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America: Chapter One – Indians December 18, 2024

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Native Americans (even pre-Columbian ones) are often enlisted in our contemporary debates through commercials and quotes.  Such as when Iron Eyes Cody an Italian American actor famous for portraying Indians stood with an artificial tear rolling down his cheek as he looked at discarded fast food wrappers, or the stirring environmental speech supposedly given by Chief Seattle which has no basis in History.  This is the attempted manipulation of modern populations through the exploitation and distortion of another culture.  It is cultural chauvinism of the most blatant kind and shows no respect or appreciation for the dignity of others.  Our study seeks to avoid this type of crass insensitivity and to discuss the culture which makes up the milieu of American colonial life in context.

Where did the Native Americans come from?  Most experts propose and support the Land Bridge or Bearing Straight Theory.  This theory, which is rejected by most Native Americans, posits that during the last ice age the water levels fell so low that the Bearing Straight between North America and Asia became dry land.  Across this land bridge the ancestors of the Native Americans, tribal people from Siberia and Mongolia, crossed spreading out to fill both North and South America.  Native Americans point to their own histories and cultural knowledge to dispute these theories most attesting to the belief that they were always here.  However, some variation of the immigration theories is generally accepted by non-Native American scholars. 

According to migration theories the initial and the largest waves of migration ended approximately 10,000 years ago as the retreating glaciers brought sea levels to their modern levels.  Subsequent waves of migration were accomplished by tribes with boats such as the Intuits and Aleuts.  These Paleo-Indians lived by hunting and gathering as was typical of all Paleolithic peoples.   They followed herds and weather patterns, seeking better living conditions and adequate food supplies ever South and East spreading out to fill every nook and cranny of the Americas.  These resourceful people adapted to the many different environmental niches, building societies and technologies that utilized available resources to an amazing degree.

The occupation of the land soon brought changes.  The large mammals such as the giant beaver, the mastodon, the horse and the camel which once covered the vast grasslands died out or were hunted to extinction.  The climate warmed and the circumstances changed.  Growing populations began to jostle for resources and constant subdivision soon brought contending groups to a land once devoid of humanity.

As time progressed the Paleo-Indians of the early migration period developed into the Archaic Indians of tribal history.  These people became adept at horticulture changing and adapting the landscape to meet their needs.  The increase of food supplies combined with the warming climate led to increased life spans, population growth and further solidification of cultural differences.  The ingenuity and skill of the various Native American peoples in adapting wild plants to their use is seen in the many crops which through the Columbian Exchange have become staples of the world’s food supply.

Many large and highly specialized cultures developed in the area that would one day become the United States.

 In the Southwest the Anasazi and the Hohokam built great cities and some of the largest irrigation systems in the ancient world.  They established trading networks that stretched across the continent and deep into Central America.  These remarkable people built impressive cliff dwellings and vast complexes such as in Chaco Canyon and Mesa Verde.  These cultures also developed pottery and horticulture to an amazing degree.  Their distinctive pottery motifs are still popular and the large surpluses of food they were able to grow supported a diverse and specialized civilization that endured for hundreds and perhaps thousands of years.

The Mound Builders built impressive cities and controlled a large area along the Mississippi and Ohio rivers.  They built their cities as far North as Minnesota and as far South as Florida, as far west as Oklahoma and as far East as Ohio.  They built the great city of Cahokia in what is today Illinois.  At its peak Cahokia was the largest settlement north of central Mexico.  It thrived for more than three centuries.  This city of pyramids and paved streets possessed a population from 10,000 to 20,000.  They erected the third largest pyramid in the Americas.  The traders from Cahokia traveled across much of North America, from the Gulf Coast to the Great Lakes, from the Atlantic coast to Oklahoma.

The Native Americans had many different religious beliefs.  Overall, these religious systems can almost universally be typified as animism.  Which is a belief in numerous personalized, supernatural beings endowed with reason, intelligence and volition.  And that these beings inhabit both objects and living beings and govern their existences. Basically, this is the belief that everything is conscious, that everything has a soul.  The term has been further extended to refer to a belief that the natural world is a community of living personas, only some of whom are human.

Important parts of these beliefs included respect for all things believed to have a spirit, the use of dreams and visions to communicate with the spirit world and shamanism.  Once the Europeans arrived their various versions of Christianity intruded into the religious beliefs and practices of the Native Americans.  This often led to a blend of the two religious systems best typified by the development and growth of the Native American Church.

