J
Jerusha
Guest
Maybe the lesson should be-- US, look at your own injustices, before you start attacking other countries on the basis of assumed injustice.
Yes, I am sure the intent of the UN speaking was to impart a moral lesson…Maybe the lesson should be-- US, look at your own injustices, before you start attacking other countries on the basis of assumed injustice.
It’s true.We took those fair and square.
Seriously--------most Indian tribes were nomadic anyway. They did not have “towns” on those lands. They hunted and kived in them, but they did’n’t “own” them . And many of them stole THOSE lands from other tribes in the numerous pre-white and post white wars they engaged in which you never hear about in “politically correct” textbooks.
Theodore Roosevelt basically said the same thing over a hundred years ago.
And also remember---------as Louis L’Amour commented years ago in an interview----there was unnecessary cruelty and injustice on BOTH sides.
Just saying.
Yep.
You write as if it’s 1812, when American Indians have for a long time = chances to succeed as all Americans & to repeat, the legal system is there to deal with injustices such as discrimination when it does happen. American Indians don’t have to live on reservations-they can live anywhere they want to, so the topic is long a moot point. Again, American Indians in history were proud winners with ‘might makes right’ & winner takes all attitude when they won land from other Indian tribes by wars but were sore losers when they lost to the Whites who just did a better job than what the American Indians. But that is history. If an American Indian today got discriminated against when it comes to getting job, etc., then yes, the legal system must resolve that. If an American Indian got more punishment than a White for committing the same crime, then that is wrong & must be resolved. But it’s useless to complain about what happened in the 1800s, right or wrong. Slavery was wrong, but that was abolished in the U.S. in 1865 & it’s useless to complain about that today because Blacks are no longer being enslaved. Once something is resolved & no longer happening, then it’s useless to complain about it as it’s past.Maybe the lesson should be-- US, look at your own injustices …
Go will still require you to suffer temporal punishment for sins you commit, even if you confess, do penance, and are absolved. Noone is above God’s justice.You write as if it’s 1812, when American Indians have for a long time = chances to succeed as all Americans & to repeat, the legal system is there to deal with injustices such as discrimination when it does happen. American Indians don’t have to live on reservations-they can live anywhere they want to, so the topic is long a moot point. Again, American Indians in history were proud winners with ‘might makes right’ & winner takes all attitude when they won land from other Indian tribes by wars but were sore losers when they lost to the Whites who just did a better job than what the American Indians. But that is history. If an American Indian today got discriminated against when it comes to getting job, etc., then yes, the legal system must resolve that. If an American Indian got more punishment than a White for committing the same crime, then that is wrong & must be resolved. But it’s useless to complain about what happened in the 1800s, right or wrong. Slavery was wrong, but that was abolished in the U.S. in 1865 & it’s useless to complain about that today because Blacks are no longer being enslaved. Once something is resolved & no longer happening, then it’s useless to complain about it as it’s past.
As opposed to the corrupt Wall Street system we have now causing economic collapse? Or the money we’ve lent out and never expect to get returned? Or the banks, who control the money supply (NOT the US government) taking 40% of the money out of circulation?When they give away or return anything it will affect its currency and possibly cause an economic collapse. Just saying…
I disagree. The intent was to plant and fertilize a seed… Now let’s see if it can grow…Yes, I am sure the intent of the UN speaking was to impart a moral lesson…
Or are you saying that because it has been shown in this topic how insane the request was?
An excellent overview, James. I have no idea what the issues are with Eastern tribes, but coming from the West, it isn’t lands lost in wars that the Native Americans want returned, it is lands the US Government granted them by treaty. That is, we just ignored our legal contracts because we had the power to do so. They want the Government (in the cases I am familiar with) to just uphold their own law.Long story short though…the AIP lost the various wars and were pushed off much of the land that had previously been theirs.
I’m not justifying - I just saying - that this is how is was. Trying to turn back the clock or “give back land” is, in most cases, not a viable option.
Yes. The Treaty of Fort Laramie has been violated numerous times, generally, whenever anyone trespassed on reservation lands and found something of value. If the federal government cannot resect its own laws and contracts, how can it expect us to? Oh, that’s right, they have the big guns and we don’t. And people still have the gumpshun to call this the land of the free.An excellent overview, James. I have no idea what the issues are with Eastern tribes, but coming from the West, it isn’t lands lost in wars that the Native Americans want returned, it is lands the US Government granted them by treaty. That is, we just ignored our legal contracts because we had the power to do so. They want the Government (in the cases I am familiar with) to just uphold their own law.
