set up the first successful European American colony
... for two years. And then the Native Americans kicked their ass
out of the country, shooting the head viking in the heart with an
arrow.
So to recap, the
vikings discovered America. They were camping off the coast of
America, and had every reason to settle America for about 500 years.
Despite being the biggest badasses in European history, one tangle
with the natives was enough to convince the vikings that settling
America wasn't worth the trouble. If you think the pilgrims would
have fared any better than the vikings against an East Coast
chock-full of Native Americans, you either don't know what a viking
is or you're placing entirely too much stock in the strategic
importance of having belt buckles on your shoes.
If the Indians had
been at full strength in 1640, white people might still be sneaking
onto the East Coast to steal wood pulp. That's as far as the vikings
got in 500 years, and they were sailing from much closer than Europe
and desperately needed the resources -- the two competing theories
for why the viking settlements on Greenland eventually died out are
lack of resources and getting killed by natives -- and, perhaps most
importantly, they were goddamned vikings.
So why did your
history teachers lie? This should have been history teachers' version
of dinosaurs: a mostly unknown period of violent awesomeness they
nevertheless told you about because they knew it would hook every
male between the ages of 5 and 12 forever.
It turns out that many
of the awesomest stories had to be paved over by the bullshit you
memorized in order to protect your teachers and parents from awkward
conversations. Like the one about how ...
#3. Everything You
Know About Columbus Is a Calculated Lie
The Myth:
Columbus discovered
America thanks to a daring journey across the Atlantic. His crew was
about to throw him overboard when land was spotted. Even after he
landed in America, Columbus didn't realize he'd discovered an entire
continent because maps of America were far less reliable back then.
In one of the great tragedies of history, Columbus went to his grave
poor, believing he'd merely discovered India. Nobody really "got"
America's potential until the pilgrims showed up and successfully
settled the country for the first time. Nearly 150 years might seem
like a long time between trips, but boats were really slow back in
those days, and they'd just learned that the Atlantic Ocean went that
far.
The Truth:
First of all, Columbus
wasn't the first to cross the Atlantic. Nor were the vikings. Two
Native Americans landed in Holland in 60 B.C. and
were promptly not given a national holiday by anyone. Columbus didn't
see the enormous significance of his ability to cross the Atlantic
because it wasn't especially significant. His voyage wasn't
particularly difficult. They enjoyed smooth sailing, and nobody was
threatening to throw him overboard. Despite what history books tell
kids (and the
Internet apparently believes), Columbus died
wealthy, and with a pretty good idea of what he'd found -- on his
third voyage to America, he wrote in
his journal, "I have come to
believe that this is a mighty continent which was hitherto unknown."
The myths surrounding
him cover up the fact that Columbus was calculating, shrewd and as
hungry for gold as the voice over guy in the Cash4Gold ads. When he
couldn't find enough of the yellow stuff to make his voyage
profitable, he focused
on enslaving Native Americans for
profit. That's how efficient Columbus was -- he discovered America
and invented American slavery in the same 15-year span.
There were plenty of
unsuccessful, mostly horrible attempts to settle America between
Columbus' discovery and the pilgrims' arrival. We only hear these two
"settling of America" stories because history books and
movies aren't huge fans of what white people got up to between 1492
and 1620 in America -- mostly digging for gold and eating each other.
They also
show us white Europeans being unable to easily defeat a native
population that hadn't yet been ravaged by plague. It
wasn't coincidence that the pilgrims settled America two years after
New England was emptied of 96 percent of the Indians who lived there.
According to James W. Loewen's Lies
My Teacher Told Me, that's generally how the
settling process went: The plague acted as a lead blocker for white
European settlers, clearing the land of all the natives. The
Europeans had superior weapons, but they also had superior guns when
they tried to colonize China, India, Africa and basically every other
region on the planet. When you picture Chinese or Indian or African
people today, they're not white because those lands were already
inhabited when the Europeans showed up. And so was America.
