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Taking into account the statement above: "What statement is false in regards to how did Native Americans conceive of private property? 1. Families might use a specific plot of land for a season. 2. Native Americans believed that land should never be claimed. 3. The same as Europeans, who claimed otherwise as an excuse to take their land. 4. A family could not claim land forever, and an individual could not either. 5. Individuals could own the right to use the land."
The answer is: native Americans believed that land should never be claimed.
Hope this helps.
The White Man's Burden' was a poemby Rudyard Kipling, published in 1899. The poem addressed the United States' shift from isolationism, a foreign policy where countries keep to themselves to imperialism, a foreign policy where countries expand their influence through peace or force
<span>Like the pyramid of Giza, west africans and Blacks in the African continent were so obsessed with any form of identity from sculpture, drawings, images that each community actually branded persons to, among other reasons, identity with that community. My university, one of the best in my country still has a sculpture of the YORUBA God, Ododuwa, just before you get into campus even admits the vast infiltration of christianity and Islam. I could go on and on and on. Initially, all African art objects were viewed as ethnographic specimens like drawn images of famous men and men but as time progresses people just weren't satisfied so they contrived any kind of identification because they had wars, inter-community strife, and more. The importance of artifacts to the black community until the late 20 century can not be overemphasized. It was a kind of lifeblood because everyone wants to, and had to identify with something because of the prevailing conditions then.</span>