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What to do with Native peoples?

Discussion in 'Alley of Dangerous Angles' started by LKD, Jul 10, 2009.

  1. ChickenIsGood Gems: 23/31
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    It's an acute case of white man's burden :p

    All cheekiness aside, my knowledge of the situation in Canada is limited to the contents of this thread. And due to my status of a white teenager from a small town I lack the necessary experience to even think of possible solutions to the problem, but it definitely needs to be solved. The most important thing would be to make sure that education on reservations becomes a priority, and the money spent towards it, goes into the budget effectively. Somehow, you have to have a little bit of a culture change, so that the aboriginals value their education more, and know how important it is. You also have to facilitate movement in and out of the reservation for those who can contribute to society in effective ways. It also seems like bringing some highly educated aboriginals back into a reservation would be effective in helping to kind of peer pressure a priority change to education.

    That's really all I have... And I also will add that I feel no guilt for the mistreatment of minorities before my lifetime, because I had no part of it. I didn't give anybody small-pox infected blankets, and I didn't have any slaves on a plantation. The people who still live with a huge chip on their shoulder for what happened long ago really disturbs me... But Triactus said some of these terrible things were going on 40 years ago in Canada, well I can certainly understand bitterness towards something that close.
     
  2. Splunge

    Splunge Bhaal’s financial advisor Adored Veteran Pillars of Eternity SP Immortalizer (for helping immortalize Sorcerer's Place in the game!) Torment: Tides of Numenera SP Immortalizer (for helping immortalize Sorcerer's Place in the game!)

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    Repping white meat. (chicken is apparently good) :)
     
  3. Aldeth the Foppish Idiot

    Aldeth the Foppish Idiot Armed with My Mallet O' Thinking Veteran

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    Repped.

    That's the thing - most people living in the US today are in fact, not descendants of the people who did this to the Native Americans. Relocating Native Americans and/or placing them on reservations has been going on for nearly 200 years at this point. My ancestors immigrated from Europe just two generations ago. The immigrant experience is the same for millions of white Americans. The large African American population weren't immigrants at all - the vast majority of them were brought here against their will. The large Latino immigration has occured since this happened to Native Americans as well. Basically, unless you're white and can trace a significant portion of your ancestry to immigrants who arrived from England in the 17th century - and very few Americans today can - you had nothing to do with how these people were treated.
     
  4. Silvery

    Silvery I won't pretend to be your friend coz I'm just not ★ SPS Account Holder Adored Veteran

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    Maybe not, but you guys are still refusing to budge off land that is theirs by rights...ho-hum...stir the pot and see who starts shouting
     
  5. Beren

    Beren Lovesick and Lonely Wanderer Staff Member Member of the Week Distinguished Member ★ SPS Account Holder Resourceful Adored Veteran Pillars of Eternity SP Immortalizer (for helping immortalize Sorcerer's Place in the game!) New Server Contributor [2012] (for helping Sorcerer's Place lease a new, more powerful server!) Torment: Tides of Numenera SP Immortalizer (for helping immortalize Sorcerer's Place in the game!)

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    And that's what a lot of the court cases in Canada are about, and the stakes are pretty high indeed. Land that was pretty useless for farming, while still having use for traditional activities, now turn out to have plenty of fossil fuels and minerals underneath. And its a divisive issue in Aboriginal communities as well. A) "Do we try to cash in on the benefits?" B) Are we still Aboriginal if we do things like this that can harm Mother Earth and her children? And so on.
     
  6. Aldeth the Foppish Idiot

    Aldeth the Foppish Idiot Armed with My Mallet O' Thinking Veteran

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    I live on a 0.1 acre plot of land, and my grandparents were coal miners. I highly doubt the Native Indians would be jealous or willing to switch places...
     
  7. Silvery

    Silvery I won't pretend to be your friend coz I'm just not ★ SPS Account Holder Adored Veteran

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    Heh heh, I can't talk, my family is orginally German! :lol:
     
  8. T2Bruno

    T2Bruno The only source of knowledge is experience Distinguished Member ★ SPS Account Holder Adored Veteran New Server Contributor [2012] (for helping Sorcerer's Place lease a new, more powerful server!) Torment: Tides of Numenera SP Immortalizer (for helping immortalize Sorcerer's Place in the game!)

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    ...perhaps the European countries which contributed in the early slaughter of the Native Americans would contribute -- or at least give back the gold, silver, and gemstones which were taken after unleashing small pox, the plague and handful of other deadly diseases on the populace.

    Between Christopher Columbus and the Conquistadors it is estimated they killed (either with weapons or disease) over ten million -- seven million by Ponce de Leon alone.
     
  9. LKD Gems: 31/31
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    Well, my direct line ancestors were dirt poor. They sure as hell never signed any treaties and later broke them. But their countrymen did.

