I hardly know anything about how the legal system works , but I can see in many situations there would be too much of a grey area to hold someone legally responsible for providing dubious Spiritual guidence .
I definently did not mean to suggest it is the business of non native governments to start trying to tell a tribe , or Native people how they may practice traditional Spirituality. Obviously that would not work, and tribal governments need to be the ones to address problems concerning their own people and traditions .
I was only thinking this might be an effective deterent in situations outside Native communities , where something is being advertised and sold , and it can be proven that this "product" is not what it is claimed to be in the advertisements , and the person advertising and selling this was aware of these facts .
Especially if it is a business , and money is being charged .
Part of what got me wondering about this, was an article in NAFPS posted in the News section located at the link below .
http://www.newagefraud.org/cgi-bin/yabb2/YaBB.pl?num=1122838227This article is about a Native man being sent to jail for selling eagle parts . He tried to defend himself saying what he did was freedom of religion , but it sounds like the court disregarded this as a defence, on the grounds that money had changed hands ? , so it was no longer seen as a matter of religion , but of a business.
In reply #2 , fourth and fifth paragraph from the bottom , it reads ;
Prosecutors did not challenge Antoine's religious beliefs. But they argued ? that money changed hands, which took it out of the realm of religion and ? made it a commercial operation that the government had a right to bar.
The jury sided with prosecutors, and Antoine was sentenced to two years in ?
federal prison.
So perhaps there are some legal precedents when religious beliefs cross the line into a commercial operation ?
What is really sad is some of the people who are most vulnerable to frauds are people who have grown up with some form of abuse , and because of this they have learned to use denial as a coping strategy . ? Often these people do not have their alarm ? go off when it should . ? This lack of a working sense of "normal" , together with a desperate need to make things right , or find a place where they belong , can make these people really vulnerable to being taken advantage of by a fraud . Definently education can go a long way to help people make better choices , but - in my opinion - lying to sell a product is still wrong, and people who do this should have some responsiblity for the damage their phoney qualifications and guidence may cause .
People pretending to have Native teachings and a right to corrupt traditional ceremonies together with the fact that this is so often tolerated, in a society that has laws and liability for things like impersonating a Priest , or a psychologist or MD , just seems like one more double standard, that is based in racism and the inabiity to see any Native ways , as being really "real" in the first place . ..... It bugs me .
Sorry if have resurected an old discussion that already died a natural death .