Date sent: Sat, 27 Apr 1996 14:33:09 -0500 (CDT) Discrimination Against Native Americans in America; Past and Present. During our country's brief history, America has prided itself as being the forward moving, upward culture throughout the past, present, and upcoming times. But our "great" nation has for centuries scorned the true Americans, weather it be by forced labor for children, relocating the entire society, or not keeping health care promises. Native Americans have been on the outside of our society since the beginning, virtually enslaved and trapped in the laws and regulations of the new America. At the time of the creation of the U.S.A, Native American tribes were considered foreign nations with which treaties needed to be made. Native Americans were not considered American citizens because The United States Senate had ruled that Amendment 14, an amendment stating that all living on US land would be granted citizenship, did not apply to the Native American tribes. From the beginning, citizenship for Native American tribes was given in treaties for land. In return for their land, the Indians would gain American citizenship. In 1830 the American Senate passed the Indian Removal Act, and many tribes were forced off their land and onto government reservations. No longer were they able to trade their land for citizenship. The Government took what they needed, and left the scraps for the Native American tribes. Eventually, treaty making with the tribes ended in 1871 with the passage of a new act, the Appropriations Act (16 US Stat. 544), which made it legal for congress to legislate without the consent or the agreement of the Native Americans in that area. No longer did the tribes have any say in the activities or their freedom. The tribes became pawns in the political struggle for land and expansion of America, and the rights of the Native Americans were ignored. The civil rights of Native Americans in our country's past isn't much better, either. Since the Native Americans were not thought of as US Citizens, neither were they treated that way. Many laws were written by the US Government that trapped the Native American people into the stereotypes of the whites . One such law was passed in California, April 23, 1850. This new law severely limited the rights and freedoms of Native Americans in California. The new act made it easier for whites to take the Native American minors into their care, keeping any profit the child made until the boys were 18, and girls, 15. And it became easier for white Americans to convict Native Americans, since their ( the Native American's) testimony was automatically ruled out as false. In 1896, The US Supreme court held the Talton vs. Mayes case, stating that the Bill of Rights didn't apply to tribal governments. Native American tribes govern themselves, and don't acknowledge the US as their government, therefore the court reasoned that the Federal Constitution didn't apply to the tribes and people within them. This case didn't attract much public interest until the 1960's, when the freedom and equal rights movements were in full gear. Senators of the US were shocked to learn that the Constitution didn't apply to tribal government. In 1968, Congress passed the Indian Civil Rights Act, a new law that protected the rights of the individual among Native American governments. Finally the Native Americans had equal rights in America. Today, tribes living on reservations act as semi-independent nations. The US maintains a government-to-government relationship with these tribes, and most tribes with reservation land are on the land as a result of treaties. All Native Americans that live on reservations currently receive birth to death medical and dental care. Although this may seem to be a blessing, still 31 percent of Native American's income is below the poverty line, and a welfare check doesn't lift a family above the poverty line. Many tribes are now dependent on tourism. Legalized Gambling on the Native American reservations employs 300,000 Native Americans. Although many are profiting from the gambling industry, 1.7 million are not involved in the Gambling industry. At the Lakota Pine Ridge Reservation, 8 in 10 residents are unemployed. This poverty also affects the health of Native American families. One in five Native American families live in a home without a toilet or telephone. Also, the rese! rvations lack running water or electricity. Native Americans are 4 times as likely to die of alcoholism, and Fetal Alcohol Syndrome (FAS) is six times the national average. Alcohol is responsible for half of all crimes committed on the Lakota Reservation, and can be seen as the cause of child abuse, infant mortality, and suicide. What is even more alarming, is the leadership that isn't there. The Department that oversees National policy towards Native Americans itself agrees with the funding cuts being made. Funding for alcohol prevention programs has been cut in the recent years, and Interior Secretary Bruce Babbit, believes that cutting the funding only worsens the problems, for other departments of the government. "It will do no good to cure these devastating cuts by sacrificing other department programs benefiting science and the environment" Babbit said. Until we can see the true problem of discrimination and concentrate on fixing it, unlike Bruce Babbit and others like him, all we will do is dance around the flames. Until we get ourselves burned, and discover just how aloof we are from the true Americans, we cannot begin to understand and help overcome boundaries set long ago by the new America. We view ourselves as a nation who lives by the credo expressed in the beginning of the Declaration of Independence, "All men are created equal", but a review of the federal government's treatment of its Native Americans living here belies what we profess to hold as our most important value. Clearly we have a long way to go... Outline 1) Introduction 2) Tribal rights, past denials and past disappointments. a) tribal rights, independent nations inside America. b) tribal treaties broken, a long trail of many tears. c) tribes rights decreasage... no longer a treaty needed. 3) Civil rights of the individual, citizen or not? a) the laws that bind.. California Senate. b) Bill of rights, and individual people. c) equal rights, but late coming... 1968 freedom movements. 4) Modern tribes, times and trials of division. a) reservations, gambling, and poverty. b) department leadership that wasn't 5) conclusion... where we are headed and what direction we need to aim. A Perfect World A perfect world would be, the perfect place, to cry, dream, or scream in the solitude of space A perfect world would be, drug and cancer free. All desieases curable, no death besides the natural. A perfect world would be, where everyone was free. Equal rights, equal liberty. No matter race, religion or society. A perfect world would be, where food for all was free. No hungry children stealing bread, No need for soup kitchens or Army's rations. A perfect world would be, a place of worldwide equality. Equal levels of income & technology No starving 3rd-world countries. A perfect world would be, a place of peace among countries. No single armies assembled no enemies to fight. A perfect world would be, a place of universal harmony, each person a citizen of the earth, dividing oceans no barrior in peace. A perfect world would be, full of universal love and freedom. Differences celibrates, greviances forgiven, blind love seeing no hate. A perfect world would be, all these and more, unending love, respect and peace, a wish for Planet Earth.