A Brief History of The Alamo

 

10,000 to 13,000 years ago, people migrated across the Aluetian Land bridge and settled throughout the Americas. They lived there in harmony with the land and in relative peace for 10,000 to 13,000 years in the region now known as Texas.

Starting around 1500 and continuing for about 300 years, a group of state-sponsored terrorists and pirates arrived from Spain; they were appropriately called conquistadors, meaning conquerors. They implemented a pogrom of genocide against Native Americans using biological warfare and outright violence, capitalizing on their technological prowess. Those Native Americans not killed outright were compelled to construct a series of concentration camps known as Missions. At these camps, Native Americans were imprisoned and forced to worship a god alien to their ways.

In 1810, a competing gang of thieves arose in the New World, who called themselves Mexicanos, or Mexicans. They engaged the Spanish gang for control of the Native American lands and ultimately drove them out in 1821. Rather than returning the stolen land to the Native Americans, they continued the pogroms of the first band of pirates.

In 1835, a third terrorist band of thieves arose, sanctioned, if not sponsored, by the American government. They engaged the Mexicano gang and suffered a humiliating defeat at The Alamo. Surprisingly, to this day, Texans and their American sponsors wallow in their humiliation, treating the site and the incompetent leadership of the American gang with awe and reverence.

Aftermath: the American thieves used their defeat as a rallying cry and mounted a counter-offensive against the Mexican thieves and consummated the theft of Native American territory from the second band of thieves in 1835. The Americans continued the genocidal pogroms of the Mexicans and expanded the construction of concentration camps, now called reservations. Notably, they institutionalized  the enslavement the few Native Americans remaining and engaged in a deliberate policy of cultural obliteration. None of the land has been returned to its rightful owners to this day in 2022.

6 Replies to “A Brief History of The Alamo”

  1. Preach Brother. Honest history is the only history.
    Thank for sharing.

  2. Loved your revisionist history but you better be careful. They’ll string you up in Texas for propagating such views.

  3. Sad, but true. Does it all have to do with technology? The conquerors prevailed because they had better technology, not a better claim? A Noam Chomsky talk that I attended in the 1980s included the observation that Americans are insulated from the anti-democratic actions of their government by the fact that democracy exists at home, but not wth regard to American actions abroad. Chomsky did not modify this pronouncement by acknowledging the limits of domestic democracy as regards all who are excluded by virtue of ethnicity, religion, skin color, gender, sexuality, or income.

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