-Caveat Lector-

From
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}}>Begin
Trusting
              the Government:
The Case of the Indians
by
              David Dieteman
One
              of the sorriest political episodes of the present time is unfolding
              in Washington, DC. It offers lessons of wide-ranging importance.
American
              Indians, once in sole possession of the continent, have not been
treated kindly by the United States. Even prior to the existence
              of the United States, they were not always treated so kindly by
              European colonists. Most are familiar with Massasoit and the story
              of the first Thanksgiving. Less are familiar with what the colonists
              did to his son, Wamsutta. They murdered him.
The
              killing is part of a sorry saga known as King
              Philip's War, which lasted from 1675-76 (Philip was the colonists'
              name for Metacom, the brother of Wamsutta), in which the colonists
              exterminated the native populations near their colonies. After Metacom

              (sometimes rendered as Metacomet or Pometacom) was killed and the
              Wampanoag were defeated, the pilgrims – yes, those pilgrims – paraded
              in Plymouth with his head. They also sold his son into slavery.
              (For more information, have a look at King
              Philip's War by Eric Schultz and Michael Tougias).
The
              grandson of Massasoit, who helped the pilgrims to survive, was sold
              as a slave. There's gratitude for you. As an aside, since the early
              Yankees could not tolerate Indian independence, is it any surprise
              that they later were so intolerant of Southern independence? Oh,
              the burden of knowing what's best for everyone, even if they have
              to be killed to understand what's for their own good.
As
              treaty after treaty was signed – we promise! – by the federal
government, treaty after treaty was broken. The fact that several Indian nations
              allied themselves with the Confederacy during the Civil War did
              not help their fate. The Indians knew who their enemy was. After
              the CSA was defeated – with Cherokee general Stand Watie being the
              last Confederate general to surrender – the US Army did not exactly
              soften its stand on the Indians.
Fast
              forward 135 years, to the present. A federal judge, after citing
              Clinton Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt for "the worst case of
              contempt of court" he had ever seen performed by a government officer,

              ordered the Bureau of Indian Affairs (part of the Interior Department)

              to give an accounting of what had happened to millions of dollars
              in Indian trust accounts.
These
              trust accounts are "administered" by the federal government.
Guess
              what? The government's course of conduct continues – even under
              Gale Norton and the Bush administration, as
              the Washington Times has reported.
Regarding
              the 1999 contempt citation of Mr Babbitt, the Times notes
              that
Beginning
                  in 1999, Judge [Royce C.] Lamberth ordered Interior Department
officials on two occasions to account for funds they held in
                  trust for more than 300,000 Indians, saying records provided
                  to the court showed that the money was so badly mishandled that
                  the government had no idea how much was missing or where it
                  could be found.
Judge
                  Lamberth...held Mr. Babbitt and Treasury Secretary Robert E.
                  Rubin in contempt for failing to turn over records in a lawsuit
                  filed by the Indians and ruled that the government had to pay
                  $625,000 for their inaction.
First,
              notice that the government had no idea – at all – what had become
              of the money which it held in trust for the Indians. No idea. Second,
              you can bet that Babbitt and Rubin did not dip into their own pockets
              or hand over their credit card numbers. No, for their bad conduct –
they spent your money, also known as "tax dollars." As
              the Times continues,
The
                  judge issued the contempt citations after Mr. Babbitt and Mr.
                  Rubin refused to produce trust-fund records, canceled checks
                  and other documents demanded by the court.
The
                  Interior Department, which manages trust-fund accounts involving
settlements, royalties and payments to about 300,000 Indians
                  and 2,000 tribal accounts, has given several reasons why the
                  trust accounts are unavailable – including that some have been
                  so tainted with rodent droppings that handling them would be
                  hazardous.
Now,
              I have worked for a college newspaper, a city newspaper (the South
Bend Tribune), several law firms, several universities, and
              so on – and I have never seen any records stored in rodent droppings.
              Certainly not rodent droppings so numerous that handling any records
              would be "hazardous."
This
              is the government that politicians want to control our lives? This
              is the government with the magic wand to solve every problem that
              can be imagined?
Yes.
              Yes it is.
That
              is the reality of the government: glitzy promises, backed up by
              piles of rodent droppings. And don't you dare ask to see a copy
              of your file – it's hazardous to handle.
Say,
              has the Interior Department been following OSHA and EPA workplace
safety regulations? Where do piles of rodent droppings fit in with
              OSHA's requirements?
Sadly,
              the Indian tribes are the "poster children" for the welfare state.
              Despite promises that the government can "manage" our lives, and
              "take care" of us, better than we can ourselves, the reality of
              welfare-statism is a giant, uncaring mess.
As
              Russell Means, an Indian activist and former Libertarian party
candidate
              – you may have seen him in Last
              of the Mohicans; if not, have a look at his autobiography,
              Where
              White Men Fear to Tread – stated on a John Stossel investigative
report, the government still uses Soviet-style five-year
              plans to run the Indians' lives. Unsurprisingly, Indian reservations
              resemble the old Soviet union in their poverty and desolation.
Which
              brings us to an additional lesson of the Indian affair: the limits
              of the law. Now that Judge Lamberth has ordered the Interior
Department
              to perform an accounting, and his order has been ignored, what is
              left for the judge to do? Send the federal marshals to the Bureau
              of Indian Affairs to force the accounting? The law, it seems, may
              have reached the limits of its power. As
              for where the saga will go from here, that may be
 anybody's guess.
              But one thing seems certain: the government is giving the Indians
              a raw deal.
July 16, 2001
Mr.
              Dieteman [send him mail]
              is an attorney in Erie, Pennsylvania, and a PhD candidate in
philosophy
              at The Catholic University of America.
©
              2001 David Dieteman
David
              Dieteman Archives Back
        to LewRockwell.com Home Page

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