Native American reservations explained

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  • čas přidán 6. 06. 2023
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Komentáře • 1,7K

  • @GeographyNow
    @GeographyNow  Před 11 měsíci +483

    Glad to have this done this much needed reference video for the upcoming USA episode! Have you ever been to a native American reservation? If not, check them out! You can learn so much from them.

    • @ChrisFan890
      @ChrisFan890 Před 11 měsíci +6

      I like your videos

    • @howto302
      @howto302 Před 11 měsíci +2

      Ok

    • @GeraldEatsSoup
      @GeraldEatsSoup Před 11 měsíci +5

      Stew

    • @howto302
      @howto302 Před 11 měsíci +3

      @@GeraldEatsSoup Stut??

    • @arvinroidoatienza7082
      @arvinroidoatienza7082 Před 11 měsíci +6

      You know, it's kinda make me sad that we have to make an entire video about them. If only they followed New Zealand's example and incorporated them into American society instead of forcing in these reservations. Im happy the Philippines is too far for the Spaniards to settle. Fun fact: they also used to call us Indians (Spanish: Indio) but it became discriminatory that it (and words like Indies) fell out of use.

  • @tomwalsh6189
    @tomwalsh6189 Před 11 měsíci +1519

    In Ireland we remember the substantial donation by the Choctaw tribe to the starving Irish during the great famine in 1847. A monument stands in Co Cork commentating this grateful deed . Always remembered

    • @serbkebab2763
      @serbkebab2763 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Why is Ireland committing national suicide by inviting in hundreds of thousands of African and Arab scammers? 20% of the population is now foreign born

    • @ravinraven6913
      @ravinraven6913 Před 11 měsíci +141

      oh yea, and to this day, Ireland donates so much food to any one around the world. They knew what it was like, and never wanted to see any one else suffer. Choctaw did was most Europeans couldn't or wouldn't do.

    • @ZhangtheGreat
      @ZhangtheGreat Před 11 měsíci +95

      See, these are the kinds of stories we don't learn in history classrooms in the US. Good for Ireland to never forget such a kind gesture.

    • @dennistate5953
      @dennistate5953 Před 10 měsíci +26

      Today delighted to talk with my aunt who has returned to Choctaw reservation in recent years. A delightful, beautiful, spirited, smart, strong woman. God bless us one and all.❤😊❤

    • @shilleaghlaw
      @shilleaghlaw Před 10 měsíci +38

      I remember there being a significant donation made by the Irish to the Choctaw during Covid since the reservation got hit particularly hard! Awesome that kind of relationship exists still.

  • @onewhoisanonymous
    @onewhoisanonymous Před 11 měsíci +855

    I currently live on a native American property 55 km or about 35 miles away from Russia. We are closer to Russia than to mainland Alaska. I hesitate to call it a reservation because under Alaskan law, it’s not considered a reservation because it is privately owned by the natives cooperation. I am a teacher on this island.

    • @prion42
      @prion42 Před 11 měsíci +41

      There's no reservations in my state but the Shawnee own a plot of land near my hometown where they have powwows.

    • @jordanjames2956
      @jordanjames2956 Před 11 měsíci +40

      So you live on Saint Lawrence Island?

    • @GeographyNow
      @GeographyNow  Před 11 měsíci +122

      Where are you? I would love to know more!

    • @onewhoisanonymous
      @onewhoisanonymous Před 11 měsíci +134

      @@GeographyNowSt. Lawrence island AK. There are two villages: Savoonga and Gambell. I live in Gambell.

    • @secularsekai8910
      @secularsekai8910 Před 11 měsíci +12

      @@onewhoisanonymous Very interesting!

  • @antons5302
    @antons5302 Před 11 měsíci +898

    Since childhood, I've been fascinated by the Native American cultures. Thank you for dedicating a full special to it

    • @dwaynefoley1020
      @dwaynefoley1020 Před 11 měsíci +12

      Came to say exactly this

    • @hermesbandofficial8551
      @hermesbandofficial8551 Před 11 měsíci +3

      @@dwaynefoley1020 same here

    • @cookiemon_123
      @cookiemon_123 Před 11 měsíci +33

      Same, they usually don't get enough recognition and to this day they are still unfairly treated in some areas.

    • @taberanta628
      @taberanta628 Před 11 měsíci +8

      There is a CZcams channel called, "Ancient Americas."

    • @hermesbandofficial8551
      @hermesbandofficial8551 Před 11 měsíci +3

      @@taberanta628 ill be looking into this if I haven’t already

  • @EdgeXXI
    @EdgeXXI Před 11 měsíci +264

    Greetings from the Tohono O'odham Nation, number three on your list of largest reservations. Our name means Desert People. The names Arizona and Tucson are derived from our language, Arizona meaning small spring and Tucson meaning black mountain. Thanks for your video.

    • @ZhangtheGreat
      @ZhangtheGreat Před 11 měsíci +12

      I know your people got split by the border and are still living on both sides to this day. I've always been curious how you communicate across what is now a recognized international border. Having seen only limited videos, the people portrayed in them were fluent in English on one side and Spanish on the other. Do you use your native tongues to communicate, or do you speak the Indo-European languages with each other?

    • @laylowxalex
      @laylowxalex Před měsícem

      Cool

  • @WizardToby
    @WizardToby Před 11 měsíci +577

    Many of our states, rivers, and landforms in the US have Native American originated names as well (like Mississippi, Minnesota, Wyoming, Missouri, Connecticut, etc). They named all these areas and the land before the Europeans showed up.

    • @rino7789
      @rino7789 Před 11 měsíci +28

      Iowa as well.

    • @boodstain
      @boodstain Před 11 měsíci +43

      The whole state of Ohio too is an Iroquois name, I think it meant “Great River”

    • @timmmahhhh
      @timmmahhhh Před 11 měsíci +25

      Michigan gets its name from an Ojibwa (Chippewa) Indian word meaning "large lake."

    • @glitchxero4687
      @glitchxero4687 Před 11 měsíci +25

      Florida has tons of indigenous names, or at least names of indigenous origin (many Seminole, but some are from other tribes or just named after the tribe itself): Okeechobee, Loxahatchee, Withlacoochee, Alpahoochee, Caloosahatchee, Choctawhatchee, Chatahoochee, Cocohatchee, Tequesta, Ocala, Miami, Pensacola, and many, many more. Some to many of them are anglicized to varying degrees, which is unfortunate, but I'm still glad I at least got that much to learn growing up. I really despise what was done to the native tribes in this country. The government tried to utterly wipe out their languages and cultures and faiths. Every time I think about those residential schools, my blood boils. I can't even imagine how it must make them feel.

    • @sublime9525
      @sublime9525 Před 11 měsíci +31

      Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, Connecticut, Hawai'i, Idaho, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, New Mexico, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Wisconsin, and Wyoming.

  • @ixlzz
    @ixlzz Před 11 měsíci +304

    As a law enforcement officer in Oklahoma, in my county, I had to be cross-deputized into three different tribal police forces so that I could respond to calls for service (or backup) in certain areas.

    • @GeographyNow
      @GeographyNow  Před 11 měsíci +37

      Interesting!

    • @AbruptandOffensive
      @AbruptandOffensive Před 11 měsíci +20

      And the craziest part is local pd/deputies have to respond but your agency can’t prosecute.

