Things were looking up for Jeff Menard, creator of the �Got Land? Thank an Indian� clothing line. Now hard times are making the Winnipeg man take a hard look at his business plan.
If the Listerine is locked up behind the pharmacists counter and Lysol and vanilla extract have been banned from sale in your town's grocery store then please thank an Indian.
Cash flow has been another problem. Menard has been giving away some of his gear for free and giving people items on credit for later payment. �It�s been hard collecting the cash,� he says.
The equivalent of taking $9 billion in cash, soaking in in kerosene, and burning it in the middle of the street, once a year for the last forty years? Hey, thank the nearest Indian.
"Thanos" said If the Listerine is locked up behind the pharmacists counter and Lysol and vanilla extract have been banned from sale in your town's grocery store then please thank an Indian.
You`re in Brandon? I knew the manager(her husband and I use to go hunting in the Brandon Hills for Chicken and Jumper) of the 10th Street Safeway there from years back. She got shit for doing exactly that. You had to ask for Lysol and mouth wash.
Baby drowned in batch of homebrew as mother slept nearby
CP February 27, 2014
FORT VERMILION, Alta. � Little Lexi Ribbonleg drowned in a batch of homebrew while her mother, who had earlier been seen drinking the alcohol, slept soundly near her in their mobile home in a remote northern Alberta community.
The baby was head down in a crate of the fermented potato-yeast concoction, her legs sticking up in the air.
Details about the 10-month-old�s death last spring near Fox Lake emerged publicly for the first time in court this week.
A document obtained by The Canadian Press says the baby�s 12-year-old brother made the discovery May 29 when he came home from school.
Their mother, Viola Ribbonleg, entered a guilty plea Tuesday to a charge of criminal negligence causing death for failing to provide adequate child care. The 32-year-old woman is to be sentenced in Fort Vermilion court July 15.
Court heard that Ribbonleg�s son saw her and another man drinking brew in the trailer on the night of May 28. The next morning, Ribbonleg was drinking again and her son believed she was drunk. She asked her son to come home at lunch and babysit for the afternoon.
When he returned with two friends, the door was locked, so one of them climbed in through a window.
The boy�s mother was sleeping on the floor. Two men were asleep on one of the couches in the living room.
The boy pulled the baby out of the brew, which was in the crate beside a couch, and then woke up his mother.
The document says Ribbonleg got upset, tried to wake the infant and told her, �I love you.� Clutching her child�s limp body, the woman ran to a nursing station.
As paramedics tried to revive the baby, the mother knelt on the floor, crying. When they declared Lexi dead, Ribbonleg begged staff to do more to save her and hit one of the paramedics on the chest.
She picked up the child and refused to put her down, repeating �dead baby, dead baby� and some words in Cree.
She also tried to breast feed the dead child.
The court document, called an agreed statement of facts, says a nurse noticed Ribbonleg was slurring her words and smelled strongly of homebrew � and that the same smell was coming from the baby�s body.
Ribbonleg denied drinking, but the document says the nurse, Sara Peters, believed the woman was intoxicated and �shouldn�t have been doing any activities that require attention.�
The document says Peters told investigators Ribbonleg refused to let go of Lexi for about three hours, even as the little body turned cold and blue.
The document says the baby�s diaper was dry, but her fingers were wrinkled from being immersed in the alcohol.
The document quotes the nurse as saying Ribbonleg insisted she had been �watching the baby the whole time.�
Ribbonleg �kept looking in Lexi�s mouth and saying that Lexi must have choked on something ... She said she and some other men had been outside the house when this happened to Lexi.�
Medical staff had alerted tribal police and Mounties later joined the investigation.
Fox Lake, a community of about 2,000 along the Slave River, is part of the Little Red River Cree Nation.
The document says an autopsy confirmed the child drowned.
Toxicology tests also showed the homebrew contained about eight per cent ethyl alcohol, slightly higher than in beer.
The person who made the brew told police it was a mix of water, rolled oats, sugar, potatoes and yeast. It had been left to ferment for about a week in a plastic bag inside the crate, typically used to hold milk cartons.
Ribbonleg�s lawyer, Michael Nanooch, refused to comment.
Fucking hell, I was terrified TERRIFIED (and still am to some degree) when my infant son was up and moving around. I had never even thought of drinking around him.
Coming from a colonized group of people that experienced genocide policy myself (more than half of total population exterminated at one point due to military conquer and then artificial hunger), I think North American aboriginals should seriously move on. Seems that they are fixated on the past and it's not healthy. Every ethnic, political, religious etc. group has a suffering past. It's not good to drag it endlessly, you must overcome and come out a winner.
I would never encourage my kids to wear slogans undigging even more recent past. Why? I think this is counter productive and even destructive. NOT for those who "stole" the land and who in reality can't care less, but for those who are still living with this deeply-rooted victim complex... Such thinking only poisons your own self, it doesn't help make the supposedly "guilty party" feel more guilty... This is totally crazy I think and warped. Prove what you're worth by real achievements instead!!!
