Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Who Gets What?

Native Americans have been in this country before anyone else.  However, when you look at national statistics, they are seemingly the least populated people in America.  After hundreds of years, Native Americans still seem to be "given the shaft."  They were forced out of their villages, onto reserves, and are given lesser supplies and leftover resources.


Everything amounts to money, in the end.  Native Americans formed the integrity of this country's land and natural resources before any European set foot on American ground.  Because of this, Native Americans deserve to be given the proper recognition.  They should be given better living conditions, proper resources, and better food supply.  After all, they started it for us to finish it, right?



Where The Bond Lies

Native Americans were here before anyone else.  Arguably, so were Latino Americans.  Both groups were in the North American region before the Europeans came and took over.  They are seemingly the oldest two groups in the history of America as a country.  African Americans, however, were brought here by Europeans after the invasion of Native American and Latino tribes.  


Keeping this in mind, it can be concluded that Native and Latino Americans will always have a stronger bond than either group will have with African Americans.  Being here so long, African Americans can be seen as those who came in and took even more of the land that the Native and Latino Americans already lost.  Its a battle of territory, and the African Americans can be seen to have invaded, as they are "higher" than other minorities in today's society. Even so, the art of Latinos and Native Americans is similar, as well as skin tones and music genres.



Why Can't We All Just Get Along?



African Americans have had many struggles to overcome in history.  In America, African Americans are seen as "the underdog," and rose from the bottom to be in a position enough to "compete" with white America.  On the other hand, African Americans are also perceived as a threat in many situations.  For example, the Trayvon Martin case.  On many occasions, cases such as this have proved African Americans to be nothing more than threats to everyday living.


Latina Americans are still seen as "lower" than the average American.  They are seen as low, and only good enough for hard labor.  Native Americans are also understated.  For such a rich and bountiful people, America oversees them as low-down and needing the help of America.  


African Americans, Latina Americans, and Native Americans have always been at odds.  I believe that banding together against the "greater, white America" could be an alliance no one can ignore, and allow all three groups to be better seen as a whole.

When Color Does Exist


In the subconscious, one sees people and immediately judges them.  We are a judging species, with everything from color of skin to religion to social habits.  Cliques, organizations, clubs: all are formed and the popularity of each is based off the judgement of prospective members.  In history, the color of someone's skin has always been basis of how others will perceive you.  Slavery, invasions, wars: all started by the simple fact of judgement.


In history, the darker the color of the skin, the harder it was to be accepted.  African Americans and Native Americans have been at odds, because each has gone through a racial profiling, and trauma.  African Americans feel as though they have been through hell and high waters, and Native Americans had it "easy."  Native Americans were only pushed against, while African Americans were taken from their continent and forced into hard labor.


Native Americans, on the other hand, feel as though African Americans are lucky.  In contrast, there are many more African Americans living and leading successful lives than there are Native Americans in the entire country as a whole.  Native Americans were always a hard-working, strong-spirited people.  Even so, they were trespassed against and Europeans stole all they had.




The Conflict

The Native Americans have a rough relationship right? Yes. Their relationship has always been this way right? NO.
Native Americans and Africans Americans were once people under the same roof who had very similar cultures and beliefs. The "bad blood" between them is only a recent issue. The Native Americans were promised money by the government for their tribes. The money is to be shared among all the members of the tribe evenly. Learning of this, the Native Americans decided to exclude African Americans from the tribe in order to only have the money distributed among Native Americans of pure blood. The Native Americans feel that the Africans were not truly part of the tribe because they did not go through all the same trials and tribulations. Although, some of them did. Sociologically speaking, the Africans and Natives had very similar cultures. They both had very deep ties with nature and respect for the gods which governed each part of the earth. They were very easy to get along with. When the Africans escaped slavery, many of them ended up settling on Native reservations where they found safety and companionship. The Native American chiefs are being greedy and forgetting the connections of the past in the face of money that they and the African Americans deserve.