As you can see, I clipped three photos together and photoshopped them to give a little more accurate perspective of the view I saw. If you click on any picture it will get bigger and sharper.
The mayor and his wife were there.
Some Native Drumming.
And as I was leaving, I ran across this young man with this unexpected sign. I wanted to ask him what he was doing in Indian country, but others were talking to him and I didn't want to wait around. Ah, the power of simplistic thinking. But consider some of the implications.
Some 230 million Euro-Americans would need to find space in Europe and leave just the United States alone - not counting Canada, Central America, or South America. (And I'm not counting Hispanics, who, I assume would go to Europe too.) Some 40 million Africans-Americans would be headed back to Africa. That would leave what is the US today with about four million "Indians." I'm basing my numbers on this census data, but I wasn't scrupulously careful here. These are just ballpark figures.
And what about people with mixed parentage? There's lots and lots of them. Do they get to choose which heritage they're going with? Maybe their destination will be Australia since it isn't mentioned here. Who will make those decisions? What can these folks take with them? Will the inhabitants of the listed continents be able to allow people from other continents to come live in their continent? What about to work? Who will make these decisions? Only the racial purists? Or will there be a democratic vote?
What exactly does the last part mean? "The existence of my people is NON-NEGOTIABLE"? Who are his people? Europeans? Northern or southern? Neanderthals were in Europe when the first humans showed up about 40,000 years ago. From what we know now (not necessarily what we'll know in 20 or 50 years), all the humans came from Africa in the first place, and when they left, they mated with Neanderthals.
And, of course, all this assumes something called 'race' exists in more than the most superficial physical characteristic. I understand that people want to know who they are and if their parents haven't done a good job of raising them, they'll latch onto whatever people or groups reach out to them and nurture them. So lots of lost souls - whether educated or not, from any rung of the economic ladder - can get attracted to explanations that answer their questions about themselves. This man's solution does reveal a lack of thinking through how all this would work, or even the idea of 'my people.'