    • @willynillylive
      @willynillylive Před 11 měsíci +5

      Tribal police are not to be f with

    • @AbruptandOffensive
      @AbruptandOffensive Před 11 měsíci

      @@willynillylive Tribal police are mostly useless and corrupt. With Lighthorse leading the way.
      The only good tribal police are the ones who are cross deputized and cross train with the US Marshals. They are held to a MUCH much higher standard than normal tribal police.
      BIA is essential the FBI for Native Americans. They are a purely investigative agency who use local tribal police or Marshals to effect arrests on Tribal lands or enclaves.

    • @Jamsomeone
      @Jamsomeone Před 11 měsíci +2

      Some some tribal police are called Lighthorse, which is awesome 😎

  • @IndigenousHistoryNow
    @IndigenousHistoryNow Před 11 měsíci +562

    Another important factor of US-Indigenous history to mention is the boarding school system. For around a century, indigenous children were forced to go to boarding schools where the US attempted to forcibly eradicate all aspects of Indigenous cultures. There was a lot of abuse and neglect, a lot of kids died. This era is why so many languages have so few speakers and also why so many Indigenous communities struggle with inter generational trauma

    • @user-wi4cs8sg8q
      @user-wi4cs8sg8q Před 11 měsíci +48

      Yeah and if I remember correctly there were a lot of natives in the southeast that adopted European-American culture and lifestyles but they were still forced off the land for gold deposits that were found around that region.

    • @alexander6304
      @alexander6304 Před 11 měsíci +51

      Yep, it also wasn't exclusive to the US as well. Canada also played a part in doing exactly what was just described.

    • @k-aw-teksleepysageuni8181
      @k-aw-teksleepysageuni8181 Před 11 měsíci

      @@alexander6304 Canada did it much longer and allowed it to be much more brutal tho too. RCMP helped the churches cover up mass deaths. THis happened until 1996!!! the USA had started closing boarding schools in the 60's and were all gone by the early 70's. Meanwhile thousands more died and were covered up and buried by my mountebank grin "LIEberal and Progressive CONservative" governments.

    • @ATownDown32
      @ATownDown32 Před 11 měsíci +1

      That was canada dude

    • @IndigenousHistoryNow
      @IndigenousHistoryNow Před 11 měsíci +64

      @@ATownDown32 it was Canada, the US, Australia, and New Zealand. All 4 of these countries had boarding school assimilation policies, but the US came up with the idea and opened the first schools. Carlisle Indian Industrial School in Pennsylvania was the first of these schools opened in 1879.

  • @GreenChicken266
    @GreenChicken266 Před 8 měsíci +25

    As a Native American, I'm glad someone is teaching others what we live on now.

  • @hexkobold9814
    @hexkobold9814 Před 11 měsíci +1031

    I'd love to see videos like this for indigenous / ethnic minority populations in other countries like Canada, Brazil, Mexico, Australia, Russia, China, etc!

    • @crazypeopleonsunday7864
      @crazypeopleonsunday7864 Před 11 měsíci +44

      Yes, Australia & Russia especially!

    • @2x2leax
      @2x2leax Před 11 měsíci +41

      Russian one has its own video, about the republics. Yes, the ones that don't have a republic needs its own video.

    • @coyotelong4349
      @coyotelong4349 Před 11 měsíci +24

      Yep, and I would add New Zealand and Taiwan to that

    • @mzee5533
      @mzee5533 Před 11 měsíci +18

      In Southern Africa we’ve the khoisan tribe. You find them in South Africa, Botswana or Namibia

    • @josemanuelalvarezbilbatua7869
      @josemanuelalvarezbilbatua7869 Před 11 měsíci +17

      We have none in Mexico. We are all just Mexicans

  • @than217
    @than217 Před 11 měsíci +264

    The Hopi trying to reclaim land from the Navajo Reservation has been a long legal battle for over half a century now, so I'm glad it got mentioned. And interestingly the ancient Apache-Navajo started their migration from Upper White River region of Alaska following a volcanic eruption from Mount Churchill.

    • @rastus666
      @rastus666 Před 10 měsíci +2

      The Hopi migrated to the US from Central America between 1300-1700 AD. Latecomers.

    • @kingtachalla6181
      @kingtachalla6181 Před 10 měsíci

      I wish we could unite like blacks , and other races instead of just tribal , imagine how powerful we could be 😢

    • @sarban1653
      @sarban1653 Před 9 měsíci +2

      Bruh, Navajo have been living in that area for well over a thousand years.

    • @lancebedonie6326
      @lancebedonie6326 Před 8 měsíci

      I’ve been a part of that battle. Hopi-Navajo relocation.

    • @MrStaybrown
      @MrStaybrown Před 7 měsíci +3

      The navajo didn't take the land, it's where the government drew the lines.

  • @mxss115
    @mxss115 Před 11 měsíci +106

    I lived and worked in the Chickasaw Nation for years. During the initial covid times, the casino I worked at had to close for almost two months. In spite of them being closed, they didn’t lay anybody off and I kept still got paid, including getting 80% of what the average tip pool was. Consider my hourly pay was almost entirely consumed by taxes, tips were almost my entire income.

    • @randytrevino99
      @randytrevino99 Před 11 měsíci +3

      WinStar?

    • @pinkiesue849
      @pinkiesue849 Před 11 měsíci +1

      wonderful of them.

    • @phapart
      @phapart Před 10 měsíci

      They got ppp loans from the us govt, it didn't come out of their pockets

    • @Durant1974
      @Durant1974 Před 8 měsíci +3

      Same at Choctaw. I wish our Government did half the things the Nation's do for their citizens.

    • @robertlee7606
      @robertlee7606 Před 6 měsíci

      Where did they get the money, from the taxpayers via the government.

  • @jacklazzaro9820
    @jacklazzaro9820 Před 11 měsíci +166

    Adding on to the language section, there’s been attempts to revive critically endangered native languages.
    Jessie Little Doe Baird is a Wampanoag linguist who has been reviving the Wampanoag language since the 90’s, and it’s seen some steady success.

  • @vertigo747
    @vertigo747 Před 11 měsíci +191

    I've always seen these across my google maps procrastination sessions and never really understood how the whole system worked, thank for explaining it so clearly. Can't wait for the US episode!! ❤❤

  • @anonimni1288
    @anonimni1288 Před 11 měsíci +280

    Native Americans are really missunderstood people and im happy you're making a video about this

  • @prettypic444
    @prettypic444 Před 11 měsíci +147

    As a fellow Californian, I'm surprised you didn't mentioned the mission system. yeah, it was under the Spanish (and later Mexican) government, but it still had HUGE impact: many Californian tribes aren't federally recognized, and many Californians actually protested when father Junipero was sainted! the history of native suffering under the mission is a big, sad part of our state history!

    • @wynntaylor1
      @wynntaylor1 Před 11 měsíci

      Juniperro serra was a grade A scumbag

    • @ap9019
      @ap9019 Před 11 měsíci +5

      Agreed

    • @franciscomunoz2222
      @franciscomunoz2222 Před 10 měsíci +15

      @Pretty Pic @AP As a fellow Californian, I urge you to dig into the history of the Missions and compare it with what Colonel Freemont did to Native Americans as he was conquering California for the federal government, and what the State of California and the US government carried out beginning in 1849. You can still read it in black and white in the papers of the time. Compare and contrast who carried out the mass killings. The Mission system never did that.

