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All Things First Nations - CF help, protests, solutions, residential schools, etc. (merged)

As I said before, the people prior to the 20th century had some reasoning in their beliefs even if you disagree with them and life was a lot harder all around. But after the start of the 20th century, the differences between lifestyle and health outcomes between native and non-native begin to diverge quickly. It was at the start of the 20th Century that Eugenics started to take hold in the minds of the upper class and Elite and I suspect that line of reasoning had a lot to do with it.
 
So let’s move into the late 20th-Century…an era of democratic enlightenment…

How long before this statue comes down?

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You know, the guy who wanted to offer Canada’s indigenous peoples a ‘New Deal’ in a flashy White Paper in 1969 through what was known and intended to be full assimilation, under the guise of repealing the Indian Act, and transferring only the existing reservation land as well as downloading all follow-on funding and claims to the provinces…and, when the First Nations challenged the many flaws in his plan, he threw a hissy fit and non-constructively, but predictably responded: “We’ll keep them in the ghetto as long as they want.”
 
So let’s move into the late 20th-Century…an era of democratic enlightenment…

How long before this statue comes down?

View attachment 65535
You know, the guy who wanted to offer Canada’s indigenous peoples a ‘New Deal’ in a flashy White Paper in 1969 through what was known and intended to be full assimilation, under the guise of repealing the Indian Act, and transferring only the existing reservation land as well as downloading all follow-on funding and claims to the provinces…and, when the First Nations challenged the many flaws in his plan, he threw a hissy fit and non-constructively, but predictably responded: “We’ll keep them in the ghetto as long as they want.”

But he was good at shoveling money off the back of the truck to everyone in Eastern Canada, so we'll overlook that :)
 
Just out of curiosity, would you say the same for mosques, synagogues, gurdwaras, temples, etc? Or is your focus entirely on Christian houses of worship? Asking for a friend.
Yes sir, religion is the real pandemic on this planet. But that’s a discussion for another thread.
 
I was going to comment on youusing Frum or the Atlantic lol. But it’s more about the argument and the point he makes.

I read/watch things across a reasonably-wide spectrum, generally not bothering with the looney-extreme fringes but occasionally going for a dip just to maintain some awareness of what's lurking out there. I came across that one on Bourque Newswatch. He leans left, but drags up some interesting articles that I might otherwise miss at times and has some good links pages. He no longer refreshes articles as frequently as he did a few years ago.

It is a balancing act. I think what the Kingston Coucil did was about as much as they could and struck a decent balance.

I rather thought so as well. It could have been worse.

it’s a case by case situation in my mind. I have no issues with places in the US removing statues of traitors and that were erected for the sole purpose of reminding a minority of who was still in charge.

"Traitors"?

As in Confederate Generals?

The US states have more autonomy than our provinces, so there was a contest of loyalty for many when the US Civil War broke out. To which does one owes one's primary loyalty - one's state, or the union of states, which had become broken? Americans do not swear an oath to a king or queen or any other individual, but a flag and a constitution. I've not attempted to determine if states had/have a right to secede from a union which they had freely and voluntarily joined, but believe that they should, similar to Britain joining and leaving the EU.

Those were hard personal decisions to make, and I envy none who had to make them, or fight against friends and former colleagues on the other side, or even family members in some cases.

But there was a conscious decision made, once it was over, re-unify and reconcile and rebuild, including accepting personnel back into the Union Army without sanction for simply fighting on the losing side.

I see nothing wrong with statues honouring men who fought valiantly and ethically and did their duty well as they saw fit, and I do not agree with removing them - especially by mob.

And I do not agree with applying today's standards to people from centuries past.

I don’t think though, that a statue to Sir John A would have been erected with the same goals or purpose. We can’t deny that he was and is our first PM. Instrumental in what Canada would become. I am also conscious that for some, he heralded in the end of certain ways of life even though he himself may not have been responsible.

The "new way of life" was not completely, if at all, imposed by him, but by others over whom he had no control - like those who almost completely wiped out the buffalo.

It was a well argued article that gives one food for thought.

Yes, it was.

