• You will need to login or register before you can post a message. If you already have an Agriville account login by clicking the login icon on the top right corner of the page. If you are a new user you will need to Register.

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

DTN and EZRA at Wheat Growers in EDM

Collapse
X
Collapse
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    #13
    Subject: FW: Chief Clarence Louie, Osoyoos BC....Idle no more







    Finally a first nations person who says it like it is!.....THEY ARE TRULY "IDLE NO MORE " !!!!


    Isn't this a pleasant change?

    Description: cid:_2_091D4868091D45FC0043106AA32579F1
    Chief Clarence Louie, Osoyoos BC speaking in Northern Alberta :

    Speaking to a large aboriginal conference and some of the attendees,
    including a few who hold high office, have straggled in.

    'I can't stand people who are late, he says into the microphone.
    Indian Time doesn't cut it. ' Some giggle, but no one is quite sure how far he
    is going to go. Just sit back and listen:

    'My first rule for success is Show up on time.'
    'My No. 2 rule for success is follow Rule No. 1.'
    'If your life sucks, it's because you suck.'
    'Quit your sniffling.'
    'Join the real world. Go to school, or get a job.'
    'Get off of welfare. Get off your butt.'

    He pauses, seeming to gauge whether he dare, then does.
    'People often say to me, How you doin'? Geez I'm working with Indians
    what do you think?' Now they are openly laughing .... applauding.
    Clarence Louie is everything that was advertised and more.

    'Our ancestors worked for a living, he says. So should you.'

    He is, fortunately, aboriginal himself. If someone else stood up and
    said these things - the white columnist standing there with his mouth open,
    for example - you'd be seen as a racist. Instead, Chief Clarence Louie is seen,
    increasingly, as one of the most interesting and innovative native leaders in
    the country even though he avoids national politics.

    He has come here to Fort McMurray because the aboriginal community needs,
    desperately, to start talking about economic development and what all this
    multibillion-dollar oil madness might mean, for good and for bad.

    Clarence Louie is chief and CEO of the Osoyoos Band in British Columbia's
    South Okanagan. He is 44 years old, though he looks like he would have been
    an infant when he began his remarkable 20-year-run as chief.
    He took a band that had been declared bankrupt and taken over by
    Indian Affairs and he has turned in into an inspiration.

    In 2000, the band set a goal of becoming self-sufficient in five years.
    They're there.

    The Osoyoos, 432 strong, own, among other things, a vineyard, a winery,
    a golf course and a tourist resort, and they are partners in the Baldy Mountain ski
    development. They have more businesses per capita than any other first nation
    in Canada.

    There are not only enough jobs for everyone, there are so many jobs being
    created that there are now members of 13 other tribal communities working
    for the Osoyoos. The little band contributes $40-million a year to the area
    economy.

    Chief Louie is tough. He is as proud of the fact that his band fires its own
    people as well as hires them. He has his mottos posted throughout the Rez.
    He believes there is no such thing as consensus, that there will always be
    those who disagree. And, he says, he is milquetoast compared to his own
    mother when it comes to how today's lazy aboriginal youth, almost exclusively
    male, should be dealt with.

    Rent a plane, she told him, and fly them all to Iraq. Dump'em off and all the
    ones who make it back are keepers. Right on, Mom. The message he has
    brought here to the Chipewyan, Dene and Cree who live around the oil sands
    is equally direct: 'Get involved, create jobs and meaningful jobs, not just
    window dressing for the oil companies.'

    'The biggest employer,' he says, 'shouldn't be the band office.'

    He also says the time has come to get over it. 'No more whining about
    100-year-old failed experiments.' 'No foolishly looking to the Queen to
    protect rights.'

    Louie says aboriginals here and along the Mackenzie Valley should not
    look at any sharing in development as rocking-chair money but as investment
    opportunity to create sustainable businesses. He wants them to move beyond
    entry-level jobs to real jobs they earn all the way to the boardrooms.
    He wants to see business manners develop: showing up on time, working
    extra hours. The business lunch, he says, should be drive through, and then
    right back at it.

    'You're going to lose your language and culture faster in poverty than you
    will in economic development', he says to those who say he is ignoring
    tradition.

    Tough talk, at times shocking talk given the audience, but on this day in
    this community, they took it and, judging by the response, they loved it.

    Eighty per cent like what I have to say, Louie says, twenty per cent don't.
    I always say to the 20 per cent, 'Get over it.' 'Chances are you're never going
    to see me again and I'm never going to see you again' 'Get some counseling.'

    The first step, he says, is all about leadership. He prides himself on being a
    stay-home chief who looks after the potholes in his own backyard and wastes
    no time running around fighting 100-year-old battles.

    'The biggest challenge will be how you treat your own people.'

    'Blaming government? That time is over.

    Comment


      #14
      I did read all of Fransisco's post and without a doubt it does show many of the problems with the First Nations.

