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Post by mdenney on Jan 21, 2007 18:36:38 GMT -5
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Post by mdenney on Jan 21, 2007 22:12:50 GMT -5
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Post by mdenney on Jan 21, 2007 22:14:54 GMT -5
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Post by mdenney on Jan 21, 2007 22:15:45 GMT -5
The Dawes Allotment Act was written with the specific expectation that Indians would disappear into the Euro-American mainstream as trained manual laborers after their allotments had been alienated. The U.S. legislators were hoping that the Aboriginal Indigenous people would become extinct, and then the U.S. would have clear title. Most of the Métis people who take the identity of Indian, are there because of White social engineering. The Euro-Indians, many of whom can pass as White people (and some of whom are genealogically full-blooded White people) are being paid to be Indians. If they were not paid, they would be gone, an active part of the mainstream of the Euro-American community to which they belong. The Métis people who are visibly not pure white are kept on the Reservation by racism. The United States White political leaders have been talking about family values for generations, but their illegitimate children are locked by social engineering into their mothers' communities, living off the resources of the Aboriginal Indigenous people. www.maquah.net/We_Have_The_Right_To_Exist/WeHaveTheRight_19-Chapter10.html
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Post by mdenney on Jan 21, 2007 22:20:59 GMT -5
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Post by mdenney on Jan 21, 2007 22:21:23 GMT -5
Special Presentations: The Making of the U.S. Constitution Timeline: American History as Seen in Congressional Documents, 1774-1873 The Revolutionary Diplomatic Correspondence of the United States Indian Land Cessions in the United States, 1784 to 1894 The Louisiana Purchase: Legislative Timeline - 1802 to 1807 Journal of the Congress of the Confederate States of America, 1861-1865 The Impeachment Trial of President Andrew Johnson, 1868 Presidential Elections and the Electoral College, 1877 links below- memory.loc.gov/ammem/amlaw/lawhome.html
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Post by mdenney on Jan 21, 2007 22:54:43 GMT -5
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Post by mdenney on Jan 21, 2007 23:04:19 GMT -5
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Post by mdenney on Jan 21, 2007 23:10:57 GMT -5
Public Law 83-283 Codified in the United States Code Title 28, section 1360 (2001) Cite as PL 83-280, 28 USC § 1360 (2001) Law Review Articles: Wilkinson & Volkman, Judicial Review of Indian Treaty Abrogation: "As Long as Water Flows, or Grass Grows Upon the Earth"--How Long a Time Is That? 63 Calif L Rev 601. Federal Courts--Indian Jurisdiction--Diversity Courts May Entertain Actions Between Indians that Are Not Cognizable in State Courts. 63 Geo LJ 989. Indian Law--Civil Rights--Federal Jurisdiction--When Tribal Remedies Effectively Exhausted Federal Courts Have Jurisdiction to Hear Claims Arising Under the Indian Civil Rights Act. 22 Kan L Rev 461. Goldberg, A Dynamic View of Tribal Jurisdiction to Tax Non-Indians. 40 Law & Contemp Prob 166. Adjudication of Indian and Federal Water Rights in the Federal Courts. 46 U Colo L Rev 555. Canby, Civil Jurisdiction and the Indian Reservation. 1973 Utah L Rev 206. Indian Law--Tribal Off-Reservation Jurisdiction. 1975 Wis L Rev 1221. link below- tuscaroras.com/jtwigle/pages/pl83-280.shtml
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Post by mdenney on Jan 21, 2007 23:19:13 GMT -5
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Post by mdenney on Jan 22, 2007 1:52:55 GMT -5
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Post by mdenney on Jan 22, 2007 2:07:33 GMT -5
About the DLN Nation Treaties, Laws, Executive Orders Concerning the DLN Nation Chiefs The United Nations and the DLN Nation Tribal and Traditional Government Images In Honor of link below- www.dlncoalition.org/dln_nation/
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Post by mdenney on Jan 22, 2007 2:41:20 GMT -5
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Post by mdenney on Jan 22, 2007 20:50:52 GMT -5
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Post by mdenney on Jan 22, 2007 20:51:57 GMT -5
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