In 2014 I rescued a parcel on the #Klamath River from one of those eBay auctioneers. I paid taxes on it dutifully. In 2020, I gave #LandBack directly to the tribes, and after much work and editing on the OFFICIAL DEED, it was finalized and recorded at the County.
While this was all going on, I was being harassed and sued by a low-level HOA (HOA as in Home Owners Association -- ¨Oregon Shores Recreational Club -- and its variations are noted on the deed¨).
OSRC Inc is sneering white supremacists whose financial statements showed they were fat, ugly, oozing with too much money already.
¨And they were stupid enough to have attacked me? HA!¨
💥 🌩️ 🌩️ 🌩️ 💥
Ooooh, they lost more than easy money-making scheme from messing with this Native American.
All this other stuff going on, and reading this today, I know the work was worth it! All this to show that not all government employees are like the sneering white supremacists that sued me.
BE CAREFUL WITH YOUR BIASES; YOU ARE ON NATIVE LAND.
INDIGENOUS PEOPLES ARE ALWAYS WORKING FOR SOMETHING OTHER THAN MONEY
#Salmon #Restoration
#Native #Indigenous
https://apnews.com/article/klamath-dam-removal-salmon-spawning-4240169b4bfa327a6a67383ab536e971
Salmon return to lay eggs in historic habitat after dam removal
Less than a month after four towering dams on the Klamath River were demolished, hundreds of salmon made it into waters they have been cut off from for decades to spawn in cool creeks. Video showing Chinook salmon in two Klamath tributaries between the former Iron Gate and Copco dams offers a hopeful sign for the newly freed waterway near the California-Oregon border. A female salmon can be seen digging a nest. In another moment, males jockey for a good position to fertilize eggs. They are in historic habitat that wasn't accessible before the largest dam removal project in U.S. history.