Friday, September 28, 2007

Please Remember Caledonia

Just a quick update on the various Caledonia issues.

There was a bit of mud-slinging at the local Candidates' debate in Brant county, as would be expected.

Meanwhile, a 15-year old was arrested in the beating of home builder Sam Gualtieri, and police are still looking for two 18-year olds.

At the same Stirling South site, Dave Van Elslander, of Venture Homes said Thursday night he and John Kragten "have been advised the deal - hailed by the Haudenosaunee Development Institute (HDI) as a way for projects in disputed territory to carry on - meant handing jurisdiction over the land to HDI."

So they (wisely) refused to sign, and the fragile peace is now in jeopardy again:

Van Elslander said when the tentative deal was struck, he and Kragten were told they would not be required to pay a development fee but could make a donation to a worthy Six Nations cause, such as literacy.

They agreed, but when the deal to allow the subdivision to go ahead was drawn up, he and Kragten decided to find out what the use of the term jurisdiction meant.

"Basically we've been advised it meant everything was over, that's it and they own it," said Van Elslander.

In his statement, MacNaughton made it clear the HDI expects Ontario municipalities to fully consult with the Haudenosaunee of Six Nations before issuing permits for any developments in "unceded territory."


There will be a "Remember Us " March on Oct. 8.

Please remember them Oct. 10.

17 comments:

Matt said...

Joanne, some time ago some anonyliberal commented on here that it's Harper's fault the man was beaten because land claims are a federal issue, and another commenter eloquently explained that the OPP report to the Premier not the PM (guess the anonyliberal didn't realize the 'O' was important?) :P

Do you know what post that comment is on? I can no longer find it.

Anonymous said...

Jo Anne...I'm still amazed at the lack of coverage!How did you find out a 15 yr. old was arrested?

Joanne (True Blue) said...

Anon - Pure happenstance. I was listening to CHML, and checked out their website on another matter. Then found the clip. Yeah, and a whole lot of good it will do anyway. Young offender and all. No-no Johnny.

Matt, I'll try to find that for you.

Joanne (True Blue) said...

Anon, the information is also in the Expositor link in the post. I didn't use the CHML one because it was doing strange things to my blog.

Anonymous said...

Hey ... just more asymmetrical Ontario justice ... 3 "Indians" beat a white man senseless .... no action. If 3 white men beat an "Indian" senseless the MSM would be howling injustice , the human rights committee would in full action , Dalton would be decrying the action , and the OPP would have the culprits in shackles paraded in front of TV cameras from across the country.

Joanne (True Blue) said...

Sorry, Matt. It's not jumping out at me. If I find it, I'll let you know. Yes, the reply was very eloquent. I tried finding it by using 'labels' but had no success.

Maybe we'll get lucky and the same person will post it again here. ;)

Anonymous said...

Jo Anne...this is only slightly off topic, but check out SDA under Readers Tips for the day. One of the last comments is about a
hidden agenda item by the one and only McSlimey.

Anonymous said...

Hey ... just more asymmetrical Ontario justice ... 3 "Indians" beat a white man senseless .... no action. If 3 white men beat an "Indian" senseless the MSM would be howling injustice , the human rights committee would in full action , Dalton would be decrying the action , and the OPP would have the culprits in shackles paraded in front of TV cameras from across the country.

Yes, we have asymmetrical justice all right.

"According to Statistics Canada in 2000/01, while Aboriginal youth
constituted 5% of the youth population, they accounted for approximately one in four admissions to remand (26%) and sentenced custody (24%). Of the total admissions for females, Aboriginal youth constituted 33% of remand admissions and 30% of admissions to sentenced custody. The proportions of Aboriginal males admitted to remand and to sentenced custody were 25% and 24% respectively."


Glad they caught the thugs though.

Joanne (True Blue) said...

Anon, thanks for the tip.

LS - What's your point?

Anonymous said...

some anonyliberal
Sheesh!

Land claims are federal, but the feds are currently claiming that the 1841 and 1843 events, that are the core of the dispute, happened before Confederation, so they are the problem of the successor to Upper Canada, i.e. Ontario.

How would the OPP reporting to the Premier have anything to do with it? It it so you can blame the Premier for thugs beating people up? Makes as much sense as blaming Harper.

Joanne (True Blue) said...

Anon, that comment is a beaut!

I'm going to copy it here (from SDA Posted by: gl1800 at September 28, 2007 2:11 PM):

Why I Voted Against McGuinty And PR Thursday, September 27, 2007

Ontario Election '07 By Howard Galganov
Anne and I live in a small rural community in South Eastern Ontario, which is located about 45 minutes from Montreal’s West Island, and about an hour from Ottawa.

In terms of location, location, location - it’s perfect for us.

We moved to this area about 7 years ago to get away from the horrific politics of the province of Quebec, where all taxes are outrageously high, and the government feels compelled to intrude into the personal lives of its residents. Not to forget to mention Quebec’s unique brand of ethnocentric nationalism.

For us, a more Conservative Ontario was the answer. But we didn’t want to move too far away from our family, friends and medical support structure. So here we are.

Then all of a sudden Dalton McGuinty happened.

McGuinty is Ontario’s current Premier (equivalent to a US Governor), who is now running for reelection. He is a social micro managing tax hungry lying Liberal.

When one calls someone a liar in voice or in print, he or she better be very careful to be able to back up such a statement for fear of being sued for defamation. But in McGuinty’s case, I’m fine. He is a liar.

During his first election campaign, he actually signed a pledge not to raise taxes, which went out the window the moment he was declared the winner.

He set the stage to make Ontario a bilingual province (English/French), even though Ontario’s French speaking community numbers only 5% of the total population.

