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Joined 10 months ago
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Cake day: June 5th, 2024

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  • Assuming that whites are entitled to “become” Indigenous through being an ally is incredibly problematic though.

    I mean this gently but I think you need to learn about colonization a lot more broadly. Fanon is a product of his time. I’d encourage you to look at South Africa, India, Zimbabwe, and also pay some attention to contemporary Indigenous activism in settler majority countries where there is often an appetite for separate sovereignty.


  • Thanks for answering but this isn’t very clear.I understand you don’t want co-governance, you want Indigenous Sovereignty - but you also want to get to put limits on that sovereignty.

    to ultimately live side-by-side with indigenous people as equals.

    You seem to want to make Indigenous people give whites and other groups use of the land, water, and other resources.

    But under that plan, Indigenous people would also have to be responsible for hosting them and all the labour of governance. They wouldn’t get to evict them.

    I wonder what your reaction is to any Indigenous people who would be against limitations to their sovereignty.




  • I didn’t think you intended it as such, and am not “accusing” you of anything.

    I was simply making an observational comment about how that word is commonly used in the west. You yourself said it’s not the best word.

    Plenty of vernacular expressions have their roots in racism and other inequality, and are used by media to support heirarchies and disguise inequality.

    It doesn’t hurt to be mindful of that or to question our unwitting reinforcement of these ideas. For example a few years ago we saw UK “expats” voting for brexit to keep out “migrants”. A little more mindfulness might have meant a little less voting for leopards to eat faces.