Weekly Opinion Editorial
ANIMAL FARM
by Steve Fair
Last week, the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals reversed a
federal district ruling on whether the City of Tulsa has jurisdiction over Native
Americans. Justin Hooper got a speeding
ticket five years ago in Tulsa. He pled
guilty and paid his fine. Two years
later, Hooper, who is a member of the Choctaw tribe, filed for postconviction
relief citing the McGirt decision. The Tulsa
municipal court threw out the case, as did the federal district court. Hooper appealed to the appellate 10th
circuit court and they agreed the Indian reservations of the five civilized
tribes remains intact and the members of the tribes are under no obligation to
submit or obey municipal or state law.
Alicia Stroble is a member of the Creek nation. In 2022, Stroble sued the Oklahoma Tax
Commission (OTC) contending that she did not have to pay state income taxes
because she wasn’t subject the laws of the state of Oklahoma. An OTC administrative judge agreed with her,
but the OTC board members reversed the ruling.
The case is now in front of the Oklahoma Supreme Court, a body more
unstable and unpredictable than water. Who
knows how they will rule.
When the McGirt decision was rendered by the Supreme Court of the United
States (SCOTUS), the disestablishment of the reservations was cited as the primary
issue. McGirt was thought to apply only
to criminal law, but the 10th Circuit decision in the Hooper case
indicates the reestablishing of the reservations has more than criminal law
implications. Two observations:
First, tribal members in Oklahoma should be subject the same laws as
non-tribal members. Since statehood,
that has been the case. McGirt changed
that. Now the Hooper ruling says non-tribal
members in the eastern half of the state have to drive the speed limit, but
tribal members can ignore it. That’s unfair and crazy! If Stroble is successful, she will not pay
taxes, but non-tribal members will have to.
That is asinine! There can’t be
two sets of rules in the state. That
will divide and ultimately destroy the state.
Governor Kevin Stitt said regarding the Stroble suit: “I will always
fight for fairness, and it is just preposterous to believe that in this
scenario a single mom of a different race would have to pay taxes, but I as
governor(Stitt is Cherokee), wouldn’t because of my native heritage. The reality is we all drive on the same roads,
send our kids to the same schools- we should all play by the same set of rules
regardless of race.”
Tribal leadership appears to want to divide Oklahoma. For over 100 years, the tribes and the state
co-existed and cooperated, but now it appears tribal want preferential
treatment for their citizens. The Hooper
opinion by the 10th circuit sent the message tribal members are like
Post cereal- just a little bit better than other Oklahomans.
Second, the Hooper decision was based on race. Ironically, the Hooper decision came the same
week the SCOTUS struck down Affirmative Action and ruled college entrance could
not be based on race. Sara Hill, the
Attorney General for the Cherokee nation, said, “A lot of people make the
mistake this (the Hooper decision) was about race when its really about being a
citizen of a government and who has authority over you.” But Hill is wrong. The determination of tribal citizenship is
based on race, so how is the ruling not related to race?
George Orwell’s novel, Animal Farm, tells the story of a group of farm animals who rebel against their human farmer. The animals vow to create a society where all the animals are equal and free. But under the dictatorship of a pig named Napoleon, the pigs ultimately create a state as bad as it was under the farmer. In the final chapter of the book, Napoleon tells the animals that all of them are equal, but some are ‘more equal’ than the others. Welcome to Animal Farm!
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