44 Replies to “We Are All Treaty People”

  1. Weak response.
    No wonder they keep doing it.
    Is Blue River populated by cowered snowflakes?

    1. I think Blue River’s main business is tourism, particularly in winter. When I drove through the area in 1980, I remember seeing signs in town for helicopter skiing services. I’m sure that the locals don’t want to do anything that might drive tourists away.

      1. Then wear it and cease complaining.
        Paralysed and pathetic….they deserve exactly what they get.

      2. Heli-skiing eh? They should invite Justin. Poor overworked thing could use a heli-skiing vacation.

        1. Mr Teach, As far as I’m concerned, Justin can go ski in Hell as soon as possible.

  2. Where’s the RCMP??

    Hiding wherever Trudeau has told then to hide.

    Where is the CBC?? How about CTV??

    Hiding with the RCMP!

    1. Keep in mind that Blue River is in a remote area. I recall that it was about a half-hour’s drive from Kamloops, which has an RCMP detachment.

      1. More like two-and-one-half to three hours from Kamloops.  I’ve driven that route more times than I care to count.  It, Valemount and Clearwater are the only three settlements of appreciable size between Kamloops and Jasper on the Yellowhead.  That entire stretch of valley only has a population of around 6,000 people (according to my cousin who lives in Tete Jaune Cache at the northern end of that stretch).  Policing services are thin on the ground, and even they realize that if something goes wrong, the old joke about “call a cop, call a taxi, call an ambulance or call for pizza and see who arrives first” applies to them as well — reinforcements are a long, long ways away.

        1. More like two-and-one-half to three hours from Kamloops.

          Yes, you’re right and I stand corrected. It’s been about 40 years since I was last there and I was probably thinking about either Valemount and Clearwater in my earlier comment. All I remembered was that it didn’t take me all that long to get to Kamloops.

          As for the scarcity of police, I can definitely confirm that. When I was moving to Edmonton, I never saw any during my early morning drives out of Blue River that year. In fact, there was hardly anyone else on the road at that time of day, which would have been around 7 or 8 AM. I’m sure I could have counted off on one hand the number of other vehicles that I encountered.

          1. Quite a few big trucks take that highway. I’ve seen it get quite busy at times. Very scenic in parts. Quite dangerous and narrow between Little Fort and the four-lane stretch north of Kamloops.

  3. I stayed at the Sandman Inn in Blue River while I was moving to Edmonton from Vancouver nearly 40 years ago. The food at the restaurant was simple but satisfying, particularly the pea soup.

    The drive from there to Tete Jaune Cache early in the autumn morning was most enjoyable, particularly as there was next to no traffic on the highway at that time.

    It’s a pity that current events have besmirched my memories.

    1. They’re still there. The website shows the site including the surrounding mountain views, the well kept Inn, and photos of their happy meals! I see what you mean. C’est si bon!

      1. If all you’re after is a decent night’s sleep and something good to eat, it’s a good place to stay.

        Try driving from BR to TJC in late September after sunrise. The leaves have turned colour there’s little traffic as it’s after Labour Day. That is a nice road trip.

  4. Wexiters take note: the interior of BC isn’t going to offer much more support than the gilded liber-alleys of Vancouver and Victoria.

    1. On reason is because Blue River likes the tourist trade. For the Lotuslanders who go there, helicopter skiing is a status symbol. Not only does it show that they have enough money that they can afford it, they get to ski where there are few proles like the ones they encounter at Seymour or Whistler.

    2. “Wexiters take note: the interior of BC isn’t going to offer much more support than the gilded liber-alleys of Vancouver and Victoria.”

      In other words, you can expect the same level of useful and committed separation activism that you’d find in Calgary, Edmonton, and much of the rest of Alberta.

      1. It wouldn’t surprise me if some of the current residents are ex-Lotuslanders. They may have left the coast but they took along their ideas and attitudes.

        1. That maybe so. But when it comes to nutlessness, gutlessness, and whining dependency, urbanization is the culprit. And I dont see any calls for rugged self-sufficiency from any of the farm/ranch/livestock/grain organizations in any of our provinces. And you can add forestry orgs to that list.

  5. In the video one of the local counter protesters was asked by Keenan what she was talking to an RCMP officer about. She was asking him what are they gonna do about all the law breaking going on in front of them. Cop told we’ll handle it but not right now. HAHA, always the response. Useless liar. They won’t do piss all. I remember when useless marxists where camping in downtown Nanaimo a few years ago. I said to two cops walking through it all that I guess it’s now legal to camp in front of the library. One glared while the other flippantly replied “Yep I guess so”. What I hate more than useless leftists are people and organizations that are supposed to be doing one thing but because of politics do the opposite and do not do what they are supposed to be doing.

