Television, public school and Hollywood has really stunted the intellects of the people, mostly. One such, “stunt,” is what is called the, “Civil War.” It was not. It was an overthrow of the Southern states by Yankee foreign mercenaries sponsored by European-Papal banking interests, and just like today, in the past the “excuse” was “slavery.” Slavery, the “catch all” psy-op. The multi-faceted, phony, hyped, multi- generational, ongoing grift. The truth, “We were pillaged and plundered by the North,” and their foot soldiers from Eastern Europe, Germany and other lands.
What the “historians” don't speak on is the contribution made by the foreign, paid rapists and killers, turned loose upon our people. They don't speak of the absolute destruction caused by Yankee troops, and they sure don't tell that we were fighting for our lands, farm, businesses and slavery had nothing to do with it. The so-called, “slaves” or “contract indentures,” fought along side of us. The historians also don't recognize the fight that our people put up in defense of the lands, and the people on them, of all races. We were fighting a real war against “principalities and powers coupled with spiritual wickedness in high places.” They wore suits, not horns.
Choctaw Confederate flag:
"Tushkahoma, a Choctaw chief, is about starting for Virginia with a regiment of his people, well armed and equipped for the Confederate service. This is only one of several Choctaw regiments in the army. The Choctaws are all true and earnest in the Southern cause."
— The Alabama Beacon, Friday, April 4, 1862
"In 1861 a great many Choctaws volunteered for the confederate service, and served with great honor to themselves in the different commands … which operated in the southwest. They made brave soldiers and good fighters. Several of these old braves are still alive, among them being Jack Amos, the confederate scout, who now is tottering on the brink of the grave, but living in the hope that he will live and have the strength to attend the reunion in the spring at New Orleans, and for the last time to see the “Stars and Bars” float in the air in front of the survivors of his old regiment."
— The Newton Record, Thursday, January 1, 1903
"FAMOUS INDIAN SCOUT ... Jack Amos of the Choctaw Tribe is Here. One of the Heroic Red Men of the Stormy Period. First With Pearce, and Later With Spann's Battalion. Mississippi Is Planning to Honor the Indian ... He is of the Choctaw tribe, and belonged to a heroic band of red men who gave splendid aid to the Confederacy, and who suffered much as a result of their loyalty to the Southern cause. Amos is now a citizen of Mississippi, and has resided in that State since the war. He is an attractive figure among the reunion visitors, and, while well advanced in years, is entering into the spirit of the occasion with a fine enthusiasm. He is a full-blooded Choctaw Indian, and is a native of Mississippi. Amos is now seventy-three years old. He talks well of himself and of the part he and other Indians played in the war."
— The Times-Democrat, Friday, May 22, 1903
“Southern newspapers (The Memphis Daily Appeal, The True Delta, New Orleans Bee, and the Mobile News) reported that "We have learned that on Wednesday about 1500 Yankees made an incursion upon Ponchatoula, which was guarded by only 150 cavalry, so sudden was their advent that our men were obliged to run without their horses. They retreated about 30 miles, telegraphing at an intermediate station for reinforcements, which came the next day in the form of 1,200 of our Indian troops and run the Yankees back..."
“On March 31, Col. Smith with a flag of truce met with Col. Miller regarding the return of stolen objects. Bacon wrote, "They are advancing. Col. Miller was there, and another colonel. They would hardly treat me civilly; they are terribly enraged against us." The number of Union troops included 400 of the 6th Michigan, 40 from the 14th Maine, 20 from the 24th Maine, 306 from the 165th New York Zouaves (FOREIGNERS), 100 from the 177th New York, and 26 from the 9th Connecticut.”
“The rebels had, in approximation, 120 of the 1st Choctaw Battalion, 40 of the 20th Mississippi, 60 of the 1st Mississippi Cavalry, 50 from the 14th Mississippi Cavalry (from Camp Moore, Louisiana and Osyka, Mississippi), and 100 from the 14th Mississippi.”
“Ponchatoula would be held by the Confederates until it was recaptured by Union forces in May 1863. Pvt. Elmore Dane of the 26th Massachusetts described it as such:
"Out of 125 men 40 were killed, wounded and missing, almost 50 percent of our number. We were kept as a reserved corps, and came up just in time to save the rest of the party from all being taken prisoners. We kept the enemy from out flanking them and covered their retreat. The fight took place at Paschola [Ponchatoula, La.] We went up the Maunshag river to the Jackson and New Orleans railroad and marched up the road. It was a bad defeat for us we had no artillery and the rebels were 1500 strong with 5 pieces of artillery. We were obliged to leave our dead on the field and the wounded in the hospital with the Doctors and assistants as prisoners in the Rebels hands; as prisoners it was a hard jaunt and well nigh cost us all imprisonment … many more die of sickness than of bullets from the enemy..."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Ponchatoula (shallow dive)
Focus your mind… I would like to point out once again that 2/3 of the Yankee Northern Army was foreign mercenaries, brought in specifically to kill us and steal our lands. Let’s be clear, that was the objective, is the objective. I have no illusions.
