February 05, 2013

Native tells protesters they're illegal

Immigrant Protest: ‘Y’all Are All Illegal!!!’

By Abena Agyeman-FisherAt a Tucson, Ariz., anti-illegal immigrant rally, a group of self-righteous protesters were literally put on mute after a Native American decided to drop some knowledge on who the real “illegals” are.

Pushing a toddler in a stroller, a rightfully irritated self-identified Native American began yelling at the group, saying:

“Y’all f*cking illegal. You’re all illegal. You’re all illegal!

“We didn’t invite none of you here!

“We’re the only native Americans here.”
Comment:  I've seen this response--Natives telling non-Natives they're illegal immigrants--before in cartoons. But this is the first live-action version I've seen.

For more on immigration, see Twitter War Over Immigration Reference and Obama: Natives Are the Only Natives.

3 comments:

Talking Two Feathers said...

Do you supose any of those whites had any real idea of what he was saying? To the white man, he had the right to come here and take the land ..... and tell others who also wish to come here that they cannot. Sad indeed.

Anonymous said...

Of course they understood what he was saying. Why do you think they all walked away from him. TRUTH hurts!
The white man didn't have the right to come and commit genocide on the Indigenous people of the Americas.

Discovery Doctrine was used against them.
The origins of the doctrine can be traced to Pope Nicholas V's issuance of the papal bull Romanus Pontifex in 1455. The bull allowed Portugal to claim and conquer lands in West Africa. Pope Alexander VI extended to Spain the right to conquer newly-found lands in 1493, with the papal bull Inter caetera, after Christopher Columbus had already begun doing so. Arguments between Portugal and Spain led to the Treaty of Tordesillas which clarified that only non-Christian lands could thus be taken, as well as drawing a line of demarcation to allocate potential discoveries between the two powers.

Anonymous said...

He's right!

All because of the Discovery Doctrine.
The origins of the doctrine can be traced to Pope Nicholas V's issuance of the papal bull Romanus Pontifex in 1455. The bull allowed Portugal to claim and conquer lands in West Africa. Pope Alexander VI extended to Spain the right to conquer newly-found lands in 1493, with the papal bull Inter caetera, after Christopher Columbus had already begun doing so. Arguments between Portugal and Spain led to the Treaty of Tordesillas which clarified that only non-Christian lands could thus be taken, as well as drawing a line of demarcation to allocate potential discoveries between the two powers.