Trump-backed town will defeat woke Darth Hochul & Evil Empire State in native mascot battle
Massapequa, LI heroically confronting cultural holocaust that's spent billion$ erasing indigenous heritage
Darth Hochul and the Evil Empire State messed with the wrong town.
The Battle of Massapequa will prove a decisive defeat for cancel culture, Gov. Kathy Hochul and New York’s obscenely racist Board of Regents.
Or Massapequa, LI will be renamed Pottersville, a once heroic hotbed of pro-Native sentiment that knew if the goose-stepping gestapo of the Wokemacht exterminated its high school mascot one day it will be back the next day to herd all the other Indian images into cultural death camps, too.
Oh! You thought they were stopping just with sports teams?!
New York’s education board ordered a ban on “Indigenous team names, mascots, and logos” in public schools in April 2023, to be effective in June 2025. Far-left Gov. Hochul proudly supports the cancel-culture holocaust that has exterminated thousands of displays of Native American heroes, history and heritage coast to coast.
The Marxist forces behind the cultural genocide have spent billions of dollars, according to insiders, and have been funded by far-left organizations such as the George Soros family’s Open Society Foundations.
Massapequa, named for one of Long Island’s 13 indigenous tribes, rose up in an organic rebellion against the racism and intolerance of far-left Democrats. The pro-Native American town is fighting for heritage essential to its identity — and essential to the identity of the nation.
It won the support of President Trump on Monday. It already enjoys the national support of organizations such as the Native American Guardians Association, which represents the voices of the 90% of Indians who approve of native sports-team mascots but have been silenced by cancel culture.
The Massapequa High School Chiefs, represented by an Indian in feathered headdress, pay tribute to a 17th-century Massapequa sachem.
“Once a Chief, always a Chief,” is a familiar phrase around town, especially among MHS graduates.
Chief in Massapequa, however, is more than just a tribute. It’s the hometown identity. The chief in Massapequa is Massapequa. No differently perhaps than the Minuteman in Lexington, Mass. is Lexington, Mass.
The Massapequa chief is plastered on every damn thing in town.
He appears on the “welcome” signs for the villages of both Massapequa and Massapequa Park — collectively “The Massapequas.” The chief is front and center on the official website of The Massapequas, its community announcements and its marketing materials.
Official town business is conducted in board rooms beneath the chief’s proud visage. The chief represents the Chamber of Commerce and appears on its website, event promotions and various other places around town.
The chief represents Massapequa’s Bravest in the Fire Department, the Massapequa Little League and various community organizations. The chief’s face is used to promote all manner of community events, from the Taste of Massapequa to the town’s drug buy-back program.
A massive Massapequa Chiefs mural was painted on the side of a local bagel shop in 2023, as the community launched its grassroots response and rejection of the state’s racist mandate.
Big Chief Lewis, meanwhile, is a local landmark erected in 1968 by famed folk artist Rodman Shutt. The statue and an accompanying mural of Chief Lewis have become nationally renowned examples of American roadside folk art. The statue has deepened Massapequa’s status as a community that celebrates its native legacy.
Given the depth of the connection, little Massapequa (pop. 21,000) made a heroic stand against the overwhelming forces behind the cultural holocaust — much like 77 Minutemen made a heroic stand against 750 of the King’s Killers on Lexington Common 250 years ago this week.
The Massapequa school board issued a formal response to the state on top of the organic community rebellion.
“The School Board’s letter characterized the Chief as being ‘more than a symbol to Massapequa,’ but a celebration of 365 years of local history that honors Chief Tackapausha who sold the area to a group of settlers in 1658,” the Massapequa Herald Post reported in May 2023, soon after the state enacted its racist ban.
Massapequa also challenged the state in court — and lost. But the outcry over the loss from Native Americans nationwide caught the attention of President Trump. He stepped into the trenches with a post on social media Monday.
“Forcing them to change the name, after all of these years, is ridiculous and, in actuality, an affront to our great Indian population,” Trump wrote.
One way or the other, Massapequa is going to win.
Massapequa High School, with the weight of the White House in its corner, will regain its Chief. Or Massapequa will be ground zero for the next phase of the war.
After Gov. Darth Hochul and the woketroopers of the Evil Empire State round up all the sports team Indian mascots in Massapaqua and other towns, they’re coming after everything else an Indian or native symbol on it: the bagel shop murals, the “Welcome to Our Historic Town” road signs, the city hall portraits, the fire department truck crests, the Little League mascots.
The dark force of cancel culture is coming after the names of our towns and our states, too. Goodbye Massachusetts and the 25 other states with native names. Goodby Massapequa and the thousands of other local communities with names that remind us of the original Americans.
Massapequa is one native name we’ll always remember. The town that made a stand and tried to warn us.





