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share for providing for its 42,000 students (most children on reservations don’t attend BIE schools), which amounts to about $20,000 per pupil,8 compared to a national average of $12,400.9

      But that’s not all. As the report from the Cato Institute notes, “Aside from the BIA and BIE, many other federal agencies have subsidy programs for American Indians. The Department of Health and Human Services houses the Indian Health Service, which has a budget of about $4 billion. The Department of Housing and Urban Development runs the Native American Housing Block Grant Program, which has a budget of about $800 million. And the Department of Education spends more than $300 million a year on BIE schools.”10

      What have American Indians gotten for all this money? Not much, it seems. It’s not just that the education these children receive is deplorable. The BIE can’t even keep the buildings from falling down. As John Kline, a Republican congressman from Minnesota, explained at a hearing in May 2015, “You’ve got collapsing roofs, leaking roofs, buckling floors, exposed wires, popping circuit breakers, gas leaks. That’s totally unacceptable.” He noted, “You can’t be well-educated, in my opinion, when you’re attending school wearing your coat, wearing your mittens and hoping that the blanket keeps out the 30-degree below-zero air.”11

      Kline is right, but most observers seem to agree it’s largely a problem of management, not money, that has gotten the BIE to where it is today. The agency is on its 36th director in 33 years. To address the crumbling infrastructure, in the budget for 2016 the Obama administration asked for $1 billion for the BIE. But if the past is any guide, it’s unlikely that things will change.

      As for sensitivity to the cultural and historical plight of Indians, what we teach our children in schools typically is the history of white encounters with Indians over a hundred years ago. A study by Sarah Shear, a professor at the University of Missouri, found that 87 percent of references to American Indians in state academic standards portrayed them in a pre-1900 context. According to Shear, when students arrive in her college classroom, they’re largely ignorant about modern Indians. “What they told me is that they learned about Thanksgiving and Columbus Day,” she told a writer for the Indian Country website. “Every once in a while, a student would mention something about the Trail of Tears. It was incredibly frustrating. They were coming to college believing that all Indians are dead.”12

      Even when states adopt formal standards to address the issue of Native American history, the content is typically about the raping and pillaging of Indian communities in the past. Take Utah’s curriculum on Indians, which teaches high-school students about the five major tribes found there today. Of the Navajos, for instance, students will learn:

      In the winter of 1863/1864, after their crops, livestock, and homes had been destroyed by the United States Army under Christopher “Kit” Carson, over 8,000 Navajos were forced to walk twelve-to-fifteen miles a day – with little food and little or no protection from the winter weather – from their ancestral homelands to the remote and desolate Bosque Redondo Reservation. The memory of the Long Walk has haunted generations of Navajos, and the story of the Long Walk is important to the history of Utah’s Navajos. Some Navajos were able to escape the army and moved into what is now southeastern Utah.13

      To the extent they’re even paying attention, most American children’s knowledge of the history of American Indians will include starvation, death by diseases brought from Europe, and massacres at the hands of white settlers. All of which is certainly true. (They’ll rarely hear about the brutalities that Indians committed against white settlers, however.) These students will come to see Indians as people who lived off the land and worshipped nature – our first environmentalists, perhaps. Indeed, there are those who’ll take from their lessons that the people indigenous to North America are to be emulated in modern times because of their respect for the earth and its creatures.

      Schoolchildren commonly learn the words of Chief Seattle, who allegedly wrote to the U.S. government in 1851: “The President in Washington sends word that he wishes to buy our land. But how can you buy or sell the sky? the land? The idea is strange to us. If we do not own the freshness of the air and the sparkle of the water, how can you buy them? Every part of this earth is sacred to my people. Every shining pine needle, every sandy shore, every mist in the dark woods, every clearing and humming insect is holy in the memory and experience of my people.”

      As Fergus Bordewich notes in his book Killing the White Man’s Indian, “More than any other single document, Seattle’s words lend support to the increasingly common belief that, to Indians, any disruption or commercialization of the earth’s natural order is sacrilege and that the most moral, the most truly ‘Indian,’ relationship with the land is a kind of poetic passivity. Seattle has achieved a kind of prophetic stature among environmentalists.” Too bad much of this mythology is complete bunk. The earliest version of the speech was composed in 1887 “from memory” by a white doctor who claimed to have been present at its delivery. The most commonly reproduced version was actually written in 1972 “by Ted Perry, a Texas scriptwriter, to serve as narration for a film produced by Southern Baptist Radio and Television Commission, which wished to give its audience a warning about the environment.”14

      The use of such stories probably does more to assuage white guilt than it does to alleviate the problems plaguing Indians. The real question is this: if not sensitivity and money, what does America owe Indians?

      In the past two years, I’ve traveled to Indian communities around the United States and Canada. I’ve interviewed tribal leaders, economists, educators, businesspeople, and government officials, all in an effort to understand what ails American Indians, particularly those on reservations. The results are by no means a comprehensive history of American Indians or even a complete picture of American Indians today. There are 562 federally recognized Indian nations in the United States – about half of which are in Alaska – and 310 reservations. Any book about American Indians will have to make some generalizations. And for that I apologize in advance. But the fact that these groups have different cultural traditions, different treaties, and different economic, political, and social situations doesn’t mean they have nothing in common.

      As you’ll see in this book, the problems American Indians face today – lack of economic opportunity, lack of education, and lack of equal protection under the law – and the solutions to these problems require a different approach from the misguided paternalism of the past 150 years. It’s not the history of forced assimilation, war, and mass murder that have left American Indians in a deplorable state; it’s the federal government’s policies today. These policies were begun by officials who didn’t know or didn’t care about what might help Indians; today they’re carried on by officials who claim to care but can’t seem to grasp the problems these policies are causing.

      The tragedy of America’s Indian policies demands immediate examination – not only because they make the lives of millions of American citizens harder and more dangerous but also because they’re a microcosm of everything that has gone wrong with modern liberalism. They’re the result of decades of politicians and bureaucrats showering a victimized people with money and sensitivity instead of what they truly need – the autonomy, the education, and the legal protections to improve their own situations. American Indians, like all Americans, must be able to avail themselves of the economic and legal freedoms this country guarantees. Until then, they’ll remain mired in poverty, social pathology, and the kind of anger that comes from knowing that your fate is controlled by ill-informed and ineffective bureaucracies.

      What America really owes Indians is nothing less than the opportunity to live lives of freedom and dignity in the land we all share.

       PART ONE

       The False Promise of Sovereignty

       CHAPTER ONE

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