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America’s Origins

America’s true origin is rooted far beneath the political power struggles of the Europeans. The land itself tells the tale.

“People think that global warming is a new thing, due mainly to our pollution, said William C. Foster, author of The LaSalle Expedition to Texas, The LaSalle Expedition in the Mississippi River and Spanish Expeditions Into Texas 1689-1768. “There were no Indian settlements during the Scandic Cold Episode, around 500A.D.  It’s actually part of a 400 to 500-year cycle that the earth goes through, colder and warmer periods.  After an Ice Age (500 B.C.) and around the year 1000 A.D. many Native-American cities grew and prospered, even in Texas, at La Junta de Los Rios and Hasinai Caddo.  1000 A.D. was the beginning of a medieval warm period in which Native-Americans built huge cities and traded through extensive routes.”  During these warm periods, civilizations, like all life on earth grew.  “American civilizations in the form of cities, larger then Paris, France existed in the prehistoric North America long before Europeans arrived.  7-story apartment buildings were built as well as huge irrigation systems, some moving water as far as 3 miles.  Art, ceramics, molding and other artifacts give us clues that there were cultural centers in Casas Grandes, Chihuahua; Wind Mountain, New Mexico; Hohokam, Arizona and Sand Canyon, Colorado.  The highest, Native-American cultural period lasted from 900 A.D. to 1400 A.D. after which a ‘Little Ice Age’ pushed bison herds south and flipped horticultural communities.  During the cold, freezing periods, however, these civilizations eroded.”

Huge bison herds were reported in Lavaca and Colorado counties.  “If you’ve ever traveled to Laredo (Texas) from here (Victoria, Texas), have you ever noticed that some areas don’t have even a blade of grass?” he said.  “The bison herds ate all grass after they were driven down and stuck there by the cold.  The cold weather was discouraging to the communities.  People began to doubt their leaders.  Even their streets and buildings, which were aligned by the skies and the seasons, were no longer in sync with nature.  So many cities were abandoned by 1500 A.D., not by European influence, but by climate.”

Much of what we learn from scientists comes as they learn.  Each person must investigate life for himself or herself.  Much of what we have learned and taken for fact, we must unlearn to find and know The Truth.  It is clear from many various researchers and archaeologists that “barbaric, ignorant” Native Americans (whether northern, southern or central) generally co-existed with their environments.  Contrarily, the Old World man from across the Atlantic (Europeans, including Spaniards) squandered their resources and starved for more.

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