These are the people who greeted the Europeans as they arrived in the Americas.  They were a highly social people divided into multiple civilizations and cultures.  Their technology was as varied as their languages and their societies ranged from simple to highly complex.  One thing they weren’t was savages in an untamed wilderness.

Season Four Episode Two December 17, 2024

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In Season Four / Episode two of I Took a Right Turn: First up we play a song from the Charismatic Revival, River of Life and a top-forty hit and longtime worship song, Put Your Hand In the Hand of the Man From Galilee.  Then we share one of our homegrown songs: Who Writes the Review.  Turning to the Bible we go somewhere we haven’t gone in quite a while: Revelation 20:11-15 followed up by John 11:25-26comparing the two sides of salvation for those who accept it and for those who reject it.  Robert reads the Introduction to his book America: Chapter One – Colonial History.  Each episode this season will include a chapter from this book.

The text of these readings are posted the day after the release of each episode at www.itookarighturn.com and www.drrobertowens.com  All of Robert’s thirty-eight books are available in paper back and kindle through Amazon.  We also invite everyone to visit our online art store, The Pair a Docs Shop where we offer our original paintings, prints and merchandise.

An excerpt from New Old Sayings Volume Two by Dr. Robert Owens December 16, 2024

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When we pass what most people think is the end, we’ve finally reached the beginning.

This is an excerpt from New Old Sayings Volume Two by Dr. Robert Owens. This and all his books are available from Amazon in paperback or kindle at

An excerpt from New Old Sayings Volume Two by Dr. Robert Owens December 15, 2024

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We’re all as close to God as we want to be.

This is an excerpt from New Old Sayings Volume Two by Dr. Robert Owens. This and all his books are available from Amazon in paperback or kindle at

An excerpt from New Old Sayings Volume Two by Dr. Robert Owens December 14, 2024

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We can never blame the lack of quality or depth in our relationship with God on anyone except ourselves.

This is an excerpt from New Old Sayings Volume Two by Dr. Robert Owens. This and all his books are available from Amazon in paperback or kindle at

An excerpt from New Old Sayings Volume Two by Dr. Robert Owens December 13, 2024

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Church shouldn’t be a place where professionals perform, and the people merely cheer them on and pay them money.

This is an excerpt from New Old Sayings Volume Two by Dr. Robert Owens. This and all his books are available from Amazon in paperback or kindle at

Ladders in the sky December 12, 2024

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An excerpt from New Old Sayings Volume Two by Dr. Robert Owens December 12, 2024

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The church isn’t a pen where sheep gather so shepherds can throw them food once or twice a week.

This is an excerpt from New Old Sayings Volume Two by Dr. Robert Owens. This and all his books are available from Amazon in paperback or kindle at

America: Colonial History – Introduction December 11, 2024

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History has a reputation of being “BORING!”   Back in the Dream Times before the dawn of the Internet, YouTube, and Facebook Early American History was almost exclusively the History of English-speaking man.  The geographic area was restricted to the Atlantic coast of North America, and that was about it.  Sure, everyone assumed there were women around someplace, but they were merely supporting actors (or actresses as they were once quaintly called). Other European colonists, the Norse, the Spanish, the French, the Dutch, the Swedish, and the Russians were treated as minor actors waiting in the wings to be discarded as soon as it was convenient to get back to the main story about the British. The Native Americans were impediments constantly moved and moved and moved again. And of course, there were African slaves but they were unfortunate victims behind the scenes of what was essentially a walk in the sunshine as the American colonies quickly rose from outposts in the wilderness to gleaming cities on a hill.  

Some have called this the Imperial History.  Some have called it the Accepted History. Some say it gave birth to a belief in American Exceptionalism.  It had certain aspects that were almost interchangeable from author to author.  The American colonists were working to improve the wilderness, to establish freedom and develop limited government, free enterprise, and religious toleration.  From the earliest beginnings to the culmination of the continental American empire it was one long story of progress and victory.  We never started a war, and we never lost one.  It wasn’t America right or wrong. It was America never wrong.

From our politically correct, highly sensitized vantage point here in the 21st Century it is easy to say the prior presentations of American History were simplistic, or racist, or filled with gender bias, ethnic bias, and Eurocentric.  However, this critique could in itself be accused of being an exercise in Presentism, or the judgment of previous times through the distorting lens of the present.  Instead, we need to realize that every society must present a coherent story of why their independent and continued existence is justified and why it is important.  Every society must teach their youth that there is a valid reason why their society must continue, or it will soon break apart into its component parts.  Multicultural societies will break apart along cultural lines, and multi-racial societies will fracture along racial lines, whatever the social tectonic plates are unless the members of that society are taught to believe in its relevance it will become irrelevant and soon cease to matter.  

