Dixiezone (Confederate Ethnostate) – Telegram
Dixiezone (Confederate Ethnostate)
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This anti white Jewish bitch
Everyone’s up in arms about her most recent tweet but nobody noticed her blatant anti white hatred
DID ANY OF YALL KNOW HOW BASED THE TEXAS RANGERS WERE?
“The Rangers were more than a police force - they acted as the Texas governor’s personal guard. The Rangers were actually originally formed and organized in the 1820s for the purpose of forcibly exterminating and expelling Indigenous and Native peoples from Texas, with an appalling body count.
A century ago, during the fighting that took place along the border during the Mexican Revolution, blood flowed like the Rio Grande. “The terms ‘death squads’ and ‘ethnic cleansing’ would not enter common usage for another 60 years or so,” Swanson notes, “but that was what the Rangers were and what they did.”
legendary Rangers as Ben McCulloch and William “Bigfoot” Wallace were known for massacring Native Americans and Mexicans willy-nilly.
“Ranger atrocities against women and children during the Mexican-American War are horribly abundant in “Cult of Glory,” though the United States Army soldiers stationed in Texas at the time were repulsed by such gleeful bloodlust. “About all of the Texans,” Second Lt. Ulysses S. Grant wrote his fiancée, “seem to think it perfectly right to impose upon the people of a conquered city to any extent, and even to murder them where the act can be covered by the dark.” Likewise, Maj. Gen. Zachary Taylor complained about psychotic Rangers who committed an “atrocious massacre.”
When the Civil War erupted in 1861, the Rangers sided with the Confederates. John “Rip” Ford, a seasoned Ranger fighter, boasted throughout Texas that slavery was ordained by the Lord Almighty. The most famous and feared Ranger units was the 8th Texas Cavalry known as “Terry’s Texas Rangers.” It was one of the most accomplished cavalry units of the war, used by Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest as shock troops. The Texas Rangers of the 8th Texas Cavalry fought almost 300 engagements. They refused to be called the “8th Texas Cavalry” they only wanted to be referred to as Texas Rangers. The Rangers were known for ruthlessly ridding themselves of Union enemies and were masters of sabotage.
Colonel A. Willich, the federal commander, reported the attack in the following terms:

"With lightning speed, under infernal yelling, great numbers of Texas Rangers rushed upon our whole force. They advanced as near as fifteen or twenty yards to our lines, some of them even between them, and then opened fire with rifles and revolvers."
A captured Union officer wrote in a letter:

The Rangers are as quick as lightning. They ride like Arabs, shoot like archers at the mark, and fight like devils. They rode upon bayonets as if they were charging a commissary department, are wholly without fear themselves, and no respecter of a wish to surrender.”
Forrest ordered forward. Without waiting to be formal in the matter, the Texans went like a cyclone, not waiting for Forrest to give his other orders to trot, gallop, and charge as he had drilled his men. By the time the Yankee skirmishers could run to their places in ranks and both lines got their bayonets ready to lift us fellows off our horses, we were halted in twenty steps of their two lines of savage bayonets, their front line kneeling with butts of guns on the ground, the bayonets standing out at right angle or straighter and the rear lines of their bayonets extended between the heads of the men of the first line. In a twinkling of an eye almost, both barrels of every shotgun in our line loaded with fifteen to twenty buckshot in each barrel was turned into that blue line and lo! What destruction and and confusion followed.”

-An account of the charge by one of these, the previously quoted Fayette County veteran, J. K. P. Blackburn
They were as feared on the United States-Mexico border as the Ku Klux Klan was in the Deep South. “They hunted runaway slaves for bounty,” he writes. “They violated international laws with impunity. They sometimes moved through Texas towns like a rampaging gang of thugs.”
The Rangers’ horrific treatment of African-Americans after the war equaled that in Mississippi and Georgia. Between 1865 and 1930 there were 450 lynchings in Texas, mostly of blacks, which the Rangers ignored. “White citizens in many cases treated them as public entertainment — spontaneous and gruesome versions of the county fair,” Swanson writes. “Vendors circulated through the mobs with refreshments. Photographs of corpses hanging from nooses were sold, and mailed, as picture postcards.”
The height of Texas Ranger violence against Mexicans to have occurred from 1915 to 1919. Some 300 ethnic Mexicans were murdered between 1915 and 1916 alone
By the turn of the twentieth century, the Rangers had moved on to lynching Black and Latino Texans. The Rangers weren’t remotely shy about their methods, which included torture, and bragged about their murderous prowess. Their methods led some scholars to compare them to the Gestapo in terms of their deadly efficiency and body count.
One Ranger justified his murders by saying that:

“A great many of the people who live on this side of the river are of a different race than our own. . . . it is unfortunately true that a sympathy exists [for breaking the law] because they are of the same race . . . .”
The Rangers spent much of the first half of the twentieth century attacking members of the NAACP, and after the Brown decision made part of its mandate the expulsion of the NAACP from Texas. During this period, a majority of Rangers were members of the Ku Klux Klan.
The Texas Rangers were based
“In 1838, a band of Rangers cornered an armed group of Black men who had escaped from slavery. The Rangers captured one of the men, and, after slashing him several times with a Bowie Knife, sold him back into slavery for $800, splitting the profit among themselves. In 1855, Rangers crossed the Rio Grande seeking Black fugitives who had escaped to a Mexican border town, where slavery was illegal. The Rangers burned the town to the ground for harboring freedom seekers.”