This is a short and hard-hitting exploration of the intertwining of the American military and Native Americans. LaDuke explores the personal, political, economic, and environmental implications of the ways that the American government has continued to exploit, manipulate, and haunt Native American land, livelihoods, and cultural dynamics. The book surfaces a variety of examples of Native American history and cultural doctrine to illustrate novel insights around how these negative impacts initially percolated and continue to fester, and I found a lot of the stories and vignettes compelling and important.
I am happy to have read this book and would generally recommend it. I found the last chapter especially compelling. At the same time, while I appreciated that it was a high-level survey of a variety of issues and associated contentions/conclusions, I found that the relative lack of depth in some of the examples made the book less effective as a whole (for example, the list of fort-named reservations felt lower signal than I wanted it to be). That being said, I am excited to deepen my own understanding by investigating further.