    1. The highest levels of police management saw what happened at Ipperwash, Ontario in the 90s. They, and their political masters, have no inclination to repeat that. So the police step back and watch. The aboriginal industry knows this too, and are taking full advantage. This mess only ends when huge financial interests are threatened (think CP and CN Rail, the ports, Canada Steam Ships (Paul Martin’s Company) who were threatened during February 2020’s blockades).

      Nothing of value to the elites will be harmed by the Trans-Mountain blockaders. CN Rail can divert traffic to Prince George and the Crowsnest Pass with some minor difficulty. Trucks can divert to the Trans-Canada #1 Highway with little difficulty. That twinned pipeline that I can see from my Edmonton bedroom will go no farther than the BC-Alberta border. Trudeau doesn’t have the guts to fight the protesters.

      1. Trudeau doesn’t have the guts to fight the protesters.

        Or has no intention to.

  6. Okay, so isn’t there a First Nation council of all the First Nations who could go talk to these Fauxindians or sue them out of existence or something?

    Or is that just crazy talk, having the First Nations police their own?

    1. I wonder how often Aboriginal women go missing because of white men in work camps as compared to other people.

      1. Your comment is an old canard that surfaces once in a while, is discredited again then disappears down a rat hole. The majority of missing and murdered aborigional women cases can be laid at the feet of aborigional men. Only those with intense biases or lower abilities in thinking think otherwise.

  7. One can hardly blame the RCMP when every move they make is severely criticised and their own boss is decrying “systemic racism” within the force. This is what you get when you “defund the police”. Be careful what you wish for, and other appropriate proverbs.

    1. One can certainly blame the RCMP. They happily take our tax money to provide us with a police service. They should do what they get paid for and be more than politically correct red-serge Tourist attractions.

    2. Yes one CAN indeed BLAME the RCMP and in particular, the Communist run UNION that Directs them and that useless sack of lesbian dung that leads them. Nothing but Woke Socialist bitches.

      DEFUND the Police.??
      IN the RCMP’s case.? Damned Straight.
      Baggage handling is all they are good for.

    3. They enforce zero laws where we live. It’s a free for all. They are solely reactive.

  8. The Indian protesters are not from any area affected (nor benefiting) from the pipeline therefore making them easy pickings for the US underwriters who fund them to protest. Behind virtually every anti pipeline protest you’ll find US cash.

  9. The simple solution, should have been done already, is cut their supply lines.

    You know who they are, figure it out if you don’t. Don’t let any of them shop local. Don’t let supply trucks from the next town deliver food, or fuel, or water.

    Basically, this is a siege, and these protesters need to be cutoff from their outside supply network. Cell phone jammers too; no communication, no food, no water. Surrender in a few days or a week.

  10. Well since Canada is saddled with its own idiot with delusions of hereditary chiefdom, I can see why nothing is being done about this mess.

  11. I drove north through Blue River on Saturday. Stopped briefly at service station on the highway. Saw no evidence of any blockades/encampments.

    1. I’ve been thru recently as well. Guess I’ll have to go back for a better look. As for the blockade, I can only imagine that there are plenty of routes around it or an injunction would have been served. But its amazing what our country has become. Under the guise of peaceful protests a private or public road can be blocked, for years even. We are fools to support this misguided behavior.

  12. I wish I could say this was unusual but we live in a small rural town in Manitoba and we’ve had much the same thing. In our case it is not a problem with ecoterrorists but it is a person arrested in the city after being caught with drugs and a sawed off shotgun and stolen property who is now awaiting trial. All kinds of things happen in town like intimidation, extortion, home invasion. We call the RCMP, they come an hour or more later. Mostly they do absolutely nothing but look bored and irritated by us. Sometimes they will take a report if we really push them. Sometimes the person is arrested, taken away and but is always back the very next business day. RCMP frequently remind us any form of response against this person will be considered a violation of the law and we will be the ones arrested and punished. The person keeps being released over and over again on bail or a promise to appear. There is quite simply is no enforcement against anyone who does not want to live by the rules and no self defence is permitted. We are expected to cheerfully hand over anything we have to anyone who comes in demanding it.

    1. Natalie, I live in a small town a hundred Kliks north of Vancouver, and we had a similar problem a few years ago. A young man of about 19 with a part native background, was continuously riding the courts merry go round. He would steal, or do a B&E and get arrested, but back at it in a few days. He did go away to a confinement place for two or three months a couple of times, but always back at it upon his releases. This went on for a couple of years, and once he also got arrested for breaking in to a closed Mall late at night. He was dragging out clothes from a popular name brand clothing store. The irony, was this was Mall was just across the street from the RCMP detachment, and his getaway van was in full view of that detachment the whole time. Again catch and release. He was also the subject of much chatter in the local paper as well.

      Then one day he broke into an apartment while the elderly resident was home. He stole cash and rings, and terrorized the elderly woman. Again catch and release, but this time he picked on the wrong victim. Two weeks later, he was found with both legs broken, in two places each, One break each to the upper and lower bones. Apparently he “fell down some Stairs”. After this, he never stole another thing, and still lives on a property outside of town, and Never, ever, leaves that property.

