I do not believe that there are any truly sovereign nations within the borders of the US. Also the federal government does have the power to simply remove recognition just as it has denied recognition to many legitimate tribes in the past.
Would you agree that unless a "nation" has complete control of all activities within its boundaries it is not truly sovereign. The US has no power over the governing of my country, except economic pressure, nor does Britain, France or Russia. Canada is sovereign, we are an independent nation, does any Indian nation have that sovereignty. No, you are all Americans and American and state citizens. Indian sovereignty comes from the federal government and it can be taken away by the federal government. You cannot renounce your citizenship and still live in the US without a green card. I know I was born in the states and lived there on a green card because I gave up my US citizenship when I became naturalised here.
The fact that Indians are such a small part of the population, and that the vast majority of Americans are not bound by the guilt of the 18th and 19th centuries. Their ancestors came through Ellis Island, not on the Mayflower. It would be politically naive to suggest that the relationship between tribes and the federal government will continue. Most voters, black, white and Latino don't believe that they have an obligation to less than 2% of the population. The same is true here, there are more people who were born outside of Canada than the entire aboriginal, Metis and Inuit population.
Black voters have made their feelings quite clear through the CBC, they are tired of seeing Indians with as they see it special rights and its their taxes that pay for those priviledges. And as they see it the CNO uses federal money to practice racial discrimination in violation of federal law and treaties. If the tea baggers, white right wingers, are any indication of public opinion, tax dollars to special interest groups including Indians will end sooner rather than later.
As to the comment about me being a racist, that is pure nonsense. Some folks use that word to describe anyone who has a different opinion than you. My wife is French Canadian and Wendake (Lorretteville, Quebec) , my family is so racially mixed that none are identifiable as any race other than mixed. We speak 2 languages in our home and I have been active in the human rights movement for over 40 years. However people who cannot recognise that not everyone in their race or ethnicity is not a racist and have not enslaved people an been racially prejudiced in the present, is a racial chauvinist. If you believe that all things that Inians have done were good and all things than non Indians do is bad who is the racist? I don't and never have been a racist racially prejudcied or a national or racial chauvinist. I have the same problems in black groups where folks believe that everyone who has any black blood has to hate whites, which is basically the same they call me a racist when I criticise black folks. Bferoe I use a word as loaded as racism you should really read Webster Dictionary definition.
What will tribes do, how many can continue to exist without federal funds? Simple rule in democracies the majority rules and the majority are not Indian. The same was true when black people were denied political power, but now they have it.
I do not believe that there are any truly sovereign nations within the borders of the US.
Then that makes you a hypocrite because you continue to cite the 1866 treaty, and a treaty is a signed agreement between two sovereign nations.
Of course in reality, the tribes today are domestic dependents. This does not mean they are not sovereign or true nations. Domestic dependent is sorta like being a child, you are your own person but have a parent overseeing some of what you do. Hence the word "dependent" within the phrase.
This is no to say however that the tribes could not totally manage themselves without the US government stepping in. At this time my tribe is 98% independent of the US government, and so we need very little from them.
Also the federal government does have the power to simply remove recognition just as it has denied recognition to many legitimate tribes in the past.
The United States can send troops into Canada if it wanted, just as it has Iraq and other places and do so with just about the same ease.
Sure the United States can eliminate a tribal government with the stroke of a pen, but would that action be any more just or unjust as in an outright invasion of another country?
It would surely be subject to damnation by other nations and the UN just the same.
Of course in regards to you bringing up plenary power of the US government over the tribes, that is just you trying to further reach a way to argue in favor of the freedmen by expressing the power of the United States.
It's almost as if you are bragging about the US and it's ability to commit such an injustice since you do not believe in the power of the tribes to exercise their sovereignty. You almost sound like a far right winger when you say things like this.
Would you agree that unless a "nation" has complete control of all activities within its boundaries it is not truly sovereign.
Actually, I would not agree.
The concept of a nation state with an ethnic group all nice and tightly fit within a specific border is a European notion.
Though the United States does not have one specific ethnic group within it's borders, the idea in which you are pushing here is still a very European minded notion. There are many nations in places like Asia in which there might be a central government recognized by other nations and the UN, there are still tribal nations and groups within those borders. They do in fact exercise a large degree of autonomy and self rule. If other nations across the world have existed like this, and still are; then there is absolutely no reason whatsoever that it can not be done in Canada and the United States.
Furthermore, long before the coming of the European the nations here did have our territories, and I see no difference in them and the territories held by nations today.
