A Good Deed Punished
Posted: Fri Mar 31, 2023 4:46 pm
Douglas Mercer
November 5 2022
They changed McKinley to Denali and now they've changed Doane to First Peoples. First Peoples? Were they even here first? And anyway when did that ever matter? It's not who gets there first that matters but who possesses it now. It's only in our sordid day that you have a trick that the people who possessed the land are dispossessed by strokes of pens and the names come tumbling down one after another in fit of tyranny and guilt. In the past when the names have changed it's always been Year Zero and a revolution is occurring. So my strong assumption is that a revolution is occurring.
Gustavus Doane led an exemplary White life. He was one of those men out there on the frontiers of our battles who cleared the way for those who came next. That we today are not living up to his example is a crying shame. Of course it's really not "we" who are not so doing but "our" government. And any more those two things are not even close to being one and the same thing. Our enemies know that when you attack our past we have no future. And so they are doing and that they are doing it in our name is a crying shame.
"Doane was credited in having a key role in the exploration and establishment of Yellowstone National Park. He was one of the escorts on the Washburn-Langford-Doane Expedition and provided reports to the Secretary of War relating to the natural phenomenon at Yellowstone"
Like Lewis and Clarke he did the hard work of exploring and mapping. And got the country to realize that it had to protect these treasures from the predations of capital lest they go up in so much smoke. These are people we should remember and honor; and we die for a time; that time is now gone. They preserved the land; but we will not preserve their memory. In just retribution he had a hand in killing some Indians, and nothing will send your memory faster down the rat hole in the Year Zero than that.
"However, in 1871 Hayden named another peak in Yellowstone as Mount Doane in his honor. In 2018, Native American leaders called for it to be renamed First Peoples Mountain, because Doane led a massacre that killed around 175 Blackfeet people, and he continued to brag about the incident throughout his life. In June 2022 the U.S. Board of Geographic Names voted unanimously to change the name to First Peoples Mountain, as part of a Department of the Interior initiative to remove derogatory names from federal lands."
That's a nice touch about him bragging about it; there was nothing squeamish about those men; far into old age they'd tell those tales about Indian blood running on the frozen ice. After all it's truth long honored that the only good Indian is a dead Indian. As for the derogatory names that means just about every public figure (with few exceptions) prior to 1920. That means the whole host and panoply of he heroes. With these Jewish jackals in charge none of them will escape the whipping.
Gustavus Doane deserves much better than this treatment. A grateful nation should recall and laud him permanently. That he did us yeoman's service should go without saying, but for his services rendered he gets treated like a dog. But fret not, every dog will have its day.
"Immediately after the ill-fated Battle of Little Bighorn Doane and his troops were instrumental in moving survivors of Major Marcus Reno's forces to safety and medical care. In June 1877, a year after the battle, Doane along Lt Colonel Michael Sheridan visited the battleground to recover remains. Of the remains recovered was that of Colonel George Armstrong Custer who was later buried at West Point."
How long until they dig him up? How long until they dig them all up? Because in the end that's where we are heading in this backwards and perverted country. Changing the names, and taking down the statues and unhanging the pictures is one thing; but as they have shown us with Nathan Bedford Forest the final desecration is not allowing the bones of these men to rest in the earth. Hounding and harrying them well beyond the grave. With their heads on a pike to discourage the others. No healthy and sane people would allow this ultimate outrage to be perpetrated on the ancestors. The ancestors don't cry, they fume for revenge.
"Research has shown that earlier that same year (1870), Doane led an attack, in response to the murder of a white fur trader, on a band of Piegan Blackfeet. During what is now known as the Marias Massacre, at least 173 American Indians were killed, including many women, elderly Tribal members and children suffering from smallpox. Doane wrote fondly about this attack and bragged about it for the rest of his life."
