The guidelines stated within this official document are to be followed by ALL people who live within the United States. Disobeying these rules is punishable to the full extent of the law.
#1.) No tribe of Native American people (Lakota, Apache, Comanche, Hopi, Kiowa, Cherokee, Cheyenne, Choctaw, Iroquois, Algonquin, Pawnee or any other recognized tribe), may be forcefully removed or displaced from their own land and herded somewhere else i.e. reservations or other land identified by the Europeans for the allocation of Native Americans.
#2.) Any Native American person who is refused service in a place of business due to their nationality may report such an offense to the local law enforcement official and the perpetrator may be arrested and charged with a hate crime and punished within the rights of the law.
#3.) Native American children who are being taught in school may not be forced to sing European Nationalist songs if they so choose and cannot be punished for this choice.
#4.) Any romantic union between a Native American person and a European or other white person is lawful and cannot be attacked or forcefully broken apart due to one's own prejudices. Any man or woman who attempts to harm a Native person or European or other white person due to their choice to be romantically involved with a member of another race may not be harmed or killed because the attacker does not agree with the union.
Native peoples and white peoples are also legally allowed to be married officially so long as they find a willing pastor who is lawfully ordained and they may choose where to hold such a ceremony and they may also choose who is allowed to attend and any persons not invited who show up attempting to break up the union may be arrested and charged with a hate crime.
This act was signed April 23, 1723 by U.S. President Andrew Powers, Oglala Lakota Chiefs Otaktay and Kangee and is a legally recognized document.