    • @basedkaiser5352
      @basedkaiser5352 Před 10 měsíci

      Based part

    • @D3ci
      @D3ci Před 10 měsíci +1

      Shiiraw'axne tongve, koy aweeshkone xaa tongve'xaarin xaa :)

  • @Deathskull0001
    @Deathskull0001 Před 11 měsíci +177

    Honestly I would've appreciated a full episode on this. Native American culture is diverse and frankly quite a bit more ancient than the USA itself. As it's not as mainstream, I really would like to know as much as possible, but the book recommendation was nice as well:)

    • @TheViolaBuddy
      @TheViolaBuddy Před 11 měsíci +11

      My immediate thought was "Hmm, we're coming to the end of the UN member states... what if after that, we started on a video for each of the 574 federally recognized Native American tribes?" Of course, that's entirely unreasonable, but maybe at least a few videos would be cool, outlining either the largest tribes or else grouping tribes together by like "Pacific Northwest tribes" vs "tribes of the Southwest Great Basin" or something like that. One thing I have a tough time understanding is the differences and diversity across different tribes, because clearly the umbrella category of "Native American" is not a monolith and yet largely my impressions of them are largely as a single block of people.

    • @justinarzola4584
      @justinarzola4584 Před 11 měsíci

      ​@@TheViolaBuddy good comment, we see native Americans as a monomyth but really it's different tribes or ethnic groups who only share the connection of being on the north American continent.

  • @sdrawkcabUK
    @sdrawkcabUK Před 11 měsíci +102

    Also often overlooked in American history are the monuments left by ancient native Americans eg. Cahokia mounds, the snake mound in Ohio, Pueblo houses in SW etc.

    • @BrandanLee
      @BrandanLee Před 11 měsíci +4

      Lizard Mound in Wisconsin, Maya's bones from ~14,000ya in Mexico, 30,000 year old footprints in White Sands, NM near the proving grounds...

    • @user-wx2vq4qd1q
      @user-wx2vq4qd1q Před 7 měsíci

      these stayed because it's hard remove them.
      imagine all the shrines and villages and temples, these are easy to burn and demolish.

  • @MAVJ
    @MAVJ Před 11 měsíci +19

    I served in the Marines with a lot of Native Americans, and they were some of the best guys. All had crazy stories, could give/take a joke, and were completely open to any and all questions we had about their cultures and perspectives of the world.

    • @Bonzi_Buddy
      @Bonzi_Buddy Před 8 měsíci

      Notorious drunks!

    • @Ronin777z
      @Ronin777z Před 4 měsíci

      @@Bonzi_Buddyhmm and why is that I wonder?

  • @chrisclancy6756
    @chrisclancy6756 Před 11 měsíci +82

    Also, the Inuit languages are often seen on signs in Nunavut, Canada. The letters and symbols are really cool looking

    • @noseboop4354
      @noseboop4354 Před 11 měsíci +19

      The origin of those letters (formely called "Inuktitut syllabics") isn't the best, they were invented by English and French missionaries so that natives could read the bible. It was wildly successful at completely destroying the native religions, nearly the entire northern native populations are now christian or protestants.

    • @BrandanLee
      @BrandanLee Před 11 měsíci +7

      @@noseboop4354 -- Correct and tragic. Repeated history of the Scandinavians and slavic folk, finns, sami... They come and "invent" a language, and all you get to read is their stuff. Currently doing it again across south america and Brazil, in the 21st century, with low contact tribes. It's their MO.

  • @BabyMammothGoBoom
    @BabyMammothGoBoom Před 11 měsíci +149

    In Hawaii we grew up learning about hawaiian history from ancient native hawaiian society and culture through hawaii's take over to now.. comparing that to where I live now in Pennsylvania, where I'm told at least the history of the lenape and Delaware weren't taught, it makes me proud to have been a local, which is what we called people from Hawaii who weren't native hawaiian :)

    • @jasonrackawack9369
      @jasonrackawack9369 Před 11 měsíci +4

      As someone who was born and raised in Eastern PA I can ever imagine leaving HI..... let alone moving to PA on purpose....you are right the schools teach nothing about the native cultures here.

    • @Intellectualrigor
      @Intellectualrigor Před 10 měsíci +4

      I grew up and still reside in Western PA, Not only did we learn about different Native cultures in the United States, we had an assembly with 2 ceremonies with local tribes. I depends on the region.

    • @Jramirez2700
      @Jramirez2700 Před 9 měsíci +2

      I grew up in NJ and we learned about the Lenape!

    • @BinglesP
      @BinglesP Před 16 dny

      I grew up in Georgia and I remember learning in school about our state's aboriginal tribes(mainly Cherokee). Once in 4th Grade about how they operated pre-colonization, and sometime in middle school where we learned about how they were treated once the settlers came in, from their agreements with Oglethorpe to their prejudice as minority groups(it was very depressing, I think I remember being physically brought to tears from studying that). Never really heard from someone from there, though. Or, at least ever talked to someone who I knew descended from them.
      So, we did learn about them here, academically at least, but I never got to actually see the reservations or anything.

  • @gagebrandon6674
    @gagebrandon6674 Před 11 měsíci +44

    Along with Kachina dolls being originally Hopi, dream catchers were siouan, and totem poles were only constructed north of Washington on the coast. Both despite their being sold across different areas disregarding where they originate

    • @GeographyNow
      @GeographyNow  Před 11 měsíci +16

      True lol. It kind of seems like a lot of tribes like to "piggyback" off of other tribes.

    • @michaelmetzger8802
      @michaelmetzger8802 Před 11 měsíci +3

      I understand that dream catchers are Ojibwe or Anishinaabe, but it isn't far fetched for contact and trade of customs cultures and all of that with nearby people. Who really knows at this point, so much was lost. One of my ancestors was Sioux and was adopted and raised by Potawatomi and married into the tribe, Who really knows where that one originates it is far back and part of the customs of both. Either way people who believe in pan-indianism blurred it all together so much it confuses many people naturally.

  • @rapportbuildingfirst8695
    @rapportbuildingfirst8695 Před 11 měsíci +60

    Having visited the Navajo Nation in my trip to the US (I'm from Australia) last year I fully agree with his assessment of how good fry-bread tastes. I'm visiting Canada later this year and looking forward to having it again there. Interesting re the languages with their own writing scripts. I did the Navajo tree (more like a bush) on Duolingo during a lockdown in 2020 and was pleased to have a crack at speaking (mainly just 'hello' and 'thank you') when I was on the Reservations last year. But to discover that not all of the Native American languages (in the US - Í'm aware that the Inuit in Canada have their own script) use the Latin script was interesting.

    • @Elmascapo937
      @Elmascapo937 Před 11 měsíci +4

      Australia is also a very interesting country

    • @coyotelong4349
      @coyotelong4349 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Don’t any of the Australian Aboriginal languages have their own script?

    • @rapportbuildingfirst8695
      @rapportbuildingfirst8695 Před 11 měsíci +4

      @@coyotelong4349 to my knowledge they don't/didn't. They were all oral languages until Europeans arrived.

    • @ravinraven6913
      @ravinraven6913 Před 11 měsíci

      people talk really weird here in youtube. like they are talking to someone already who asked them a question. Is this how your teachers taught you how to write paragraphs?

    • @hersheysbar28
      @hersheysbar28 Před 10 měsíci +2

      ​@@ravinraven6913 Buddy, your paragraph here is by far the least well-written. I would take a look at myself before commenting on others if I were you.

  • @SouthwestWoodcraft-pd7wk
    @SouthwestWoodcraft-pd7wk Před 9 měsíci +9

    As a member of the Mescelaro Apache and Toas Pueblo people, I want to thank you for doing a great job on accurately portraying the reservations. I have been keeping up with your channel for some time now and am so glad this episode was made. Keep up the good work and it would be and honor if you came and visited the Toas Pueblo, the oldest inhabited area in North America.