And most of the past is a complete mess.

I am still awaiting restitution and apologies from the Normans who invaded my ancestral lands and raped, pillaged, and plundered my ancestors, and the Danes who invaded my ancestral lands and raped, pillaged, and plundered my ancestors before them, and the Romans who invaded my ancestral lands and raped, pillaged, and plundered my ancestors before them, and the Celts who invaded my ancestral lands and raped, pillaged, and plundered my ancestors before them, and the . . .

But I would, almost guaranteed, have to make reparations and give grovelling apologies to each contingent as well, as various ancestors were raping, pillaging, and plundering other ancestors in turn - most probably all of the way from Africa and through the middle east and Europe and Scandinavia to the green and sceptered isle.
 
So let’s move into the late 20th-Century…an era of democratic enlightenment…

How long before this statue comes down?

You know, the guy who wanted to offer Canada’s indigenous peoples a ‘New Deal’ in a flashy White Paper in 1969 through what was known and intended to be full assimilation, under the guise of repealing the Indian Act, and transferring only the existing reservation land as well as downloading all follow-on funding and claims to the provinces…and, when the First Nations challenged the many flaws in his plan, he threw a hissy fit and non-constructively, but predictably responded: “We’ll keep them in the ghetto as long as they want.”

Somebody did paint a statue of him somewhere black not too long ago.

But perhaps they thought that it was the more recent Trudeau.
 
I am still awaiting restitution and apologies from the Normans who invaded my ancestral lands and raped, pillaged, and plundered my ancestors, and the Danes who invaded my ancestral lands and raped, pillaged, and plundered my ancestors before them, and the Romans who invaded my ancestral lands and raped, pillaged, and plundered my ancestors before them, and the Celts who invaded my ancestral lands and raped, pillaged, and plundered my ancestors before them, and the . . .

But I would, almost guaranteed, have to make reparations and give grovelling apologies to each contingent as well, as various ancestors were raping, pillaging, and plundering other ancestors in turn - most probably all of the way from Africa and through the middle east and Europe and Scandinavia to the green and sceptered isle.
I would say the same thing, but I'm descended from all of them. The British people are a mixup of mostly Celtic/Breton-German-Norse peoples who have gradually interbred. Most people of British descent are a lot more closely related than they think. Another reason why I think any attempt to break-up the UK is silly.
 
Speaking of interbreeding, that's a big topic in some bands with the "Half-breeds" starting to outnumber the "True bloods" and some high caste families trying to maintain that true blood by marrying only other full-blooded Indians. The good news is that the half-breeds don't have a fantasy of what life was like and are generally faster to adapt to the world around them.
 
I read/watch things across a reasonably-wide spectrum, generally not bothering with the looney-extreme fringes but occasionally going for a dip just to maintain some awareness of what's lurking out there. I came across that one on Bourque Newswatch. He leans left, but drags up some interesting articles that I might otherwise miss at times and has some good links pages. He no longer refreshes articles as frequently as he did a few years ago.



I rather thought so as well. It could have been worse.



"Traitors"?

As in Confederate Generals?

The US states have more autonomy than our provinces, so there was a contest of loyalty for many when the US Civil War broke out. To which does one owes one's primary loyalty - one's state, or the union of states, which had become broken? Americans do not swear an oath to a king or queen or any other individual, but a flag and a constitution. I've not attempted to determine if states had/have a right to secede from a union which they had freely and voluntarily joined, but believe that they should, similar to Britain joining and leaving the EU.

Those were hard personal decisions to make, and I envy none who had to make them, or fight against friends and former colleagues on the other side, or even family members in some cases.

But there was a conscious decision made, once it was over, re-unify and reconcile and rebuild, including accepting personnel back into the Union Army without sanction for simply fighting on the losing side.

I see nothing wrong with statues honouring men who fought valiantly and ethically and did their duty well as they saw fit, and I do not agree with removing them - especially by mob.

And I do not agree with applying today's standards to people from centuries past.



The "new way of life" was not completely, if at all, imposed by him, but by others over whom he had no control - like those who almost completely wiped out the buffalo.



