Nunavut and the Inuit are not considered "natives" by the government. They don't fall under the oppressive Indian act and for the large part they were left alone to practice their way of life, unlike natives who actually lived where white people wanted to.
marmot
JoinedPosts by marmot
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52
Who knows when Native Americans was granted citizenship?? Very strange.
by jam inhow can one not be a citizen of their own land??.
yes the act of 1924 granted u.s citizenship to those native .
americans who were not already u.s. citizens.. prior to the passage of the indian citizens act of 1924, nearly .
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52
Who knows when Native Americans was granted citizenship?? Very strange.
by jam inhow can one not be a citizen of their own land??.
yes the act of 1924 granted u.s citizenship to those native .
americans who were not already u.s. citizens.. prior to the passage of the indian citizens act of 1924, nearly .
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marmot
But hey, at least my great-grandparents weren't born in California:
"Towns offered bounty hunters cash for every Indian head or scalp they obtained. Rewards ranged from $5 for every severed head in Shasta City in 1855 to 25 cents for a scalp in Honey Lake in 1863. One resident of Shasta City wrote about how he remembers seeing men bringing mules to town, each laden with eight to twelve Indian heads. Other regions passed laws that called for collective punishment for the whole village for crimes committed by Indians, up to the destruction of the entire village and all of its inhabitants. These policies led to the destruction of as many as 150 Native communities.
In both 1851 and 1852 California paid out $1 million--revenue from the gold fields--to militias that hunted down and slaughtered Indians. In 1857, the state issued $400,000 in bonds to pay for anti-Indian militias.
http://rwor.org/a/v21/1030-039/1039/gold1.htm
When California was admitted to the Union in 1850, the estimated Indian population of this state numbered some 150,000.
One of the first statutory acts of this legislature was to offer a bounty on Indian scalps.
From 1850 to 1863, state law provided for the indenture of California Indians.
Indian property was free for the taking because Indians weren’t permitted to testify in court. It was impossible to prosecute any crimes against them.
In this very body, State Senator J.J. Warner spoke for many at the time when he said: “... there is no place within the territory of the United States in which to locate them ... better, far better, to drive them at once into the ocean, or bury them in the land of their birth."
And by the mid-1870’s, the Indian population had fallen to less than 30,000.
http://republican.sen.ca.gov/web/mcclintock/article_print.asp?PID=270
White merchants, miners, and others impatient for the new state to further their interests created citizen militias to rid the state of Indians who resisted their demands for their land, their labor, or anything else. The Pit River Rangers, the Oregon Militia and others carried out their deadly work with support from the new State of California that provided a bounty for Indian scalps. By 1859 less than a third of the Indian population in California was able to escape the bloodbath. During this period the federal government negotiated eighteen treaties with Indians that promised reservations where Indians could live in peace and economic aid and vocational training g in compensation for the lands taken from them. The California Legislature prevailed on the Senate not to ratify the treaties and the genocide proceeded. By 1900, California Indians had nearly been annihilated and the population was only 15% of what it had been in 1850. The surviving Indians had to learn to live with an alien set of beliefs and life philosophy. Indians were forced to adapt to changes in their standards of living, their ability to travel, their ability to use their own language, the way they practiced conservation, their diet, and their art forms. In other words, their way of life was forcibly taken away from them and those who rebelled were destroyed.
http://www.cahro.org/html/aprilmay97-3.html -
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Who knows when Native Americans was granted citizenship?? Very strange.
by jam inhow can one not be a citizen of their own land??.
yes the act of 1924 granted u.s citizenship to those native .
americans who were not already u.s. citizens.. prior to the passage of the indian citizens act of 1924, nearly .
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marmot
Government-sanctioned starvation policies aren't new either. Canada's first prime minister John A. Macdonald was a despicable man who used starvation as a weapon to force the western plains nations onto reserves.
Later, Western European settlers began to complain that natives were being given preferential treatment because of obligations the government had under the treaties (sound familiar?) and the government came up with the utterly depraved "peasant farming" policy that was written into the federal Indian Act. This made it illegal for natives to use modern farming implements or own more than one cow. Sowing and harvesting had to be done by hand without plows or draft animals, which led to the widespread abandonment of any attempt at industrial agriculture, keeping natives starving and under the thumb of the government.
http://esask.uregina.ca/entry/aboriginal_reserve_agriculture_to_1900.html
These calculated policies are behind the decades of social ills that plague many First Nations to this day.
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52
Who knows when Native Americans was granted citizenship?? Very strange.
by jam inhow can one not be a citizen of their own land??.
yes the act of 1924 granted u.s citizenship to those native .
americans who were not already u.s. citizens.. prior to the passage of the indian citizens act of 1924, nearly .
