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Fate of Lakotahs Highlights
America's Failed Native
American Policies
By Stephen Lendman
11-21-8 |
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On November 6, South Dakota's
governor Michael Rounds declared
a state of emergency as heavy
snow blanketed the state and
threatened all parts of it -
including Native American
reservations.
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They, however, were excluded
from his declaration. They'll
get no badly needed help, and
it's an all too familiar story
for our nation's original
inhabitants. They've been abused
and slaughtered for over 500
years. At Mabila, Acoma Mesa,
Conestoga, the Trail of Tears,
Pamunkey, Mystic River, Yellow
Creek, Sand Creek, Gnadenhutten,
and Wooded Knee. At far too many
other places as well at a cost
of many millions of lives, now
forgotten and erased from
memory.
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Worst still, our Native people
continue to be systematically
repressed and mistreated. They
live in poverty and despair.
They're mocked and demonized in
films and society as drunks,
beasts, primitives, savages, and
people to be Americanized or
warehoused on reservations and
forgotten.
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Their cultures are willfully
denegrated. Their legacy is one
of millions slaughtered,
betrayal, treaties made and
broken, stolen lands, rights
denied, and welfare criminally
ignored to this day.
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The Lakotahs are one of many
examples, and the Republic of
Lakotah web site highlights
their plight. It welcomes "all
self-sufficient People who come
with an open Heart, a Passion
for Freedom and a Love for Grand
Mother Earth."
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In a commentary titled "Broken
Promises & Laws," it describes a
Broken People whose lands were
stolen, buffalo massacred,
people slaughtered, and who were
herded onto reservations in
violation of Treaties successive
US governments signed and then
abrogated.
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The Treaty of 1851, for example,
in which the government
requested a right-of-way for a
road through Lakotah lands to
the newly- discovered Montana
gold fields. It became known as
the Bozeman Trail to be used
only until all gold was removed.
By the Civil War it was gone and
the government reneged. Forts
were erected on its right of
way. Lakotahs demanded they be
removed. The US refused, war
ensued, and it ended with the
Treaty of 1868.
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It stated that "The government
of the United States desires
peace, and its honor is hereby
pledged to keep it." It also
re-affirmed all rights the
Indians were granted under the
1851 Treaty. Those rights and
all others were abrogated and
denied.
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Western North and South Dakota
Lakotahs are one of seven Sioux
tribes comprising the Great
Sioux Nation and are best known
by their redoubtable leaders -
Sitting Bull, Crazy Horse, Red
Cloud and Black Elk, among
others. Names even young school
children know but not their
heroic feats and the great price
they and their people paid.
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Before the 1770s, Sioux held
territories from Minnesota to
the Rocky Mountains and from the
Yellowstone to the Platte
Rivers. Until the Treaty of
1868, they were the richest
Native American nation of the
northwestern plains, but years
earlier their lives were
irrevocably changed. Treaties
were made and broken. Settlers,
railroads, and mining interests
took their lands and resources.
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In 1874, General George Custer
invaded the most sacred Lakotah
territory, the Black Hills (Paha
Sapa), and with him came gold
seekers. An illegal occupation
followed along with billions of
dollars of stolen resources and
great numbers of lives lost. All
in the name of progress to
colonize the continent's West.
All at the expense of our Native
peoples who lost everything as a
result.
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The earlier 1787 Northwest
Ordinance was deceptive on its
face. Supposedly to afford
Indians "justice (and)
humanity," it, in fact, expanded
the nation to admit new states
on stolen Native American lands.
Wars followed. Broken promises
and treaties as well in
violation of Article 6 of the
Constitution that states:
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"This Constitution, and the Laws
of the United States which shall
be made in Pursuance thereof;
and all Treaties made, or which
shall be made, under the
Authority of the United States,
shall be the supreme Law of the
Land" - binding without
qualification on the executive,
legislature and judiciary.