114th New Your Regiment. Eastern Europeans, Germans and others of foreign nativity.
In previous posts the issue was explained, but for the sake of “bringing readers up to speed,” I will refresh the memory.
“When hostilities first broke out, roughly 13% of Americans were foreign-born, the vast majority concentrated in northern cities; subsequently, foreign enlistment largely favored the Union, which was also far more successful at attracting volunteers. Roughly a quarter to a third of the Union Army was foreign-born, or 543,000–625,000 out of 2 million troops; an additional 18% had at least one parent born abroad, meaning close to half the Northern army had some recent foreign origin. By contrast, only several thousand foreigners served with the Confederacy, comprising just 5% of its armed forces. The significant manpower advantage to Union forces proved decisive to its victory, with some historians claiming the North otherwise would not have prevailed.”
“Reflecting the influx of immigrants leading up to the war, the largest foreign contingents on either side were German, Irish, and British (including English, Scottish and Welsh). Most other foreign recruits were from Canada and the rest of Europe, particularly Poland, France, Italy, and Scandinavia; smaller numbers came from China, Mexico, Hawaii, and various Native American tribes. Several high-ranking political and military leaders in both the Union and Confederacy were of foreign or immigrant background.”
“In the 40 years leading to the outbreak of the war, the United States had received four million immigrants; the vast majority came from Ireland (one million), the German states (500,000), and Great Britain (300,000). By 1860, well over a tenth of all Americans were foreign-born, with a similar proportion being second- or third-generation immigrants. The influx drove a significant demographic shift in the country: At the start of the 19th century, the U.S. population was around five million; by 1860, it had swelled to roughly 31 million.”
“The more urbanized and industrialized states of the northern U.S. drew the lion's share of foreign arrivals, which accounted for the Union's decisive demographic advantage over the Confederacy; two-thirds of all Americans (21 million) lived in U.S.-controlled territory. This included 91% of all pre-war immigrants, who now made up over half the U.S. population following secession.Consequently, the North recruited the overwhelming majority of foreigners who served in the Civil War.”
“While most immigrants, particularly from Ireland, were fleeing hardship, famine, and persecution, a large number, especially from German lands, came following the sociopolitical upheavals that gripped much of Europe in 1848. Many new arrivals had republican sentiments and a strong opposition to political oppression of all forms, including slavery; parallels were drawn between the enslavement of African Americans and the aristocratic exploitation of serfs and peasants. Hence many U.S. immigrants were enthusiastic supporters of the Union and joined for ideological reasons.”
“The Union made a concerted effort to recruit foreigners both at home and abroad. One recruitment poster, written in Italian, French, Hungarian, and German, called on "250 able-bodied men . . . Patriots of all nations" to serve their "adopted country".
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foreign_enlistment_in_the_American_Civil_War
“The 114th Pennsylvania's uniform from top to bottom began with a red Moroccan style fez with a yellow-gold tassel worn crushed downward on the back of the head like a skull cap. Some men were issued fezzes that were too large so they compensated by turning up the brim giving the fez the appearance of a beanie. For dress parade and guard mount duty, the fez was augmented with a white turban which was wound around the head in Arabic style. Although the turban was not worn on the march or in battle it has often been erroneously portrayed as such in post-war art. The collarless jacket was dark blue with sky blue cuffs and red trim. Arabesque designs on the jacket breasts were called tombeaux and gave the appearance of large false pockets trimmed in red. A sky blue sash was worn wrapped tightly around the waist with Chasseur style madder red trousers, white leggings (gaiters), and leather jambières rounding out the ensemble. The material for the uniforms was imported from France by Colonel Collis himself.”
