- "In 1864, in Sand Creek, Colorado, the U.S. military waited until the friendly Cheyenne braves had all gone hunting. Waited to attack and slaughter the families left behind and claim their land."
- âTrevor Slattery[src]
Sand Creek was the location of a Cheyenne village in the U.S. state of Colorado during the 19th Century.
History[]
Sand Creek Massacre[]
In 1864, seven hundred men from a militia of the United States Military slaughtered a peaceful village of Cheyenne in Colorado, killing and mutilating around one hundred Indians, mostly women and children. The militiamen waited for the men of the tribe to leave the village, and attacked the families left behind to claim their land.
This event, later known as the Sand Creek massacre, was chosen by Trevor Slattery, masquerading as the "Mandarin" as a parallelism while taking authority of the bombing of Ali Al Salem Air Base in Kuwait, as one of the "Mandarin's" lessons to the United States of America.[1]