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Dances with Dependency offers effective strategies to eliminate welfare dependency and help eradicate poverty among indigenous populations. Beginning with an impassioned and insightful portrait of today's native communities, it connects the prevailing impoverishment and despair directly to a "dependency mindset" forged by welfare economics. To reframe this debilitating mindset, it advocates policy reform in conjunction with a return to native peoples' ten-thousand-year tradition of self-reliance based on personal responsibility and cultural awareness. Author Calvin Helin, un-tethered to agendas of political correctness or partisan politics, describes the mounting crisis as an impending demographic tsunami threatening both the United States and Canada. In the United States, where government entitlement programs for diverse ethnic minorities coexist with an already huge national debt, he shows how prosperity is obviously at stake. This looming demographic tidal wave viewed constructively, however, can become an opportunity for reform-among not only indigenous peoples of North America but any impoverished population struggling with dependency in inner cities, developing nations, and post-totalitarian countries.
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Reviews
"Calvin Helin is a Canadian Aboriginal thinker whose brave ideas evoke at once Thomas Jefferson's zeal for independence and Martin Good Luther King Jr.'s audacious 'I have a dream' idealism. Helin's courageous declaration in the groundbreaking Dances with Dependency scouts the way forward."
Michael Adams, winner of the Donner Prize for Fire and Ice: The United States, Canada, and
"I read Dances with Dependency from cover to cover and could not put it down. [It raises] issues which must be discussed if progress is to be achieved. The fact that this book has aroused such interest is a positive sign for the future."
The Right Honourable Paul Martin, twenty-first prime minister of Canada
"Self-reliance, personal responsibility, and self-respect are key to revitalizing native cultures. My father, Raymond Nakai, Chairman of the Navajo Tribe during the 1960s, suggested similar ideas to redirect the economic situation of [his] people; unfortunately, he played to deaf ears. Helin offers future-oriented solutions to counter the centuries of colonial federalism that have diminished and d
The Right Honourable Paul Martin, twenty-first prime minister of Canada