The Sorrow of the Trail of Tears

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Thousands of people departed Europe, during the colonial settlement time period, out of desire to have land given to them or the opportunity to gain land, to obtain religious freedom, and many other reasons. Europeans migrated their entire families to settle in the very distant, frontier now known as the Americas. Was this not the very basis for leaving Europe, and coming to the Americas? But what was inflicted on the Indians who occupied North America, was almost exactly which that the settlers wished to escape. What the Indians were subjected to, is utter and total hypocrisy. The Trail of Tears, was a focused event of ethnic cleansing, blatant racism, religious oppression, and subjugation or elimination of the Indian tribes. It is shameful, and a great stain upon the conscience of the United States' history, that this idea was imagined and supported, and then acted upon. Forcibly removing the Indians, seizing their lands to further the goal of white settler expansion, and to exert control and usage over their lands and natural resources, was exceedingly wrong.
The Trail of Tears was a calamitous, sad, and truly revolting time during our countries' early 19th century history. It was an eight hundred mile death march, enforced and escorted in many cases, by the military (“Cherokee”). The various Indian tribes were made to suffer tremendously, all in the name of the greater good, and the white settlers' cowardice and greed. However, it is a little known fact that Trail of Tears was a fully government supported, and mandated Act. It was known, officially, as the Indian Removal Act of 1830. There were five major tribes affected by this act. The affected tribes were: the Cherokee, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Muskogee Creek, and ...

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...da or Mexico. This would have prevented the bloodshed, hardship and all of the associated results of the Indians' plight.
In the end, the predicament of the Native Americans was completely avoidable. However, Americans chose the easy, and wrong path, by outright savagery, enslaving the Indians, or herding them into unwanted territory. What is worse is, that this was not a singular event. The government and the Native Americans never actually signed a treaty, thus refraining from giving them their own sovereign land, even to this day. Instead, a Band-Aid of a fix was offered--reservations. Reservations granted some leeway in jurisdiction as a minor consolation, but this is far and away, a very insignificant grant in comparison to what Indians once had. This too, one day, will be revoked by the government and consolidated in to the United States. Mark my words.

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