It keeps the White people from having to fight with the Indians and allows them to take the land to develop it into something that will help America grow with the strengthening of the southwestern frontier.
Why is it good for the Indians?
It allows them to move to seemingly decent land under seemingly acceptable conditions or to become proper, God-loving creatures rather than to stay savages. It is apparently best for them to go far away or change completely.
What does Jackson want to see happen to former Indian lands?
He wants the land to become populated, strong, and wealthy, like other cities/towns/farms-- mostly cities.
What is the best possible outcome for the Indians? …show more content…
However, becoming civilized and abandoning savage traditions would make them "happy, prosperous people."
Is Indian removal democratic? Why/not?
It seems democratic to shift this land into something that can serve the White American people. The plan is to take this land for America and gift it to Americans so they can live better; the strength of the govenrment to take this land is great because it allows more strong states and more liberty for the