
ER Editor: Aboriginal land claims are the latest ‘thing’ for western Canada. In other words, key land areas, claimed by indigenous groups, were never ceded to the federal government going back in history. For a key land area, think the City of Vancouver for starters, and other municipalities (news report from two days ago as an example). Do residents there actually OWN their property, or do particular indigenous tribes (there are several) have claims over entire swaths of land? What does this mean for private property rights?
Curiously, this was never a thing when we lived there ourselves for so many years. We believe, in the mass orchestration of events that we are living through currently, this topic has deliberately been reared to educate the public as to some historical realities, and especially to wake up the normies who blindly believe the ‘white man is bad’ type of narrative. British Columbia is an enormous province; a lot of land is up for grabs, suddenly. Things look different when your home and life savings are at stake.
Now in Alberta, over the separation petition, which garnered almost double the signatures needed to proceed by May 2, a judge has ruled in favour of indigenous land claims to have the petition thrown out.
Grab the popcorn.
We don’t trust Danielle Smith as far as we can throw her, but she seems to want to support petitioners’ rights. We sense life may get very difficult for her —
Read Full Article: https://www.thelibertybeacon.com/alberta-judge-tosses-out-petition-for-province-to-separate-from-canada/