259 Comments
User's avatar
⭠ Return to thread
John Cougar Misanthrope's avatar

Yes, in Michigan. Obviously, there are exceptions.

The situation with Native Americans is similar to the situation with other minorities, particularly in urban areas. It's why brilliant thinkers like Thomas Sowell condemned affirmative action and race-based preferences as he recognized that these practices are counter-productive.

They do not promote upward advancement but rather only serve to perpetuate dependence on the government for support. William F. Buckley, Jr. once said, “There is an inverse relationship between reliance on the state and self-reliance.”

Controlling minorities through dependence on the government is an industry just like abortion and the prison system.

Expand full comment
Guttermouth's avatar

The reservation system is slow-motion extinction and a reflection of a centuries-old lack of political will to do one of two things:

1) Make designated Indian territories fully sovereign nations with the powers (and responsibilities) to figure out their own shit.

2) Make those with tribal claims to Indian territories and identity regular American citizens with no positive or negative special status, designate their land privately owned that they can do whatever they want with under law like everyone else, and finally end their status as existing in a limbo-state of half-assimilated descendants of conquered people.

Expand full comment
Johnny truthseeker's avatar

My understanding is that since the reservations operate outside of American jurisdiction on lots of matters, the people suffer under corruption from their leaders.

Expand full comment
Holadios's avatar

Sounds like unions.

Expand full comment
Guttermouth's avatar

Yes. While there are certainly good ones, tribal councils have basically no oversight and are the first stop of all cash going into or out of the reservation ecosystem.

Read up on "tribal roll purges" for a typical example of how this corruption usually works.

Expand full comment