Native American Removal
For decades, Native American Removal has brought a lot of suffering and cruelty for the Indians. How the so-called “civilized” people of the west could display such barbarism in the past is a shameful chapter of American history. Unfortunately, some people still believe that taking away their land was the right thing to do, merely because they were the more superior people at the time. Such thinking can reflect on the treatment the Indians received, and the ignorance that were displayed by the Americans.
The first century of the United States is poisoned with brutal acts and slandering words towards the Indians. Many founders and “heroes” such as President Washington and Jefferson described them as “Beasts and savages” and left them with little choice other than to die out, migrate, or become totally assimilated. Not do be outdone by this, President Andrew Jackson advocated slaughter and mutilation the Indians in 1830, as he ordered his men to cut of their noses to “provide” accurate body counts. This brutality is not only limited to early American history. As such in 1890, President Roosevelt declared that nine out of ten cases, the “only good Indian was a dead Indian.” These four men mentioned did not only serve as Presidents of the United States, but three have their faces carved into Mt.
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As early as 1830, the Indian Removal Act, which moved the Indians to “Indian Territory” (West of Mississippi). The act stated that the President would “forever secure and guaranty” this lands the Indians. “Forever” turned out to be around 76 years, as this land soon become part of Oklahoma. In the Fort Laramie Treaty from 1851, native groups were promised a $50 000 payment in exchange for the use of native land of a 10 year period. Soon after, the US Senate reduced this amount to $10