Avatar feed
Responses: 3
Lt Col Scott Shuttleworth
6
6
0
It is a painful past...native Americans were not treated with the dignity and respect of a human being. Some say it was in the name of religion but it was all about fear and greed. Thanks for the post.
(6)
Comment
(0)
Avatar small
MSgt Dale Johnson
6
6
0
Good intentions are not always carried out in a good manner.
(6)
Comment
(0)
PO3 Justin Bowen
PO3 Justin Bowen
>1 y
Since when is intentional cultural genocide as part of the "Kill the Indian in Him, Save the Man" policy considered a "good intention"? Perhaps at the same time that slavery in the US and the Holocaust were considered to be petsonally beneficial to Blacks and Jews (and gypsies and others) because it taught them useful useful skills that they could later use to...

Oh, wait a second...
(1)
Reply
(0)
MSgt Dale Johnson
MSgt Dale Johnson
>1 y
PO3 Justin Bowen - IMHO, many of those schools ran by Christian Organizations thought they were helping when in fact they were not.
Also you need to look and evaluate History from the perspective of the time, Slavery was a horrible wrong perpetrated on many people throughout the world but that is the way the world worked from before written history.
Someone was always subjugating others who were weaker, lands were taken by force and usually the inhabitants forced to work the land for those who conquered them, or they were pushed off for the people of whoever conquered them.
(0)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small
MSG Stan Hutchison
1
1
0
It was not limited to the 1800's. My wife was sent to an Indian boarding school when she was 9 years old. (1958)
(1)
Comment
(0)
Avatar small

Join nearly 2 million former and current members of the US military, just like you.

close