‘Aboriginal Industry Rewards An Ally’

Perry Bellegarde, as A‘FN’ Grand Chief, lobbied the government to bring in UNDRIP;

David Lametti, as Justice Minister, brought it in,

and now Bellegarde and Lametti and their law firm benefit from it financially.”

“Former Justice Minister David Lametti’s departure from government and immediate acceptance into an expensive law firm that makes millions from ‘indigenous’ issues is a recent example of what has long been called “The Indian Industry” at work. The fact that a member of the firm, Perry Bellegarde, former Grand Chief of the Assembly of ‘First Nations’ (A‘FN’) greased the wheels to bring Lametti into the expensive firm makes it the perfect example.

He {Lametti} said he is joining the Fasken Martineau DuMoulin law firm {Canada’s largest}, where one of his focuses will be on ‘Indigenous’ {sic} law.”

https://calgarysun.com/news/national/former-justice-minister-david-lametti-resigns-as-montreal-mp-to-join-law-firm

“It is unknown who first coined the term “The Indian Industry”. Many ‘indigenous’ and non- indigenous’ writers have used the term over the decades. ‘Indigenous’ author, Calvin Helin made liberal use of the term in Dances With Dependency as did Cree writer, Harold Johnson, in “Firewater- How Alcohol is Killing My People.

{Note: Canadian Aboriginals are ‘Indigenous’ to Siberia and Mongolia.}

“However, it was Frances Widdowson and Albert Howard’s important 2009 book “Disrobing The Aboriginal Industry that first examined the Indian Industry in detail.

“The authors chose to use the term “Aboriginal Industry”, perhaps for reasons of politeness, but they are describing the ‘Indian Industry’.

{No, it’s because it’s no longer just about ‘Indians’. Inuit and Metis are now also included on the Industry gravy train; hence, the ‘Aboriginal Industry’.}

“They tell in detail how extensive it has become in Canada. Entire universities, law firms and virtually all Canadian institutions have become largely dependent on the money sloshing around within it. Almost all of that money comes in one way or another from taxpayers.

But they note the supreme irony that the Indian Industry is not improving the lot of the very people it is supposed to be helpingCanada’s marginalized and dependent ‘indigenous’ underclass:

Despite the billions of dollars devoted to aboriginal causes, Native people in Canada continue to suffer all the symptoms of a marginalized existence – high rates of substance abuse, violence, poverty. ‘Disrobing the Aboriginal Industry’ argues that the policies proposed to address these problems – land claims and self government – are in fact contributing to their entrenchment”.

https://www.mqup.ca/disrobing-the-aboriginal-industry-products-9780773534216.php

“However, “Disrobing” was written in 2009, and since the Trudeau ‘Liberals’ took over in 2015, the money flowing into the Indian Industry has increased dramatically in volume.

In fact, that money flow, and the enormous ‘indigenous’ {Aboriginal} contingent liabilities that now total $76,000,000,000 are growing so quickly – seven times higher since Trudeau took over – that the parliamentary budget officer has raised the alarm. Canada’s economic future is being compromised {See below}.

“It isn’t only ‘indigenous’ contingent liabilities – money owed for ‘indigenous’ claims – that have grown so alarmingly, it is all ‘indigenous’ spending. Reports from the Fraser Institute keep track of the shocking increases in total ‘indigenous’ spending since the Trudeau ‘Liberals’ took power. It is fair to say that the truly frightening federal government deficits in recent years occurred largely because of this extra ‘indigenous’ spending.

{And this doesn’t take into account the Provincial expenditures – encompassing programs in most Ministries – or Municipalities, from which, Aboriginal-focused programs have proliferated in recent years…}

“And it isn’t only the largesse of the Trudeau government that has dumped money into the Indian Industry. Since 2015, it has also been the residential school bonanza. Clever lobbyists have been able to extract tens of billions of dollars from taxpayers by making highly-exaggerated claims that residential schools were places of horror, where priests tortured, murdered and secretly buried thousands of ‘indigenous’ children.

These claims are nonsense. Although it is completely true that the residential school system was deeply flawed, and that many ‘indigenous’ children were badly hurt by their residential school experience, it is also true that many received educations they would otherwise have been denied. But, more to the point, there is no evidence that even one child was murdered, or secretly buried during the entire history of residential schools. Despite that, baseless claims of clandestine deaths and secret burials have worked very well for everyone involved in the Indian Industry…

“But, as Widdowson and Howard noted years ago, the Indian Industry has done nothing to solve what has always been called Canada’s “Indian problem” – namely, that the great majority of Canada’s ‘indigenous’ people remain far behind the mainstream on every social indicator. They are the least healthy, worst educated, most incarcerated, shortest living of any demographic, by far.

“They were that way before 2015, and they remain that way now. The Indian Industry, and the astounding amounts of money poured into it since 2015, haven’t changed those depressing numbers one bit.

“A recent CBC investigative report on the dismal conditions at the St. Theresa Point reserve in Manitoba is a case in point. It is one of Canada’s hundreds of totally-dependent reserves. Families there of as many as 23 people per house live in dilapidated housing, in a community that is almost totally unemployed and dependent. The increased money flow since 2015 appears to have only made dependency and all of its related problems – addiction, crime, domestic violence – worse.

“So, if the huge, marginalized and dependent ‘indigenous’ underclass does not benefit from all that money that changes hands inside the Indian Industry who is benefiting?

“It is people like David Lametti and Perry Bellegarde, and their law firms, universities, etc. – none of whom need special help.