  • @TheThOdOr1s
    @TheThOdOr1s Před 11 měsíci +32

    Just letting future generations know that Geography Now reached the US and made a Reservations Video BEFORE CGP Grey released part 1 of his Reservations Series. Part 0 is been around for 3 years!

    • @ravinraven6913
      @ravinraven6913 Před 11 měsíci

      part 0 has what? part 0 is the one before you start doing something....if hes called it part 0, then hes an idiot

    • @Labyrinth6000
      @Labyrinth6000 Před 26 dny

      I’m guessing he gave up on the topic. He’s infamous for not finishing up certain topics that are covered in “another time”.

  • @elijahrodriguez4744
    @elijahrodriguez4744 Před 11 měsíci +33

    Hey Barby, my name is Hayden Rodriguez and I just wanna sy thank you for taking the time to make this video and educating more people about the indigenous peoples of the US. I would really like to see a series where you cover maybe not every reservation but a few major reservations individually.

    • @ravinraven6913
      @ravinraven6913 Před 11 měsíci

      then why does it it say Elijah Rodriguez and not Hayden? I really think more people could use some more info on reservations. The concept to me to live on them seems stupid, I went through a few in Montana, and they were run down and dilapidated. Only jobs were at the Casino. Kinda sad that the Crow reservations are where the Cheyenne used to call their family homes for hundreds of years. Crow were the US scouts and stuff. So it would be nice to see what tribe was where and what tribe has moved into what tribes land
      It would be good to show people that its not only people of European decent that take over other peoples land. Natives been doing it for hundreds of years, only mad at them white boys because they couldn't beat them like they could beat each other

    • @hyweldavies8450
      @hyweldavies8450 Před 6 měsíci

      😊😊

    • @Trancymind
      @Trancymind Před měsícem

      Rodriguez comes from a germanic tribe from southern sweden and northern germany. Interesting.

  • @RapnFreshD
    @RapnFreshD Před 11 měsíci +31

    i specialised in north american ("native") cultures in my cultural anthropology bachelor (minor) and there is so much to learn and so many stories and histories to tell, it's truly incredible and interesting!

  • @robthetraveler1099
    @robthetraveler1099 Před 11 měsíci +44

    4:06 Fun fact, Native tribes can establish casinos on their reservations even when casinos are illegal in the state that the reservation is surrounded by, e.g. Texas. The only casinos in Texas are on Native reservations.

    • @CliffCardi
      @CliffCardi Před 11 měsíci +3

      That goes for most states. New Jersey requires special licenses, while many riverboat casinos operate on rivers between state borders. But native reservations are always fair game.

    • @cashewnuttel9054
      @cashewnuttel9054 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Since the US already took so much from them some concession maybe allowed?

    • @scottabc72
      @scottabc72 Před 11 měsíci

      @@cashewnuttel9054 Its not really a concession just a recognition that only the Federal government is allowed to pass regulations and laws on Native reservations. This is a legacy of the treaty relationship between the U.S. and Native nations that is codified in the Constitution.

    • @jessallen7756
      @jessallen7756 Před 9 měsíci

      State borders don't end at the waters edge of rivers.....State borders extend to the middle of those rivers.....Some states allow exceptions for socalled riverboat casinos, most of which aren't a boat at all, just a casino building along the shoreline of a river....

    • @randymarshall7665
      @randymarshall7665 Před 8 měsíci

      takin it back one quarter at a time....8)

  • @ortegaperu8510
    @ortegaperu8510 Před 11 měsíci +99

    Hope they can preserve their culture

    • @samsmith2635
      @samsmith2635 Před 11 měsíci +12

      I Hopi they can too

    • @uptown_rider8078
      @uptown_rider8078 Před 11 měsíci +7

      Hopefully we can all preserve our culture

    • @Trancymind
      @Trancymind Před 11 měsíci +2

      Fun fact- All religions, cultures and languages will change over time. Humans are destined to change, why you ask? Because we have had unlimited perspectives from the people who lived in the past, the people currently living and the people who will be born into the future. That's why.

    • @oqo3310
      @oqo3310 Před 10 měsíci +1

      ​@@Trancymindyou can have your culture preserved through time even tho it was subject to change. Jews still have their culture despite it coming from millenias ago and having been subject to brutal discrimination in nearly every place of the globe they have settled in.

    • @Trancymind
      @Trancymind Před 10 měsíci

      @@oqo3310 The jews culture has changed since the beginning including the bible as well. Especially with translation of certain specific words in order to clarify certain sentences. If you look at the jewish religion, it has split into certain branches. Gnosticism is a religion older than the jews even older than the ancient egyptians. This religion doesn't value material things instead the spirit/soul of the individual as well as earths and the afterlife. This religion goes back when people had a simple language and lived in dwellings and caves.

  • @tiltiege7842
    @tiltiege7842 Před 11 měsíci +30

    Nice quick explanation. Knowing Better made a video some time ago, that goes into way more detail why this system is such a clusterfuck at times.

  • @sobs291
    @sobs291 Před 11 měsíci +255

    Unfortunate that you didn’t address why most reservations are full of poverty. For example, since the land is federal, people in the reservations cannot purchase land and thus build wealth to pass down to their children.

    • @JoshTalks11
      @JoshTalks11 Před 11 měsíci +11

      Can you elaborate? As in land outside the res or inside? I guess outside was because they didn’t want reservations to expand even though I think they should be able to. Inside, can’t they just make their own system of land ownership? I don’t think they’re beholden to US property rights on the res

    • @krmendozaa
      @krmendozaa Před 11 měsíci +33

      @@JoshTalks11no, on the Rez. One of my closest friends lives on the Navajo Nation and it’s a really messed up, convoluted system. Homes are basically leased from the tribal/federal government so you cannot own the land. And it’s nearly impossible to get a loan to build a home from the ground up, so many (at least on the Navajo Rez but it might be similar elsewhere) live in trailers because it’s cheapest. Any housing you see is likely the equivalent public housing elsewhere that these families have lived in for decades.

    • @krmendozaa
      @krmendozaa Před 11 měsíci +23

      It’s so sad how it’s so difficult to also open local businesses on reservations so they stay literal food deserts and/or only have access to wildly expensive or corporate fast food.

    • @GeographyNow
      @GeographyNow  Před 11 měsíci +100

      Uhh no idea where you got that from, that is not true, they do have the right to own property, under the Allotment Act of 1887, and Wheeler-Howard Act of 1930s, property ownership rights were established for individual land allotments, which could be owned and transferred similar to private property. Where the issue comes in is the numerous OTHER factors such as the negligence of allocating certain federal funds for things like access to ammenities and services.

    • @Bundpataka
      @Bundpataka Před 11 měsíci +18

      @@GeographyNow Also a lot of allotments were small, poor quality, and native allotment owners often had to split the land between their children, reducing the sizes even more. And the allotment system was created partially to free up the remaining unallotted reservation land for white settlement, which many thought would allow for the natives to be assimilated.

