Who owns the land you live on, you or the Natives?
Real Estate has exploded to unthinkable levels here in Canada. We here in Canada use to look at Japan and think to our self’s wow so expensive to own real estate in Japan. Today we Canadians have embarked on to the same flight in Real Estate as Japan. The question we are suddenly reminded here in Canada is who really owns certain area of property in every city in Canada. The Native Canadians or non Native Canadians? Yet in real life we are all Canadians the Natives and non Native Canadians who are blessed to live in this beautiful country. The dispute in lease rights has been on going for a long time in many parts of the country with out any resolution that would help to stop this ongoing disobedience that hearts every Canadian Native and the non Natives.
The only solution available to us all, is to insure that the Government of the day will negociate a fair setalment for both sides. The Problem gets biger when the Government of the day dosent do the apropriate job in negociating a deal that will not need revisiting like today in Caledonia.
As well the natives must respect any settlement presented to them and excepted by them or the recipe is good but the eating is not.
Natives tear up road
Broadcast News
Published: Monday, May 22, 2006
CALEDONIA, Ontario -- Tensions have escalated again at the site of an aboriginal protest near Caledonia, Ontario.
This afternoon, protesters began to tear up a portion of the road they have been barricading since April.
The Six Nations protesters had removed their blockade across the main road through Caledonia earlier today, but now they've blocked it again -- and brought in a backhoe to dig it up.
They're angry that non-native protesters who'd set up a counter blockade on the road refused to let them pass through.
Within the last hour they resurrected their own barricade.
Six Nations members have occupied a construction site nearby since February, arguing that the land belongs to them.
They say they agreed to lease the property for a road in 1835, but never agreed to sell.
The road blockade went up after police tried to forcibly end their occupation on April 20th.
Real Estate has exploded to unthinkable levels here in Canada. We here in Canada use to look at Japan and think to our self’s wow so expensive to own real estate in Japan. Today we Canadians have embarked on to the same flight in Real Estate as Japan. The question we are suddenly reminded here in Canada is who really owns certain area of property in every city in Canada. The Native Canadians or non Native Canadians? Yet in real life we are all Canadians the Natives and non Native Canadians who are blessed to live in this beautiful country. The dispute in lease rights has been on going for a long time in many parts of the country with out any resolution that would help to stop this ongoing disobedience that hearts every Canadian Native and the non Natives.
The only solution available to us all, is to insure that the Government of the day will negociate a fair setalment for both sides. The Problem gets biger when the Government of the day dosent do the apropriate job in negociating a deal that will not need revisiting like today in Caledonia.
As well the natives must respect any settlement presented to them and excepted by them or the recipe is good but the eating is not.
Natives tear up road
Broadcast News
Published: Monday, May 22, 2006
CALEDONIA, Ontario -- Tensions have escalated again at the site of an aboriginal protest near Caledonia, Ontario.
This afternoon, protesters began to tear up a portion of the road they have been barricading since April.
The Six Nations protesters had removed their blockade across the main road through Caledonia earlier today, but now they've blocked it again -- and brought in a backhoe to dig it up.
They're angry that non-native protesters who'd set up a counter blockade on the road refused to let them pass through.
Within the last hour they resurrected their own barricade.
Six Nations members have occupied a construction site nearby since February, arguing that the land belongs to them.
They say they agreed to lease the property for a road in 1835, but never agreed to sell.
The road blockade went up after police tried to forcibly end their occupation on April 20th.
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