• @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    But you and I did NOT. I see a lot of people online who can’t make the distinction.

    EDIT: Thanks for replies, all. Some good conversation here

    • @[email protected]
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      491 year ago

      Of course I’m gonna assume good faith from you here, but I feel like some people boil down issues like this to “well I mean I didn’t do it so stop complaining”, and that’s wildly reductive and irresponsible at minimum.

      Arguing the situation in this way sidesteps the uncomfortable and inconvenient reality that the United States is yet still occupying native land, whether it be Hawai’i, Alaska, or the contiguous territories. Yes it’s entirely possible that mine or your ancestors didn’t perpetuate these things as immigration is and has always been ongoing, but the point everyone misses is that we are still here.

      I couldn’t possibly imagine belittling natives for acknowledging the fact that their land was taken from them by force. Some real colonialist shit.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        I feel you, and also acknowledge it is a hairy subject on a grand scale.

        I also try to frame the issue in the actual, real moment. I try my damndest to do as little harm as humanly possible to anyone. Should I be forced to give money to someone affected? Land? Should I be punished?

        Who benefits? A grandson of someone displaced? A great great grandson? Whole family trees? How do you make shit like this right after so much time?

        Mostly, I’m trying to encourage thought and discussion. Fundamentally, I think people should be judged on their own merits and actions, not their lineage.

        • @[email protected]
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          91 year ago

          That will always be an issue until the US government actually has real communication and cooperation with native people.

          I don’t necessarily think that citizens of occupied land are automatically responsible for the past actions of a government (not to say that’s what you implied), but said government that committed the atrocities is. As far as the other part of the equation, I suppose the beneficiaries should be determined by the natives themselves.

        • BOMBS
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          81 year ago

          The way I understand it is that even if we omit any ancestral blame for what happened, the Native Americans are still dealing with the impact while European descendants benefit from it. It’s kind of like if I went to school with a very bright kid that was horribly abused and kicked out into the streets, so they performed poorly and dropped out, allowing me to get into the best college possible and have a great career. Why should I have any compassion for this kid if I didn’t abuse them myself? Why would I help them get housed and into college? Why would I even acknowledge that they were abused and forced out of their home? I’m one that earned it by working hard to get into college and graduate.

          This omits the possibility that this kid might have outperformed me and taken the college spot, leaving me to be in a worse off situation.

          • @[email protected]
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            81 year ago

            Not 1000% on board with your analogy, but I understand and fully agree lol.

            I just wish most people had the empathy and mental capacity to understand the intricacies of this stuff. It’s a hell of a lot easier to just say “uH wOw I ain’t payin reparations for no dang indians” than it is to actually think for a minute about and acknowledge the real history of where you live

          • @[email protected]
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            11 year ago

            How far back in time are we going to enact justice? My 36x Great uncle Olaf never got his comeuppance (/s a little)

            • TigrisMorte
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              01 year ago

              As far back as required to make those involved feel as if they were compensated. If you feel that 36x Great uncle Olaf’s loss affects your Family Today, then you should have your day in Court to make the case. However, as most likely 36x Great uncle Olaf was in fact not involved in anything in a currently oppressed People’s past, it’ll be a hard case to make.

        • TigrisMorte
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          31 year ago

          The outcome needs to be negotiated and yes, the Tax Payer should foot the bill for the redress for the actions of the State and individual wealthy Families should foot the bill for the crimes their wealth stems from. For example: the entirety of Oklahoma’s rather impressively inhumane treatment of the Native Tribes needs to be dealt with as the People that profited from the malfeasance are still holding the proceeds of those crimes.

      • @Anonymousllama
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        11 year ago

        we are still here

        Yes, people don’t leave occupied land. It’s never happened historically and certainly won’t happen now, that’s the point of occupation. People can acknowledge what happened but in practical terms thinking that somehow all native land will be returned is just naive.

        • @[email protected]
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          01 year ago

          Oh well of course, at this point in time it’s been made extremely clear that natives will be getting absolutely no land back, even unoccupied land in the plains for example. There’s no major figures in government even remotely speaking on this stuff in a substantial way, so it may as well never happen. Fucked up stuff on top of all the other fucked up stuff.

          And also to be fair, implying that most anyone here believes that all land should be returned is pretty naive in and of itself - there are absolutely more options than ALL OF THE LAND and NONE OF THE LAND

        • @[email protected]
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          01 year ago

          False equivalence, that’s an entirely different historical context. Things can apply to one situation and not another

          • @[email protected]
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            11 year ago

            Explain. How is it a false equivalent? Romans controlled the city / region for over a thousand years and were later conqured, and their land stolen, to use the vernacular of this thread.

            • @[email protected]
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              11 year ago

              You’re oversimplifying in order to compare the two. Wildly different historical contexts with entirely unrelated events. Distilling both down to “area conquered” just so you can make a point is reductive.

              Beyond that though, why does it matter honestly? Does the fact that a city was conquered in the 1400s invalidate anything mentioned so far?

    • Neato
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      121 year ago

      That doesn’t mean everyone living on stolen land gets a pass just because they weren’t the ones to steal it. They have an obligation to make it right.

            • @rockSlayer
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              171 year ago

              Just sayin’ but there are still several native tribes still existing across the Americas. We can talk to them.

              • @FireTower
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                31 year ago

                Unfortunately it was pretty thorough, especially so on the East Coast. Many states

                • @[email protected]
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                  31 year ago

                  I don’t think they were trying to downplay the severity. I think they were just pointing out in a snarky way that there were survivors, and thus, we can ask their descendants these questions.

                • Catfish [she/her]
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                  31 year ago

                  I’m from a tribe whose ancestral homelands were within the 13 colonies. We have demands and we are not extinct.

        • @IMongoose
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          91 year ago

          My town just voted to give some land back to native American descendants by buying it from the current owners.

        • PlasterAnalyst
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          11 year ago

          Land shouldn’t be owned indefinitely and passed through families. It’s not right to have created a dynasty based on one guy in the 1800s claiming everything in sight and having his idiot descendents be wealthy simply based on the fact. They didn’t do anything except inherent land.

          Land that isn’t your primary home should have to be leased and not owned, that way it’s being used most effectively and not privatized for the sole benefit of the owner. It leads to land speculation and squatting of land that someone else would like to use.

          Additionally, natural resources should also belong to the people and companies should have to pay fair compensation for their extraction.

          • SquareBear
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            41 year ago

            Yeah but that isn’t what everyone is saying. They are saying give it all back to the native Americans and what? Move back to Europe?

            Israel is more muddy people have been taking that land from eachother for millenia. Just because after the 2nd world war Israel was re-created after being stamped out prior to that. Who was the aggressor and the victim back then.

            • PlasterAnalyst
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              11 year ago

              TBH, I don’t see what’s do great about Israel anyway. It just looks like a hot desert area with rocks everywhere.

        • TigrisMorte
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          -81 year ago

          Both sides must come to an agreement that both agree to, without coercion by sword. All involved.

      • Tb0n3
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        -41 year ago

        You say stolen, everyone else says conquered.

        • @GeneralVincent
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          111 year ago

          Right, conquered is worse because it implies it’s stolen via violence at a large scale. While just stolen could mean taken quietly and without violence. Thank you for addressing the seriousness of the issue.

    • Muad'Dibber
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      1 year ago

      If you steal someone’s TV and give it to your kid, does that mean the person who it was stolen from shouldn’t get it back? Its the kid’s now???