However, when all the actors and all their stories are added in while the History may not be as consistently uplifting or as universally consistent it is much more interesting, and it is much closer to the facts.  Keeping our eyes upon the past let us begin our study seeking to present an honest, interesting, readable and brief representation of our History we will seek guideposts that will help us navigate the future.

In this study we will work to include all the voices while at the same time expressing the uniqueness of America, its history, and its destiny.

First of all, we must accept that the wilderness that has long been the stage for our understanding of European colonization in the Americas was not wilderness to the Native Americans. It was home.  Many of these cultures had lived in the same areas for thousands of years.  Others were newer arrivals.  Whichever they were they had established nations and territories that were unmistakably developed and sovereign.  They had established towns and cities, many of which were permanent and extensive.  They’d developed some of the most important food crops in the world today.  They had extensive trade networks, worship centers, and all the other components of an advanced culture made up of varied societies.

Secondly, the narrative cannot exclude the less savory side if it is to be in any way complete.  Therefore, in out text we will encounter the development of racially tinged philosophy, white solidarity, and the oppression and exploitation of others that became an abiding feature of English colonization.  We will also watch the transplanted national rivalries that plagued European civilization wherever they planted their flags anywhere in the world.  The text will also take notice of the fact that fifty percent of the population was excluded from political and social equality through the gender bias inherited from the past and transplanted to the new world.

In addition, the text attempts to portray a feature of American History which is often neglected or ignored: the proposition that in the colonial period there really wasn’t an “America.”  The boundaries which we see as firm and fixed were then nonexistent.  Each colony was a separate entity and unless they were surrounded by other colonies such as Delaware or Rhode Island they all thought of themselves as having a growing frontier in the West. They all dealt with sovereign Indian nations as well as with the colonies of other nations.  The Atlantic Sea lanes were an open door to the commerce and navies of the world binding America and Americans in the triangle trade between Europe, Africa, and the Americas a trade which bound together the growing community of Western Civilization.

The unimaginably immense impact of the colonials upon the environment of North America is not ignored.  The cross-pollination of disease, technology, flora, and fauna, and the political variations of European power strategies outline the Columbian Exchange which has had a massive influence on the subsequent development of the world.  Not that pre-Columbian America was static. There had always been the same shifting patterns of life among the tribes and nations of America before the Europeans arrived, but they had always been indigenous except for the fleeting foray of the Norse.  After the arrival of the later Europeans in the fifteenth century the Americas would forever be subsumed into the shifting alliances and other variables of European politics.

The larger populations of the colonists, aided by the technological, organizational, and economical developments of the Europeans, possessed the power to gain an overbearing influence in the development of North America once they had established themselves along the East coast.  Once the bridgehead was secure the Europeans began an almost continuous advance to the West. Using trade, alliance, and war the sphere of European power grew and grew always bringing environmental, social, and political change as they displaced the native cultures.  One thing that is important to remember is that the size and scope of the European movement to North America was not merely a wave or two of immigration.  It was so large and so sustained it can only be understood as migration not immigration.

This work is written for non-Historians and is a handy easy to read condensed look at Early American History.  It is composed of short chapters, each of which is designed to be a stand-alone treatment of a segment of time.  It is my hope that this book will help fill the void that is exposed by the general lack of historical perspective which I believe is a major contributor to America’s current lack of self-awareness of and appreciation for the uniqueness which is the United States.

Season Four Episode One December 10, 2024

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In Season Four / Episode One of I Took a Right Turn: We first play two traditional worship songs: Holy, Holy, Holy, and Thou Art Worthy.  Then we play an old revival song from the days of the Canvas Cathedral and the saw-dust trail: God is God.  Then we share one of our homegrown songs: All Thing in God’s Time.  Turning to the Bible we examine Genesis 1:1-5 highlighting that the Bible is real History.  Robert reads the Introduction to his book America: Chapter One – Colonial History.  Each episode this season will include a chapter from this book.

The text of these readings are posted the day after the release of each episode at www.itookarighturn.com and www.drrobertowens.com  All of Robert’s thirty-eight books are available in paper back and kindle through Amazon.  We also invite everyone to visit our online art store, The Pair a Docs Shop where we offer our original paintings, prints and merchandise.