Thursday, October 6, 2011

Columbus Genocide Day


Columbus Day is this Monday. I will choose to spend the day in remembrance of the millions of Native Americans he killed and all the others that followed.

Although I hardly resemble a Native American, I was raised as one.  If you took one look into my childhood home, you would see vast amounts of traditionally handmade native decor.  I remember counting some 200 Kokopellis around our house.  I met many Navajo and Cherokee tribal members growing up. Most of them were either blood relatives, or I was considered family to them. My father was born and raised on and near the Navajo reservation, however we have Cherokee blood.  The result was a sort of mash-up of Navajo and Cherokee cultures.  My aunt is currently a Cherokee tribal member, and my grandfather and all previous relatives were. I'm currently working on my own Cherokee citizenship. My parents and relatives taught me from a young age about the horrible treatment of Native Americans by European settlers and the U.S.  Our ancestors experienced the worst of the Trail of Tears, and during that time they changed our last name of Falling Leaves to Falling to become more excepted by white society.  I learned none of this in school.  It surprises me that people still don't know anything about Native American oppression.  I try to express this to people every year around Columbus Day, but most people don't care or don't believe the facts.

Click image for a chart on the explorers of America

Columbus was a great navigator, but his accomplishments end at that.  He never discovered America.  The Americas were visited nearly fourteen times before.  Native Americans even crossed the Atlantic to Europe before Columbus did.  Anthropologists conjecture that Native Americans traveled millennia ago from Canada to Scandinavia or Scotland.  And two Native American ships were found shipwrecked in Holland around 60 B.C.


Columbus is responsible for the genocide of around 15 million people.  Some historians give figures closer to 8 million.  Yet other historians pin him for many more millions of deaths.  Columbus reduced the Taino numbers from as many as 8 million to about 3 million in 1496.  Perhaps 100,000 were left by the time of his departure.  His policies, however, remained, with the result that by 1542 the Spanish census of the island showed barely 200 remaining alive.  The Taino were considered extinct.  Per his own diaries, letters, and reports Columbus willingly planed this genocide even before leaving Spain.  He also noted the Taino were a gracious people and welcomed him when he landed on their island.  There were over 15 million indigenous people throughout the Caribbean Basin at the point of first contact with Columbus.  All of which were then considered extinct.

I believe one of the problems that we face today is that people so willing paint Native Americans as small, insignificant tribes who eventually benefited from the Europeans.  However their cultures were in many ways more advanced than the Europeans especially in equality issues.  Women and LGBT people were treated with respect (something the rest of the world wouldn't begin to understand until many, many years later).  They were not like the reduced numbers living on reservations in poverty today.

By wiping out these nations, Columbus set a precedent that would later result in the massacres and horrible treatment of the other indigenous cultures of the Americas.  334 years later, what is commonly described as the most horrible act our government has committed, the last of the U.S. Native Americans were forced to leave their homelands during the Trail of Tears.  During which the United States essentially paid their citizens the equivalent of $719 to kill any Native Americans along the way.  The man responsible is honored on our twenty dollar bill.

"I fought through the War Between the States and have seen many men shot, but the Cherokee Removal was the cruelest work I ever knew."
-Georgia soldier who participated in the removal


Native American hardships have often been compared to the Holocaust.  If you juxtapose percentages of the Jewish population in Europe who died during the Holocaust and of Cherokee who died during The Trail of Tears, they were virtually the same.  Columbus killed around the same number of people as Hitler during the Holocaust.

The European settlers and U.S. government enacted countless examples of genocides and crimes against humanity.  Today, 515 years later, we still have a Native American political prisoner that has not been released.

Why is it that we have a day celebrating such an atrocious man and yet no day in remembrance of Native Americans?—two continents of people, somewhere between 50 and 100 million, nearly wiped out of existence.

Monday, September 12, 2011

Found My Ad!












I found an advertisement flyer that I did in circulation today.  I feel like I'm advertising to myself. This is the back side. The font had a rendering of a maze which the caption "Life can be a maze." The publishers messed up the front a little. The back was mostly untouched except for stretching the logo (not sure why anyone would ever mess with a company's logo).

Thursday, September 8, 2011

Wow, I Never Post Anything

After 4 years of googling, studying, and experimenting with Buddhism, I have come to the realization that I have yet to meet another person who is interested in the same religion!  I believe I never felt a strong need for a Buddhist community because much of the religion seems very personal to me.  It's surprising how I have benefited so abundantly from this religion on my own.  On September 24th I will be attending a retreat held at a local Zen Buddhist temple.  I have yet to decide what kind of Buddhism I prefer, but this seems like a great way to make that decision.  The program is designed for people who are new to Buddhism (although I would hardly describe 4 years as new).  I look forward to this next step in my way to bettering myself.

Here's a list of Buddhist celebrities that I found interesting.



Orlando Bloom
Amy Winehouse
Leonard Cohen
Richard Gere
Angelina Jolie
Tina Turner
Uma Thurman
Miranda Kerr
Jet Li
Kate Hudson
Dennis Weaver
Allen Ginsberg
Philip Glass
Phil Jackson
K.D. Lang
Courtney Love
Alanis Morissette
Victor Pelevin
Keanu Reeves
Sting
Thuy Trang
Tiger Woods
Naomi Watts
Sharon Stone
Ming-Na Wen
Steve Jobs
Steven Seagal


Thursday, June 10, 2010

Favorite New Game

Remember that spider-man game that we all loved?  InFamous uses the same type of game play but perfects it.  And you don't have to be the good guy. http://www.infamousthegame.com/

Monday, May 31, 2010

Fun Fact Day

Remember when we used land lines to connect to the internet?  Dial-up was slow and impractical.  However I found myself the other day with a computer and no internet connection.  Then my eyes came across my cell phone and remembered the days of dial-up.  I could not only just use my cell phone as a modem, but I could basically use the internet anywhere I wanted.

To do this make sure that you have a data plan and the necessary drivers on your computer for your cell phone. You can get the drivers from your retailer or through their website.  Once you've obtained the drivers you can either connect your cell phone using a USB cord or you could actually use bluetooth to connect wireless.  The connection is fast enough on my computer.

I guess outdated technology can sometimes be useful.

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

New Vertigo Website

I am happy to announce Vertigo's new website is launched!

vertigobutler.weebly.com

I will soon buy our own domain, but for now we will just have to deal with the "weebly."

Monday, October 5, 2009

Trick or Treat.

Here is a little treat for anyone who actually reads my blog.

Free RedBox rental for today only (10/05/09).
Check out with promo code: QNGJ7KD.
Expires at midnight.
It's good for only one night-make sure you return it by 9pm tomorrow. It will charge you for additional nights at normal price of $1 plus tax.

Enjoy the show.