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    <title>FWD Article on &amp;quot;The New Land Rush&amp;quot; - Hawaiian Culture and Independence - tribe.net</title>
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      <title>FWD Article on "The New Land Rush"</title>
      <link>http://HawaiiAloha.tribe.net/thread/39405ead-cb94-4f39-97ac-997a60e9103f#25dc9e80-f72d-4d1f-ad11-c79932e5df9e</link>
      <description>This article addresses a little known consequence of global warming. We have to oppose this new use of the "doctrine of discovery." &#xD;
-----&#xD;
&#xD;
The New Land Rush&#xD;
&#xD;
By Robert J. Miller &amp;amp;lt;http://www.alternet.org/authors/8347/&gt; ,&#xD;
TomPaine.com &amp;amp;lt;http://www.tompaine.com/&gt; . Posted May 7, 2007&#xD;
&amp;amp;lt;http://www.alternet.org/ts/archives/?date[F]=05&amp;amp;date[Y]=2007&amp;amp;dat\&#xD;
e[d]=07&amp;amp;act=Go/&gt; .&#xD;
&#xD;
&#xD;
&#xD;
Nations are racing to plant flags and claim the "new world" of&#xD;
islands and sea routes that are emerging as Arctic ice melts.&#xD;
Recent news reports state that global warming and the shrinking&#xD;
Arctic icecaps are opening new sea lanes and making barren&#xD;
islands suddenly very valuable. In fact, the international&#xD;
community might experience a new race of exploration, conquest&#xD;
and acquisition for this "new world" -- these newly available&#xD;
lands and sea routes. Conflicts could arise over shipping lanes,&#xD;
islands, fish stocks, minerals and oil that are now becoming&#xD;
accessible and commercially exploitable.&#xD;
Governments are even now engaged in asserting their sovereignty&#xD;
over these areas and assets. Canada, Denmark and the United&#xD;
States are already involved in diplomatic disputes over these&#xD;
issues. For example, Canada and Denmark have sent diplomats and&#xD;
warships to plant their flags on tiny Hans Island near&#xD;
northwestern Greenland.&#xD;
&#xD;
In 1984, Denmark's Minister for Greenland Affairs landed on the&#xD;
island in a helicopter and raised the Danish flag, buried a&#xD;
bottle of brandy, and left a note that said "Welcome to the&#xD;
Danish Island."&#xD;
&#xD;
Canada was not amused by this assertion of Danish sovereignty. In&#xD;
2005, the Canadian Defense Minister and troops landed on the&#xD;
island and hoisted the Canadian flag. Denmark lodged an official&#xD;
protest. In addition, Canada, Russia and Denmark are claiming&#xD;
waters all the way to the North Pole.&#xD;
&#xD;
Moreover, the United States and Canada are disputing Canadian&#xD;
claims that the emerging Northwest Passage sea route is in its&#xD;
territory. The U.S. insists the waters are neutral and open to&#xD;
all but Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper states that he&#xD;
will place military icebreakers in the area "to assert our&#xD;
sovereignty and take action to protect our territorial&#xD;
integrity."&#xD;
&#xD;
This kind of conduct is nothing new. It mirrors exactly the&#xD;
actions taken by European and American governments in the 15th --&#xD;
20th centuries in their race to claim the lands and the assets of&#xD;
the New World of the Americas, Africa, and other areas.&#xD;
&#xD;
That race was conducted under the international legal principle&#xD;
known today as the Doctrine of Discovery. Under various papal&#xD;
bulls, Spain and Portugal could establish claims to the lands of&#xD;
indigenous, non-Christian, non-European peoples by merely&#xD;
"discovering" the lands.&#xD;
&#xD;
Spanish, Portuguese, and later English and French explorers&#xD;
engaged in numerous types of Discovery rituals upon encountering&#xD;
new lands. The hoisting of their flag and the cross and leaving&#xD;
evidence that they had been there was part of the Discovery&#xD;
process.&#xD;
&#xD;
In 1776-78, for example, Captain Cook established English claims&#xD;
to British Columbia by leaving English coins in buried bottles.&#xD;
In 1774, he erased Spanish marks of ownership and possession in&#xD;
Tahiti and replaced them with English ones. Upon learning of&#xD;
this, Spain dispatched explorers to restore its marks of&#xD;
possession. Furthermore, in 1742-49, French military expeditions&#xD;
buried lead plates throughout the Ohio country to reassert the&#xD;