No. The practice among tribes in forested regions of North America was to set fires in a controlled way every year. The dead wood and sn mall trees burned off, this fed the forests which were populated by giant and ancient trees which had incredibly think (fire-resistant) bark as a result of being exposed to the repeated burns. It was parklike. The aboriginal people planted “crops” in the forest, in areas where they knew the sun reached the section, small plots of beans and corn (combined complete proteins that dry and store over the winter.)Aside from which, wildfires are the forest management practice of their ancestors…
There were very few “control burns” in ages prior to the invention of earth moving equipment. The Native Americans caused a lot of destruction by using fire as a method to scare animals into canyons and other places so they could hunt them. And the attempt to burn down forests to provide more cultivated land to grow maze, etc. Yes, they tried to avoid catastrophic fires, and there is evidence they avoided areas that may yield to catastrophic fires, however there is plenty of evidence of wide spread destruction of forested areas.No. The practice among tribes in forested regions of North America was to set fires in a controlled way every year. The dead wood and sn mall trees burned off, this fed the forests which were populated by giant and ancient trees which had incredibly think (fire-resistant) bark as a result of being exposed to the repeated burns. It was parklike. The aboriginal people planted “crops” in the forest, in areas where they knew the sun reached the section, small plots of beans and corn (combined complete proteins that dry and store over the winter.)
What does this have to do with secularism?Oh, boy. More secular pipe dreams and attempts by the UN to dictate to the US what to do.![]()
The truth?I’m back folks…been catching up on the comments.
I tend to agree with you. I myself said (as heartless as it might seem, and "politically incorrect) that maybe God intended the outcome of the Indian vs. White man struggle to come out the way it did.
And yes------they were mostly nomads-they used the lands themselves and then moved on. They also conwuered their own peoples and destroyed tribes—even after the white man came. They also committed just as many unneccessary cruelties and injustices as the white man did.
Sorry------
But that is the truth.
& the American Indians such as Aztecs, Incas & Mayans had human sacrifices. American Indians had slavery, scalpings, killing eachother with tomahawks, kidnapping women to make their wives & when they to repeat wanted land, took it from another tribe by wars. Doesn’t seem that you or other posters sympathetic to American Indians have a problem when American Indians did thisYes. The Treaty of Fort Laramie has been violated numerous times, generally, whenever anyone trespassed on reservation lands and found something of value. If the federal government cannot resect its own laws and contracts, how can it expect us to? Oh, that’s right, they have the big guns and we don’t. And people still have the gumpshun to call this the land of the free.![]()
As opposed to the morally superior European Christians who drove the heathen pagans off their traditional lands, killed them if they resisted, and force converted the rest.& the American Indians such as Aztecs, Incas & Mayans had human sacrifices. American Indians had slavery, scalpings, killing eachother with tomahawks, kidnapping women to make their wives & when they to repeat wanted land, took it from another tribe by wars. Doesn’t seem that you or other posters sympathetic to American Indians have a problem when American Indians did thisFact again is that most land in the Americas was uninhabited, so most land was not taken from any1 other than the plants & animals who lived there. American Indians were not noble savages. They to repeat were proud winners with winner takes all attitude when they won the wars from other tribes but became sore losers when they lost the wars to the Whites (poster is not White). It seems that the posters sympathetic to American Indians have the sore loser attitude.
With the last paragraph, slavery was wrong but @ that time it was worldwide. Africans enslaved other Africans & sold them to Whites. Chinese had slavery. American Indians had slavery. Not right, but that was worldwide back then. This poster again is not European, but pointing out that the Europeans did not do anything different as it relates to slavery.As opposed to the morally superior European Christians who drove the heathen pagans off their traditional lands, killed them if they resisted, and force converted the rest.Oh, and THEN began importing their own slaves from Africa, Ireland, and Scotland.
But again, most of the land was not stolen as it was uninhabited except for animals & plants who lived there. This is repeat, but it’s long a moot point as the American Indians can already live in those lands & more. To repeat, when American Indians wanted land, they took it from another Indian tribe by wars & proudly said ‘winner takes all’ but when the American Indians lost the war, then they complained about ‘stolen land’ when to repeat, the American Indians often stole land from other tribes. American Indians are being sore losers when they complain about stolen land because they had no problem with taking land from others as long as they won.Sometimes I think the UN is just plain crazy. No, we never should have stolen their land to begin with. Instead, we should have bought or traded for it. However, it has already happened and giving them all of their land back would cause more problems than it would solve.