Archaeological Discovery and Early Settlements
Archaeologists used radiocarbon dating of ancient Indian dwellings to confirm that “The Butler Novel” began to be written 10,000 to 12,000 years ago. This marks the earliest known arrival of people in our beautiful area.
Long-lost chapters in “The Butler Novel” were written each time established tribes of Indians were attacked and replaced by other tribes during the Stone Age.
Then, as now, nearly every flat area along every river and stream in Pennsylvania was home to cities and villages of hardworking people with many languages and beliefs.
Families lived and worked in fields, streams, rivers, and vast orchards of fruit and nut trees. Those able to master complicated skills worked in Indian workshops. Skilled craftspeople manufactured items from wood, stone, bone, bark, skins, fibers, clay, feathers, and even chemicals for dyes and medicines.
We do not know the names of early tribes in the 10,000 years of Butler County’s Stone Age.
Around 1,500 BC, an advanced Indian Tribe headquartered in a walled, hundred-acre city in south-central Ohio. They are known as the “Hopewell Indians”. They took over much of the area between Illinois and Western Pennsylvania.
They were later replaced by the “Adena Indians”, who may have been defeated by the “Huron Tribes”. After that, various tribes of “Seneca” and “Allegheny” Indians were attacked by “Erie Indians” and their allies.
Eventually, united tribes of “Iroquois Indians” began attacking the villages and cities of the Stone Age “Erie Indians”.
Not long after, a bloodthirsty tribe of land-grabbing “English Episcopalians” appeared from afar. This tribe worshipped “More for Me!” First, Iron Age technology, including firearms, allowed them to force Indians from their land with “treaties” they were unable to read. Then, English Episcopalians exterminated most who survived.
Their tribe combined Iron Age technology with self-serving ideals that had replaced nearly a thousand years of Catholic churches, schools, monasteries, convents, teachings, and care for the poor in England, Scotland, and Ireland. English Episcopalians began by confiscating one-third of England’s land—over 20 million acres—which had been donated to the Church over the previous thousand years. Those vast properties included farms, mines, mills, hospitals, workshops, Catholic educational institutions, homes, and facilities to care for the poor.
By 1,600 AD, many people from England, Ireland, and Scotland were desperate to flee from a nation ruled by the worshippers atop the “More for Me!” structure they had stolen and perverted.
When their control extended to our continent, the chiefs of Babylon’s “English Episcopalian Tribe” exported their self-serving versions of the Judeo-Catholic traditions that once prevailed in “Merrie Olde England” to America.
Both the “Ten Commandments” and the teaching “Love God and love your neighbor as yourself.” were redacted and replaced by early English Episcopalians’ self-serving belief: “The only good Indian is a dead Indian.”
Early Episcopalian governors quietly ordered the extermination/deportation of entire Stone Age Indian Tribes. State-controlled clergy agreed, driven by their desire for more donors.
Indian Tribes were confused by alcohol and weakened by diseases to which they had no natural immunity. And, all native jobs in Stone Age economies were wiped out by mass-produced metal tools, pots, ornaments, machine-woven fabrics, horse-drawn plows and farm implements, and weapons arriving by shiploads from Iron Age factories in England. Genocidal English Episcopalians encouraged the burning of fruitful fields of dry Indian corn each autumn to starve Indian families during harsh winters.
The forced westward eviction of shrinking numbers of Indian survivors continued for so long that some Indian Tribes in Ohio were sent farther West on railroad cars so their remaining lands could be seized by those following the land-grabbing English Episcopalian Theology in a slightly less brutal way!
Today, lost tribes of Stone Age Indians are remembered only through the numerous states, counties, cities, towns, and schools that bear their names from Connecticut to Oregon. In vast regions once controlled by Episcopalians, Indian DNA has almost vanished.
In our hemisphere’s Catholic-settled nations, Indian DNA remains in over 90% of their populations.
By the grace of God, more Christian denominations returned to the fundamental truths “You shall not kill” and “Love God and love your neighbor as yourself.”
An even greater miracle occurred: Some descendants of the English Episcopalians returned to these uplifting beliefs. Christian denominations became blessedly more Christian than the initial violent waves of land-grabbing, death-dealing English Episcopalians who permanently erased tens of millions of Stone Age Indians, but only after spreading “More for Me!” from “sea to sea”.
Many are blessed to know this basic fact: “History repeats itself.” Today, well-organized, well-financed Muslim invaders seek to do to American families what the “More for Me!” Tribe of English Episcopalians once did to America’s Indians. And, the usual self-serving individuals driven by hatred of God, their neighbors, and themselves eagerly assist.
Preview of Chapter 1
This began to be written the day after 6:11 PM on July 13, 2024, when a confused young man was led to try to assassinate President Trump. It records the outstanding work done by good citizens, local law enforcement, and Butler County officials before, during, and after Presidential candidate Donald Trump’s campaign rally. And, it compares their good works with the institutionalized incompetence, or worse, of those with greater authority.
Oddly, Chapter 1 begins with something surprisingly similar to what happened in Athens, Greece, around the year 514 BC. It gives a sense of History ignored by those who prefer the thinking of Conventional Reality.
Many good people in and around Butler County play the same starring roles in this latest chapter of “The Butler Novel” as they do in real life. They performed far better than many have been led to believe:
Preview of Chapter 2
Chapter 2 will explore how important Public Education was when those words described it, and what went wrong.
Preview of Chapter 3
This Chapter takes three areas of modern life, wells, septic tanks, and sewage. It helps us see what has intentionally made every American Family poorer. Worth reading and sharing with people who may have been too busy to wonder why water, septic, and sewage have begun to cost so much more in the last fifty years.
Preview of Chapter 4
Chapter 4 includes proven ways to help families do our most important public duty: identify and elect officials who will care more about helping families than being more concerned about those who give them donations.