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

Mowich

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The longer these ridiculous blockades go on, the more appealing the Kent State Massacre looks...
The Kent state massacre involved un-armed students shot and killed by the Ohio National Guard. The Mohawks are known to be well-armed and more than capable of shooting at the RCMP or OPP if they so choose. The blockade removals are happening and the police are doing a good job of remaining steadfast in their duties in spite of all the verbal abuse being screamed at them by the punks and thugs who were the first ones to start throwing punches when the OPP finally began to remove them. Not one punch was thrown by the OPP. The violence all came from the scofflaws. I watched the entire video of the blockade removal.
 

Mowich

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“We heard Prime Minister Trudeau just a little while ago talking about the inconvenience that Canada has suffered. However, there is a difference between inconvenience and injustice -- total difference. Don’t confuse one with the other. There’s a big difference," Woos said."
No confusion, here woos. The injustice of Canadians going without fuel to heat their homes and a myriad of other vital necessities due to the interference of Eastern natives in a BC land dispute is much more than simply inconvenient. That is the difference.
 

Mowich

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TYENDINAGA , Ont. — Ontario Provincial Police have moved to clear a rail blockade on Tyendinaga Mohawk Territory.

Police and CN Rail had given protesters until midnight Sunday to clear the blockade or face an investigation and possible criminal charges.

The deadline came and went, and the blockade near Belleville, Ont., that has crippled both freight and passenger rail traffic in most of eastern Canada for nearly three weeks remained in place Monday morning. However, by 8:30 a.m. EST Monday, reports indicated that police had begun to make moves to clear the site.


CP24 reports that a “large column” of OPP police vehicles approached the protesters. CTV reports that “several dozen” officers began arresting people and wrestling others to the ground.
CTV has the video taken by one of the punks at the blockade, pete. I watched it in its entirety. The thugs who had been screaming FU at the police - clearly heard in the vid - started throwing punches when the police finally moved to arrest them. Not one punch was thrown by the police - all the violent actions came from the scofflaws.
 

captain morgan

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Where do I sign up? I need to Red-Wash a protest or two. Can a Hereditary Chief protest other protestors? Do we get to pick our own names? Is there a secret handshake or anything so we can tell ourselves apart from the posers and wannabees?


You're in bud... A secret handshake is a great idea... I'll get you the details on where we consume the sacred, ceremonial cigarette and finalize the inauguration.


All good questions, Ron. Cap is the Big Chief and so far I am the only other member. I'd welcome you with open arms but should wait to see what the big guy says. :lol: I really like the secret hand shake idea.


Between you and me, the vote was/is unanimous


...& I wanna pick my own name (Chief Ronnie TwoSkidoos), or I'm gonna protest!!! I'll block the way to a public washroom in a Walmart in solidarity with myself.


That name kicks ass! and we fully support your protest at the Walmart wash rooms in the name of stamping out global fascism, Justin Beiber and tramp stamps on fat chicks
 

Mowich

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You're in bud... A secret handshake is a great idea... I'll get you the details on where we consume the sacred, ceremonial cigarette and finalize the inauguration.

Between you and me, the vote was/is unanimous

That name kicks ass! and we fully support your protest at the Walmart wash rooms in the name of stamping out global fascism, Justin Beiber and tramp stamps on fat chicks

Hey Cap.......if we can recruit a couple more people we will match the number of old men........oops hereditary chiefs preventing the advancement of their 'nations'..............then we too could get in our gas-guzzling cars as dozens of they and their 'supporters did, drive down to Ottawa and petition the government for status cards. After all the liberal government has never made any bones about supporting anyone and everyone who wants to call themselves whatever their little minds can dream up. I'd say we'd have a legitimate case.
 

taxme

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Okay setting the Canadian flag on fire!!??

There is no more need to respect the Canadian flag. Canada really does not exist anymore. How this country keeps going is quite amazing indeed. Canada has now become a country and a home for anarchy and terrorism. But ask Trudeau if he cares?

