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This is a response to an email sent to the webmaster from
Pokey from the Rosebud Reservation.
January 25, 2008
Dear Pokey,
Russell Means has asked me to respond to your letter. I
will do my best. Some of the responses, particularly the ones with exclamation
marks, are direct quotes from Russell. I have regrouped some of your points to
address them together.
Best,
Jerry Collette
Interim Attorney General
Provisional Government
> The Lakota leaders rejected the Lakotah Freedom
Delegation's
> proposal. We are NOT part of what Russell Means is trying to do.
>There has been rejection statements in the news
> papers from our leaders.
British colonial government leaders rejected the proposal
by the American colonists to declare their independence. They were not part of
what the signers of the Declaration of Independence were trying to do. There
were rejection statements in the newspapers from the colonial governors
appointed by the Crown.
> Russell Means even read to us a letter of
> rejection form his own tribe.
Russell read the letter from the Indian administrators (who
have the full authority to administer US government Indian policies and nothing
else) because their letter detailed gross treaty violations by the US. These
“leaders” see the same problems as the freedom seekers do, but they still
believe in the treaties. Do they still believe in the Tooth Fairy, too?
>He didn't ask the Lakota people or our leaders about this
before
> he started. It hasn't been brought to our Elders or any other of
> our people beforehand.
In 1974, the first International TREATY Conference at
Wakpala on the Standing Rock Sioux Indian reservation in what is now called
South Dakota was where the Declaration of Continuing Independence was created.
(The full text of the Declaration is available at
http://republicoflakotah.com/docs/declarationofcontinuingindependence.pdf)
The conference was attended by numerous elders. These were not your ordinary
elders; most of them were born to parents who had been born free, they had never
been to schools, and they spoke little of no English.
These elders gave Russell and the younger participants two
mandates. The first mandate was to become recognized by the International
Communities. On September 2007, when the United Nations passed the Declaration
of Indigenous Rights, that mandate was fulfilled. The second mandate is to
return to our original status as free and Independent Nations. On December 17,
2007, the Lakotah Freedom Delegation notified the Department of State of the
United States of America, we are unilaterally withdrawing from all Treaties and
Agreements entered into between the United States of America and Lakotah.
Before going to Washington, Russell traveled all over the
five state area meeting with key people over a seven month period. Russell is
now in his sixty-ninth winter, and has been working on achieving better
conditions for the Indian people for over forty years. He is an elder!
> Smoky and I went to the> meeting in St. Francis and we
left about 3:00 because what he was saying just wouldn't work the way he thinks
it would.
You left before the best part. The closing ceremony was
amazing.
>
Here's some questions you might ask him.
> 1. If we are no longer part of the US how will we support our
> people? We wouldn't be able to get US Grants anymore either. We are
> having a hard enough time now even with the government programs and
> grants! We don't have any kind of industry, all the government
> programs we have now will stop because they are part of the treaties
> and US government.
The US government has done a tremendous job of training
Lakotah people to be dependent. We are now in a transition period, during which
those programs continue while we reestablish our independence. This was done in
the Compacts of Free Association that the US government did when the former
Trust Territories of the Pacific, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, the
Republic of Palau, and the Federated States of Micronesia, reestablished their
sovereignty and freedom.
> 2. Where will our communications systems come from ?
> We don't have any of our own companies.
> 9. Will we have to import all our food and goods which will make
> prices sky rocket way out of our ability to pay ? What will we do if
> companies that have what we need don't want to have anything to do
> with us now that we have our own money system ?
Companies will trade. That is what they do. Prices tend to
be lower in countries with less regulations. For example, identical prescription
drugs are as much as ninety percent cheaper in other countries as they are in
the US. This is because the US has so many laws that the Lakotah people do not
need.
Industry is flocking to invest here since we have
reasserted our sovereignty. Investors like free countries. Their money return is
faster and greater. Check out the investment that happened in the eastern
European countries after they became free from the Soviet Union! Other
countries, like East Timor, etc., have had similar investment booms.
> 3 What kind of money system will we have ? What do we
have to back
> it up with ? No one is going to put their money in our banks, with
> out some kind of interest or returns, and say ok here do what you
> want to with it. Will our money be excepted every place we want to
> spend it ?
We expect that there will be many money systems. Some
people will still use US dollars. We also plan to have our own currency, which
will be backed by gold and silver. We have people from all over the world
interested in this because, unlike the US dollar and all other governments
currencies, ours will be backed by real value, not just printed up whenever the
central bankers decide, like the US dollar, etc.
> 4. How will we defend ourselves ? We don't have any
military in
> place nor weapons of any kind. You know everyone even the US will be
> at war with us trying to over throw our government. If they succeed
> we would really lose everything including the treaties.
> Sure these other countries would bring weapons and someone that knows
> how to use them and help us defend our country, they want a piece of
> the pie too. Who's kidding who here ?
The US is not our enemy, and they have no reason to attack
us. Costa Rica has no military. The US has brainwashed its people that it needs
a global military presence and taxes them like mad to fund it. We will not
follow such a folly.
Everything we are doing is lawful and legal! We are
following US laws and international laws. We will never have to expend anyone
else's money so we can have an army. We do not need one!
> 5. What utilities will we have ? Where will they come
from ? How
> will we pay for it ?
> 6. What do we have as far as postal services?
