http://tworowtimes.com/opinions/columns/lets-talk-native/time-for-the-u-s-to-admit-what-its-doing-indian-fighting-with-terrorism-laws/#.Uic6nRZVhpV
Wednesday, September 4, 2013
Time for the U.S. to Admit What It’s Doing—“Indian Fighting” with Terrorism Laws
The LTN Column by John Kane for the September 4, 2013 Issue of the Two Row Times
The Contraband Cigarette
Trafficking Act (CCTA) and its enhanced amendments through the reauthorization
of the USA PATRIOT Act* are supposed to be tools to fight organized crime,
violence associated with the illicit tobacco trade and the funding of terrorism
through tobacco diversion. And yet the Bureau
of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) that claims to be pitifully
underfunded still managed to spend several years, millions of dollars and
thousands of man-hours conducting a “sting” operation out of Kansas City,
Missouri, not to prosecute the “mob” or biker gangs or even terrorist cells,
but to help New York State with its “Indian problem.” It’s true! This entire elaborate
“set up” had Native businesses as the objects of its affection.
This is a country in the midst
of a decade-long war on terrorism, the worst economic crisis since the “Great
Depression,” and street violence that rises to a level where a little girl is
gunned down in the street a week after performing for the President of the
United States. And these laws are being
used for an “Indian problem”? A state that is rated as the worst place in the
country to do business, has the highest tax rates, highest Medicaid costs, and
most of its cities on the brink of bankruptcy has an “Indian problem”?
And this “Indian problem”
warrants the use of laws designed to fight organized crime and terrorism? Well,
just what is this “Indian problem”?
Oh! It’s that sovereignty thing
again! I recently spent two days at the National Indian Gaming Association’s
Legislative Summit in Washington D.C. There I saw and heard Congressman after
Congressman and Senator after Senator—none from New York, by the way—take to
the podium and pledge their undying support to “Tribal Sovereignty.” It’s
funny, but not one suggested that we were a threat to national security or
hinted at any concern about our territories slipping into the clutches of
organized crime. Yet the attempt to force our barely existing economic
development into compliance with the state with the worst regulatory atmosphere
is the exact opposite of respect and support for our sovereignty. It tramples
it!
Since New York State was born,
our people have resisted its regulations and many federal ones, too. For more
than 30 years our people have worked to reclaim a place in an industry we
started: the tobacco trade. During that time we have stood strong in our
resistance to the State’s authority over our tobacco trade. Even as New York
State whined and complained about tax revenue it claimed to be losing to us we
demonstrated over and over again the positive effects our trade had on and off
our territories. As the State shut off their wholesalers from supplying
national brands, our people produced our own brands bringing manufacturing,
distribution and wholesaling to our lands and giving even more of a boost to
our economy and that of the areas around our communities.
Our tobacco trade is not a
crime. We have backward integrated from tarpaper shacks selling cheap
cigarettes to full-fledged convenience stores, sophisticated wholesale and
distribution companies and state-of-the-art manufacturers. We bank, we invest,
we employ and we support one another. But we don’t owe and we don’t pay the
State anything. And although we don’t allow New York State to regulate our
businesses, it certainly does benefit from them. This is not a crime. It is the
assertion of our sovereignty.
If the U.S. Treasury
Department’s ATF and the prosecutors from the Justice Department intend to use
the CCTA and the USA PATRIOT Act* to solve New York’s “Indian problem,” then
they should come right out and call us all criminals and terrorists and cease
with all this “unintended consequence of our laws” BS. It’s time for Native,
state and federal politicians to stop playing dumb. And it’s time for the U.S.
to admit how it abuses its own laws.
*For
those who don’t know, this act has nothing to do with “patriotism.” It stands
for “Uniting (and) Strengthening America (by) Providing Appropriate Tools
Required (to) Intercept (and) Obstruct Terrorism Act.
http://tworowtimes.com/opinions/columns/lets-talk-native/time-for-the-u-s-to-admit-what-its-doing-indian-fighting-with-terrorism-laws/#.Uic6nRZVhpV
http://tworowtimes.com/opinions/columns/lets-talk-native/time-for-the-u-s-to-admit-what-its-doing-indian-fighting-with-terrorism-laws/#.Uic6nRZVhpV
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