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{"text": "Chatsworth is located in the San Fernando Valley, the suburbs of Los Angeles, California, and was once home to several distinct Native American tribes, some of whom left rock art in caves on cliffs, which were explored and colonized by the Spanish beginning in the 18th century.\n\nToday, I found myself driving by Stony Point Park, located near the north end of Topanga Canyon Boulevard in Chatsworth, and I decided to take a hike to the top.\n\nI wasn't really dressed for hiking today, especially in 94 degree heat, but I had just come from a doctor's visit and was told that I needed to do something about my high cholesterol and that lifting the fork to my mouth at restaurants did not count as rigorous exercise.\n\nSo as it turns out, the trails here are a lot steeper than I expected, so I thought that it would be wise to practice climbing some of these smaller boulders first, just to get warmed up and to take in some of the scenery.\n\nNow that I'm getting older, I decided to start taking better care of my health, and so I'm determined to make it to the top today.\n\nNo matter how difficult it is, I won't let anything sway me, and even though I already broke a sweat from the heat, and I've never tried this before, there's absolutely no way I'm turning back, because I made up my mind, and I will overcome any obstacle that I encounter along my path to the top.\n\nOkay, you know what, I just changed my mind. There's a very angry looking snake on this path, so maybe it's best that I reconsider and try climbing up another way.\n\nSome of my friends have asked me to join their gym to help get me into shape, but it's not for me.\n\nI'd rather be out in nature than on a treadmill running in the same spot staring at a TV set, and there's just nothing like a good hike, especially when at the end you're rewarded with a beautiful and scenic view from the top."}
{"text": ".\n\nI'd rather be out in nature than on a treadmill running in the same spot staring at a TV set, and there's just nothing like a good hike, especially when at the end you're rewarded with a beautiful and scenic view from the top.\n\nLiving in America, I think a lot about the ancient cultures that lived here before me, that may have climbed these same rocks in antiquity, the people that historians and anthropologists call Native Americans.\n\nIn the Merriam-Webster dictionary, the term Native is defined as an original or indigenous inhabitant.\n\nIn the same dictionary, the term indigenous is defined as, quote, relating to the earliest known inhabitants of a place and especially of a place that was colonized by a now dominant group.\n\nIn the context of the peopling of the Americas, the now dominant colonizers are, of course, the Europeans that officially started arriving in 1492, the year that jews were expelled from Europe.\n\nOf course, Christopher Columbus was himself known to be a converso, meaning he openly converted to Christianity while secretly maintaining his original faith.\n\nHis voyage was financed to a large degree by three prominent jewish conversos, and at least a third of the crew members on the Nenya, the Pinta, and the Santa Maria were jews, all of which can be fact checked online.\n\nIt is also interesting to note that Columbus officially set sail on the morning of August 3, 1492, the very morning after, according to Chabad.org, a jewish website that cites, quote, the last jews left Spain on August 2, 1492.\n\nThe validity of these statements can be attested to anthropologically by the plethora of centuries-old tombstones that can still be found in Jamaica with Hebrew writing next to Skull and Bones symbology, which I already explained the occult meaning of in prior videos about the Knights Templar.\n\nThat said, the alleged discovery of the Americas by Christopher Columbus was not by accident through seeking a direct water route west from Europe to Asia, but rather for new land to be settled by conversos who traced their ancestry back to Canaanites who were well aware of the Americas for many millennia."}
{"text": "by accident through seeking a direct water route west from Europe to Asia, but rather for new land to be settled by conversos who traced their ancestry back to Canaanites who were well aware of the Americas for many millennia.\n\nSpanish jews were called Sephardic, as Sepharad means Spain in Hebrew and had a long history of trade with ancient Phoenicia, which is the Greek word for the land of Canaan.\n\nAlexander the Great crushed the Phoenician capital of Tyre, and the Roman Empire eradicated the Phoenician colony of Carthage in the Punic Wars, which is why modern history books, which are all based on the Greco-Roman version of history, leaves out the true story of the Phoenicians and Canaanites as well as the Israelites and certain Egyptian dynasties who were also all aware of the Americas since antiquity.\n\nDuring the era of the Roman Empire, as well as their extension, the Holy Roman Empire, or Catholic Church, anything to do with the conquered Phoenicians, which means red in Greek, was hidden or vilified.\n\nThat's why Satan, which means adversary, was always depicted in red, horned, and holding a trident, all symbols of their conquered adversary who were forced to go underground.\n\nThe Phoenicians were not one distinct isolated nation, but rather, collectively, followers of an ancient tradition which can be traced back thousands of years to the Pleistocene, which is a time that the ancient Egyptians and Greeks attributed to Atlantis, which even during the Ice Age was said to be involved in transatlantic settlements.\n\nThe Catholic Church extended their Inquisition, which is another word for genocide, to the Americas, where they exterminated the Phoenician descendants that had fled there during the Punic Wars and in modern times banned their ancient symbol, the swastika, which was also revered by the Vikings, who also sailed to the Americas before Christopher Columbus and were also affiliated with the Phoenicians.\n\nThe Lakota are a Native American tribe, one of the three main subcultures of the Sioux people.\n\nCrazy Horse had a lighter complexion and hair than others in his tribe, with prodigious curls."}
