Reflections on Vancouver, British Columbia and other topics, related or not
B.C. has given B.C. away
And Canada has given natives
the power to shut down Canada
Greg Klein | April 25, 2026
Lengthy occupations and blockades are easily conducted
by people largely exempt from the Criminal Code and
often free of time-consuming inconveniences like work.
Any attempt to withdraw or amend DRIPA “will be met with collective resistance from First Nations and allies across the province.”
—A statement to B.C. MLAs from the First Nations Leadership Council, the First Nations Summit, the Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs and the B.C. Assembly of First Nations.
“There is no vitriol that anybody can bring against anybody else in this country that is the equivalent of the vitriol that First Nations can bring to anybody who stands up to them.”
—Geoffrey Moyse, a former B.C. government advisor and a lawyer with over 30 years’ experience specializing in aboriginal law, constitutional law and public law.
“Aboriginal leaders are pandered to constantly and never challenged, so they become more and more unhinged as time goes on.”
—Political scientist Frances Widdowson commenting on Chief Charlene Belleau’s call for Widdowson to be beaten and raped.
“Systemic racism,” “anti-Indigenous racism and harm,” “violence and racism,” “the result of systemic anti-Indigenous racism and … nothing short of a human rights violation.”
—The B.C. Association of Aboriginal Friendship Centres, the First Nations Summit, the Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs and the B.C. Assembly of First Nations complaining about a locked washroom.
Anyone could have predicted B.C.’s Great Giveaway. Here’s one such example, although 15 years ago it failed to foresee anything like David Eby’s political contortions. Vacillating, floundering, flipping and flopping, B.C.’s premier has nevertheless succeeded in taking the social revolution to new heights, even greater than his steadfast insistence on gender-bending procedures for children and his world-leading encouragement of drug addiction. By effectively granting all of B.C. territory, resources and legislative powers to Canada’s most pathetic special needs ethnic group he’s destroyed democracy, the rule of law, the economy and—the ultimate goal—normality.
Neither B.C.’s DRIPA legislation nor the recent flurry of treaty giveaways can be repealed or even reformed. Any attempt would face “collective resistance from First Nations and allies across the province.”
A disaster of Trudeauvian magnitude, David Eby
currently represents the peak of Western elite madness.
Several B.C. media outlets reported the threat without asking what it would entail. But the ultimatum came from groups that have already proven themselves ruthless in their over-empowered malevolence. As for their “allies,” they’re non-native, mostly white.
They include Antifa-types, but who needs them when societal destruction is such a conventionally mainstream enthusiasm?
Said to influence Eby is Snuneymuxw lawyer Doug White. But do
his abilities go beyond simplistic ethnic demands? His work on Nanaimo
city council suggested otherwise, especially in his support for chief administrative
officer/DEI wackjob Tracy Samra (aka Tracy Fleck). White led the B.C. First
Nations Justice Council, a confused, incompetent group that fails to
take up legitimate issues involving police and natives.
Ottawa has long been a social revolutionary force, at least against Anglo Canada. Academia and the rest of the educational establishment, the judiciary and the rest of the legal establishment, news and entertainment media, every other institution, corporation, business, sports team, cultural venue, social club and men’s knitting circle that pushed or complied with “reconciliation,” “genocide” and the mass graves hoax stand resolute in their support for Canada’s most powerful ethnic group.
That’s the basis of native power—not native achievement but non-native benevolence.
With that in mind, here’s a re-post from December commenting on the otherwise incomprehensible gap between native ability and native power, and how native power might be manipulated by non-natives intent on destroying normality:
How many native leaders show even average intelligence? Which ones are they? What does it take to get along with native leaders?
It’s worth noting that Canada’s most powerful ethnic group was a passive recipient of its power. Notwithstanding two generations of “lawyers” churned out by dumbed-down native-only university programs, aboriginals played little or no role in the declarations, rulings, policies and laws issued by the UN, parliament, legislatures and courts. UNDRIP, the “genocide” declaration and DRIPA, aboriginal title and aboriginal sovereignty, resources control and the native veto, Gladue, the entitlements, sinecures, money and all the rest owe their existence to non-natives, mostly whites.
It even took a white junior academic to proclaim the facile lie that triggered the unmarked/hidden/mass graves hysteria that continues to expand and intensify native power.
This is speculative: That turmoil might have been planned and orchestrated by a coterie of well-organized, well-connected non-natives who learned from a similarly orchestrated uproar following the Minneapolis martyrdom. Otherwise there’s something uncanny about the rapid, extreme, society-wide upheaval in either instance, not to mention both cases.
With relative immunity from criminal law, natives
need very few people to block a highway. Backed by
well-organized advisors, they could shut down the country.
Should such a coterie exist, it might take advantage of natives’ near-immunity to criminal law, along with extensive national and international media sympathy. Instead of an indolent roadblock here and a slothful blockade there, a well-organized campaign could shut down Canada.
Highly speculative indeed. But the response might be alarming if premier David Eby tries—or even pretends to try—to claw back what he’s given away.
And in a final note, the country’s overall response to the reconciliation con leads to one more racially charged question: Can’t white Canadians function better than this?
An April update regarding B.C. public awareness about B.C. issues: Twice recently I’ve greeted acquaintances with “Hi, how’s it going?” only to hear miserable griping about Trump.



