Ray, it's an unfortunate aspect of human history that various high level powers 
-- political, administrative, military, etc. -- trump group identity and 
culture.  In Canada, the Quebecois see themselves as linguistically and 
culturally distinct, yet they fall under the same administrative rules, 
including passports, as the rest of us.  The same is true of our Native people. 
 The fact that we call them "First Nations" makes us feel a little better about 
what we have done to them, but it really hasn't given them more power or 
improved their social and economic status.  Some twenty years ago I was heavily 
involved in helping Yukon Indians settle their land claims.  The process by 
which the claims were settled and the administrative and land ownership 
provisions that were applied were the way we saw things, not necessarily the 
way they saw them.

I don't know why the Haudenosaunee were not allowed to travel on their own 
passports, but I suspect that the much tighter world we live in since 9/11 had 
something to do with it.

Ed


----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Ray Harrell 
  To: 'RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION,EDUCATION' 
  Sent: Thursday, July 15, 2010 7:06 PM
  Subject: Re: [Futurework] Fw: [Ottawadissenters] Fw: More dismal stuff


  Ed, 

   

  What's so hard about this?    No one is listening.    The NYTimes said that 
the Lacrosse Federation would not accept them as a National Team if they came 
with Canadian or U.S. Passports.     

   

  Batesonian double bind.   Or as we say "between a Rock and a Hard Place".    
The truth is probably that the Brits didn't want to risk losing a game to a 
reserve.   But that is their ego problem.      That type of ego problem took 
them into the Falklands and the U.S. to Granada.    

   

  The problem here was that it was "Lieutenant Scheisskopf" all the way.    
Catch 22.   [ You can't come without  fancy passports but if you have them you 
can't play because you're not from a real nation.]    

   

  Of course if they were from a Pacific Island Nation with representation at 
the UN and 400 people, would the same be true of THEIR passports?      The 
Iroquois Confederacy is larger than Lichtenstein.     More people, more land, 
distinct language and culture and a history older than modern France and they 
invented Lacrosse.       But the problem is the same as for Basques of Spain or 
the Armenians in Turkey or the Kurds in Turkey and Iraq.    How does it feel to 
be using the words of Sadaam Hussein talking about his "Iroquois"?       "They 
were in the way."    After 200 years they're still arguing over biological 
warfare here too.     There is a lot more distance between the Iroquois and 
their neighbors than the Kurds or the Armenians were with theirs.     Indian 
Nations in America have more  population than  Lichtenstein and a continuous 
culture, language and religion  for longer.    Hell there are more Muslims in 
America than Swiss in Switzerland.    This team had plenty of creds.      

   

  Britain didn't want to lose to them and besides they shouldn't give any 
encouragement to the Catholics in Northern Ireland or the French in Quebec.     
Reconciliation is really hard.   It takes sacrifice and integrity.       What 
would happen if this sovereign nation decided to take erase the 
Canadian/American border that runs through their nation and set up their 
roadblocks in and out of their country?       They've done that before and they 
stopped traffic on a big International bride.      What if they appealed to the 
UN and to China for development funds and set up a gaming empire?    What, 
they've done that already too.     But they have been good little Indians, a 
little surly but still "citizens."       Can't you see the Canadians issues 
with taking over militarily and the U.S.?     The Canadians have the French and 
the Scots and we have Texans:>))

   

  The Brits, U.S. and Canada just didn't want the Indians to come and so they 
set up a Catch 22.     This is not my first experience with this.      The U.S. 
and Canada can talk about Reconciliation and Apologies but when the ukstaha 
hits the fan they either mean it or they were just "fooling around"  and 
pretending that it was love.     Under U.S. Law and the Supreme Court Indian 
Nations are "dependent" sovereign entities.    This is just the latest skirmish 
that goes all the way back to the Cherokee Nation vs. Georgia Supreme Court 
Case that Georgia lost and they sent us on a death march anyway.     More of us 
died than at the WTC.  

   

  I saw it happen again with our article to the Reconciliation Commission in 
Canada, even though we were paid a good fee for the product.    It was too 
serious and the assumptions they had were not (serious).      

   

  This is the same cultural problem that David Kay spoke about when he said the 
problem of WMD's in Iraq was that no one really knew anything about Iraqi 
culture so interpreting  Saddam was semiotic.    Or idiotic.    "Maybe culture 
is too much to ask here?"     Those were exactly David Kay's words on C-Span.   
   Before that it was Edward T. Hall's when the State Department hired him to 
teach them about culture.   He failed..     Cross culture is just not a part of 
America's cultural image.    You're all supposed to become good Englishman but 
not too English.    As a result we have a cultural war with every culture 
speaking IT's English and claiming that they are the only true version. 

   

  It's really simple.    It's Bernard Shaw and Henry Higgins speaking for him.  
  Some people are sitting on one side of the problematic situation and see that 
side but the others are sitting across on the other side from the same problem 
and the view's so different that it doesn't even seem the same problem.   Then 
there are the people on the left and the right who see half of what both sides 
see but still think it's something else.      No one seems to be willing to 
look for the whole.    No one is willing to ask and no one is willing to give 
up the power their unique view affords them.    So they fight.     That's 
Lacrosse.   That's the meaning of the ball as each fights for winning over the 
other at carrying the ball, not in their hands but in a stick. [The ball is too 
sacred to touch.     When they are through they can sit down, ask questions, 
dance together and share their uniqueness with each other and come to some kind 
of knowledge of what the real whole happens to be.   

