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A Revolutionary Remembrance, My first protest, fifty years ago today

It happened on Bastille Day, naturally.

Forgotten History, this could be the fate of our movement, and me, if things continue as they are

Jaxon’s photograph, with his library now taking up a good part of a city block, ran as a human-interest story in the New York dailies. But little was said about how the disheveled old man was once the voice of settler protest in the Saskatchewan country in the 1880's and worked closely with the insurrectionist Métis leader Louis Riel during the Red River Rebellion.

Jaxon was born William Henry Jackson in Toronto in 1861. Educated in Classics at the University of Toronto, he moved with his family to Prince Albert, then part of the North-West Territories, in 1882.

A Proclamation from the Elders

Read by Clan Mother Katie Stoqua of the Huron Nation

WHY SWEAR ALLEGIANCE TO THIS IDIOT?

“King” Charlie the Brainless makes $54.2 million a year for doing nothing.

King Charles named by insider as instigator of kill order against Canadian aboriginal man

Breaking Global Media Release

Issued by the International Common Law Court of Justice (ICLCJ)