Terrill Tailfeathers

527.2K posts

Terrill Tailfeathers banner
Terrill Tailfeathers

Terrill Tailfeathers

@Terrilltf

Blackfoot (Kainai/Siksika) in what is currently known as Canada.

Treaty 7 Territory Katılım Haziran 2009
29.1K Takip Edilen48.9K Takipçiler
Terrill Tailfeathers
Terrill Tailfeathers@Terrilltf·
@BarryESharp Problem is it’s not my nationhood claim. Read the Royal Proclamation, Barry. Until you’ve read it stop wasting our time.
English
1
0
0
17
Barry Sharp
Barry Sharp@BarryESharp·
Post 1. Terrill, your romanticized “nationhood” claim crumbles under basic history, demography, and evidence, not settler myths, but verifiable facts. Indigenous groups in what became Canada were diverse: some semi-sedentary with agriculture and villages, such as Iroquoian peoples, many others mobile hunter-gatherers or seasonal bands across vast territories. They lacked the centralized institutions, written legal codes, standing armies, or sovereign states of European nations. Pre-contact populations were small; estimates for all of North America around 1492 range from 2–18 million total, with Canada’s portion far lower, fragmented by language, inter-tribal warfare, raiding, slavery, and territorial flux. Archaeological and genetic data confirm multiple migration waves into the Americas from Siberia and East Asia over 15,000+ years, with later groups displacing earlier ones. That is migration and conquest, the same as everywhere else on Earth. No group held immutable title from “time immemorial.” Great Britain unified through centuries of Roman, Anglo-Saxon, Viking, Norman, and internal consolidation into a kingdom with parliamentary institutions by the 1700s. Canada’s federation in 1867 built on Crown sovereignty, treaties, and rule of law, not “occupation” of pristine nations but extension of institutions that delivered medicine, markets, property rights, and technology, raising living standards dramatically for everyone, including Indigenous descendants. Life expectancy, literacy, and material conditions soared post-contact despite real tragedies like disease, which devastated all isolated populations, and conflicts. Treaties tell the real story. Numbers 6, 7, and 8, covering much of the Prairies, explicitly state signatories “cede, release, surrender and yield up” rights and titles to the Crown for reserves, annuities, hunting rights, and aid. These were not “nation-to-nation” perpetual veto pacts; they enabled provincial creation on Crown lands outside reserves, about 1.2% in Alberta. Courts and activists twist “duty to consult” such as Haida Nation into de facto vetoes, but it requires good-faith accommodation, not paralysis of democratic debate or $670B+ in stalled resource projects. Modern treaties with finality, extinguishment, fee-simple ownership, and Charter integration, such as Nisga’a and Tsawwassen, deliver jobs, royalties, and prosperity. Grievance models, Indian Act collective title, and UNDRIP-style parallel sovereignty do not. Outcomes expose the failure. Auditor General reports hammer “unsatisfactory progress” despite tens of billions annually via Indigenous Services Canada, including $6.5B+ in recent grants alone. On-reserve employment is about 47% versus about 74% off-reserve and non-Indigenous. Persistent boil-water advisories, housing gaps, and health and education lags remain. Ritual acknowledgments, “knowledge keepers,” and narrative maintenance, including Kamloops GPR anomalies being framed as “mass graves” with zero exhumations years later despite millions paid, change nothing on the ground. Ordinary Indigenous Canadians face the same housing crunch, inflation, and opportunity shortages as everyone else. Parallel systems entrench dependency; individual rights, skills, clear title, and consistent rules lift people. Canada is not “Great Britain occupying others’ lands.” It is a liberal democracy under one Charter, with section 15 equality for all citizens, built on ceded and settled territory with massive ongoing transfers, Impact Benefit Agreements, and shared prosperity potential from resources. Pre-contact Neolithic technology, smaller populations, and inter-tribal realities are not denialism; they are context airbrushed to sustain a multi-billion grievance industry shielded from scrutiny.
English
2
0
0
47
Terrill Tailfeathers
Terrill Tailfeathers@Terrilltf·
You need a common language, culture and land base to be a nation. Canada uses foreign languages, have no culture and they occupy other’s land base. We’ve been nations since before the “Great Britain” even came into being.
Out Of The Blue@plantfreedoms

@Terrilltf The tribes were never ever a nation. Nor a country. Just nomadic warriors who regularly killed and enslaved each other. Also, they came here to Turtle Island from....yup.... Europe and Mongolia. So,"FN" is all bullshit. Manufacturer division for a price.

