Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Aren’t people native to the place where they were born?
Not necessarily.
Most in the U.S. are occupiers.
ALL are occupiers.
Those "Native Americans" came from Asia.
Not only that, but they didn't even come all at once. There were waves of them migrating across the land bridges over the centuries and even over millennia in some cases. So even among the indigenous people in the Americas, you still had established people and newcomers. And yes, they fought each other and took their lands many times over. These are humans after all, and not some "noble savages."
I am getting really tired of this misinformation being spread, both repeatedly on this thread and every time people talk about indigenous Americans.
No, they were not all fighting and taking over each other's territories all the time. There were maybe 50 million people across both continents, which cover 17 million square miles. Tribes were not huge and lived in villages that were loosely congregated by language and culture across larger areas, similar to how Alaska natives live today. When Europeans arrived, they were able to establish boundaries between tribes pretty easily and drew maps using rivers, mountains, etc. There may be have been occasional clashes over hunting territories, problems following ecological stressors, and a small number of tribes with an aggressive culture, but overall there is not much evidence that there was overlap or conflict among different groups, who were more focused on day-to-day issues than "territory."
The fighting and political conflicts among tribes that most people know about happened after contact when fur trapping became extremely lucrative and territorial rights and boundaries became important to tribes. Also, as Europeans pushed westward and consumed natural resources, tribes that previously had not had to deal with scarcity suddenly had to develop mechanisms to protect themselves and were encouraged by the US Government to fight with each other. These were not traditional patterns.
It is ignorant to post these kinds of responses "they fought each other and took their lands many times over" without knowing the history, and I suspect it is done with racist intent.
I appreciate your attempt to educate us, but you should probably read a bit more extensively before lecturing. It's misleading (and uncomfortably similar to the white supremacist narratives you claim to deplore) to conjure the entirety of North America as having ALWAYS been a sparsely populated continent, settled only by scattered villages.
Setting aside the Aztec capital, which had (by some estimates) up to 300,000 inhabitants at its peak, there were also civilizational centers across what is now the US. The most famous of these is Cahokia (in what is now Missouri and Illinois), which scholars have estimated was a city of 40,000 people at its peak, but which had outposts all the way up into Wisconsin.
It was first contact with the Spanish that really depopulated the continent -- some really gnarly epidemics, featuring diseases that native populations had not encountered in millennia or ever, took horrific tolls.
To this end, the earliest Spanish accounts of contact make for tragic, if fascinating, reading. The first round talked about thriving cities. Then the Spanish left for a bit. Wen they came back, roughly half a century later, they found almost nobody left.