The packaging and labeling of Native American commodity goods like Soda, Alcohol and Cigarettes and Tobacco products, are similar to what they used to be in the USA, back in the 1970s.
This provides a comparatively ill description of the products heavily in favor of the maker, and on Indian reservations these products are heavily advertised as there are no laws regulating or banning the advertisements, and they also run outdated advertising and promotion programs that are now illegal.
And it contributes to their high tobacco consumption and alcohol consumption.
The age for gambling and Alcohol consumption on Indian reservations is 18, not 21.
This contributes to alcoholism and gambling problems, and would contribute to dangerous driving conditions if they were not so poor.
The Photo ID requirements are nowhere near as strict on an indian reservation either.
On Indian reservations they do not pay American Taxes and so the cost of these unhealthy goods and services are much less expensive, which drives up the usage rates.
There is very little, if any laws that control business and economic practices.
The education standards on Indian Reservations are next to Non-Existent.
And if their system was compared to the system that educates us, theirs would rank dead last across America, number 50.
There is absolutely no way that a child from there who gets caught in the American child welfare services, should be sent back to there to live with anybody that lives there.
This provides a comparatively ill description of the products heavily in favor of the maker, and on Indian reservations these products are heavily advertised as there are no laws regulating or banning the advertisements, and they also run outdated advertising and promotion programs that are now illegal.
And it contributes to their high tobacco consumption and alcohol consumption.
The age for gambling and Alcohol consumption on Indian reservations is 18, not 21.
This contributes to alcoholism and gambling problems, and would contribute to dangerous driving conditions if they were not so poor.
The Photo ID requirements are nowhere near as strict on an indian reservation either.
On Indian reservations they do not pay American Taxes and so the cost of these unhealthy goods and services are much less expensive, which drives up the usage rates.
There is very little, if any laws that control business and economic practices.
The education standards on Indian Reservations are next to Non-Existent.
And if their system was compared to the system that educates us, theirs would rank dead last across America, number 50.
There is absolutely no way that a child from there who gets caught in the American child welfare services, should be sent back to there to live with anybody that lives there.