English
8
15
50
1.1K
Karla Treadway | Host Sovereign Sphere Podcast
Chief Allan Adam is the lead voice of the First Nations coalition that brought the legal challenge that killed the citizen-led Alberta separation petition. He went on CBC to celebrate the ruling. He called it a "great win for Canada and for democracy." But here is what CBC didn't ask him about. Chief Allan receives foreign interference money. The Tides Foundation is a left-wing lobby organization based in San Francisco who wired $55,000 directly to Chief Allan Adam's bank account to oppose the oil sands. Shortly after receiving that money, Adam flew to Toronto to sit on a stage next to Neil Young to publicly demonize Canada's energy industry. CBC themselves reported that various American funders contributed an estimated $40 million to Canadian environmental and Indigenous groups with one specific goal.... to landlock Alberta crude by blocking pipeline construction. Researcher Vivian Krauss attributed the cancellation of Northern Gateway, Energy East, Keystone, and Trans Mountain directly to this coordinated American-funded campaign. Chief Allan Adam was part of that campaign. He gladly took the money. This is real foreign interference in Canada's energy economy. And the same man who took American money to block Canadian prosperity is now the man leading the charge to block Albertans from having a democratic vote on their own future. Meanwhile he REAPS the benefits of tax payer money from the very same industry profits. The Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation's own audited financial statements tell a story that Chief Adam did not mention once during his CBC interview. Combined with existing assets and real estate holdings, the band is sitting on close to $300 million. And the registered population of this band? 1,567 people total. With only 33 people living on reserve. That works out to roughly $9 million per person on reserve and Canadian taxpayers are still sending them $10 million a year plus a $100 million lump sum payout. Meanwhile this reserve has no public accounting of money spent since 2021. That's five years of missing financial disclosures. No accountability. No transparency. And the money keeps flowing. Chief Adam has been doing this for years: 2018 — The National Post reported his complaints were complicating the Liberal review of the Frontier Oil Sands mine. The Alberta government publicly stated his concerns were about money, not environment. 2018 — Despite publicly criticizing fossil fuel developers and hosting anti-oil activists including Leonardo DiCaprio, Adam signed a benefit agreement with Teck after what he described as positive negotiations. His opposition was for sale. 2020 — Adam was stopped by RCMP outside a Fort McMurray casino for an expired license plate, resisted arrest, and publicly accused the officers of "racist" treatment. The RCMP was cleared. No evidence of misconduct was found. Chief Allan Adam did not vote against Alberta separation. He did not organize Albertans to vote against it. He went to court to make sure Albertans never got to vote on it at all. Over 300,000 Albertans signed that petition. They followed the law. They used the exact democratic mechanism the Legislature created for them. And a judge threw every one of those signatures in the garbage. A man taking money from foreign interference organizations who also massively benefits from Alberta prosperity is taking democratic rights away from Albertans. Yet he thinks this is a "win for democracy." Canadians you are being scammed in every way possible.
English
120
1K
2K
50.9K
Terrill Tailfeathers
Terrill Tailfeathers@Terrilltf·
Pay up or pack up, pinky. Land and resources aren’t free.
kab@kab98623152

@Terrilltf Ah, says one who is a member of the continuously grievous bunch with their hand out constantly. I get why you don’t want change - scared the golden goose will go away

English
8
0
24
542
Terrill Tailfeathers retweetledi
K. Tagseth 🇨🇦
K. Tagseth 🇨🇦@ktagseth·
@Terrilltf Selling Canada off one piece at a time. National Parks will be P3s, crown land will go to the highest bidder, and the Dominion of Canada will become the Corporation of Canada with Carney as CEO. Proceeds of sales to Ukraine and Israɛl. Canada needs to remove the #FascistFraud.
English
1
2
9
207
Terrill Tailfeathers
Terrill Tailfeathers@Terrilltf·
Who is Karla Treadway and who is she getting paid by? If anyone knows them personally, has any info on this person or where they’re from let me know. I’m very curious to find out.
Karla Treadway | Host Sovereign Sphere Podcast@thesovereignceo

