RECLASSIFIED
THE ADMINISTRATIVE ERASURE OF AMERICA'S ABORIGINAL POPULATIONS
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Narrado por:
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Virtual Voice
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De:
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Rodney Carroll™
Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
History did not erase America’s first peoples. Paper did.
This book exposes how laws, records, census codes, court designations, and bureaucratic classifications quietly transformed entire Indigenous populations into something else on paper—Negro, Colored, Freedman, Mulatto—severing them from land, lineage, treaty rights, and legal standing without a single battlefield victory.
The Administrative Erasure of America’s Aboriginal Populations traces how identity was not merely misnamed, but reassigned—through statutes, registries, church records, land patents, school systems, and federal forms. It reveals how this reclassification dismantled nations, displaced communities, and rewrote ancestry through ink rather than arms.
Inside, you will discover:
How bureaucratic categories became tools of dispossession
Why Southeastern Indigenous peoples were reclassified rather than removed
How paper replaced conquest as the primary weapon
The legal and historical mechanics of identity reassignment
What was lost when a people became a “classification”
This is not a political manifesto.
It is a forensic examination of how systems operate.
Through law, history, and archival evidence, the book demonstrates that erasure is not always violent. Sometimes it is quiet. Sometimes it is procedural. Sometimes it arrives in the form of a checkbox.
This work is for readers who question official narratives, for scholars of history and law, for descendants seeking clarity, and for anyone who understands that control of identity is control of destiny.
Because once a people are reclassified, they no longer have to be conquered.