The Marias Massacre, the Tulsa Race Massacre, the Texas Chain Saw Massacre. The Jews love those massacres and they love saying Massacre. Of course when Indians massacred Whites it was just what a put upon people were forced to do to protect themselves. No such verbal courtesy is extended to White people, in what was after all a war to the knife between two peoples at war. And as for that murdered White trader there it is of course; the part they generally leave out of the big shows of the name change. And the most elementary law of such tooth and nail warfare: kill and be killed, expect no quarter--give none. A White man was murdered; that was what it was about at bottom. Was the response disproportionate? Of course it was--you bet. It had to be. We've seen in our day what mealy-mouthed nonsense gets you. And who could have witnessed the last fifty odd years of the assaults on our people and not had his sympathy run dry? But back then they knew that the response needed to be overwhelming and draconian; a village for an eye as it were. Certainly no one can argue with their success; and nothing succeeds like that.
"However, Doane is also accused of many acts of violence towards native tribes. According to The Powell Tribune, he was part of a massacre that killed an estimated 175 Piegan Blackfeet people in 1870."
He admired the way the blood of the many dead flowed along the ice of the frozen river.
"As the leader of the U.S. Army escort of the Washburn-Langford-Doane Expedition into Yellowstone in August–September 1870, Lt. Gustavus C. Doane became a significant contributor to the process that ultimately resulted in the creation of Yellowstone National Park on March 1, 1872. Although he was skillful and resourceful throughout the expedition, it was his thorough and detailed report to the Secretary of War in February 1871 of the natural phenomena in Yellowstone that played a convincing role in the efforts to convince the U.S. Congress to create the National Park."
A stone cold killer when need be, one who could revel in the red blood on the white ice of the river, he was also a nature writer at heart. It was he who really got the ball rolling on that great White Supremacist project: the national parks. The same men who wanted to preserve in pristine condition the very best part of our living space were also uniquely concerned with preserving the White race, the two going hand in hand. Certainly, Gustavus Doane was one of their kind.
"Frontier soldier and explorer extraordinaire, Gustavus Cheyney Doane was no stranger to historical events. Between 1863 and 1892 he participated in every major Indian battle in Montana Territory, and led the first scientific reconnaissance into the Yellowstone country—his report on that expedition even contributed to the establishment of Yellowstone National Park."
"More than enough to ensure the fame of the dead man's deeds, and no reason at all to besmirch the dead man's reputation. Of course, he should be in any who's who of our heroes. And now even before this moral debacle of the name change few if any had heard of him. Now they say his name will live in infamy."
Under Major Eugene Baker's command, a group of soldiers searched for Owl Child and his camp. The group encountered a different Blackfeet camp on January 23, 1870. When Baker was told that Owl Child was not in the camp, he stated that makes no difference and gave the command that the people there be slaughtered. As the Great Falls Tribune explains, the victims were mostly comprised of women and children that were sick with smallpox and sleeping."
Boo hoo, cry us a river with your blood flowing in it. Think twice before messing around with the White man.
It's not a paying proposition.
"Ultimately, at least 173 Blackfeet tribal members lost their lives as a result of the Marias Massacre. The National Park Service notes that Doane led the attack and he later relished and boasted about it. Decades after the attack, Blackfeet members urged the government to make amends and change the name of Yellowstone's Mount Doane."
And now they've done it.
***
In France they changed the names of the month and began worshipping the goddess of reason; in Russia they changed the names of cities; in Cambodia it was the Year Zero. But for sheer iconoclasm and changing of nomenclature nothing can compare to America circa right now. It would be a good thing if someone were actually keeping track.
"There have been calls for the 10,551ft Mount Doane to be renamed from various groups, citing war crimes and violence. The Rocky Mountain Tribal Leaders Council also submitted a proposal to rename Hayden Valley—named after geologist Ferdinand Hayden—because of his views on tribal people."
Who will survive that standard? Who can pass liberal insect muster if they have wrong think about the Indians? They were great men to today's pygmies, none of whom have the strength of character to commit a war crime.
