B.C. pipeline protests continue to halt Ontario trains for 5th day in a row

Mowich

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Who are the protesters? ‘There’s a lot of people that aren’t from these communities, that aren’t Aboriginal’






Protesters standing in solidarity with the Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs are only inflaming an already intense situation, and have disregarded the years of consultations conducted with First Nations along the pipeline route, says Ellis Ross, who served for 14 years on one of the 20 elected band councils that signed an agreement with Coastal GasLink.

“There’s a lot of people that aren’t from these communities, that aren’t Aboriginal, that are saying hereditary leadership has full authority, and they’re not doing it based on any facts. It would be like me saying that the elected leadership of B.C. and Canada has no authority, and it’s the Queen who has all authority,” said Ross, now the Liberal MLA for Skeena, B.C. “That would be a very destabilizing remark to make. It’s a very irresponsible remark to make.”

Five Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs have claimed they have title to a vast 22,000-square-kilometre area, about four times the size of Prince Edward Island, and that the elected chiefs only have authority over reserve lands. Ross questioned the validity of this point of view given that Aboriginal title belongs to Indigenous communities and is not held by any specific individual or group.

“A lot of what I see out there right now, from these people talking about it, is basically opinion. It’s not fact,” he said, adding that nobody has ever proved that elected chiefs have authority only over reserves. “In fact, in the Indian Act band councils are legally authorized to sign agreements and contracts on behalf of the communities.”

But anti-pipeline protesters have not acknowledged this grey area, he said, or the five years of consultations.

“It inflames the situation, and I think that’s what the point is for all these people who are talking like this — Natives and non-Natives alike. They just want to heighten the situation that’s facing us today. And these communities don’t need their issues escalated,” Ellis said. “I’m not sure they are aware of it, but they have the potential to tear these communities apart — right down to family and friends.”

For some in the Wet’suwet’en Nation, the solidarity protests are getting out of hand.

Andrew George, a member of the Wet’suwet’en Nation and wing chief of the Gidimt’en, told APTN on Tuesday that Wet’suwet’en Elders are worried about the escalating demonstrations across Canada.

“What currently is going on does not reflect the true governance of the Wet’suwet’en – on both sides,” he said, adding that he is particularly concerned about young people blocking trains and chaining themselves to police cars. “When you look at what’s happening with the youth, it’s spreading like wildfire, but there’s no control.”

He called for a rare all-clans meeting to address the issue.

“We are afraid something bad might happen,” George said, adding it’s up to the Wet’suwet’en Nation to take charge.

Meanwhile, one of those solidarity protests resulted in a backlash against a First Nations community that was not even involved in the demonstration.

The K’omoks First Nation on Vancouver Island issued a statement clarifying that it had nothing to do with a blockade on Highway 19 on Monday after racist comments were aimed at the community on social media.

“K’omoks First Nation was never contacted or advised of this event, and we are disappointed that our name was unknowingly used.

This event was organized by non-Indigenous Comox Valley residents who aren’t connected to our territory in the same way as K’omoks, and in no way represent K’omoks or our values,” K’omoks First Nation Chief Nicole Rempel said in a statement.

She told the National Post in an interview that she believes that people should have the right to protest whatever they want, but that a certain protocol should be followed.

“If you’re in a Nation’s territory, you really should be engaging with the First Nation,” she said.

In a statement sent on Tuesday to Chek News, the protest organizers had claimed to have support of the First Nation.

“We, a group of concerned residents defending our home in the K’omoks Territory with the aid of some K’omoks Nation people blockaded Highway 19,” said the statement from Extinction Rebellion Nanaimo. Extinction Rebellion is an international movement that says it “uses non-violent civil disobedience in an attempt to halt mass extinction and minimize the risk of social collapse.” The group said that it supported the protest, but the demonstration was not an official Extinction Rebellion event.

Ross, who was chief councillor for the Haisla First Nation from 2013 to 2017, said the benefits of this project to his community are too many to count.