{"text": "oux people.\n\nCrazy Horse had a lighter complexion and hair than others in his tribe, with prodigious curls.\n\nBoys were traditionally not permanently named until they had an experience that earned them a name, so Crazy Horse was called Curly Hair and Light-Haired Boy as a child.\n\nAs an adolescent, Crazy Horse earned the name His Horse Looking, but he was more commonly known as Curly until 1858 when following a battle with Arapaho warriors, he was given his father's name, while his father took the name Worm.\n\nCrazy Horse was not a traditionalist with regard to his tribe's customs, shrugging off many of the traditions and rituals that the Sioux practiced.\n\nIn 1854, Crazy Horse rode off into the prairies for a vision quest, purposefully ignoring the required rituals.\n\nFasting for two days, Crazy Horse had a vision of an unadorned horseman who directed him to present himself in the same way, with no more than one feather and never a warb on it.\n\nHe was also told to toss dust over his horse before entering battle and to place a stone behind his ear and directed to never take anything for himself.\n\nCrazy Horse followed these instructions until his death. Black Buffalo Woman was Crazy Horse's first love.\n\nThey met in 1857, but she married a man named No Water while Crazy Horse was on a raid.\n\nCrazy Horse continued to pay her attention and in 1868 eloped with her while No Water was on a hunting party.\n\nHe and Black Buffalo Woman spent one night together before No Water took back his wife, including Crazy Horse in the nose and breaking his jaw.\n\nDespite fears of violence between villages, the two men came to a truce. Crazy Horse insisted that Black Buffalo Woman shouldn't be punished for fleeing and received the horse from No Water in compensation for the injury.\n\nCrazy Horse eventually married Black Shawl, who died of tuberculosis, and later a half-Chayenne, half-French woman named Nellie Laraby.\n\nBlack Buffalo Woman's fourth child, a girl, was a light-skinned baby suspected of being the result of her night with Crazy Horse."}
{"text": "Water in compensation for the injury.\n\nCrazy Horse eventually married Black Shawl, who died of tuberculosis, and later a half-Chayenne, half-French woman named Nellie Laraby.\n\nBlack Buffalo Woman's fourth child, a girl, was a light-skinned baby suspected of being the result of her night with Crazy Horse.\n\nCrazy Horse was involved in many battles. The most famous was probably when he led as many as 1,000 warriors against General Custer, helping seal the General's disastrous defeat and death at the Battle of Little Bighorn, also known as Custer's Last Stand.\n\nFive of the seventh cavalry's 12 companies were annihilated and Custer was killed.\n\nThe total US casualty count included 268 dead and 55 severely wounded, with six dying later from their wounds.\n\nCrazy Horse eventually negotiated a deal, essentially surrendering in exchange for the Sioux to get their own reservation.\n\nDuring negotiations, Crazy Horse found trouble with both the army and his fellow tribesmen, and was arrested, dying shortly after at the age of 35 during a struggle with an old friend that worked for the army and the soldier.\n\nCrazy Horse is remembered for his courage, leadership, and his tenacity of spirit in the face of near impossible odds.\n\nHis legacy is celebrated in the Crazy Horse Memorial, an uncompleted monumental sculpture located in the Black Hills not far from Mount Rushmore and likely to be one of the largest sculptures in the world when completed.\n\nThe Sioux tribe once lived as woodland Indians along the upper Mississippi and Minnesota, Iowa and Wisconsin.\n\nThey were forced west by the French and their Chippewa allies. During the migration west to the Great Plains, the tribe split into three divisions, the Dakota, Nakota, and Lakota, which were the people's names for themselves.\n\nThe name Sioux actually means little snakes, which was given to the tribe by the Chippewa Indians.\n\nArchaeological, linguistic, and genetic studies indicate that the peopling of the Americas happened in several different waves during different time periods and that the populations were ethnically and racially diverse, rather than one homogenous group."}
{"text": "peopling of the Americas happened in several different waves during different time periods and that the populations were ethnically and racially diverse, rather than one homogenous group.\n\nWhile my previous videos have focused on transatlantic settlers from Vikings, Celts, Phoenicians, Maritime Archaic or better known as the Red Paint people, and even Ice Age seafaring populations genetically related to the European Basque people that used solutrian bifacial stone tools, it could be said that evidence exists that seafaring people also arrived by boat on the Pacific side of the North American continent.\n\nAlthough mainstream anthropologists still mostly cling to the Bering Strait land route as the main path from Asia to the New World, more and more archaeologists are finding reason to believe that boats hugging the coastline were also likely used, with the ocean itself being used as an ancient highway by migrating tribes of various ethnicities well into the Pleistocene or Ice Age.\n\nArchaeologists in Canada unearthed an Ice Age settlement that may rewrite North American history.\n\nIt's a story that has been passed down from generation to generation amongst the Hilsuk Nation.\n\nIndeed, it forms part of the oral history of the Canadian people. Yet the narrative it portrays has challenged widespread conceptions about the human migration in North America.\n\nAnd now, incredibly, archaeologists have found stunning evidence to prove it. Some 14,000 years ago, the North American continent was in the grip of an Ice Age.\n\nAs a result, glaciers covered most of the land. Scientists have long believed that it was during this period that the first humans crossed into North America, traveling on foot across a land bridge between what is now Alaska and Eastern Russia before moving further south via inland routes.\n\nHowever, a new discovery in northwestern Canada has challenged that belief. The story that the Hilsuk people told concerned a strip of land along the west coast of Canada.\n\nIn contrast to accepted scientific wisdom, their traditions claimed that this piece of land didn't freeze during the Ice Age.\n\nConsequently, they say, it was here that their ancestors took shelter from the freezing conditions.\n\nAnd as a result of these Hilsuk beliefs, archaeologists recently turned their attention to an island called Tricket in British Columbia."}