DakotaRed, my challenge was about you saying 'ancient' history. I mean, where have you been about 'modern' history of the Native American Indians?
Guest, you mentioned matters that happened in the 1700's. You said nothing about "modern" matters. What happened in the 1700's is indeed ancient history.
About diseased blankets given to Native people to wipe them out in this day and age? How about the story that was aired on a show similiar to 60 minutes where the government gave Native people in Arizona 'radioactive' building materials to build their home!!!!! Now if you consider the last 25-50 years as being 'ancient' history, then my time table of time is really screwed up.
More red herrings? Did it ever occur to you that scientists didn't even know the full effects of possibly radioactive materials on people until quite some time after the invention of the nuclear bomb? If you have documentation of deliberate dissemination of radioactive materials to people, please present it, not just some wild eyed theory.
In 1990 Canada had the Oka crisis in which most of this news was blocked out in the USA. Back in 1880's (ancient history), the Candian government came up with an 'Act' called the Indian Act. In that first edition, they defined of an Indian was a 'none person!'
Uh, you first state it was the US doing this mass genocide against Indians and now give mention to Canada? I am unaware of the US annexing Canada. No one has said that Indians were treated fairly long ago, but where is either the US or the Canadian governments defining todays Indians as "none persons?"
May I refer you to 'ancient' history about Andrew Jackson's treatment of the Cherokee's. He removed the Cherokee's from their homeland and had the old people and young children walk in the dead of winter (500 miles) to another location. This in defiance to Chief Justice John Marshall's order that the Cheokee's had a right to stay in their homeland.
The Trail Of Tears was a dark spot on our history and I will make no attempts at justification of it. I happen to agree with you that what was done to Indians back in the 1700's and 1800's was indeed heinous and wrong. But again, it was quite some time ago, wasn't it? Shall we resurrect the dead and apologize to them while prosecuting the rest?
My question to you is, is justice prejudice? Does justice apply only to modern times and not 'ancient' times? Apparently killing people in ancient history (in the past)compared to modern times differ greatly, how interesting! I'll have to think that through. It was OK to kill Indians in 'ancient' history but not in modern times, hmmmm some reasoning.
If you have an effective method of resurrecting the dead, I will join you in prosecuting the perpetrators of those deeds. Sorry, but I am unaware of any effective means to travel back in time to correct many misdeeds done against many people from both sides. No one has said it was okay, but what do you propose we do towards dead people today? How far back in history shall we go to prosecute dead people? Shall that prosecution also include Indians accused of scalping? Or, those Indians that slaughtered white women and children too? Shall we include modern European nations since it was they who brought much of that to this continent?
About Casino's and treaties, your way off base. Your so off base on this issue that you better go back and do some home work. If you knew the full story as why the government is allowing and permitting casino's on Indian reserves it would shock you. In fact, Time magaizine had a two part story about Native casino's and who's profiting. I'll give you a clue, the government gave a non-Indian women an Indian status so she can open a casino! The government is still pursuing their aim of assimilating the Indians.
May I suggest you do some more research. One misdeed is not a wholesale genocide of a people. Some tribes where I live are prospering quite well with this. Like I originally said, though, "some." Just like when white start a business, not all prosper, do they?
You complain about the Indians being "assimilated." That also means a broader acceptance into the society, does it not? Individuals may still retain individual cultures, many do, but society as a whole should accept all and segregate none. If Indians can take advantage of treaties and have businesses on their lands that aren't allowed elsewhere, I applaud them for choosing that, if they so choose. If the wealth isn't reaching all within the tribe, I blame that on Tribal Councils, not the US Government. They should ensure the equitable dispertion of profits amongst the people.
Untaxed merchandise? Have you read the part in YOUR USA constitution that Indians are exempt from taxation? If the USA is a Christian nation then why are they not following Jesus words at Matt. 5:37, "Just let... your ...Yes mean Yes..." when it come to keeping treaties?
Uh, I was referring to sale of items that are heavily taxed off the reservations. Through a quirk in the law, federal taxes are not charged on such item on the reservations and some tribes have taken to selling these items to all, legally. The Seminoles in Florida were doing quite well with tax free cigarettes 10 or 15 years ago. Smokers that bought off the reservation were paying a great deal more than those who shopped on the reservation.
So killing isn't bad, its not 'pure' evil you say? I guess it all depends on who's doing the killing and what era, correct?
Again, a red herring, but since you brought it up, please show were anyone has condoned the killing of Indians or even settlers 200 years ago. Again, I ask, what do you propose we do to the dead? Shall we try them and resentence their skeletal remains to another death?
After that, please explain the relevance of this to Saddam Hussein and Iraq today.
Lew W