He is too busy running over around in Africa at the height of the illegal blockades trying to push gender equality and same sex marriage and donating more of our tax dollars to some African countries while at the same time also trying to secure some seat on some United Nations council. While Canada burns, Trudeau adds more fuel to the fire. The guy just does not give a crap about Canada or Canadians. The turd appears to be more concerned about the rest of the world instead.

So, why is this guy still the prime mistake of Canada anyway? What is wrong with those leftards that voted that fool back in power? I think that insanity has finally taken over Canada. Try not to look to sane. They will probably try and come for you and take you away to that crazy place. Only crazy people now live in Canada. Just saying.
 

taxme

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I find it hilarious that morons who say they're protesting in support of the Wet'suwet'en seem utterly clueless that the VAST majority of the Wet'suwet'en support the project. One would have to be pretty goddam stupid to suggest these "protestors" are in any way in solidarity with the Wet'suwet'en.
As for the non-Native protestors, they're just racists dude. The eco-colonialists don't give a shit about the Native people in Canada. They're just using them to further their own ALT-left agenda. Period!
There's several reserves in Canada that don't have access to clean drinking water. At least two of them haven't had access for over 20 years
But nah, the "ultra-woke" ALT-left shit bags (and the UN) would rather focus their efforts on denying a group of Native people the opportunity to enjoy the economic benefits of our natural resources instead of actually protesting a real problem.


So, how then did these so called non Wetsuweten people get to take control of the Wewsuen Indian band anyway? It would appear as though the Wetsuen people appear to have given their Indian blessings to those terrorists? There can be no doubt that the Wetsuens are in cahoots with the those non Wetsuen terrorists. They have the right to kick any trespassers off their land? So why are those trespassers still on Indian land?
 

taxme

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Internet Trolls Are Narcissists, Psychopaths, and Sadists
Trolls will lie, exaggerate, and offend to get a response.

Posted Sep 18, 2014
In this month's issue of Personality and Individual Differences, a study was published that confirms what we all suspected: Internet trolls are horrible people.
Let's start by getting our definitions straight: An Internet troll is someone who comes into a discussion and posts comments designed to upset or disrupt the conversation. Often, in fact, it seems like there is no real purpose behind their comments except to upset everyone else involved. Trolls will lie, exaggerate, and offend to get a response.

What kind of person would do this? Some Canadian researchers decided to find out.
They conducted two online studies with over 1,200 people, giving personality tests to each subject along with a survey about their Internet commenting behavior. They were looking for evidence that linked trolling with the "Dark Tetrad" of personality traits: narcissism, Machiavellianism, psychopathy, and sadism.
They found that Dark Tetrad scores were highest among people who said trolling was their favorite Internet activity. To get an idea of how much more prevalent these traits were among Internet trolls, one can refer to tables from the paper showing low Dark Tetrad scores for everyone in the study . . . except the trolls. Their scores for all four traits soar on the chart. The relationship between trolling and the Dark Tetrad is so significant that the authors write in their paper:

"... the associations between sadism and GAIT (Global Assessment of Internet Trolling) scores were so strong that it might be said that online trolls are prototypical everyday sadists." [emphasis added]
Trolls truly enjoy making you feel bad. To quote the authors once more (because this is a truly quotable article): "Both trolls and sadists feel sadistic glee at the distress of others. Sadists just want to have fun. . . and the Internet is their playground!"
The next time you encounter a troll online, remember:
These trolls are some truly difficult people.
It is your suffering that brings them pleasure, so the best thing you can do is ignore them.


Then we must all assume that we are all just a bunch of trolls ourselves here because anything I say or you say or anyone else here says would no doubt get some people upset over someone's comments, uhmmm? I do not like your reply so you have to be a troll. What a waste of time of even talking about trolls.