  • @chrisclancy6756
    @chrisclancy6756 Před 11 měsíci +13

    I’m in education, which has recently privileged me to attend a meeting w Gilbert Whiteduck and members of the Mohawk, Algonquin, and Schenectady tribes. We participated in a smudging ceremony with a fire fanned by an eagles feather and passed a talking stick around to talk about our lives, our ideas for education, or our relation to native life. The whole thing was rather eye opening. The teacher I work with presented a project we’re doing in which students from a upper-middle class elementary school collaborated with a nearby indigenous elementary school in creating a song together. The kids played, did activities, had lunch together, and took time to write lyrics in groups. The lyrics spoke of the tragedies of the past while also speaking about a brighter future once we sort the information. The meeting confirmed to me that we can teach the future generations the truth in what happened and other sensitive topics without making anyone feel bad or uncomfortable! The truth may be ugly but it’s the only thing that will set us free from it

    • @davidmrodriguez8067
      @davidmrodriguez8067 Před 15 dny

      Simple music can make you sing, a simple hug can make you feel better, simple things can make you happy, I hope my simple hello will make you smile. I pray to God to give you a lot of beautiful days and I hope God bless you to have a great day. I’m Jason by name from Overbrook Philadelphia and you where are you from?

  • @TriumvirSajaki
    @TriumvirSajaki Před 11 měsíci +14

    When Geography Now gets to the reservations before CPG Grey does

  • @antonioyazzie4615
    @antonioyazzie4615 Před 11 měsíci +5

    Thank you for this episode! Happy you visited my reservation. Sending good thoughts from Navajoland

    • @davidmrodriguez8067
      @davidmrodriguez8067 Před 15 dny

      Simple music can make you sing, a simple hug can make you feel better, simple things can make you happy, I hope my simple hello will make you smile. I pray to God to give you a lot of beautiful days and I hope God bless you to have a great day. I’m Jason by name from Overbrook Philadelphia and you where are you from?

  • @dkeelin
    @dkeelin Před 11 měsíci +11

    When you get bored you should do something like this for Mexico and Canada

  • @MoneyMikeMurray
    @MoneyMikeMurray Před 11 měsíci

    I've never seen your videos before but you sold me with this one. Very informative I loved it

  • @HeisenbergFam
    @HeisenbergFam Před 11 měsíci +75

    Imagine how surreal it feels to live in your land, foreign power comes in with new technology and you are designated to live in special reservations

    • @El-Djazir-Blobfish
      @El-Djazir-Blobfish Před 11 měsíci +4

      HEISENBERG YOU STARING AT MOST OF US

    • @JJ_Five_Two
      @JJ_Five_Two Před 11 měsíci +12

      Oversimplification

    • @benji-pj4dp
      @benji-pj4dp Před 11 měsíci +10

      Because they were all handing out daises to eachother before westerners arrived?

    • @DudeTotally1000
      @DudeTotally1000 Před 11 měsíci +13

      ​@@benji-pj4dp Don't you know that all native Americans were saints? The Aztec empire was basically a utopia 🤣

    • @dkgamers1385
      @dkgamers1385 Před 11 měsíci +2

      Yeah armenians be like native Americans.

  • @zionnobre3139
    @zionnobre3139 Před 11 měsíci +8

    2:01 One note is that there wasn’t an “ice bridge” connecting Asia and North America at the end of the Ice Age (Pleistocene Epoch), but a land bridge that different animals migrated across. This landmass connected both continents because of the lowering of sea level that was caused by glaciers and ice sheets all across the world during that time.

    • @davidmrodriguez8067
      @davidmrodriguez8067 Před 15 dny

      Simple music can make you sing, a simple hug can make you feel better, simple things can make you happy, I hope my simple hello will make you smile. I pray to God to give you a lot of beautiful days and I hope God bless you to have a great day. I’m Jason by name from Overbrook Philadelphia and you where are you from?

  • @samuelboston5121
    @samuelboston5121 Před 11 měsíci +2

    This was incredible work. The perspectives felt balanced and it was well researched. I enjoy this level of work

    • @davidmrodriguez8067
      @davidmrodriguez8067 Před 15 dny

      Simple music can make you sing, a simple hug can make you feel better, simple things can make you happy, I hope my simple hello will make you smile. I pray to God to give you a lot of beautiful days and I hope God bless you to have a great day. I’m Jason by name from Overbrook Philadelphia and you where are you from?

  • @IvanHadlich
    @IvanHadlich Před 11 měsíci

    Duuude! Awesome knowledge here. I had a brainstorming with my friend about this topic last year (I was f curious about it) and here we are! Thanks, awesome video.

  • @edibleandsentientautomobil5396
    @edibleandsentientautomobil5396 Před 11 měsíci +3

    I've been longing to visit a reservation for a long time! Thanks for the cool info

    • @davidmrodriguez8067
      @davidmrodriguez8067 Před 15 dny

      Simple music can make you sing, a simple hug can make you feel better, simple things can make you happy, I hope my simple hello will make you smile. I pray to God to give you a lot of beautiful days and I hope God bless you to have a great day. I’m Jason by name from Overbrook Philadelphia and you where are you from?

  • @earthtomara
    @earthtomara Před 11 měsíci +5

    Miigwech for making this video!! I think it's really important to acknowledge that not all indigenous tribes were the same or even symbiotic in any way. A lot of people have this weird idea that all native peoples have one look and one combined story. My dad is Dakota and my mom is Ojibwe. They were married for 20 years and even they couldn't get along lmao (it's funny because haha enemy tribes)
    If you like frybread and are ever up north, you should try to find some bannock bread. It's bigger, thinner, and I think it's baked? It's not the same of even comparable to frybread, but it's really good and deserves a try!
    Sidenote: In some areas that are surrounded by reservations, you can find some signs written in different indigenous languages. I live in MN and a lot of our welcome or restroom signs are written in English and Ojibwe.

    • @davidmrodriguez8067
      @davidmrodriguez8067 Před 15 dny

      Simple music can make you sing, a simple hug can make you feel better, simple things can make you happy, I hope my simple hello will make you smile. I pray to God to give you a lot of beautiful days and I hope God bless you to have a great day. I’m Jason by name from Overbrook Philadelphia and you where are you from?

  • @ttime808
    @ttime808 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Thanks for including the Pacific in this great explanation video! ❤

  • @DanielKolbin
    @DanielKolbin Před 10 měsíci

    After more than half a decade of waiting, the USA episode is around the block :)
    Massive respect for you doing this series. I really wonder what will happen after Zimbabwe.

  • @jordanwutkee2548
    @jordanwutkee2548 Před 11 měsíci +9

    You could do a whole episode just on the Native Californians, 'cause that's a whole 'nother ballgame. There are multiple dozens of tribes and sub-tribes. I live in the area of the Chumash people, whose language family is believed to be even older than the ones you mentioned, making them among the oldest inhabitants of the region.

  • @Tclans
    @Tclans Před 11 měsíci +13

    Correct me if I’m wrong but wasn’t the word Indian derived from the fact they where looking to reach India or the indies by sailing west instead east.
    Thus landing on the American continent and naming the indigenous people Indians because they where under the impression to have hit India / the indies.

    • @bluntscar7617
      @bluntscar7617 Před 11 měsíci +6

      The name India comes from the river Indus.The land east of Indus is India.

    • @ManteIIo
      @ManteIIo Před 11 měsíci +9

      Yes, they used word Indians to describe peoples of Indian peninsula long before they reached American continent and that's the reason the name stuck with them as well as they thought they reached India from another side. That was the whole point of funding Columbus expedition, to find shorter and faster route to India by going westwards in order to avoid wasting several months by circumnavigating whole African continent.

    • @jonathanborchardt891
      @jonathanborchardt891 Před 9 měsíci

      EN DIOS two words Columbus was lost not stupid.
      Mix up between Latin, Spanish, Portuguese, and English.
      Used to describe the innocent nature of Tanios.

