Did You Know Native Americans Owned Slaves?

A fact that is conveniently overlooked by those calling for reparations.

Did You Know Native Americans Owned Slaves?

Elizabeth Warren got some ‘splaining to do!

The 13th Amendment did not free all slaves in the boundaries of modern-day US. Members of five Native American nations, the Cherokee, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Creek, and Seminole Nations (known as the Five Tribes), owned black slaves. Located outside the territorial boundaries of the US in a region known as Indian Territory (modern-day Oklahoma), these sovereign nations were not affected by proclamations or constitutional amendments. Instead, separate treaties had to be made between the US and these Native American nations not only to free slaves, but also to formally end the American Civil War battles and antagonism between American and Native American troops.

Don Cheadle finds out Native Americans owned his ancestors:

Don Cheadle discovers his ancestors were never owned by white people, but instead by Native Americans. Slaves weren’t freed from Native American ownership until 3 years after the Civil War when the white US government forced them to.

Did You Know Native Americans Owned Slaves?

An Ancestry of African-Native Americans



Brewery Uses Man’s Beard Yeast To Make Beer

Maybe this should be on tap at Obama’s next “Beer Summit”.

Something strange is going on at the Rogue Ales Brewery in Newport, Oregon. Brewers there are developing an ale made from wild yeast harvested from the beard of Rogue’s award-winning brewmaster, John Maier.

He hasn’t shaved since 1978, and that apparently makes his beard the perfect place to harvest yeast. I’m just kidding, it’s far from perfect, but Rogue Ales’ president, Brett Joyce said he was looking for a “different place that might have some magic yeast in it” and decided to try out Maier’s facial hair. The guys at Rogue had tried developing some new yeast strains from some of their own hopyard, but came up empty-handed, so as a joke they had their lab guy take a couple of Q-tip swabs from John Maier’s fluffy beard. Amazingly enough, he found a yeast cell, did some fermentation tests and the unique “beard beer” was born. What started out as a joke turned into something really special, since they never expected to find the new yeast they were looking for right in their brewmaster’s beard. ”This really is the needle in the haystack” John Couchot, Rogue Ales’ self-described mad scientist said.

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