Chief Allan Adam is the lead voice of the First Nations coalition that brought the legal challenge that killed the citizen-led Alberta separation petition. He went on CBC to celebrate the ruling. He called it a "great win for Canada and for democracy." But here is what CBC didn't ask him about. Chief Allan receives foreign interference money. The Tides Foundation is a left-wing lobby organization based in San Francisco who wired $55,000 directly to Chief Allan Adam's bank account to oppose the oil sands. Shortly after receiving that money, Adam flew to Toronto to sit on a stage next to Neil Young to publicly demonize Canada's energy industry. CBC themselves reported that various American funders contributed an estimated $40 million to Canadian environmental and Indigenous groups with one specific goal.... to landlock Alberta crude by blocking pipeline construction. Researcher Vivian Krauss attributed the cancellation of Northern Gateway, Energy East, Keystone, and Trans Mountain directly to this coordinated American-funded campaign. Chief Allan Adam was part of that campaign. He gladly took the money. This is real foreign interference in Canada's energy economy. And the same man who took American money to block Canadian prosperity is now the man leading the charge to block Albertans from having a democratic vote on their own future. Meanwhile he REAPS the benefits of tax payer money from the very same industry profits. The Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation's own audited financial statements tell a story that Chief Adam did not mention once during his CBC interview. Combined with existing assets and real estate holdings, the band is sitting on close to $300 million. And the registered population of this band? 1,567 people total. With only 33 people living on reserve. That works out to roughly $9 million per person on reserve and Canadian taxpayers are still sending them $10 million a year plus a $100 million lump sum payout. Meanwhile this reserve has no public accounting of money spent since 2021. That's five years of missing financial disclosures. No accountability. No transparency. And the money keeps flowing. Chief Adam has been doing this for years: 2018 — The National Post reported his complaints were complicating the Liberal review of the Frontier Oil Sands mine. The Alberta government publicly stated his concerns were about money, not environment. 2018 — Despite publicly criticizing fossil fuel developers and hosting anti-oil activists including Leonardo DiCaprio, Adam signed a benefit agreement with Teck after what he described as positive negotiations. His opposition was for sale. 2020 — Adam was stopped by RCMP outside a Fort McMurray casino for an expired license plate, resisted arrest, and publicly accused the officers of "racist" treatment. The RCMP was cleared. No evidence of misconduct was found. Chief Allan Adam did not vote against Alberta separation. He did not organize Albertans to vote against it. He went to court to make sure Albertans never got to vote on it at all. Over 300,000 Albertans signed that petition. They followed the law. They used the exact democratic mechanism the Legislature created for them. And a judge threw every one of those signatures in the garbage. A man taking money from foreign interference organizations who also massively benefits from Alberta prosperity is taking democratic rights away from Albertans. Yet he thinks this is a "win for democracy." Canadians you are being scammed in every way possible.

English
7
7
31
2.1K
Terrill Tailfeathers
Terrill Tailfeathers@Terrilltf·
@corruptario Thanks. I’ll do some more digging around too when I get time. Hard for me because I’m not on Meta platforms. Hoping people there can get some info on her. These folks could make things very dangerous for our people.
English
5
0
6
147
marius paul
marius paul@mariuspaul10·
@catamarancommie @Terrilltf @plantfreedoms Some of us retain our ancient languages, and spend a life time transliterating into an alien language, that language which is literally taken for granted as the communicative tool. Indigenous is a step away from pan-Indianism.
English
1
0
1
24
Terrill Tailfeathers
Terrill Tailfeathers@Terrilltf·
This is your regular reminder to keep all Zionists away from your children in Canada. They fully condone the bombing of babies in tents and the rapes of political prisoners including youth and children. They are a threat to your children’s safety wherever they go. Shun them.
English
4
23
97
781
Dusty Rose
Dusty Rose@DustyRoseYYC·
Until twitter I didn't even know I was a racist, misogynist, homophobe, climate-denier. I just thought I wanted lower taxes. #cdnpoli #abpoli
English
187
524
2.2K
0