      Tom: Somehow I'm not much of a believer in the noble motives of Stephen Harper.
      At the end of the day it is up to the First Nations people to decide if they want to own their treaty land collectively or as individual private property....not Stephen Harper?

      I suspect in Harpers ideal world all the Indians would be in inner city slums or concentration camps and their land would be sold to his corporate pals! Harper is a neo con corporatist and as such should be kept on a short leash!

      Comment


        #15
        What you describe Wilagro is the
        definition of crony capitalism. That
        combined with a shift to socialism (Alison
        bought her job from the teachers union)
        will reduce Alberta to a mere shadow of
        its former greatness. Don`t blame me: I
        voted WR.

        Comment


          #16
          Tom has absolutely the right take in this. In its
          expiring stage the government of King Trudeau I
          proposed a plan under which Indian reservations
          would have been given the status of munipalities
          in which residents would have been able to own
          land with a proper title. The enterprise was shot
          down by the band leaders who realized that they
          would lose control. The resemblance to the CWB
          monopoly is almost too much to stand. The
          Jonathan Kay piece in the National Post is an eye
          opener. The aboriginals are not free, not free to
          succeed or fail. That is one tragedy. The other is
          that the alleged leaders do not have enough faith
          in their own people to imagine that many of them
          could be entirely successful if they were permitted
          to join the 21st century.

          Comment


            #17
            Agriman,

            Thanks. Steven Harper want a resolution to this
            problem as much as you or I. As do the vast majority
            of Conservative Party of Canada MP's.

            Cheers!

            Comment


              #18
              Here's a resolution, stop paying them,
              allow them to be Canadian. Start paying
              taxes to the government like the rest of
              us peasants.

              Comment


                #19
                Willagro - You might change your mind about
                whether Allison is steering Alberta towards
                socialism after the upcoming budget in March.

                I have heard an Alberta reporter speculating that it
                might be running a $4 billion shortfall......is Allison
                capable of cutting or will it be higher taxes?

                Comment


                  #20
                  Why Don't We Do What The US Does fer Their Natives, I Never Hear Them Complaining about Anything. HECK, I Forgot About em', Till I Remembered About em'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

                  Comment


                    #21
                    ASRG,

                    PM Harper, Jim Prentice, Chuck Strahl, Monte Solberg,
                    and a host of others to long to list out.... have been
                    frustrated by how S L O W L Y change comes.

                    I know CWB Minister Goodale... in his time... as other
                    Liberal ministers of the day... knew change needed to
                    come... Yet the left used: fear, jealousy, deception, in
                    the name of fairness... to take personal property
                    decisions AWAY from those who were responsible for
                    the outcome. The CWB director and votes were
                    designed to diminish the rightful say of those growers
                    who were most affected... and retain the status quo.

                    Same with the Indian Act today. Anyone who offends a
                    chief or those powerful economically from the Indian
                    Act today...runs into a blockade of howls and
                    screams... as it was with changes to the CWB Act.
                    Those who like purposed changes are long lost as
                    shills/puppets of the government.

                    In some civilizations this would be liable slander... but
                    in Canada we are too passive to complain or stop this
                    arrogance and gossip.

                    Cheers!

                    Comment


                      #22
                      Tom, be grateful that we are slow and passive. At least
                      no one gets physically hurt. If this was south of the
                      49th someone who disagreed with you might just walk
                      up and blow you away with a S&W 357 or an assault
                      rifle. If you really need instant gratification, go buy an
                      X-box. To use your words, not mine, "God Bless
                      Canada".

                      Comment


                        #23
                        Rockpile,

                        "If this was south of the
                        49th someone who disagreed with you might just walk
                        up and blow you away with a S&W 357 or an assault
                        rifle."

                        You must have really upstanding 'brothers' down
                        south... I have not met any US Citizen or friend who
                        would respond in this way. For you to write this and
                        express it; is a veiled threat.

                        I know...

                        "If we 'play' in the sand box... expect to have sand
                        thrown in our face."

                        I'm not allowed to defend myself... and you are
                        defending those who libel/slander others unfairly.

                        Nice!

                        Cheers.

                        Comment


                          #24
                          Tom, you have me all wrong, no threat here. Did
                          you know over the last three days 5 Americans were
                          wounded at 3 different gun shows when somehow
                          things went wrong? I am a pacifist and totally anti
                          violence. Period. The week after Sandy Nook more
                          than 900 Americans were either killed or wounded
                          because of gun violence. Something is definitely
                          wrong South of the border. And I too have many
                          friends and family living there. Most are normal and
                          outstanding, but some, who won't travel without
                          heat are down right scary. I just don't want that
                          culture in my back yard. The worst confrontation
                          you'll ever get from me is over a cup of coffee at
                          Tim Hortons. Now chill!

                          Comment

                          • Reply to this Thread
                          • Return to Topic List
                          Working...