Yes there was in the 1800's.
Hitler's policy towards the Jews was the "Final Solution" which was the total annihilation or genocide of the Jewish race and culture.
You are asking the wrong question. It should be how did American policy affect Native Americans.
Thomas Jackson, also known as Stonewall Jackson, is not known to have had a policy toward Native Americans. Andrew Jackson, a generation earlier, and no relation to Stonewall, carried out a policy similar to a Russian progrom to force Native Americans across the Mississippi to a separate territory. This became known as the Trail of Tears.
In 1850, U.S. government policy towards Native Americans was largely characterized by removal and marginalization. The Indian Removal Act of 1830 had already set the stage for the forced relocation of tribes from their ancestral lands, particularly in the southeastern United States. By 1850, many Native Americans were being pushed westward into designated Indian Territory, often facing violence and broken treaties. The prevailing attitude was one of assimilation, with efforts to undermine Native cultures and integrate Indigenous peoples into European-American society.
True
Most Native Americans were practically forced to relocate to reservations.
false
Hitler's policy towards the Jews was the "Final Solution" which was the total annihilation or genocide of the Jewish race and culture.
The policy brought the native americans into mainstream Self-determination
You are asking the wrong question. It should be how did American policy affect Native Americans.
Thomas Jackson, also known as Stonewall Jackson, is not known to have had a policy toward Native Americans. Andrew Jackson, a generation earlier, and no relation to Stonewall, carried out a policy similar to a Russian progrom to force Native Americans across the Mississippi to a separate territory. This became known as the Trail of Tears.
The government's policy of assimilation of the Native Americans was a failure because the government wanted to eliminate them. The government wanted the Native Americans to remain powerless.
Move them at all costs
they didnt think about the native Indian only of their expension and the power they thought they had because of the Indians illerteracy and they took advantage of it and because of that power they drove them out. and put them in extinction.
In 1850, U.S. government policy towards Native Americans was largely characterized by removal and marginalization. The Indian Removal Act of 1830 had already set the stage for the forced relocation of tribes from their ancestral lands, particularly in the southeastern United States. By 1850, many Native Americans were being pushed westward into designated Indian Territory, often facing violence and broken treaties. The prevailing attitude was one of assimilation, with efforts to undermine Native cultures and integrate Indigenous peoples into European-American society.
True
True