Camille Stewart Gloucester
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
And what is notable in each one of these statutes, I believe particularly in Worcester v.
Georgia, although it seems that it was
supporting tribal sovereignty in that they were above state jurisdiction.
So the Removal Act happened after all of these statutes that you already had that supported federal Indian sovereignty.
And so the Cherokees in Georgia were one of the tribes that were removed.
And so you kind of see what you talked about, the
justification for settler expansion and so again we bring it back to these themes of like settler colonialism in order to um kind of gain more of this land and a lot of these statutes are still cited the doctrine of discovery in them and rather than supporting tribal policy
the relationship between the United States federal government and American Indians, um, was not based on the rights of Indians, but more that they can't, they can't govern themselves.
And there's a couple of federal Indian policy theorists, Vine Deloria Jr., who's one of the most famous ones, and David E. Wilkins, who talks about how there is no need for checks and balances within the federal Indian policy system.
the Battle of Recygrass or the Little Bighorn, where General Custer was killed by Sioux, Cheyennes, and Arapahos, and different instances of battles such as those, and also where a lot of tribes were forcibly removed to
Um, and next, um, you have the termination era.
So the federal Indian government as trying to get rid of tribes, especially as you can see in this era.
And just kind of like other policies that have given the tribes more rights to determine for themselves and their own people to a certain degree underneath the federal government as domestic dependent nations.
I think I could talk about more about like what I mean by it personally and what I've understood it to mean to other people.
Well, some people also might mean and recognize that this whole United States government is a settler state based on the doctrine of discovery, which is based on denying slavery.
And we have seen some of that or also just people interrupting the narrative in their own mind of their Euro-American identity.