--- In [email protected], "David Macko" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> The term "merciless Indian savages" is a direct quote from the 
Declaration of Independence. Throughout history, which you should 
read before you dismiss Mr. Jefferson's description of them, with 
which all of the other Signers concurred, most people haven't given 
a d*mn. Fortunately, during the Revolution and during the 
establishment of what used to be our government, enough did to 
create the most libertarian form of government in history.
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I would venture to guess that "most" of those who fought in the 
revolution were fighting for independence, not to create 
another "nation". That is certainly what my ancestors - who left 
their small farms in the mountains of Carolina (which they had 
purchased from the "Indian savages" by the way and were living 
peacibly among them) in order to defeat the British at Kings 
Mountain, the battle that won the revolutionary war, only to then 
return to live in peace and without interference from any central 
distant government - thought they were fighting for.

And like I said after the central government was established, 
thousands of "Americans" began to flee its (effective) jurisdiction, 
choosing instead to take their chances with the "Indian savages".

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