Advanced Strategies on Stealing Indigenous Resourcesâ
â TWO DIRTY COLONIAL REPTILES â CHRIS âODBâ REID AND ROBIN âROTTEN EGGâ AITKEN CITED AS SLIMEY âAUTHORITIESâ MNN. Mar. 4, 2008. âAll the tricks of the colonists are now revealedâ, sayeth the infamous Indigenous sage, Red-X. âItâs a manual on how to try to cash in on our land and resourcesâ. It was used at Dehcho and it looks like theyâre fine tuning it at Sharbot Lake too. Here are some of the key hints on their dirty tricks and how to counter them.
Colonial Dirty Trick #1. Call it âdemocracyâ and make sure you keep control. Invite the Indigenous to conferences on âself-governanceâ. Make sure they go to lots of fancy cocktail parties with open bars, with colonial big-wigs like Governor General Michaelle Jean and other âheavies. Give them tiaras to try on and a taste of âlife in the fast laneâ. Make sure theyâre too drunk to notice theyâve sold out their people. Colonial Dirty Trick #2. Make sure Indigenous are outnumbered three to one at every meeting. Red-X says, âDonât go to Ottawa, Vancouver or Kingston or any big city. Hold them meetings at home in your tipi, longhouse or your condemned Indian Affairs bungalow with the cracked window panes and asbestos contaminated floors and wallsâ. Colonial Dirty Trick #3. Put out colonial law as if itâs Indigenous law. Ignore Indigenous legal processes. Only look at what counts according to the colonial Supreme Court. The Red-X says, âLetâs take a look at how two colonial reptiles played out the âlife and deathâ game against our people of the Northwest Territoriesâ. Red-X goes on to reveal the âColonial Cheat Sheetâ used to try to pull the wool over our eyes. CDT #4. Information is power â the colonists have two control strategies: collect, horde and keep it to themselves. When necessary they make it disappear. The other option is to put out a whole lot of lies, like false history and myth making. Even create “Indians”! CDT #5. Put some âheaviesâ at the table. The bigger the title, the longer the resume, the fatter, the better. At the talks with our Dehcho brothers and sisters, the âheavyâ, Minister of Indian Affairs, Robert Nault, said, “The signing of these agreements is an acknowledgment of a new relationship between the Deh Cho, Canada and the GNWT”. What he really said was, âI hope I confused you because Iâm fâking confused myself.â Michael Nadli, a sell-out band councilor, said, “We look forward to Phase II to begin substantive negotiations on the more fundamental elements of Deh Cho Governance.” Translation: âIâm being played. Theyâre making me read a script I donât understandâ. CDT #6. Use hierarchical colonial criteria with with the colonists sitting at the top seeing themselves with guns and money in hand. We are supposed to be down there somewhere out of sight. They always beat around the bush. CDT #7. Design an extreme âoffer-concession strategyâ to bowl the Injuns over if we kick up a fuss or raise awkward questions, like, âHowâre you gonna clean up your filthy mess?â Thatâs when the “operatives” throw the chair back and pull away from the table. We can stop these sleazes even when they threaten to take the âbribeâ money with them. CDT #8. The colonial “hoods” will walk out if they lose âcontrolâ. Thatâs when we know the whole is falling. Translation: âWe ainât playing with you bad âInjunsâ anymore!â CDT #9. Look for weaknesses. These gangsters may even use a âgood copâ and a âbad copâ strategy to throw those Injuns off balance. We all know thereâs no âgood copâ. Theyâre all âbadâ. They then threaten us with illegal injunctions, jail time and law suits. At the January 6, 2008 Kingston meeting âODBâ Reidâs pal, âAlgonquin Would-beâ, Robert Lovelace, was sent back in to talk to the Mohawks after the âcarpetbaggersâ stomped off in a huff. Would- Beâs job was to side track the Mohawks with his âCointelproâ charm. The next day these âair punchingâ carpetbaggers disappeared to a secret hideaway. The Mohawks found them and once again they slithered off into the darkness. CDT #10. The carpetbaggers donât like the people you bring along. They will suggest taking your sell-outs into another room to make a deal behind closed doors. ODB Reid was overheard telling âNeed-to-be-Algonquin-to-settle-a-phony-land-claimâ Lovelace, âThe next time we should meet with George White of Frontenac Ventures alone with no lawyersâ. Theyâre trying to make a deal on uranium mining on Haudenosaunee land at Sharbot Lake. When we tried to ask questions, they fled again with their coat tails flapping. CDT #11. They want targets. In the 1990 Mohawk-Oka