Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA Montana family seeks to uncover a long-hidden treasure and solve the last mystery of Little Bighorn, the American West's most famous battle that historians still examine and discuss.A Montana family seeks to uncover a long-hidden treasure and solve the last mystery of Little Bighorn, the American West's most famous battle that historians still examine and discuss.A Montana family seeks to uncover a long-hidden treasure and solve the last mystery of Little Bighorn, the American West's most famous battle that historians still examine and discuss.
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It didn't take them long to lose their credibility with phoney information. They show an apparent archeological dig at the site of the " lone tepee " and find what they say is a period rifle cartridge. An expert later alleges the cartridge is a 45 caliber of the type used by Custer'a army. I don't think so. I'm not an expert, but one can clearly see that when removed from the earth the rifle cartridge they dug up was a newer bottleneck design no where near the size of a 45 cal., more like a 30 calibre modern hunting cartridge. Did anyone else notice this ?
Another silly show about a non existing treasure.
How about "Hunting Lincoln's Alien Nazi Mystery Treasure" next?
Oak Island in Montana. It's all about the ever elusive cache (cash). I don't know about anyone else, but whenever I take my cavalry regiment into the field of battle I always look around for something really heavy for the sole purpose of slowing us all down. You never know when you're going to run across a 7-11 that only takes gold coins. Evidence... Look at this guys! I just found this thing in the middle of nowhere out of pure luck. Either that or the producers stuck it the day before.
True historians gag at crap like this.
True historians gag at crap like this.
I don't trust people who say "Calvary" when they mean cavalry.
Yet another instance of some "reality" show producers only looking to sell a program. Phony baloney. Just like Yeti hunters and that fisherman guy who bores us with an hour-long search for some maneater and comes up short every time. What scams! I laugh and use the remote.
Now I'm watching "Aliens and the Civil War" on History (misnomer) Channel !!!! Quick: back to "Andy Griffith Show" or "Twilight Zone" re-runs.
Yet another instance of some "reality" show producers only looking to sell a program. Phony baloney. Just like Yeti hunters and that fisherman guy who bores us with an hour-long search for some maneater and comes up short every time. What scams! I laugh and use the remote.
Now I'm watching "Aliens and the Civil War" on History (misnomer) Channel !!!! Quick: back to "Andy Griffith Show" or "Twilight Zone" re-runs.
There's a bottleneck shell casing dug up, and they actually get somebody of alleged expertise to claim it's from Custers era. This invalidates the entire show. All the claims of accuracy fly right out the window. That's a much more modern casing. Probably used for hunting. I'm sure as people watch this, tons of people will point this out in their reviews, To put it into perspective, it's like finding a Chevy Nova and having somebody claim its a vehicle from the 1920's.
These particular tribes were known for utilizing every resource at their disposal. To dig up people who claim they were told directly that there was an order to not pillage the battle scene is ridiculous. All the person is doing is trying to make it seem his tribe was more noble than the others.
I'm a Native American and this idea we're all holy people who never lie or make up stories is ludicrous. When I was a kid there was a reservation that burned tires constantly and every day you could see the black tendril rising from the fire for miles and miles. Nowadays that same tribe tries to act like they've been the voice of conservation forever...lol. They were the only people who could gt away with doing that and not get arrested!
I'm not here to bash my fellows, but to point out we're humans too. Humans who take advantage of whatever situation we're presented with. There's a reason Custers men were stripped naked. They wanted to utilize everything they could. Not stick it in some cavern and never speak of it again. We aren't hoarders.
Even if they do find ACTUAL shells and rounds miles from the battle site, it proves they took the armaments and used them. I don't even get what they're trying to prove otherwise? That they dropped them on their way to stashing them?
These particular tribes were known for utilizing every resource at their disposal. To dig up people who claim they were told directly that there was an order to not pillage the battle scene is ridiculous. All the person is doing is trying to make it seem his tribe was more noble than the others.
I'm a Native American and this idea we're all holy people who never lie or make up stories is ludicrous. When I was a kid there was a reservation that burned tires constantly and every day you could see the black tendril rising from the fire for miles and miles. Nowadays that same tribe tries to act like they've been the voice of conservation forever...lol. They were the only people who could gt away with doing that and not get arrested!
I'm not here to bash my fellows, but to point out we're humans too. Humans who take advantage of whatever situation we're presented with. There's a reason Custers men were stripped naked. They wanted to utilize everything they could. Not stick it in some cavern and never speak of it again. We aren't hoarders.
Even if they do find ACTUAL shells and rounds miles from the battle site, it proves they took the armaments and used them. I don't even get what they're trying to prove otherwise? That they dropped them on their way to stashing them?
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By what name was Custer: The Final Mystery (2018) officially released in Canada in English?
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