Sunday, May 24, 2015

LONGEST OCCUPATION IN UNITED STATES–FIRST AMERICANS DISFRANCHISED ON LAST OF THEIR LANDS

European immigrants from the first called Americans the "enemy" and later "foreigners" until the 20th century.  Although they fought in all American wars to help the United States, they were not recognized as citizens until 1934 and granted freedom of speech and due process of law until 1968. Yet these soverign rights they inherited from birth as human beings and were denied flat out.
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Dear Ones,

These First Americans were derogatorily called "Red Skins" as American Africans are still pegged "Black," what is code for slave.  To this day the traditional people who speak their own language, earn less than $7,000 a year.

For years U.S. restaurants displayed signs in their windows, "No dogs or Indians allowed."  Perhaps this is one reason why they have been held back, prisoners by the elected Bureau of Indian Affairs, the  most corrupt regulatory department of the government, through results of investigations by Congress.

The government also broke over 400 treaties, the most powerful law of the land, even stronger than eminent domain.  This culture was also self sufficient until the government was corrupted by its first biological warfare used in "gifts" of blankets from small pox hospitals, what diminished their population exceedingly and when the government  chose to exterminate the American bison, their very livelihood. 

Further genocide came in the 1970s when First Americans were sterilized when they were admitted to hospitals, uncovered by Senator James Abourezk, under reign of CIA director George H. W. Bush (1976-1977).

Later came welfare used as another control, what cause suffering and instability within their own culture.   These proud people had governed themselves with the people supplying their own food and natural medicine, more advanced than Europeans when they first arrived on American shores.

But the bright side is that First Americans through the Five (later Six) Iroquois Confederation of Nations  inspired the U.S. Constitution with the words, "We the people to form and establish a union , , , "  This  great Indian Constitution  was founded on Democratic principles and fostered visions of peace–the first government democracy without slaves (unlike the Greek democracy that harbored people in bondage).

President Woodrow Wilson's League of Nations, that the U.S. refused to accept since it wanted complete control), was also the seed for the later accepted United Nations. Still to this day there are nearly 600 nations within a nation in the United States.

Mame,
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