[Foreign Mercenary Uniform- Domestic Immigrant and Overseas Recruiting. “Hidden Hand,” again]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/114th_Pennsylvania_Infantry_Regiment
“This regiment was organized at Philadelphia August, 1862. It mustered out May 29, 1865. This Regiment was also known as the Zouaves D' Afrique. The 114th Pennsylvania was the brain-child of Charles H. T. Collis, an Irish immigrant who settled in Philadelphia becoming a prominent young lawyer. Collis initially raised only a small company of men calling them the "Zouaves d'Afrique" which served while attached to other regiments. They saw action in the 1862 Shenandoah Valley Campaign, the Battle of Cedar Mountain, and the Battle of Antietam. The "Zouaves d'Afrique" were much admired for their military bearing and prowess in battle to the point that it was decided to raise a full-sized regiment which was given the numeric designation of 114th Volunteer Infantry. Like other Zouave regiments raised in the larger cities of America, the 114th attracted some immigrants to its ranks who were veterans of European wars, but the rank and file consisted mostly of American-born citizens from Philadelphia and its surrounding counties.”
https://www.familysearch.org/en/wiki/114th_Regiment,_Pennsylvania_Infantry
“Hawkins’ Zouaves, the 9th New York Infantry Regiment, was the first official Zouave regiment in the Civil War, mustered on April 23, 1861, just 11 days after war broke out at Fort Sumter, South Carolina. The unit was formed by New York lawyer and Mexican War veteran Rush C. Hawkins, and it served with distinction throughout the war. Though officially a Zouave unit, its uniforms were a modified version of the light blue worn by the Tirailleurs Algerians.
Hawkins’ Zouaves fought most bravely on September 17, 1862, at the Battle of Antietam at Sharpsburg, Maryland—the bloodiest single-day battle in us military history, when nearly 22,000 soldiers on both sides fell. The Zouaves charged uphill from Antietam Creek toward the town of Sharpsburg, which was defended by a superior force of Confederate infantry and artillery deployed behind a stone wall.
Zouave Sergeant John H. E. Whitney took part in the charge, and he was badly wounded in the left hip. After the war, he described the attack:
“A scene of carnage now ensued too terrible to describe; the imagination, however, may be aided by the statistics, which estimate that from the ranks of the “Ninth” alone there fell, in the space of a few minutes, about two hundred men killed and wounded…. The Zouaves were ordered strictly to [hold] their fire until they should have approached within whispering distance of the rebels, then to give them a hot fire of “Minie;” afterward to rush upon them with the cold, bright bayonet and finish the work…. A scene of the wildest confusion took place when the Zouaves surmounted the wall. Some of the enemy begged for mercy on the spot, while others resisted with right good-will…. Those who ran away were quickly reached with bullets, and many fell in their cowardly flight; others threw down their arms to save their lives by submission. The Zouaves now had it all their own way.”
“Hawkins’ Zouaves brought 373 soldiers to the field and lost 45 killed, 176 wounded and 14 missing in a single day. Years later, in memory of their bravery that day, the State of New York raised an obelisk monument on the battlefield. The inscription bears the motto of Hawkins’ Zouaves: “Toujours Prêt” (“Always Ready”).
https://www.aramcoworld.com/Articles/March-2017/America-s-Zouaves
They are still here: https://114thpa.tripod.com/mission.html
[While calling themselves, “d'Afrique,” they were in reality, “d'Eastern European.” Africa was the cover story, in the same way it is utilized as a “catch all phrase” for B.S. “Africanized bees,” savages from “Africa,” slaves from “Africa,” exotic animals from “Africa,” all and sundry. The devils figured out early on that they could use the term as a cloak for their plots.]
“The siege of Port Hudson (May 22 – July 9, 1863) was the final engagement in the Union campaign to recapture the Mississippi River in the American Civil War. While Union General Ulysses Grant was besieging Vicksburg upriver, General Nathaniel Banks was ordered to capture the lower Mississippi Confederate stronghold of Port Hudson, Louisiana, to go to Grant's aid. When his assault failed, Banks settled into a 48-day siege, the longest in US military history up to that point. A second attack also failed, and it was only after the fall of Vicksburg that the Confederate commander, General Franklin Gardner, surrendered the port. The Union gained control of the river and navigation from the Gulf of Mexico through the Deep South and to the river's upper reaches.”
