By Rich
Lowry
Friday,
July 07, 2023
Ben
& Jerry’s ice cream wants the United States to return the
Black Hills to the Lakota.
Which
raises the question: Once this transfer takes place, will the Lakota turn
around and give the Black Hills back to the tribes they took them from?
It’s
never a good idea to get history lessons from an ice-cream maker with a hippy
vibe that sold out to a multinational conglomerate long ago, but the Ben &
Jerry’s July 4 condemnation of the United States as “founded on stolen
Indigenous land” is a common enough hostile interpretation of our past that
it’s worth dwelling on.
There is
no doubt that our dealings with Native Americans were characterized
by brutality, land-hunger, and duplicity, and constitute one of the nation’s
foremost sins. The problem with the Ben & Jerry’s view, which is considered
a truism on the left, is that it is immune to complexity and rests on an
ahistorical, ultimately condescending belief in the inherent innocence and
peaceableness of Native Americans.
Consider
the Lakota. Like many other tribes we encountered on the Plains, they were
relative newcomers to the area, getting pushed westward by intertribal warfare
and establishing themselves there by force, as well. Counter to the saccharine
romance of such depictions as the famous Kevin Costner movie, Dances
with Wolves, Native American society was red in tooth and claw; Native
Americans weren’t simplistic archetypes but real people prone to all the usual
flaws of human nature including hatred, greed, and violence.
The Ben
& Jerry’s July 4 message refers to the Lakota “fighting to keep colonizers
off their land,” without any mention of the fact that, just a short time
before, they were the colonizers.
As
Elliott West notes in his new book Continental Reckoning: The American
West in the Age of Expansion, the advent of a horse culture among various
Native American tribes made the Great Plains and Southwest a killing field of
warfare and disease. “Two great coalitions — Cheyennes, Arapahos, and Lakotas
north of the Arkansas River and Comanches and Kiowas south of it — clashed
bitterly until making peace in 1840, then both preyed on sedentary peoples on
the fringes,” West writes.
Devastating
smallpox epidemics, slaughters, and raids and counterraids were dismayingly
routine features of these regions long before the United States was a contender
for dominance.
According
to West, one reason so much Mexican land was there for the taking during the Mexican–American
War was it had been depopulated by constant Native American raiding.
Is it
too much for Ben & Jerry’s to spare a thought for the Mexicans killed,
captured, or dispossessed by merciless Native American warriors?
As for
the Lakota, they didn’t take control of territory to the west through gentle
persuasion. They gained control of the Black Hills in the late 18th century by
expelling the prior occupants. The history here doesn’t neatly line up with the
Ben & Jerry’s call for “dismantling white supremacy and systems of
oppression and ensuring that Indigenous people can again govern the land their
communities called home for thousands of years.”
Which
indigenous people? And which lands?
None of
this is to minimize the double-dealing that saw the United States take the
Black Hills after the discovery of gold, or the demographic catastrophe that
befell Native peoples. Europeans unleashed terrible epidemics when they came to
these shores, although that wasn’t something they foresaw or intended.
The potted
version of the nation’s history favored by the likes of Ben & Jerry’s is
meant to delegitimize the United States as such. Not only does it make the
country’s expansion a tale of unadulterated malevolence, but it also can’t
accommodate the reality of Native American peoples who practiced
self-interested, ever-shifting diplomacy with one another and with Europeans,
and who constantly warred with one another and Europeans — for land and hunting
grounds, for honor and vengeance, and for captives to add to their numbers.
Suffice
it to say that — no matter what their latter-day champions might wish — these
peoples were not politically correct.
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