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First Nation MyyyyyAsssss

Masked, camoflauge-wearing men attack police with baseball bats and pipes. Black, acrid smoke fills the air as large piles of tires are set alight less than a hundred meters away from a school where terrified students hide under desks. An explosion and fire rips through a Hydroelectric transformer near the battleground, plunging over 50 000 people into darkness. One could be forgiven for thinking this is a scene out of Beirut or Bagdahd. But it’s not. These events are taking place right here in the “Peaceable Kingdom” we know as Canada.
The Caledonia stand-off is just the latest in a sad string of violent native land disputes that have occurred over the last decade in this country.
Native stand-offs were thrust onto the Canadian public’s radar in July 1990 when a Quebec Provincial Police attempt to arrest a group of Mohawk Warriors manning a barricade was met with a volley of native gunfire which left officer Marcel Lemay dead. The government responded by deploying the Canadian Army to the location. 6 weeks later, the last of the Mohawk occupiers were removed from the site by armed troops. But this was only the beginning.

CanadaKicksAss gives a backgrounder to the standoff in Caledonia, Ontario where a bunch of folks who call themselves 'First Nations' are creating havoc. The OPP, Ontario's top police force, have been totally ineffective in stopping the shennanigans these hoodlums have been into. If it was up to me, I'd call in the Army and start blowing these sob's away. Too bad someone in authority in Canada or Ontario doesn't have the parts to do this once and for all.
The interesting part of that article is

In fact, the area in which the Six Nation reserve is now located was previously inhabited by a tribe
known as the Neutral Indians. This group was conquered by the Iroquois in 1651 and the survivors
were enslaved. Despite their victory, the Iroquois returned to their traditional homeland in New York
and remained there for hundreds of years.

So it would seem these folks are, in fact, Second Nations.

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