And the stories that matter just 0. Ok and join the stream today is coverage of respecting indigenous land rights or look at the protests over a proposed pipeline in the wet so wet a nation you can join our conversation live on you tube and twitter ringback. Im dr Charmaine Nelson professor of art history at Mcgill University in montreal and you are in a string. On sunday here at a tree chase of the white sweater nation and the cajun government came to a tentative agreement that could end nearly a month of protests over a proposed natural gas pipeline just look at the harsh tides of the protests and those protests have generated the talks laid out a commitment to recognize Aboriginal Land rights but the 2 sides are still odds over this 640. 00 climate a coastal gas pipeline that would run through the 1st nation now unlike all of the 1st nations in canada where its so wet unlined has never been seeded by treaty to the government of over the 6 canadian place enter the territory to break