    The thing is, history is rife with examples of technologically superior (please note the italics, people) cultures moving in and displacing other cultures. Even without the technological advantage, the advantage of numbers and centralized organization has given other cultures the advantage in taking land from their rivals. It happens. It's not nice, and it's bloody, messy, and some would even say unfair, but it's been going on for centuries at the least, if not millennia.

    So on the one hand, Silvery, I have to take issue with the statement you made about it being "their" land. In Realpolitik terms, possession is 9/10 of the law. The land on which your home is situated may have been stolen by your ancestors from Celtic settlers 2500 years ago or whatever, but you would hardly say the land belongs to the Celts. Descendants of the Etruscans are really, really unlikely to get any reparations from the Italian government today, given that the Romans likely pushed them off the land thousands of years ago.

    Now I know we are talking about hundreds of years and not thousands, but IMHO the principle remains the same. As I said, people of European, Oriental, African, and other descents are not likely to shove off anytime soon. Historically, what's done is done.

    However, we pride ourselves on following the rule of law. We made deals or promised to make deals with these people. Hopefully, we have progressed beyond to vicious bullying that has been the hallmark of societies for much of history. God knows, the Canadian government has thrown billions of dollars at this problem for the past 100 years at the least.

    Now some people mentioned residential schools. Those damn things are a blight on our past, absolutely. I feel for the suffering that the Native students underwent there, and the suffering their families felt at losing their children. Generous compensation should be paid to the victims. Not to every Native on the planet, mind, just the people who actually were in the schools. In some cases, children of the students have come forward with their hands out, looking for reparations. To me that's pathetic. If I knew the man who murdered my father, I would not go to the murderer's son asking for reparations. That's just plain ridiculous.

    Beren brought up an interesting point -- BTW, Beren I didn't know you were a First Nations member -- in that the land that was given to the Natives was often really useless land in terms of farming. But now in many cases great natural wealth is being found on those reservations. If we value our integrity as a nation (a nation that I believe includes people of all backgrounds) we should compensate them fairly for the extraction of those resources, just as we would do for any other citizen.

    Beren's other point was about the true nature of being Native. Thomas King talked about this when he told a story about a young Native who called him an "apple" (Red on the outside, White on the inside) because King was dressed in jeans and a dress shirt. King went on to say that he doesn't believe a Native is only a Native when he is dressed in regalia. Who gets to determine what being Native is? Certainly White's shouldn't, but should it be the purview of an elite few?

    Beren, you seem to me to be an example of a Native who succeeded at working with modern culture. yet you keep portions of your old culture, which thing I applaud. Have you ever been accused of selling out your heritage or assimilating too much? I'd hazard you have, and I think that's a damn shame. If any group is so wrapped up in their efforts to establish their identity that they don't enter mainstream society, then IMHO there's very little that society can do to help them solve their internal problems.

    More to come.
     
    Last edited: Jul 13, 2009
  10. Aldeth the Foppish Idiot

    Aldeth the Foppish Idiot Armed with My Mallet O' Thinking Veteran

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    Well, I'll let Beren speak for himself, but I seem to remember Beren saying that he didn't grow up on a reservation. Perhaps the reason he assimilated into modern culture was because he was brought up in it...
     
  11. dmc

    dmc Speak softly and carry a big briefcase Staff Member Distinguished Member ★ SPS Account Holder Resourceful Adored Veteran New Server Contributor [2012] (for helping Sorcerer's Place lease a new, more powerful server!)

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    There's also another concept floating around there: The current economic and political systems of Canada and the USA were developed over time by utilization of substantial resources that were taken by force or guile from the natives. Those of us whose parents/grandparents/etc. came here after that was already accomplished are nonetheless benefitting from it by reaping what economic benefit we get from the current system. Thus, while my ancestors were being abused as peasants in Russia and Poland while the natives were being forced off their land and/or tricked out of it (and let's not forget numerous treaties that USA blew off when it suited the country's goals), I am now a member of society that is seriously profitting from what happened here, not what happened in Russia/Poland.

    The counter is that, if my ancestors came here, unable to speak the language and dirt poor, and in two generations I am making serious dollars as a highly educated (and ridiculously hard working) lawyer, nothing is preventing the natives from doing the same -- valuing education, fitting in with society and moving on. However, I look like the majority of white people, so fitting in is a heck of a lot easier for me than someone who doesn't look like the majority.

    All in all, a very sticky business with no clear cut answers. (I take that back -- there is one clear cut answer, at least here in the USA, as there aren't going to be any wholesale changes to the way things are, so natives aren't getting land back and, quite frankly, are getting some economic stabilization from the ability to have legal gambling on their lands in states where there is no legal gambling otherwise. Not exactly quid pro quo, but that's about it.)
     
