[The Winning of the West, Volume Three by Theodore Roosevelt]@TWC D-Link bookThe Winning of the West, Volume Three CHAPTER II 30/111
In these treaties we have been more than just to the Indians; we have been abundantly generous, for we have paid them many times what they were entitled to; many times what we would have paid any civilized people whose claim was as vague and shadowy as theirs.
By war or threat of war, or purchase we have won from great civilized nations, from France, Spain, Russia, and Mexico, immense tracts of country already peopled by many tens of thousands of families; we have paid many millions of dollars to these nations for the land we took; but for every dollar thus paid to these great and powerful civilized commonwealths, we have paid ten, for lands less valuable, to the chiefs and warriors of the red tribes.
No other conquering and colonizing nation has ever treated the original savage owners of the soil with such generosity as has the United States.
Nor is the charge that the treaties with the Indians have been broken, of weight in itself; it depends always on the individual case.
Many of the treaties were kept by the whites and broken by the Indians; others were broken by the whites themselves; and sometimes those who broke them did very wrong indeed, and sometimes they did right.
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