The Three Amendments Of Native Americans In America

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In today’s society, you can notice that many Native Americans cannot be seen in the United States of America, even though they lived in America for more than a thousand years. This is all started when whites conquered the American. Taking control over the lands left Natives Americans without much of freedom and rights. After Civil War, three Amendments for minority people in the United States passed on. These are 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments. When the 14th Amendment passed, Indians did not gain the right that the 14th Amendment has as African Americans have. According to one article, “The Amendment was intended to give citizenship to the African-American former slaves and not to Indians… Government agencies (the Bureau of Indian Affairs, the Department of the Interior), and the courts (state, federal, and, ultimately, the Supreme Court) consistently held that the Fourteenth Amendment did not confer citizenship on Indians.” This statement shows that even living in the same nation and getting involved in each other lives, natives were not considered as citizens of the United States. Moreover, natives are not as …show more content…

According to History Central, “Most tribes and nations of Native Americans did not have amiable relations with the government of the United States… thousands of Indians had been pushed off their land and forced to settle further west, or on reservations.” This shows that Natives Americans were not shared the new laws that were just passed right after the Civil War. Its seems that the government does not even count them as their people even after helping them with wars. Most of the time, the U.S government intended to look Natives Americans as a group of people who are not needed in this country. From when white settlers came to America to today’s society, they appear to give only a little concern for the

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