all who support this group are racists and thieves. Debbie - TopicsExpress



          

all who support this group are racists and thieves. Debbie Cameron likes ERBL END RACE BASED LAW inc. Like Page ERBL END RACE BASED LAW inc. Sponsored · Edited · . Natives claim authority over {another} Ontario beach A handful of Ontario property owners are standing up to more first nations aggression: “The place is going to hell in a handbasket and nobody’s doing anything about it. The police...the government is not stepping up... Nobody’s prepared to stand up to anybody, so I stood up yesterday (Saturday), and me and a bunch of my friends, we’re going to continue to do so.” ************************************* A First Nation in southwestern Ontario {illegally} tore down barriers and began driving along a stretch of beach near the site of the 1995 Ipperwash crisis, the local mayor said Sunday. Kettle and Stony Point First Nation took down the gates blocking vehicle access to Ipperwash Beach on Lake Huron on Friday, saying the route encompasses the band’s “historical trails” and that the nation wasn’t consulted when the no-entry gates first went up in 1973. The beach runs {across private property} between the band’s main reserve and Ipperwash park, a former provincial park where aboriginal protester Dudley George was killed by police in a heated land dispute two decades ago. The park is in the process of being transferred to the First Nation. Members of the First Nation have long walked along the beach, but the addition of vehicles has sparked safety and environmental concerns among residents, Lambton Shores Mayor Bill Weber said in an interview. “Right now, we are hoping that cooler heads prevail,” he said. The municipality has no problem with Kettle and Stony Point claiming the strip as a traditional trail {?}, he added, but wants clarity from the senior governments on just how it can be used. Weber said the municipality was caught off guard when workers equipped with machinery moved in Friday and ripped out the barriers, as there was already a longstanding forum with Kettle and Stony Point and local residents to deal with land issues. ********************************* Some of those living in the cottages lining the beach held a protest Saturday, with one resident even setting up his own makeshift barricade using a picnic table, as cars and trucks drove by. Ontario Provincial Police...monitored the situation. Their spokesman for the area wasn’t available Sunday... Spokespeople with the Ontario and federal aboriginal affairs minister did not immediately return request for comment. Kettle and Stony Point First Nation Chief Tom Bressette also couldn’t be reached, but addressed the action in a statement issued Friday. “Our First Nation has chosen to exercise our jurisdiction in reopening this travel route once again for the benefit of our First Nation members in addition to all residents and visitors to our communities.” ********************************* Mark Lindsay, the cottage owner who set up the ad hoc barricade, said he bears no ill will against the First Nation’s members, and laid blame squarely with Chief Bressette. His deed clearly states the property extends to the approximate edge of the water, he said. Owners are concerned about losing use of their land, what the traffic will do to property values and safe use of the beach — a summer destination for cottagers. “I don’t want a car driving across there and running over somebody,” he said. “I don’t want cars on a natural ecosystem.” He questioned letting in traffic when there is a road only 100 or so metres away. While saying he doesn’t want things to escalate further, residents won’t give up their beach, Lindsay said. “The place is going to hell in a handbasket and nobody’s doing anything about it. The police — I don’t blame them — the government is not stepping up,” he said. “Nobody’s prepared to stand up to anybody, so I stood up yesterday (Saturday), and me and a bunch of my friends, we’re going to continue to do so.” --First Nation tears down barriers along Ipperwash beach near park where Ontario police killed protester in 1995, Canadian Press, December 7, 2014 news.nationalpost/…/first-nation-tears-down-bar…/ ********************************** ********************************** Members of the Chippewas of Kettle and Stony Point First Nation tore down barriers on Ipperwash Beach in a surprise move Friday that was criticized by municipal politicians and cottagers... Lambton Shores Mayor Bill Weber said he’s disappointed Bressette didn’t talk with the municipality before the barriers were removed. The move is a blow to economic development and will further strain relations between the municipality and the First Nations community, he said. “What can we do?” Lambton Shores is conducting an investigation into who owns what land, he said. Some land is owned by the Ontario Natural Resources Ministry and some by private property owners. But Bressette said all the property falls under a treaty with his band... Eugene Dorey, head of the Centre Ipperwash Community Association, said the barriers prevented people from driving on the popular beach. “We’ve just regressed to having cars driving up and down the beach with children playing,” he said. “It’s a very big safety concern.” Mike Huybers, a 30-year cottager, said it wasn’t a coincidence the barriers were taken down Friday. “I think if they did it in the summertime, there would have been enough cottage owners around there would have been an uprising.” --First Nation members remove beach barriers in a surprise move Friday, Jennifer OBrien, Lynda Hillman-Rapley, QMIAgency/Sarnia Observer, December 5, 2014 theobserver.ca/…/opp-on-site-lambton-shores-mayo… ********************************** ********************************** COMMENT: The wimping out started in 2007 when the McGuinty liberals agreed to negotiate the return of the provincial park to the natives. This whole situation should come as no surprise to anyone. The politically correct liberals and their equally politically correct police force are too busy walking on eggshells so as not to risk offending the aboriginal population, that they have forgotten who they are supposed to represent. When the Ipperwash Provincial Park is turned over to the Kettle and Stony Point Band, all the liberal supporters in Toronto who use the park now are going to be seriously annoyed, and they have only themselves to blame. sunnewsnetwork.ca/…/archives/2014/12/20141205-14… ********************************** ********************************** This Indian Band is covered by the land surrender McKee Treaty, No. 2 {McKee Purchase}: https://aadnc-aandc.gc.ca/…/1370372152585/1370372222012… ********************************** ********************************** Petition to END RACE BASED LAW: endracebasedlaw.ca/end-race-based-law-petition
Posted on: Tue, 09 Dec 2014 18:27:57 +0000

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