    • @19erik74
      @19erik74 Před 8 měsíci

      ​@@jonathanborchardt891I've also heard it pronounced los sin dios

  • @thomasmoore5949
    @thomasmoore5949 Před 10 měsíci +1

    You know that we still need informative books about Native/indigenous Americans, which can answer questions like the ones you answered here.
    You gave a very good stream of tangible information. I want to hear more about all aspects of Native American history, culture, language, and life.
    That book you recommended would clearly be a good start.

  • @loganarnoldkicks4321
    @loganarnoldkicks4321 Před 11 měsíci +1

    This is the thing I'm most excited for in the USA episode! I'm a history nerd in addition to being a geography nerd, so the major well-known US history kind of bores me just because I've studied it so much in school. I love learning about the cultures of the Indigenous population of different countries, so I'm super excited to learn more

  • @johngorentz6409
    @johngorentz6409 Před 11 měsíci +5

    I like your attitude: Ask. Don't assume you already know or that one answer fits all. And don't assume that one person speaks for everybody.

  • @HessianHunter
    @HessianHunter Před 11 měsíci +7

    1:43 Archaeologists held on to the 10,000 years ago Beringia theory for the arrival of the first Americans for a long time, but there's now convincing evidence that people lived at sites like Monte Verde in Chile and Meadowcroft Rock Shelter in Pennsylvania closer to 20,000 years ago and likely long before then. Linguists noted a long time ago that 10k years wasn't a realistic time frame to develop the extreme linguistic diversity of the continents from a single migratory group. The CZcams channel Ancient Americas has a fantastic video about it and other indigenous history topics.

    • @danielzhang1916
      @danielzhang1916 Před 11 měsíci

      yes the sea theory has become more accepted

    • @HessianHunter
      @HessianHunter Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@danielzhang1916 You mean the "kelp highway" theory, right? Makes a lot of sense once you consider that traveling long distances is far easier via boats than walking on land.

    • @danielzhang1916
      @danielzhang1916 Před 11 měsíci

      @@HessianHunter I didn't know there was an actual name for it, but yes

  • @akucbol
    @akucbol Před 20 dny

    Great personality and storytelling that made this video interesting and easy to both watch and follow.
    Cheers! More power to ya 💕

  • @johngreen6421
    @johngreen6421 Před 10 měsíci

    I really like the video. Very cool. I am very interested in all your information and how much you covered. I look forward to check out more. Thank you

  • @carltonshell1964
    @carltonshell1964 Před 10 měsíci +2

    Sorry, Just FYI for anyone interested... I am Northwest Florida Mvskoke (Muscogee Creek), which is not on your map. During the Indian Removal act the mvskoke from as far away as "Little Tallasee" (near present-day Montgomery, Alabama) Joined with the Tribe in Pensacola, Florida where they remained with a group led by Osceola drawing the federal troops away from them down into the everglades and taking the name "Seminole". A lot happened between then and the 1940's and 1950's to try and become recognized, and finely in 1974, the State of Florida created the Northwest Florida Creek Indian Council under Florida Statute 285 to deal with Creek Indian issues, and in 1986 a treaty was finally signed and the Senate and the House of Representatives for the State of Florida passed concurrent Resolutions that recognized us as a tribe. Our land is not a reservation however, it is called "Tribal Land" and is composed of large areas of land privately purchased and shared among the tribe.

  • @viniciuspaiva8932
    @viniciuspaiva8932 Před 11 měsíci +12

    Here in Brasiil "indigenous" is usually the most accepted term

  • @ettaplace6716
    @ettaplace6716 Před 11 měsíci

    Thanks a lot for covering this !! 👏🏻

  • @GodfatherBoxSet
    @GodfatherBoxSet Před 11 měsíci

    Super cool video. My grandfather was born on the Seneca Res in North Eastern Oklahoma. He moved to Pittsburgh where the tribe is orginally from after his mother passed. We had family here that assimilated when they were being forced out

  • @pckrichards7980
    @pckrichards7980 Před 11 měsíci +2

    Awesome, man. I’m not indigenous, but I’ve always been interested in these groups. Glad you’ve covered this.

    • @davidmrodriguez8067
      @davidmrodriguez8067 Před 15 dny

      Simple music can make you sing, a simple hug can make you feel better, simple things can make you happy, I hope my simple hello will make you smile. I pray to God to give you a lot of beautiful days and I hope God bless you to have a great day. I’m Jason by name from Overbrook Philadelphia and you where are you from?

  • @hotelworker812
    @hotelworker812 Před 11 měsíci +4

    Great video! I have always been curious as to how tribal lands operate.

  • @Gdavis135
    @Gdavis135 Před 10 měsíci

    Thank you for this great video. Nicely explained!

  • @Maurice-Navel
    @Maurice-Navel Před 11 měsíci +1

    I appreciate the care you took in creating this!

    • @davidmrodriguez8067
      @davidmrodriguez8067 Před 15 dny

      Simple music can make you sing, a simple hug can make you feel better, simple things can make you happy, I hope my simple hello will make you smile. I pray to God to give you a lot of beautiful days and I hope God bless you to have a great day. I’m Jason by name from Overbrook Philadelphia and you where are you from?

  • @maitreyajambhulkar
    @maitreyajambhulkar Před 11 měsíci +41

    I have heard about reservations for Native Americans in America.
    Good that you explained. 👍.
    There are Navajo and Mohawk tribes. Any country having a tribe is best.
    In my country India there are lots of tribes but there is no reservation land for them. Tribals in India are found in all parts. But in your country USA there are specific locations for tribals.

    • @mohitshrivastava5412
      @mohitshrivastava5412 Před 11 měsíci +2

      There is a reservation for them under the ST category 'scheduled tribes'. Don't spread misinformation

    • @theawesomeman9821
      @theawesomeman9821 Před 11 měsíci +2

      the Nagas from Manipur would like to object to your answer.

    • @maitreyajambhulkar
      @maitreyajambhulkar Před 11 měsíci +5

      @@mohitshrivastava5412 the reservations in America and India are different. Here in America reservations means specific places for tribes to live.
      In India, reservation means seats which are reserved for Scheduled Castes or Tribes. The reservation can mean anything in India like seats or constituencies reserved for a special group of people. You are getting confused.

    • @maitreyajambhulkar
      @maitreyajambhulkar Před 11 měsíci +2

      @@theawesomeman9821 Nagas were living in the Nagaland and Manipur region long before the Indian government recognised the area as theirs.

    • @bhanupratap1063
      @bhanupratap1063 Před 9 měsíci

      In India, Tribal people have autonomous district councils.

  • @Zeyev
    @Zeyev Před 11 měsíci +3

    Thanks for the overview. I would suggest a deeper dive into some of the nations, but the selection process would take decades, no?
    PS. Like so many Usonians, even those of us with immigrant backgrounds, I have a story: my father was born in Comanche County on a reservation in a house built by members of the Kiowa nation. His father was in the US Army there. Like everything else with the People of the Land, it's a nuanced and difficult history.

  • @Freak_a_zoid
    @Freak_a_zoid Před 9 měsíci

    Very well done. I’m Comanche and this topic is complex…I did enjoy your video and thought you did a very good job. Thank you for this video.

  • @willyhyena
    @willyhyena Před 11 měsíci

    This may be your best one! I learned a lot! I love geography that's why i love you! But this one taught me! Thanks!

