Fake Indians: All of a sudden, Census
shows American Indian population has surged 86.5%
American Thinker,
by
Monica Showalter
Original Article
Posted By: PageTurner,
12/25/2021 8:39:30 AM
Sen. Liz Warren, an early adopter on the fake Indian front, suddenly has a lot of company.
Get a load of this from Legal Insurrection:
The Native American population in the U.S. grew by a staggering 86.5% between 2010 and 2020, according to the latest U.S. Census – a rate demographers say is impossible to achieve without immigration.
Birth rates among Native Americans don’t explain the massive rise in numbers. And there certainly is no evidence of an influx of Native American expatriates returning to the U.S.
Reply 1 - Posted by:
BarryNo 12/25/2021 8:53:17 AM (No. 1018278)
Did native Americans simply not answer the census, in the past? Or is this a symptom of a larger problem?
I can see the Democrats inserting databases of fake people they can shift around and use to generate fraudulent votes.
17 people like this.
Reply 2 - Posted by:
Jethro bo 12/25/2021 8:58:23 AM (No. 1018282)
So what? In a word where one only has to 'feel' they are something they are not, this makes sense. People 'feel' they are Indians and get the special privileges awarded by our goobernment for those more equal than others. Tired of being blamed for all the evils in the world? Then claim one is no longer an evil white male but instead a hero Indian male. Our Emperor has no clothes goobernment says is A-Ok! I imagine most folks simple found through some Ancestry.com site they are related to some Indian and now claim Indian blood. And since Indians are a more equal group than others, its also a benefit. The goobernment created this nonsense when it accepted nonsense of identifying gender, color, etc. Now live with it.
10 people like this.
Reply 3 - Posted by:
Ida Lou Pino 12/25/2021 8:58:34 AM (No. 1018283)
Cheekbone enhancement surgery.
17 people like this.
Reply 4 - Posted by:
JackBurton 12/25/2021 9:07:28 AM (No. 1018290)
I'm 100% Polish. My wife is half Hispanic, half Armenian. Our kids? Hispanic.
Helped 'em get into the college of their choice. Two can play at that game.
Oh, BTW, I'm conservative and my wife is liberal. So, I'm bigotted and maybe racist...Me... the guy who married a half hispanic and told the kids to identify as such.
16 people like this.
Reply 5 - Posted by:
Rand Al'Thor 12/25/2021 9:08:24 AM (No. 1018292)
The casinos are getting lucrative.
13 people like this.
Reply 6 - Posted by:
Strike3 12/25/2021 9:09:57 AM (No. 1018296)
Being Native American is a shortcut to free college and a large monthly allowance. Our government loves to give things away to the people who don't want to work for it. Why wouldn't people cheat since they have seen what it did for Lizzy, who is still sitting in congress collecting $174K a year and teaching classes at the Ivy League school that she scammed her way into the same way.
16 people like this.
Reply 7 - Posted by:
WV.Hillbilly 12/25/2021 9:10:06 AM (No. 1018297)
My family has been here for almost 400 years. I count myself as a Native American.
27 people like this.
Reply 8 - Posted by:
Bur Oak 12/25/2021 9:10:17 AM (No. 1018298)
I'm native American. I was born here!
26 people like this.
Reply 9 - Posted by:
snakeoil 12/25/2021 9:18:30 AM (No. 1018309)
I've attended several Atlanta Braves games. Where my wampum?
11 people like this.
Reply 10 - Posted by:
EJKrausJr 12/25/2021 9:19:02 AM (No. 1018310)
How many are members of the Hekawi tribe?
12 people like this.
Reply 11 - Posted by:
chance_232 12/25/2021 9:26:31 AM (No. 1018318)
I blame DNA testing. Mine came back showing that I'm 99.8% Northern European. The rest.....Native American. Sooooooooooooooooooo using the Elizabeth Warren logic....I'm Native American first.
14 people like this.
Reply 12 - Posted by:
RobertJ984 12/25/2021 9:29:42 AM (No. 1018322)
Indians? Feather, not dot?
6 people like this.
Reply 13 - Posted by:
sanspeur 12/25/2021 9:34:07 AM (No. 1018327)
How?
5 people like this.
Reply 14 - Posted by:
bgarrett 12/25/2021 9:53:33 AM (No. 1018340)
#6 got it right. When the government rewards people for being Indian, more 'become' Indian
12 people like this.
Reply 15 - Posted by:
texaspast 12/25/2021 9:53:52 AM (No. 1018341)
One of my great-great grandfathers claimed to be Choctaw and I can trace my ancestry back to John Rolfe and Pocahontas. I'm now an Indian! Woo hoo! And #10, is that the same tribe as the fugawis?
7 people like this.
Reply 16 - Posted by:
Toodles3956 12/25/2021 9:58:55 AM (No. 1018349)
I think some of it comes from people doing their DNA. I was surprised to find that I was 30% Native American.
2 people like this.
Reply 17 - Posted by:
Catfur27 12/25/2021 10:21:09 AM (No. 1018367)
I question the counting methodology : They used the "One little , two little , three little Indians,,,,," method... which has been shown to have no scientific basis....
3 people like this.
Reply 18 - Posted by:
Blue-Z-Anna 12/25/2021 10:24:23 AM (No. 1018369)
I am the chief mucky muck of the fagawi Indian tribe and my casino is currently under construction.
