I'm a 69 year old 22-year veteran of the United States Army with sixteen years of experience as a combat medic, and I am also what can be called a Constitutiona
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THOUSANDS OF NATIVE AMERICANS DIED SO AMERICA COULD EXPAND WESTWARD.
That is the part of history many people were never fully taught.
The Trail of Tears forced Native nations from their ancestral lands after the U.S. government ordered their removal.
Families lost homes, farms, sacred places, and loved ones.
Some walked over 1,000 miles in brutal conditions.
Disease spread quickly.
Food was scarce.
Winter storms killed many who were already weak from exhaustion.
Mothers carried sick children while trying to survive.
Elders were left behind after collapsing from fatigue.
Entire families disappeared during the journey.
Yet Native communities endured.
Today, descendants still remember the stories passed down by survivors.
The trauma did not end when the marches ended.
Its effects continued through generations.
Many Indigenous people say schools often rush through this history too quickly.
A few textbook pages cannot fully explain the suffering, resistance, and resilience of Native nations.
History is not meant to make people comfortable.
It is meant to help people understand truth.
Because a country cannot fully heal from the past if it refuses to fully acknowledge it.
Why this matters:
• Indigenous remembrance
• Historical truth
• Cultural resilience
• Respect for Native communities
• Honest education
Should the Trail of Tears be taught in greater detail in U.S. schools?
YES or NO?