The Mississauga Nations obviously signed an accord, and you were there. We have raised our flag in the communities. We are having interactions at the government relationship table with our chiefs. We're hoping to have community functions and get back together.
The reason we're doing the Mississauga Nation and beyond that is that if the Mississauga Nation succeeds—and it will—the other nations, like the Chippewa, Odawa, Ojibwa, and Potawatomi, can come together as nations under the Anishinabe people because that's who they are. They are separate nations under the Anishinabe people. As long as we see ourselves separate and divided in the north and the south—this PTO, that PTO—we'll never be able to help each other. We can't see ourselves helping somebody when they're our competition because we all scramble and fight for the same thing. So, the nation-to-nation for all of us is the best path forward.
I don't exclude my other indigenous brothers and sisters who are in that evolvement, but that's their role to find. I can only only deal with the Anishinabe, who we are.
The Government of Canada has provided some funding and is interested in having discussions around governance with the Mississaugas of the New Credit First Nation, discussions about what that all means and how that could get to the ideology of nation-to-nation and the movement out of the Indian Act. There has been some funding in round tables with regard to that.