Title: Losing the Constitution on the Category:History Details: Words: 986 | Pages: 4.2 (approximately 235 words/page)
Losing the Constitution on the
History 101
Losing the Constitution on the Trail
To most people in America in 1830 the Indians and their tribes were nothing. They were lower in stature than the black slaves on farms and in houses. But to some, they were regarded as human beings; people just like any other. People with rights. Rights given to them by their individual tribes, and by the country in which they lived, worked, and died. With the assumption that the American Indians were citizens of The United States in 1830 and showed first 85 words of 986 total
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showed last 85 words of 986 total their way? In reality there were ethics and morals that took place. But only in the minds of those who had any to begin with. Along with the old saying, “actions speak louder than words”, the actions of the US government during this ten year period spoke volumes versus the words that they spoke to each other in private and kept in hunger inside their minds. Any ethical or moral issues that existed took no place in these decisions, and therefore neither did the Constitution.