Six Miles Deep

Roads as Trespass

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Roads as trespass flips the usual assumption that roads are inherently public and legitimate. In ordinary Canadian thinking, if there is a paved road with lines and signs, it is simply part of the public highway system; the only question is how to obey the rules while you drive on it. On Haldimand lands, the deeper question is: who had the right to put that road there in the first place?

The doctrine of dedication says that, for land to become a public road, someone with legitimate title has to intend to dedicate it to public use, and the public has to accept that dedication. If the underlying territory was already promised as a refuge for Mohawk posterity “forever,” and if no one representing that posterity lawfully consented to carve out road allowances, then many of the “public” roads cutting across Six Miles Deep are, in principle, long strips of unauthorized occupation.

This doesn’t mean people should suddenly barricade every highway. It means that every time a road is used to justify police incursions, tax enforcement, or development (“it’s already serviced; it’s already connected!”), the question of original consent has to come back onto the table.

In the Six Miles Deep lexicon, “roads as trespass” is shorthand for seeing the transportation grid not as neutral infrastructure, but as one of the main tools that sliced up a promised refuge without Mohawk permission.

232 words

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About Benjamin Doolittle U.E.

listen to BLOODLINE

“Bloodline” follows the Haldimand Proclamation from its original promise to the present fight to have it honoured. The track moves through Crown grants, broken commitments, and the legal and political road back to enforcement, asking listeners to hear the Proclamation not as a relic of the past, but as a living obligation that still binds the Crown to the Mohawk Nation of Grand River.

Artist: One Way Current
Writer: Benjamin Doolittle UE
Producer: One Way Current
Publisher: Corn Press Publications
Affiliation: Six Miles Deep / Mohawk Nation of Grand River

Six Miles Deep