    LKD likes this.
  12. Triactus

    Triactus United we stand, divided we fall Veteran

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    LKD, I agree. Ownership of the land would be impossible to transfer. It would be like if the french canadians would demand to have Louisiana back.

    Yes, awful things happened to the natives, both long ago and in the last generation. For that I sympathize and I apologize on behalf of my people. But if you dwell too much on the past, you forget the present and the future.

    The child poverty rate in Canada is 11,3% (meaning 11,3% of canadian children are living in poverty) [source : http://www.campaign2000.ca/rc/C2000 Report Card FINAL Nov 10th08.pdf]. In 2001 (the most recent I could find), the rate for first nation children in Canada is 40% [source : http://www.campaign2000.ca/rc/rc06/06_C2000NationalReportCard.pdf]. Nearly 1 of 2 children are living in poverty. That is unbelievable.

    Yes, white men came several centuries ago. Yes, natives have been discriminated, beaten and abused since. But what can we do TODAY? Let's be pro-active!

    I understand that most natives feel robbed of their culture, of their identity. But does it help the situation if a lot of them are often drunk or if parents sell drugs to their children? My girlfriend's uncle married a native and is now living on a reservation. He told us that alcohol and drug use is a plague there. Even his son is a drug user. The uncle often leaves money lying around because he's afraid of what his son might do to get money.

    What if, instead of granting tax exemption to the natives (I don't know if they have the same deal in the US), why not use that money to build infrastructures, programs, augment school fundings?

    You are only going to change a society's mentality by better educating the children (and I don't mean strictly academical). But at the same time, maybe the government doesn't want the native as a proactive, healthy, *demanding* society...
     
    Last edited: Jul 13, 2009
  13. Beren

    Beren Lovesick and Lonely Wanderer Staff Member Member of the Week Distinguished Member ★ SPS Account Holder Resourceful Adored Veteran Pillars of Eternity SP Immortalizer (for helping immortalize Sorcerer's Place in the game!) New Server Contributor [2012] (for helping Sorcerer's Place lease a new, more powerful server!) Torment: Tides of Numenera SP Immortalizer (for helping immortalize Sorcerer's Place in the game!)

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    Well, I wouldn't say 'assimilated' is quite the right word. Thing is, cultures are dynamic. So most of us realize that turning the clock ALL the way back to before Columbus showed up is just plain unrealistic. But Aboriginal cultures are too some degrees, at least many facets of it, are still alive and well, certain ceremonies, healing systems, ethical standards, spiritual teachings, and so on. One can do what one has gotta do (get an education, get a job) and still live the culture privately and in your daily interactions with other people.

    The example that I'll give is that for the past few years, I've become a devoted student of Tai Chi, which led me to have significant interactions with the Chinese community in Vancouver. Sure, many of them are very good at the very things Western civilization developed, business, accounting, banking, etc. Yet they're still a community unto themselves that live by certain things, Daoist philisophy, Confucianist ethics, ceremonial observances, wushu, and so on. To a certain degree, it is an insular community, but to a significant degree, the boundaries are also porous. A similar reality exists in Aboriginal communities, although obviously many of us have severe problems getting anywhere.

    I'm actually fair skinned, because its only my mother who's native, although I lived in urban Aboriginal communities for most of my life. Nonetheless, there's more than one concept to the term 'red apple', which I explained in this definition that I provided to the Urban Dictionary (third below):

    http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=red+apple

    And I can't say that I've ever been directly accused of being a sell out or traitor simply because I succeeded. I guess part of it is I'm recognized for being a lawyer/law professor who's actually trying to help out.
     
  14. Silvery

    Silvery I won't pretend to be your friend coz I'm just not ★ SPS Account Holder Adored Veteran

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    You're right chick, I wouldn't say that the land my house is on belonged to the celts. I would say that the British have fully assimilated the native people here (a fact shown by the amount of red-haired stocky people, of which most of my mothers family are, here), not displaced them onto some crappy farmland out in the middle of nowhere and then felt supierior about it
     
  15. LKD Gems: 31/31
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    Ha! I hope I don't come across as superior -- I do not believe that morally or ethically (or absolutely) Euro-Canadian culture is superior. The thing is, as Triactus alluded to, some pretty large groups of Natives are suffering quite badly. The rest of us are told, over and over again, that WE are the ones who caused this problem and therefore WE need to take steps to fix it. My position is not one of either superiority or paternalism. It is rather one of "these people (of a different cultural heritage) are my fellow citizens and should be treated as such. They are suffering. How can I and my fellow citizens (who share my cultural heritage) help and support them?"
     