Yes, it was.

And most of the past is a complete mess.

I am still awaiting restitution and apologies from the Normans who invaded my ancestral lands and raped, pillaged, and plundered my ancestors, and the Danes who invaded my ancestral lands and raped, pillaged, and plundered my ancestors before them, and the Romans who invaded my ancestral lands and raped, pillaged, and plundered my ancestors before them, and the Celts who invaded my ancestral lands and raped, pillaged, and plundered my ancestors before them, and the . . .

But I would, almost guaranteed, have to make reparations and give grovelling apologies to each contingent as well, as various ancestors were raping, pillaging, and plundering other ancestors in turn - most probably all of the way from Africa and through the middle east and Europe and Scandinavia to the green and sceptered isle.
I think there is place for a lot of those statues but many of them, especially the the pro slavery ones, were placed during the Jim Crow era with a different purpose in mind. Gettysburg is a great example of monuments done right. Or communities that may have given their sons to the fight. But even some states that weren’t even confederate states put some up.


But I guess that is another discussion. Sorry to derail.

Unfortunately the restitution arguments for bygone eras don’t hold much water. The legal entities responsible for more recent events like residential schools are still around as has been pointed out.
 
.... The US states have more autonomy than our provinces, so there was a contest of loyalty for many when the US Civil War broke out. To which does one owes one's primary loyalty - one's state, or the union of states, which had become broken? ... Those were hard personal decisions to make, and I envy none who had to make them, or fight against friends and former colleagues on the other side, or even family members in some cases ... I see nothing wrong with statues honouring men who fought valiantly and ethically and did their duty well as they saw fit, and I do not agree with removing them - especially by mob ...
The only problem with using the "individuals had tough choices to make & did their best" argument is that throughout history, that's always been true, in causes both just and unjust - including individual clergy in the residential schools. I'll bet you could find Soviets who truly felt they were doing the right thing "helping" the Poles, Ukrainians, Latvians, Lithuanians & Estonians during WW2. That said, once Past Management left the old Warsaw Pact countries, can you blame them for not wanting to see statues of people who brought on what they did, regardless of their intentions? I don't hear/read/see a lot of people calling on folks living in former Soviet republics to stop being whiners, get on with life, and keep Soviet statues/landmarks up as long as there's a fuller explanation of the history behind them. Well, outside of Russian leaders & commentators, anyway.
... I am still awaiting restitution and apologies from the Normans who invaded my ancestral lands and raped, pillaged, and plundered my ancestors, and the Danes who invaded my ancestral lands and raped, pillaged, and plundered my ancestors before them, and the Romans who invaded my ancestral lands and raped, pillaged, and plundered my ancestors before them, and the Celts who invaded my ancestral lands and raped, pillaged, and plundered my ancestors before them, and the . . .

But I would, almost guaranteed, have to make reparations and give grovelling apologies to each contingent as well, as various ancestors were raping, pillaging, and plundering other ancestors in turn - most probably all of the way from Africa and through the middle east and Europe and Scandinavia to the green and sceptered isle.
Where does it stop/end? $64,000 question (no compensation pun intended). But I like to think we want to do better, not "only just better".
 
It doesn't end. Not till both sides get rid of the us vs them mentality. As long as a good number of natives are segregated from society there will always be a divide that will bring up old memories. A hundred years from now we will probably still be having the same conversation.
 
It doesn't end. Not till both sides get rid of the us vs them mentality. As long as a good number of natives are segregated from society there will always be a divide that will bring up old memories. A hundred years from now we will probably still be having the same conversation.
And as long as the Indian Act is allowed to exist in whatever form it has now there is going to be segregation. Changing a name or removing a statue will accomplish squat. As any person who has suffered through a divorce caused by infidelity or just plain abandonment they never stopped hurting until they were able to put the offense behind them, quit playing the blame game and start liking themselves again. And that is really hard to do. They can't wait until government, church or whatever makes things right: they neither can nor will at least not to the grieved person's satisfaction. No restitution can compensate for a lost child or a lost childhood and there are no words that are adequate. It has to be the grieved person who lets go. The publicity certainly doesn't help. It is like tearing the scab off a recent wound: you get to experience the pain and bleeding all over again and to what purpose? Everyone knew the bodies were there. In a number of locations the graves are marked by tombstones or at least were until they caved in or rotted. What they need more than anything is self-respect and that won't happen until there are decent jobs, decent accommodation, decent connections with the rest of the world and leadership that actually takes responsibility oh and clean water that doesn't need boiling.
 
