You don't look Indian to me!
"Hey
Bro, ya wanna git jiggy wif one o' my Injun rugs?" said the Black man
selling Indian rugs in Oklahoma.
Maybe such a scene never really
happened, maybe it did. No matter. One imagines that such a scene or similar
ones were in the minds of the 76% of the Cherokee Nation who voted last week
to strip non-Cherokees of membership in the tribe.
This story actually starts back
in 1838 in North Carolina, Tennessee and Georgia when the feds forced the
Cherokees to migrate to Oklahoma. When the Cherokees left their
traditional lands, some took their black slaves with them.
Then, when slavery was
abolished, the blacks were given citizenship in the Cherokee nation. Today,
there are almost 3,000 descendents of these freed slaves living with the
Cherokees in Oklahoma.
If the vote stands to limit
membership in the tribe to those with Cherokee blood, it will be primarily
these descendents of black slaves who will be booted out of the tribe, but
others including some whites and some members of other Indian tribes will
also be affected.
Cherokees, no less than any
other distinct peoples, are what they are because of their
genes. And, it seems the Cherokees understand this.
If pureblood male and
female Cherokees mate--23 Cherokee chromosomes from the male and 23 from the
female join. At that moment of joining--when there are 46 chromosomes
together, the life process starts its trajectory that will result in the
birth of a new full blooded, genuine Cherokee.
Mating within your group--like
with like--is the way all distinct peoples keep from going extinct.
There's no other way to do it.
Of course, over the past 100 or
so years, there has been a lot of intermarriage among Cherokees, just as among
other distinct peoples, as the insane blending philosophy of this age has
caused people to not see themselves or their people as being unique and worth
preserving.
It's not difficult to see how a
people goes extinct through the bedroom genocide of mating outside the group.
A pureblood Cherokee
mates with a black or a white or an Asian and the child produced is only half
Cherokee i.e. the new child has 23 Cherokee chromosomes and
23 non-Cherokee Chromosomes. Then, if that child grows up and mates
with a non-Cherokee, the child born is only one quarter Cherokee. If that
child also mates with a non-Cherokee the next child is only one eighth
Cherokee. Then it becomes one sixteenth and so on. Of course, it's
a bit more complicated than that, but that's the rough idea.
Soon, you have a tribe of
"Indians" who, depending on how the mating went, may look like
Scandinavians or African-Americans or whatever.
The blond, blue eyed
Scandinavian Cherokees may put feathers on their heads, but they sure as
hell aren't Cherokees no matter what they call themselves. Their genes have
been too watered down.
If you don't look Cherokee,
you're not Cherokee. Same with all other peoples. Trust your eyes.
So, what's to be done to save
the Cherokees from extinction? The Cherokees, themselves, have to want
to save themselves. No one else is going to do it for them. This
vote, if it stands, could be a big step away from extinction.
Of course, to really stave off
extinction the Cherokees have to have their consciousness raised even
higher as to who is a Cherokee and who isn't. If the right level of
consciousness is achieved, social taboos against breeding outside the group
should foster some reproductive isolation.
And, with reproductive
isolation will come a folding back in of those members of the tribe who may
have mixed blood, so that the mixed blood will begin reversing itself in a
sort of distillation process.
What the Cherokees are trying
to do is to go back to a period before miscegenation and alien genes were
inserted into their tribe and start from there. In other words, they
want to go back to a time before the fork in the road that led to their tribe
now having many non-Cherokees as members.
With their vote on expelling
non-Cherokees from the tribe, the Cherokees said that only those who can
show that they are blood descendents of those who were on the Cherokee
rolls back in about 1898 can be members of the tribe.
Now, obviously, the genes
of some who are descended from those on the old Cherokee
rolls may have been watered down in some lines over the past hundred or
so years, but if the Cherokees hold firm with their vote even though they are
being called racists, and if they stand up to the pressure of the blenders,
then they may be able to revive themselves as a distinct people.
In 2000, the Seminoles did
something similar to what the Cherokees are now trying, but then the
feds cut off federal money that the Seminoles had been receiving and the
Seminoles caved in. In effect, the Seminoles accepted money to commit
their own genocide.
Will the Cherokees sell their
genes for money? Time will tell.
You may not hear many
Cherokees talking about this in the terms I've used here, but, if you
cut through the sagebrush, this really is about self-identification,
self-determination and survival as a distinct people. And, there are lessons
here for all distinct peoples who want to survive the blending that is being
forced on humanity.