Tuesday, March 11, 2014
"Sovereignty is not our Defense. It's what we Defend!"
On my "Let's Talk Native..." radio show on Sunday, March
9, I announced my new campaign. No, I am not running for office. My campaign is
about truth telling and clearing away false assumptions about what the United
States and Canada believe they have reduced us to — namely, their subjects.
In spite of the lop-sided "deals" and, more often
than not, fraudulent acts committed by Europeans and their descendants to gain
access to the lands of our children, the characterization that we are dependent
on them is false. The very existence of the U.S. and Canada depends on their
claim to a land base. The fact of the matter is that they are completely
dependent on lands that we allowed them to occupy — but that occupation was and
is conditional. And neither of these "colonies" has been released
from the debt of those conditions.
In the egotistical view of Christian Europeans, the Earth was
created to be subdued and owned by man. With that assumption and with their own
view of such things, treaties were entered into with a people who by and large
were willing to help a poor and wretched class of humans that washed up on
their shores. In later years, these white men, cloaked in their religion, would
attempt to claim certain ownership of lands under decrees of their church and
the tenets of the Doctrine of Christian Discovery. But in spite of the U.S. Supreme
Court's attempt to codify this racist and unlawful policy that literally says a
Christian people can just claim ownership of the lands of pagans, the early
American leaders crafted law after law acknowledging Native lands and our
exclusive ownership of those lands as well as the distinction of our autonomy
and sovereignty.
There is no reconciling on the attempt by the U.S. or Canada
to create some uniform body of "federal Indian law" with the realities
of their own inconsistencies, ambiguities and outright lies. The crumbling
foundation of the concept of federal Indian law is built upon religious and
racist dogma addressed in the U.N. Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous
Peoples, as follows:
"all doctrines, policies and practices based on or advocating
superiority of peoples or individuals on the basis of national origin or
racial, religious, ethnic or cultural differences are racist, scientifically
false, legally invalid, morally condemnable and socially unjust."
We are not wards of the
state. The U.S. and Canada are not our custodians, our guardians, our trustees or
our superiors.
Those who choose to be victims of the American genocide are
certainly free to do so and the U.S. and Canada are happy to oblige. But for
those of us who continue to not just survive but actually fight back, we do so
to affect change and not just to find a kinder and gentler master. We fight and
defend our sovereignty for our children and those unborn faces to come and also
to transform those victims among us into survivors.
As I spend the next several months exposing the absurdity of
state, U.S. federal, provincial and Canadian federal policies and showing how
these policies are born out of blatant racism with a clear objective to
eliminate our claim to distinction and autonomy, I ask that others join me to
advance this campaign.
My goal in defending our sovereignty is to turn the tables on
those who attempt to criminalize us or assert unlawful controls over us. Let
them produce their documents defending their positions. Name the event that
transferred our sovereignty to them. Give us a date, a time and a place. When
and where was our consent given to their governments "instituted amongst
Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed?" When
did we concede to subjugation?
Even the self-righteousness of the U.S. and Canada cannot
give them the right to legislate or adjudicate away the sovereignty of another
people. It's fine to cry "rule of law" with mouse eyes but we have
been watching with the eyes of the eagle from a thousand feet in the air. We
see where justice stops and where law is used as a tool or a weapon against us
and others. If man's laws are needed at all, they need to be built on a
foundation of truth and integrity and must be just to be valid.
When New York State claims our trade must abide by their laws
with no legal basis for making such claim and when the U.S. Treasury
Department's Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms sends armed and masked
agents into our lands to bolster the State's claim, this is not justice. This
is not rule of law. This is manipulation of law. This is secret oppression — undeclared
policy.
It has been almost three years since two New York State Senators
(Senators George Maziarz and Timothy Kennedy) asked the Commissioner of New
York State's Department of Taxation and Finance to disclose and provide in
writing what the State's policy was on Native-manufactured goods and Native-to-Native
trade. Commissioner Thomas Mattox has refused to accommodate this request even
as the New York State Attorney General pursues lawsuits against Native
manufacturers. These are not the actions of governments and agencies
demonstrating just powers. These actions are political and discriminatory, and
based on policies hidden from the view of those affected, their own citizens
and their own lawmakers.
Hold on. It is going to get nasty around here. This ends only
one way — with our sovereignty intact!
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