There is no way anyone can know or tell if some member here is a troll. Only the troll himself will know that he is a troll. So why anyone wants to bring up the word troll here is beyond me. One must prove that someone is a troll. So, how are they going to do that? Just asking.
 

pgs

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Hey Cap.......if we can recruit a couple more people we will match the number of old men........oops hereditary chiefs preventing the advancement of their 'nations'..............then we too could get in our gas-guzzling cars as dozens of they and their 'supporters did, drive down to Ottawa and petition the government for status cards. After all the liberal government has never made any bones about supporting anyone and everyone who wants to call themselves whatever their little minds can dream up. I'd say we'd have a legitimate case.
Hey in my twenties , Chips and coke for breakfast . Pizza and beer for supper . Born and bred in Canada .
 

taxme

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

https://globalnews.ca/news/6530177/bc-pipeline-protests-ontario-via-rail-trains-halted-day-5/

Is yourself or anyone else here able to explain to me as to what this Indian reconciliation is all about? I cannot figure it out anymore as to what it is all about these days. What more do they want that has not been given to and done for them already?

They have their lands to live on. They get plenty of tax dollars from the federal government(taxpayer's)every month. They get to sit in on and have a say on how many projects will get the go ahead. What more do these native Indian bands want from we the non-Indian people?

Will they never be happy until maybe one day they can get all of the non native Indian people living in Canada today end up going back to Europe bu chance? Where or when will all of this constant bull chit about reconciliation ever come to an end? Over to you or anyone else here that can explain this all to me. Thanks.
 

pgs

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Is yourself or anyone else here able to explain to me as to what this Indian reconciliation is all about? I cannot figure it out anymore as to what it is all about these days. What more do they want that has not been given to and done for them already?

They have their lands to live on. They get plenty of tax dollars from the federal government(taxpayer's)every month. They get to sit in on and have a say on how many projects will get the go ahead. What more do these native Indian bands want from we the non-Indian people?

Will they never be happy until maybe one day they can get all of the non native Indian people living in Canada today end up going back to Europe bu chance? Where or when will all of this constant bull chit about reconciliation ever come to an end? Over to you or anyone else here that can explain this all to me. Thanks.
Free money .
 

Mowich

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Hey in my twenties , Chips and coke for breakfast . Pizza and beer for supper . Born and bred in Canada .
That's your resume'? No matter, it is up to Hereditary Chief Captain Morgan. He is our nation's spokesperson - best check with him.
 

Mowich

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Wet'suwet'en supporters blocking West Coast Express, Vancouver port, B.C. Legislature

www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/demonstrators-blocking-entrance-port-vancouver


Via Rail service in northern B.C. remains cancelled


www.princegeorgecitizen.com/news/local-news/via-rail-service-in-northern-b-c-remains-cancelled


Blockade trips up Canada's biggest ports as shippers steer clear of rail closure


www.princegeorgecitizen.com/blockade-trips-up-canada-s-biggest-ports-as-shippers-steer-clear-of-rail-closure-1.24081134
 
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Mowich

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B.C. VIEWS: Pipeline dispute highlights need for clarity

It would be a mistake to assume that the dispute between Wet’suwet’en traditional leaders and the Coastal GasLink pipeline project can be resolved in a column.

It has taken generations to get to this point; it will take more than 550 words to get past it.

What the dispute has revealed, however, is the absolute urgency for action.

Not the kind that some suggest. Sending in the troops, or ordering police to dismantle blockades has failed to produce longterm solutions in the past. It will again.

What’s needed is a commitment by First Nations, provincial and federal governments to resolve the longstanding land title and governance issues that lie at the core of the dispute.

The Wet’suwet’en blockade is the symptom of a bigger problem. It is a byproduct of British Columbia’s messy and unfinished treaty process, and a failed and broken federal Indian Act.

How dysfunctional it has become can be seen in the Wet’suwet’en First Nation itself. While some British Columbians may have just heard about Gaslink’s plan to build a $6 billion pipeline from Northeastern B.C. to a $40 billion gas liquefaction plant and export terminal at Kitimat, the Wet’suwet’en have been debating it for years.

The discussions were not easy, and even today the debate is polarizing the community. But in the end, the elected band councils supported the project, arguing construction would provide opportunity and employment for their members.

What Coastal Gaslink failed to do was convince the Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs.


And there’s the rub.

Elected band councils are the product of the Indian Act – a notoriously paternal piece of 19th century legislation. Its primary function was to promote the rapid assimilation and cultural extinction of First Nations people across Canada. It brought residential schools, subjugated women, squelched traditional languages, and even barred dancing and the wearing of regalia.

