Thanks a bunch but I think I'll go with the Cletus Beauregard Stonewall Yokel look.grixit wrote:Burnaby49 wrote:
Hope I'll be able to get in.
Don't be silly-- you're the Helen Thomas of sov events!

Moderator: Burnaby49
Thanks a bunch but I think I'll go with the Cletus Beauregard Stonewall Yokel look.grixit wrote:Burnaby49 wrote:
Hope I'll be able to get in.
Don't be silly-- you're the Helen Thomas of sov events!
Want to see it Steven? Nothing easier! Just get up and go. Walk through main entrance to courthouse, past the sheriff at the desk to the right and check the bulletin boards to the right just before the registry entrance for the day's schedule. I'm guessing the Chief gets the fifth floor.Sino General
2 hrs · Vancouver ·
.Just finished on camera interview with the Province. .. photoshoot. Interview is done. So should be out tmrw or online today. Tmrw either way in the thoughts of many parties is ... this will determine alot of things in regards to our status as a people and a nation. Do they respect our relationship or do they disregard who we are
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20 people like this..
Tasha-Tanya Jacko So interested to see the outcome
Bryan Parker Sino General, please make sure your interview finds its way onto Tactical Sovereignty.
Chris Evan Keep us posted
Tālis Bŗauns What court, tommorrow?
Sino General Smithe at supreme Court
Tālis Bŗauns Owen Smith SCC, March 20th?
Steven Willard I am very interested, How can i see it?
All those delusions.his will determine alot of things in regards to our status as a people and a nation
Now how could a man with a seal like that not be a notary?Sino General
1 hr ·
.“I follow the law of peace and the governments of the (Six Nations) nation,” he said. “Our government’s system was here thousands of years before they (Canadian government) got here. I am exempt from Canadian law. Thanks Brandi Morin
B.C. Notary Society sues Cayuga Nation man for acting as notary public - APTN National NewsBrandi Morin APTN National News A Six Nations man now living in B.C. is facing a contempt of court civil suit for practicing as a [...]aptn.ca..
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Glen Atwell As a Six Nations Band Member you have a lien on the Law Society because " In the 1840s, the Crown actually invested funds it held for the Six Nations in bonds the Law Society of Upper Canada was floating to pay for the building of Osgoode Hall. When the Law Society repaid the money, it went into general crown revenues."41 mins · Like
You're not the only one with that thought. From the comments to the Province article;Jeffrey wrote:His interview is painful to watch. He can't even come up with a verbal explanation for his actions.
But one of Canada's greatest legal experts rises to the Chief's defensePreston Dumont · Top Commenter · Columbia Academy of Radio, Television and Recording Arts
As a fellow fn I hate to say that this guy could barely make his argument to a reporter let alone a judge. Also he is far from his traditional territory and has no authority to sign anything on behalf of any nation that his decision to support affect and lastly there is almost no treaties that have been signed in bc besides a couple
Meads is just a personal opinion without any relevance or weight of law? I guess the notaries are going to look like monkeys when they cite it! You might ask, who is Harry Wombat? Check the Chief's Facebook, Harry is some guy avidly "liking" all the Chief's posts.Harry Wombat · FollowFollowing · Dumbed Down Collegiate
Preston Dumont,
Your comment displays your ignorance. Is it intentional? Are you a troll, lawyer, cop? Because, here in REALITY, you're demonstrating an undeniable ability to pull ":facts out of your a%#".
First of all, if you read the article, he is from the Cayuga Nation which is nowhere near B.C. As an original he is not within the JURISDICTION of the corporation known as CANADA, or any other corporations commonly referred to as provinces.
Secondly, he never claimed he was signing anything on behalf of his nation, but, merely as a member of it. If you bake a cake, does it mean you are officially baking cake "on behalf" of Canada because you are a Canadian?
Finally, his nation does have treaties which essentially say "Your laws don't apply to our nation, and our laws don't apply to your nation as both nations are sovereign."
The treaties signed make it illegal for Canada to impose it's laws on an original (native) unless they choose to give up their sovereignty, which he hasn't.
As for this constant reference to Meads vs. Meads made by the media in this article as well, what is not shared by the media is that the quotes taken are from an OPINION written by Rooke, and not a FINDING or determination of fact or law.