   

  Unfortunately no one seems to really get the idea of a "Circle of Nations" or 
a circle of cultural identities.        That's what is so wonderful about 
music.    Everyone who performs knows that to do another culture's style or 
context badly means you're a pig.     So they work hard to learn the other 
style.    But that's Art and Art is of little value to the "practical world" 
that got us into this mess with the environment and the banks.    Or is it?    
Maybe we just sacrificed another Indian, like in the movies, for another White 
man's growth or survival.       Been there, done that. 

   

  REH

   

  From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Ed Weick
  Sent: Thursday, July 15, 2010 3:55 PM
  To: RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, EDUCATION
  Subject: Re: [Futurework] Fw: [Ottawadissenters] Fw: More dismal stuff

   

  Easy, Ray, easy... and I don't like it anymore than you do.  All I was saying 
is that if the Haudenosaunee really wanted to get to Britain to play lacrosse, 
they would have to follow the rules that would get them there even if they 
found those rules demeaning.  If, on the other hand, they were trying to make a 
statement then I guess they put themselves into a position that would enable 
them to make it.  I don't see it as a game, but the world is a crappy place and 
if you want to move around in it you may have to do things that you don't like.

   

  Ed

    ----- Original Message ----- 

    From: Ray Harrell 

    To: 'RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION,EDUCATION' 

    Sent: Thursday, July 15, 2010 2:26 PM

    Subject: Re: [Futurework] Fw: [Ottawadissenters] Fw: More dismal stuff

     

    You're really not getting it.   This is like the loggers road that was 
going to destroy a thousands of year old meditation run for the Yarok religion 
in California.    All of the Anglos and the Italian Catholics on the Supreme 
Court said Tsk Tsk too bad but we move on, we have to have logs.  Then the UN 
got involved and an international  indigenous group got involved and put 
pressure on the state of California and they stopped the road.    The Yarok 
culture is still there.     To you it's a game and a game has a social purpose, 
to them it's a part of the religion as it is with us.     It's a substitute for 
hostile action against those who oppress us.   It's called the "Little War"   
and it's a lot better than going to Iraq.    Would you prefer suicide bombers?  
   These kids have a high suicide rate.    How long before they realize what 
Islam has realized?   In short.   You are a smart man and this is beneath you.  
   You should be better.   There are consequences.        If you guys would 
like I would be willing to give the list a primer instruction in this so you 
don't come off as brutes. 

     

    REH 

     

    From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Ed Weick
    Sent: Thursday, July 15, 2010 2:04 PM
    To: RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, EDUCATION
    Subject: Re: [Futurework] Fw: [Ottawadissenters] Fw: More dismal stuff

     

    It's too bad, but it's the kind of world we now live in.  I used to ride a 
motorbike across the US border with nothing more than a driver's license as ID. 
 I'm no longer doing that but if I were, I'd need a passport.  This is the post 
9/11 world.  The Haudenosaunee should have known what they were getting into 
and should have been prepared for it.  You may not respect a US or Canadian 
passport, but you may have to have it nevertheless.

     

    Ed

      ----- Original Message ----- 

      From: Ray Harrell 

      To: 'RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION,EDUCATION' 

      Sent: Thursday, July 15, 2010 12:20 PM

      Subject: Re: [Futurework] Fw: [Ottawadissenters] Fw: More dismal stuff

       

      Speaking of Values.     What's your thought on the Iroquois Nationals now 
that Britain has banned them? 

       

      From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Ed Weick
      Sent: Thursday, July 15, 2010 8:08 AM
      To: RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, EDUCATION
      Subject: Re: [Futurework] Fw: [Ottawadissenters] Fw: More dismal stuff

       

      I know it's about values Ray, and values come with cultural perspectives. 
 I spent a lot of my professional life working with and about Native people in 
northern Canada and have a pretty good understanding of how their values differ 
from ours.  I recall how, back in the 1970s, people of the Mackenzie Valley 
first encountered the concept of land ownership.  "What?" they would say, 
"owning the land?  Nobody owns the land.  It's just there."  Needless to say, 
the guys from the oil patch who wanted to drill or build pipelines saw things 
differently.  At the time, the Canadian government tended to side with the oil 
patch.  It took a helluva lot of work to develop a concept of land ownership 
that was accepted by both sides and to bring on the land claims process.

       

      Ed

        ----- Original Message ----- 

        From: Ray Harrell 

        To: 'RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION,EDUCATION' 

        Sent: Wednesday, July 14, 2010 5:07 PM

        Subject: Re: [Futurework] Fw: [Ottawadissenters] Fw: More dismal stuff

         

        It's about values Ed.    They value the wrong things.   A stone or a 
widget or a piece of tar.   Consider the value of a song?   Consider a society 
that rethought it's values and moved away from the market ideas of Mill and 
Jevons.   Mill should have known better.  If he had not had Wordworth his life 
would have been spent as a failure in the mental institution after the terrible 
beating his father gave him.    Obama is a failure with Indians because as a 
Black Man he missed the point completely of our history.     He's a failure 
with economics because he bought the European model of value.    Capital, is 
what it's all about.   You have to be willing to invest it in real growth that 
grows people, not just is material transformation into energy that dissolves.   
Electricity and computers, bit rot and records.   All of our visual and 
literary treasures caught in a machine that could disappear in a moment.   
Someone's values are screwy and they aren't mine.   I still say it Hohokum.     
I've had a computer crash and lost all of my history except for what was in 
paper and had to redo thousands of pages and I'm one person.   This place is 
nuts.    The first solar pulse to come along and they will just disappear. 

         

        REH

         

         


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