It also provided a mechanism for bands to manage their own reserve lands through elected band councils.

The challenge in B.C. is that reserve lands make up only a fraction of the traditional territory claimed by First Nations.

And because few treaties have ever been signed in this province, these First Nations have never relinquished their title or rights to that land – a point supported by the Canadian Supreme Court in its 1997 Delgamuukw ruling.

It is this traditional territory that the Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs claim authority over.

That claim has created a simple narrative: Traditional leaders, defending traditional territory from colonial and industrial incursion.

Dismissed in this narrative, of course, is the support from the 20 First Nations along the pipeline route and the extensive consultations with those nations that have taken place to get to this point.

The question of who speaks for the Wet’suwet’en is something the Wet’suwet’en will have to decide themselves.

But it is a question that will continue to be asked in other Indigenous communities until the issue of land claims in B.C. is resolved. The treaty process – moving as slowly as it is – will not only define aboriginal rights and title, but provide agreed-upon governance structures.

Without that resolution there will be no clarity, no certainty, and little chance of the economic prosperity so many First Nations people are calling for.

www.houston-today.com/opinion/b-c-views-pipeline-dispute-highlights-need-for-clarity/


A copy of this should be sent to every single chief in the AFN - though I doubt it sway them in their enduring quest to keep the Indian Act in place for purely personal reasons. Copies should also be sent to those FN bands that have been fighting with each other for decades over boundary issues.
 

Mowich

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Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs call for end of police patrols


The RCMP has removed its temporary office from traditional Wet’suwet’en territory in northern B.C., but the First Nation’s hereditary chiefs say they are still patrolling the logging road that controls access to the Coastal GasLink work sites.

“They have shuttered the building itself, but we had also asked them to slow down their patrols, if not cease, but that just hasn’t happened,” said chief Na’moks. “Everything is peaceful. We just can’t see any reason why they would continue to do that.”

Last Friday, the RCMP finished moving its base of operations to its Houston detachment in the wake of enforcing a court injunction and removing Wet’suwet’en members and their supporters from blocking access to the pipeline work sites.

An RCMP spokesperson has confirmed officers continue to patrol the area to ensure the Morice West Forest Service Road stays open.

The hereditary chiefs are demanding an end to the police presence and for the complete withdrawal of Coastal GasLink crews from the area before meaningful talks can occur between the chiefs and federal and provincial governments.

Na’moks, who also goes by the name John Risdale, said conversations on those demands were going well with the Crown-Indigenous Relations Minister Carolyn Bennett and B.C. RCMP Deputy Commissioner Jennifer Strachan, but ended abruptly on Friday when the prime minister called for the injunction to be upheld and ordered the removal of barricades on rail lines across Canada, erected in support of hereditary chiefs.

“We were making headway, but then the prime minister held his press conference and we went backwards after that.”

Na’moks said valuable momentum was lost over the weekend. However in an email the RCMP stated talks with the hereditary chiefs will continue.

“Out of respect for the discussions, and the trust being sought by all, we don’t wish to speak about any of the specifics at this time,” said a RCMP spokesperson.

“However I can confirm that the discussions to date have been respectful and positive and also provided a number of options, considerations and commitments that will continue to move us all forward towards solutions.”

The RCMP has previously said its officers will leave the area once they meet with the hereditary chiefs and receive a commitment that they’ll keep the service road clear.

www.interior-news.com/news/wetsuweten-hereditary-chiefs-call-for-end-of-police-patrols/


“We were making headway, but then the prime minister held his press conference and we went backwards after that.”

Got that much right.


A firm and binding agreement with stated consequences for infractions must be obtained from the Wet'suwet'en band and hereditary chiefs before the patrols are stopped.
 

Mowich

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‘Disappointment, fear and anger:” Indigenous communities blindsided by Teck's decision to pull Frontier project


CALGARY – Ron Quintal was barbecuing with his family on Sunday when he received a text from one of Teck Resources Ltd.’s vice-presidents, requesting an urgent phone call.

“I thought it was an invite to Ottawa,” said Quintal, president of the Fort McKay Metis Nation, noting that he expected good news and to attend a ceremony approving the project this week. “It’s devastating,” he said.