Crisis at Kanehsatake, we sent in different spokespeople every day. Alex Patterson and Bernard Roy, the negotiators for Quebec and Canada, got spitting mad. Their threats were ignored. They picked up their toys and left. Negotiations broke down. CDT #12. The colonial agents stuff their side with âknow-it-alls. Warns the Red-X, âThis does not intimidate us. We just have more foul smell to cut through. Just keep telling them this is all our land, we are sovereign and they are trespassersâ. Our Basic Way is simple: Report daily to the community. Get their instructions. Select new negotiators each day to avoid getting targeted and becoming too cozy with the adversaries. Indigenous men cannot meet with adversaries without consulting the women. We all have diverse knowledge, abilities, expertise and responsibilities. We have to use the Great Law traditional decision making process to bring in everybodyâs ideas. Separate private âtete-a-tetesâ are meant to force us into making secret deals with the devil. The meetings must be 2 sided â the Indigenous People on one side and all the pirates on the other side â with a neutral third party approved by both sides to mediate. This is required by international law. The Dehcho Coercion Process involving Chris “ODB” Reid and Robin “Rotten Egg” Aitkin. The âDehcho Nationâ is in the southwest corner of the land known to the colonists as the âNorthwest Territoriesâ. It covers roughly 210,000 square kms. There are 10 communities. The colonial vipers wanted their land and resources and to put a pipeline through their territory. Itâs not a place where the vipers themselves dream of living or raising their families. But they sure do salivate after the resources. Red-X warns, âWatch out for âODBâ. Reid. It is believed he was the double dipping negotiator and lawyer for the Deh Cho [(867) 695-2355 or (416) 466-9928]. Look out for Robin Aitken who was the Chief Federal Negotiator from Indian Affairs [(819) 953-1018]. Donât let Bob Patterson slip away. He was the Chief Negotiator for the Northwest Territories [(867) 873-7167]. “They brag about their prowess with Indigenous peopleâ, said Red-X. Check out their websites. See what they think of us. Their using similar dirty tricks in the current âmining and land claim strategyâ at Sharbot Lake. The Deh Cho process started in 1998 when former Indian Affairs Minister Jane Stewart sent in her patsy, Dr. Peter H. Russell, to look at Dehcho âlands, resources and governanceâ on behalf of industry. Sheâs now trying to organize Six Nations according to this Manual. âPatsyâ Russell teaches political science at the University of Toronto [phruss@aol.com] and speaks on the âLessons of Ipperwash and Caledonia â Learning to be Treaty Peopleâ. [This title is sooo patronizing! Try not to barf!] He works at the C.D. Howe Institute, a Conservative think tank, that plans and schemes against us. He also spent time among the Australian Aborigines. After his visits to Dehcho, agents were sent in to start managing them. George Erasmus, who gets put on all kinds of government boards and commissions, was put in as chief negotiator for Dehcho. First there was an âInterim Measures Agreementâ signed in May 2001 to let the Dehcho take part in their own land and resource management. Wow! What progress! [They have been doing this for thousands of years!] Canada wanted an âAgreement-in-Principleâ in five years and a final agreement two years later so that industry could get their claws on the resources, oil, gas and diamonds and to put in the pipeline. Dr. Russell recommended something called âinterim measuresâ and then an âAgreement-in-Principleâ. Thereâs no science behind their spin on names for their theft! On May 21, 2001, Dehcho, NWT and Canada signed something else called a âFramework Agreementâ that was supposed to be based on the fraudulent Treaty 8 of 1900 and Treaty 11 of 1921 and 1922 with Canada. If the Dehcho scrutinized these treaties, they might find they donât meet international law standards. Some other fancy names to awe us into being coerced might include âLand Use Planningâ funded by Canada; âInterim Land Withdrawalâ to temporarily protect lands not presently needed by industry; involve the Dehcho in the âMackenzie Valley Resource Managementâ to make them feel important, meaning âweâll let you talk to us but we donât have to listen to youâ; National Energy Board, an outsider, will authorize oil and gas activities with a benefit plan for someone; Canada will let Dehcho watch them turn their land into a park; and âjoint ventures projectsâ called âInterim Resources