31 Replies to “Fauxcahontas”

  1. She (Warren) claimed Cherokee ancestry to take advantage of affirmative action hiring practices to gain a faculty position, robbing genuine minorities of the opportunity. This is the typical morality of your everyday Democrat. They love her.

  2. Pretty sure it was Howie Carr who originally broke this story a while back. Would be nice if the NeverTrumper French gave credit where credit is due.
    For those who don’t know, Howie has a great, very funny radio show on 15 stations in New England (3:00-7:00 EST). Also on Iheartradio. I listen everday.

  3. Howie Carr is a great on-air personality. There are moments during his shows when I hear a striking resemblance to the voice of the late, great Jean Shepherd – it’s really quite amazing.

  4. Trump constantly calls out the ‘left’ with their noble good intentions for what it actually is; just bs and self interest. No Republican president has ever done that and it’s driving the left and their media partners crazy.

  5. Poor native american Elizabeth warren (estimated wealth between 4 million and 10 million dollars)- They really don’t know because much of the money is stuffed all around the world in different accounts to avoid taxes.
    Anyway…
    Swamp Monster Donald Trump called her a racists name.
    Wait a minute!!… If she is not Native American,
    how could it be a Racists name?
    Fauxcahontas making even more money and political points from a self promoting lie.

  6. I had a friend, Blood Indian, who was trying to get a patent for a food product he called Bannock-in-a-Box.
    It was a kit intended to be sold at stores that contained materials and method to make bannock.
    Bannock is just pan fried flat bread. I asked him if bannock was an Indian recipe, which tribe was famous for growing wheat?

  7. I don’t see what the big deal is. If you can decide what gender you want to be, why can’t you decide what race you want to be?
    Oh, and Trump is racist because the media would not lie!

  8. Correct, but most people attempting to decide their race don’t run successfully for the US Senate. Even if half the charges are true, Warren is an extraordinary fake. Would a legitimate Cherokee cooperate with a book titled Pow Wow Chow? I don’t think so, if they valued their dignity. And stealing recipes, I can’t think of anything worse because the pettiness scale is so low, but if you already have faked your identity maybe not so bad. And this woman is touted as a candidate for President of the USA?

  9. A coupla nights back Adler said that Pocahontas is revered by American Indians. I was unaware of that? It somehow doesn’t fit the narrative. I dunno…maybe?

  10. Trust Mark Steyn to deliver the best put-down:
    https://www.steynonline.com/8279/washington-redskin
    The recipes sent in by “Elizabeth Warren—Cherokee” include a crab dish with tomato mayonnaise. Mrs. Warren’s fictional Cherokee ancestors in Oklahoma were renowned for their ability to spear the fast-moving Oklahoma crab. It’s in the state song:
    Ooooooklahoma!
    Where the crabs come sweepin’ down the plain. . .
    But then the white man came and now the Oklahoma crab is extinct, and at the Cherokee clambakes they have to make do with Mrs. Warren’s traditional Five Tribes recipe for Cherokee Lime Pie…

  11. Look up “Pow Wow Chow” in the book section of amazon and read the comments, it’s hilarious. Total take downs of Warren and Obama.

  12. Re: “robbing genuine minorities of the opportunity (of affirmative action).”
    If so, it’s like one gang of robbers against another. The “opportunity” of affirmative action for “genuine minorities” is already robbing qualified applicants of the opportunity to compete without reference to race or color. With Thomas Jefferson, I believe in a meritocracy. That was why he founded the University of Virginia. Affirmative action is diametrically opposed to that idea.
    Yes, Warren, or Fauxcahontas, or Satnohacop, is a cheat, and not deserving of a university chair on the basis of a false claim. However, she would not have deserved it more had she really some drops of Native American blood. Neither would any “genuine minority” hired on the basis of his race. In a way, Warren exposed the hypocrisy of “affirmative action.”

  13. // “Elizabeth Warren—Cherokee” include a crab dish with tomato mayonnaise. Mrs. Warren’s fictional Cherokee ancestors in Oklahoma were renowned for their ability to spear the fast-moving Oklahoma crab. It’s in the state song //
    +
    Steyn. Ignorant as always.
    Cherokee crab receipes galore:
    https://www.google.ca/search?client=opera&q=cherokee+crab+dishes
    This may be a clue:
    Where did the Cherokee live before 1838 (the Trail of Tears)?
    Before European contact, the Cherokee lived in a very large area which included all or portions of the present day states of Georgia, Tennessee, North Carolina, South Carolina, Kentucky, Alabama, Virginia and West Virginia
    Interestingly, Trump made his lame joke under a painting of the man responsible for the “Trail of Tears”.

  14. Tucker Carlson did a segment on trans-racialism and it is an actual thing. If you don’t believe you can chose your race YOU are a bigoted transracistphobe.

  15. Indigenous Myth Exposed
    ” I asked him if bannock was an Indian recipe, which tribe was famous for growing wheat?”
    A History of Bannock
    Bannock is a type of fry bread, which originates from Scotland but was eventually adopted by the Indigenous peoples of Canada, particularly the Métis of western Canada. Bannock stems from the Gaelic word bannach, which means “morsel,” a short and sweet but accurate description. The Scottish cooked the bread on a griddle called a Bannock Stone, which they placed on the floor in front of a fire.
    The bread was brought to Canada by Scottish explorers and traders, where the Indigenous adopted the recipe over the 18th and 19th centuries,
    https://ueat.utoronto.ca/a-history-of-bannock/

  16. Indigenous Myth Exposed
    ” I asked him if bannock was an Indian recipe, which tribe was famous for growing wheat?”
    A History of Bannock
    Bannock is a type of fry bread, which originates from Scotland but was eventually adopted by the Indigenous peoples of Canada, particularly the Métis of western Canada. Bannock stems from the Gaelic word bannach, which means “morsel,” a short and sweet but accurate description. The Scottish cooked the bread on a griddle called a Bannock Stone, which they placed on the floor in front of a fire.
    The bread was brought to Canada by Scottish explorers and traders, where the Indigenous adopted the recipe over the 18th and 19th centuries,
    https://ueat.utoronto.ca/a-history-of-bannock/

  17. Another Howie Carr Show fan here, I never miss him. As he says every day, ‘You can trust me. I’m not like the others.”
    He is the go-to expert on all thing Elizabeth “Granny” Warren. He’s also been trying to purloin her DNA off coffee cups for years. No luck so far. And yes he is the one who discovered her pow-wow-chow recipe theft.
    Give him a listen: Howiecarrshow.com

  18. “….under a painting of the man responsible for the “Trail of Tears”.
    If Trump hadn’t chosen a portrait of a Democrat, he’d be accused of being partisan. Any Democrat presidents that were better than Jackson?

  19. // did they drive around in Fords, or Dodges before 1835+1/2. Boy you are one stupid a$$. //
    +
    I guess the clue I offered was too subtle for you [& a couple of others]
    But rather than rub your nose in it I’ll just show you Senator Warren involved in the nation’s business,
    https://twitter.com/SenWarren/status/935568415447756800
    Hear Flora’s story and you’ll understand why the @CFPB is worth fighting for.
    while POTUS is tweeting fake news about muslims [he’s also back on the birther kick & saying that the Hollywood Grab yer Pussy tape is fake] and generally showing a tenuous grip on reality.
    Incidentally,
    “Members of Warren’s family, including

  20. see above
    Incidentally,
    “Members of Warren’s family, including a first cousin, have embraced their Cherokee roots and are active in American Indian causes in Oklahoma, where she grew up.”

Navigation