And here is the second irony: The Indian Industry feeds on the human misery on display at communities like St. Theresa Point. It needs that misery to continue to keep the money flowing.

{Deconstructing The Aboriginal Industry

The ‘Aboriginal Industry’ favours Segregation over Integration… The generally dysfunctional character of aboriginal community leadership and administration remains deeply entrenched because of the influence of an industry of lawyers, consultants and other professionals that benefit from the status quo of native dependency. These opportunists encourage a culture of opposition – to virtually any government attempt to improve aboriginal conditions – on the basis of entitlement for past injustices. They then, through their advocacy “research”, construct apologetics that justify aboriginal isolation and marginalization. –Widdowson”

https://endracebasedlaw.wordpress.com/2016/06/02/deconstructing-the-aboriginal-industry/ }

“This is not to suggest that any of the people and institutions that are part of it are deliberately perpetuating poverty, or doing anything illegal. They aren’t. They are simply picking up all of the free money our elected representatives and courts throw into the Indian Industry every day. They pick it up because we put it there.

{They are also aggressively lobbying, propagandizing and soliciting money on a full-time basis. So, innocent recipients of government largesse, they are not.}

It is probably not fair to single out David Lametti and Perry Bellegarde for their participation in this obscene waste of taxpayer money that is the Indian Industry {Yes, it is…}. They are just two of many ‘enterprising’ such people who have come before them, and many who will come after them. They probably convince themselves that they are doing something useful. They aren’t. They are part of an Indian Industry that fleeces taxpayers, while pretending to be solving the ‘indigenous’ underclass problem, while making it worse. At a certain point, will Canadians grow tired of this game?

Because it has become abundantly clear that the federal ‘indigenous’ policy that has developed over decades is a total failure. While privileged ‘indigenous’ people who don’t need special attention are benefitting spectacularly, the ‘indigenous’ people who do need the help are becoming more helpless and dependent all the time. The huge increase in the money dumped into uneconomic communities, like St. Theresa Point, is making things worse, not better. It is keeping young people, who should be moving to job centres, trapped in hopeless communities.

“Renowned American economist and philosopher Thomas Sowell argues convincingly that simply giving money to chronically-dependent people makes things worse, not better. I’m sure that Mr. Lametti and Mr. Bellegarde don’t want that to happen, but it is. And it is the Indian Industry that is making them wealthy that is doing it.

“At some point, the entire Indian Industry, with its racist ‘Indian Act’ and brutal reserve system, will come to an end. ‘Indigenous’ {sic} people living on Indian reserves now comprise only 1% of the Canadian population. Despite high birth rates on reserves, more and more reserve residents are moving away from them. By most measures, only 25-40% of status Indians now live on reserves, and that percentage steadily falls.

Meanwhile, immigrants are steadily flowing into Canada. According to some estimates, Canada might have a population of 100 million by the end of the century. The percentage of the population living on reserves will become far less than 1%. Maintaining a completely separate system and bureaucracy for one tiny segment of the population will make less and less sense – especially to those millions of new Canadians, who don’t feel that they owe any special debt to ‘indigenous’ people.

“But while this natural process works itself out, the Indian Industry, now armed with the deeply divisive United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP), is doing permanent damage to the country. We see that process now playing out in British Columbia, where their provincial version of UNDRIP – DRIPA – is wreaking havoc on their natural resources industry. It has become not only a virtual ‘indigenous’ veto on any mining, pipeline or development project, it is now directly threatening basic landowner rights. In what is much like Chicago during the days of the Mafia, ‘indigenous’ leaders all demand their “cut” before any project can proceed. This harmful process is spreading all across Canada, now that Canada has foolishly adopted UNDRIP.

Perry Bellegarde

“And, in what is a perfect illustration of how the Indian Industry works, Perry Bellegarde, as A‘FN’ Grand Chief, lobbied the government to bring in UNDRIP, David Lamerti, as Justice Minister, brought it in, and now Bellegrde and Lametti and their law firm benefit from it financially. Meanwhile, the taxpayer pays, and the marginalized and dependent ‘indigenous’ majority remains marginalized and dependent.

David Lametti

Isn’t it time to end this farce? {END RACE BASED LAW!} People who need education, and assistance to move to job centres, should get that help. But pretending that making privileged people like David Lametti and Perry Bellegarde wealthier by dumping endless amounts of cash into Indian Industry cronyism is somehow good for ‘indigenous’ people is nuts.

“It isn’t. It’s bad for them, and it’s bad for Canada.”

–‘Indian Industry Cronyism’,

Brian Giesbrecht, FCPP, February 16, 2024

https://fcpp.org/2024/02/16/indian-industry-cronyism/

See also:

How The Aboriginal Industry Wins In Court:

“…in Indian treaty rights cases, the standards of evidence and logic are not what they are elsewhere… In these trials by history (i.e, law office history), watching the highly-skilled, forceful attorneys at work serving the Indian cause was a thoroughly eye-opening experience. From them, I learned much about the selective use — and suppression of — historical and anthropological evidence…”

https://endracebasedlaw.wordpress.com/2015/09/17/how-the-aboriginal-industry-wins-in-court/

Race Based Law Costing Billions—and Climbing Exponentially{Apr.3, 2024}:

“The Canadian government likely ‘owes’ ‘Indigenous’ people almost $76 billion for currently filed land claims and lawsuits, recent official reporting says — a sum that’s nearly seven times greater today than when Justin Trudeau became prime minister.”

https://endracebasedlaw.ca/2024/03/02/race-based-law-costing-billions-and-climbing-exponentially/

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