New law will remove the word ‘squaw’ from California place names, but not the ones in Alaska
By Tom Hall
September 14, 2019
The federal government’s new citizenship question has a good start in the United States, as it is now the first question on the state-based new citizens’ roll. But this is not the first time our federal government has attempted to impose its ideas on the country as a whole.
The federal government’s attempt to impose its idea of citizenship has been a long and continuing process, starting with the government’s first attempt to impose its idea of citizenship on Indian tribes. That attempt succeeded almost immediately.
A few years after the Indian tribes’ efforts to prevent the federal government from imposing its idea of citizenship on the Indian tribes began, they were succeeded in their efforts. The Indian tribes’ efforts to prevent the federal government from imposing its idea of citizenship on the Indian tribes failed. After the federal government imposed its idea of citizenship on the Indian tribes, those Indian tribes were also succeeded in their efforts to prevent the federal government from imposing its idea of citizenship on the Indian tribes.
The Native American tribes found it to be difficult to prevent the federal government from imposing its idea of citizenship on the Indian tribes. The federal government was unwilling to work with these tribes to solve their problems and, as a result, the federal government began to impose its idea of citizenship on the Indian tribes. Today, the federal government is following the Native American tribes’ effort to prevent the federal government from imposing its idea of citizenship on the Indian tribes.
One of the reasons that the federal government had difficulty working with the Indian tribes was that the federal government wanted the Indian tribes to remove their sovereign immunity. In response, the federally recognized Indian tribes took steps to take their sovereign immunity off the table and to make sure that the federal government could not impose the federal government’s idea of citizenship on the Indian tribes.
The federal government had a problem with the sovereign immunity of the Indian tribes. The sovereign immunity