Author Topic: "We have a right to sleep"....  (Read 3340 times)

Dos Equis

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Re: "We have a right to sleep"....
« Reply #25 on: November 29, 2013, 02:22:37 PM »

Technical Translation for the Metricly Challenged:

We went from a balmy 55 degrees Fahrenheit to 14 degrees Fahrenheit, which with the winds factored in, felt like minus 40 degrees Fahrenheit in less than 12 hours.

Universal Translation:

It was bloody freaking cold!!!

Nobody cares about the metric system. 

Pretty big cold front.  Never heard of a wind chill of minus 40 when its 14 degrees out. 

Dos Equis

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Re: "We have a right to sleep"....
« Reply #26 on: November 29, 2013, 02:27:15 PM »
We're you even alive when Reagan was around?   ::)

I was living in the USA while Reagan was president, ...and I can assure you it wasn't pretty.

And yes, the system IS designed for you to fail. Those of us who recognized that early on are the ones who escape the traps laid out, and succeed. And OzmO's reference is not a reference to private property.

But if you want to take a step back in history, your country wouldn't exist if it weren't for a bunch of people who decided to squat on someone else's land. Not content with just squatting, they then proceeded to orchestrate wholesale genocide against them.

Perhaps it's this unspoken truth of their ow history that scares the heck out of some people, ...either that, or the fear that they will soon be joining their ranks.

UN Urged To Declare Canada's Treatment Of Aboriginals 'Genocide'
The Huffington Post Canada  |  By Michael Bolen   
Posted: 10/18/2013 4:53 pm EDT  |  Updated: 10/19/2013

FOLLOW: Idle No More, Genocide Aboriginals, Genocide Canada, Genocide Canada First Nations, Genocide Canada Natives, Genocide First Nations, Genocide Natives, Genocide Un Canada, United Nations Canada, United Nations Canada Genocide, Canada Politics News
A fresh campaign is underway to push the United Nations to label Canada's treatment of First Nations people "genocide."

On Monday, former National Chief Phil Fontaine, elder Fred Kelly, businessman Dr. Michael Dan and human rights activist Bernie Farber sent a letter to James Anaya, UN special rapporteur on the rights of indigenous peoples, arguing that several specific crimes against aboriginal people in Canada qualify as genocide under the post-Second World War Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (CPPCG)

Article 2 of the Convention states that "genocide means any of the following acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group, as such:

(a) Killing members of the group;
(b) Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group;
(c) Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part;
(d) Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group;
(e) Forcibly transferring children of the group to another group.

The letter writers assert that at least three actions on the part of Canadian governments constitute genocide under those rules.

1. Sir John A. MacDonald's policy of deliberately starving First Nations people to make way for settlers in the Canadian west.

2. The residential school system and especially the decision of Department of Indian Affairs chief Duncan Campbell Scott not to address rampant tuberculosis among students.


3. The forcible removal of aboriginal children from their homes for the purpose of adoption by white families, a practice known as the "Sixties Scoop." Estimates put the number of children removed between the 1960s and the mid 1980s at around 20,000.

Farber and Dan have previously argued that the recently revealed nutrition experiments performed on children at residential schools also qualify as genocide.

The genocide argument has been criticized by Sun News pundit Ezra Levant, who wrote this summer that "Canada does not and never has had a policy of exterminating Indians. Genocides don’t normally include billions of dollars a year in government grants to the group in question, affirmative action hiring quotas, land reserves and other privileges."

Levant accuses Dan of hiring Faber to curry favour with First Nations people so his Gemini Power Corp. can get permission to build power plants on reserves.

Farber told HuffPost Canada in an email that Levant's characterization is inaccurate.

"Ezra, as usual, gets it wrong."

The letter from Farber and company was sent as special rapporteur Anaya concluded a visit to Canada. He said Canada faces a "crisis" regarding its indigenous people and called for an inquiry into missing and murdered aboriginal women.

The Conservative government pledged to renew efforts to address the issue of murdered and missing aboriginal women in its throne speech Wednesday.

Earlier this year, former prime minister Paul Martin referred to residential schools as "cultural genocide." In 2012, Justice Murray Sinclair, the chairman of Canada's Truth and Reconciliation Commission, said the removal of children from their homes to residential schools was an act of genocide, but that it didn't necessarily qualify under the UN Convention.

There have only ever been two successful prosecutions under the Genocide Convention, former Rwandan prime minister Jean Kambanda and ex-mayor Jean-Paul Akayesu for crimes during the 1994 slaughter in that country. The UN's highest court cleared the government of Serbia of genocide charges in 2007, but found it breached international law in failing to stop the killing and by not handing over officials accused of war crimes.

The push for action from the UN comes amid renewed violence between authorities and aboriginal peoples. On Thursday, police cars were torched during an attempt by the RCMP to enforce an injunction to end a demonstration against shale gas exploration in eastern New Brunswick. The Mounties said at least 40 people were arrested

The violence has sparked a renewal of the cross-country protests seen during the Idle No More movement last winter.

http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/2013/10/18/genocide-first-nations-aboriginals-canada-un_n_4123112.html

24KT

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Re: "We have a right to sleep"....
« Reply #27 on: November 29, 2013, 02:33:48 PM »
Nobody cares about the metric system.  

