Irrelevant, since violent conflict among native Americans predates Europeans showing up on the scene.
Not irrelevant at all since Europeans were violent before showing up on this continent.
You posted a link reporting native people's violence. The cause for that violence against those described in the article is relevant.
Tribal wars are irrelevant when responding to your DailyMail 2013article that speaks of Comanche peoples violence toward European invaders.
The truth Johnny Depp wants to hide about the real-life Tontos: How Comanche Indians butchered babies, roasted enemies alive and would ride 1,000 miles to wipe out one family
- Comanche Indians were responsible for one of the most brutal slaughters in the history of the Wild West
- However, Johnny Depp wants to play Tonto in a more sympathetic light
Why not seek out actual historic reporting? Johnny Depp means nothing to the issue of tribal people.
The Comanche – Horsemen of the Plains
"...
Many historians debate whether the Comanche deserve their ferocious reputation, indicating that they were only fighting for retrieval of the land they felt was theirs. Continuing to protect their territory, the formidable Comanche aggressively attacked the many settlers passing through on their way to the
California Gold Rush. Some were killed, but most often their horses and cattle were stolen.
The fierce Comanche continued to maintain their independence and even increase their territory until new diseases, including smallpox and cholera, began to take their toll. By the 1870s, these illnesses had reduced their population to about 7,000 people.
Medicine Lodge, Kansas Treaty Council
In the 1860s efforts began to move the Comanche to a reservation in Indian Territory (Oklahoma). In the Treaty of Medicine Lodge of 1867, the government offered them churches, schools, and annuities in return for a vast tract of land totaling over 60,000 square miles. They also promised to stop the
buffalo hunters, who were decimating the great herds of the Plains with the condition that the Comanche, along with the Apache,
Kiowa,
Cheyenne, and
Arapaho relocate.
Obviously, the government failed on their promise the prevent the buffalo hunters from slaughtering the herds, which soon provoked the Comanche Chief White Eagle to attack a group of hunters in the Texas Panhandle in 1874. Known as the
Second Battle of Adobe Walls, the attack was a disaster for the Comanche and the army soon drove those who were remaining onto a reservation."