  • @Caleb.Brockie
    @Caleb.Brockie Před 11 měsíci +5

    Love this video. I am part Native American from the Gros Ventre tribe (yes I know the translation of the name from French and they did name it). Our reservation is in Montana however it’s technically not our homeland. Our homeland is in present day Canada and when the border was established in the 1800s the Americans wouldn’t let us cross back into Canada

  • @lavarockz9380
    @lavarockz9380 Před 8 měsíci +3

    The Indians weren’t named after the country India, they were named after “the East Indies” which is what people called Indonesia at the time.

    • @davidmrodriguez8067
      @davidmrodriguez8067 Před 15 dny

      Simple music can make you sing, a simple hug can make you feel better, simple things can make you happy, I hope my simple hello will make you smile. I pray to God to give you a lot of beautiful days and I hope God bless you to have a great day. I’m Jason by name from Overbrook Philadelphia and you where are you from?

  • @20thcenturytunes
    @20thcenturytunes Před 11 měsíci +1

    Bravo sir, well done, It is a complex issue and really needs to be talked about more - I've lived and worked in and around two reservations and find each has its complexities, like here by the Great Lakes and adjacent waterways its fishing rights that tends to be a serious concern. Yes, fry bread is awesome.

  • @mstreemoon8117
    @mstreemoon8117 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Thank you so much for recognizing my tribe, the Lumbee, on your map❤we often get overlooked bc of the whole state vs federal recognition issue.

    • @davidmrodriguez8067
      @davidmrodriguez8067 Před 15 dny

      Simple music can make you sing, a simple hug can make you feel better, simple things can make you happy, I hope my simple hello will make you smile. I pray to God to give you a lot of beautiful days and I hope God bless you to have a great day. I’m Jason by name from Overbrook Philadelphia and you where are you from?

  • @viniciuspaiva8932
    @viniciuspaiva8932 Před 11 měsíci +7

    thanks for actually visiting the reservations for the video barbs, mad respects.

    • @davidmrodriguez8067
      @davidmrodriguez8067 Před 15 dny

      Simple music can make you sing, a simple hug can make you feel better, simple things can make you happy, I hope my simple hello will make you smile. I pray to God to give you a lot of beautiful days and I hope God bless you to have a great day. I’m Jason by name from Overbrook Philadelphia and you where are you from?

    • @viniciuspaiva8932
      @viniciuspaiva8932 Před 15 dny

      @@davidmrodriguez8067 from Brasil bro

  • @augustdavis4725
    @augustdavis4725 Před 11 měsíci +18

    As someone who loves the show Yellowstone, (who treats the Natives with such respect), I’m so happy you made this!

  • @8AlisaInez
    @8AlisaInez Před 10 měsíci +1

    Awesome💚Thank you for the message!
    *acknowledgment by the Hopi
    Enjoying your Vlogs 😊

    • @davidmrodriguez8067
      @davidmrodriguez8067 Před 15 dny

      Simple music can make you sing, a simple hug can make you feel better, simple things can make you happy, I hope my simple hello will make you smile. I pray to God to give you a lot of beautiful days and I hope God bless you to have a great day. I’m Jason by name from Overbrook Philadelphia and you where are you from?

  • @krazeevideos
    @krazeevideos Před 8 měsíci

    Excellent research thanks for your educational video👍I'm from Canada and have been to gathering of nations it was awesome trip

  • @bj.bruner
    @bj.bruner Před 11 měsíci +3

    You've done what CGP Grey started but couldn't finish. Well done Barbs 👏

  • @rachelellebye5203
    @rachelellebye5203 Před 11 měsíci +8

    So hyped for the USA episode!!

    • @davidmrodriguez8067
      @davidmrodriguez8067 Před 15 dny

      Simple music can make you sing, a simple hug can make you feel better, simple things can make you happy, I hope my simple hello will make you smile. I pray to God to give you a lot of beautiful days and I hope God bless you to have a great day. I’m Jason by name from Overbrook Philadelphia and you where are you from?

  • @Flying_Ninja
    @Flying_Ninja Před 11 měsíci +2

    im excited for the us episode, it’s gonna be awesome 👍

  • @michaelschlegel8585
    @michaelschlegel8585 Před 10 měsíci

    Barbs, I’ve been a fan for probably about 6 years- since I was in college as a young/dumb geography major. I want to thank you for helping me get interested in the subject, and the great content you’ve provided. I was always curious how you would display the US eventually. As an American, I could not be more happy with how you represented us.
    The USA has done many wrongs, particularly to natives, African-Americans, etc. that you didn’t shy away from. I’m glad you gave the backstory on some of the people our country has historically forgot.
    We’re a nation of misfits, who often times seem like we hate each other. Again, don’t get me wrong, we have a million problems, but I’m happy to be here, and very grateful to be from here.
    I was always raised to do my best not judge, treat people how I’d want to be treated, and ultimately we’re all in this together. My parents always taught me no matter how we look or how we got here- we’re all Americans. I think you exemplified that. Thanks Barbs.

  • @ryanmcmanusoldcities
    @ryanmcmanusoldcities Před 11 měsíci +3

    Hey, Geography Now, have you read the book 1491 about the pre-columbian americas, I'm almost finished with it and it's really good. Among many things, it talks about how the pre-columbian americas were actually descently densely populated, and a lot more densely populated than most people picture them or what is generally taught in schools.

  • @jonathanbush6197
    @jonathanbush6197 Před 11 měsíci +4

    Thanks for the useful info! Although there is apparently no official Native land in Virginia, there are still regions that hold many descendants from the same tribe, such as the Monacan tribe around Amherst. I used to deliver newspapers there, and on the few occasions that we met, they were always very nice to me.

    • @davidmrodriguez8067
      @davidmrodriguez8067 Před 15 dny

      Simple music can make you sing, a simple hug can make you feel better, simple things can make you happy, I hope my simple hello will make you smile. I pray to God to give you a lot of beautiful days and I hope God bless you to have a great day. I’m Jason by name from Overbrook Philadelphia and you where are you from?

    • @jonathanbush6197
      @jonathanbush6197 Před 15 dny +1

      @@davidmrodriguez8067 These days I live in Lexington Virginia. Thank you for your good wishes which did cheer me up. I wish the same for you.

    • @davidmrodriguez8067
      @davidmrodriguez8067 Před 15 dny

      @@jonathanbush6197 Smile that so lovely to know.
      Life is beautiful.
      How is the weather over there with you?

  • @gnsmk357
    @gnsmk357 Před 7 měsíci

    This was a well thought out and respectful 12 min 12 sec of good researched information. Great job. Great insight. A+ Video.

    • @davidmrodriguez8067
      @davidmrodriguez8067 Před 15 dny

      Simple music can make you sing, a simple hug can make you feel better, simple things can make you happy, I hope my simple hello will make you smile. I pray to God to give you a lot of beautiful days and I hope God bless you to have a great day. I’m Jason by name from Overbrook Philadelphia and you where are you from?

  • @WERTYCLOUD77_YT
    @WERTYCLOUD77_YT Před 10 měsíci +1

    Hi Geography Now, I love your content it's very interesting and very educational 😀 that's why I subscribe 😃

  • @BougieAshr
    @BougieAshr Před 10 měsíci +5

    I’m a gen z Native American and I personally hate the term indigenous because it sounds so close to indigent (poor; needy). Native American is fine but I tend to say Indian more because it doesn’t take as long to say 😂

    • @Luci_S
      @Luci_S Před 9 měsíci +2

      Sister! Just use the short variant! NDN!