The Fort McKay Metis was one of the 14 Indigenous groups that had signed benefits agreements with Vancouver-based Teck for Frontier, a proposed 260,000 barrels per day oilsands mine that would have required 7,000 people to build it.

Quintal said Teck leadership had been in meetings for four consecutive days and came to the decision Sunday afternoon. The cancellation of the project has come as a “shock” to his community.

Now, Quintal said, his members are asking him, “What the hell is going on?”

On Sunday night, Vancouver-based Teck announced it was withdrawing its application to build the 270,000-barrel-per-day oilsands mine in northern Alberta just days before Ottawa was set to approve the project.

Like other companies that have recently pulled major projects planned to be built in Canada, Teck president and CEO Don Lindsay said in a letter to federal environment minister Jonathan Wilkinson, his company was concerned that Frontier had become a symbol and a victim of a broader debate about resource development and climate change.

“The growing debate around this issue has placed Frontier and our company squarely at the nexus of much broader issues that need to be resolved,” Lindsay wrote. “In that context, it is now evident that there is no constructive path forward for the project.”

The decision left Indigenous communities, competing oil and gas companies and the broader Alberta business community grappling with “disappointment, fear and anger” on Monday morning, as the decision reverberated through the province, Quintal said.

“They’re a Canadian-based company that did everything right. If one of our own can’t get a project built, then who can?” Quintal said, adding that the cancellation should cause deep introspection across the country. “You don’t just look at a $20-billion project walking away without taking it seriously.”

Similarly, Fort McKay First Nation Chief Mel Grandjamb said in a release Monday afternoon he was “disappointed” by Teck’s decision to shelve the project, adding that his nation had been working with the company on the project since 2008.

“Teck’s decision follows in the wake of a national debate about resource development, climate change, environmental protections and Indigenous interests,” Grandjamb said, adding, “Responsible resource development can be a meaningful tool for reconciliation when it also recognizes Canada’s obligation to protect Treaty rights.”

To many in Alberta’s business community, the cancellation of Frontier is a continuation of a larger pattern of major companies withdrawing large projects. In the past five years, TC Energy Corp. has cancelled plans for its $15-billion Energy East pipeline, Petronas Bhd withdrew its $36-billion Pacific NorthWest LNG proposal, CNOOC Ltd. scrapped its $28-billion Aurora LNG project and Exxon Mobil Corp. pulled the application for its $25-billion West Coast Canada LNG project.

“The root of all this is our country is not united behind a vision to develop resources in a responsible way that manages climate change,” Adam Legge, Business Council of Alberta CEO, said on Monday.

The Business Council of Alberta is calling on Ottawa to launch a royal commission to develop a framework and plan for resource development and climate change in Canada in an attempt to address the concerns raised in Lindsay’s letter.

Legge said that if a consensus can be reached on these issues, it’s possible that Teck’s Frontier project could be resurrected. “I just don’t know how we can get to that national consensus,” he said.

In the meantime, he said it’s disappointing that 14 Indigenous communities lost out on potential jobs and benefits agreements with Teck for the project. “These opportunities don’t come around very often in the remote areas of our country,” Legge said.

The shock withdrawal of the Teck’s application will have implications for oil and gas producers outside of the oilsands trying to attract investment, said Grant Fagerheim, president and CEO of Whitecap Resources Inc., which produces light oil in Alberta and Saskatchewan.

Fagerheim said he received two calls from international shareholders on Monday morning — one from the U.S. and one from the U.K. – asking for an explanation of what would have led to this decision.

“The loser at the end of the day is the Canadian public,” Fagereheim said.

The cancellation of Frontier also underscores the political risk investors now face when looking at putting their money into Canadian companies.

“Investors look very carefully at the risks they face,” said Kevin Neveu, CEO of Precision Drilling Corp., noting that most oil and gas investors putting their money in Canada are focused on geological or seasonal risks. “They have a hard time analyzing political risks.”

The cancellation of Frontier – amid a broader debate about major projects, pipelines and rail blockades – is particularly difficult for foreign investors to understand. “It’s really hard for investors to figure out public sentiment if they’re not living inside the country,” Neveu said.