French claims of discovery dating from 1643. The plates stated&#xD;
that they were "a renewal of possession."&#xD;
&#xD;
Americans also engaged in discovery rituals. The Lewis &amp;amp; Clark&#xD;
expedition marked and branded trees and rocks in the Pacific&#xD;
Northwest to prove the American presence and claim to the region.&#xD;
They also left a memorial or memo at Fort Clatsop in March 1806&#xD;
and gave copies to Indians to deliver to any whites that might&#xD;
arrive to prove the U.S. presence and claim to the Northwest.&#xD;
&#xD;
The memorial stated that its "object" was that "through the&#xD;
medium of some civilized person ... it may be made known to the&#xD;
informed world" that Lewis &amp;amp; Clark had crossed the continent and&#xD;
lived at the mouth of the Columbia River on the Pacific Ocean.&#xD;
This was nothing less than a claim of discovery and possession of&#xD;
the region and a claim of ownership under the Doctrine of&#xD;
Discovery.&#xD;
&#xD;
A decade later, as the U.S. and England argued over the Pacific&#xD;
Northwest and the possession of Fort Astoria at the mouth of the&#xD;
Columbia, Secretary of State John Quincy Adams and President&#xD;
James Monroe took actions based directly upon the principles of&#xD;
Discovery.&#xD;
&#xD;
In 1817, as they despaired that England would voluntarily return&#xD;
Fort Astoria, Adams and Monroe ordered an American diplomat and&#xD;
naval captain to sail to Astoria "to assert the [American] claim&#xD;
of territorial possession at the mouth of Columbia River." Adams&#xD;
wrote that this mission was designed "to resume possession of&#xD;
that post, and in some appropriate manner to reassert the title&#xD;
of the United States."&#xD;
&#xD;
Accordingly, Monroe and Adams ordered the American diplomat John&#xD;
Prevost and Captain James Biddle to sail to the Columbia and to&#xD;
"assert there the claim of sovereignty in the name of ... the&#xD;
United States, by some symbolical or other appropriate mode of&#xD;
setting up a claim of national authority and dominion."&#xD;
&#xD;
The President and Secretary of State were ordering them to engage&#xD;
in Discovery rituals. Prevost and Biddle did as they were&#xD;
ordered. In August 1818, Captain Biddle arrived at the north side&#xD;
of the mouth of the Columbia River and in the presence of Chinook&#xD;
Indians he raised the U.S. flag, turned the soil with a shovel,&#xD;
and nailed up a lead plate that read: "Taken possession of, in&#xD;
the name and on the behalf of the United States by Captain James&#xD;
Biddle." He repeated this Discovery ritual on the south shore of&#xD;
the Columbia and hung up a wooden sign declaring American&#xD;
ownership of the region.&#xD;
&#xD;
John Prevost arrived at Fort Astoria in September 1818 and with&#xD;
the cooperation of the English he proceeded to use Discovery&#xD;
rituals to reclaim the fort for the United States. First, the&#xD;
English flag was lowered and the U.S. flag was hoisted in its&#xD;
place. Then the English troops filed a salute, the American flag&#xD;
was taken down and the Union Jack was returned to its place, and&#xD;
the American diplomat sailed away with his Discovery mission&#xD;
accomplished.&#xD;
&#xD;
In 1823, the United States Supreme Court in Johnson v. M'Intosh&#xD;
declared that the Doctrine of Discovery had been the law on the&#xD;
North American continent since the beginning of European&#xD;
exploration and controlled how Europeans and Americans could&#xD;
claim and acquire land from the Indian nations.&#xD;
&#xD;
Discovery is still the law in the United States today and in the&#xD;
international arena as is well demonstrated by the actions of&#xD;
modern day countries attempting to claim new lands and assets in&#xD;
the Arctic. We appear to be at the start of a new race to&#xD;
establish claims to this "New World" of the Arctic as the icecaps&#xD;
retreat, and it is evident that the rituals and principles of the&#xD;
Doctrine of Discovery provide the legal framework for claims to&#xD;
newly discovered lands and assets.</description>
      <pubDate>Mon, 14 May 2007 20:35:10 GMT</pubDate>
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      <dc:date>2007-05-14T20:35:10Z</dc:date>
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