He was on the council when talks began about the LNG pipeline and he ran to become an MLA to “help get LNG across the finish line.”

“The real goal was to get individuals off depending on band councils for welfare, or houses, or jobs. And the other point was to get councils off the dependency of government funding from Ottawa and in my community, we achieved that,” he said.

“They’re trying to paint a picture that if the pipeline goes through, our culture of living in wigwams or long houses will get destroyed,” Ross said. “That is not what my community looks like. Nobody in the last 15 years has come into my office and started crying about how the culture is going to be destroyed.”

People come to his office because they are concerned they don’t have enough money, he said.

nationalpost.com/news/canada/who-are-the-protesters-theres-a-lot-of-people-that-arent-from-these-communities-that-arent-aboriginal
 

Mowich

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Vaughn Palmer: Politicians' own words and actions coming back to bite them


VICTORIA — It was a week of ironies, as whole flocks of chickens came home to roost for some of B.C.’s activist politicians.

John Horgan, in his Opposition days, endorsed the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples in a speech to the Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs, with Grand Chief Stewart Phillip looking on.

On Tuesday, a “despondent” Premier Horgan struggled with “my personal feelings” as throne speech day was disrupted by an unprecedented protest over NDP support for the Coastal GasLink natural gas pipeline.

Among those blasting the New Democrats for trampling the objections of some Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs was none other than Grand Chief Phillip.

“Reconciliation will never be achieved at gunpoint,” charged Phillip.

“The Horgan government is picking and choosing which articles of the UN Declaration that it upholds and when,” he added via news release. “The rhetoric that is being peddled by the Horgan government is a purposeful and strategic effort to confuse and misinform the public.”

What about it? Horgan was asked by reporters when he got sufficient control of his feelings to meet the news media on the day after the protest.

“Grand Chief Stewart Phillip is the head of a political organization,” huffed Horgan. “If he wants to come and make political statements, that is entirely his right.”

No less the head of a political organization than Horgan himself. Nor is Phillip any more or less a politician today than he was back in 2016 when the NDP Opposition leader was happy to share a platform alongside him to endorse the UN Declaration.

Among those having trouble entering the legislature on throne sp… er, protest day, was Agriculture Minister Lana Popham, who was known to take part in a few protests in her Opposition days.

Early in the term of the NDP government, she acknowledged the challenge of going from activist Opposition MLA to minister at the cabinet table.

“It was a lot harder than I thought it was going to be,” she told the Victoria Times Colonist. “I was used to lighting my hair on fire, and then all of a sudden I was in the line of fire.”

On Tuesday, the minister was confronted and stopped by a feather-wielding Chrissy Brett, who has been in the front lines of protests all over Metro Vancouver and southern Vancouver Island.

Thus did the once-amateur activist meet an experienced pro. And it was Popham who retreated, being unable to get past Brett.

Vancouver Mayor Kennedy Stewart set the tone for the week by siding with the hereditary chiefs in the pipeline standoff.

“What is happening on unceded Wet’suwet’en territory will not help us reconcile with past wrongs or deal with the ongoing legacy of colonialism in our city, province and country,” declared the former NDP MP, showing no sympathy for his NDP counterparts in Victoria.

“Protests like this are happening all across the province and country, demonstrating how crucial it is for all leaders to put reconciliation into practice,” continued Stewart. “We will no doubt see more people demonstrating in solidarity.”

Protesters responded to Stewart’s quasi invitation within 24 hours, blockading a major intersection near Stewart’s city hall, disrupting traffic, bus service and even ambulance service to nearby Vancouver General Hospital.

Another politician compelled to reflect on the week’s ironies was Attorney-General David Eby, who came up through the political ranks as an activist on myriad causes.

While the A-G was attending the legislature in Victoria, protesters invaded his Vancouver-Point Grey constituency office, driving his distraught constituency assistant to lock herself in the bathroom.

That crossed the line, according to the former head of the Civil Liberties Association.