"The Wyoming Board of Geographic Names voted six to two in favor of the name change in a meeting held at the end of May."
No one wants to touch Gustavus Doane with a ten foot pole. Well, two people, but they're probably at re-education camp right now. If they haven't been shuffled off ignominiously to the gulag to be worked to death.
"Based on recommendations from the Rocky Mountain Tribal Council, subsequent votes within the Wyoming Board of Geographic names, and with support of the National Park Service, the name was forwarded to the BGN for a vote in June 2022. The name change will be reflected in The Domestic Names Geographic Names Information System (GNIS) in the coming days."
This was a juggernaut whose time had come. When the long history of the American Past is written the name of George Floyd (sadly) will have a place above nearly all others. There was a long descent to that treacherous moment but that is when the critical mass broke through and all the devils were loose. After that there was a massive push for everyone to come clean on the alleged evils of the past, to wipe the slate clean as it were.
The Year Zero is always merciless with the host population.
"Yellowstone National Park announced today that Mount Doane is now named First Peoples Mountain. Today’s announcement follows a 15-0 vote affirming the change by the U.S. Board on Geographic Names (BGN)."
It was a blowout. Not one person wanted anything to do with a man who killed Indians so that his people might live. No one of them want anything to do with what it took to forge a nation out of a wilderness. No, they'd rather take on the mantle of atonement and of seeking forgiveness and morality by taking the sides of the victims in that struggle. After all in this day and age what could be more fashionable that the so called First Peoples?
"One of the highest peaks in Yellowstone National Park will be renamed from Mount Doane to the First Peoples Mountain over claims Gustavus Cheyney Doane—after who the mountain is named—was a horrible man who actively engaged in violence towards Native People."
Not a horrible man but one who struck awe in to his enemies. One who dealt with them with a sudden terribleness which can't be countenanced today. The milksops who rule us now have no concept of that kind of greatness. Greatness such as that, such hard-nosed no compromise work on behalf of the Great White Race makes Jew here the sound of hoof beats thunder across the steppes, make them hear the sound of the trains.
"A 2014 report from the Native American Council said: America's first National Park should no longer have features named after the proponents and exponents of genocide, as is the case with Hayden Valley and Mount Doane."
Who says? Jews, that's who.
"Three years later, an official submission was made to the U.S. Board on Geographic Names to have both Mount Doane and Hayden Valley changed to the First Peoples Mountain and Buffalo Nations Valley, respectively. The Board then put the matter to the Park County, the Wyoming Board of Geographic Names, and the National Park Service."
And they erase our past with a vote and stroke of the pen. For Jews this is just another data point of White Genocide.
"A 15-0 vote, the National Park Service writes that the U.S. Board on Geographic Names agreed to change the mountain's name from Mount Doane to First Peoples Mountain. The agency added that they had consulted with 27 different Native American tribes and all were in favor of the name change. The new name was also supported by the Rocky Mountain Tribal Council and the Wyoming Board of Geographic names. Tom Rodgers, a Blackfeet member, explained how important this name change was not only for current members but also for his ancestors who were victims of a horrific moment in history."
Their ancestors never stood a chance against us. Which is why extermination is the only long-term basis to deal with your enemies. You can't let them survive, for if you do the remnant may be taken up by some hostile parasite who enters you land. And the hostile parasite will dredge up those old tales of valor and courage and ice-cold steel resolve and turn them in to tales of horror. Only a misplaced Christian Charity allowed them to live scattered about us, and be turned in to a cudgel picked up by Jews to kill us off and break the Nordic spell
But let us give the final word to the great and good Gustavus Done. He deserves it.
"Doane took pride in the attack. He wrote in 1891: I remember the day when we slaughtered the Piegans, how it occurred to me, as I sat on the bank of the Marias & watched the stream of their blood, which ran down on the frozen river over half a mile, that the work we were doing would be rewarded."
Some reward, eh?