      It turns out this elderly lady was actually the mother of the Canada’s National Hell’s Angel, membership secretary! Karma eventually settles the score one way or another.

      1. I almost wish we had some Hell’s Angel types in our town. The RCMP are just a taxi service and it’s not really their fault because it’s the courts that do the releasing. This person is currently banned from coming into our town as part of the latest set of bail conditions to be violated because the RCMP basically told the judge our town is full of a bunch of racists and that’s why this person can’t rehabilitate. If things go on as they have before we’ll be being terrorized again in about another week.

  13. Rule of Law ? No, not in Canada, the foundations of self-government/Common-Law included the citizens apprehending criminals and bringing them to justice.

    When Sir Robert Peel introduced professional police to London in the early 1800s, he had to promise, in order to placate the protest that arose, that the police would co-operate with the role of citizens not replace it or suppress it. Hence, Sir Robert Peel’s 9 Rules of Policing.

    A completely incompatible totalitarian ideology has been subverting citizen self-government/responsible government and the Rule of Law, Magna Carta, for some decades.
    It will take a major reassertion of citizens Rights and Responsibilities to reverse that. The history of the development of self-government in Britain is full of such examples. That is a major reason the history of the development of Parliamentary, representative government, the foundational principles, including the Magna Carta has been censored from history course. There are no survey history course that describe the process of the history of Western Civilization, in order, to disorient the citizenry. It’s a psychology of submission, of serfdom.

    It is reversible. Such acts of heroism, of moral and physical courage built West. Civilization and Canada, too. The archetype of the hero is our history, in it’s absence, times have been dark and difficult.

  14. Waiting to trap a few more taxpayers,so the RCMP and courts can feast on the wealth of private citizens.
    The Just Us System is so grand.
    We all know the solution,but no sane person wants to go there.
    Especially not a citizen who has paid extortionist taxes for decades,for the “forces of law and order”.
    When this blows,the RCMP would be well advised to pretend Blue River does not exist.Because they are now clearly and undeniably one with the Enemy.
    Every citizen there knows,if they act against these thugs and terrorists they must be prepared to defend themselves from the “Biggest Street Gang” in the country.
    Which means open,armed rebellion against Canada.

    So far,that is a bridge too far for decent people.

    But as the RCMP and their political masters continue to make it plain who they serve,those forced to pay for their non-service are getting annoyed.
    The consequences of this slow burn,of betrayal,contempt and treachery from the minions we feed are very hard to judge.

    After the Gun Registry,I have not offered assistance to any policeman.
    I witness nothing.
    In an “emergency” I get me gone,having no interest in being caught up in a cluster fuck of incompetence and virtue signalling.
    And Like Old Rudyard Kipling said,I watch the awakening.
    People who used to dismiss me as a antigovernment radical are now using my language,as what I told them would come,has come.

    For a kleptocracy is so easy to predict.
    We are entering end times,for the kleptocracy,as other peoples wealth is in very short supply and people are starting to realize,they are NOT better off,having “professional help”.
    At least not government grade professional help.

    With government servant families now entering their 5th or 6th generation of “Public Service” we have employees so detached from reality that disaster can only result.
    For these people have few if any friends or family outside of government,thus the “taxpayer” is a fictional creature to them.
    The concept of making payroll or producing a reality are far beyond their worlds.
    The “taxpayer” is an endless pool of wealth,that they may dip into at will.
    For the good of the “People” of course.
    That those “people” are real only to them is inconceivable.

    Oh well Gimmee Dat and Best Victim of the day,hour or moment are the games losers play.

    On a brighter note.
    What if all the fuss about reopening schools?
    Either way,we seem to desire well indoctrinated,illiterate and ignorant graduates, so why torture the kids with 12 years of hard time?
    If it is the desire of “public education” to produce what it does..Why bother sending them to school?
    Twitter,Utube and TV can indoctrinate them for a fraction of the current cost and all those “selfless school teachers” can finally get on with their high skilled lives..
    Or is the risk they might stumble upon old truths and learnings too great to risk the great socialist experiment as well as having so many unemployed pedophiles and parasites running loose????

    1. Mr Robertson, an excellent post. The last two lines, of the last paragraph is the truth of it. If we were able to teach children as opposed to indoctrinate, the outcome would not be the one they want. This is precisely why they want our guns, for we have the means to reject them if they push to far. Yet as OWG often says, we, as a whole, do not have the gumption to do what needs to be done. How far they can push, until push back occurs, is anyone’s guess. It will happen at some point, but we may be too neutered to take a stand, until it’s to late to change anything anyway. We are our own worst enemy!
      So yes, right now, it is a bridge to far for decent people. We thus allow the descent, into madness and apathy. For how long it will be allowed is anyone’s guess, but some are finally waking up, there is still hope. The irony is, that while hope remains, decent people will remain decent.

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