    • @Trancymind
      @Trancymind Před měsícem

      Indian= India. I can tell you this, women from India are very attractive with their faces/eyes and curved bodies.

  • @BenDover-xv5il
    @BenDover-xv5il Před 11 měsíci +7

    Can’t wait for the Indigenous Australians episode! Lots of history and geography to cover.

    • @Bonzi_Buddy
      @Bonzi_Buddy Před 8 měsíci +1

      Ah yes. They have an average IQ in the 70’s.

    • @poloclubb
      @poloclubb Před 7 měsíci

      Like where they built a 5 star resort on top of a big concentration camp for aborigines 😃

  • @yamahaxs6501
    @yamahaxs6501 Před 11 měsíci

    So much incredible information. Thank you.

  • @happyphoto200
    @happyphoto200 Před 11 měsíci +4

    One of the craziest thing I learned about one tribe the Seminole Tribe of Florida is that they own the hard rock cafe brand.

  • @charliekoughing866
    @charliekoughing866 Před 11 měsíci +4

    Born on Pine Ridge rez here.
    Gotta say you're intro is pretty solid. For sure we perfer to be referred to by tribal lines.
    As far as the other terms go, I myself perfer American Indian. Mostly due to AIM (American Indian Movement) in the 60s and 70's

    • @davidmrodriguez8067
      @davidmrodriguez8067 Před 15 dny

      Simple music can make you sing, a simple hug can make you feel better, simple things can make you happy, I hope my simple hello will make you smile. I pray to God to give you a lot of beautiful days and I hope God bless you to have a great day. I’m Jason by name from Overbrook Philadelphia and you where are you from?

  • @rvnsprng
    @rvnsprng Před 11 měsíci

    Hesci estvnko Barbs! Thank you for making this video! As a Mvskoke man I appreciate seeing my fellow Native peoples getting recognition

  • @marinazapatero3382
    @marinazapatero3382 Před 8 měsíci

    Vielen Dank für dieses informative video. Es ist das erste mal, dass ich mich mit diesem Thema beschäftige. Das war sehr hilfreich

    • @davidmrodriguez8067
      @davidmrodriguez8067 Před 15 dny

      Simple music can make you sing, a simple hug can make you feel better, simple things can make you happy, I hope my simple hello will make you smile. I pray to God to give you a lot of beautiful days and I hope God bless you to have a great day. I’m David by name from Overbrook Philadelphia and you where are you from?

  • @PaulSobon1
    @PaulSobon1 Před 11 měsíci +3

    As well, members of certain Indian Nations travel on their own National passports rather than their US passport to selected countries. I spoke last year here in Geneva with the Haudenosaunee Confederacy Representative to the UN. He entered Switzerland via Zurich on his Haudenosaunne passport; he showed it to me with its official entrance stamp by Switzerland immigration. The Haudenosanee (sometimes know as Iroquois) are officially recognized by the Canton of Geneva but are not yet recognized by the UN as an independent nation, so the visit protocol was a mix of official state business and “just another tourist”. I learned a bit about their nation during the Geneva welcoming ceremony. As Paul says, talking is the best way forward. The Representative wasn’t so clear, but I suspect he entered back in New York on his US passport rather than his Haudenosaunne.

    • @willynillylive
      @willynillylive Před 11 měsíci

      Your Indian id is us government federal identification and can be used as a u s passport because it is

    • @SafavidAfsharid3197
      @SafavidAfsharid3197 Před 7 měsíci

      ​@@willynillylivei don't think our indian ID or adhar would work in USA and your native reservations bruh. Its only work within indian borders.

  • @raguelelnaqum
    @raguelelnaqum Před 11 měsíci +5

    It'd be interesting if you could cover state-recognized tribes & nations, plus their reservations. For example, the Lumbee of North Carolina

    • @lancebedonie6326
      @lancebedonie6326 Před 8 měsíci +1

      I visited Lambee rez. I’m Navajo. It’s a beautiful country. I loved the lakes.

    • @raguelelnaqum
      @raguelelnaqum Před 8 měsíci

      @@lancebedonie6326 What a coincidence, I've visited the Navajo rez & one of my close family friends is of the Dine!

  • @billyr2904
    @billyr2904 Před 11 měsíci

    This video is like what you did with the UK episode. Where you made a video on the subdivisions, as a reference point.

  • @nathangale7702
    @nathangale7702 Před 11 měsíci

    Overall, this is a good introduction. I'm glad you encourage everyone to research the nuances further.

  • @fernandez3841
    @fernandez3841 Před 11 měsíci +19

    Most white Americans, "I'm part Cherokee"

    • @stargazer-elite
      @stargazer-elite Před 11 měsíci

      Well all humans are related to the first single called life soooo technically the truth we all are cousins to each other

    • @willynillylive
      @willynillylive Před 11 měsíci

      Lots of people probably are Cherokee

    • @lingding-
      @lingding- Před 10 měsíci

      Most are

  • @coyotelong4349
    @coyotelong4349 Před 11 měsíci +4

    If you think about it, the UK’s equivalent of Indigenous reservations are the countries of Scotland, Wales & Northern Ireland 😅 (& unofficially Cornwall)

  • @bchapman1234
    @bchapman1234 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Thanks for the summary. Our church has a Racial Justice and Equity class. I remember being very frustrated trying to explain the relationship of the tribes to the US and the States. I couldn't seem to get it across. I wish I had your video then.

  • @FreedomToRoam86
    @FreedomToRoam86 Před 6 měsíci

    Pretty good summary - thanks for the good effort.

  • @cabbagecat9404
    @cabbagecat9404 Před 11 měsíci +3

    should do a video like this for Canada's reserves, yes reserves not reservations, even though you already made a video on Canada but it would be cool! high from Canada :)

    • @davidmrodriguez8067
      @davidmrodriguez8067 Před 15 dny

      Simple music can make you sing, a simple hug can make you feel better, simple things can make you happy, I hope my simple hello will make you smile. I pray to God to give you a lot of beautiful days and I hope God bless you to have a great day. I’m David by name from Overbrook Philadelphia and you where are you from?

  • @evanunderland8964
    @evanunderland8964 Před 11 měsíci +3

    I know there is a so much information about the native people and this video is only the tip of the iceberg but it would've been to cool to mention the sport of Lacrosse! It is the oldest sport in North America and was played primarily by the tribes in the Northeast and along the great lakes. You mentioned them in the video but the Iroquois have their own team and compete at the international level and are one of the best in the world. Lacrosse has such a rich history and I encourage anybody to watch a game or some highlights. It is such a unique and fun sport and currently on the rise in popularity

    • @muchachonextdoor5608
      @muchachonextdoor5608 Před 11 měsíci

      The creators game

    • @phapart
      @phapart Před 10 měsíci

      What about that game the Mayans played where the losers would be killed?

  • @jhonyermo
    @jhonyermo Před 11 měsíci

    One of your VERY BEST. Thank YOU !!!!

  • @FrankTulloch
    @FrankTulloch Před 10 měsíci

    thank you for the rundown King 🙏

  • @shaneeq
    @shaneeq Před 11 měsíci +2

    An Amazing Video as Usual :))

    • @davidmrodriguez8067
      @davidmrodriguez8067 Před 15 dny

      Simple music can make you sing, a simple hug can make you feel better, simple things can make you happy, I hope my simple hello will make you smile. I pray to God to give you a lot of beautiful days and I hope God bless you to have a great day. I’m Jason by name from Overbrook Philadelphia and you where are you from?