Nah, this needs its own thread: The Unknown History of Latino Lynchings

Gizza

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:wtf: I'm not surprised but fuk man! Living in Frisco I read as a kid, after the Chinese built the railroad they blow them up with dynamite or hung em by their Queue. These craccaz insane we should just make multiple threads on various topics like this. :snoop:
 

scarlxrd

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:wtf: I'm not surprised but fuk man! Living in Frisco I read as a kid, after the Chinese built the railroad they blow them up with dynamite or hung em by their Queue. These craccaz insane we should just make multiple threads on various topics like this. :snoop:
That shyt is crazy too. We had nazi style internment camps in this fukking country.
 

thedon3305

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:wtf: I'm not surprised but fuk man! Living in Frisco I read as a kid, after the Chinese built the railroad they blow them up with dynamite or hung em by their Queue. These craccaz insane we should just make multiple threads on various topics like this. :snoop:

The Chinese massacre of 1871 was a racially motivated riot on October 24, 1871 in Los Angeles, when a mob of over 500 men entered Chinatown to attack, rob, and murder Chinese residents of the city.[1] The riots took place on Calle de los Negros (Street of the Negroes), also referred to as "****** Alley", which later became part of Los Angeles Street. A total of 18 Chinese immigrants were systematically killed by the mob, making the so-called "Chinatown War" the largest incident of mass lynching in American history.

But them Chinese nowaways be on some :mjpls:.
 

Kobes Two Jerseys

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Had no idea Mexicans were getting lynched as well.
Theres alot nobody knows about.

You'll most likely never hear about this man, Reies Lopez Tijerina. He wasn't about simply talking, praying and being peaceful. He was about that action.

Tijerina-300x168.png


Reies López Tijerina, a fighter for the people
By Gloria La Riva
Jan 21, 2015

Reies López Tijerina, militant leader of an historic 1967 action for land rights of the Latino and Indigenous communities in New Mexico,died yesterday at the age of 88 in El Paso, Tx., where he lived in recent years.

The armed action that Tijerina led on June 5, 1967 was known as the “Tierra Amarilla Courthouse Raid,” and blazed in headlines of New Mexico and the U.S. press, in a struggle over lands stolen from the oppressed communities by the U.S. government and white landowners.

Tijerina’s organizing was a major inspiration for the new Chicano movement of the 1960s and 1970s, and exposed to the world the massive land theft in New Mexico that had so impoverished the Native and Latino people.


Women, men and children being arrested in the Tierra Amarilla aftermath. Credit: Albuquerque Journal/Ray Cary

Tijerina preferred to identify as, and use the term “Indo-Hispano.” He, like many other leaders of the Chicano/Mexican struggle, marched shoulder to shoulder with the Native and Black liberation struggles, including the Black Panther Party and American Indian Movement. He and Martin Luther King, Jr. were allies.

As a fiery orator and tireless organizer, Tijerina rallied hundreds to the cause, to demand that the U.S. government honor the land grants. His most notable fight centered in northern Rio Arriba county, whose seat was Tierra Amarilla.

The lands in question — especially in the vast region of New Mexico — had been deeded by Spain to the Spanish settlers and Indigenous population by titles known as land grants, for those who farmed the land and created the irrigation systems, so necessary in the arid climate.

For many centuries before Europeans arrived, all land was communal. In the Spanish conquest, a pre-capitalist mode of production prevailed, with land tenure based on the land grants, which retained the collective use of land and sharing of common pastures. The many Pueblo Indian communities continued to resist colonization and assimilation, but subsistence agriculture was the norm in all the communities.

After Mexico’s independence from Spain in 1821, the land grants were still in force.

From 1846 to 1848 the United States launched a war of aggression against Mexico, stealing over 500,000 square miles, half of Mexico’s territory — now New Mexico, Arizona, Nevada, California, Utah and part of Colorado. White settlers in Texas had already declared a republic in 1836, and joined the United States in 1845.

Land and language rights of the people were supposedly guaranteed in perpetuity in the 1848 “Guadalupe-Hidalgo” peace treaty between Mexico and the United States. But like all treaties made with Native nations from east to west, it was soon tossed aside.

The U.S. conquest of the west brought the imposition of its rapidly developing capitalist system, in which land was a prime commodity. The genocidal war against Native people intensified, and massive land monopolization was soon underway.

In the late 1800s, the oppressed people of New Mexico became dispossessed of their land by wholesale destruction of land grants by white land speculators, the U.S. government, railroad companies and ranchers.

In just one example, Thomas B. Catron, a former Confederate general in the Civil War, moved to the New Mexico territory, became a lawyer and soon acquired a controlling interest or outright ownership of 34 land-grants totaling 3 million acres.

