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|    Message 337,335 of 338,838    |
|    Person Familiar With the Matter to All    |
|    Exposed Kiddy Fiddler and Traitor KegBre    |
|    04 Jan 26 17:28:34    |
      XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh       From: PFWTM@cumcast.net              Hegseth Declares Wounded Knee Massacre Troops Will Keep Medals of Honor              Fri, September 26, 2025 at 10:56 AM EDT       5 min read              U.S. Secretary of War Pete Hegseth delivers remarks during the Department       of War 2025 National Prisoner of POW/MIA Recognition Day ceremony at the       Pentagon on September 19, 2025 in Arlington, Virginia.       Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images              Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has decided that soldiers who received the       Medal of Honor for helping gun down hundreds of Lakota Indians at the 1890       Wounded Knee Massacre will be allowed to keep the military's highest       decoration.              His predecessor Lloyd Austin had ordered a review last year in response to       a 2022 congressional recommendation that the medals—which were awarded to       20 soldiers from the 7th Cavalry Regiment—be revisited.              "We're making it clear without hesitation that the soldiers who fought in       the Battle of Wounded Knee in 1890 will keep their medals, and we're making       it clear they deserve those medals," Hegseth said in a video posted to the       social media platform X.       Advertisement              Although originally described as a "battle," historical records show the       U.S. Army killed between 150 and 300 members of a Lakota group called the       Miniconjou—including women and children—even after the armed members of       their group had already surrendered their weapons, according to Smithsonian       Magazine.                     The massacre was one of the final chapters of the Indian Wars between the       U.S. government and the Plains Indians.              By 1890, the Lakota had lost 58 million acres of their land and been forced       to live on a handful of neighboring reservations in North and South Dakota,       National Geographic reported.              In 1889, Congress slashed the annual Lakota rations budget; a year later, a       harsh winter and drought pushed the tribe to the brink of starvation,       according to Encyclopedia Britannica.       Advertisement              In response, many embraced a spiritual movement called the Ghost Dance,       believing they could bring back their dead and reclaim their traditional       hunting lands if they participated in ceremonial songs and dances.              The rituals were supposed to encourage the gods to return the earth to its       natural state before the arrival of European colonists, and bury the non-       believing white settlers underground.                     It was the U.S. Army's crackdown on the Ghost Dance movement—which white       settlers worried would incite violence against them—that led to the Wounded       Knee Massacre.              In December 1890, the U.S. Army banned Ghost Dance ceremonies and sent       dozens of Native American policemen to arrest the Lakota Chief Sitting       Bull, who had indicated that he would allow Ghost Dancers to gather at his       camp in South Dakota.       Advertisement              Years earlier, in 1876, Sitting Bull had defeated the U.S. Army's 7th       Cavalry at the Battle of Little Bighorn.                     He resisted arrest and was murdered by one of the police officers. A group       of his followers fled to join Sitting Bull's half-brother Spotted Elk and       his Miniconjou band at another reservation, according to National       Geographic.              Worried the Army would kill more chiefs, the entire group decided to travel       to yet another reservation. On the way, they were intercepted by 7th       Cavalry troops, who escorted them to Wounded Knee Creek.                     The bodies of the Lakota killed during the Wounded Knee Massacre were       dumped into a mass grave hacked into the frozen soil. / Hulton Archive via              There, they were surrounded by about 500 more 7th Cavalry soldiers, who       told the Lakota to lay down their weapons and said they would take them to       a new camp.       Advertisement              It's not entirely clear what happened next.              According to National Geographic, the Lakota thought they would be removed       from their territory entirely and began to sing Ghost Dance songs. A dancer       picked up dirt from the ground and flung it in the air, which the soldiers       interpreted as a signal.              They began firing, discharging early machine guns and shooting women and       babies at close range. The Lakota fought back but had mostly given up their       guns, and even some who tried to flee were hunted down and shot, National       Geographic reported.              Other accounts say the troops opened fire after a shot rang out, possibly       because a soldier grabbed the rifle of a deaf Miniconjou named Black       Coyote, who either didn't understand or didn't want to follow the order to       turn over his weapon, according to Smithsonian.                     The shooting continued for several hours, killing hundreds of Lakota and       leaving 25 soldiers dead, many of them killed by friendly fire.              In 1973, about 200 members of the American Indian Movement seized the       reservation hamlet of Wounded Knee and occupied it for two months. /       Bettmann Archive via Getty Images                     The Bureau of Indian Affairs nevertheless said the encounter had been a       battle, and 20 soldiers were given Medals of Honor for various reasons,       including bravery, efforts to rescue fellow troops, and "dislodging       Indians" who were concealed in a ravine, according to the AP.              Starting in the 1970s, though, the incident became widely seen as a       slaughter and not a legitimate military engagement. In 1990, Congress       formally apologized to the descendants of the victims of Wounded Knee.              The massacre could have been revenge for the Army's humiliating losses at       the Battle of Little Bighorn, according to the Encyclopedia Britannica.              Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has made a point of honoring other dark       periods in U.S. history, including restoring 20-foot portrait of Gen.       Robert E. Lee in his Confederate uniform, accompanied by an enslaved       person, at the West Point Military Academy.              Hegseth, however, insisted during his social media video that the Wounded       Knee soldiers' "place in our nation's history is no longer up for debate."       Advertisement              During his video, he claimed that the review panel Austin convened had       issued a report reaching the same conclusion about the soldiers keeping       their medals, but that the previous administration had kept the soldiers'       fate in limbo by refusing to act on the report.              "We salute their memory, we honor their service, and we will never forget       what they did," Hegseth said.              Reached for comment by the AP, a Defense Department official couldn't say       if the report would be made public. The Daily Beast has also requested       comment.              It's not the first time Hegseth has insisted on honoring ugly chapters of       U.S. history.                     Since taking the helm at the Department of Defense—which the Trump       administration has given the secondary name of the Department of War—he has       restored a Confederate monument that celebrates the slaveholding South and       returned a statue of a Confederate general to a prominent place outside the              [continued in next message]              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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