However many tribes had areas that were neutral and shared by more then one nation. So again your notion of a nation can not exist within a nation is still a false one of European mindset.
The US has no power over the governing of my country, except economic pressure, nor does Britain, France or Russia.
At any time with some international incident, as I said earlier, the United States could very much put more then just economic pressure on your nation of Canada. Even just economic pressure can be hard on a country. Just look at the devastation caused on countries like Cuba that have suffered decades of embargo.
does any Indian nation have that sovereignty.
Again, your ideas about sovereignty are European in nature. Furthermore nations like Iran have full sovereignty, and yet the United States believes it has the right to tell them if they can posses nuclear weapons or not. The only difference between Iran and an Indian nation is the size of the land mass, the population, and the presence of a military.
These are just degrees in sovereignty, and you are just using them in ways to argue that the sovereignty of tribal nations does not exist, when in fact they do.
No, you are all Americans and American and state citizens.
I know Canadians with dual Canadian and American citizenship. That of course makes this aspect of your argument invalid.
As member of domestic dependent nations, we are full members of both our tribal nations and the United States.
Indian sovereignty comes from the federal government and it can be taken away by the federal government.
Completely and totally wrong!!
The tribes posses what's called
inherent sovereignty, which by
definition means having always been sovereign This is no different then any other nation that has always been sovereign.
So the federal government can not give what a nation has always had. Now since the tribes have been invaded and now are administered as domestic dependents, and that is not unlike if the US invaded another country and occupied it indefinitely while still allowing that particular nation some degree of autonomy.
The fact that Indians are such a small part of the population, and that the vast majority of Americans are not bound by the guilt of the 18th and 19th centuries. Their ancestors came through Ellis Island, not on the Mayflower.
Well with that argument in mind, then that would mean that the majority of Americans owe black people nothing for slavery.
That is unless you chose to continue to be a hypocrite and think that Indians should be paying for things you now are here claiming the vast majority of Americans are not responsible for.
Most voters, black, white and Latino don't believe that they have an obligation to less than 2% of the population.
Again, another fallacy on your part with this argument.
The vast majority of voters used to be in support of segregation and other Jim Crowe laws, but did that mean they were just in supporting that???
Do you believe that the majority of people do not need to own up to obligations their country gave to anther group of people when it committed genocide upon them and took their land and resources?
Black voters have made their feelings quite clear through the CBC
In actuality, most black voters are not even aware of this issue. Those that have heard it are just as misinformed and wrong about it as you are.
You can't claim the Cherokee Nation is racist over the Freedmen issue when it has open enrollment and more people of black majority blood then it has people who are full blooded Cherokee. These blacks Cherokee in tribe are in no danger of losing citizenship whatsoever.
What we have here is Diane Watson and others in the CBC being hypocritical for getting involved in this issue, when Watson has tribes in her own back yard that are guilty of disenrolling members, and yet she says not a word.
To me that is Racism.
they are tired of seeing Indians with as they see it special rights and its their taxes that pay for those privileges.
How do you know this, have you spoken to every black person in the United States about this issue? Most blacks in the United States that I have ever talked to, have been very supportive of Native Americans since our histories are similar.
The Freedmen issue might cause a stir in some that hear about it, but when it is pointed out that there are thousands of black Cherokee in the nation in no danger of losing citizenship.
YOU yourself continues to point out how you do not think the tribes are actual nations.
If what you say is true, then what are tribal governments then? I would assume then that going by your logic they are entities of the Federal Government created to be social services for those with Indian ancestry.
It that is true, then going by your argument; Indian tribes are social services reserved for Indians and therefor not intended for people without a certain ancestry. If blacks need social services, or reparations for having slaves as ancestors, then those should be taken care of by the federal government with things such as social security, welfare etc....just like any other American in this country.
they see it special rights
If anyone see's what is the US government upholding treaty stipulations as special rights, then they are surely ignorant and need an education.
Furthermore, if these black people you claim are tired of seeing Indians get
so called special rights, then by all means why are we even having this argument when the same one would fall against blacks and what has happened to them.
In that regards, nobody owes blacks in this country a single penny.
What will tribes do, how many can continue to exist without federal funds?
You need to educate yourself about tribes in the United States, and not argue based on stereotypes. There are many tribes today that receive very little from the federal government, and do not need much from them.
If it were not for the federal government making sure the tribes that are dependent on them remain that way, the vast majority would have needed next to nothing from them as well.
[Al's note: Split thread, retitled it, and moved it to Etc.