Whoever support such mindset and behavior, does dubious service to the aboriginal peoples... Healthy pride and preservation of culture, language etc. should be encouraged. Not absolutely silly accusations.
I might not understand something as a superficial observer, but again, many things my people experienced the same way. But time goes on, it must be forgotten. It's 21st century, new life, lots of opportunities everywhere. The whole world is out there. Why keep re-living events of the far, far past, no matter how suffering might they be? I really don't get it.
But I'm sorry if I maybe offend anybody as my opinion is that of an outsider to this issue.
Thank a Nippy.
Got ripped off? Thank an Indian
If the Listerine is locked up behind the pharmacists counter and Lysol and vanilla extract have been banned from sale in your town's grocery store then please thank an Indian.
You`re in Brandon? I knew the manager(her husband and I use to go hunting in the Brandon Hills for Chicken and Jumper) of the 10th Street Safeway there from years back. She got shit for doing exactly that. You had to ask for Lysol and mouth wash.
Baby drowned in batch of homebrew as mother slept nearby
CP February 27, 2014
FORT VERMILION, Alta. � Little Lexi Ribbonleg drowned in a batch of homebrew while her mother, who had earlier been seen drinking the alcohol, slept soundly near her in their mobile home in a remote northern Alberta community.
The baby was head down in a crate of the fermented potato-yeast concoction, her legs sticking up in the air.
Details about the 10-month-old�s death last spring near Fox Lake emerged publicly for the first time in court this week.
A document obtained by The Canadian Press says the baby�s 12-year-old brother made the discovery May 29 when he came home from school.
Their mother, Viola Ribbonleg, entered a guilty plea Tuesday to a charge of criminal negligence causing death for failing to provide adequate child care. The 32-year-old woman is to be sentenced in Fort Vermilion court July 15.
Court heard that Ribbonleg�s son saw her and another man drinking brew in the trailer on the night of May 28. The next morning, Ribbonleg was drinking again and her son believed she was drunk. She asked her son to come home at lunch and babysit for the afternoon.
When he returned with two friends, the door was locked, so one of them climbed in through a window.
The boy�s mother was sleeping on the floor. Two men were asleep on one of the couches in the living room.
The boy pulled the baby out of the brew, which was in the crate beside a couch, and then woke up his mother.
The document says Ribbonleg got upset, tried to wake the infant and told her, �I love you.� Clutching her child�s limp body, the woman ran to a nursing station.
As paramedics tried to revive the baby, the mother knelt on the floor, crying. When they declared Lexi dead, Ribbonleg begged staff to do more to save her and hit one of the paramedics on the chest.
She picked up the child and refused to put her down, repeating �dead baby, dead baby� and some words in Cree.
She also tried to breast feed the dead child.
The court document, called an agreed statement of facts, says a nurse noticed Ribbonleg was slurring her words and smelled strongly of homebrew � and that the same smell was coming from the baby�s body.
Ribbonleg denied drinking, but the document says the nurse, Sara Peters, believed the woman was intoxicated and �shouldn�t have been doing any activities that require attention.�
The document says Peters told investigators Ribbonleg refused to let go of Lexi for about three hours, even as the little body turned cold and blue.
The document says the baby�s diaper was dry, but her fingers were wrinkled from being immersed in the alcohol.
The document quotes the nurse as saying Ribbonleg insisted she had been �watching the baby the whole time.�
Ribbonleg �kept looking in Lexi�s mouth and saying that Lexi must have choked on something ... She said she and some other men had been outside the house when this happened to Lexi.�
Medical staff had alerted tribal police and Mounties later joined the investigation.
Fox Lake, a community of about 2,000 along the Slave River, is part of the Little Red River Cree Nation.
The document says an autopsy confirmed the child drowned.
Toxicology tests also showed the homebrew contained about eight per cent ethyl alcohol, slightly higher than in beer.
The person who made the brew told police it was a mix of water, rolled oats, sugar, potatoes and yeast. It had been left to ferment for about a week in a plastic bag inside the crate, typically used to hold milk cartons.
Ribbonleg�s lawyer, Michael Nanooch, refused to comment.
� By Chris Purdy in Edmonton
I would never encourage my kids to wear slogans undigging even more recent past. Why? I think this is counter productive and even destructive. NOT for those who "stole" the land and who in reality can't care less, but for those who are still living with this deeply-rooted victim complex... Such thinking only poisons your own self, it doesn't help make the supposedly "guilty party" feel more guilty... This is totally crazy I think and warped. Prove what you're worth by real achievements instead!!!
Whoever support such mindset and behavior, does dubious service to the aboriginal peoples... Healthy pride and preservation of culture, language etc. should be encouraged. Not absolutely silly accusations.
I might not understand something as a superficial observer, but again, many things my people experienced the same way. But time goes on, it must be forgotten. It's 21st century, new life, lots of opportunities everywhere. The whole world is out there. Why keep re-living events of the far, far past, no matter how suffering might they be? I really don't get it.
But I'm sorry if I maybe offend anybody as my opinion is that of an outsider to this issue.