Road Map to the Future


PovertyCarl Writes:

If you are debating the direction our country is being taken, you may be hard pressed to find applicable parallels that illustrate how bad things can get from an aggressive smothering government.  Sure, there was the Soviet Union. But nothing the US government has already done indicates an unplanned ‘end game.’

Then there’s this:

5 Ways The Government Keeps Native Americans In Poverty

By Shawn Regan
 
Imagine if the government were responsible for looking after your best interests. All of your assets must be managed by bureaucrats on your behalf. A special bureau is even set up to oversee your affairs. Every important decision you make requires approval, and every approval comes with a mountain of regulations.
 
How well would this work? Just ask Native Americans.
 
The federal government is responsible for managing Indian affairs for the benefit of all Indians. But by all accounts the government has failed to live up to this responsibility. As a result, Native American reservations are among the poorest communities in the United States. Here’s how the government keeps Native Americans in poverty.
 
Indian lands are owned and managed by the federal government.
Reservations
 
Chief Justice John Marshall set Native Americans on the path to poverty in 1831 when he characterized the relationship between Indians and the government as “resembling that of a ward to his guardian.”With these words, Marshall established the federal trust doctrine, which assigns the government as the trustee of Indian affairs. That trusteeship continues today, but it has not served Indians well.
 
Underlying this doctrine is the notion that tribes are not capable of owning or managing their lands. The government is the legal owner of all land and assets in Indian Country and is required to manage them for the benefit of Indians.
 
But because Indians do not generally own their land or homes on reservations, they cannot mortgage their assets for loans like other Americans. This makes it incredibly difficult to start a business in Indian Country. Even tribes with valuable natural resources remain locked in poverty. Their resources amount to “dead capital”—unable to generate growth for tribal communities.
 
Nearly every aspect of economic development is controlled by federal agencies.
 
All development projects on Indian land must be reviewed and authorized by the government, a process that is notoriously slow and burdensome. On Indian lands, companies must go through at least four federal agencies and 49 steps to acquire a permit for energy development. Off reservation, it takes only four steps. This bureaucracy prevents tribes from capitalizing on their resources.
 
It’s not uncommon for years to pass before the necessary approvals are acquired to begin energy development on Indian lands—a process that takes only a few months on private lands. At any time, an agency may demand more information or shut down development. Simply completing a title search can cause delays. Indians have waited six years to receive title search reports that other Americans can get in just a few days.
 
The result is that many investors avoid Indian lands altogether. When development does occur, federal agencies are involved in every detail, even collecting payments on behalf of tribes. The royalties are then distributed back to Indians—that is, if the government doesn’t lose the money in the process.
 
Reservations have a complex legal framework that hinders economic growth.  Crow Reservation Montana:
Crow
 
Thanks to the legacy of federal control, reservations have complicated legal and property systems that are detrimental to economic growth. Jurisdiction and land ownership can vary widely on reservations as a result of the government’s allotment policies of the nineteenth century. Navigating this complex system makes development and growth difficult on Indian lands.

God Bless America – Pass This On!!

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About giliar

An American patriot who has gone rogue - I will remember in November!

5 responses to “Road Map to the Future”

  1. NEO says :

    And if you’ve read the history of what the assigned army officers said in their reports to the war department in the early history of the reservations you will develop a whole perspective on who the Indians enemies really were.

    The army had no doubt that the Indians had to be defeated but they were horrified at what the Bureau of Indian Affairs were doing to a honorable people. Not that it mattered, nobody wanted to hear, in Washington, what men on the ground said, then or now.

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