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marmot
To the people who say injustices to natives are just part of the foggy distant past:
http://m.thestar.com/#!/news/redirect/45bb6636b0b7a9a0011f1ff01a2e111a
Canadian government researchers deliberately STARVED native children as part of sick experiments in the 40s and 50s.
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52
Who knows when Native Americans was granted citizenship?? Very strange.
by jam inhow can one not be a citizen of their own land??.
yes the act of 1924 granted u.s citizenship to those native .
americans who were not already u.s. citizens.. prior to the passage of the indian citizens act of 1924, nearly .
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marmot
"Given a long enough time line, the native population living on reserves will dwindle and be absorbed into the US and Canada."
Native populations are the fastest growing demographic in Canada.
https://www.aadnc-aandc.gc.ca/eng/1100100014298/1100100014302
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Who knows when Native Americans was granted citizenship?? Very strange.
by jam inhow can one not be a citizen of their own land??.
yes the act of 1924 granted u.s citizenship to those native .
americans who were not already u.s. citizens.. prior to the passage of the indian citizens act of 1924, nearly .
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marmot
Here is one of the rare success stories about economic development on a reserve:
http://www.canadianbusiness.com/economy/people-cant-protect-their-culture-when-theyre-on-welfare/
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52
Who knows when Native Americans was granted citizenship?? Very strange.
by jam inhow can one not be a citizen of their own land??.
yes the act of 1924 granted u.s citizenship to those native .
americans who were not already u.s. citizens.. prior to the passage of the indian citizens act of 1924, nearly .
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marmot
Jam, as far as the casino question goes I can't comment because my community doesn't have one. In fact the people voted against a casino in two separate referendums. Our sister reserve on the Quebec/Ontario/U.S. border has one but I don't know how they distribute the profits.
As for alcohol it depends on the individual, like with any other ethnic group. I can drink most people under the table but my sister is toast after two drinks. I'd say it's a myth. Alcohol abuse, however, is endemic in certain communities because of the lack of economic development and rampant social problems.
What is sorely lacking is a focus on social programs and economic development. My reserve is relatively well-off because of the close proximity to a major urban centre and the tobacco trade, which provides thousands of jobs. The Canadian government, however, is fighting tooth and nail to crush this source of economic activity, however, deeming it illegal. In fact, the Harper government spent over 100 million dollars last year on surveillance, policing and harsh new mandatory minimum jail sentences for people involved in the tobacco trade.
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52
Who knows when Native Americans was granted citizenship?? Very strange.
by jam inhow can one not be a citizen of their own land??.
yes the act of 1924 granted u.s citizenship to those native .
americans who were not already u.s. citizens.. prior to the passage of the indian citizens act of 1924, nearly .
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marmot
" Nowadays in canda they live on the reserve and earn food money off the government.. they use it then use half of it on booze.... then they beg or 'whore' for more
Now this is only half.. many are above this! (I'm not stereotying all)
The rest work decent jobs but when problems arise at work it always becomes a race issue with them...
Sadly they never get over the harm done to them."
Okay, this is complete and utter bullshit. I grew up on a reserve, I'm Mohawk with a native status card and we do NOT get "food money" from the government, you ignorant jerk. Wanna know why so many native communities "can't get over" what was done to them? Consider this: the aboriginal population in Canada is roughly 4.3% of the overall population, guess what percentage of land we have to live on and create an economy with?
0.028%
That's right, we have only 28,000 square kilometers of native territory, all of the natural resources and riches of this country were stripped away and you wonder why there are economic problems in native communities!? Not to mention the residential schools problem, which was an issue right up until the 1970s, where native children were ripped from their families and denied the right to speak their own languages and robbed of their culture, many of whom suffered unspeakable sexual and physical abuse in these state-approved church-run schools. The social harm done to these kids goes a long way to explaining the staggering percentage of homeless aboriginals and prison inmates.
But of course, we're all just lazy tax evaders looking for a government handout.
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Getting bariatric surgery in March!
by marmot inafter being on a waiting list for three and a half years i've finally reached the light at the end of the tunnel and am going under the knife for a gastric sleeve operation in march.
i can't tell you how pumped i am because i'll finally be able to re-take my life after being severely overweight for several years.
i gained a ton of weight after being put on meds for bipolar disorder and it made exercising a painful chore.
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marmot
They moved up the surgery date, I'm going under the knife on Monday!
Feeling both anxious and a little nervous, but I'm sure everything will go well.
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45
I am having trouble believing in God...
by thedepressedsoul ini was raised a jw and i am still one but recently i have been having trouble believing in a god.
this is not meant to offend anyone who does, i am just curious to see if i am the only one who thinks this..... to start, i am a very black and white person.
if 1+1=2 it makes sense to me and i can agree with it.
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marmot
A really good couple of books for you to consider would be "Who Wrote the Bible?" by Richard Eliot Friedman and "The Bible Unearthed" by Neil Asher Silberman.