6 people like this.
Reply 19 - Posted by:
hershey 12/25/2021 10:30:01 AM (No. 1018381)
Well everyone knows we are all at least 1/1024th Indian....
6 people like this.
Reply 20 - Posted by:
Birddog 12/25/2021 10:57:47 AM (No. 1018405)
It would be interesting to compare the census number with the Tribal CBID numbers...several tribes have been REMOVING names/people from their rolls, primarily black people that had been granted tribal status in the late 1800's/early 1900's.
That reduction is countered by an ever increasing quest to find/enroll the people who were "Stolen" through adoptions.
The baseline of who is "Indian" includes primarily only those listed in the Dawes and Baker rolls and their direct descendants. DNA/Blood tests may mean little to nothing as far as the individual tribes are concerned, if there is not Birth/Death/correspondence/legal documentation with your ancestors name and tribal affiliation specifically mentioned.
3 people like this.
Reply 21 - Posted by:
msts 12/25/2021 11:04:17 AM (No. 1018410)
#12...Dot head or woo woo?
4 people like this.
Reply 22 - Posted by:
texaspast 12/25/2021 11:09:17 AM (No. 1018414)
#20, there are a good number of families with Indian background who were never enrolled. Here in our part of East Texas there were several Cherokee families who just never left in 1839 or came back because they had bought land before the "removal" to Oklahoma and they came back to East Texas. They became prominent members of the community (lawyers, mayors, doctors, etc.). As a result of intermarriage, a good portion of our little town has at least a little Cherokee blood and are more indian than lieawatha!
4 people like this.
Reply 23 - Posted by:
marbles 12/25/2021 11:14:05 AM (No. 1018420)
I was born here, that makes me a Native American. My ancestors came fro The Pale of Settlement which was Russia and is now The Ukraine. But I was born here in the USA, and that makes me a native American.
10 people like this.
Reply 24 - Posted by:
3XALADY 12/25/2021 11:18:32 AM (No. 1018425)
My father, who was from Oark, Arkansas, left our family when I was three. My mother said his grandmother was full blooded Indian but she didn't know which tribe or anything else about the family. My sister and I tried to find out about their family but was never able to. We wrote the Cherokee people and didn't hear back from them. Was told they didn't want any more to have to split their gooberment money with. Makes sense.
5 people like this.
Reply 25 - Posted by:
Roscoelewis 12/25/2021 11:30:30 AM (No. 1018435)
Ugh, Me want'um much wampum.
4 people like this.
Since I have no idea of my ethnic background, family tree, or even care, I adopt whatever ethnic group on that day I most identify with. Why restrict yourself to one ethnic background in a country where you can make up your own gender...?
4 people like this.
Reply 27 - Posted by:
cheeflo 12/25/2021 1:20:05 PM (No. 1018511)
... and public service announcements (remember the crying Indian?) depict.
Iron Eyes Cody, the Indian in that famous ad, was actually born Espera de Corti — an Italian-American.
5 people like this.
Reply 28 - Posted by:
DVC 12/25/2021 1:40:45 PM (No. 1018528)
Liar, liar, war bonnet on fire.
3 people like this.
Reply 29 - Posted by:
Strike3 12/25/2021 2:13:25 PM (No. 1018556)
I once belonged to a ski club where a former Assistant Secretary - Indian Affairs was a member. He told us that he doled out money to the various tribes based on the quality of booze and women the tribal leaders supplied him when he made his visit. I had no reason to doubt him.
4 people like this.
Reply 30 - Posted by:
bighambone 12/25/2021 4:26:02 PM (No. 1018634)
I have a member of my family whose father was adopted as a small baby, when I knew him as an adult he had physical features that his adoptive parents always described as being Italian or Mediterranean in nature, I always suspected otherwise. The State where the adoption took place would not tell the adoptive parents anything concerning their adopted baby’s origin or natural parentage.
A couple of years ago the adopted baby’s daughter, now an adult, did the Ancestry DNA test. When the result came back to her it showed that her DNA is about half Native American. That DNA match had to come from her father as her mother also did the Ancestry DNA testing and her DNA is 100% European origin. Sometime later the daughter was contacted by native Americans living on the Pine Ridge Lakota (Sioux) Reservation in South Dakota by way of Ancestry and those Lakota (Sioux) people who also matched her DNA told her that they knew her Native American ancestors and that her father’s people were Lakota (Sioux) from that tribe. While the lady does exhibit Native American facial features that resemble her Dad, she is really not interested in looking up any Native American relatives for fear that they would not accept her relationship as she was not brought up on the tribal reservation and said that she would be better off by letting sleeping dogs lie. She also has a sister who also resembles her Dad’s features, but otherwise she is light complected and has blond hair. The sister’s Ancestry DNA result showed that she had a good percentage of Pacific Islander DNA. I have been told that White people can no longer adopt Native American babies because of a recent federal law. The two sisters are now college graduates, are gainfully employed and are not in need of any federal assistance based upon their heritage.
0 people like this.
Reply 31 - Posted by:
Hermit_Crab 12/25/2021 4:45:56 PM (No. 1018639)
Yathhey, Baby
0 people like this.
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Cherokee peeeeeple! Cherokee priiiiide....