Indigenous Peoples and Human Rights

February 12, 2018

'South Dakota Recognizes Treaty of Ft. Laramie' by American Indian Genocide Museum




South Dakota Officially Recognizes the Treaty of Fort Laramie of 1868
Within the Definition of 'Discovery' is a Mandate for Genocide

By Steve Melendez, Paiute
President, American Indian Genocide Museum
Censored News
French translation by Christine Prat at:
http://www.chrisp.lautre.net/wpblog/?p=4431

The definition of "discovery" per Black's Law Dictionary, Sixth Edition is: "International law, as the foundation for a claim of national ownership or sovereignty, discovery is the finding of a country, continent, or island previously unknown, or previously known only to its uncivilized inhabitants."

With this 1823 law, (Johnson v. M'Intosh), the Supreme Court institutionalized racial discrimination against the Indians. It guaranteed that the Indians would never win their treaty land back in a court of law. In America, not only is justice blind, it is crazier that a bat. The gist of this law says that Indians owned the land right up to the point that Columbus "discovered" it. This law deserves to be dragged from the vaults of America's Freemasonry past and made to stand in the light of day.

 Apparently South Dakotans have had enough of being witnesses to the historic injustices perpetrated  against Native Americans in their state. Too long had white America sat idly by and watched unjust laws that promote racism and instigate wars of genocide continue to happen. On January 25, 2018 the South Dakota Senate passed Senate Resolution 1 which confirmed "the legitimacy of, and South Dakota's support for, the 1868 Treaty of Fort Laramie"

Most South Dakotans know their history. Who can forget the seizure of the Homestake Gold Mine? As President Grant said at the time, "Gold has been discovered in the Black Hills, a portion of the Sioux reservation"?  Even this event would have been expunged from the history books had it not been for a new technology at the time---photography. The photographs have burned into American memory the images of the dead, piled high and about to be thrown into the mass grave at Wounded Knee.

What must never be forgotten by everyone are the laws that justify land grabbing . The tactics in the past the government used against other tribes with treaties must never be forgotten. Only in the light of past legal precedent can racist colonial law be understood. The chilling lesson to be learned is to never venture into the white man's court seeking treaty rights because you cannot win in a kangaroo court. All that has ever been gained by taking a treaty into the white man's court is not land rights but a tiny monetary settlement dangled in front of an impoverished people for their homeland.

The U.S. Government cited Johnson v. M'Intosh  in 2001 when giving their reason for ignoring the Treaty of Ruby Valley of 1863 with the Western Shoshone.

In 1955, when the Tee-Hit-Ton Indians of Alaska had their timber sold by the government to a logging company and clear-cut around their villages, the government also cited Johnson v. M'Intosh .  The Supreme Court chiseled this colonial law in stone when Justice Stanley Reed wrote the majority opinion which said in part:

"It leaves with Congress, where it belongs, the policy of Indian gratuities for the termination of Indian occupancy of Government-owned land rather than making compensation for its value a rigid constitutional principle."

"…After conquest (Indian tribes) were permitted to occupy portions of territory over which they had previously exercised sovereignty, as we use that term. This is not a property right but amounts to a right of occupancy which…may be terminated and…fully disposed of by the sovereign itself without any legally enforceable obligation to compensate the Indians…This position of the Indians has long been rationalized by the legal theory that discovery and conquest gave the conquerors sovereignty over and ownership of the lands thus obtained."

During World War II, Hitler had a policy of land seizure called "Lebenstrom"--living space.  He justified seizing other peoples lands because the German people needed living space.  Do you know where he got such an idea?  I will give you a hint.  He referred to those people already living in those lands as "natives".  Speaking of the Jews and the Slavs he once said, "The natives will be our Redskins".  This is a direct correlation between the Jewish Holocaust and genocide in America. Genocide began in Germany during World War II with an attitude of "Aryan" white supremacy.  Laws were made which literally took away the homes and lands of Jews and others who were not German. It was this same attitude that was painfully on display for all the world to see in 21st Century  America.  At Standing Rock, Native Americans who had lived on the land from time immemorial were arrested as trespassers and labeled terrorists. Confrontations such as this in the past would have resulted in the Indians being expunged from the face of the earth and American memory had it not been for the advent of videography and social media.

 Apparently South Dakotans have had enough of being part of an American Dream that is an American nightmare for Native Americans.  Living under the rule of law is desirable but witnessing unjust laws that dispossess an entire people in Nazi-like fashion was just too much to bear.

Steve Melendez, Paiute

President, American Indian Genocide Museum
Website:http://www.aigenom.org

Copyright Steve Melendez

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