“The line for me is the safety of my staff and the security of information that we hold for constituents that we’re doing the case work for,” he complained.

But at least the protest organizers had a sense of humour. As an aid to monitoring police conduct without getting arrested, they distributed a guide for “legal observers” at protests. The co-author was none other than David Eby, during his days with the Civil Liberties Association.

Another politician who found the protesters arriving on his constituency office doorstep was Environment Minister George Heyman.

Before being elected to office, Heyman toured the province with a film that rang the alarm bells about the alleged dangers of natural gas fracking here in B.C.

As a cabinet minister, he announced that B.C. would unilaterally block increased shipments of bitumen from Alberta, then went to a celebratory dinner with a platoon of anti-pipeline activists.

But on the floor of the legislature on Thursday, there was Heyman lamenting that today’s activists don’t show him any respect when they visit his constituency office or protest outside it.

“Starting a little over a year ago, the visits and protests clearly took a different edge,” said Heyman. “We had more than one occasion where people came into the office, occupied the office, refused to leave. Some people were abusive to the constituency staff.”

It has gotten so bad that from time to time, he has had to close his office altogether.

Which is regrettable and, in my view, a job for police, same as with protests that block access to the legislature, transportation and the port.

But having pandered to environmental and Indigenous activists for years, the New Democrats should not be surprised that some of it has come back to bite them.

vancouversun.com/opinion/columnists/vaughn-palmer-politicians-own-words-and-actions-coming-back-to-bite-them
 

Hoid

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I wonder who people need to be in order to have the right to protest.
 

taxme

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...And police are looking for the driver of the truck so they can arrest him. Meanwhile, citizens who are completely fed up and had enough of watching police do nothing about an illegal blockade take the initiative and move pallets and debris off the road, and they get arrested for it. WTF is going on in this country??

The minority mob rule this country. The majority have no say anymore in this pathetic country. The RCMP will go after anyone who fights these terrorists, and let those terrorists off the hook. And they know thy can because I will bet you that no one would come to this drivers defense if caught and charged for some fed up by a citizen offence. When the minority mob rule and run a country, it is a recipe for the majority. Our politicians are nothing more than a bunch of politically correct wimps and sucks. None are worth voting for. Welcome to the new Canada.
 

