Massacre of India The US government uses military force to adopt genocide policy against Native Americans. In politics, thousands of American Indians died by removal, concentration and assimilation policies. Economically, the US government uses power as long as precious resources are found in the soil of India. In the social aspect, the near extinction of Buffalo has resulted in starvation and death among tribes. The evidence clearly shows that the US government is utilizing military power and economic pressure to carry out genocide policy on American Indians.
The title of this article may cause the opposite reaction by suggesting that genocide is part of the history of American Indians. Do Europeans and Americans qualify as Indian actions and policies as a massacre? In short, scholars, students, citizens and almost everyone has views on this subject. Some people are convinced that the answer to this question is positive, ie the massive decline in the population of the United States since 1492 is a clear case of genocide. However, others are also convinced that the answer is "no" in the same way. In short, the actions and policies of European and American Indians are sorry (at least from time to time), but can not be marked as genocide.
For the past 20 years from the third season, the concept of genocide had only a negligible effect on the writing of American Indian history. As an indication of genocide in the academic field of the American Indian History, authoritative Blackwell's companion American Indian history contains a large number of articles in 25 chapters. No or Churchill's books are included in that bibliography, of which 487 are hard to be accused of being incomplete 47.
Massacre of India The US government uses military force to adopt genocide policy against Native Americans. In politics, thousands of American Indians died by removal, concentration and assimilation policies. Economically, the US government uses power as long as precious resources are found in the soil of India. In the social aspect, the near extinction of Buffalo has resulted in starvation and death among tribes. Evidence clearly shows this