Quote Originally Posted by chesswarsnow View Post
Sorry bout that,







1. Oh the resident Dawinist has spoken.
2. Like he knows something I don't.
3. They saw a *Thunderbird*, which took humans for lunch.
4. I'dd say that pretty much kills the whole evolution story.
5. Dino's were supposed to have died off some 95 million years ago.
6. And yet, there were these *Thunderbirds*.
8. And for some strange reason all this oil we pump up from under ground came from that era, where did a miles worth of soil come from?
9. I wonder how much love a retarded China Indian gets on the reservation?
10. Maybe those they boil in a pot?


Regards,
SirJamesofTexas
You need to read your own post dummy.

'One day, long long ago, before the white man came to America, a party of Sioux Indian warriors were out hunting. They had left their village far behind. Before they realized it, the group of braves found themselves alone in the bare and rocky badlands of the West.

'Suddenly the sky darkened … . There was a clap of thunder that shook the earth. Looking up in terror, the Indians thought they saw the shape of a giant bird falling to earth … .

'The band of hunters traveled over the badlands for days until they came at last to the spot where they thought the giant bird had fallen. Nothing was left of the terrible creature but its bones … .

'The Indians shuddered as they looked at the monster's skeleton. The bird had fallen so hard they thought, that its bones were partly sunk in the rock. But the braves could see that its wingspread was as big as four tall men standing on top of one another. The strange creature had fierce claws on its wings, as well as on its feet, and the beak was long and sharp. There was a long, bony crest on its head. The Indians knew that they had never seen a bird like it before.'5
Where's it say anything about a man getting eaten? It took days of travel to reach the spot where they thought it went down? Did they observe the crash through a telescope?

Sorry Charlie but this story very clearly describes some natives finding a fossilized dinosaur. It's strange appearance no doubt gave birth to the stories of the Thunderbird. I'll bet you think the story came first and the bones validated the myth...