Neveu said his company has worked hard to reduce the environmental impact of its operations, but Canadian resource companies don’t get credit for the work they’ve done.

Indeed, Explorers and Producers Association of Canada president Tristan Goodman said domestic oil and gas companies have worked to reduce their emissions and demonstrate that the Canadian sector can be part of the response to climate change.
“We do have a climate problem that we as a nation have to show leadership on,” said Goodman, whose industry group represents small- to mid-sized oil and gas companies.

At the same time, Goodman said, oil and gas continue to be in demand in both developed and developing countries. While Canadian projects are blocked, competing oil companies in other countries are rushing to meet that demand.

“The cancellation of something like this reverberates so far outside of Canada,” Goodman said. “Investors are increasingly nervous putting their money into this country.”


business.financialpost.com/commodities/energy/disappointment-fear-and-anger-indigenous-communities-blindsided-by-tecks-decision-to-pull-frontier-project
 

pgs

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B.C. VIEWS: Pipeline dispute highlights need for clarity

It would be a mistake to assume that the dispute between Wet’suwet’en traditional leaders and the Coastal GasLink pipeline project can be resolved in a column.

It has taken generations to get to this point; it will take more than 550 words to get past it.

What the dispute has revealed, however, is the absolute urgency for action.

Not the kind that some suggest. Sending in the troops, or ordering police to dismantle blockades has failed to produce longterm solutions in the past. It will again.

What’s needed is a commitment by First Nations, provincial and federal governments to resolve the longstanding land title and governance issues that lie at the core of the dispute.

The Wet’suwet’en blockade is the symptom of a bigger problem. It is a byproduct of British Columbia’s messy and unfinished treaty process, and a failed and broken federal Indian Act.

How dysfunctional it has become can be seen in the Wet’suwet’en First Nation itself. While some British Columbians may have just heard about Gaslink’s plan to build a $6 billion pipeline from Northeastern B.C. to a $40 billion gas liquefaction plant and export terminal at Kitimat, the Wet’suwet’en have been debating it for years.

The discussions were not easy, and even today the debate is polarizing the community. But in the end, the elected band councils supported the project, arguing construction would provide opportunity and employment for their members.

What Coastal Gaslink failed to do was convince the Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs.


And there’s the rub.

Elected band councils are the product of the Indian Act – a notoriously paternal piece of 19th century legislation. Its primary function was to promote the rapid assimilation and cultural extinction of First Nations people across Canada. It brought residential schools, subjugated women, squelched traditional languages, and even barred dancing and the wearing of regalia.

It also provided a mechanism for bands to manage their own reserve lands through elected band councils.

The challenge in B.C. is that reserve lands make up only a fraction of the traditional territory claimed by First Nations.

And because few treaties have ever been signed in this province, these First Nations have never relinquished their title or rights to that land – a point supported by the Canadian Supreme Court in its 1997 Delgamuukw ruling.

It is this traditional territory that the Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs claim authority over.

That claim has created a simple narrative: Traditional leaders, defending traditional territory from colonial and industrial incursion.

Dismissed in this narrative, of course, is the support from the 20 First Nations along the pipeline route and the extensive consultations with those nations that have taken place to get to this point.

The question of who speaks for the Wet’suwet’en is something the Wet’suwet’en will have to decide themselves.

But it is a question that will continue to be asked in other Indigenous communities until the issue of land claims in B.C. is resolved. The treaty process – moving as slowly as it is – will not only define aboriginal rights and title, but provide agreed-upon governance structures.

Without that resolution there will be no clarity, no certainty, and little chance of the economic prosperity so many First Nations people are calling for.

www.houston-today.com/opinion/b-c-views-pipeline-dispute-highlights-need-for-clarity/


A copy of this should be sent to every single chief in the AFN - though I doubt it sway them in their enduring quest to keep the Indian Act in place for purely personal reasons. Copies should also be sent to those FN bands that have been fighting with each other for decades over boundary issues.
Of course the Indian act was passed to facilitate the transition from a hunter gatherer existence into the modern world . Unfortunately due to human greed and ignorance the result was a disenfranchised people that are wards of the state .