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Politics Where we learn not to think less of others who don't share our views |
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#5 |
Person who doesn't update the user title
Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: Bottom lands of the Missoula floods
Posts: 6,402
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xoB, that's a good find. I've seen quite a few tribes and nations using
the internet to document their existence and history. Of course we ("whites") tend to think of their cultures in terms of battles and killings and reservations and stereotypes therein. But the tribes are changing too, and are using "our" legal and belief systems as part of their modern day weaponry. One thing I find really of interest is that Native Americans have taken one of our basic legal foundations - Freedom of Region - using it as a formidable tool in their arsenal. As just one example, here in the Pacific Northwest, when the tribes are in negotiation/fight over salmon, they couch their rights in terms of "religious practices", not in terms of historic ownership. I think a similar and ironic situation is the gambling casinos that are taking large sums of $ from whites, and using the $ to provide health care for their people. In sort of a "turn your enemy's strength into their weakness", or visa versus, legal status and rights and courts-of-law and land grants have replaced the bows/arrows and guns/bullets. And in the case of the Keystone Pipeline, a Sioux challenge in federal and state courts could be extensive and very effective. . |
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