taxme

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Vaughn Palmer: Politicians' own words and actions coming back to bite them
VICTORIA — It was a week of ironies, as whole flocks of chickens came home to roost for some of B.C.’s activist politicians.
John Horgan, in his Opposition days, endorsed the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples in a speech to the Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs, with Grand Chief Stewart Phillip looking on.
On Tuesday, a “despondent” Premier Horgan struggled with “my personal feelings” as throne speech day was disrupted by an unprecedented protest over NDP support for the Coastal GasLink natural gas pipeline.
Among those blasting the New Democrats for trampling the objections of some Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs was none other than Grand Chief Phillip.
“Reconciliation will never be achieved at gunpoint,” charged Phillip.
“The Horgan government is picking and choosing which articles of the UN Declaration that it upholds and when,” he added via news release. “The rhetoric that is being peddled by the Horgan government is a purposeful and strategic effort to confuse and misinform the public.”
What about it? Horgan was asked by reporters when he got sufficient control of his feelings to meet the news media on the day after the protest.
“Grand Chief Stewart Phillip is the head of a political organization,” huffed Horgan. “If he wants to come and make political statements, that is entirely his right.”
No less the head of a political organization than Horgan himself. Nor is Phillip any more or less a politician today than he was back in 2016 when the NDP Opposition leader was happy to share a platform alongside him to endorse the UN Declaration.
Among those having trouble entering the legislature on throne sp… er, protest day, was Agriculture Minister Lana Popham, who was known to take part in a few protests in her Opposition days.
Early in the term of the NDP government, she acknowledged the challenge of going from activist Opposition MLA to minister at the cabinet table.
“It was a lot harder than I thought it was going to be,” she told the Victoria Times Colonist. “I was used to lighting my hair on fire, and then all of a sudden I was in the line of fire.”
On Tuesday, the minister was confronted and stopped by a feather-wielding Chrissy Brett, who has been in the front lines of protests all over Metro Vancouver and southern Vancouver Island.
Thus did the once-amateur activist meet an experienced pro. And it was Popham who retreated, being unable to get past Brett.
Vancouver Mayor Kennedy Stewart set the tone for the week by siding with the hereditary chiefs in the pipeline standoff.
“What is happening on unceded Wet’suwet’en territory will not help us reconcile with past wrongs or deal with the ongoing legacy of colonialism in our city, province and country,” declared the former NDP MP, showing no sympathy for his NDP counterparts in Victoria.
“Protests like this are happening all across the province and country, demonstrating how crucial it is for all leaders to put reconciliation into practice,” continued Stewart. “We will no doubt see more people demonstrating in solidarity.”
Protesters responded to Stewart’s quasi invitation within 24 hours, blockading a major intersection near Stewart’s city hall, disrupting traffic, bus service and even ambulance service to nearby Vancouver General Hospital.
Another politician compelled to reflect on the week’s ironies was Attorney-General David Eby, who came up through the political ranks as an activist on myriad causes.
While the A-G was attending the legislature in Victoria, protesters invaded his Vancouver-Point Grey constituency office, driving his distraught constituency assistant to lock herself in the bathroom.
That crossed the line, according to the former head of the Civil Liberties Association.
“The line for me is the safety of my staff and the security of information that we hold for constituents that we’re doing the case work for,” he complained.
But at least the protest organizers had a sense of humour. As an aid to monitoring police conduct without getting arrested, they distributed a guide for “legal observers” at protests. The co-author was none other than David Eby, during his days with the Civil Liberties Association.
Another politician who found the protesters arriving on his constituency office doorstep was Environment Minister George Heyman.
Before being elected to office, Heyman toured the province with a film that rang the alarm bells about the alleged dangers of natural gas fracking here in B.C.
As a cabinet minister, he announced that B.C. would unilaterally block increased shipments of bitumen from Alberta, then went to a celebratory dinner with a platoon of anti-pipeline activists.
But on the floor of the legislature on Thursday, there was Heyman lamenting that today’s activists don’t show him any respect when they visit his constituency office or protest outside it.
“Starting a little over a year ago, the visits and protests clearly took a different edge,” said Heyman. “We had more than one occasion where people came into the office, occupied the office, refused to leave. Some people were abusive to the constituency staff.”
It has gotten so bad that from time to time, he has had to close his office altogether.
Which is regrettable and, in my view, a job for police, same as with protests that block access to the legislature, transportation and the port.
But having pandered to environmental and Indigenous activists for years, the New Democrats should not be surprised that some of it has come back to bite them.
vancouversun.com/opinion/columnists/vaughn-palmer-politicians-own-words-and-actions-coming-back-to-bite-them

There is no way anyone in this country will ever be able to satisfy the native Indians in this country. Most of the Indian bands have become eco-terrorists as an excuse to just make trouble for the rest of we the citizen's who will always sit back and will take their nonsense. When we fight back we are the ones that get charged and arrested.

The native Indians in this country have received hundreds of billions of free tax dollars from we the people for several decades now, and they are still not satisfied. This will never end with those natives. There is nothing that can be done these days without their consent and their waving of the feather blessings. They now hold BC as hostage, as they have been giving the right by the NDP many moons ago that all native Indian bands must be consulted first before anything gets done here in BC. Because of the Indians and the eco-terrorists, BC will never see it's full potential. All we will see and get from our pretty much useless BC politicians is just more carbon taxes being applied on a gallon of gas. Aw well.
 

Mowich

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There is no way anyone in this country will ever be able to satisfy the native Indians in this country. Most of the Indian bands have become eco-terrorists as an excuse to just make trouble for the rest of we the citizen's who will always sit back and will take their nonsense. When we fight back we are the ones that get charged and arrested.