“While the infantry attacks raged against the northern section of the fortress, Brigadier General Sherman lined up 30 cannon opposite the eastern side of the fortress and conducted a steady bombardment of the rebel works and battery positions, supported by sharpshooters aiming for Confederate artillery crews. This effort had some success, but General Banks, upon hearing no rifle fire from the Union center, visited Sherman's headquarters and threatened to relieve him of command unless he advanced his troops. Sherman then began the attack on the eastern edge of the Port Hudson works at about 2 pm. These attacks included the troops of Augur as well as his own, and had less in the way of natural terrain obstacles to contend with, but in this area the Confederates had more time to construct fortifications, and had put more effort and firepower into them. One feature of the earthworks in this region was a dry moat and more cut down trees in front of the parapet. The Union attackers therefore carried axes, poles, planks, cotton bags and fascines to fill in the ditch. Another feature of the rebel defense was a battery containing two 24-pounder smoothbore (5.82-inch, 148 mm bore) as canister throwers.In this case the canister was composed of broken chains, segments of railroad rails, and other scrap iron. Confederate Colonel William R. Miles, commanding the infantry in the sector, had also removed all the rifles from the hospital that had been left by the sick and wounded. He was thus able to equip each of his soldiers with three weapons, greatly increasing their firepower. When the Union infantry closed within 200 yards they were met by a hail of rifle and canister fire, and few made it within 70 yards of the Confederate lines. Union commanders Sherman and Dow were wounded in these attacks, and Lieutenant Colonel James O'Brien, commanding the pioneer group, was killed. At 5 pm the commander of the 159th New York raised a white flag to signal a truce to remove the wounded and dead from the field. This ended the fighting for the day. None of the Union attacks had even made it to the Confederate parapets. The Union suffered 293 KIA, 1,545 wounded, 157 MIA, compared to the Confederate casualties of 235.”
“Capt. James F. Fitts of the 114th New York described the assault on June 14 published shortly after the war in the magazine, “The Galaxy.”
“...while every eye was bent anxiously forward to catch the first view of the position. It was no time for the exhibition of enthusiasm; nobody failed to understand that the assault was being furiously pressed, without an inch of advantage to us thus far. I looked at the faces of those about me, and saw that they perfectly understood it. There were some boyish faces there that were quite pale, and the bearded ones wore a look which was almost one of suffering; but one and all were silently nerving their hearts for the torment, and they kept right on... The sound of the strife rolled down from above in an increasing tumult; the bullets fell thicker into the road; the air was mingled with noises of battle. The sides of the cut began to slope toward the level of our feet; two rods more, and we were out of the covered way. There was an abrupt ascent, then a small area of rough, uneven ground, then a ditch, seven feet deep, and quite as wide, while beyond all rose a perpendicular earthwork, not less than twelve feet above the ditch, built in the form of a retreating angle. Here was the point chosen for the assault, and before it was being enacted a scene of slaughter replete with all the horrors of a close and desperate fight. There was not sufficient ground to allow a regiment to deploy to advantage; as fast as they were unmasked from the cut, the companies rushed with a shout up the ascent, across the intervening ground, and into the ditch. From the parapet of the Rebel work came a continual flash of rifles–not in volleys, but in an irregular burst which never ceased while the attack lasted. The Rebels were entirely sheltered behind their defenses; hardly a head was to be seen above the parapet. The open space before the work was strewn with soldiers in blue, dead, dying, and severely wounded; they lay among the bushes, on the hillside, and covered the bottom of that awful ditch, yawning like a grave, at the foot of the work. For a whole hour there was a continued repetition of the scene; a yell, a rush, shouts, musket shots, cries and groans. The ditch was at last filled with the living and the dead; the former striving, within six yards of the muzzles of the Rebel rifles, to climb the face of the earthwork, and continually dropping back, with bullet holes perforated clear through their bodies…Wounded men were killed while trying to crawl beyond the range of the fire, or lay helpless under it, unable to hazard the attempt…every repetition of the assault was met by the same murderous discharge, covering the ground thickly with its victims, and adding to the horrors of the scene.”
— Capt. James F. Fitts of the 114th New York
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siege_of_Port_Hudson
See how this went? Bankers and their international interests wanted our land. It was the industrial, money generating center of the states united due to its cattle, cotton rice, sugar, textiles, etc.
The bankers and their minions in the states united “government” fomented the violent takeover of our lands. The foreigners came in, put on Yankee blues and commenced to murder our people, under the guise of warfare. It was an overthrow, it was a genocide and it was a pattern.
The same pattern is afoot today. Gives FOREIGN IMMIGRATION and SOUTHERN BORDERS a new look, huh? The “Indians,” we tried to stop them, but the foreigners were just too well sustained. Now you can see why, and from who. The states united, “ATM for the world,” brought to you by the same devils that brought you the civil war, subsequent engagements and grifts thereafter.
Lord have Mercy
Ouch. Let's be clear. "They fought White Pre-Colonials too." Everyone caught "the blues."
"Damn Yankees," it was.
organized crime and then the multitude of lone criminals similar to organized and disorganized serial killers...