In the comments section, someone named Tony put up a spirited defense of America's genocidal actions. I've debated people like this hundreds of times, so I shouldn't bother, but I got carried away and did it again.
Go to the original posting to see all the arguments in context. I've picked a few of Tony's most egregious claims to rebut:
If you think pioneers settled the "wildness" of the West, you're perpetuating the myth that Indians were savages without culture or civilization. That they were little more than from wild animals. That's the same argument as before, so the distinction you're making--settling the West vs. settling the West's "wildness"--is immaterial.
The fact is that the Indians had already settled Americas when the Europeans arrived. No amount of semantic games can change this fact.
Later in your argument, you yourself tell us how Indians weren't idealistic tree-huggers--how they altered the landscape by cutting trees, burning brush, etc. News flash, buddy: These are the activities involved in "settling" the land. So you implicit admit what you've tried to deny: that the land wasn't "wild" and didn't need "taming" or "settling."
Disease killed most Indians...really?
And so what if disease killed 90% of the Indians and warfare killed only 10%? Ten percent of several million people is still mass murder and it still constitutes genocide.
FYI, the intent to exterminate Indian peoples and cultures is what matters, not the results. Similarly, we call the Holocaust an act of genocide even though many Jews survived it.
You gotta it when genocide defenders point out that disease killed the majority of Indians. As if that's some stunning revelation. As if Indians and liberal ("revisionist") historians didn't realize it until a few conservative soothsayers pointed it out. Thanks for that deep insight, pal.
FYI, forced relocation and cultural destruction are part of the official definition of genocide. If you "kill the Indian to save the man," you've committed an act of genocide even if the victim lives. For more on the subject, see Genocide by Any Other Name....
And war is always waged to kill people, bright boy. That's inherent in the definition of war. If a war has other motivations, that doesn't change the fact of the deadly intent.
Again, by your logic, the 9/11 terrorists didn't intend to kill the people in the World Trade Center. They wanted to send us a message about getting out of the Middle East and innocent victims just happened to get in the way. Unconscionable, yes, but not mass murder according to you.
No alternative to being savage?
Among the things Indians could've done but didn't were: 1) Wallow in unsanitary conditions without bathing. 2) Demand obedience to a hierarchical church and state with "divine" authorities. 3) Devote their lives to gathering material goods and titles. Which explains why people the Indians captured almost always wanted to stay with the Indians.
Your pseudo-socialist fantasies notwithstanding, many if not most Indians understood the concepts of personal property and territorial rights (e.g., hunting grounds). Again, you don't need written records if you're not prone to lying and cheating, as Euro-Americans were. "You stay on your side of the river and we'll stay on ours"...simple.
Have you heard of the fur trade? Many tribes had extensive trade economies. Whether these economies were "formal" or not is irrelevant. And keeping trade records doesn't necessarily require a written language. Drawings, notches, beads, or memories can substitute for written tallies.
Here's a good example of the Indians' informal economy:
Ancient Miwok harvested salt
For trade according to new report
By Don Baumgart
“The site is the most impressive prehistoric saltworks yet discovered in North America,” Diggles and Moore said in their report, “and represents a unique departure from traditional hunter-gatherer activities to that of manufacturing.”
The grinding of so many basins in granite could not have been done without the labor of a concentrated population.
In short, thanks for sharing your stereotypical "history" with us. You're doing a great job of regurgitating your grade-school textbooks. I'm so glad to hear that the first racist settlers were correct and Indians really were primitive "savages."
Western culture is superior?
What do you base your ridiculous claim on? Euro-Americans "won" primarily because of their inadvertent germ warfare, which you admitted. They also won because of their propensity to break their own vows and laws after signing treaties. Even with these unanticipated and immoral advantages, Native defeat wasn't inevitable. So where exactly is the cultural superiority?
If you define "cultural superiority" as military supremacy, then it's easy to determine the greatest culture in the modern world. The US defeated Britain, Germany, Italy, Japan, and the USSR...and Vietnam defeated the US. Vietnam is Earth's greatest culture.
If you define "cultural superiority" as economic supremacy, you have about a decade before China overtakes the US (and Vietnam) as Earth's greatest culture. Then what? You'll be reduced to weak, qualitative arguments such as "the US is the freest country on Earth" even though other countries have more income per capita, less crime, longer life expectancies, etc., etc. In other words, you'll become a cultural relativist.
Have you read Jared Diamond's Guns, Germs, and Steel? If you have, you must've missed its message. The message is that the West succeeded because of the luck of the draw, not because of any innate superiority. For more on the subject, see The Myth of Western Superiority.
Are you really saying "progress" is such a virtue that it was worth the death of millions of Indians? Please answer yes or no. Yes, the progress was worth with it or no, it wasn't. Let's see exactly how much or little you value Indian lives.
"Might makes right" better than Zinn?
For more on the subject, see Europeans Taught Natives "Discipline, Order"?, Europeans and Indians Equally Evil?, and No Colonization, No United States?
Below: Our superior Western culture.
A few problems with your post:
ReplyDelete"Among the things Indians could've done but didn't were: 1) Wallow in unsanitary conditions without bathing."
First off there were European cultures that did have a standard of cleanliness; the Norse for example were renowned for their hygiene. You're essentially doing the reverse of what anti-Indian bigots do; comparing the best of the Indian cultures to the worst of the European cultures.
