HAVING AMERICAN INDIAN IN MY BLOODLINE I THINK IT NECESSARY TO DEAL WITH A BIG ISSUE CONCERNING THE EARLY WAYS IN WHICH WE AS A NATION DEALT WITH INDIANS.
www.wallbuilders.com/downloads/.../CelebratingThanksgivingInAmerica.pdf
www.wallbuilders.com/libissuesarticles.asp?id=100
Celebrating Thanksgiving in America
December 1621 to thank God and to celebrate with their Indian friends 11 – America's first Thanksgiving Festival. Ninety Wampanoag Indians joined the fifty ...www.wallbuilders.com/downloads/.../CelebratingThanksgivingInAmerica.pdf
Issues and Articles - God: Missing in Action from American History?
John Marrant, the first African American to evangelize successfully among American Indians; the Rev. Richard Allen, who gained his freedom from slavery, ...www.wallbuilders.com/libissuesarticles.asp?id=100
Much of our history is filled with opportunism WITHOUT self control or God's leading being a part of that exploration, this is NOT God's fault but ours as a nation. So it is important to understand that many historical settings were plainly UNCONSTITUTIONAL in nature AND UNGODLY in their viewpoint, the USEFUL IDIOTS of the time being used by the powers that be.
When we look at the circumstances surrounding certain happenings in history its very important that we UNLIKE those who have a personal agenda, like the useful idiots, use our heads to get to the bottom of the WHY of history.
The American Indian was FAR FROM INNOCENT and very far from being God fearing people, while some of their practices can be traced to biblical practices they were after all "Pagan institutions" developed over Centuries of practice! The further away from their biblical roots the more polluted with "Pagan ideas" their lives became.
The useful idiots love to develop story lines of Christian vs Indian practice and surrounding that with Land grabbing and murder, because that sells press not the MANY STORIES of Christian and Indian cooperation. The MANY years of peace mean little to the idiots that serve bad press.
It must be understood that as long as God's Love and Laws were obeyed within the confines of history there was peace and understanding and when those rules were broken for ANY REASON - war and death followed and NO NATION ON EARTH WAS OR IS EXEMPT.
History must be tempered with PROPER background, and that background must be tempered with PROPER facts tempered by THE TRUTH OF GOD. Those who USE History as their "personal agenda creator" are the worst kind of people.
They look at issues in history like "Slavery or Indian affairs" and superimpose upon them a "Modern mindset of agendas" that did not exist then, this is changing history IN ANOTHER TIME PERIOD to serve an agenda NOW IN THIS TIME. Not to avoid repeating the issue, which would be a Nobel idea but to make the modern issue seem worse than it really is.
They look at issues in history like "Slavery or Indian affairs" and superimpose upon them a "Modern mindset of agendas" that did not exist then, this is changing history IN ANOTHER TIME PERIOD to serve an agenda NOW IN THIS TIME. Not to avoid repeating the issue, which would be a Nobel idea but to make the modern issue seem worse than it really is.
Ask yourself the question, have "Indian Affairs" been helped by these useful idiots or has it been rendered as more of the same. They've created a certain view of history and then mirrored that same FALSE idea throughout our history to make America seem less of what she really is.
The problem is, its FALSE HISTORY that is the basis of every idea that we now use to deal with the Indians, the Blacks, the Hispanics and others including Whites. All peoples have been badly represented by these "idiots" who use history to bring down nations and governments for their Socialist, Communistic agendas. The Muslims have rearranged history in their favor many times and are doing as we speak.
www.wallbuilders.com/.../ IsPresidentObamaCorrectIsAmericaNoLongeraChristianNation.pdf
Is President Obama Correct: Is America No Longer a Christian Nation?
Apr 10, 2009 ... repeatedly claimed that America is not a Christian nation. He ..... in which Indian lands were wrongly being taken for timber, minerals, and other ...www.wallbuilders.com/.../
America’s Founding Fathers
The Treaty of Tripoli
The Origins of Separation of Church and State
The Founders and Slavery
The Founders and Freemasonry
The Bible and Church in America
Revisionism
"How Congress Took Control of Indians’ Lives"
by Rob Natels
Just as Congress has stretched its Interstate Commerce Power into
authority over the entire national economy, so it has used the Indian
Commerce Clause to justify micro-managing the lives of American Indians
and of their tribes.