Catron was a member of the notorious Santa Fe Ring, the largest land speculators’ gang in New Mexico, which also conspired against the Indian pueblos. With New Mexico’s admittance as a state in 1912, he became a U.S. Senator. Catron County is named after him.

The policy of outright robbery and extreme corruption drove the masses of people into extreme poverty, illiteracy, racism and isolation. Yet, the peoples retained their culture, sense of history and claim to the land.

Tijerina, the son of migrant farmworkers in Texas, began organizing communities in Texas and Arizona. Although lacking formal education, he researched extensively the history of the land, traveling to Mexico and Spain to learn the origin of the land grants.

Moving to New Mexico in 1960, he soon embarked on the crusade to vindicate Native/Chicano/Mexican people’s right to the land stolen from them.

In 1963, Tijerina formed the Alianza Federal de Mercedes, or Federal Alliance of Land Grants with a core of activists, many descendants of the original land grants. Soon hundreds of people joined. The widely-listened-to Spanish radio station in Albuquerque, KABQ, gave the Alianza a weekly show to explain their cause.

After appealing to U.S. presidents and politicians to no avail, after numerous court appeals were turned down, the Alianza launched dramatic actions to drive the point home.

On October 22, 1966, hundreds of Alianza members in 150 vehicles drove into Echo Amphitheatre Park. It used to be the land grant of San Joaquin del Rio de Chama of more than 300 families, but now was U.S. government property. After a stand-off, several Alianza members were arrested and charged with trespassing.

On June 6, 1967, when 11 Alianza members were suddenly arrested, Tijerina led a armed group to make a citizens’ arrest of District Attorney Alfonso Sanchez, who had waged a campaign against the Alianza. In the struggle that ensued, shots were fired, two police were injured and the Alianza members briefly took two hostages.

An immediate massive hunt by the state National Guard, state police and FBI was launched, with women, men and children rounded up. After several days Tijerina and his comrades surrendered. In the trial that followed, Tijerina represented himself. With a fiery self-defense, he was surprisingly acquitted.


But the authorities kept indicting him on old accusations, and he was convicted and served two years in prison.

The Tierra Amarilla action sent a shockwave throughout the establishment. It was portrayed as a dangerous threat to the social order. Tijerina and his followers were hounded and the authorities waged a racist and brutal repression against them, even before Tierra Amarilla.

But the struggle for land was no longer hidden in the past.

Tijerina and the Alianza became an inspiration for the Chicano movement, with many youth joining in this and numerous other struggles in the Southwest.

Armando Rendón, author of the book “Chicano Manifesto,” commenting on his passing, said: “Tijerina was very much a part of what became the Chicano movement. He was a good warrior for all Raza and he brought attention to a lot of major issues.”

Tijerina explained in his autobiography, “They Called Me King Tiger: My Struggle for the Land and Our Rights”:

“The Anglos themselves had brought the taking of the Tierra Amarilla courthouse upon their own heads. For the past nine years we had been writing to Washington, asking for justice and demanding an investigation. On December 12, 1959, we wrote to Dwight D. Eisenhower. In September 1963, we wrote to John F. Kennedy – on January 12, 1965, to L.B. Johnson. … We were citizens. They ate from our hands and labor, our taxes. They ran their affairs in Washington with our money. Yet, they treated us worse than dogs without an owner. We did not ask that they return the land to the heirs. We simply demanded that they investigate the title of San Joaquin. What was so difficult about this simple petition?”

At a time when racism and poverty were so profound in New Mexico, Tijerina led an historic struggle over the question of land and rights of the oppressed people of the state. Despite some contradictions and the eventual decline of his movement, Tijerina’s leadership awoke a consciousness and fight-back spirit that is still felt in New Mexico today.
 

scarlxrd

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But them Chinese nowaways be on some :mjpls:.
it's wild how hypocritical these groups are. Makes me feel like this country is essentially a crab in a bucket situation for all minorities. We're so alike and have been through some similar situations but we pull each other down when we're all being played by White Supremacy.

Then again that's more about classism than race.
 

ManxOfxThexYear

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That shyt is crazy too. We had nazi style internment camps in this fukking country.

We still do :whistle:

Theres alot nobody knows about.

You'll most likely never hear about this man, Reies Lopez Tijerina. He wasn't about simply talking, praying and being peaceful. He was about that action.

Tijerina-300x168.png


Reies López Tijerina, a fighter for the people
By Gloria La Riva
Jan 21, 2015

Reies López Tijerina, militant leader of an historic 1967 action for land rights of the Latino and Indigenous communities in New Mexico,died yesterday at the age of 88 in El Paso, Tx., where he lived in recent years.