The native Indians in this country have received hundreds of billions of free tax dollars from we the people for several decades now, and they are still not satisfied. This will never end with those natives. There is nothing that can be done these days without their consent and their waving of the feather blessings. They now hold BC as hostage, as they have been giving the right by the NDP many moons ago that all native Indian bands must be consulted first before anything gets done here in BC. Because of the Indians and the eco-terrorists, BC will never see it's full potential. All we will see and get from our pretty much useless BC politicians is just more carbon taxes being applied on a gallon of gas. Aw well.


It is really important to remember, IMO, that it is but a small portion of FNs who are protesting/blockading, taxme. Just look at all the photos to see how many other Canadians are taking part. Blanket condemnation of all FNs is just as wrong as blanket condemnation of all people of other ethnicities.
 

taxme

Time Out
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I wonder who people need to be in order to have the right to protest.

Anybody can protest all they want. Just do not interfere with the flow of commerce or traffic and get in the way of people who really do have to go to work for a living to survive. These long haired hippy eco-terrorists and native Indian band mobs that are causing all of this chaos and mayhem are no doubt getting free tax dollars from we the working people that they interfere with. They are fighting the hand that feeds them, the stunned bunch of lazy buffoons. How these terrorists are being allowed to get away with this terrorism is beyond me.

This country truly has become a country being ruled by a bunch of thugs and mobsters. But ask any politician if they really give a crap? I can tell you right now how they no doubt feel about all of this bs? A shrug of the shoulders and Who cares. Until our politically correct gutless politicians and appointed lieberal judges start putting most of these mobsters in jail for longer than a day, if at all, they will continue on with their nonsense. We the majority of citizen's need to see some action being taken with these terrorists because that is what they really are. Enough already. Time for some tough love. Works for me.
 

Mowich

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Times Colonist
Letter to the Editor

A four-point guide for protesters

Let me start by saying that I am all in favour of civil disobedience. The right to protest government decisions and actions is, in fact, the difference between a free society and one that is not free.

People should be able to take actions to oppose their government. With four provisos. In order of importance:

First, the protesters must be willing to go to jail. The essence of civil disobedience is martyrdom. The protester has to be willing to suffer to make his or her point, and going to jail makes a stronger point than standing around in the cold, or standing next to a fire, sacred or otherwise. Anyone who claims to be a protester but doesn’t want to be arrested is more poseur than protester.

Secondly, the protest should be peaceful. You want to destroy things, go somewhere else. China or Russia, for instance. And good luck.

Thirdly, the protest has to take place where the perceived offense was committed, or where it can be mitigated. In the current case, that would be anywhere along the pipeline route, or at the house of government, the legislature building. Closing down streets, or bridges, or trains, or universities, or anything similar, is pointless. If the aim is to gain support, it won’t work. In fact, it will have the opposite result.

Fourthly, the protesters should understand the issue. The current protesters claim that they are supporting the right of hereditary chiefs to decide what should be done with their land. I’d like to ask any of these people what they actually know about the issue, starting with what they know about Helen Michelle, hereditary chief of the Skin Tyee nation.

Ian Cameron
Brentwood Bay


https://www.timescolonist.com/opinion/letters/letters-feb-13
 

Mowich

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Jonathan Kay: Railroading of elected bands betrays progressive hypocrisy


In late 2019, Ontario’s public broadcaster, TVO, produced a widely circulated video segment in which Indigenous public figures delivered short monologues responding to the controversial claim that Canada was perpetuating an ongoing “genocide” against Indigenous women. The TVO commentators flatly told viewers that this ongoing genocide is a “fact,” and that any argument to the contrary amounts to “denial.” Moreover, we were told that anyone engaging in such denial is effectively abetting a crime against humanity, because “denial is a tool of genocide.”

