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Latest post 08-23-2010 10:48 PM by slipstar01. 41 replies.
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01-01-2001 12:00 AM
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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Terrorism towards Native American.
Of all the horror and prejudice that the invading European people have heaped on the Native of America. This is the most degrading of all. To take one more good and honorable right away from the decedents of the Native Americans is despicable. For the Fulton Sheen to have his name on this bill is adding insult to injury. To have a man from Ottawa County to have introduced this bill is disgusting. As one concerned American Citizen do not pass this bill.
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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Tuition Waiver Repeal is not good
Certainly no one can say that Native Americans have suffered throughout the history of this so-called great nation and many are still suffering today. The truth is that this bill would take away one avenue of hope for young people of native american decent. Many native americans, like many other americans, living in extreme poverty. The tuition waiver was passed to help them in some way become educated and make a better life for themselves and for their people. We all deserve to succeed and application of this tuition waiver to native americans may appear unequal. However taking away something that helps a small but historically-battered section of our population and removing the only hope of getting an education is not something that true liberty and justice for all should implicate.
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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Try harder (no actually, please don't)
"historically-battered section of our population and removing"
Pretty poor excuse for more special-interest welfare. You would think that the last century would have given sufficient illustration of the ridiculosity of these scams, but I guess some people will always be greedy pigs.
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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Educate yourself: It's Not Charity
Brief History
In 1976, the Michigan Legislature enacted Public Act 174, "An act to provide free tuition for North American Indians" in public colleges and universities in the State. This legislation is most commonly known as the "Comstock Agreement".
In 1934, former governor, William A. Comstock, petitioned the U.S. Government to establish state responsibility for Indian education in trade for the Mt. Pleasant Indian School, which was to be utilized as a training facility for the developmentally disabled.
In 1976, Public Act 174, was passed by the Michigan House to enact 390.1251 Waiver of Tuition.
http://www.eric.ed.gov/ERICDocs/data/ericdocs2sql/content_storage_01/0000019b/80/16/f5/72.pdf
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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more moronic nativist nitwittery
Read this stupid
Michigan has had responsibilities for educating the state's American Indians since the Comstock Agreement of 1934. A 1976 legislative act and its subsequent revisions provided for state institutions of higher education to grant free tuition to certain American Indians through the Michigan Indian Tuition Waiver (ITW) program. Eligible Indians had to have a certain percentage of Indian blood, meet pre-enrollment residency requirements, and satisfy requirements concerning degree programs and full- or part-time attendance. A 1996 study found that typical ITW recipients were first-generation college students, part-time college students, unmarried females with 2-4 dependents, 30 years old, and not eligible for most other forms of financial aid. Recipients' mean gross annual income was $22,000. Attempts in 1981 and 1994 to repeal the program failed, and in 1995 the legislature continued the program in spite of the governor's objection. In 1996 the legislature eliminated the ITW, but waiver amounts were folded into higher education base per-pupil funding of each state university and college. Continuation of the program thus depended on colleges and universities deciding to allocate state funding to tuition reimbursement. Since ITW grants are no longer a line item, the state cannot determine the amount of ITW revenue each university and community college provides in free tuition. Since 1976, 15,000 Native Americans have enrolled in the program. Twenty years later, approximately 70 percent of those enrolled had completed some sort of certificate or degree.
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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I'm sure Adema could find his cut someplace else.
Pick on someone your own size Adema. Many Native American tribes in Michigan do not even have a federally recognized voice. Fortunately some of the state's laws still hold water and credibility. Or not???? Can't you find your couple mill for gas cuts in someone else's pot? The Native Americans have already paid with their lives and their dignity. Find someone white or rich to take from, at least perhaps that will be a small challenge for you.
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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The Wyandot of Anderdon Nation
P.O. 68
Trenton Michigan
48138
Address to Dave Adgema Represenative Lansing Thursday June 12th 2008 11 :00 am
RE: Michigan Indian Tuition Waiver
You must remember the past to understand why we are here today as many
Michigan Natives have been promised the protection of the law and the benefits and advancements of society as the original inhabitants’ of this land.
Throughout the years since total colonization of the Americas we have been promised and denied, brutalized and forced from our homes, had children forcibly removed from there parents to attend Indian schools where they were beaten and abused for wanting to speak their own language and practice there own culture.
