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À quels "droits autochtones issus de traités" faites-vous référence dans l'acte législatif que nous devrions collectivement accepter ? par Rhonda Cwynar
Traduction : To which "The Indigenous Treaty Rights" do you reference in the Enactment that we should collectively be agreeing to? https://www.thepowershift.ca/forum/convention-of-consent-faq/to-which-the-indigenous-treaty-rights-do-you-reference-in-the-enactment-that-we-should-collectively-be-agreeing-to
dans Convention of Consent FAQ
Notez : Ce document a été traduit pour votre bénéfice. En cas d'incohérence, la version originale anglaise prévaudra, compte tenu qu’elle est la source de ce contenu. Merci de votre compréhension.
Cette question est souvent posée, et elle est vraiment révélatrice du peu d'attention que nous portons aux droits des autres dans notre propre pays.
La phrase "... la mise en application et la sauvegarde de tous " DROITS DES AUTOCHTONES ISSUS DES TRAITÉS "...qui se trouve dans la Convention civile est exactement ce qu'elle dit.
Il n'y a pas de jeu de mots.
En tant que nation, nous sommes tenus de respecter tous les droits autochtones existants issus de traités, comme le Canada l'a accepté dans le cadre des accords qu'il a signés avec les peuples autochtones du Canada, tant au niveau fédéral qu'international. Si vous souhaitez savoir quels sont ces droits spécifiques, nous vous suggérons de lire la Constitution existante, les traités signés et les déclarations des Nations Unies. Vous pouvez les trouver en ligne en utilisant le moteur de recherche de votre choix.
Understood.
However, as I'm sure that you're all aware, the UN and other international organizations are corrupt.
I've been through the Canadian Charter, #25 clearly states that any rights or freedoms recognized by the Royal Proclamation of Oct 7, 1763 are guaranteed, yet that proclamation led to civil wars. The following exerpts come from various sources:
- "The Royal Proclamation made new territories. It created the Province of Quebec and a huge Indigenous reserve. The reserve was located west of the Appalachian mountain range. Settlers were not allowed to buy any of the land belonging to Indigenous people. Only the British monarch (the king or queen) could do this. Many Americans were angry at the British because they wanted this land. It was rich and fertile. Twelve years after the Royal Proclamation was issued, the American Revolution began (seeAmerican Revolution – Invasion of Canada). The Royal Proclamation helped to cause it."
- The Appalachian Mountains is a landform region that is located in Canada, presently in Newfoundland, Quebec, Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick.
- When Canada became a nation in 1867 the federal government followed the laws put in place by the British regarding the buying and selling of Indigenous land (seeConfederation). The Crown or Canada (unclear, various sources contradict each other) negotiated 11 treaties with Indigenous peoples between 1871 and 1921 (seeNumbered Treaties). The lands involved in these treaties are in the Prairie provinces, northeastern British Columbia, northwestern Ontario, and the Northwest Territories.
- The Numbered Treaties were a series of 11 treaties made between the Crown and First Nations from 1871 to 1921. In order to address concerns about treaty fulfilment, the federal government established a policy recognizing comprehensive and specific claims in 1973. Indigenous and Northern Affairs Canada continues to negotiate disputed claims.
So the land disputes were occurring first between the Crown (England) and First Nations; that evolved in to disputes b/w the federal gov't and indigenous people.
And here we are, continuing the division.
Many generations have since worked the land, built businesses, both indigenous and non-indigenous.
It may be time to bring ALL people, ALL canadians, into the 21st century.