If you find yourself astounded by the current situation in Canada, whereby protesters have been allowed to shut down a rail network that remains a backbone of passenger travel and industrial transport (and whose coast-to-coast completion in 1885 became a symbol of national unity), it’s useful to revisit the accumulation of symbolic gestures that have steadily destroyed the moral authority of our governments to push back at any assertion of Indigenous rights and grievances. For years, our leaders offered reflexive acquiescence to increasingly expansive claims that Canada remains a white supremacist dystopia, culminating in last year’s campaign to convince us not only that modern Canada is a “genocide” state, but that even the act of expressing disagreement with this description makes you a sort of metaphorical train conductor on the rails to Canadian Dachau. Having publicly tattooed their guilty settler souls with every imaginable hashtag, our leaders now apparently find themselves stopped from restoring the rule of law.

The rails to hell are laid with good intentions. And there is nothing that now signals goodness in Canadian public life more than the land acknowledgment. Certainly, no one can argue with the historical truth that Indigenous peoples populated Canada for thousands of years before the arrival of Europeans. But words have meaning. And the well-understood meaning of these acknowledgments is that Indigenous peoples exercise a sort of broad, vaguely defined moral sovereignty over lands “owned” by Canadian governments, corporations and private citizens — including the lands on which we have constructed roads, rails, ports and legislatures. And since this sovereignty apparently now may be asserted at any time, for pretty much any reason, we have effectively lost the ability to enforce the systematic organization of property rights on which every functional society, Indigenous or non-Indigenous, depends.

The push to recognize Indigenous sovereignty over ancestral lands stretches back generations, an effort rooted in very real constitutional and treaty rights. But what I am describing here is not this formally bounded legal campaign, but rather the more general insistence that the entire country remains stained by original sin, and so must be purified by an open-ended, quasi-spiritual process of “decolonization.” This project began in earnest in 2017 as a counter-reaction to the perceived jingoism of the Canada 150 celebrations.

Within the rarified corners of the literary and arts milieus (in which I found myself embedded at the time), decolonization quickly became a sort of state religion, complete with decolonization-themed sensitivity training and confession rituals.

But as tragicomic as this witch hunt became, it didn’t really affect ordinary people whose lives lay outside the fields of politics, journalism, arts and academia. Since the whole idea of decolonization — or “reconciliation,” if you prefer its focus-grouped stand-in — is confined almost entirely to performative rites of ideological compliance, it had little effect on the vast swathe of Canadians who produce useful goods and services instead of, say, newspaper columns, sad-settler poetry, and college seminar courses on white fragility.

All that is now changing, however, thanks to the shutdown of Canada’s rail system — because the people being affected are no longer just members of the same rarified cultural caste that’s been proselytizing decolonialization these last three years. The social-justice extremism that till now has been largely confined to campus life and obscure CanLit publications has metastasized to the world of normal human beings. And so the victims now include families going to weekend weddings and funerals, students trying to visit home on study break, blue-collar workers who don’t own cars and can’t afford plane travel.

Of course, most Canadians want to do the right thing for Indigenous people, despite the bad will produced by all this bien-pensant hectoring. But anyone who’s followed this controversy knows that the rail shutdown has nothing to do with Indigenous rights — because the B.C. pipeline that’s being protested already has been approved by democratically elected Indigenous bands that are prioritizing growth and self-sufficiency over environmental puritanism.

The people doing the protesting are led by dissidents within one of the affected Indigenous communities, amplified by a critical mass of white environmentalists who are perfectly happy to cherry-pick Indigenous causes based on how well they line up with their own Anti-Racism/Critical Studies term-project requirements. Indeed, there is a certain type of very self-satisfied white Canadian leftist who sees himself as a real-life Lorax. Drawing on antiquated noble-savage stereotypes from the past, these decolonization super-allies cast Indigenous people as their little bar-ba-loot bears. And it just ruins their day when Indigenous leaders refuse to grab their tummies, moan for the CBC cameras, or read their bar-ba-loot scripts.

