Native Americans And Treaties with the Government

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“We must protect the forests for our children, grandchildren and children yet to be born. We must protect the forests for those who can't speak for themselves such as the birds, animals, fish and trees" Chief Qwatsina’s of the Lakota Tribe. The plain natives, a respectful people, took from the land what they needed and always gave back. The settlers that came thought they were smarter and more advanced than the natives, and viewed the natives as being inferior. In reality it was the exact opposite. It was the settlers that had forgotten that the most basic way of life was the smartest way of life. The settlers were clouded by their “vast knowledge” that they convinced themselves that their way of life was the best and only way of life and that anything less was not acceptable. The natives were a strong people and not easily swayed, but despite there relentless will to fight they, in the end, would lose. Living side by side was not a realistic option for there differences were too vast. Treaties were made and treaties were broken along with the line of trust between the Natives and the government, making a diplomatic solution impossible. The only reason that the government was able to push the Natives off their land was to exterminate the bison. The Native American conflict in textbooks is said to have started at King Philips war, but the conflict really began when the initial settlers made their first encounters with the natives, coming to a conclusion at the end of the Great Sioux war in 1877. The native tribes of the Great Plains (residing from Montana to Colorado and North Dakota to Kansas), and at some level, all of the native tribes for had a very close tie with the part of earth, which provided for their survival. They s...

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...October 5, 2012. Accessed February 10, 2014. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-eKft8CB6AM.

This is a video with a native american bias that shows the relationship between Tecumseh and whites. I use this video to show how natives and whites would never be able to live side by side.

Wildcat, Wayne. "The Buffalo Harvest." ICE Case Studies. Last modified December 18, 1997. Accessed January 8, 2014. http://www1.american.edu/ted/ice/buffalo.htm.

This website is an overview of the relationship between the natives and the American Government and people, with a Native bias. This website appears to be credible but the other website says the same thing more thorough and is more credible. What I can take away from this site however is a great primary source buffalo days: forty years in the old west: the personal narrative of a cattleman, Indian fighter and army officer.

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