Compensation for these many atrocities came in the form of treaties’ written by white colonists to benefit NOT the natives whom they were supposedly designed for but the hoards of Europeans that flooded into the Ohio/ Michigan territories, starting the forced removal of the native nations by the Indian removal act in 1830 by Andrew Jackson, a radical and spiteful President who sought only a final solutions for the “INDIAN PROBLEM”.
Having been left by our Ancestors to maintain our culture and traditions we seek only what we have been promised since the inception of European cultural domination in this land, a free legal education and the right to practice our spirituality and culture without interference as the original people that lived here for literally centuries before the eradication and division of this continent occurred with the arrival of slave capturing groups to exploit the Americas.
As you may well be aware today advancement and fulfillment cannot be found in entry level positions to meet the requirements’ of the “American Dream”, We ask that you not punish us further by the denial of constitution driven rights by the founding fathers of this country, that you consider in the acts of the oppressive nature of this legislation you are considering in denying the facts stated above.
Pg 1
The Wyandot of Anderdon Nation membership is not supported by casino revenues, we are struggling to meet the requirements’ of petitioning the Federal Government for our rights as the original inhabitants of this land, there are no external sources’ for us to rely on for the thousands of dollars we will need to obtain legal help to peruse CFR 25, we rely on are own ability and our membership to pull us through with higher education to help us along this path
If any group of people deserves this right it is Native Americans across this land for the sacrifice of being a displaced people in there own homeland. The Wyandot People have done what asked long before the final solution of removal, we tilled our land settled our farms and grew fruit and vegetables’ and founded community, but alas none of it was good enough to satisfy the European greed that disassociated us from our homes by warfare and oppression in 1812 and 1843.
Today we will always be there to cry foul when we come under attack once again for the principals’ promised over and over for a better life by the sacrifice of our ancestors and the outright fraud that removed a way of peaceful coexistence for all Native Americans .
We will work together today in hopes of a equitable stance that favors the sacrifice of Native Americans, we hope to enlighten you that we deserve this higher education to preserve our cultural and tradition to enhance society today by honoring the past and remembering why this all came to be.
Please do not take what little has been left to a people that sacrificed all of there existence and territory for what has become Michigan today, it will only separate us in ideology further and mount more distrust of a political system gone astray from the original principals set to compensate a people for a sacrifice no group on the face of this Earth would willingly make today.
Sincerely
Tribal Chief / CEO
The Wyandot of Anderdon Nation
Taywanoka (Flying Arrow)
Steve A. Gronda
CC: Anderdon Council / Files
PG 2
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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Chief Flying Arrow misses target
I do not begrudge any individual- Native, African or European American, seeking to improve themselve through higher education. The free tuition program for Native Americans is, on the face of it, a noble and worthy endeavor. However, I wonder what the graduation rate is for this program. Are the participants making progress towards their degree, or merely taking up space because it is their "right" to do so? I am sure the State of Michigan has statistics which would show the effacacy of the program. How about the Wyandot nation? Surely, the Chief has statistics proving the worth of the program for his people. Give us some anecdotal information, at least. Local squaw makes good in nursing program. Noble warrior excels in business school. Something that show that the program is working.
With regard to his bitterness towards European Americans, the Chief would do well to remember that the "invading hoards of Europeans" who settled Michigan were often the refugees of war, genocide, and hunger in their own lands. This attitude that the aggrieved Native Americans are forever to be coddled is nonsense. People of varied cultures and backgrounds have succeeded in America, without such programs, but through their own industriousness. Is their an unaddressed achievement gap for Native Americans? The overall tone of the Chief suggests a sad retrospective attitude, not looking to the future. Even your name, "Flying Arrow," suggests an antiquated technology. I
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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Tuition waiver, by M. Gape
In regards to your comments about Chief "Flying Arrow", that is exactly what a great leader should be named. He has led us in the right and proper path. As far as what do we native americans become, or do we just take up space in education, I would like to let you know that many of us have become great teachers. In life, everyone needs a great teacher to get them through and inspire them. This is just what our Chief has done. Tuition waivers for native american's are much needed and well deserved by our people.
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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The comment posted by the person saying that the Europeans that came here overcame their own hardships - really needs to take a history lesson. Native Americans haven't had the same opportunities that the Europeans or other immigrants have been afforded. The military forced them from their land. The government put them on reservations. The government tried to shut them up, take away their beliefs, and keep them separate by trying to keep them on the reservation, forbidding them to speak their language, practice their religion and other cultural practices, and keep them poor. They promised much but delivered little!
