24 October 2004

More Schwarzenegger Sh*t...



O.K. Arnie, just put down the crack pipe and back slowly away...

Before you try to tell California's First People what to do, please learn the proper pronounciation of the state you've been charged to lead!

--ryan


Schwarzenegger Defiant in Indian Casino Fight
 
Fri. Oct 22, 2004
 
By Dan Whitcomb
 
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, under fire from American Indians for telling voters that tribes were "ripping off" the state with their casinos, refused on Friday to back down.
 
Schwarzenegger has invoked the "rip off" theme as he campaigns against a Nov. 2 ballot measure, called Proposition 70, that would permit rapid expansion of Indian casinos in California and side-step the governor's effort to manage them.
 
"Read my lips: The Indian gaming tribes behind Proposition 70 are trying to rip off California. I will say it again and again and again," a defiant Schwarzenegger said in Los Angeles. "That's why they are upset. Because the truth hurts."
 
Supporters of Proposition 70, which is funded largely by Indian gaming
tribes, responded by calling Schwarzenegger's position racist.
 
"The governor's repeated use of racial remarks against Native Americans is wrong and only increases racial tensions in California," the Yes on 70 campaign said in a written statement. "Schwarzenegger says he can bring Indian tribes to the table, but with his racial remarks he's just pushing them away."
 
Earlier this week, a lobbying group for Indian gaming tribes demanded an apology from Schwarzenegger, saying that they share revenue with non-gaming tribes, donate money to charity and provide local governments with money for road improvements and public services.
 
Some Indian activists called the remark racist, saying that it taps into a
deep vein of hostility that dates back to the migration to the U.S. West.
 
Indian casinos have become more numerous in the United States since key court rulings and new laws favorable to the tribes in the 1980s. That expansion has helped some tribes rise from poverty, but it also triggered a backlash.
 
Schwarzenegger made casino payments to the state an issue in his run for governor last year, saying tribes were not paying their fair share.
 
Schwarzenegger earlier this year struck a deal with five tribes to guarantee payments by Indians, who have a monopoly on slot machines. Proposition 70 would nullify that deal and set the payments at the corporate rate of 8.84 percent.
 
It also would allow tribes to sign contracts with the state to operate as many slot machines as they want on their land and introduce roulette and craps, which are now banned in California.
 
 

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