lunes, 18 de abril de 2011
Time to Nominate!!! :)
sábado, 16 de abril de 2011
Amendment Proposal!
As a member of the Congress, I would make many changes in the rights of the U.S. citizens. One of the groups that need some changes and other rights are the Native Americans. Most of the people think that only homosexuals, African Americans, immigrants, Catholics and others are discriminated in the U.S. but they leave out the Native Americans, who were the first ones to live in the U.S.
We, the U.S. citizens, forget that the Native Americans had been forced out of their land by the whites and imagine if they were the ones that forced us out of our land. It will not be fair for us and it was definitely not fair for them. Native Americans have had a lot of problems with the whites and they still feel discriminated and we have to stop it. Everyone is equal and is not equal and is not fair that because they have different religion, beliefs and customs does not mean that they should not be treated equal. Although they began rebelling against us, the whites, but they rebelled because we were being unfair taking all of their land. Today, there is a minority of Native Americans in the U.S. because they are not able to success in their land. That's why I want to propose an Amendment for the Native Americans.
This Amendment will include the right for Native Americans to live free in their land and being able to attend schools and have employments without any problems and also to live without any police harassment. I would also like to include that the whites or any U.S. citizens could not use stereotypes to identify Native Americans, because it would make them feel discriminated. So, I hope that YOU, as part of the U.S. Congress vote for this Amendment to be added. With these rights, Native Americans will feel equal and not discriminated for sure!
jueves, 14 de abril de 2011
Changes in Native Americans Rights
These pictures show what were some moments of the Civil Rights movement for the Native Americans in the U.S.
The Native American culture was one that everyone had the right to be equal. When the American government took control over Native American lands, the Indians had tofollow all of the rules that the whites proposed. When the U.S. Congress passed down the Civil Rights , there were only a few rights for Native Americans, but changes had occurred and the whites startedto recognize that they were part of the U.S. too.
The Indians had many reasons to be angry at the whites and to start battles because the U.S. government was being unfair with this people. All Native Americans born within the territorial limits of the U.S. are by law citizens and are given the rights of the U.S. Native Americans have the privilege of voting in national elections since 1924, but some states prohibited Native Americans from voting in local elections, such as New Mexico. Indians do not receive payments from the federal governmentsimply because they are Indians.
Today,some Native Americans tribes receive benefits from the federal goverment in fulfillment of treaty obligations or for the extraction of tribal natural resources. But still with some benefits that the Native Americans receive from the U.S. government, they have broken promises with the Indians and they are even discriminated still. Indian tribes deserve to have a peaceful life on their own land. Also, the U.S. government must respect the binding agreements spelled out in their own treaties with the Native Americans. The U.S. government has promised the Indians many things, but few had become real.
martes, 12 de abril de 2011
The Struggles of the Native Americans
Native Americans treated the whites with respect and they even shared their land with them. But the whites wanted their land to make money, in which caused the Native Americans to get angry and fight. Indians could not be freein their land anymore and their form of protest against the whites was fightiing.
The NativeAmericans were very peacefuland treated the whites. After the whites realized that their land was very valuable, they did anything as possible to get it. The American government decided to do a Removal Act for the Indians, in which they were forced to get out of their land and if they didn't, the whites would start fighting and killing Native Americans. Many Native Americans tribe had nochoice than to relocate to reservations, but as the time passed, the Indians realized thuat they were not treated theright way and they were discriminated by the whites.
Later, the Native Americans realized that they did not deserved to live in such conditions in the "white land" and they had to stop obeying "white rules" and start living their normal life since the whites did not respect them. This was when battles broke up between the whites and the Native Americans. These battles were known as savage and violent, and they took place in a small area, and involved few people. Native Americans joined and killed or captured as many whites as possible and often scalped the dead. Most of the wars were little more futile attempts by desperate, poorly equipped Native Americans to keep their land and their way of life. The whites won and often rewrote history to suit themselves. Today, many Native Americans live in reservations with their way of life, religion, and beliefs but are still discriminated by some whites.
//answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=2008062705496AAzRFdg
viernes, 8 de abril de 2011
Oppression of the Native Americans!
This is a picture of a part of the Bill of Rights of the U.S.
Many movies show us that Native Americans were the ones who always treated the whites badly and did not wanted to share their lands. This "mistreatment" towards the whites caused many problems including battles in which Native Americans always used the scalpping methods. But, guess what? These problems were exagerated in movies and it was totally the opposite because the whites were the ones who treated badly the Native Americans
All of the Native Americans were treated badly by the whites in the 1800's. This mistreatments started when the whites realized that the Native American's lands were valuable with many minerals and fertile soil used to crop, in which they could make money. The whites from the U.S. government invaded Native American's land, killed their people,broke some treaties, and send them to reservations. In the past 200 years, Native Americans have been stripped of their land,rights, and dignity and have become a minority in the U.S. today. Native Americans were once proud to live in a nation like the U.S. but sadly today they have the highest suicide rate and lowest life expectancy.
Racism in the U.S. has been a major issue since the colonial era and slave era. Major racially structure institutions included slaves, Indian wars, Native American reservations,segregation, residential schools for Native Americans and internment camps. According to the Bill of Rights, every person should be treated equal no matter the race and they should have the right to be free and there should not be segregation. But, today Indians are still discriminated since they still live in reservations and some whites even try to be far from them because of their beliefs and ways of living. Why can't they live their lifes just as everyone else, with their beliefs? They are humans just like us! Native Americans still have rights in which they can be educated in any public school and they have a higher probability to be successful in their lifes than in earlier years.
(www.docshare.com/doc/131340/Mistreatment-of-Native-Americans)
miércoles, 6 de abril de 2011
Native American Rights in the United States...What is their History?
The Native Americans were the first ones to conquer and live in the lands of the United States, even before the European settlers came and discover these lands. Native Americans were and are still scattered all around the U.S. and they are related in culture and genetics. Based on the anthropological and genetic evidence, scientists agreed that most Native Americansdescended from people who migrated from Siberia across the Bering Strait between 12,000 years ago, trying to escape from the ice covers of the last ice age. Native Americans,since then, have adopted the way of living in the U.S. and considered it as their homeland. Many problems such as military defeat,cultural pressure, and confinement on reservations, forced cultural assimilation, outlawing of native languages and culture,and slavery between the 1950's and 1960's had bad effects on Native American's mental and physical health. Since the 1960's Indians were no longer safe in their lands and were dying because of battles they had with the whites.
In the 2010 Census of the U.S., there were 2.5 million Native Americans reported, which represented 0.9% of the population (http://2010.census.gov/2010census/data/). Native Americans were strong but the whites started to take their lands and they bacame weak and their population decreased alot. A few Native Americans became succesful in their lifes with works such as the whites but others refused to have the life of the whites. Today, Native Americans live in resaervations all around the U.S. and still follow their beliefs and customs but I think that they do not have enough rights and they are still not treated equally as they should be, since they were the first ones to live in the U.S.