The armed action that Tijerina led on June 5, 1967 was known as the “Tierra Amarilla Courthouse Raid,” and blazed in headlines of New Mexico and the U.S. press, in a struggle over lands stolen from the oppressed communities by the U.S. government and white landowners.

Tijerina’s organizing was a major inspiration for the new Chicano movement of the 1960s and 1970s, and exposed to the world the massive land theft in New Mexico that had so impoverished the Native and Latino people.


Women, men and children being arrested in the Tierra Amarilla aftermath. Credit: Albuquerque Journal/Ray Cary

Tijerina preferred to identify as, and use the term “Indo-Hispano.” He, like many other leaders of the Chicano/Mexican struggle, marched shoulder to shoulder with the Native and Black liberation struggles, including the Black Panther Party and American Indian Movement. He and Martin Luther King, Jr. were allies.

As a fiery orator and tireless organizer, Tijerina rallied hundreds to the cause, to demand that the U.S. government honor the land grants. His most notable fight centered in northern Rio Arriba county, whose seat was Tierra Amarilla.

The lands in question — especially in the vast region of New Mexico — had been deeded by Spain to the Spanish settlers and Indigenous population by titles known as land grants, for those who farmed the land and created the irrigation systems, so necessary in the arid climate.

For many centuries before Europeans arrived, all land was communal. In the Spanish conquest, a pre-capitalist mode of production prevailed, with land tenure based on the land grants, which retained the collective use of land and sharing of common pastures. The many Pueblo Indian communities continued to resist colonization and assimilation, but subsistence agriculture was the norm in all the communities.

After Mexico’s independence from Spain in 1821, the land grants were still in force.

From 1846 to 1848 the United States launched a war of aggression against Mexico, stealing over 500,000 square miles, half of Mexico’s territory — now New Mexico, Arizona, Nevada, California, Utah and part of Colorado. White settlers in Texas had already declared a republic in 1836, and joined the United States in 1845.

Land and language rights of the people were supposedly guaranteed in perpetuity in the 1848 “Guadalupe-Hidalgo” peace treaty between Mexico and the United States. But like all treaties made with Native nations from east to west, it was soon tossed aside.

The U.S. conquest of the west brought the imposition of its rapidly developing capitalist system, in which land was a prime commodity. The genocidal war against Native people intensified, and massive land monopolization was soon underway.

In the late 1800s, the oppressed people of New Mexico became dispossessed of their land by wholesale destruction of land grants by white land speculators, the U.S. government, railroad companies and ranchers.

In just one example, Thomas B. Catron, a former Confederate general in the Civil War, moved to the New Mexico territory, became a lawyer and soon acquired a controlling interest or outright ownership of 34 land-grants totaling 3 million acres.

Catron was a member of the notorious Santa Fe Ring, the largest land speculators’ gang in New Mexico, which also conspired against the Indian pueblos. With New Mexico’s admittance as a state in 1912, he became a U.S. Senator. Catron County is named after him.

The policy of outright robbery and extreme corruption drove the masses of people into extreme poverty, illiteracy, racism and isolation. Yet, the peoples retained their culture, sense of history and claim to the land.

Tijerina, the son of migrant farmworkers in Texas, began organizing communities in Texas and Arizona. Although lacking formal education, he researched extensively the history of the land, traveling to Mexico and Spain to learn the origin of the land grants.

Moving to New Mexico in 1960, he soon embarked on the crusade to vindicate Native/Chicano/Mexican people’s right to the land stolen from them.

In 1963, Tijerina formed the Alianza Federal de Mercedes, or Federal Alliance of Land Grants with a core of activists, many descendants of the original land grants. Soon hundreds of people joined. The widely-listened-to Spanish radio station in Albuquerque, KABQ, gave the Alianza a weekly show to explain their cause.

After appealing to U.S. presidents and politicians to no avail, after numerous court appeals were turned down, the Alianza launched dramatic actions to drive the point home.

On October 22, 1966, hundreds of Alianza members in 150 vehicles drove into Echo Amphitheatre Park. It used to be the land grant of San Joaquin del Rio de Chama of more than 300 families, but now was U.S. government property. After a stand-off, several Alianza members were arrested and charged with trespassing.

On June 6, 1967, when 11 Alianza members were suddenly arrested, Tijerina led a armed group to make a citizens’ arrest of District Attorney Alfonso Sanchez, who had waged a campaign against the Alianza. In the struggle that ensued, shots were fired, two police were injured and the Alianza members briefly took two hostages.