What immigrant can say that when they came to America, they were told they must live in a certain area, not speak their language, not practice their religious beliefs and should keep their children in certain schools?
American Indians are not coddled. They are hardworking, loyal citizens, who vote and love their country! A treaty should be upheld no matter the voice of oppressors.
Also for your information, my daughters' (or as your rasist remarks called them squaws) - graduated as a doctor, nurse, and an International business major! They did not take up space - they set out to help others and to serve their communities!
The rest of the Native American's in this great Nation deserve the same opportunities for all that was taken away from us!
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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remember the phrase "don't be an Indian giver"
That phrase stems from the white man giving to the Indian, only to take back the gift when it suited him to do so. This happened countless times, in land (which ironically the Indian already owned), in material gifts, and in promises. Seems that history is again repeating itself.
However, now I say that we need a recall started for our new "indian giver."
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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chief needs to aim better
History is full of sad stories: granted, the native american experience is especially poignant, but not entirely unique. When the Irish immigrated to America, they were forced to live in designated ghetto neighborhoods, their churches were often burned, and job opportunities were limited to the most menial labor.
With regard to the tuition program, your anecdotal story regarding native american success is a start. I still maintain that the Chief would be wise to provide statistical proof of the program's success, instead of emotional rips at antebellum presidents like ole Andy Jackson.
Don't go on the warpath with my squaw comment; just having a little fun. Ooops, there I go again... wasn't this an episode of Seinfeld? You probably didn't like that either.
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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Conservatives more honest than liberals
Commentary - Peter Schweizer: Conservatives more honest than liberals?
The headline may seem like a trick question — even a dangerous one — to ask during an election year. Yet there is a striking gap between the manner in which liberals and conservatives address the issue of honesty.
Consider these results:
Is it OK to cheat on your taxes? A total of 57 percent of those who described themselves as “very liberal” said yes in response to the World Values Survey, compared with only 20 percent of those who are “very conservative.” When Pew Research asked whether it was “morally wrong” to cheat Uncle Sam, 86 percent of conservatives agreed, compared with only 68 percent of liberals.
Ponder this scenario, offered by the National Cultural Values Survey: “You lose your job. Your friend’s company is looking for someone to do temporary work. They are willing to pay the person in cash to avoid taxes and allow the person to still collect unemployment. What would you do?”
Almost half, or 49 percent, of self-described progressives would go along with the scheme, but only 21 percent of conservatives said they would.
When the World Values Survey asked a similar question, the results were largely the same: Those who were very liberal were much more likely to say it was all right to get welfare benefits you didn’t deserve.
The World Values Survey found that those on the left were also much more likely to say it is OK to buy goods that you know are stolen.
Another survey by Barna Research found that political liberals were two and a half times more likely to say that they illegally download or trade music for free on the Internet.
A study in the Journal of Business Ethics involving 392 college students found that stronger beliefs toward “conservatism” translated into “higher levels of ethical values.” And academics concluded in the Journal of Psychology that there was a link between “political liberalism” and “lying in your own self-interest,” based on a study involving 156 adults.
Liberals were more willing to “let others take the blame” for their own ethical lapses, “copy a published article” and pass it off as their own, and were more accepting of “cheating on an exam,” according to still another study in the Journal of Business Ethics.
Modern liberalism is infused with idea that truth is relative. Surveys consistently show this. And if truth is relative, it also must follow that honesty is subjective.
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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Members do graduate from college....
We are proud members of the Wyandot of Anderdon and are behind our Chief Steven Gronda 100%.
He is a great and wise man with much to offer.
Our daughter Stephanie is going to graduate from Wayne State University this year into broadcast journalism.
Our son is in his second year at WSU also and will graduate in the coming years.
Our oldest son is currently serving America in the US ARMY and just returned from a tour of duty in IRAQ. He returned home a decorated veteran with a Bronze Star on his chest.
Without the tuition waiver 2 of our children may have never seen a university, we are very grateful for the chance to have our children go to college and receive higher education here in Michigan.
Many Thanks to the state of Michigan, many more to our chief Steven Gronda.
C.Stoddart
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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Response to "Given Enough"
American Indians have Sovereignty (Education included- Indian Self-Determination & Education Assistance Act of 1975) based on: what they have retained-not what has been "given". Nothing has been given to A.I. by the states or the federal government. Read a history book, might I suggest: "A People's History of the United States by: Howard Zinn. It would be a good place to start to educate yourself about a people that are the original, authentic first people of America. You belive too many myths and per-cap casino stories.
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