Respuesta :
The point of view of the Virginia governor here is that he C feels a responsibility to protect White frontier settlers from violent encounters with American Indians
During colonial times, there was frequent conflict between the Native Americans and American colonists such that there was bloodshed in the land.
From this except, the Virginia governor is calling for more action against violent American Indians whom he felt are dealing quite a lot of damage because:
- the Rangers were not sufficient
- the people of Virginia were not ready to engage in war with the Natives
We can conclude that from his suggestion that they settle their Native American allies on the frontier that, he feels a responsibility to protect the lives of Whites on the frontier by any means necessary, including sacrificing the lives of their Native allies.
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The excerpt in question is:
"The next matter I shall recommend to you is the providing more effectively for the security of your frontiers against [American] Indians, who notwithstanding the many parties of Rangers [militia, or local men who volunteered for colonial defense] have . . . killed and carried off at least twenty of our outward inhabitants and Indian allies; I have attempted by several ways to oppose those [invasions] but after some trouble and expense have only experienced that our people are not ready for warlike undertakings. . . . The [condition of our Indian allies has] of late approved themselves to be ready and faithfully allied, and I am persuaded that setting them along our frontiers without all our inhabitants . . . would be a better and cheaper safeguard to the country than the old method of Rangers."
Virginia Governor Alexander Spotswood, addressing the members of the House of Burgesses, 1713