thecuriousviolet
Fun fact

Native Americans weren’t allowed US citizenship until 1924.

Let that sink in. We lived here first…for thousands of years. And less than a hundred years ago we were finally given citizenship.

istamaza

We also fought in WWI despite not being US citizens.

the-yaadihla-girls

In Arizona, natives weren’t granted the right to vote until 1948. Think how that type of neglect ties into resource colonization as infrastructure was developed within years prior. 

giizhigaate

In addition: the indigenous peoples of Canada were not recognized as Human Beings until the year 1960.
Now let that shit sink in.

fatbodypolitics

In the US it wasn’t until 1968 that the Indian Civil Rights Act was passed and allowed for the right to freedom of speech / assembly / press, a jury trial, the right to an attorney etc. It’s so fucking frustrating.

beoriseyo

and it wasn’t until 1978 that we were legally allowed to practice our own religions. in a nation founded on religious freedoms, it was illegal to practice our own religions. in our own country. how fucked up is that?

wtfzurtopic

Aaaand Native Americans weren’t entitled to their own languages (had no legal rights to teach them in their schools, use them in business) until the Native American Language Act of 1990.

jeankd

I teach this to my students, because NONE of it is in a single textbook. This is and act of indoctrination

smallrevolutionary

Boosting because I didn’t know any of this.

travelerofthetimestreams

These facts should be known by all.

chicanochamberofcommerce

Also never mentioned:

It is standing Supreme Court precedent (Lone Wolf v. Hitchcock) that Congress has the right to unilaterally scrap any or all parts of any treaty with any indigenous nation.

Unilaterally means with or without warning, with or without justification.