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The Sioux acted in good faith to
avoid confrontation, but in
vain. The executive, Congress,
and judiciary denied them their
lands, vital resources, and
basic rights through a
succession of repressive laws:
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-- Homestead Acts - for settlers
only that gave them title to 160
acres of "underdeveloped" land
outside the original 13
colonies; 1.6 million in all got
around 270 million acres, or 10%
of all US land between 1862 -
1886;
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-- Allotment Acts - various
"act(s) to provide for the
allotment of land in severalty
to Indians on the various
reservations and to extend the
protection of the laws of the
United States over the Indians,
and for other purposes;" for
example, the 1887 Dawes Act that
distributed mostly unwanted and
unviable land in Oklahoma; it
was done by dividing
reservations into
privately-owned parcels to
destroy Native cultures, impose
western values, and achieve
forced assimilation;
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-- the Indian Citizenship Act of
1924 to force citizenship on all
Native Americans; the words of
one spoke for many: "United
States citizenship was just
another way of absorbing us and
destroying our customs and
government; how could these
Europeans come over and tell us
we were citizens in our country;
we had our citizenship;" it's
"in our nations;" forcing their
citizenship on us "was a
violation of our sovereignty;"
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-- the 1934 Indian
Reorganization Act (aka the
Wheeler-Howard Act or the Indian
New Deal); it reversed Dawes
provisions and created what
Native Americans call the first
Apartheid Act that still
applies; the 1964 Bantu
Development Act copied this law
and institutionalized black and
white separation in South
Africa; the same practice exists
now in Occupied Palestine, in US
inner cities, and wherever else
white supremicists want unwanted
people kept out of their
restricted spaces;
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-- forced relocations continued
during the 1950s and 1960s;
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-- Supreme Court rulings against
Native American religious
practices; in City of Boerne v.
Flores (June 1997), the Court
ruled against the 1993 Religious
Freedom Restoration Act that
prohibited the government from
"substantially burdening" a
believer's religious practices;
the Court held that this act
attempted to overturn its own
First Amendment interpretation;
in Employment Division v. Smith
(April 1990), the Court ruled
that Oregon could deny
unemployment benefits to a
person fired for violating a
state prohibition on the use of
peyote, even for a religious
ritual; in other words, this and
similar practices aren't
protected under the First
Amendment freedom of religion
provision; and
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-- Native Americans on
reservations aren't entitled to
the same constitutional rights
(like free speech, religion,
assembly, and due process, etc.)
as other Americans even though
they're legal citizens;
non-Indian people when on
reservations (so-called "tribal
trust status lands") also
relinquish these rights while
there; in addition, "tribal
sovereignty" benefits leaders
alone, not their people, and
tribal chiefs get their
authority from the Interior
Secretary and US-run Bureau of
Indian Affairs (BIA).
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"Tribal sovereignty" is a
profound misnomer. It belies any
sense that Indians on
reservations are self-governing.
They are not. There are no
checks and balances, no
separation of powers, no
constitutional protections, and
the US government owns the lands
as federal territories - under
"plenary power" in trust status.
In 1978, the Supreme Court ruled
that Indian tribal chiefs and
councils (not US law) have full
authority over their people, and
these "governments" are
empowered by Washington.
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Indian tribes are beholden to
the government for help and need
permission for most everything
they do. Their people on
reservations remain warehoused,
abused and forgotten. The notion
of "sovereignty" is another
indignity, a charade, and silent
outrage against our proud
original inhabitants. Out of
sight and mind in tribal
"homelands," no different than
South Africa's former bantustans
and equally oppressive.
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The Republic of Lakotah Today -
A Broken People the Result of
Broken Promises and Broken Laws
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To this day, Native Americans
and the Lakotah people are
victims of what Ward Churchill
calls "A Little Matter of
Genocide" that he explained in
his book by that title. It's
from American Indian Movement
founder, Russell Means, who
spoke of "a little matter of
genocide right here at home" by
which he meant a process still
ongoing.
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In 1944, jurist Raphael Lemkin
first defined the term to mean:
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"the destruction of a nation or
of an ethnic group" that
corresponds to other terms like
"tyrannicide, homocide,
infanticide, etc." Genocide
"does not necessarily mean
the....destruction of a nation,
except when accomplished by mass
killings....It is intended....to
signify a coordinated plan (to
destroy) the essential
foundations of the life of
national groups" with intent to
eradicate or substantially
weaken or harm them. "Genocidal
plans involve the
disintegration....of political
and social institutions,
culture, language, national
feelings, religion....economic
existence, personal security,
liberty, health, dignity, and"
human lives.
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The Convention on the Prevention
and Punishment of the Crime of
Genocide (adopted December 1948
and took effect in January 1951)
defines genocide in legal terms
as follows:
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"any (acts like those Lemkin
cited) committed with intent to
destroy, in whole or in part,
the national, ethnical, racial
or religious group (by) killing
(its) members; causing (them)
serious bodily or mental harm;
(or) deliberately inflicting (on
them) conditions" that may
destroy them in whole or in
part.
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Destroying peoples' cultures,
preventing them from practicing
their religion, speaking their
language, and/or passing on
their traditions to new
generations are acts of
genocide.
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Nowhere does the Constitution
let government abuse its people
or deny them their rights.