There is a larger hypocrisy at play here, too. Justin Trudeau and his entourage — currently on world tour, hoping to convince African and Caribbean leaders to hand him the shiny trophy of a UN Security Council seat — don’t take the train much. They fly. So, too, do the provincial politicians passing the buck in equal measure, not to mention the national broadcast journalists offering maudlin profiles of the demonstrators. Forcing ordinary travellers to bear the burden of upholding officially sanctioned upper-middle-class social-justice pieties isn’t “progressive.” It’s reactionary, snobbish elitism with a progressive façade.

Imagine, for a moment, if some of these same protesters camped themselves on the tarmac at Pearson — or, god forbid, even blocked the entrance to the Maple Leaf Lounge. They’d be arrested in a matter of minutes. That’s because there’s still a line that protesters can’t cross in Canada. But that line is no longer defined by property rights. It’s defined by social class. And if you’re one of the many Canadians struggling to get from Point A to Point B this weekend, it’s because your PM (currently jet-setting en route from Senegal to Barbados, by the way) left you on the wrong side of it.

nationalpost.com/opinion/jonathan-kay-railroading-of-elected-bands-betrays-progressive-hypocrisy
 
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petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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There are protestors in Viktorya who have no idea what the pipeline carrys.

How does that work?

Maybe it's time to barricade and shut down the weed farms?
 

B00Mer

Make Canada Great Again
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Well dam'it, he puts up some good reasons why this protest is happening.

Okay, where do I signup

....................

If you are wondering why First Nations are so angry and fed up. Let me tell why:
1. Murdered and missing indigenous women
2. Land grabbing i.e Wet'suwet'en
3. Stolen children - 60s scoop
4. Residential schools
5. Land fill dumps placed next to First Nation Communities.
6. Hydro and gas lines running thru our lands.
7. Racism and discrimination by OPP, RCMP and city cops.
8. Canadian Ignorance of First Nations history.
9. Treaties never recognized or fulfilled by the crown. The Crown, not Indigenous people enacted treaties!
10. Racism and discrimination on a daily basis
11. Canadas court and jail systems.
12. The list just continues.

So if Canada is inconvienced for a few days and the econonmy suffers a bit, it is nothing compared to the 500 years of our suffering and loss of economy.
Think on that people.
 

B00Mer

Make Canada Great Again
Sep 6, 2008
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Trudeau will not do shit!!

This is his base, his voters.

Canada's economy will suffer..

NOT!! Rail is down I'm taking emergency loads via truck at twice the rate :lol:

This month alone I will net close to $30,000+, after fuel, insurance and so on.

I'm with you protestors, keep it going for 6 months :lol: Fukk no, 1 year. ;)
 
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petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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Well dam'it, he puts up some good reasons why this protest is happening.
Okay, where do I signup
....................
If you are wondering why First Nations are so angry and fed up. Let me tell why:
1. Murdered and missing indigenous women
2. Land grabbing i.e Wet'suwet'en
3. Stolen children - 60s scoop
4. Residential schools
5. Land fill dumps placed next to First Nation Communities.
6. Hydro and gas lines running thru our lands.
7. Racism and discrimination by OPP, RCMP and city cops.
8. Canadian Ignorance of First Nations history.
9. Treaties never recognized or fulfilled by the crown. The Crown, not Indigenous people enacted treaties!
10. Racism and discrimination on a daily basis
11. Canadas court and jail systems.
12. The list just continues.
So if Canada is inconvienced for a few days and the econonmy suffers a bit, it is nothing compared to the 500 years of our suffering and loss of economy.
Think on that people.
Sign up right here: https://twitter.com/i/status/1228897931664580608

After seeing the promo video, do you still want to join the fight for socialism?
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
117,180
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Low Earth Orbit
Cambie and Broadway at rush hour right now
#WetsuwetenStrong Unistoten.camp/Support
They arent Wetsuweten supporters. Not at all. They are pipeline opposers.
Dont confuse pipeline opposition for first nation support.
 
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