Yet the inescapable fact is that when the last wild Apache warrior laid down his rifle in 1886, the huge, rich North American continent was united under one sovereign state from coast to coast. Thanks to the vision and determination of our white European forefathers, the
No one claims that the red men’s grievances were without cause. The history of the
Both races committed the most horrifying atrocities against each other. It is fair to say, however, that in general – though not always – the settlers’ and soldiers’ offenses involved straightforward assaults in the heat of battle. The Indians, on the other hand, reserved their most appalling cruelties for defenseless captives tortured at leisure. Nor did reservation life mitigate their savagery. During Apache Chief Geronimo’s last outbreak, in
Viewing the last 200 years in worldwide perspective, we find destruction of cultures not unique, or even surprising. Whenever different peoples collide, deadly conflict always results. World Wars One and Two were global struggles among the tribal nationalities of Europe and
The real story is that the 19th Century witnessed nothing less than a transformation of worldwide human society from its immemorial agrarian past to a concentrated, interdependent urban industrial culture. The Stone Age lasted some 195,000 years, from the rise of Homo Sapiens to the first stirrings of civilization around the
Why should American Indians not be part of this process? They might as well try to excuse themselves from life. Nostalgia is one thing, and your author defers to no one in celebrating
“Political imperatives were irreconcilable with moral imperatives,” writes Robert M. Utley in The Lance and the Shield, his book on the “life and times of Sitting Bull.” But this facile judgment is not true. Indeed, Utley’s statement libels white American pioneers, our ancestors, by declaring that their settlement of the vast empty spaces of post-Ice Age North America, seeking to build a good life for themselves and their posterity, was morally wrong.
Mr. Utley, like most fashionable academics, is too glib by half. Who is he, the safe and secure beneficiary of latter-day American freedom and civilization, to say that the conquest of the American West a century ago was immoral? Of what, exactly, does he think morality consists, and what “moral imperative” does he refer to? The imperative of allowing wild Indians to raid American frontiers and murder white settlers with impunity? What is “moral” about permitting a few hundred thousand barbaric aborigines to monopolize an entire continent, while millions of other people, who are just as “worthy” and “deserving” as any stone-age savage, fester and starve in crowded, oppressed, stultified Europe?
Only a morally blind intellectual elitist could possibly promote such a one-sided view. Utley cannot have taken the trouble to think seriously about he’s saying. He reveals himself as merely another so-called liberal intellectual poseur.
All morality derives from ethics, those absolute, timeless, and universal standards that express our highest human nature as rational, responsible, self-conscious beings. Morality is what we consider “right” and “wrong” with reference to ethical standards. Such questions engage the profoundest philosophical issues of ultimate importance, and when a professional historian employs them to analyze and judge momentous events of the past these terms require definition. Utley doesn’t seem to know what they mean.
Your author has expressed his thoughts on this difficult and even controversial subject in an essay, and will summarize them here. Contrary to the deconstructionist fantasy which Marxian nihilists inspired by Nietzsche foist on American campuses today, the world is “real.” “Reality” means “the brute facts of existence, which cannot be denied.” Since reality is objective and absolute, not subjective or relative, there must be, accordingly, an absolute ethical standard that applies to all living things in the real world. The greatest reality that cannot be denied is the difference between life and death. For all animals, indeed all organisms, the ultimate ethical standard is survival.
Religion and other fields of subjective opinion, like history, deal with cultural “mores,” the ever-changing fashions of acceptable behavior dependent on time and place. Ethics, however, are Thomas Jefferson’s “self-evident truths,” eternal verities that exist apart from transitory morals. With the reservation that no end justifies using any means -- only effective ones -- we define actions that are truly necessary to promote the ethic of group survival as in the highest degree “moral.” Right actions lead to happiness, prosperity, and health; wrong actions lead to misery, destruction, and death. Wisdom is knowing the difference. The only appeal is to nature, and nature recognizes only winners. Questions of public versus private morality involve considerations of “higher” good, meaning individuals’ responsibility to their communities. But the standard is the same. Ethical individuals and nations choose life. This is not debatable, for to do otherwise is to be drunk or insane.
Utley entirely begs this transcendent issue, though he does recognize that “pointless regret and guilt over what ‘we’ did to the Indians [is] a historical distortion and an emotional dead end.” No regrets or guilt are appropriate, however, when we consider the alternatives. We do not say that “might is right;” only that competing groups cannot deny the natural ethic of Charles Darwin’s absolute biological imperative.
The process of white conquest might have been more gentle and orderly. But if Indian cultures had been more advanced or innovative, as were the Japanese, the struggle for ascendancy in
Sitting Bull, chief of the warlike Dakota Sioux, had a right to say, “All white men are thieves and liars. They took our land, and left us outcasts” (3). But Sitting Bull had fought and lost. His bitter words were wrong, as wrong as those of
We trust that the American Indians’ truly great days lie ahead. In the meantime, anyone red, yellow, white, brown, or black is free to improve the quality of his life by going to live on the prairie in a skin tent with the buffalo and the wolves. Mr. Utley should ask himself why not many choose to do so.
1. We appreciate that to write about white Europeans is politically incorrect in 2008. Those who duck this seminal truth are the same people who complain about historical bias and cultural centrism. But why should we be racially biased in favor of red-skinned aborigines, or pretend that the stone age culture we encountered was not an obstacle to civilizing the great American West? Clearly the opposite is true.
2 comments:
would the same argument apply if China decided that it needed more room and more natural resources?
A very well written exposition, with reasoned arguments, not the radical and one-sided statements I have often read on this subject.
I'm from Europe and so I can't fully comprehend all the factors on the struggle between whites and American Indians, but when I hear the word 'genocide', I believe it was not so. After the ACW, if the U.S. army had decided to completely wipe out the Indian tribes, I have little doubts that very few would have survived. If Sitting Bull, or Crazy Horse, or Geronimo had had to face whole divisions of battle-hardened veterans with clear orders of destroying all natives, instead of a few Cavalry regiments spread along hundreds of miles, they would have been annihilated in a few years. Even actions labeled as massacres, like Wounded Knee, ended with substantial losses amogst the U.S. troops, so I wonder if they were really one-sided massacres.
If we talk of genocide, perhaps we should talk of the wars between Canadian tribes, Indian against Indian,like the Fox war of 1712, or the Mascouten massacre of 1642, which ended with the annihilation of whole nations, i.e. Fox, Peorias, Ojibwes or Mascouten.
Or the terrible year of 1655, when the Five Nations (Mohawk, Onondaga, Oneida, Cayuga and Seneca), almost completely destroyed several tribes, including Eries, Suskehannas and Mingos, killing by torture all their captives, just because they needed new territories. So much for the argument that they learned torture from European settlers...
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