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Rex Havoc

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  1. How about we all leave, wait a winter and then come home to clean up and bury the dead.
  2. Do you feel we are all going to die from global warming? Are you one of those?
  3. Alaskan oil that comes in by tanker. Even BC's own oil needs the TMPL to get to Burnaby. It doesn't walk there from Ft St. John. TMPL also carries refined products to supply BC and Washington State. Refined product is also trucked in from a refinery in Regina. Simply put BC and Washington heavily rely on TMPL and AB/SK oil. It wouldn't cost 50 cents more a litre in Vancouver than AB or SK if they didn't have such a high demand and supply shortfalls in locally refined, domestic and imported gasoline and diesel. If it weren't for the current TMPL, BC would grind to a halt.
  4. Farmed salmon. Oh how yummy.
  5. You are sadly mistaken. PRIVATE PROPERTY AND THE CHARTER The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms does not directly protect property rights. The Charter was enacted as part of the Constitution Act, 1982, which affirmed the Constitution as the supreme law of Canada and provided that any law that is inconsistent with the Constitution is of no force or effect. The Charter guarantees certain individual rights against intrusion by the state and gives the courts the power to provide a remedy to anyone whose Charter rights are denied. For example, section 7 of the Charterreads: If property rights had been included in the Charter, certain laws restricting or removing property rights would be unconstitutional, and the courts would have been able to strike them down. But property rights were deliberately excluded from the Charter(the reasons for this omission are subject to some debate that cannot be summarized adequately in this guide), and subsequent proposals to amend the Charter by adding protection for private property have not been successful. The Charter does affect property rights in other ways: section 8 protects individuals from unreasonable search and seizure of their property; section 15 guarantees equality before the law and can be used, for example, to challenge land use regulations that discriminate based on religion, mental disability, or other protected categories; and section 26 affirms the existence of pre-Chartercommon law and other rights that existed in Canada. In addition, section 35 of the Constitution Act, 1982protects Aboriginal rights, including land rights, against state interference.
  6. For you http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/m/article/property-law/ for me http://fntc.ca/background-on-the-first-nations-property-ownership-initiative/ ENJOY!
  7. Canada is a giant Rez. You don't have property rights.
  8. How do crooked Chiefs impact Indians who have never set foot on a Rez. Why does everybody think we all live on the Rez? Stereotypes?
  9. Who wants money? Is that what you think this is about? You are a very shallow person.
  10. What's you point? Parliament is for everybody but?
  11. You don't like it when we flex our Rights?
  12. Treaties clearly say it's our land and newcomers are our tennents. What applies to you under the Charter doesn't always apply to me. Provinces are irrelevant to us.
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