But fret not: we will vindicate our martyrs. Of this you can be sure.
November 5 2022
They changed McKinley to Denali and now they've changed Doane to First Peoples. First Peoples? Were they even here first? And anyway when did that ever matter? It's not who gets there first that matters but who possesses it now. It's only in our sordid day that you have a trick that the people who possessed the land are dispossessed by strokes of pens and the names come tumbling down one after another in fit of tyranny and guilt. In the past when the names have changed it's always been Year Zero and a revolution is occurring. So my strong assumption is that a revolution is occurring.
Gustavus Doane led an exemplary White life. He was one of those men out there on the frontiers of our battles who cleared the way for those who came next. That we today are not living up to his example is a crying shame. Of course it's really not "we" who are not so doing but "our" government. And any more those two things are not even close to being one and the same thing. Our enemies know that when you attack our past we have no future. And so they are doing and that they are doing it in our name is a crying shame.
"Doane was credited in having a key role in the exploration and establishment of Yellowstone National Park. He was one of the escorts on the Washburn-Langford-Doane Expedition and provided reports to the Secretary of War relating to the natural phenomenon at Yellowstone"
Like Lewis and Clarke he did the hard work of exploring and mapping. And got the country to realize that it had to protect these treasures from the predations of capital lest they go up in so much smoke. These are people we should remember and honor; and we die for a time; that time is now gone. They preserved the land; but we will not preserve their memory. In just retribution he had a hand in killing some Indians, and nothing will send your memory faster down the rat hole in the Year Zero than that.
"However, in 1871 Hayden named another peak in Yellowstone as Mount Doane in his honor. In 2018, Native American leaders called for it to be renamed First Peoples Mountain, because Doane led a massacre that killed around 175 Blackfeet people, and he continued to brag about the incident throughout his life. In June 2022 the U.S. Board of Geographic Names voted unanimously to change the name to First Peoples Mountain, as part of a Department of the Interior initiative to remove derogatory names from federal lands."
That's a nice touch about him bragging about it; there was nothing squeamish about those men; far into old age they'd tell those tales about Indian blood running on the frozen ice. After all it's truth long honored that the only good Indian is a dead Indian. As for the derogatory names that means just about every public figure (with few exceptions) prior to 1920. That means the whole host and panoply of he heroes. With these Jewish jackals in charge none of them will escape the whipping.
Gustavus Doane deserves much better than this treatment. A grateful nation should recall and laud him permanently. That he did us yeoman's service should go without saying, but for his services rendered he gets treated like a dog. But fret not, every dog will have its day.
"Immediately after the ill-fated Battle of Little Bighorn Doane and his troops were instrumental in moving survivors of Major Marcus Reno's forces to safety and medical care. In June 1877, a year after the battle, Doane along Lt Colonel Michael Sheridan visited the battleground to recover remains. Of the remains recovered was that of Colonel George Armstrong Custer who was later buried at West Point."
How long until they dig him up? How long until they dig them all up? Because in the end that's where we are heading in this backwards and perverted country. Changing the names, and taking down the statues and unhanging the pictures is one thing; but as they have shown us with Nathan Bedford Forest the final desecration is not allowing the bones of these men to rest in the earth. Hounding and harrying them well beyond the grave. With their heads on a pike to discourage the others. No healthy and sane people would allow this ultimate outrage to be perpetrated on the ancestors. The ancestors don't cry, they fume for revenge.
"Research has shown that earlier that same year (1870), Doane led an attack, in response to the murder of a white fur trader, on a band of Piegan Blackfeet. During what is now known as the Marias Massacre, at least 173 American Indians were killed, including many women, elderly Tribal members and children suffering from smallpox. Doane wrote fondly about this attack and bragged about it for the rest of his life."
