Jan 11, 1960 - The definite study of what happens when the state offers, or forces, a group to exchange...

"security" for "freedom" can be found in the miserable plight of the once-proud Indian tribes of North America.
      It proves that there is no acceptable alternatives to liberty and that the state cannot raise a standard of living, educate, or elevate. It can only take from one pocket and put into another, with the usual brokerage charge for the transaction.
      Major problems of education, health and economic development of the American Indian remain unsolved, although the federal government has been in the Indian business for the past 185 years.
      The Continental Congress declared its jurisdiction over Indian affairs in 1775, and the federal government began making payments to Indians in 1789.
      Since then it has spent more than 3 billion on Indian programs. Of this, $1.1 billion has been spend during the past decade. If the present trend continues, Congress soon will be spending $200 million a year on Indian programs. ...    1960 Jan 11, The Brownsville Herald 
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1960 Jan 11, The Brownsville Herald 

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