American people convicted of murder

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    settlers lived their daily lives. Other factors such as the glooming presence of the British, and Native Indians also caused trouble amongst the settlers. Western life was different from the rest of the nation because of the troubles faced by the people, the vast nothingness of the landscape, and conflicts with the British and Indians. The journey West is a story of danger, hardships, and even death. The land was relatively unexplored, and roads were an idea of the distant future. The first…

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    Native American Beliefs

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    Today, there are many people who believed that the Native American were the savages, bloodthirsty. Due to their lack of knowledge of history, they only believed in pertinent stories or inaccurate sources that led to misunderstand about Native American. Actually, the myths and stereotypes of Native American have to understand in the context of history. The Indians also boasted of their tribes in the United States and used the name "Native Nations" instead of the "tribes", unorganized tribes. Even…

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    determining factors. Francis Parkman’s The Oregon Trail: Sketches of Prairie and Rocky-Mountain Life originated as a book and was published in 1849 with the purpose of examining the life of Native Americans in the west and the Oregon Trail. The book contained descriptions of pioneers, native american people, wildlife and landscapes during his travels that originated in Independence, Missouri and ended in Fort…

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    When the Europeans colonized North America, the Native Americans and the Europeans actually formed a sort of partnership and mutual understanding to each other. The Europeans learned to get along with the Indian tribes through gifts and tributes to the chiefs of the Indian tribes. This partnership eventually began to decline and fail when the British and American populations grew in the region. Their presence helped destroy the partnership because of many reasons. The first reason this…

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    forth, but disease truly changed the future of the New World. Over the centuries, Europeans had developed immunities to a variety of sicknesses. When they arrived in the New World, Native Americans were exposed to a deadly concoction of diseases, to which they had no immunities to fight. Millions of Native Americans…

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    Denniz Puzz Analysis

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    Denniz Puzz, Jr. graduated from the University of Minnesota Law School and has since been dealing with Native American legal issues. He has been the Executive Director of his own tribe, Yurok Tribe, and has also worked with multiple other tribal clients. In his lecture on February 9 in the UC, he spoke of various issues that exist with Native American legalities, as well as highlighted the issue of tribe sovereignty. To begin his lecture, he gave a definition of tribe sovereignty, and he…

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    Sepulveda's Analysis

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    brutal conquest of the Native Americans. “There are other causes of just wars less clear and less frequent, but not therefore less just or based any less on natural and divine law, and one of them is the conquest by arms, if no other way is possible, of those who by natural condition must obey others and refuse to do so. The greatest philosophers state that this type of war is just according to the laws of nature…” (Sepulveda, 66-70). According to this, the Native Americans are essentially…

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    to dominate the trading economy. When Columbus discovered the West Indies and Bahamas, a new world of opportunities was shown to Europeans. The Spanish arrived and immediately started to torture the Natives, purposely and accidentally. The Native Americans were not accustomed to the new settlers way of life, or the factors that they brought with them, such as disease. If a Spanish settler wanted to seize control over an Indian village he could easily do so without having to exert much force due…

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    blood raging politics between the European and the Indigenous, which thus left a history of bloodshed. For instance, the Myall Creek Massacre was a holocaust, which was depicted as the most controversial genocide in Australian history, marking the murder of 28 vulnerable Indigenous men, women and children, where European massacrers were actually persecuted and bloodshed for their…

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    By the time the explorer Bernal Dìaz del Castillo had his encounter with the natives it was not a very pleasant encounter because when he did his exploration the natives were “beginning to die off in large number because of disease and harsh treatment.” (Castillo, 18) The remaining natives became allies with the Spaniards. If the natives were not allies with Spaniards, then they were considered spies. If the natives were considered spies, then they were tortured by having body parts cut off.…

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