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Saturday, April 19, 2025

gulf of oilnado

  *America, she's not that great yeah we invented the bomb that makes cower sweat we took huddled shivering masses clad em chains and ads we stole ball sports and yo-semite from yakima and kickapoo we drank aquifers for silicon valley gurlz we inclusively segregate until not we wrestle justice tho he on our team america remember those wind up hot potato cartoon bombs you'd toss as kids that's idaho you take it no you she's first America in the dud categories teamatized by mayor don  it on diet going bleak thin into sequins she's not that great it's more cosmopolitan in cowtown poland america going to invent obsolescence after we borrow it's tune america their open arms let trump twit america once on his bedstand under a pile of fast food impervious to COVID mein template america the rat fucker paragon look at your upshot rappacini wharton wanted: america it traced without vanish gulf of oilnado heck of a blob america 


at least we ratified that footnote sez bye den


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"The word Yosemite (derived from yohhe'meti, "they are killers" in Miwok) historically referred to the name that the Miwok gave to the Ahwahneechee, the resident indigenous tribe. 

 Previously, the region had been called "Ahwahnee" ("big mouth") by its only indigenous inhabitants, the Ahwahneechee. 

The term Yosemite in Miwok is easily confused with a similar term for "grizzly bear", and is still a common misconception" 

"Humans may have first entered the area 10,000 to 8,000 years ago, with Native Americans having inhabited the region for nearly 4,000 years. European Americans entered the area by 1833 and just look, blood"  


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yosemite_National_Park 



"The 1848–1855 California Gold Rush was a major event impacting the native population. It drew more than 90,000 European Americans to the area in 1849, causing competition for resources between gold miners and residents. 

 About 70 years before the Gold Rush, the indigenous population was estimated to be 300,000, quickly dropping to 150,000, and just ten years later, only about 50,000 remained.

The reasons for such a decline included disease, birth rate decreases, starvation, and conflict. The conflict in Yosemite, which is known as the Mariposa War, was part of the California genocide,  

which was the systemic killing of indigenous peoples throughout the State between the 1840s and 1870s. 

 It started in December 1850 when California funded a state militia to drive Native people from contested territory  

to suppress Native American resistance to the European American influx" 




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