Paul Mooney spittin that real on White rappers

Maschine_Man

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did you seriously just try to say that europeans created the idea of those instruments and how they use strings and air to play????

:dead:


cacs didnt invent harmony or melody. they invented how to write it down.

what level is your character on wow?
LOL, you trying way to hard bruh.

I said Europeans invented those instruments. Even most black blues and Jazz players have admitted that.

IN fact Jazz is a fusion of European style and African style music.

But I'll let you tell it.


Its been well documented that "rhythm" and thr beats and all that derives from Africa. BUt conversely Harmony and theory have come from Europe.

That fact that you can't even do even a little research to see that just shows how BS this argument even is.
 

™BlackPearl The Empress™

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naismith_james.jpg


This man, a white Canadian-American, created basketball. Is basketball part of white culture?
Basketball WAS NOT created by WP!
 

™BlackPearl The Empress™

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Keep claiming shyt you didn't invent devil.


The Mayan Ball Game: A Deadly Sport




On This Site

Ancient America



One of the ways that the Mayan peoples competed against each other was by playing what has been called the Ball Game. They used a rubber
mayanballgameaction.jpg
ball, about 20 inches in diameter, to play the Game, which was played on a stone "court" whose measurements varied. (The largest one found so far measures 459 feet by 114 feet.) The court had walls that sloped inward, and hanging high on the walls were stone rings.
mayanballgamehoop.jpg
The goal of the game was to pass the ball around, without having it touch your hands, and then get the ball to pass through one of the rings. Since the rings were so high and players were not allowed to use their hands, it was extremely difficult to get the ball through a ring. In fact, when a player did manage to get a ball through a ring, that usually ended the game. The game ended otherwise when the ball touched the ground.

mayanruler.jpg
The Mayan Ball Game was a solemn experience, filled with ritual importance. Religious leaders attended, as did most chieftains and other government leaders. Sacred songs were sung and played. Other religious activities took place as well.

mayansacrifice.jpg
The winners of the game were treated as heroes and given a great feast. The penalty for losing a game was sometimes unusually harsh: death. The leader of the team who lost the game was sometimes killed. This fit in with the Mayan belief that human sacrifice was necessary for the continued success of the peoples' agriculture, trade, and overall health.

The game was like games and sports that people play today in a few ways:

  • The players were working as a team to beat another team of players
  • The goal was to get the ball through a hoop
  • The goal was also NOT to touch the ball with one's hands, like soccer is today.
  • Huge structures were built just for playing
  • The games attracted very large numbers of people to watch
  • Gambling on who would win was common
 

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Dona Nobis Pacem

Smithsonian
Lacrosse is merely the best-known indigenous invention. We bring you several examples of indigenous ingenuity.
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10 Native Inventions and Innovations That Changed the World
VINCENT SCHILLING
6/29/14


Soon after the arrival of Columbus, detailed descriptions of the inventions of Indigenous Peoples began to make their way back to Europe. Not satisfied that “savages” would be able to generate such innovation, rumors began to spread that the Americas were simply a lost colony of Christians or Israelites. Such rumors still exist today and in fact continue to be discussed by archeologists.

But all of this aside, indigenous cultures have created thousands upon thousands of innovations that are in use today in the most modern of practices, be it a tub of popcorn at the movies, the administering of medicines with surgical precision or the removal of tartar from teeth in modern dentistry. In order to give some more credit where credit is due to our ancestral innovators, here are 10 Native inventions and innovations that changed the world. These are but a few examples of indigenous ingenuity, but highlighting them serves to unswathe yet another facet of hidden history.



syringe-thinkstock_image_169279029.jpg

Thinkstock


Syringes, or Hypodermic Needles

Though Scotsman Alexander Wood is credited with inventing the syringe in 1853, in pre-Columbian times South American Indians used a type of syringe made from sharpened hollow bird bones attached to small bladders to inject medicine, irrigate wounds or even clean ears. Additionally, Indigenous healers also used larger and similar instruments for enemas.



baby_bottle-thinkstock_image_179217779.jpg

Thinkstock


Baby Bottles and Formula

Using similar technology as the syringe, the Seneca used washed, dried and oiled bear intestines with a bird quill attached as a form of nipple. Mothers filled them with a mixture of pounded nuts, meat and water.



oral_contraceptives-thinkstock_image_78820071.jpg

Thinkstock




Oral Contraception

An oral contraceptive is a substance taken by mouth to prevent pregnancy. Recorded instances of American Indians taking such substances date back to the 1700s, more than 200 years before the creation of a man-made substance by western medicine. One of the herbs used was the stone seed, employed by the Shoshone, while the Potawatomi used the herb dogbane.



cigars-thinkstock_image_468552655.jpg

Thinkstock






Cigars

On a 1,000-year-old pottery vessel found in Guatemala, a Maya man is shown smoking a roll of tobacco leaves tied with string. The Maya word for smoking was sikkar, which became the Spanish word cigarro. Once settlers had learned from Indians how to cultivate tobacco, cigar factories sprung up. One of them, an early cigar factory in Pennsylvania, gave the cigar its playful moniker the “stogie.”



Pest Control

To combat insects such as lice infestation, the Paiute and Shoshone of the Great Basin, for example, washed their hair in a hot infusion made from sweetroot.



insect_repellent-thinkstock_image_478301367.jpg

Thinkstock
To fight other pests, pre-Columbian peoples built structures with cashew wood, while the Pima sprinkled ashes on their crops to thwart squash bugs. The Pueblo have used ground buffalo gourd to fend off garden pests, and Inca cotton farmers planted lemon verbena and burned it as a pesticide.






