Time To Bring Native Americans The Foundation of the American Dream: Property Rights
Native
Americans in the U.S. and Property Rights: A Comparative Look at
Canada’s First Nations Property Ownership Act – The Atlantic:
The 2 million Natives in the U.S. have the highest rate of poverty
of any racial group—almost twice the national average. This deprivation
seems to contribute not only to higher rates of crime but also to
higher rates of suicide, alcoholism, gang membership, and sexual abuse.
As of 2011, the suicide rate
for Native American men aged 15 to 34 was 1.5 times higher than for the
general population. Suicide is the second leading cause of death among
Natives aged 10 to 34.
Alcohol-use disorders are more likely among American Indian youths than among any other ethnic group.
Involvement in gang activity is more prevalent among Native Americans
than it is among Latinos and African Americans. Native American women report being raped two-and-a-half times as often as the national average.
The rate of child abuse among Native Americans is twice as high as the national average. And each of these problems is worse among the half of Natives who live on reservations.
[…]
The economic devastation in American Indian communities
is not simply a result of their history as victims of forced
assimilation, war, and mass murder; it’s a result of the federal
government’s current policies, and particularly its restrictions on
Natives’ property rights.
Reservation land is held “in trust” for Indians by the federal
government. The goal of this policy was originally to keep Indians
contained to certain lands. Now, it has shifted to preserving these
lands for indigenous peoples. But the effect is the same. Indians can’t own land, so they can’t build equity. This prevents American Indians from reaping numerous benefits.
[…]
Indian reservations, Terry Anderson and Shawn Regan wrote in Louisiana State University’s Journal of Energy Law and Resources,
“contain almost 30 percent of the nation’s coal reserves west of the
Mississippi, 50 percent of potential uranium reserves, and 20 percent of
known oil and gas reserves”—resources worth nearly $1.5 trillion, or
$290,000 per tribal member. Tragically, “86 percent of Indian lands with
energy or mineral potential remain undeveloped because of federal
control of reservations that keeps Indians from fully capitalizing on
their natural resources if they desire.”
[…]
The people I met on reservations were not suffering because others
don’t understand their heritage or know their tribal language. What
American Indians need are real property rights.
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