And what evidence does he have? Is there anthropological evidence of Native Americans finding or using dinosaur hide and bones?
...wow, this is just beyond silly. I struggled to just write a response to this.
It's too funny to report as being off topic for a politics thread, though. I'd say the OP is a fairly good example of how many people see Tea partiers. Would anyone go as far as to say this is a typical example?
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.
Soft tissue increasingly being found in dinosaur remains:
http://kgov.com/dinosaur-soft-tissue
WOT rates this link as poor trustworthiness and caution for child safety.
Poe or not ...
Who the **** is Poe. It seems to me that a lot of posters here are living in their own insulated world with their own sort of a code language which you cannot expect normal people to be familiar with.

Who the **** is Poe. It seems to me that a lot of posters here are living in their own insulated world with their own sort of a code language which you cannot expect normal people to be familiar with.
Who the **** is Poe. It seems to me that a lot of posters here are living in their own insulated world with their own sort of a code language which you cannot expect normal people to be familiar with.
Poe's LawWho the **** is Poe.
You have to realize that you have joined a community of people that has existed for over a decade and that share, on some level, a common interest in critical thinking and skepticism. As such, we have a somewhat common frame of reference, which includes jargon and slang.It seems to me that a lot of posters here are living in their own insulated world with their own sort of a code language which you cannot expect normal people to be familiar with.
You may be right in thinking that conservatives and pubbies should be looking for silver linings in the calamity. I actually can think of one such: With a total incompetent in the white house, there would appear to be a fairly good chance of seeing Serbian tanks roll back into Kosovo within the next couple of years. THAT would be a $1000 ticket and a class A celebration.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vEKcCVgKEiQ
Gee it's a good thing they don't need gold for electronics or aerospace.![]()
In 1957 public schools still worked in the sense of being able to teach fairly dumb kids to read, write, and have some facility with numbers...
But being in one of them was nobody's idea of fun. They were never intended to produce scholars or self-reliant people; our public school system was based on the Prussian system and intended to produce cannon fodder and bricks in the wall. Thre was no such thing as well-off people sending kids to public schools.
The problem with homeschooling is that it turns out kids who only know what their parents know. It's like inbreeding for knowledge. Even if your parents are well educated you're missing out of the things you learn from other cultures and differing viewpoints.


Maybe on an island with just the family... In real life, home-school people band together and form up their own little mini schools, which they control. One parent understands math, another French, another biology.....
I'm just calling Poe right now.
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.