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The United States does not welcome the plight of American Indians for the first time on the United Nations agenda. Because it is a question of examining the fate of a population of 2,7 million inhabitants ravaged by a multitude of plagues and in appalling proportions. But what to expect? Because the word of these exterminated is inaudible.
(...)
The war of the States against the Tribes
But the worst for these tribes at the moment probably comes from the pressure of the States to grab their lands. There are many conflicts across the country. They are ignited under various reasons, like the will of the Governor of New York, in 2007, to extend the taxation of the State to the territories of the Seneca Nation, which engendered a violent legal fight. And although the territories left to the Indians are for the majority poor in resources and difficult to access, their contestation by the States which shelter them are more and more common.
However, the natural demographic and sociological slope followed by this population which the American Constitution ignores should be resolved by the most natural process in the world in the decades to come: extinction.
(...)
Christophe wrote:Nice article on the Amerindian genocide: http://actuwiki.fr/environnement/16990The United States does not welcome the plight of American Indians for the first time on the United Nations agenda. Because it is a question of examining the fate of a population of 2,7 million inhabitants ravaged by a multitude of plagues and in appalling proportions. But what to expect? Because the word of these exterminated is inaudible.
(...)
The war of the States against the Tribes
But the worst for these tribes at the moment probably comes from the pressure of the States to grab their lands. There are many conflicts across the country. They are ignited under various reasons, like the will of the Governor of New York, in 2007, to extend the taxation of the State to the territories of the Seneca Nation, which engendered a violent legal fight. And although the territories left to the Indians are for the majority poor in resources and difficult to access, their contestation by the States which shelter them are more and more common.
However, the natural demographic and sociological slope followed by this population which the American Constitution ignores should be resolved by the most natural process in the world in the decades to come: extinction.
(...)
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