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Will Trump Continue the Centuries Long Policy of Stealing from Native Americans?

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My guess is that Donald Trump has never thought about Native Americans in his life except to bemoan the fact that they can break into the casino industry. And maybe to tell some Tonto jokes with his good buddy Roy Cohn. But like everything else the Great Orange Blowhard has not thought about, he is just going to hire right-wing extremists to deal with it for him. In the aftermath of the Dakota Access Pipeline protests forcing the Obama administration to change the construction route, it’s a good time to think about what a Trump administration might look like for indigenous peoples. You may not be surprised that Trump policy toward the reservations is probably going to be all about privatization and looting natural resources.

Native American reservations cover just 2 percent of the United States, but they may contain about a fifth of the nation’s oil and gas, along with vast coal reserves.

Now, a group of advisors to President-elect Donald Trump on Native American issues wants to free those resources from what they call a suffocating federal bureaucracy that holds title to 56 million acres of tribal lands, two chairmen of the coalition told Reuters in exclusive interviews.

The group proposes to put those lands into private ownership – a politically explosive idea that could upend more than century of policy designed to preserve Indian tribes on U.S.-owned reservations, which are governed by tribal leaders as sovereign nations.

The tribes have rights to use the land, but they do not own it. They can drill it and reap the profits, but only under regulations that are far more burdensome than those applied to private property.

“We should take tribal land away from public treatment,” said Markwayne Mullin, a Republican U.S. Representative from Oklahoma and a Cherokee tribe member who is co-chairing Trump’s Native American Affairs Coalition. “As long as we can do it without unintended consequences, I think we will have broad support around Indian country.”

Trump’s transition team did not respond to multiple requests for comment.

The plan dovetails with Trump’s larger aim of slashing regulation to boost energy production. It could deeply divide Native American leaders, who hold a range of opinions on the proper balance between development and conservation.

The proposed path to deregulated drilling – privatizing reservations – could prove even more divisive. Many Native Americans view such efforts as a violation of tribal self-determination and culture.

“Our spiritual leaders are opposed to the privatization of our lands, which means the commoditization of the nature, water, air we hold sacred,” said Tom Goldtooth, a member of both the Navajo and the Dakota tribes who runs the Indigenous Environmental Network. “Privatization has been the goal since colonization – to strip Native Nations of their sovereignty.”

Reservations governed by the U.S. Bureau of Indian Affairs are intended in part to keep Native American lands off the private real estate market, preventing sales to non-Indians. An official at the Bureau of Indian Affairs did not respond to a request for comment.

This would continue a history that goes back to the beginning of the reservation system (and really from the moment Europeans set food in the Americas) to see Native American land as something that only belongs to them unless white people want something on it. Then the nation can loot them once again, as they did during allotment after the Dawes Act and did once again during the oil boom in Oklahoma and has done over and over again.

Like much about the next four (or more) years in American history, this policy and period is going to eventually go down as part of our national shame that future generations will have to apologize for and try to understand what happened to their nation.

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