I guess it was just normal for "Indigenous people".
But it really makes me wonder, what is the status of Pocahontas at nu-Disney now? And of John Smith in particular?
Also, the Powhatans were literal cucks:
Wives were allowed to engage in sexual relationships outside of their marriage, so long as these arrangements were sanctioned by their husbands. Strachey, perhaps reflecting a monogamous English society, was scandalized by this practice. He described the Powhatans as “most voluptious,” and suggested that wives, given permission, turned into “Virgill’s scrantiae,” scrantiae being an old Roman epithet for unchaste women. (It was actually the ancient Roman playwright Plautus who coined the word.) According to Strachey, such women “may embrase the acquaintance of any straunger for nothing, and it is accompted no offence,” a circumstance that left them “full of their countrye desease (the pox) very young.” In fact, however, Powhatan women probably behaved less according to their sexual whims than to the dictates of custom: husbands often loaned their wives to visitors as a form of hospitality.
I guess it was just normal for "Indigenous people".
But it really makes me wonder, what is the status of Pocahontas at nu-Disney now? And of John Smith in particular?