An immediate massive hunt by the state National Guard, state police and FBI was launched, with women, men and children rounded up. After several days Tijerina and his comrades surrendered. In the trial that followed, Tijerina represented himself. With a fiery self-defense, he was surprisingly acquitted.


But the authorities kept indicting him on old accusations, and he was convicted and served two years in prison.

The Tierra Amarilla action sent a shockwave throughout the establishment. It was portrayed as a dangerous threat to the social order. Tijerina and his followers were hounded and the authorities waged a racist and brutal repression against them, even before Tierra Amarilla.

But the struggle for land was no longer hidden in the past.

Tijerina and the Alianza became an inspiration for the Chicano movement, with many youth joining in this and numerous other struggles in the Southwest.

Armando Rendón, author of the book “Chicano Manifesto,” commenting on his passing, said: “Tijerina was very much a part of what became the Chicano movement. He was a good warrior for all Raza and he brought attention to a lot of major issues.”

Tijerina explained in his autobiography, “They Called Me King Tiger: My Struggle for the Land and Our Rights”:

“The Anglos themselves had brought the taking of the Tierra Amarilla courthouse upon their own heads. For the past nine years we had been writing to Washington, asking for justice and demanding an investigation. On December 12, 1959, we wrote to Dwight D. Eisenhower. In September 1963, we wrote to John F. Kennedy – on January 12, 1965, to L.B. Johnson. … We were citizens. They ate from our hands and labor, our taxes. They ran their affairs in Washington with our money. Yet, they treated us worse than dogs without an owner. We did not ask that they return the land to the heirs. We simply demanded that they investigate the title of San Joaquin. What was so difficult about this simple petition?”

At a time when racism and poverty were so profound in New Mexico, Tijerina led an historic struggle over the question of land and rights of the oppressed people of the state. Despite some contradictions and the eventual decline of his movement, Tijerina’s leadership awoke a consciousness and fight-back spirit that is still felt in New Mexico today.

That was dope read, repped too. I'm :fpb: right now though cause this shyt was in my own state and I didn't even know.

Tijerina preferred to identify as, and use the term “Indo-Hispano.” He, like many other leaders of the Chicano/Mexican struggle, marched shoulder to shoulder with the Native and Black liberation struggles, including the Black Panther Party and American Indian Movement. He and Martin Luther King, Jr. were allies.

I wonder how many will overlook this

:sas2:
 

Black Nate Grey

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they loved lynching italians and tried to starve everyone in ireland to death. Their brutality knows know bounds.

Just saw this on wikipedia.

Mexicans were lynched at a rate of 27.4 per 100,000 of population between 1880 and 1930. This statistic was second only to that of the African American community, which endured an average of 37.1 per 100,000 of population during that period. fukking disgusting.

Are you not irish though?:leostare:
As in a European.:ufdup:
As in you're a cac too.:umad:

Maybe I have you confused with another poster :patrice:
 

Barnett115

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That just proves that your people are really down for the cause. Your brother there risked getting murked by hillbillies just so he can help out the black community.

That c00n @sicc2def is doing all he can to break up the strong Black-Brown Coalition so he can empower his white masters. Cacs be in the cut on some
giphy.gif
while their little pawn sicc2def chops up a united opposition to them. He literally is doing the white man's dirty work, and that's not the first issue he's c00ned on, we all clowned him for supporting cacs vs Muslims, and for trying to group himself with people who hate him. Dude's a fakkit who's gotta go, my sig quote by the GOAT catpissmartini says it all :sas2:

And I got confirmed info that @Roddy Right is white. He too is trying to destroy the Coalition, plus he shyts on black women, and finally he got caught showing love and respect to the "founding fathers", who were old slaveowning white folks who would hate him if he were actually black. But his adoration of them, along with the other evidence, proved that he is white. Imposter cacs on some infiltration shyt just trying to cause problems here :camby:

Are you Hispanic?

Also @Slang Dussain Ali did you really dap this fukk shyt?

For every video of a Latino doing stuff like this, I could show you 10 of Latinos being racist towards Blacks or 20 of Whites being "down for the cause". I guess Whites are allies now and there's a White-Black coalition right according to your logic? :mjlol:

It means nothing. Good for that specific Hispanic who tore down those flags and RIP to all the brown people lynched but kill this Black-Brown coalition garbage.
 

Black Nate Grey

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You got me right. I'm mentioned in my post what other Europeans did to Ireland. We just wanted to mind our own business then got invaded by the Brits. Who still occupy our country.

That's interesting.
So do you (or irish people in general) not identify as a white person because your use of 'their' confused me.
And Britain? Or are you saying Anglo-Saxons and Celts are different people.
 
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