Nowhere does it authorize
genocide, either in or outside
the country, or permit the theft
and occupation of their lands or
any others.
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Nowhere does it say "We the
People" are the chosen few or
that the minimum function of
government is less than to
insure the "general welfare" as
stated in the Preamble and
Article I, Section 8 as follows:
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"The Congress shall have power
to....provide for....(the)
general welfare of the United
States" - the so-called welfare
clause for all its citizens.
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Nowhere does it sanction rampant
crime, unequal justice,
political or corporate
corruption, dishonest officials,
raging social problems, the
right to ignore the law, or to
be able to slaughter and abuse
its Native people. Nonetheless,
it happens. Most egregiously to
native Indians for over 500
years and counting.
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Before early Europeans arrived,
the Americas (North and South by
expert estimates) were home to
over 100 million indigenous
peoples. From 1492 to 1892, US
Census Bureau figures showed
less than 250,000 survived. Or
put another way - white
Europeans committed the greatest
ever genocide that was rivaled
only, but not equaled, by the
one against black Africans who
were stolen into slavery for the
"new world." Millions of them
died during capture and the
Middle Passage.
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Our Native peoples in even
greater numbers - victimized by
ritual slaughter. By being
hacked apart, buried alive,
trampled under horses, hunted as
game and fed to dogs, shot,
beaten, stabbed, and even
scalped for bounty or as
trophies. They were also hung on
meathooks like beef, thrown into
the sea from ships (the way
blacks were), worked to death as
slaves, starved, frozen to death
during forced marches and
internments, and infected with
deadly diseases. Our disturbing
"civilization" that's untaught
in American schools, and when it
is Indians are the villains and
the settlers their victims.
History on its head the way
Hollywood portrays it and still
does.
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Ward Churchill recounts
otherwise about what he calls
"the American holocaust" and
compares it to the Jewish one
under the Nazis. He explains
that:
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"Distinctions....between right,
center, left and extreme left in
the US are quite literally
nonexistent on the question of
genocide of indigenous peoples.
From all four vantage points,
the historical reality is
simultaneously denied,
justified, and in most cases
celebrated (or just forgotten.
But preposterous as these
arguments are, all of them are)
outstripped by a substantial
component of zionism which
contends not only that the
American holocaust never
happened, but that no 'true'
genocide has ever occurred,
other than the Holocaust
suffered by the Jews" in Nazi
Germany.
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It's an all too familiar pattern
of historical revisionism or
denial to view one people's
ordeal as important, preeminent
or unique and another's as
non-existent - depending, of
course, on who suffered and who
caused it. After WW II, Zionist
Jews copyrighted Hitler's
genocide, rebranded it "The
Holocaust," framed it as a one-
off event, and created the myth
of unique Jewish suffering.
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The Plight of the Lakotah People
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The Republic of Lakotah web site
recounts it from the first
official political and
diplomatic contacts "between
Lakotah and the (US) government
began in earnest after the
United States (completed) the
(so-called) Louisiana Purchase
in 1803."
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It refers to "fantasy" US
history about the purported
French sale of 530 million acres
for a mere $15 million - part of
which belonged to Lakotahs who
weren't consulted or consented
to the transaction. The first
"peace and friendship" treaty
followed in 1805. Like others
later on, it was systematically
ignored and violated as settlers
invaded, encroached, and
occupied Lakotah lands.
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Throughout the 19th century, the
US government "engaged in
multiple military, legal and
political strategies....to deny
Lakotah our right to freedom and
self-determination." Even after
the Supreme Court's 1883 Ex
Parte Crow Dog decision, it
persisted. The Court recognized
Lakotah freedom and independence
in ruling that tribes held
exclusive jurisdiction over
their internal affairs. It
didn't matter as in 1885
Congress passed the Major Crimes
Act to extend US jurisdiction
into Lakotah territory, and more
egregious actions followed.
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One was the 1903 Supreme Court
Lone Wolf v. Hitchcock decision
that recognized near absolute
plenary congressional power over
Indian affairs, virtually exempt
from judicial oversight. It was
an outrageous ruling to let the
government freely expropriate
tribal lands and resources on
the pretext of fulfilling its
federal trust responsibilities.
Quite simply, it empowered
Washington and rendered Indians
impotent over their own internal
affairs, with no rights of any
kind without Washington's
permission.
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This ruling was then used to
violate hundreds of treaties
between the government and
indigenous peoples, including
Lakotahs. As a result, the
sacred Black Hills were stolen
along with billions of dollars
of resources from them. America
was on the move. Lakotahs were
in the way, so they were shoved
aside through all the various
ways described above.
