trump bans indian word in america
The recent comments of Donald Trump when he said that people are not allowed to use the word Indian anymore has sparked the heated debates concerning race, language and Native identity in the United States. His words did not proclaim a new legal prohibition, but they exploited emotional and political stresses on the manner in which Indigenous people are to be characterized and portrayed. The scandal lies on the border of history, cultural sensitivity, and the combative history of Trump himself on Native American matters, sports mascots, casino controversies, and the rhetoric of Native Americans.
In an informal interview with a reporter, Trump would say that no longer can people be allowed to refer to someone as Indian and that only the Indians would want you to call them such. He packaged it as opposition to imposed changes of language and political correctness indicating that he would never instruct individuals to alter their words. Notably, he has not quoted any law or policy or official edict as prohibiting the word and there is no national legal ban like that.
Indian is a name that originated with Christopher Columbus when he mistakenly thought that he had reached India when he landed in the Americas and the name was socially accepted as a name of Indigenous peoples over the centuries. Currently, the views on using the name Indian vary within the Native communities: some tribes and other organizations retain the word Indian in their legal names, treaties, and self-identification, whereas the others find it to be inaccurate, outdated, or colonialist and use the terms Native American, Indigenous, or tribal names.
The remark of Trump is a part of a longer history of conflicts with Native American tribes and the Indigenous representation. He was called before Congress in 1990s to testify against Native American gaming, in which he questioned why some tribes resembled Indians, and said he might be having more Indian blood than the other tribes, a quote which was widely considered to be an insult. More recently, he has urged teams such as the Washington Commanders and the Cleveland Guardians to revive their old names based on Native themes, arguing that the Indian people desire the old names, which many Native organizations have opposed as stereotyping and demeaning Native people.
The controversy because of the comment made by Trump about the Indians is a symptom of a wider conflict about identity, history, as well as power. Native activists stress that language shapes the way the colonization is being recalled by the societies, the tribal sovereignty is being respected and the discrimination that is faced by the communities. As much as there are voices among the Indigenous people who believe that some of the traditional names should be maintained, most people believe that the choice should be made by the Native community, rather than politicians playing the culture-war card in the name of the issue.
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