The Wetʼsuwetʼen are a First Nation who live on the Bulkley River and around Burns Lake, Broman Lake, and François Lake in the northwestern Central Interior of British Columbia.

They speak Witsuwitʼen, a dialect of the Babine-Witsuwitʼen language which, like its sister language Carrier, is a member of the Athabaskan family.

Their oral history, called kungax, recounts that their ancestral village, Dizkle or Dzilke, once stood upstream from the Bulkley Canyon. This cluster of cedar houses on both sides of the river is said to have been abandoned because of an omen of impending disaster. The exact location of the village has been lost. The neighbouring Gitxsan people of the Hazelton area have a similar tale, though the village in their version is named Dimlahamid (Temlahan)

The endonym Wetʼsuwetʼen means “People of the Wa Dzun Kwuh River (Bulkley River)”

The Wet’suwet’en First Nation was formerly part of the Omineca Band. However, in 1984 the Omineca Band split into the Broman Lake and Nee-Tahi-Buhn bands. The Skin Tayi band later split off from Nee-Tahi-Buhn. Today, the Skin Tyee Band, Nee Tahi Buhn Band, Wet’suwet’en First Nation, Moricetown Band and Hagwilget Band make up the Wet’suwet’en Nation.

Like most First Nations here, Wet’suwet’en never signed treaties with the Canadian or provincial governments. Nevertheless, the latter took the land and leased forested acreage to logging companies. Today just 20% of British Columbia’s old-growth forests remain.

In 2020, after decades of activist pressure, the province identified about a quarter of the remaining old growth as at high risk for logging and recommended a pause while deciding their fate. Yet today, logging has been deferred in less than half of the high-risk area.

Another conflict with the settler state has been the Coastal GasLink pipeline, which seeks to transport liquefied natural gas from northeast BC to a terminal on the coast near the town of Kitimat.

The 670-kilometre (417-mile) pipeline will cut across traditional Wet’suwet’en lands that cover 22,000sq km across northern BC.

The hereditary chiefs, who under Wet’suwet’en law claim authority over those traditional territories, said they never gave their consent for the project to move forward. They have raised concerns about the pipeline’s potential effects on the land, water, and their community.

In late July, Amnesty International took the extraordinary step in naming Dsta’hyl Canada’s first ever designated prisoner of conscience, and now demanding his immediate and unconditional release.

“The Canadian state has unjustly criminalized and confined Chief Dsta’hyl for defending the land and rights of the Wet’suwet’en people,” Amnesty International’s Ana Piquer stated in a press release. “As a result, Canada joins the shameful list of countries where prisoners of conscience remain under house arrest or behind bars.”

In October 2021, Dsta’hyl was arrested and charged with criminal contempt after confiscating and decommissioning heavy equipment utilized by Coastal GasLink to construct its LNG pipeline on unceded Wet’suwet’en territory. Dsta’hyl said he was enforcing Wet’suwet’en laws as the company did not have the free, prior and informed consent of hereditary chiefs to build the pipeline.

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  • ashinadash [she/her]@hexbear.net
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    2 hours ago

    Tagging music is giving me existential dread.

    If you’re tagging soundtracks, you want to keep soundtracks from the same series of films or games together. So you list Artist as the composers and Album Artist as… Various Artists? That’d be handy if it were actually the case, but something like Celeste is solo composer. So what do you do, put the publisher’s name as Album Artist and in the folder title?

    • rtstragedy [she/her, fae/faer]@hexbear.net
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      37 minutes ago

      I usually only set Album Artist when there’s more than one in the album, I am not consistent but Jellyfin will split albums by Artist if i dont set it, so…

      I hate using VA in general since it doesnt really say anything, wishing Jellyfin wouldnt split tbh. But the folder structure of my giant music folder is a disaster since its mostly game soundtracks and I did not sort any of them, some are in Japanese and some English and some Romaji, some have weird date prefixes for some reason, its a dumping ground lol. It seems like Jellyfin doesn’t care about subfolders but ive never been quite sure, so I keep it flat.

      I have seen albums with publisher in Album Artist, and that felt weird to me too, because like the company didn’t make the soundtrack, a group of people did?

      Would not recommend my system. Especially the mixed language, since its not consistent anymore lol I am not good at this.

      • ashinadash [she/her]@hexbear.net
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        21 minutes ago

        Jellyfin should not do this split but to be real, so many music programs just read tags whatever stupid way they want. I hate them for this, and my tagging is an attempt to make a universally compatible library, that I can plug in anywhere…

        Yeah I have the Akumajo Dracula Red/Black boxes that have KONAMI in there but like, get fucked? lol

        Shit’s alllll fucked…