An Inevitable Decision

Ari L. NoonanNewsLeave a Comment

Rusty and Summer Page. Still from YouTube Video, KHTS Radio

Re: “Indian Revenge Still Stings” 

The Indian Child Welfare Act is a federal law that seeks to keep American Indian children with American Indian families. Congress passed the law in 1978 in response to the alarmingly high number of Indian children being removed from their homes by both public and private agencies. The intent of Congress was to “protect the best interests of Indian children and to promote the stability and security of Indian tribes and families/” The Welfare Act sets federal requirements that apply to state child custody proceedings involving an Indian child who is a member of or eligible for membership in a federally recognized tribe.

This week’s refusal by the left-wing state Supreme Court to hear the case of a 6-year-old “Indian” foster daughter snatched from her home and placed with shoestring relatives far away was as predictable as it was tragic.

Family values routinely clash with the values of liberals. The left would rather save the world than save a family.

This is the story of a Santa Clarita couple, Summer and Rusty Page. The parents of  three children of their own, they welcomed a 2-year-old foster daughter, Lexi, into their home four years ago.

Besides having been born to disgusting parents incapable of raising her, Lexi’s criminal father turns out to have had an incredibly distant Choctaw Indian relative.

Lexi is 1/64th Choctaw, and as you can see from the note at the beginning, Lexi cannot be raised with a loving family. By law, she must be raised with “her own kind” – a phrase that liberals correctly and vociferously have protested for decades.

Here is the overt racism that liberals profess to detest.

One-sixty-fourth? Sounds like the punch line in a nightclub act.

When black children are adopted into white families, we don’t hear objections because they would rightly be branded as racist.

How is the Page case different?

The Pages say they may take their case to the U.S. Supreme Court.

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