Home
Refresh   Tag(s): ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;
Add to My Group
April 13, 2008 at 19:14:09

View Ratings | Rate It

An Annual Big Lie

by David Cornsilk (Posted by John Cornsilk)     Page 1 of 2 page(s)

www.opednews.com

 
Tell A Friend

CNO Sesquicentennial celebration is an absolute lie.

True this is the esquicentennial date of the Cherokee nation from the advent of the 1839 Constitution of the Cherokee Nation which this LIE makes a total mockery of, by an entity usurping the Sovereign rights of the Cherokee People, and was only established by Ross Swimmer in 1975, the "Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma" (CNO)

Part -1
If you read the press releases regarding the upcoming Cherokee Nation Holiday with any understanding of what they are saying, you the reader will learn the truth. They cannot celebrate the 1906 Five Civilized Tribes Act without actually telling the truth about what it means.

The reader should note that the CNO admits three basic facts in each of their press releases which provide proof positive that the constitutional government of the Cherokee people created in 1839 continued on after Oklahoma statehood. And if the reader can achieve this understanding, then the logical question then becomes, "By what authority did Ross Swimmer create a new constitution?"

And if the answer to that question is, as I contend, he had no authority, then the government he created is not the Cherokee Nation, as yet still continued in "full force and effect" as it existed in 1906.



1. CNO makes it clear that the government of the Cherokee people, styled The Cherokee Nation, was created by the Constitution of 1839, and;

2. CNO makes it clear that the constitutional government of the Cherokee Nation was continued in full force and effect by the 1906 Five Civilized Tribes Act, and;

3. CNO makes it clear that the Cherokee National Holiday, begun in 1953, was developed to celebrate the signing of the 1839 Constitution.

If the 1906 Five Civilized Tribes Act continued the "constitutional governments" of the Five Civilized Tribes, then where did those governments go? Three of those tribes, the Creeks, Choctaws and Chickasaws, operate under revised constitutions in accordance with the Oklahoma Indian Welfare Act. The Seminole Nation and Cherokee Nation did not, and under the same disabilities imposed by the Curtis Act (no courts, laws unenforceable), Five Tribes Act (government continues on, President to appoint Principal Chief) and the Principal Chiefs Act (Cherokee people get to popularly select Principal Chief, who is authorized to 'promulgate rules').

We saw from the previous article by Mildred Mellowbug in 1973, posted by Marvin Summerfield, that the Cherokee people were in the process of revising the 1839 Constitution to create a real representative government, when that process was hijacked by Ross O. Swimmer when he created the organization known as the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma by ignoring the Cherokee people's revisions and created his own constitution of 1975.

He claimed, as has every chief since him, that the authority to create this constitutional government is derived from the 1970 Principal Chiefs Act. Yet, any reasonably intelligent reader can simply look at the wording of that act, which provides for the Principal Chief to "promulgate rules" for an election and nothing more, and ascertain that Swimmer had no authority to create a new constitution.

These are not revelations unknown to the leadership of the CNO. The evidence of their efforts to cover up and validate the CNO government is evident in the language inserted into the Delaware Recognition Bill which states that the United States recognize the CNO and its 1975/99 constitution as the only valid governing document.

I have said this before and offer it again: if the CNO is the legitimate government of the Cherokee Nation, then why would such language be necessary? The traditional language in most bills proposed to Congress merely state that the tribe, "from time immemorial" and does not seek to have Congress, in a sideways manner, give some kind of left handed recognition to a government that supposedly is already recognized.


Part-2
The Cherokee Nation was organized as a government under the terms of the 1839 Constitution by a delegation of the inherent sovereign authority of the Cherokee people to govern themselves. That right has been reaffirmed time and again by the courts and Congress.

The U.S. Congress restricted the sovereign authority of the Cherokee people's government in 1898 by passing the Curtis Act, which stripped the Cherokee government of its courts and made its laws unenforceable in the state and federal courts.

Following major efforts on the part of Congress to dismantle the Cherokee Nation, a bill was passed in 1906 continuing the Cherokee Nation "in full force and effect" according to law, but completely removed the legislative branch and took democracy away from the Cherokee people by providing that the principal chief would be appointed by the President.

Thus, we have a tribal government, continuing in full force and effect, but restricted according to law. In other words, the 1839 Constitution, which had created the Cherokee Nation was recognized and continued. The 1898 Curtis Act was recognized as controlling and diminishing the sovereign authority of the tribe by abolishing its courts. The citizenship of the Cherokee Nation was "frozen" by Congress when it closed the Dawes Rolls, providing that the individuals born to Dawes enrollees were merely descendants, but not citizens. The only citizens of the Cherokee Nation are those persons listed upon the Dawes Commission Rolls, and their numbers are few, as those yet living would be 100 years old or older.

Next Page  1  |  2

 

The views expressed in this article are the sole responsibility of the author
and do not necessarily reflect those of this website or its editors.

Contact Editor

 

Book Recommendations for "Cherokee Delaware"
The Delaware
by Toni Jollay Prevost

$299.99

Number of pages: 123
Publisher: Heritage Books

Delaware Tribe in a Cherokee Nation
by Brice Obermeyer

$45.00
Lowest New Price $40.46

Number of pages: 352
Publisher: University of Nebraska Press

Muskogee and northeastern Oklahoma,: Including the counties of Muskogee, McIntosh, Wagoner, Cherokee, Sequoyah, Adair, Delaware, Mayes, Rogers, Washington, Nowata, Craig, and Ottawa
by John Downing Benedict

$1,528.18

Number of pages:
Publisher: S.J. Clarke Pub. Co

Allotment of Land to Delaware Indians. ... Letter from the Secretary of the Interior ... relative to the allotment of lands in the Cherokee Nation to the Delaware Indians.
by Delaware Indians.


Number of pages:
Publisher: Washington: GPO,

View All Book Recommendations

Share this page: (what's this?)                   Tell a Friend: Tell A Friend

FACEBOOK      DIGG THIS      Add This Page to Mr Wong!           NEWSVINE      DEl.ICIO.US      Looksmart Furl      NETSCAPE      My Web      Tag!RawSugar      Blink List     (More...)
Comments: Expand   Shrink   Hide  
No comments

 
Want to post your own comment on this Article? Post Comment


 

Most Popular Articles
in the Last 2 Days
(by Recommend Emails)

Tampa, FL - UnitedHealth to Enter Funeral Parlor Industry by James Dunham

Rothschild's Federal Reserve Must Be Abolished by Allen L Roland

Photo Essay: Thoughts for the Fourth of July: Talking the Talk and Walking the Walk for Peace by Mac McKinney

Israeli Embassy Correspondence Concerning Spirit of Humanity Capture Clarifies Centuries of Conflict by Meryl Ann Butler

Health Insurance Exec Whistleblower Wendell Potter Testifies Before Congress by Wendell Potter

Did Obama Appoint People With Track Record of Making Right Decisions? by Ralph Nader

The true face of politics as 467,000 jobs were shed by Mary MacElveen

Obama Has No Legal Authority For Afghan War by Sherwood Ross

Torture on the 4th of July by Lawrence Gist

Hypocritical Repugnicans Owe WJ Clinton an Apology by David Gray

Go To Top 50 Most Popular

 

Tell a Friend: Tell A Friend

Copyright © 2002-2009, OpEdNews

Powered by Populum