American history goes
to almost comical lengths to ignore that fact. For instance, if your
reading comprehension was strong in middle school, you might remember
the lost colony of Roanoke, where the people mysteriously
disappeared, leaving behind only one cryptic clue: the word "Croatan"
carved into the town post. As we've
covered before, this is only a mystery if you
are the worst detective ever. Croatan was the name of a nearby island
populated by friendly Native Americans. In the years after the people
of Roanoke "disappeared," genetically
impossible Native Americans with gray eyes and
an "astounding" familiarity with distinctly European
customs began to pop up in the tribes that moved between Croatan and
Roanoke islands.
#2. White Settlers
Did Not Carve America Out of the Untamed Wilderness
The Myth:
The pilgrims were the
first in a parade of brave settlers who pushed civilization westward
along the frontier with elbow grease and sheer grizzled-old-man
strength.
The Truth:
In written records
from early colonial times, you constantly come across "settlers"
being shocked at how convenient the American wilderness made things
for them. The eastern forests, generally portrayed by great
American writers as a "thick, unbroken snarl of trees" no
longer existed by the time the white European settlers actually
showed up. The pilgrims couldn't believe
their luck when they found that American forests just naturally
contained "an ecological kaleidosocope of garden plots,
blackberry rambles, pine barrens and spacious groves of chestnut,
hickory and oak."
The puzzlingly
obedient wilderness didn't stop in New England. Frontiersmen who
settled what is today Ohio were psyched to find that the forest
there naturally grew in a way that "resembled English parks."
You could drive carriages through the untamed frontier without
burning a single calorie clearing rocks, trees and shrubbery.
Whether they honestly
believed they'd lucked into the 17th century equivalent of Candyland
or were being willfully ignorant about how the land got so tamed, the
truth about the presettled wilderness didn't make it into the
official account. It's the same reason every extraordinarily lucky
CEO of the past 100 years has written a book about leadership. It's
always a better idea to credit hard work and intelligence than to
acknowledge that you just got luckier than any group of people has
ever gotten in the history of the world.
Nobody's role in
settling America has been quite as overplayed as the pilgrims'.
Despite famous sermons with titles like "Into the Wilderness,"
the pilgrims cherry-picked Plymouth specifically because it was a
recently abandoned town. After sailing up and down the coast of Cape
Cod, they chose Plymouth Rock because of "its beautiful cleared
fields, recently planted in corn, and its useful harbor."
We're always told that
the pilgrims were helped by an Indian named Squanto who spoke
English. How the hell did that happen? Had he taken AP English in
high school? The answer to that question is the greatest story your
history teachers didn't bother to teach you. Squanto was from the
town that would become Plymouth, but between being born there and the
pilgrims' arrival, he'd undergone an epic journey that puts
Homer's Odyssey to shame.
Squanto had been
kidnapped from Cape Cod as a child and sold into slavery in Spain. He
escaped like the boy Maximus he was, and spent his better years
hoofing it west until he hit the Atlantic Ocean. Deciding that
swimming back to America would take too much time, he learned enough
English to convince someone to let him hitch a ride to "the New
World." When he finally got back home, he found his town
deserted. The plague had swept through two years before, taking
everyone but him with it.
when the pilgrims
showed up, instead of being pissed at the people from the Continent
who had stolen his ability to grow up with his family, he decided
that since nobody else was using it, he might as well show them how
to make his town work.
This is especially
charitable of him when you realize that, while the pilgrims were
nicer than past settlers, they weren't exactly sensitive to Squanto's
plight. According to a pilgrim journal from the days immediately
after they arrived, they raided Indian graves for "bowls, trays,
dishes and things like that. We took several of the prettiest things
to carry away with us, and covered the body up again." And yet
Squanto taught them how to make it through a winter without turning
to cannibalism -- a landmark accomplishment for the British to that
point.
Compare that to
Jamestown, the first successful settlement in American history. You
don't know the name of the ship that landed there because the
settlers antagonized the natives, just like the vikings who came
before them. The Native Americans didn't have to actively kill them.
They just sat back and laughed as the English spent the harvest
seasons digging holes for gold. The first Virginians were so
desperate without a Squanto that they went from taking Indian slaves
to offering themselves up as slaves to the Indians in exchange for
food. Enough English managed to survive there to make Jamestown the
oldest successful colonial settlement in America. But it's hard to
turn it into a religious allegory in which white people are the good
guys, so we get the pilgrims instead.