It wasn’t supposed to be that way.
The Articles of Confederation gave Congress power over Indian
“affairs,” but in practice the states also continued to exercise
authority over Indians. States passed trade laws, regulated Indian land
transactions, and in some cases exercised a general police power over
Indians within their boundaries.
When the Constitution was adopted, the federal government was granted
some control over dealings with the Natives. However, this was one of
the very few areas where the Constitution actually granted the new
governmentless authority than Congress had enjoyed under the
Confederation.
Instead of sweeping power over Indian “affairs,” the
Constitution granted
(1) to the President-and-Senate, power to make
treatise with the Natives,
(2) to Congress, power over federal property
and territories (where many tribes lived), and
(3) also to Congress, the
power to “regulate Commerce . . . with the Indian tribes.”
The Treaty Clause (II-2-2) empowered the President-and-Senate to
govern the details of Indian relations, but only with the consent of the
affected tribes, since both sides must agree to a treaty.
The
Territories and Property Clause (IV-3-2) granted Congress power to
regulate tribes, but only on federal land. The Indian Commerce Clause
(I-8-3) gave Congress control over mercantile trade and certain related
activities.
The specific model in the Indian area consisted of state
Indian trade statutes and a Confederation ordinance that addressed such
matters as preventing fraud, licensing merchants, and regulating prices.
Also part of the constitutional settlement was that the states
retained their general police power over Indians within their borders,
subject to pre-emption by congressional regulations of commerce and by
treaties.
This system began to break down in the 1870s with the announcement by
Congress that the federal government would no longer make treaties with
the Indians. How Congress could bind the President-and-Senate this way
was never adequately justified or explained.
Congress then began to regulate Indian affairs on the basis that
doing so was part of its “inherent sovereign authority”—supposedly
unenumerated authority outside the Constitution.
The theory of “inherent
sovereign authority” is complete jurisprudential nonsense, and
contradicted by both the intent and words of the Tenth Amendment.
Although the Supreme Court rejected the theory in Kansas v. Colorado (1907), it continues to surface from time to time.
Also cited as justifying wide congressional authority was the “trust
relationship” between the federal government and the Indians. But trust
rules do not grant power; they merely set standards by which power is to
be executed.
In modern times, the favorite justification for congressional
omnipotence over the tribes is the Indian Commerce Clause. Apologists
resort to some of the same tricks used to justify congressional
omnipotence over the economy—including the Indian Trade and Intercourse Act of 1790, which I discussed in my last post.
In the area of Indian commerce, moreover, apologists for Congress
often go even farther, claiming that congressional authority over Indian
affairs is exclusive—that states have no jurisdiction over
Indians at all. There is little justification for this theory, and it
has proved unworkable in practice.
In 2007, I researched and wrote an article called The Original Understanding of the Indian Commerce Clause.
During the research, I found that the state of the commentary on the
Indian Commerce Clause was even more dismal than in most other areas of
constitutional law. Most of articles on the constitutional background
consist of interventions by activists and others with little knowledge
of the Founding Era or of originalist methodology.
Bottom line: Reading the Constitution according to its real meaning
shows that, although Congress was to have a significant say in Indian
affairs, its rightful power is far from absolute. Both Indians and
non-Indians need to inform Congress of this much more often.
In private life, Rob Natelson is a long-time conservative/free
market activist, but professionally he is a constitutional scholar whose
meticulous studies of the Constitution’s original meaning have been
published or cited by many top law journals.
(See www.umt.edu/law/faculty/natelson.htm.) Most recently, he co-authored The Origins of the Necessary and Proper Clause (Cambridge University Press) and The Original Constitution(Tenth
Amendment Center).
After a quarter of a century as Professor of Law at
the University of Montana, he recently retired to work full time at
Colorado’s Independence Institute.
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