He has stood by like a silent dummy as Ottawa picked Ontario’s pockets to send our tax dollars to ethnocentric Quebec.

He has bloated the bureaucracy and sucked-up big time to the unions. And he has done nothing positive for small businesses. I mean nothing!

He has also introduced a new voting structure that would see our First Past The Post system, which we now have, combined to a Proportional Representative (PR) system similar to what exists in politically gridlocked countries like Italy and Israel.

Conservative leader John Tory, who is a relatively bland person without much apparent vision, leads the opposition. To his credit, he wants (or so he says) less government and lower taxes.

The thing about Tory that really sets me off though, is his stated policy of funding religious schools.

In Ontario, there are two school systems funded by public tax dollars. There is the public school board, which is void of all religious specific education. And there is the Catholic school board, which teaches Creationism through the Catholic Bible.

Tory wants to add all religious specific schools to the public purse.

To me, this is an outrage. I do not want one penny of my tax dollars going to teach a Moslem about Allah, a Christian about Christ, a Jew about Abraham, a Buddhist about Buddha or Hindus about Vishnu.

Because McGuinty is a liar and a micro meddling Putz, and Tory wants to mix religion and public money for education, I was compelled not to vote in this upcoming Ontario election.

But not voting is wrong. So I thought seriously about going to the polls to destroy my ballot. But I didn’t want to do that either.

I decided to vote. And this is how I arrived at my decision.

McGuinty is a liar and a micro manager. He gets his government involved in social engineering where none is needed. And he wants to bilingualize Ontario where the linguistic minority is so small that there is no reason for it at all.

John Tory wants religious specific education paid for by the public purse. But it already is, since the Catholics have their own school system paid for by all Ontario taxpayers. So, if the Catholics can be funded by the public purse, why not everyone else?

I cannot bring myself to vote for a meddling liar like McGuinty. And not to vote directly against him would perhaps be like voting for him. So yesterday, I bit the ballot (so as to speak), and voted for the Conservative John Tory in the advance poll.

I also voted in Ontario’s referendum on changing or keeping the government status quo between the existing First Past The Post, or a combination of First Past the Post and Proportional Representation.

I voted to keep First Past The Post.

As I see it, we already have too much government. We don’t need more. I also see this second option that includes limited proportional representation as confusing, ponderous and yet another way to create new stifling bureaucracies.

This combination of First Past the Post and Proportional Representation is a perfect example of a government that wants to become bigger. If we could cut our government size by half, that wouldn’t be enough.

There’s also going to be a real problem at the polls.

When we arrived (Anne and myself), we were the only people there to vote. We were asked for our voting card, and waited until they found our names on the master list.

They also asked for one piece of photo ID with an address, which they then examined and presented to the person who hands out the ballots.

The person whose job it is to hand out the ballots asked us where we lived, as she looked at the ID. Her job was to make certain that we knew the information that was on the piece of photo ID we submitted. Then we were given the ballots.

This process took several minutes each. Can you imagine what it will be like when several million people show up to cast their votes on Election Day?

Surprisingly though, the only question they did not ask, which they should have asked was: ARE YOU A CANADIAN CITIZEN since only Canadian citizens are allowed to vote in any Canadian election from municiple to national?

I write this because an American friend of mine, who is not Canadian, is on the voters list, even though she has repeatedly told those responsible to remove her name due to her nationality.

According to what Anne and I went through at the polls, this friend of ours would have been allowed to vote, since her driver’s license is Ontarian and her address is in the riding.

Instead of a referendum for Proportional Representation and a much bigger more complicated government, perhaps we should have a referendum on the need to have a voter’s ID card.

In conclusion: I won’t tell you how to vote. But now you know how I voted and why.

Anonymous said...

anon 4:12 claims, with absolutely no evidence, that the case is handled differently because it is Indians beating on whites. I pointed out that if you want to look at "asymmetry", you could look at incarceration statistics.

I doubt you would see a significant difference in the result. The case was investigated and there were arrests. If it was an indian who was beaten senseless, there likely would be less investigation if anything.

Joanne (True Blue) said...

I pointed out that if you want to look at "asymmetry", you could look at incarceration statistics.

That's what I thought you were getting at. I've heard this tired argument before. So you're saying it's all about racism? That actual facts and incidence could not have possibly entered the equation?

Anonymous said...

So you're saying it's all about racism? That actual facts and incidence could not have possibly entered the equation?

Of course I'm not, but anon was. anon claims some kind of reverse racism, as if the native thugs who were just caught would have been caught faster if they were white.

I suspect that native incarceration rates have a lot to do with high poverty levels more than anything else. Things like no drinking water put a big crimp on trying to get an education to raise oneself out of poverty.

Calling an argument "tired" is kind of tired too.

Joanne (True Blue) said...

I suspect that native incarceration rates have a lot to do with high poverty levels more than anything else.

I suspect it has more to do with lack of motivation and the influence of organized crime.

Anonymous said...

"I suspect that native incarceration rates have a lot to do with high poverty levels"


I suspect that it has more to do with natives breaking the law and the OPP under the Liberal [McWimpy] government condoning it by circumventing the law [in these cases of native procecutions] to suit the rebellious/terrorist situation of avoiding native feathers being ruffled. It's called running scared !

Why ? ... Why do they break the laws of this country.

BECAUSE THEY CAN !

Anonymous said...

I suspect that it has more to do with natives breaking the law and the OPP under the Liberal [McWimpy] government condoning it by circumventing the law [in these cases of native procecutions] to suit the rebellious/terrorist situation of avoiding native feathers being ruffled. It's called running scared !

Way to miss the point, anon.

If all this lawbreaking is being "condoned" as you claim, why do natives have 4 times the incarceration rate?