It appears that about $2.6+ billion of the transfers
are to offset legal costs incurred by Indigenous bands.
In short, taxpayers are
funding Indigenous tribes to sue us. Activists blocking highways and
rail lines have
good reason to believe the
federal government will not hold them to account. This illusion can
be dealt with.
Start with arresting and detaining all protesters who engage in the
disruption of or access to
government or private
services. Make a peace bond a condition of bail. Do not impose fines;
require a few hundred hours
of community service with the alternative of time in jail.
Indigenous hereditary chiefs are trying to impose 17th
century rule by kings on a portion of Canada.
Like their counterparts in
Europe and Africa they live in obscurity dreaming of a day when they
can exercise the powers of
their ancestors. Royalty in a democracy has a tough road to travel.
Claims by hereditary chiefs that their sovereignty precedes
confederation and “colonial law”
repeals the human and
charter rights of the people living on the lands claimed and negates
the common law protections
for order and peace. A successful claim by hereditary chiefs would
mean that residents in the
area would receive no services or support from the federal and
provincial governments they
refuse to recognize. Imposing a royal prerogative cuts two ways.
There can be no negotiations with hereditary indigenous chiefs until
they can prove conclusively
that most residents living
on the land that they claim accept the chiefs as their leaders.
Land claims are one thing and can be argued in court. Claims that
inherited rights include the
rule of people under royal
entitlement is not acceptable in any free world nation.
Too much blood has been
shed to break the arbitrary rule of kings for us to ever go back to
those horrors.
***********************************
Rail blockades could turn
into a full-blown secession crisis — and Trudeau's government is to
blame
Five years of pandering and subsidising 632 First Nations leaders
has led to this catastrophe
Diane Francis
National Post
February 13, 2020
The illegal road and rail
blockades perpetrated by Indigenous radicals across the country are
not about pipelines or fossil fuels.
It’s an existential threat
to Canada and its sovereignty — and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s
Liberal government is to blame.
Five years of pandering and subsidizing 632 First Nations leaders has
led to this catastrophe, which is being spearheaded by
five unelected hereditary
chiefs in British Columbia who claim their nation — the Wet’suwet’en
— is exempt from Canadian laws
and regulations. They claim
sovereignty over a 22,000-square-kilometre swath of land, an area the
size of Israel, and have
successfully invoked
nationwide solidarity protests that have crippled portions of the
country’s rail system.
Wet’suwet’en hereditary
leaders and their accomplices have defied court orders and ignored
agreements signed by 20 band
councils, including their
own. The issue at hand is the building of a 670-kilometre gas
pipeline to a $40-billion LNG plant on
the coast, but at stake is
the future of Canada itself. On Dec. 31, the
B.C. Supreme Court ordered protesters to allow
workers access to a remote
logging road in northern B.C. But Wet’suwet’en activists continued to
block the road and, days later,
28 were arrested (six of
whom were released without charges). Now, dozens of arrests have
followed across the country.
Such lawlessness has been
emboldened since 2015, when Trudeau decided the federal government
would not enforce the
First Nations Financial Transparency
Act. The law requires Indigenous leaders, often inherited chiefs, to
be accountable and
transparent by forcing them
to publish audits of band expenses, including their compensation.
Along the way, Ottawa has also
sidestepped disputes
involving corruption, rigged elections, no elections, nepotism and
charter rights violations.
By ceding its oversight
powers to band chiefs and councils, without checks and balances, or
any semblance of accountability,
the feds have allowed the
rights of the Indigenous people who fall under the control of these
chiefs and councils to be trampled
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