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On Mar 21, 12:05 am, Pat Flannery wrote:
Scott Hedrick wrote: The contractor did it first. Other than permits, what could possible have cost multi-millions for what's there? Tribe must contact Great White Fathers that watch over casinos. Much wampum must go to Great White Fathers, so that Skybridge does not burn down. This is called "Protection Wampum". Is special medicine, watched over by Teamster braves, who get "Slice Of Pie", and "Piece Of Action". Many of our tribe bleed from this "Cut". Don Luigi-Black-Hand-Squeezing Lakota Stewed Tribe Hey pat, there is a lot you and others can be learn from the indigenous peoples of the southwest, as they learned to live on little in a harsh environment. tom The first link is Information on the Hualipai nation, or the "people of the tall pines." http://www.cpluhna.nau.edu/People/pais.htm The second link it to a book, that may shed a little light on the legal battles of the Haulapai http://yalepress.yale.edu/yupbooks/b...sbn=0300114605 "Making Indian Law Christian W. McMillen The Hualapai Land Case and the Birth of Ethnohistory by Christian W. McMillen. In 1941, after decades of struggling to hold on to the remainder of their aboriginal home, the Hualapai Indians finally took their case to the Supreme Court-and won. The Hualapai case was the culminating event in a legal and intellectual revolution that transformed Indian law and ushered in a new way of writing Indian history that provided legal grounds for native land claims. But Making Indian Law is about more than a legal decision. It's the story of Hualapai activists, and eventually sympathetic lawyers, who challenged both the Santa Fe Railroad and the U.S. government to a courtroom showdown over the meaning of Indian property rights-and the Indian past. At the heart of the Hualapai campaign to save the reservation was documenting the history of Hualapai land use. Making Indian Law showcases the central role that the Hualapai and their lawyers played in formulating new understandings of native people, their property, and their past. To this day, the impact of the Hualapai decision is felt wherever and whenever indigenous land claims are litigated throughout the world. " |
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