Petroleum Collection and Extraction



oil_rig-thinkstock_image_178604463.jpg

Thinkstock
Although the discovery of oil in the United States is usually credited to Edwin L. Drake, who drilled an oil well in Pennsylvania in 1859, Native Americans were known to have sunk pits into the ground more than 400 years earlier in the Oil Creek Flats of Pennsylvania. These pits, which are 15 to 20 feet deep, were walled with vertical timbers that had been cut with stone axes.


Like many historians, J.A. Caldwell—who wrote about the oil pits—assumed the work was done by “a race of people who occupied the country prior to the advance of the Indian tribes.” However, the French general Montcalm, traveling to Fort Duquesne in 1750, said he observed the Seneca and other Iroquoian Indians set fire to the oil that seeped from the ground for ceremonial fires. They also slathered protective lotion (like petroleum jelly) onto their skin.

Bunk Beds



bunk_beds-thinkstock_image_146822683.jpg

Thinkstock
In the Northeast of the United States, the Iroquois have long lived in longhouses—long, extended buildings made of branches formed into a large half circle and covered with bark. Inside these longhouses were bunk-beds. A creation of two beds built one on top of the other. No thanks necessary, Ikea.




Pharmaceuticals

Take a step back in respect, Rite-Aid enthusiasts. According to Daniel Moerman, the foremost expert on North American Indian ethnobotany in the United States, North American Indians have medicinal uses for 2,564 plant species.

pharmaceuticals-thinkstock_image_150422225.jpg

Thinkstock


But many Native people say the actual number may likely dwarf Dr. Moerman’s statistics.

Since the times of the Spanish explorers, American Indian medicines have been used to cure colds with guiacum, heart ailments with dogbane, and employ foxglove and lady’s slipper as a sedative. Said Steven R. King about Brazil’s well-known “slobber mouth plant,” the jaborandi tree, had Europeans but listened, a dry-mouth-syndrome product may have come years earlier.

Chewing Gum



chewing_gum-thinkstock_image_177003198.jpg

Thinkstock
Bubbulicious—remember that gum? Well it may never have gotten its start if not for the sapodilla tree. The Mesoamerican Indians chewed the milky chicle, which became today’s chewing gum. And you thought you were being sneaky, Chiclets—we caught you copying Indians!








Lacrosse

This even the Europeans acknowledged at the time, but it never hurts to be reminded that Turtle Island's Indigenous Peoples created an entire sports genre. The Iroquoian Creator’s game of lacrosse has been played for centuries. Yes, it was first played by the Iroquoian tribes who honored the game as one that was played for the Creator's enjoyment. We’ve come a long way since the Tewaaraton awards.



10.lacrosse_ball_players_by_george_catlin_smithsonian_800px-ball_players.jpg




Read more athttp://indiancountrytodaymedianetwo...d-innovations-changed-world-155541?nopaging=1
 

Maschine_Man

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Keep claiming shyt you didn't invent devil.


The Mayan Ball Game: A Deadly Sport




On This Site

Ancient America



One of the ways that the Mayan peoples competed against each other was by playing what has been called the Ball Game. They used a rubber
mayanballgameaction.jpg
ball, about 20 inches in diameter, to play the Game, which was played on a stone "court" whose measurements varied. (The largest one found so far measures 459 feet by 114 feet.) The court had walls that sloped inward, and hanging high on the walls were stone rings.
mayanballgamehoop.jpg
The goal of the game was to pass the ball around, without having it touch your hands, and then get the ball to pass through one of the rings. Since the rings were so high and players were not allowed to use their hands, it was extremely difficult to get the ball through a ring. In fact, when a player did manage to get a ball through a ring, that usually ended the game. The game ended otherwise when the ball touched the ground.

mayanruler.jpg
The Mayan Ball Game was a solemn experience, filled with ritual importance. Religious leaders attended, as did most chieftains and other government leaders. Sacred songs were sung and played. Other religious activities took place as well.

mayansacrifice.jpg
The winners of the game were treated as heroes and given a great feast. The penalty for losing a game was sometimes unusually harsh: death. The leader of the team who lost the game was sometimes killed. This fit in with the Mayan belief that human sacrifice was necessary for the continued success of the peoples' agriculture, trade, and overall health.

The game was like games and sports that people play today in a few ways:

  • The players were working as a team to beat another team of players
  • The goal was to get the ball through a hoop
  • The goal was also NOT to touch the ball with one's hands, like soccer is today.
  • Huge structures were built just for playing
  • The games attracted very large numbers of people to watch
  • Gambling on who would win was common
LOL, thats pretty much the exact same thing.

I mean lebron hardly dribbles the ball anyway so I guess that makes sense.

You dudes are trying way to hard to discredit anyone.
 

Maschine_Man

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Native Americans also invented Lacrosse

16758c6c38ee8dba4b867accfada01db.jpg





Actually Native Americans didn't invent lacrosse.....









































They were aboriginal Canadians (Native Canadians)....



but, I thought that was universally accepted and known?

did anyone ever claim that it wasn't a native sport?
 

Maschine_Man

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If you dont listen to, buy, or support white artist..

What else can a nicca do?
What else do you need to do?

Support what you like, don't support what you don't like :manny:

its pretty easy to do IMO.

The biggest problem I see is that PPL don't want to support what they don't like(no problem there) but then don't also want to support the things they do like YET turn around and complain that the things they don't like are being better supported than the things they do like(without actually contributing to that support)
 
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