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Today, the Republic of Lakotah
explains the "Genocidal Results
of the Failed American Indian
Policies of the United States"
under the following headings:
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Mortality
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-- Lahotah men have the world's
lowest life expectancy at 44
years;
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-- the Lakotah death rate is the
highest in America;
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-- the Lakotah infant mortality
rate is three time the US
average;
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-- one-fourth of Lakotah
children are fostered or adopted
by non- Indian households - a
willful Americanization policy
to destroy their culture and
existence;
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-- Lakotahs have epidemic levels
of disease and illness; and
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-- teenage Lakotah suicide is
150% higher than the US national
average.
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Poverty
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-- median income is a shocking
$2600 - $3500 a year;
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-- 97% of Lakotahs live below
the poverty line - unmatched
anywhere in the world except by
other indigenous peoples; and
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-- most families can't afford
heating oil, wood, propane or
any way to heat homes.
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Unemployment
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-- it's at 80% or higher; and
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-- government funding for job
creation is lost through
cronyism and corruption.
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Housing
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-- it's so inadequate that many
elderly die each winter from
hypothemia (freezing to death);
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-- one-third of homes lack clean
water and sewage;
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-- 40% have no electricity;
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-- 60% no telephone;
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-- 60% are infected with
potentially fatal black molds;
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-- an estimated 17 people on
average live in each family home
- many with only two or three
rooms; some homes built for six
to eight people have up to 30
living in them.
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Drugs and Alcohol
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-- drug addiction afflicts over
half of Lakotah adults; two
known meth-amphetamine labs are
allowed to operate; and
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-- alcoholism affects 90% of
families.
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Disease
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-- the tuberculosis rate for
Lakotahs is about 800% higher
than the US national average;
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-- cervical cancer is 500%
higher;
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-- diabetes 800% higher; and
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-- the Federal Commodity Food
Program provides sugar-rich
foods that cause high rates of
diabetes, heart disease, and
other preventable illnesses and
diseases.
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Incarceration
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-- the rate for Indian children
is 40% higher than for whites;
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-- 21% of South Dakotan
prisoners are Indians yet they
comprise 2% of the population;
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-- Indians have the second
largest state prison
incarceration rate in the nation
after blacks; and
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-- most Indians live on
reservations that are supposed
to be self- governing - in
principle, that is; around 2% of
Indians live under state
jurisdiction.
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Threatened Culture
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-- only 14% of Lakotahs speak
their native language;
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-- it's not being taught inter-generationally;
the average age of fluent
Lakotah speakers is 65; thus the
language is endangered and on
the verge of extinction; and
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-- the Lakotah language is
forbidden to be taught in US
government schools - a further
indignity inflicted on the
people.
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A Final Comment
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In September 2007, the UN
General Assembly adopted the
United Nations Declaration on
the Rights of Indigenous
Peoples. It passed 143 - 4 with
only Australia, New Zealand,
Canada and the US voting "no."
Eleven nations abstained.
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This document enumerates the
"collective rights of the
world's 370 million native
peoples, calls for the
maintenance and strengthening of
their cultural identities, and
emphasizes their right to pursue
development in keeping with
their own needs and
aspirations."
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The Declaration affirms the
right of native peoples "to the
recognition, observance and
enforcement of treaties
concluded with States or their
successors. It also prohibits
discrimination against
indigenous peoples and promotes
their full and effective
participation in all matters
that concern them."
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This document concluded 25 years
of "contentious negotiations
over the rights of native people
to protect their lands and
resources, and to maintain their
unique cultures and traditions."
In that and the above stated
respects, it's historic and
important.
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Nonetheless, America has its own
"traditions" over and above
those of others it disdains and
abuses - the poor, non-whites,
the disadvantaged, labor,
non-Jews and Christians,
virtually everyone outside its
white supremacists elites, and
clearly its Native peoples from
the earliest settlers to the
present day.
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Nothing's changed from then to
now - Broken Promises, Broken
Laws, Broken Treaties, and
Broken Hope for a Broken People
suffering hugely in the United
States of America - out of sight
and mind and not an issue for
the dominant news media. Very
much one for people who care.
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Stephen Lendman is a Research
Associate of the Centre for
Research on Globalization. He
lives in Chicago and can be
reached at
lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
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Also visit his blog site at
sjlendman.blogspot.com and
listen to The Global Research
News Hour on
RepublicBroadcasting.org Mondays
from 11AM - 1PM US Central time
for cutting-edge discussions on
world and national topics with
distinguished guests. All
programs are archived for easy
listening.
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www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=10946
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