Anyone can announce their opinion, even Rooke, but let's stick to demonstrable facts.
There are a pile of new supporting comments on the Chief's Facebook page. Unfortunately they are more the "Good luck, tell me how it works out" variety than "See you there".Preston Dumont · Top Commenter · Columbia Academy of Radio, Television and Recording Arts
Harry dingbat. You obviously don't know the facts. Fact one is you do not have the traditional right to be practicing your beliefs in someone else's tradition territories and this is sto:lo territory. This is not a treaty of your government this is law in our traditional ways which we respect way more then Canadian law.
Second fact dingbat he is talking about sovereignty he has within his traditional 6 nations territory which he is far from. Yes we are all sovereign nations however Canadian laws "dont" apply on reserve.
Fact three he is representing himself and it in my opinion he better do a better job explaining himself to a judge because he did a poor job with the reporter. Fact 4 is BC is unceded land there has never been any singing over of lands to Canada unlike the majority of the first nations out east. There have been some recent treaties but not in the same historical scam Canada pulled...it is actually opposite. Anyways dingbat there's some first nations 101for you
One of the documents purportedly notarized by General appears to be a court order made “before Adjudicator Hajistahénhway” and signed by Hajistahénhway, ordering the defendant, the Haisla Nation Council, to pay the plaintiff “$100,000,000 in fine one ounce silver bullion 99.9 per cent and/or the equivalent in the lawful currency of the day.”
Roger D. McConchie, lawyer for the Haisla Nation, said he received a series of documents seemingly notarized, stamped and signed by Hajistahénhway.
“I got some incoherent, bizarre gibberish delivered to my office several times,” McConchie said. “It’s obviously, to someone who knows the legal system anyway, less authentic than Monopoly money.”
He has some support apparently:A commercial lawyer in Vancouver who reviewed some of the case material said the documents purportedly notarized by General had “an equal amount” of legal authority as a napkin. However, he added, “it’s definitely less useful than a napkin. At least you can do something with a napkin.”
Lisa Monchalin, a Kwantlen Polytechnic University professor of criminology who plans to attend court Friday, believes General has a valid point about jurisdiction, saying: “International law applies here, not Canadian law, and Canadian courts do not have jurisdiction here.”
Adjuicator? I hadn't seen that one before. Does an ajudicator trump a chief when native people are involved? And even more important, how much did the Chief charge the plaintiff for those documents (if the Chief was not the plaintiff)? And how does the the plaintiff feel about paying out good money for gibberish instead of napkins?LordEd wrote:One of the documents purportedly notarized by General appears to be a court order made “before Adjudicator Hajistahénhway” and signed by Hajistahénhway,...
Not sure why anyone should think that a criminology professor is a go-to source about jurisdiction and treaties. They should interview her later after the Chief ends up in prison.Lisa Monchalin, a Kwantlen Polytechnic University professor of criminology who plans to attend court Friday, believes General has a valid point about jurisdiction,...
Continuing that quote:The Observer wrote:Not sure why anyone should think that a criminology professor is a go-to source about jurisdiction and treaties.Lisa Monchalin, a Kwantlen Polytechnic University professor of criminology who plans to attend court Friday, believes General has a valid point about jurisdiction,...
Canadian courts don't have jurisdiction in Vancouver? And what, pray tell, does "international law" have to say about who can notarize documents? In any event, does the good professor think that you can just pull some thick tome entitled "International Law" from the shelves of a law school library and look it up? What does she think "international law" is?Lisa Monchalin, a Kwantlen Polytechnic University professor of criminology who plans to attend court Friday, believes General has a valid point about jurisdiction, saying: “International law applies here, not Canadian law, and Canadian courts do not have jurisdiction here."
Oh god we've been compromised! Burn everything, shred all the documents, drink all the booze!Quatloos was mentioned a number of times and the Chief commented about me three times to the court! Pointing me out while doing it!
Please, no japery, this is a serious business but, yes, I did count the Chief's supporters. I used to be an accountant. This is the photograph that appeared on page 7 of today's Province;LordEd wrote:That gives me time to set up the betting pools.
Number of minutes until Chief pulled the racist card. (5 quatloos on 12 minutes)
Number of (known) freeman attendees in the crowd (1 quatloo on 1).
All wagers to be decided by Burnaby the Green. Polls close on Burnaby's report.