Analyze colonizer challenges to tribal sovereignty in the early United States.(1 point)

Responses

American colonizers did not challenge tribal sovereignty. They worked together with Indigenous people and respected their rights.
American colonizers did not challenge tribal sovereignty. They worked together with Indigenous people and respected their rights.

Colonizers challenged tribal sovereignty by allowing Indigenous peoples to negotiate with the American government fairly and allowing them to keep living on their land.
Colonizers challenged tribal sovereignty by allowing Indigenous peoples to negotiate with the American government fairly and allowing them to keep living on their land.

Colonizers challenged tribal sovereignty by trading with Indigenous groups and sharing farming techniques with them.
Colonizers challenged tribal sovereignty by trading with Indigenous groups and sharing farming techniques with them.

Colonizers challenged tribal sovereignty by stealing land and introducing diseases, plants, and animals that devastated Indigenous land and peoples.

Colonizers challenged tribal sovereignty by stealing land and introducing diseases, plants, and animals that devastated Indigenous land and peoples. This led to forced removal of tribes from their traditional lands, broken treaties, and ultimately the erosion of tribal sovereignty. The American government also passed laws that sought to assimilate Indigenous peoples into American society, further weakening tribal autonomy. These actions ultimately had long-lasting impacts on Indigenous communities and their ability to govern themselves.