The answer to this question depends highly on what is an Indian, for that there are at least three answers (each of them conflict with each other) - with this in mind the answer is given based on all three definitions, and conflict with each other.
- Yes, "Indians" (Native Americans) are still Indians as long as a drop of Indian blood still flows in their veins (quoting Cohen's Handbook on Federal Indian Law, 4th ed.).
- No, "Indians" as a distinct cultural people have been extinct since the early 1900's; quoting different US Government Sources.
- Yes, "Indians" still exist and are defined as a distinct cultural people that associate or band together for that purpose (Quoting the Montoya Test - by US Federal Courts). This answer is also the same as many answers given by most tribal people, being that an "Indian" is not defined by blood or birth, they are defined by the Cultural Teachings they live by (not the ones they profess).