When dealing with several English American versions of history, British nationalistic versions, or Ethnic Anti-Native interpretations, the term "Rebel" has been used politically during conflicts, and has lazily been parroted, or intentionally passed on by revisionists.
Pacific American Historian "In many well known areas of Western History, from the Americas to New Zealand, the term 'Rebel' is so grossly used, apart of a step by step military play book used by the British Royalists, learned from the real Imperial Powers east of theirs. In 1763, the Ottawa Native American confederation under Chief Pontiac has been at times labeled a 'Native rebellion', by English Historians.
This is really so ridiculous, calling the Legal owners 'the rebels', on land inhabited by their ancestors for thousands of years, and who by the way, the British could not navigate the American land without a guide. The real reason for using the label 'rebel' in war is to argue that an attack was murder. Under British Law at that time, a person could be legally shot on a wall or publicly hung for murder, and calling War a murder case was a dishonorable Royal tact, used when they began to loose. Although not all European immigrants in America were from Britain in the 1700s, who may have been Spanish, German, Irish, Polish, or French, they were still considered without rights, and if were against the British crown, they too were labeled a rebel.
There are several history versions still using the title 'Pontiac Rebellion', a war lost by the British, and a war which inspired the American Independence. Native Americans were so loved for their heart and warrior soul, and known for being Anti-British, that at the famous Boston Tea Party, the Colonials dressed up as Indian warriors, a mockery to the Brits.
The New Zealand Wars or Maori Wars has the same labeling tact in their history, again a play book bulletin point, checked off, as the British Royalists used it there. As the Maori Wars progressed, and British lost, the 'rebel' label appeared in pro-British newspapers, one pro-Auckland paper being The New Zealand Herald."
As history makes its way in 2014, the Pacific Historians continue to point out these word plays, and who make corrections, rewriting a truer version in English language.
Monday, February 03, 2014
The British royalist use of the term Rebel in America and New Zealand 1700-1860
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