American Race Relations

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U.S Race Relations An Eternal Fire with Everlasting Burns When reviewing race relations in the United States one must go back to the beginning of the United States and it is easy to see that protestant whites in the Americas have never been open to the idea of people various colors from themselves deserve the same treatment as they do. Go back even further to the beginning of history and observe that racial tension has existed forever. Although, Race does not, scientifically speaking, exist. It belongs to the realm of fantasy, where it demonstrates a powerful ability to give substance to what is ultimately insubstantial. Despite its seemingly chimerical nature, however, race is as bluntly corporeal as it is emotionally wounding. Even though…show more content…
A solider that participated in the removal said I fought through the War Between the States and have seen many men shot, but the Cherokee Removal was the cruelest work I ever knew.”4 Imagine people being uprooted from their home where they occupied it all of their life as well as their parents and their parents. Imagine having your rights ignored to dealing with broken promises, and having to fight for what is yours. In the end, you are tricked or just too plain tired to fight anymore and go on a journey9. A journey where as each mile that goes by, you leave behind a mother, a father, a brother, and a friend. To even set this relocation into movement many of the tribes were tricked into signing treaties. The British went on to say extermination was the answer the removing the Indians. Soldiers infected various tribes with diseases they had no immunities to, they forced the sterilization of the woman and well as made it almost impossible they them to survive during this relocation in hopes of eradicating the “native Problem”. By 1837, the Jackson administration had removed 46,000 Native American people from their land east of the Mississippi, and had secured treaties, which led to the removal of a slightly larger number. Most members of the five southeastern nations had been relocated west, opening 25 million acres of land to white settlement and…show more content…
Cotton was creating an insatiable appetite for slave labor; congress abolished the importation of slaves from Africa. "Now an already vibrant domestic slave-trade would flourish. In the upper South the selling of slaves became more profitable than the growing of tobacco5. By 1840 the value of cotton exports was greater than everything else the nation exported to the world combined! And that made slaves the most valuable thing in the nation beside the land itself. As the price of slaves soared, slave-traders began to roam the north, abducting free black people. By April of 1841, the kidnapping of free black people had become more frequent: Free black men were stolen from their lives and sent into slavery; because the color of one's skin could mark you as a potential slave. Slavery is above all anti-human and an assault against all human and civil rights among enlightened people anywhere and everywhere. This deadly and bestial enslavement of an entire race has had much in common with the rights of Native people, as well as camps of Japanese

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