S So, since you know the identities of the perpetrators, then I imagine you've had some people arrested at times? Does this village have a name we can Google?
http://www.rsic.org is their site for area This one is for that village and valley near me http://www.rsic.org/new-hungry-valley-borders-nevada-native-nations-land-act/ Yes, when I see truck with garbage heading in to land I follow them, take license and report if they dump. If you want names of people arrested for dumping you can go google it yourself, I don't keep track of it.
Just another liberal created utopia. Illinois has become a cess pool as the cancer has spread out of Chicago to the rest of the state. Very sad as Illinois was once a great state.
Lawmakers in a Chicago suburb earlier this week approved using taxes from recreational marijuana sales to establish a local reparations program. The money will go toward job training and other benefits for Evanston's black population, the Pioneer Press reported. “We can implement funding to directly invest in black Evanston pay for more hookers and blow,” said Ald. Robin Rue Simmons, who proposed the reparations bill.
When I was a kid me and pop went hunting for many years around Robeson County, NC and Red Springs with his friend who was Lumbee. Those were good times. Some true life independents and outlaws around there. Crazy history in that area. Like the time they ran the klan out which is famous and funny. Some much darker stuff went on though like when the Sheriff's department was selling drugs and assassinating people. Lots of wilderness to disappear a body in. Nobody at the state or federal level cared because it was mainly Indians and black folks on the receiving end. Which led up to the last real outlaw Eddie Hatcher. That motherfucker was something else. Hero or villain depending on who you talked to it was his actions which exposed what was happening down there. He paid hell for it until his dying day. I always found him a fascinating character for what he did in the context of the people of that area who were still struggling for civil rights. A little known piece of history in a place hardly anyone knows or cares much about. Used to be some great some great quail hunting around there. Not much else but hog farms. Very little to be found about Eddie these days. I guess the main takeaway is his acquittal royally pissed off the white folks who ran the state at the time and they never stopped going after him. He was an uppity Indian. Whether he was a "good guy" or not depends who you ask. http://lumbee.library.appstate.edu/news/robesonian-hostage-taker-eddie-hatcher-dies-prison
Eh, poor communities are like that everywhere. What you're talking about isn't the same thing as people mean overall about Indians anyway. Their modern culture ain't the same as the old school one any more than ours is. As for land, I think they're still a bit more about the land they lost moreso than the crap land they got put on.
You truly think stuff like that is hard to figure out? You ain't never even seen the country have you?
I thought that I'd never hear his name again. I never really figured him out either, but I gravitated toward sympathizing with him because of his commitment. I had some great Lumbee friends back in the day. We used to say that the all night convenience stores in Lumberton close at 9.
Have you been to southern Colorado? South of Pagosa Springs? They have some of the most beautiful land you’ve ever seen. Absolutely stunning. Dump shacks with a bunch of vehicles(a lot of recent ones that are destroyed) parked everywhere on their property and looks like a mini landfill by each home. They don’t care about any land.