And as long as the Indian Act is allowed to exist in whatever form it has now there is going to be segregation. Changing a name or removing a statue will accomplish squat. As any person who has suffered through a divorce caused by infidelity or just plain abandonment they never stopped hurting until they were able to put the offense behind them, quit playing the blame game and start liking themselves again. And that is really hard to do. They can't wait until government, church or whatever makes things right: they neither can nor will at least not to the grieved person's satisfaction. No restitution can compensate for a lost child or a lost childhood and there are no words that are adequate. It has to be the grieved person who lets go. The publicity certainly doesn't help. It is like tearing the scab off a recent wound: you get to experience the pain and bleeding all over again and to what purpose? Everyone knew the bodies were there. In a number of locations the graves are marked by tombstones or at least were until they caved in or rotted. What they need more than anything is self-respect and that won't happen until there are decent jobs, decent accommodation, decent connections with the rest of the world and leadership that actually takes responsibility oh and clean water that doesn't need boiling.
OMG you are so right.
 
I would say the same thing, but I'm descended from all of them.

That was my point. So am I.

It is important to remember and understand history, but history should not hinder our present and our future.

Centuries of denominational violence, between people who worship the same God and Messiah, in Northern Ireland, and the violent break-up of Yugoslavia are two prime examples. "Your great-great-grandfather killed my great-great-grandfather so I'm going to kill you in revenge" solves nothing, and destroys both sides' chances of peace and prosperity.

"What have the Romans ever done for us?"

I doubt that many First Nations people today would want to give up any of the benefits that resulted from British, French, and other European migration.

I have yet to see any real solutions or proposals for true reconciliation, as there is too much polarization and also too many factions here - and too much money involved.

We are a marvellous species, but we also suck.
 
Speaking of interbreeding, that's a big topic in some bands with the "Half-breeds" starting to outnumber the "True bloods" and some high caste families trying to maintain that true blood by marrying only other full-blooded Indians. The good news is that the half-breeds don't have a fantasy of what life was like and are generally faster to adapt to the world around them.

No matter how much we may look alike, there is always somebody who wants to exploit the slightest difference to divide people for his or her own gain - be it power, prestige, money, or just a petty feeling of superiority over a "lesser" individual.
 
Speaking of interbreeding, that's a big topic in some bands with the "Half-breeds" starting to outnumber the "True bloods" and some high caste families trying to maintain that true blood by marrying only other full-blooded Indians. The good news is that the half-breeds don't have a fantasy of what life was like and are generally faster to adapt to the world around them.
And that is exactly what the Egyptian Ptolemic dynasty did except that dynasty was not Egyptian - it was Greek and Ptolemy got Egypt when Alex The Great's empire broke up. That dynasty had brothers and sisters marry in belief that the blood line would remain pure....

Other royal families have done the same - marrying first cousins etc until you end up with a genetic mutation that makes Forrest Gump look like a genius.
 
The only problem with using the "individuals had tough choices to make & did their best" argument is that throughout history, that's always been true, in causes both just and unjust.

What was a young German, for example, reasonably expected to do when conscripted between 1939 and 1945? What about a professional Officer, already serving? Many did not accept Nazism, but only a small few dared to actively resist/revolt against it.

I have nothing against statues honouring commanders, units, or soldiers of losing sides as long as they fought honourably and ethically.

A statue of a slave-owner whipping one of his victims, however, would be completely different, as would a statue of a war criminal.

A statue of Sir John causes me no offence - we all, today, benefit from his accomplishments (although, if he'd failed, we would have the benefit of the US Second Amendment). A statue of a priest or nun beating a child victim most definitely would.
 
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