Native American Genocide
The Long War: Institutional Destruction of Native Peoples
After Wounded Knee the war moved into schools, clinics, and land bureaus. This series covers boarding schools, broken treaties, reservations, sterilization, and MMIW.
Native American Genocide
After Wounded Knee the war moved into schools, clinics, and land bureaus. This series covers boarding schools, broken treaties, reservations, sterilization, and MMIW.
Native American Genocide
The U.S. reduced the Native population from millions to 237,000 by 1900 through removal, massacres, boarding schools, and forced sterilization. Both series documented here.
Native American Genocide
Native women are murdered at 10 times the national average in some regions. The MMIW crisis traces directly to jurisdictional gaps the federal government deliberately created.
Native American Genocide
Between 1970 and 1976 the Indian Health Service sterilized an estimated 25 to 50 percent of Native women in its facilities. No one was prosecuted.
Native American Genocide
The Dawes Act stripped 90 million acres of tribal land between 1887 and 1934. Reservation poverty today has a documented cause — it was the policy goal all along.
Native American Genocide
The U.S. made 375 treaties with Native nations and violated every one. The Sioux have refused a $1 billion payout for the Black Hills — they want the land back.
Native American Genocide
The federal government ran 83 Native American boarding schools between 1869 and 1978. The 2022 Interior report found 53 burial sites at or near former schools.
Native American Genocide
The Trail of Tears, Sand Creek, and Wounded Knee were not isolated events. This series documents the federal project that stripped Native nations of 2 billion acres.
Native American Genocide
On December 29, 1890, U.S. soldiers killed at least 250 Lakota at Wounded Knee Creek. The Army awarded 20 Medals of Honor that have never been rescinded.
Native American Genocide
In 1864 Colorado militia attacked a Cheyenne and Arapaho camp flying an American flag, killing 150 to 200 people. No one was ever prosecuted.
Native American Genocide
The Trail of Tears displaced 60,000 Native people from the Southeast starting in 1830. An estimated 4,000 Cherokee died on the winter march to Indian Territory.