Andrew Boulton
The Adminator
Interesting as this is, let's try to steer this back Travellerwards.
Interesting as this is, let's try to steer this back Travellerwards.
But that's not really how it was at all, especially in regards to the eastern tribes. The Indian tribes that the earliest European settlers stumbled upon were established and sophisticated town-based agricultural societies, not neolithic nomads living off grubs and berries. A huge chunk of the modern food supply exists because of the multi-generational genetic engineering efforts of these Indian tribes. No less authority than the US Government asserts that the powerful Iroquois Confederacy served as a primary source for the structure and traditions of the American Federal Constitutional system.As for:
"And you cannot ethnically cleanse a rancher because ranching is a profession, not an ethnic group. And the ranchers could have kept the farmers off all that land they were using for free by actually homesteading or (God forbid!) buying it; but they didn't. Simply being too obstinate to adjust your business model to a new economic reality is not the same thing as being ethnically cleansed.
Today 01:46 PM"
Wasn't that the essence of the Indian Wars? The fact that hunter-gatherers and farmers can't share the same space and the Indians refused to become part of the general economic structure.
Well, the ranchers never really became extinct; they just stopped letting their cattle wander all over the continent loading up on free government grass. The Indians, on the other hand, starved to death when the buffalo disappeared, and were reduced for generations to pathetic remnants living off ragged blankets and moldy government handouts. So desperately did the Plains Indians yearn for their lost buffalo that they created an entire messianic religion around an apocalypse that preached, among other things, the return of the buffalo from their underworld exile. The Plains Indian reservations of the Dakotas of today are effectively Third World nations embedded inside the framework of the United States of America. In a very real sense, these tribes have never recovered from the socio-ecological blow of the near-extinction of the American Bison.As for ranching, "not being an ethnicity", that is true. But it was a way of life. And one could just as easily say buffalo hunting was a profession, not an ethnicity.
I'm actually not as pro-Indian as you might think. My objection to your points are not visceral, but rather historical, in context.In any case, is the fact of not being an ethnicity something that makes changing ones lifestyle more pleasant? It is true it is not specificly "ETHNIC cleansing" but to say that that is especially relevant is to say that ancestry determines justice. Now in fact I am not especially indignant about the fate of the ranchers. But I do find the lack of sympathy given them rather inconsistent with the sympathy given the Indians. It is true that one can only be sympathetic toward a few people at a time. But at least one might think of others.
However, I'm not aware of a single case where a human ethnic or cultural group has been successfully exterminated to the last man.
We know that many animals have been hunted to extinction, so the extinction of species is certainly possible. However, I'm not aware of a single case where a human ethnic or cultural group has been successfully exterminated to the last man. Why not? What tends to prevent this from happening, and would those preventions be valid in the case of planetary invasion?
The other reason is Insurrection/Infiltration/Sabotage from Inside. The whole 'Love Thy Enemy' at least until you learn all of their dirty tricks thing. Something I haven't seen too much of in history. But then, who would write about it?
That's one heck of a stab in the back.
Spinward Scout said:But then, who would write about it?
They usually don't get outright exterminated so much as overwhelmed by their more powerful neighbors and diluted by outside intermarriage -- circumstances which almost certainly would not apply in the case of two or more competing alien biologies.Icosahedron said:I'm not aware of a single case where a human ethnic or cultural group has been successfully exterminated to the last man. Why not? What tends to prevent this from happening, and would those preventions be valid in the case of planetary invasion?