EVILFACE
Insufferable S.O.B.
Doesn't bother me at all. It's history. Make it as accurate as possible.
If you don't like the it, don't look at it.
If you don't like the it, don't look at it.
I'm not saying the United States is evil just that some REGIMES of the US were evil. It's comparing regimes of the US with regimes of Germany.There are degrees of injustice. "Eugenics" having "a presence" is one thing ... the wholesale extermination of millions of people via ovens in concentration camps is quite another. I do not understand the need of some to equate the United States with the worst regimes in the history of the world -- apparently up to, and including, the Nazis. Completely ridiculous. There is no comparison.
SnakeDoc
--To me, I find it equally disturbing to have a picture of Andrew Jackson on our twenty dollar bill as it would be for someone to have a Nazi doll on their shelf.
Which brings me to my next point, do you think it is in good taste to keep Nazi, terrorist, Viet Cong, etc. figures up on display if you have friends that might be offended by them. (i.e. Jewish, South Vietnamese-American, African-American)
One of my relatives has a rebel flag in their room but removes it when their African-American friends visit. Is that hypocrisy or just good manners
It isn't arguable that the British Empire or the United States are just as evil as the Nazis. Segregation is not comparable to the Holocaust. If nothing else, the survival rate for victims is a lot higher among those that suffered American injustices instead that of the Nazis.
The colonists invaded their land and took over their hunting grounds. The U.S. government broke about every treaty they ever made with the native peoples. Everything the native peoples did was in defense of themselves and their land.The U.S. was at war with the Native Americans and it was not a one-sided war. I think it would be a stretch to say that the colonists started it, although it has long been fashionable to blame them.
Fact is, the tribes lost the war. I'm not excusing crimes committed by the U.S. government or its citizens in that period of history, but comparing the U.S. to the Third Reich based on the conflict with the native tribes is completely wrong. I'd call it hyperbole, but the word isn't big enough to encompass how false the comparison is.
The colonists invaded their land and took over their hunting grounds. The U.S. government broke about every treaty they ever made with the native peoples. Everything the native peoples did was in defense of themselves and their land.
The colonists invaded their land and took over their hunting grounds. The U.S. government broke about every treaty they ever made with the native peoples. Everything the native peoples did was in defense of themselves and their land.
Oh, look...a mass grave in Germany...and a mass grave in America. They must be the same thing. Also, your toilet is a throne, just like the pharoah's.
It's not about the numbers, it's just about the injustices.
Eugenics also had a presence in the US before the Nazis started doing the same.
Heh. The War of American Indian xenophobia ... the first American anti-immigrant advocates.
A war between Native Americans and American settlers is not comparable to the Nazi Holocaust, trendy as the self-hating comparison might be. Native Americans were not exterminated. They were outnumbered in a two-sided war -- which arose from a conflict of culture between free settlers and nomadic tribes over sparsely-occupied nomadic lands. They lost the war. Hell, many died of diseases incidentally introduced by settlers. That isn't a genocide; it is an accident of biology. Sad story. Tragic. Not a genocide.
Land was not stolen. It was settled. I suppose there is an argument that the land was conquered -- though it was never invaded, and nobody landed here with the intention of going to war. Either way -- settled or conquered -- it ain't a holocaust. Lands have been conquered since the beginning of time. It ain't always pretty, but it happens ... human nature. Still not comparable to the Nazi holocaust.
SnakeDoc
They didn't own North America.
In most cases, they didn't even have a concept of private property. There wasn't even a unified 'they'.
Nomads are always going to have issues with fixed settlements, and they're never going to have a valid claim if all they can come up with is "we were here last year" (and my father was here before that, and his father, and his father, etc.).
Once they decide to start massacring settlers in the night, all bets are off.
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