> 7. Passports, visa's, paying duty ? Mission,S.D. isn't part of the
> Rez. Will we need a passport and visa to go shopping and pay duty on
> the goods we buy there ? Will they accept our form of money and will
> we have to pay extra like Canada and other countries do ? Will we
> have to have a visa to go to Antelope, Winner, Valentine ? We'd have
> to go through Mission to go to these places. Will friends and
> families that don't live here have to go through all this to come
> visit us ? My grand-daughter and great-grand daughter live in
> Mission. We live in Rosebud 10 miles from Mission.
> 10. What about all the medical and other people providing services we
> need that aren't Indian ? Will they have to have passports, visa's
> and work permits ? What about their friends and family that want to
> come visit them from outside of our country but live with in the U S ?
> 11. What would become of all the money that was paid into Social
> Security. I know the SS wouldn't give it all back to the people that
> paid into it all during their working years.
Transitions for all these kinds of things have been done
before elsewhere. There are experts who know how to do this, and they will help
us, too. Already we have doctors, lawyers, engineers of all types, skilled
workers, teachers, etc, etc. etc., emailing us wanting to come to a free
country! When you are truly free, you don't have time to complain!
> 8. Will we still have tribal presidents or will we have
one
> president to run our country like the other countries do ? Would we
> have a president or a dictator ? If we couldn't vote on a president,
> we'd have a dictator wouldn't we.
> 12. What laws will we have ? Who will determine what
they are ? Who
> will enforce them ?
> 13. What foreign policies will we have ? Who will
determined what
> they are ? Will the people have anything to say about it.
We are only the provisional government; we are serving as
midwives for the rebirth of the Lakotah as a free people. The Lakotah people
will decide on their own form of government. Remember, we are not starting from
scratch. Before the white man came, Indians governed themselves freely for
thousands of years. The white man used the Indian model to create the United
States Constitution.
> 14. Exactly where would our country be located ? Would it
be all the
> 5 states or just one ? And which one would it be if it was just one ?
The map you see represents the 1851 treaty boundaries, but
our traditional lands go beyond that. The exact boundaries are yet to be
determined. We are not waiving any claims to our traditional lands.
> 15. No taxes? If we don't have to pay taxes who will pay
for all the
> stuff that the taxes pay for now, like roads, schools, jails, our
> government workers, and all the other things it pays for ? We can't
> spin gold out of straw.
We expect that there will be local taxes, but not national
ones. The local governments will support the national government. We are not
expecting to have huge governments. Free people do not need them. They do not
work, anyway. We have seen that.
> If we was to be part of this he would have to come up
with some
> better ideas on how things was to be done and take it to the people
> and find out if that's what everyone wants.
> 16. Why wasn't this brought to a vote by the people ? No one has the
> right to speak for all of us with out our consent. Even our tribal
> presidents don't have the right to give the ok with out asking us how
> we feel about something like this and giving us a chance to vote on
> it. I am an enrolled member and I'm an Elder but no one said any
> thing to me, the first I heard of this is when someone from Ohio
> asked me about it in an E-Mail. All the Elders I asked about it said
> they didn't hear anything about it either.
We came to a treaty meeting on Rosebud (at St. Francis)
before we went to DC. Then, we had the meeting at Rosebud after we came back,
part of which you even attended. We are having more meetings; we just had one at
Standing Rock last weekend, we are having one at Yankton this weekend, and we
are scheduling one for Rapid City. We will also be posting more info on the
website as things develop.
> Even our tribal President didn't know.
We did not ask the permission of the US authorities
disguised as tribal leaders. They like the existing system. They are in power,
and they get to keep that power by begging to Washington for crumbs for our
people. Then, eighty-three cents of every dollar they get from Washington goes
to administration, and seventeen cents ends up passing through the reservation
briefly on its way back to the white man's corporations.
> Please excuse all the questions but these are all issues
that would
> have to be addressed in a satisfactory way before we would even
> consider being our own separate country in the middle of the U S.
They will all be addressed during the transition period.
The United States has not left yet.
> If
Russell Means really wanted to do something worth while, why don't
> he petition the US Government to honor the treaties instead of
> trying to start a war that every one knows we will lose and our
> country would be taken over with out any treaties or anything else
> and we would be a lot worse off than we are right now.
Russell has been working for over forty years to get the US
to honor its treaties.
There will be no war with the US. Do you really believe
the US people will allow their government to bomb us?
We can count on things getting worse if we continue under US domination.
> Every one here on the Rosebud Reservation tell me Russell
is just
> trying to fill his pockets at the expense of our people.
Out of his concern for his people, Russell is paying a lot
of his own money to do this. However, a rising tide does raise all the ships in
the harbor. With freedom and economic prosperity in Lakotah, we will all do
better. Does anybody expect our situation to improve much under the current
system? You know that everything has gotten worse during your lifetime. Wake up
and smell the coffee!
> Sooner or later every one will know he's just
> making a fool of himself, well if it was just himself I would just
> laugh along with every one else but he's making the Lakotah look
> like fools right along with himself!
Russell admits that he was foolish to believe in the
treaties for as long as he did, but does not fault the Lakotah people who still
believe in them.
> By the way some one needs to teach Russell how to spell
Lakota,
> there's no "h" at the end of Lakota !
You are free to spell it the white man's way if you
prefer.
Mitaku
Oyasin!
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