The Marias Massacre, the Tulsa Race Massacre, the Texas Chain Saw Massacre. The Jews love those massacres and they love saying Massacre. Of course when Indians massacred Whites it was just what a put upon people were forced to do to protect themselves. No such verbal courtesy is extended to White people, in what was after all a war to the knife between two peoples at war. And as for that murdered White trader there it is of course; the part they generally leave out of the big shows of the name change. And the most elementary law of such tooth and nail warfare: kill and be killed, expect no quarter--give none. A White man was murdered; that was what it was about at bottom. Was the response disproportionate? Of course it was--you bet. It had to be. We've seen in our day what mealy-mouthed nonsense gets you. And who could have witnessed the last fifty odd years of the assaults on our people and not had his sympathy run dry? But back then they knew that the response needed to be overwhelming and draconian; a village for an eye as it were. Certainly no one can argue with their success; and nothing succeeds like that.
"However, Doane is also accused of many acts of violence towards native tribes. According to The Powell Tribune, he was part of a massacre that killed an estimated 175 Piegan Blackfeet people in 1870."
He admired the way the blood of the many dead flowed along the ice of the frozen river.
"As the leader of the U.S. Army escort of the Washburn-Langford-Doane Expedition into Yellowstone in August–September 1870, Lt. Gustavus C. Doane became a significant contributor to the process that ultimately resulted in the creation of Yellowstone National Park on March 1, 1872. Although he was skillful and resourceful throughout the expedition, it was his thorough and detailed report to the Secretary of War in February 1871 of the natural phenomena in Yellowstone that played a convincing role in the efforts to convince the U.S. Congress to create the National Park."
A stone cold killer when need be, one who could revel in the red blood on the white ice of the river, he was also a nature writer at heart. It was he who really got the ball rolling on that great White Supremacist project: the national parks. The same men who wanted to preserve in pristine condition the very best part of our living space were also uniquely concerned with preserving the White race, the two going hand in hand. Certainly, Gustavus Doane was one of their kind.
"Frontier soldier and explorer extraordinaire, Gustavus Cheyney Doane was no stranger to historical events. Between 1863 and 1892 he participated in every major Indian battle in Montana Territory, and led the first scientific reconnaissance into the Yellowstone country—his report on that expedition even contributed to the establishment of Yellowstone National Park."
"More than enough to ensure the fame of the dead man's deeds, and no reason at all to besmirch the dead man's reputation. Of course, he should be in any who's who of our heroes. And now even before this moral debacle of the name change few if any had heard of him. Now they say his name will live in infamy."
Under Major Eugene Baker's command, a group of soldiers searched for Owl Child and his camp. The group encountered a different Blackfeet camp on January 23, 1870. When Baker was told that Owl Child was not in the camp, he stated that makes no difference and gave the command that the people there be slaughtered. As the Great Falls Tribune explains, the victims were mostly comprised of women and children that were sick with smallpox and sleeping."
Boo hoo, cry us a river with your blood flowing in it. Think twice before messing around with the White man.
It's not a paying proposition.
"Ultimately, at least 173 Blackfeet tribal members lost their lives as a result of the Marias Massacre. The National Park Service notes that Doane led the attack and he later relished and boasted about it. Decades after the attack, Blackfeet members urged the government to make amends and change the name of Yellowstone's Mount Doane."
And now they've done it.
***
In France they changed the names of the month and began worshipping the goddess of reason; in Russia they changed the names of cities; in Cambodia it was the Year Zero. But for sheer iconoclasm and changing of nomenclature nothing can compare to America circa right now. It would be a good thing if someone were actually keeping track.
"There have been calls for the 10,551ft Mount Doane to be renamed from various groups, citing war crimes and violence. The Rocky Mountain Tribal Leaders Council also submitted a proposal to rename Hayden Valley—named after geologist Ferdinand Hayden—because of his views on tribal people."
Who will survive that standard? Who can pass liberal insect muster if they have wrong think about the Indians? They were great men to today's pygmies, none of whom have the strength of character to commit a war crime.