Development Agreementsâ will let Canada and industry steal the resources and give a few pennies to the Dehcho. Resources like wildlife and fish will be used, managed and protected without specifying by whom and at whose cost. In August 2003 the Dehcho stopped surface and sub-surface development for five years, probably on the land that has no resources that industry wanted. The mining companies, environmental groups, prospectors and oil and gas companies were probably involved in deciding which 34% of the lands were withdrawn. In the âInterim Resource Development Agreementâ of April 2003 the Dehcho would benefit only if there was oil and gas development. Dehcho got 12.25% of the first $2 million [$250,000] that Canada collected in resource royalties from the Mackenzie Valley each year, and 2.45% of any more royalties. The Dehcho could only get up to 50% each year to a maximum of $1 million. âYouâll get an allowance if you behave ourselvesâ, Canada told them. Canada will hold the balance in trust so that they can dip into it for their own needs. This is an old trick. At the final agreement in 2005/06 the Dehcho got $1 million. The oil and gas companies are taking out at least $1 million a day if not an hour from their land. Dehcho had to agree to issue oil and gas exploration licenses and prospecting permits the first year and every two years after that. Mining companies can go to individual Dehcho communities to make separate deals. This is all so underhanded. Canada says they are giving the Dehcho a chance to “hit the ground running” when a final agreement is completed. Yes, weâd better all run away from these salivating reptiles! This means they will give the Dehcho an advance on their allowance which will be deducted from the final settlement. If it doesnât go through, the Dehcho may have to pay it back. In September 2004, the Dehcho sued the Mackenzie Gas Project, suspending land, resources and governance negotiations. In the out-of-court settlement of July 2005 Canada agreed to pay Dehcho $31.5 million over three years through âprogram fundingâ and ânew fundingâ which the Dehcho have to get anyway. It ended up as $3.5 million per year to make it look like the Dehcho were taking part. The âFramework Agreementâ sets out how Canada would set up an illegal municipal government to avoid legitimate nation to nation relations. âYeah, weâll let you âregulateâ your own land and water as long as you go by our “rulesâ, which are in the best interests of industry!â The Dehcho role in the Mackenzie Valley Land & Water Board was to bring their land and resources under the same overall controlling regulations. We hear they got two jobs from the oil and gas exploration. Did ODB Reid get this for them? Derek Neary of the Deh Cho Drum, Fort Simpson, wrote about the distrust of federal negotiator, Robin âRotten-Eggâ Aitken. Rotten Egg repeatedly said that Canada doesn’t have anything up its sleeve! He said that the Dehcho made him push the negotiations. Do we believe that? Itâs always the other way around. An Old “Indian” Trick We Learned from a White Man: Canada made agreements with âmetisâ to put pressure on Dehcho to go along with the land and resources giveaways. Who are these âmetis? Anybody who wishes to be native, like the âpaper Algonquinsâ at Sharbot Lake who are negotiating away Haudenosaunee land? The âCongress of Aboriginal Peopleâ CAP is the federal government creature that signs up anyone who wants to be an âIndianâ. If this keeps up, every Canadian could sign up and be part of this subterfuge. As Red-X said, âThey can never be Ongwehonwe!â The Red-X advises, âBrothers and sisters, we must use our natural world strategies against these beastsâ. Kahentinetha Horn MNN Mohawk Nation News Watch for more news on the return of Red-X. [Backgrounder – Deh Cho Process Back to News Release Index] Roxane Poulin Communications Indian and Northern Affairs Canada Yellowknife, NWT
Tel: (867) 669-2580 Fax: (867) 669-2715 poulinr@ainc-inac.gc.ca Deh Cho First Nation’s Interim Resource Development Agreement.
http://search.yahoo.com/search?ei=utf-8&fr=slv8-yga&p
=Deh%20Cho%20First%20Nation%27s%20Interim%20Resource%20Development%20Agreement. All Deh Cho updates here http://nwt-tno.inac-ainc.gc.ca/dehcho/wn_e.html http://www.ainc-inac.gc.ca/nr/prs/m-a2001/2-01150_e.html http://www.ainc-inac.gc.ca/nr/prs/m-a2001/2-01150_e.html The Business Journal of Phoenix – May 9, 2005http://phoenix.bizjournals.com/phoenix/stories/2005/05/09/smallb3.html http://nwt-tno.inac-ainc.gc.ca/dehcho/news/053006b_e.htm Click News and See Category: âSharbot Lakeâ |