Pretty big cold front.  Never heard of a wind chill of minus 40 when its 14 degrees out.  

ahem... the majority of the world is on the metric system.

It was a wicked arctic front, and the winds were pretty bad.
Thank Goodness for the snowfall that warmed things up somewhat.
w

24KT

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Re: "We have a right to sleep"....
« Reply #28 on: November 29, 2013, 02:46:16 PM »
UN Urged To Declare Canada's Treatment Of Aboriginals 'Genocide'
The Huffington Post Canada  |  By Michael Bolen   
Posted: 10/18/2013 4:53 pm EDT  |  Updated: 10/19/2013

FOLLOW: Idle No More, Genocide Aboriginals, Genocide Canada, Genocide Canada First Nations, Genocide Canada Natives, Genocide First Nations, Genocide Natives, Genocide Un Canada, United Nations Canada, United Nations Canada Genocide, Canada Politics News
A fresh campaign is underway to push the United Nations to label Canada's treatment of First Nations people "genocide."

On Monday, former National Chief Phil Fontaine, elder Fred Kelly, businessman Dr. Michael Dan and human rights activist Bernie Farber sent a letter to James Anaya, UN special rapporteur on the rights of indigenous peoples, arguing that several specific crimes against aboriginal people in Canada qualify as genocide under the post-Second World War Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (CPPCG)

Article 2 of the Convention states that "genocide means any of the following acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group, as such:

(a) Killing members of the group;
(b) Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group;
(c) Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part;
(d) Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group;
(e) Forcibly transferring children of the group to another group.

The letter writers assert that at least three actions on the part of Canadian governments constitute genocide under those rules.

1. Sir John A. MacDonald's policy of deliberately starving First Nations people to make way for settlers in the Canadian west.

2. The residential school system and especially the decision of Department of Indian Affairs chief Duncan Campbell Scott not to address rampant tuberculosis among students.


3. The forcible removal of aboriginal children from their homes for the purpose of adoption by white families, a practice known as the "Sixties Scoop." Estimates put the number of children removed between the 1960s and the mid 1980s at around 20,000.

Farber and Dan have previously argued that the recently revealed nutrition experiments performed on children at residential schools also qualify as genocide.

The genocide argument has been criticized by Sun News pundit Ezra Levant, who wrote this summer that "Canada does not and never has had a policy of exterminating Indians. Genocides don’t normally include billions of dollars a year in government grants to the group in question, affirmative action hiring quotas, land reserves and other privileges."

Levant accuses Dan of hiring Faber to curry favour with First Nations people so his Gemini Power Corp. can get permission to build power plants on reserves.

Farber told HuffPost Canada in an email that Levant's characterization is inaccurate.

"Ezra, as usual, gets it wrong."

The letter from Farber and company was sent as special rapporteur Anaya concluded a visit to Canada. He said Canada faces a "crisis" regarding its indigenous people and called for an inquiry into missing and murdered aboriginal women.

The Conservative government pledged to renew efforts to address the issue of murdered and missing aboriginal women in its throne speech Wednesday.

Earlier this year, former prime minister Paul Martin referred to residential schools as "cultural genocide." In 2012, Justice Murray Sinclair, the chairman of Canada's Truth and Reconciliation Commission, said the removal of children from their homes to residential schools was an act of genocide, but that it didn't necessarily qualify under the UN Convention.

There have only ever been two successful prosecutions under the Genocide Convention, former Rwandan prime minister Jean Kambanda and ex-mayor Jean-Paul Akayesu for crimes during the 1994 slaughter in that country. The UN's highest court cleared the government of Serbia of genocide charges in 2007, but found it breached international law in failing to stop the killing and by not handing over officials accused of war crimes.

The push for action from the UN comes amid renewed violence between authorities and aboriginal peoples. On Thursday, police cars were torched during an attempt by the RCMP to enforce an injunction to end a demonstration against shale gas exploration in eastern New Brunswick. The Mounties said at least 40 people were arrested

The violence has sparked a renewal of the cross-country protests seen during the Idle No More movement last winter.

http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/2013/10/18/genocide-first-nations-aboriginals-canada-un_n_4123112.html

The list of attrocities is appalling. The horror & abuse that took place in some of those native schools was simply shocking. From routine sexual abuse of children to all out torture as punishment for simple infractions like speaking their own native language.

The official lyrics to Canada's National anthem Oh Canada go:

Oh Canada, Our home and Native land...

but alot of Canadians have taken to singing:

Oh Canada, Our home on Native land.

Many Canadians have no clue about the attrocities committed by our own government over the years.
It's only when our government gets high & mighty with others and they throw the hypocrisy in our faces when most Canadians get a wake up call. Like back in the 80's when Canada spoke out against S. Africa's system of apartheid, and Botha shot back "what about your reservations?", ...or when First Nations people start blockading roads. Govs freak out when they start that, because the public starts asking why, ...and the answers often don't cast the government in a very favourable light.
w