- Reaction score
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- Points
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This whole thing has become a farce. The blockade at the CGL site that started all this came down 4 days ago and work has resumed.
CloudCover said:This whole thing has become a farce. The blockade at the CGL site that started all this came down 4 days ago and work has resumed.
YZT580 said:The chiefs have attached a condition of the RCMP leaving. Sounds fair provided the road remains open and that was a reasonable condition to attach to the agreement. The response of the hereditary chiefs will tell whether they are actually interested in a solution or simply want to stop progress so they can maintain control of their bands. It appears that there is a lot of band politics.
Brad Sallows said:Whatever Canada's duties are to its citizens, those duties are owed equally to those who hold some sort of aboriginal status. Their interests are not necessarily well-served by activists who claim to act in those interests.
Chris Pook said:What would happen if the property rights that Canada recognizes under the Universal Declaration of Human Rights were enacted into Canadian charter law? Wouldn't that not only appeal to "the settlers" but also the First Nations?
You've made the assertion that it was PET who kept property rights out a few times, yet never provide a source. So...here's the actual answer from the Fraser Institute:Haggis said:Trudeau senior ensured that individual property rights were not enshrined in our constitution. This is key to the governments assertion that the ownership of any property in Canada, particularly that property where the crown requires you to have a licence to own/operate (e.g. guns), is a privilege.
Lots of people to point that particular finger at, but PET isn't one of them.Back when Canadas premiers and then-Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau debated what to put into what later became the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, property rights were one possibility and on the table.
Trudeau had pushed for property rights as justice minister in 1968, again as prime minister in 1969, and in 1980 during constitutional talks. But property rights never made it into the final 1982 Charter because Trudeau and Bill Bennett, then-Premier of British Columbia, were the lone advocates.
While one can only theorize about the positive impact of including property rights in the Charter, the effect of excluding property rights are demonstrableand demonstrably harmful. (I chronicled some examples in a recent book on the subject).
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garb811 said:You've made the assertion that it was PET who kept property rights out a few times, yet never provide a source. So...here's the actual answer from the Fraser Institute:
Lacking constitutional protection, governments routinely trample property rights[/url]Lots of people to point that particular finger at, but PET isn't one of them.