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Thats easy, *gavel drops*...reserves are now passé. Sell and buy/develop as you wish.
Problem solved......darn, I should be running things.
Problem solved......darn, I should be running things.
Who owns it? The community, individuals, families?Bruce Monkhouse said:Thats easy, *gavel drops*...reserves are now passé. Sell and buy/develop as you wish.
Problem solved......darn, I should be running things.
UberCree said:They did this once in the states and because of the economic status of some of the reservations they immediately sold off most of their land to maintain an operating budget. Some of the communities there ended up worse off.
UberCree said:Regarding the Indian Act. One grand chief explained our relationship with the Indian Act better than I could. Native people both love and hate the Indian Act. It is the only thing that defines us and our role in the Canadian constitution, yet the definition is based on a paternalistic (bruce like) relationship.
UberCree said:I am an advocate of the 'citizen plus' model.
cplcaldwell said:But as I read through this it seems there are two kinds of aboriginals 1.
The Constitution, as also the Charter, lays out the following groups as recognizable Aboriginal: Status (on or off reserve), Metis and Inuit.
Status is defined as per the Indian Act - one can under the 1960 amendments live on or off reserve and still hold status. Metis is still struggling with what that is defined as but is coming close to a final definition - read self determination. Inuit is pretty much self explanatory. What the Feds won't recognize are those FN who are non-status and live off reserve. Even though Bill C31 afforded the opportunity for those who lost status under the old indian Act to gain it back, not everyone who could be considered status has got their status back. Those people even though they are FN, are deemed by the Feds to be a non-native and therefore falling outside of their jurisdiction/responsibility.
The ones who decide to be enfranchised 2, get an education, serve in the military,... a bunch of other things... or marry someone who belongs to one of these (aforementioned) groups AND those who don't.
See above, enfranchisement was more than being able to vote, it meant once taken out, the person was no longer considered FN, call it instant white guy making. So the question could be ...
Is the Indian Act (and the rights, including Reserved Land) there as a 'backstop' to protect individuals (who have a birthright and ..) who wish to live in a relatively parochial world, that 'backstop' ceasing for folks who wish to step out into the 'big bad world' .
The Indian Act does not confer any rights, only the treaties do that. The IA is legislation to a) define who is or is not an Indian b) who is or is not a band member c) how the personal effect of a deceased Indian person is dealt with by the Minister d) health and dental care limitations e) reserve territory expansion provisions /housing and e) sets out powers of band councils and the election there of of officials. In the 1985 amendments (Bill C31), the new legislation set out that a status person could no longer abrogate or derogate their status. All the previous reasons that were listed that one could lose their status no longer applies. BUT as I mentioned earlier, not everyone who is entitled to gain back their status have been afforded that right. The kicker of Bill C31 was that status was returned to the person who first lost it and then granted to subsequent descendents. For example, way back in 1939, a woman marries a non native man. She loses status but that's ok because after 10 years in residential school, she really is quite ashamed to be Indian - she likes it now that she's an instant white woman. Fast forward to 1985 when the Feds say, it's ok now folks, you can all have your lost status back -if- you apply for it. The woman doesn't want to apply even though her blood quantum is 100%. She may walk like a duck but she's so used to being a goose that goingback to being considered a duck appalls her. But her children and grandchildren are fine with being a first nation descendent and want the status. Too bad says the Government, "If your Mother doesn't apply then status will not be conferred upon you. You'll have to wait until she dies then you can apply." Or there are the cases where the children were apprehended by CAS and adopted out and never told they were entitled to status. Manitoba lost over 40,000 children to the United States when they were adopted and "sold" off for a hundred bucks apiece to American adoption agencies. Most of those kids have no clue they are Canadian FN. OR
Is it a birthright to be claimed by anybody, no matter what they, or their mothers or fathers (or apparently, their grandparents) have done in their lives based on some quotient of DNA....
If they can prove they are a direct descendant of any treaty right, then they can claim it. ( I believe it was the first Marshall case out of Nova Scotia that settled that point. I know there was a bundle of cases out of there all dealing with treaty rights, just can't recall which one right now)
1 I know that's the grossest of generalizations, bear with me...
2 I'm real ignorant, does this mean 'vote'?
Klc said:A thought comes to mind. This is something I have wondered for a long time about why things are as they are in regards to legislation. That is, what is the overall idea behind why we continue to have anything at all in government based on race - that is why there is any legislation that is at all based on bloodline. It just seems odd, as it could be seen as discriminatory in a sense. Why is someone born into any privileges different then anybody else?
Is it because of Convention, A continuation of past practice? Restitution, or is it perhaps Situational - that is, is it because no other solution is acceptable? the situation warrents it. Or something completely different? (much more likely then my half brained thoughts. Likely a combination of things)
I normally wouldn't wade into a conversation such as this, especially asking questions off of topic. I only do because I have never had a chance to discuss this with people who are passionate about the issue. As much as I learned about it in high school, there was a serious lack of intelligent conversation.
(Be kind, I burn easily, ;D)
dglad said:Subsequent Supreme Court decisions have detailed,andclarified, invented and fictionalized what this means. The Court has recognized that the aboriginal peoples of Canada lived here long before the arrival of Europeans and used the land and its resources (fish, game, some forest resources mainly) in a particular way, to maintain a "traditional" lifestyle. This results in certain "aboriginal rights". "Treaty rights" are just what they sound like...rights derived from various treaties concluded with aboriginal groups across the country.