When you consider that more than half of those who voted in 2012 voted to re-elect Barrack Obama, that means that on average in this country, knowing more than your neighbors isn't asking for terribly much.
Got a synopsis of that book? Sorry, but an Amazon page isn't evidence, it's spam.
Being a professional skeptic involves something similar to a claim of omniscience.
Being a professional skeptic involves something similar to a claim of omniscience.
You can read Skeptical Inquirer's review of it here.
Both the great achievements of Native Americans and the sorry record of United States dealings with them should be widely and honestly taught. I would like to think that eventually enough justice will be done that modern Native Americans will no longer feel themselves a victimized minority, and an articulate leader like Deloria will not feel the need to put his best foot forward into a cow pie of politically motivated, false prehistory.
and an articulate leader like Deloria will not feel the need to put his best foot forward into a cow pie of politically motivated, false prehistory.![]()
So he substitutes the red man fairy tale?Deloria described the idea of dinosaurs dying out 65M years ago as a kind of a white man's fairy tale.
Vine Deloria taught at the University of Colorado, was president of the Nation Council of American Indians two or three terms, and remains the best known of all American Indian authors. Several of his books, particularly his "Custer DFied for your Sins", are standard university texts on Indian Affairs.
His "Red Earth, White Lies" is generally meant as a refutation to the "Overkill" and/or "Blitzkrieg Overkill" theories which blame Indian ancestors for the North American megafauna dieouts which occurred some 10K - 12K years ago. One chapter, however, deals with dinosaurs in Amerind oral traditions and iconography and petroglyphs, particularly the stegosaur which Indians called "Mishi-pishu" (water panther). Oral traditions describe the water panther as having a saw-blade back, a cat-like face, reddish fur, and a "great spiked tail" which he used as a weapon, i.e. as a stegosaur.
Those kinds of glyphs were common when Europeans first got to North America and, in fact, Lewis and Clark noted that their Indian guides were in mortal terror at the sight of them since the original meaning was "
Caution, one of these things LIVES here".
The glyph at Ogawa Rock is the only one left which is fairly representational, others remain which are more like stick figures but even those show the dorsal spikes. The Agawa Rock glyph also has horns which stegosaurs lacked, but those were simply added at a much later date by an artist who figured an animal that size needed them. Indians were in the habit of touching those glyphs up ever few years.
Deloria described the idea of dinosaurs dying out 65M years ago as a kind of a white man's fairy tale.
The clown writing that crap isn't fit to shine Deloria's shoes.
I'm just calling Poe right now.
Which hardly matters because it is an appeal to authority. And not even a somewhat appropriate authority, either.Pity all of that is pure woo BS.
I'm just calling Poe right now.
What Vine once told me was that he'd been working on a sort of a compendium of Amerind oral traditions and had basically spoken with pretty nearly every story-teller and keeper of such traditions from Alaska down to Tierra del Fuego. He said that if there was anything which got to him at first it was the extent to which seemingly 80 or 90% of those traditions retaind ideas about ancestors dealing with dinosaurs.
He said that, knowing Indians as he did, he'd assume that if such stories were fictitious, he'd expect most of them to be about the Indian hero killing the monster with his spear and saving the girl. But the stories usually were about building log stockades to prevent the clumsy creatures from trampling the villages. He said that factor made it highly unlikely that all such stories were fictitious.
What Vine once told me was that he'd been working on a sort of a compendium of Amerind oral traditions and had basically spoken with pretty nearly every story-teller and keeper of such traditions from Alaska down to Tierra del Fuego. He said that if there was anything which got to him at first it was the extent to which seemingly 80 or 90% of those traditions retaind ideas about ancestors dealing with dinosaurs.
He said that, knowing Indians as he did, he'd assume that if such stories were fictitious, he'd expect most of them to be about the Indian hero killing the monster with his spear and saving the girl. But the stories usually were about building log stockades to prevent the clumsy creatures from trampling the villages. He said that factor made it highly unlikely that all such stories were fictitious.
What Vine once told me was that he'd been working on a sort of a compendium of Amerind oral traditions and had basically spoken with pretty nearly every story-teller and keeper of such traditions from Alaska down to Tierra del Fuego. He said that if there was anything which got to him at first it was the extent to which seemingly 80 or 90% of those traditions retaind ideas about ancestors dealing with dinosaurs.
He said that, knowing Indians as he did, he'd assume that if such stories were fictitious, he'd expect most of them to be about the Indian hero killing the monster with his spear and saving the girl. But the stories usually were about building log stockades to prevent the clumsy creatures from trampling the villages. He said that factor made it highly unlikely that all such stories were fictitious.
What Vine once told me was that he'd been working on a sort of a compendium of Amerind oral traditions and had basically spoken with pretty nearly every story-teller and keeper of such traditions from Alaska down to Tierra del Fuego. He said that if there was anything which got to him at first it was the extent to which seemingly 80 or 90% of those traditions retaind ideas about ancestors dealing with dinosaurs.
He said that, knowing Indians as he did, he'd assume that if such stories were fictitious, he'd expect most of them to be about the Indian hero killing the monster with his spear and saving the girl. But the stories usually were about building log stockades to prevent the clumsy creatures from trampling the villages. He said that factor made it highly unlikely that all such stories were fictitious.
And what evidence does he have? Is there anthropological evidence of Native Americans finding or using dinosaur hide and bones?But the stories usually were about building log stockades to prevent the clumsy creatures from trampling the villages. He said that factor made it highly unlikely that all such stories were fictitious.