Gen. Philip Sheridan: http://www.trivia-library.com/b/origins-of-sayings-the-only-good-indian-is-a-dead-indian.htm
captain Pratt's
the first Indian that came to the pilgrims and said "welcome englishmen" was named "Squanto"... hope that helps.
they said hi
Someone who didn't have a clue to as the consequences of his actions (i.e. naive).
Perez
As people began to move west they wanted the Native American lands. The Indian Relocation Act of 1830 officially said that the tribes were to be removed. From their arrival to establish the first colony the European settlers did their best to kill, remove, or displace the Native tribes from their lands. The government made treaties they broke and they forcibly removed people to reservations. The Federal army would go into a sleeping village early in the morning and kill men, women, and children. The government policy was a " good Indian was a dead one" and they would do anything to accomplish this task. Read Black Elk Speaks or Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee for further understanding of the genocide that was committed..
it was said by General Sheridan Jan. 1869. One of the Generals duties was to oversee the Indian territory and ensure that Indians stayed on the reservations. The phrase was spoken at a meeting with some Indian Chiefs,
Jesus
"the only good human is a dead human" said by snowball to boxer after the battle of the cowshed
Who said, "A man is only as good as his word?"
Voltaire
ME
the writers said "only the rich get taxed" and now they are dead and we the living say "everyone gets taxed"
who in Macbeth said 'the sleeping and the dead are but as pictures'
The outgoing head of the Indian Central Vigilance Committee, Pratyush Sinha, said that 'Every third Indian is corrupt'
He really didnt do anything. What he said was only virginians can tax virgians.
it only means that you also somewhere in your mind want to be like him and fill said that he is now dead
Dietrich Bonhoeffer (1906 - 1945) said "Only the man who is dead to his own will can follow Christ," in "The Cost of Discipleship," first published in 1937.