"2) Demand obedience to a hierarchical church and state with "divine" authorities."
Would that include the Basques who owned their land free of the church or crown and practiced democracy? Second of all religious fanaticism is not exactly something unique to Europe.
"Devote their lives to gathering material goods and titles."
This an example of stereotyping not every single European culture was a hellish feudal monarchy; take the medieval Italian republics for example or the Manx Tynwald which is one of the oldest examples of democracy on the planet.
"Which explains why people the Indians captured almost always wanted to stay with the Indians."
That sounds like some absurd premise straight out of a bodice ripper.
"Again, you don't need written records if you're not prone to lying and cheating, as Euro-Americans were."
Even more absurdity you seem to be suggesting that Euro-Americans are genetically prone to lying while all Indians were sweethearts. Then there's the matter of this quote:
"As for the sophistication of the Native American civilization, it all depends on what you value: technological advancement and material wealth or sustainable culture built on respect for community and for nature. I think the Native American belief and property system were far more sophisticated than the Western ones that replaced them."
The problem is that there were Eruopean cultures that had respect for community and nature; the Basques would be a perfect example.
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ReplyDeleteAlthough I like some of the "Art of Manliness" articles, this isn't one of them:
ReplyDelete'Retribing'
Check out the book:
Retribing book
I just read this:
ReplyDeleteThe Art of Manliness is Anti-Woman
I'll backtrack... That's scary as f*ck: To recap, the Pioneers were cool, inspirational and "manly" (who cares about the Indians?) and women should not be allowed to vote or go to College. Whoa...
Please wake me up when we are finally in the 21st century- all of us.
I've never heard of a Native culture that didn't practice bathing. In contrast, many if not most European culture didn't practice it. So I was comparing average to average, which is fair and valid, not best to worst.
ReplyDeleteSome generalizations about European bathing customs:
http://www.wordinfo.info/words/index/info/view_unit/2701
* Through great periods of European and much of U.S. history, clieanliness was inconvenient, religiously restricted, or just plain out of fashion.
* Living unwashed were saints, the masses, and monarchs alike.
* In response to the debauchery of Roman baths, the early Christian church frequently discouraged cleanliness. "To those that are well, and especially to the young," Saint Benedict in the sixth century commanded, "bathing shall seldom be permitted."
"Demand obedience..." was a generalization, something you've demonstrated you don't understand. And except for maybe the big empires (Aztec, Maya, Inca), Indian cultures weren't fanatical about their religions. They didn't insist their religions were the only valid ones or try to convert others to them.
ReplyDelete"Devote their live..." was a general comment on the materialism of Western culture. It applies to democratic countries such as the US as well as to Europe's monarchies.
Couldn't you find a more significant medieval democracy than the tiny Isle of Man? How about Iceland?
FYI, the Italian "republics" were mostly republics in name only. Here's what people have said about them:
http://www.allempires.net/medieval-italian-republics_topic27401.html
What I found from the little I researched is that they were oligarchies, only rich and powerful residents of the cities themselves ruled them. Franchise was limited and was modeled on the Roman model (grouping people into classes with a certain weight according to wealth).
The medieval Italian republics were not democratic in any meaningful modern sense. It was essentially the rule of the trading interests (the burgesses). It's no coincidence that this form of government was preferred in these booming trading towns over monarchies.
I think the Western propensity to lie is cultural, not genetic. It probably has something to do with avoiding shame and punishment from one's fellow Christian sinners.
ReplyDeleteAs for my claim about Indian captives, I believe it's well-documented in the literature. For instance, in this excerpt from Lies My Teacher Told Me by James W. Loewen:
The historian Gary Nash tells us that interculturation took place from the start in Virginia, "facilitated by the fact that some Indians lived among the English as day laborers, while a number of settlers fled to Indian villages rather than endure the rigors of life among the autocratic English." Indeed, many white and black newcomers chose to live an Indian lifestyle. In his Letters from an American Farmer, Michel Guillaume Jean de Crevecoeur wrote, "There must be in the Indians' social bond something singularly captivating, and far superior to be boasted of among us; for thousands of Europeans are Indians, and we have no examples of even one of those Aborigines having from choice become Europeans." Crevecoeur overstated his case: as we know from Squanto's example, some Natives chose to live among whites from the beginning. The migration was mostly the other way, however. As Benjamin Franklin put it, "No European who has tasted Savage Life can afterwards bear to live in our societies."
Europeans were always trying to stop the outflow. Hernando De Soto had to post guards to keep his men and women from defecting to Native societies. The Pilgrims so feared Indianization that they made it a crime for men to wear long hair. "People who did run away to the Indians might expect very extreme punishments, even up to the death penalty," if caught by Whites. Nonetheless, right up to the end of independent Indian nationhood in 1890, whites continued to defect, and whites who lived an Indian lifestyle, such as Daniel Boone, became cultural heroes in white society.
Finally, your "problem" with Nik's quote stems from your misreading of what he said. He referred specifically to the Western beliefs that replaced their Indian counterparts. The Basque belief system wasn't influential in Europe or the Americas, so it's irrelevant to Nik's claim.
ReplyDeleteP.S. Thanks for the update on "The Art of Manliness," Kat. I presumed I wouldn't like it, but I didn't investigate it. I figured it would just make me mad. Glad to see I was right. ;-)
ReplyDelete