Good enough answer for me. I like the succinct reasoning.Thanas wrote:The Armenian "genocide" was largely forced relocation, with the deaths largely being caused by the effects of forced marching, banditry and the inhospitality where they were marched into.
So I don't see why this should be different.
Certainly there were a lot of deaths from the Native American forced marches.
No worries, I understand how that is.Edi wrote:I'll need to recheck that reference wrt Oklahoma, it may have only talked about Kentucky, Oklahoma may have been the place where some of those displaced wound up. This post, like the previous one, was made from work, where I don't have that book at hand.
Oklahoma was used as the relocation area for the Five Civilized Tribes. The Cherokee nation is still there in Oklahoma.
If I recall correctly, there were several stages. First, they cleared the Natives from the Atlantic to the mountains. The next stage was clearly out the Ohio valley and lands east of the Mississippi, pushing the Natives across the big river. By that time the Natives got the message that the whites weren't going to stop their advance which may account for some of the more fierce resistance from the Plains tribes. Once the whites were past the Mississippi they were running out of places to push the Natives as settlements were already on the West Coast so instead of pushing them westward they started forcing them onto "reservations" which, of course, were on land nobody else wanted and often impossible for subsistence living (which is often why no one was living there in the first place).
Of course, by "push" I mean "either the Natives submitted to relocation or they were killed". This wasn't a polite request.