  16. Aldeth the Foppish Idiot

    Aldeth the Foppish Idiot Armed with My Mallet O' Thinking Veteran

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    What exactly is Euro-Canadian culture? I've never heard of the culture. I've heard of western culture, and Euro-North American culture, but never Euro-Canadian.
     
  17. LKD Gems: 31/31
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    What I mean is the mainstream culture that has developed in Canada -- it owes much of its present form to European (read that racially, White) ideas, thoughts, and traditions. I mean, our legal system for almost all of Canada derives from the British model. So does our Governmental system. In Quebec, they still use elements of the Napoleonic code for their civil law, yet that is still a European model, albeit a French one rather than an English one.

    Despite the tons of immigrants from non-European nations, Canada is still predominantly made up of Europeans. If you count the Hispanic immigration from South America, IMHO that still makes them somewhat European as they speak a language that originated in Europe and cleave to a religion that is quite European in nature (I refer to the Roman Catholic faith here)

    This culture is a good one, I think, though I would never say a perfect one -- we've made tons of mistakes over the centuries. It is what I term the mainstream culture here in Canada and it is so good that many immigrants find it attractive enough to want to come to the country and partake of the peace and bounty we enjoy.

    I know a lot of Natives feel quite hostile to this culture, though, and look upon any aid from it with deep suspicion -- history has taught them well -- but as some have mentioned it's time for people to get over the past and work toward a future.

    The stereotype of an "Indian" is an uneducated, shiftless bum who sponges money off of the welfare system and uses it to feed addictions to drugs and alcohol, and when the money runs out, they pimp Indian girls on the streetcorner to get their fixes. This is unfair in the extreme in that there are lots of Natives who do not come anywhere close to filling this stereotype.

    That said, though, all you need to do is drive to the downtown core of any major Canadian city and you will find a large number of people who do fit the stereotype. Our newspapers are full of stories about reservations where life is so bad they have astronomical suicide rates and people drink photocopier fluid to get high. The incarceration rate amongst Native peoples is far higher than it should be, statistically speaking, and that's even with traditions in the legal system that state that judges should "go easier" on Native defendants.

    Several international organizations have condemned Canada's record in how they deal with Native populations. I understand their positions, but once again, it's not like we're going to feasibly be able to just hand over the entire city of Winnipeg to Native leaders. Criticism is easy -- finding a realistic solution is much more difficult. I'd like to find that soluition, though.
     
  18. NOG (No Other Gods)

    NOG (No Other Gods) Going to church doesn't make you a Christian

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    Well, since I'm partially Native myself (only 1/64th, but it's still there), I feel I have every right to profit from the exploitation of my land! It's all you foreigners that need to get off! :grin:

    Seriously, though, reality is that posession is 9/10ths of real law, and power is the other 1/10th. Historically, probably every ethnic group in existance today (including Natives, maybe not the Austrailian Aborigines though) has both been driven off their land, and driven others off their land. The only difference between all of those times and what happened in the Americas/Austrailia is that it happened more recently. It's ridiculous to expect people to "pay back" for what their ancestors did, on any topic; but it's even more ridiculous to expect it in an issue of conquest. If Ponce de Leon were still alive, I'd fully support bringing him up on war crimes charges (except I don't think the laws were around back then, either), but there's nothing more than that to do.

    Now, if there is injustice still being done today, if there are laws on the books that are racially biased, if people are breaking laws to take advantage of others, that's something else.
     
  19. Morgoroth

    Morgoroth Just because I happen to have tentacles, it doesn'

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    Well there is such a thing as profiting from a crime as dmc pointed out. Are the Swiss banks right in refusing to keep back the gold to the ancestors of those jews who died on concentration camps? I know many others do not feel that way considering the preassure that's put on them and various other institutions that hold on to treasures stolen from the Jews during the holocaust. On the other hand I really don't see anyone giving much back to the native americans or anyone even putting any preassure on the Brittish, Spanish and French who probably have all sorts of artefacts made from the gold stolen from the new world, or the current American population to give out land for that matter.

    I don't know personally a lot about the issues with native Americans but we do have our own native people (not that regular Finns aren't native) here called the Saami who basically wish to gain greater rights to the lands of Lapland (Northern Finland). Their problems are quite similar to those of Native Americans it seems, and they are in constant legal battles with the paper industry and forest owners in the area.
     
  20. NOG (No Other Gods)

    NOG (No Other Gods) Going to church doesn't make you a Christian

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    Morgoroth, the difference there is that a singular continuous entity has profited. The same banks that took the valuables still hold them, or have sold them off and now hold the money. By and large, the land owners that own land in the US today are not the same entities that took it from the Native Americans. Even arguing that the nation is the same is a very tenuous point.

    As an asside, exactly what rights are they fighting for? Are we talking basic citizen rights, rights to hereditary lands, or rights to compensation?
     
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