The Myth:
After the natives
helped the pilgrims get through that first winter, all playing nice
disappeared until Dances with Wolves. Even the movies that do portray
white people going native portray it as a shocking exception to the
rule. Otherwise, the only influence the natives seem to have on the
New World and the frontiersmen is giving them moving targets to shoot
at, and eventually a plot outline for Avatar.
The Truth:
The fake mystery of
Roanoke is a pretty good key for understanding the difference between
how white settlers actually felt about American Indians and how hard
your history books had to ignore that reality. Settlers defecting to
join native society was so common that it became a major issue for
colonial leaders -- think the modern immigration debate, except with
all the white people risking their lives to get out of American
society. According
to Loewen, "Europeans were
always trying to stop the outflow. Hernando De Soto had to post
guards to keep his men and women from defecting to Native societies."
Pilgrims were so scared of Indian influence that they
outlawed the wearing of long hair.
Ben
Franklin noted that, "No
European who has tasted Savage Life can afterwards bear to live in
our societies." While "always bet on black"
might have been sound financial advice by the time Wesley Snipes
offered it, Ben Franklin knew that for much of American history, it
was equally advisable to bet on red.
Franklin wasn't
pointing this out as a critique of the settlers who defected -- he
believed that Indian societies provided greater opportunities for
happiness than European cultures -- and he wasn't the only Founding
Father who thought settlers could learn a thing or two from them.
They didn't dress up like Indians at the Boston Tea Party ironically.
That was common protesting gear during the American revolutions.
For a hundred years
after the American Revolution, none of this was a secret. Political
cartoonists used Indians to represent the colonial side. Colonial
soldiers dressed up like Indians when fighting the British. Documents
from the time indicate that the design of the U.S. government was at
least partially inspired by native tribal society. Historians think
the Iroquois Confederacy had a direct influence on the U.S.
Constitution, and the Senate
even passed a resolution acknowledging
that "the confederation of the original thirteen colonies into
one republic was influenced ... by the Iroquois Confederacy, as were
many of the democratic principles which were incorporated into the
constitution itself."
That wasn't just
Congress trying to get some Indian casino money. The colonists came
from European countries that had spent most of their time as
monarchies and much of their resources fighting religious wars with
each other. They initially tried to set up the colonies exactly like
Western Europe -- a series of small, in-fighting nations stacked on
top of each other. The idea of an overarching confederacy of
different independent states was completely foreign to them. Or it
would have been. But as Ben Franklin noted in a letter about the
failure to integrate with one another:
"It would be a
strange thing if six nations of ignorant savages should be capable of
forming a scheme for such a union and be able to execute it in such a
manner as that it has subsisted ages and appears insoluble; and yet
that a like union should be impracticable for 10 or a dozen English
colonies."
In 1987, Cornell
University held a conference on the link
between the Iroquois' government and the U.S. Constitution.
It was noted that the Iroquois Great Law of Peace "includes
'freedom of speech, freedom of religion ... separation of power in
government and checks and balances."
Wow, checks and
balances, freedom of speech and religion. Sounds awfully familiar.
One of the strangest
legacies of America's founding is our national obsession with the
apocalypse. There's a new JJ Abrams show coming this fall called The
Revolution about a post-apocalyptic America, and of course The
Hunger Games. We go to a gift shop in Arizona and see dug-up Indian
arrowheads, and never think "this is the same thing as the stuff
laying around in Terminator or The Road or that
part in The Road Warrior where the feral kid finds a music
box and doesn't know what it is."
We love the apocalypse
as long as nobody acknowledges the truth: It's not a mythical event.
We live on top of one.
Jack O'Brien is the
Editor in Chief of Cracked.com. You can follow him on Twitter.
6 Ridiculous Lies You Believe About the Founding of America | Cracked.com http://www.cracked.com/article_19864_6-ridiculous-lies-you-believe-about-founding-america_p2.html#ixzz2BDnx0yPo
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