"The Wyoming Board of Geographic Names voted six to two in favor of the name change in a meeting held at the end of May."
No one wants to touch Gustavus Doane with a ten foot pole. Well, two people, but they're probably at re-education camp right now. If they haven't been shuffled off ignominiously to the gulag to be worked to death.
"Based on recommendations from the Rocky Mountain Tribal Council, subsequent votes within the Wyoming Board of Geographic names, and with support of the National Park Service, the name was forwarded to the BGN for a vote in June 2022. The name change will be reflected in The Domestic Names Geographic Names Information System (GNIS) in the coming days."
This was a juggernaut whose time had come. When the long history of the American Past is written the name of George Floyd (sadly) will have a place above nearly all others. There was a long descent to that treacherous moment but that is when the critical mass broke through and all the devils were loose. After that there was a massive push for everyone to come clean on the alleged evils of the past, to wipe the slate clean as it were.
The Year Zero is always merciless with the host population.
"Yellowstone National Park announced today that Mount Doane is now named First Peoples Mountain. Today’s announcement follows a 15-0 vote affirming the change by the U.S. Board on Geographic Names (BGN)."
It was a blowout. Not one person wanted anything to do with a man who killed Indians so that his people might live. No one of them want anything to do with what it took to forge a nation out of a wilderness. No, they'd rather take on the mantle of atonement and of seeking forgiveness and morality by taking the sides of the victims in that struggle. After all in this day and age what could be more fashionable that the so called First Peoples?
"One of the highest peaks in Yellowstone National Park will be renamed from Mount Doane to the First Peoples Mountain over claims Gustavus Cheyney Doane—after who the mountain is named—was a horrible man who actively engaged in violence towards Native People."
Not a horrible man but one who struck awe in to his enemies. One who dealt with them with a sudden terribleness which can't be countenanced today. The milksops who rule us now have no concept of that kind of greatness. Greatness such as that, such hard-nosed no compromise work on behalf of the Great White Race makes Jew here the sound of hoof beats thunder across the steppes, make them hear the sound of the trains.
"A 2014 report from the Native American Council said: America's first National Park should no longer have features named after the proponents and exponents of genocide, as is the case with Hayden Valley and Mount Doane."
Who says? Jews, that's who.
"Three years later, an official submission was made to the U.S. Board on Geographic Names to have both Mount Doane and Hayden Valley changed to the First Peoples Mountain and Buffalo Nations Valley, respectively. The Board then put the matter to the Park County, the Wyoming Board of Geographic Names, and the National Park Service."
And they erase our past with a vote and stroke of the pen. For Jews this is just another data point of White Genocide.
"A 15-0 vote, the National Park Service writes that the U.S. Board on Geographic Names agreed to change the mountain's name from Mount Doane to First Peoples Mountain. The agency added that they had consulted with 27 different Native American tribes and all were in favor of the name change. The new name was also supported by the Rocky Mountain Tribal Council and the Wyoming Board of Geographic names. Tom Rodgers, a Blackfeet member, explained how important this name change was not only for current members but also for his ancestors who were victims of a horrific moment in history."
Their ancestors never stood a chance against us. Which is why extermination is the only long-term basis to deal with your enemies. You can't let them survive, for if you do the remnant may be taken up by some hostile parasite who enters you land. And the hostile parasite will dredge up those old tales of valor and courage and ice-cold steel resolve and turn them in to tales of horror. Only a misplaced Christian Charity allowed them to live scattered about us, and be turned in to a cudgel picked up by Jews to kill us off and break the Nordic spell
But let us give the final word to the great and good Gustavus Done. He deserves it.
"Doane took pride in the attack. He wrote in 1891: I remember the day when we slaughtered the Piegans, how it occurred to me, as I sat on the bank of the Marias & watched the stream of their blood, which ran down on the frozen river over half a mile, that the work we were doing would be rewarded."
Some reward, eh?
But fret not: we will vindicate our martyrs. Of this you can be sure.