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Remembrance Day: National holiday?/"Veterans' Day"? (merged)

Remembrance Day should be a National Holiday?

  • Yes

    Votes: 80 61.1%
  • No

    Votes: 43 32.8%
  • Undecided

    Votes: 4 3.1%
  • Don't care

    Votes: 4 3.1%

  • Total voters
    131
I had to catch a Sea Cadet before they face planted. Surprisingly we had 2 Navy League fall out, which rarely happens. We had about 6 of the other Cadets fall out as well. Better than the 17 of previous year. Teenagers don't listen when you tell them to sleep, eat before parade, plus a lot of stuff is going on in their bodies at that point.
 
"A white guy who has done something related to the military."

This morning, reports of an Ontario public school principal’s ludicrous decision to
politicize his school’s Remembrance Day ceremony is making national news for all the wrong reasons.

But the reason he used to justify for his decision equally as egregious (see below).
I suppose what he did shouldn’t come as a surprise to anyone - a sizeable portion of Canada’s educational system has fallen prey to a homogeny of woke thought that wouldn’t think to question this man’s incredibly stupid decision. In fact, it was probably encouraged, and will likely be defended.

Enough.

These sorts of things should not to go unnoticed, and change is desperately needed. I encourage you to speak up too.
Here’s my open letter to the Principal Aaron Hobbs, and to colleagues in the Ontario legislature.
**************************************************************
Dear Principal Hobbs,
This morning I woke up to reports that
you royally screwed up your school's Remembrance Day ceremony by choosing to play a song that engendered division and anxiety within your student body. And then, when confronted by members of your school's community about this dangerously irrational decision, you reportedly said this:
Principal Aaron Hobbs defended the selection during one of those meetings, saying it was chosen to bring diversity and inclusion to Remembrance Day that is usually only about "a white guy who has done something related to the military."

First, let me congratulate the students who blew the whistle, took this to the media, and confronted you—well done. It gives me hope that despite having the grievous misfortune of having their education overseen by you, they've been able to retain a sense of right and wrong.

My colleagues in the Ontario legislature must take this matter seriously. Canadians across the country are watching their response to your actions closely. I will be, too.

Now, onto the substance of the matter.

The actions you undertook politicized your school's Remembrance Day ceremony. It made kids who feel persecuted for their faith within their own community right now extremely uncomfortable. It divided your student body on a day when it should have been united in reverence for the sacrifices of Canadian men and women in defence of our pluralism and during a time when there's unrest in our streets.

And then, this:
"A white guy who has done something related to the military."

I've plumbed the depths of ignorance of this comment and have not yet found its end.

Do you not understand how divisive this false belief is? The defence of Canada is colour blind - ask anyone who serves. The contributions of men and women from every faith and ethnic background, including Indigenous persons, to Canada's Armed Forces are well documented. That people of diverse backgrounds stand shoulder to shoulder in defence of our pluralism is the miracle of Canada.

Remembrance Day is when we are charged with honouring Canada's military for the courage of their action, not the colour of their skin. It terrifies me that a person in charge of the education of hundreds of diverse students does not seem to understand any of this.

But your comment/belief also taints the contribution of countless men who died in service to Canada. The truth that your woke self needs to understand is that, yes, tens of thousands of white men died to protect Canada's peaceful, democratic pluralism. You owe your ability to freely spew your ignorance to their sacrifice, and you dishonour the freedom they won for you by infecting students with your preening idiocy.

Years of peace and prosperity have lulled Canadians like you into thinking that no power can take away what we have, or worse, that we have nothing to defend (
I wrote a piece about this yesterday, you should read it).

As an educator, you have an important role to play in imparting the sacred obligation of Remembrance within our children. And yet, here we are.

I am married to “a white guy who had something to do with the military” - served over twenty years in one of our allied country's military. He would have given his life to protect freedom and to liberate those being persecuted from evil. Anyone serving in Canada's military has done and will do the same thing. Their families (Do you know how challenging a deployment is for a military family? Do you know what it's like to be a spouse to someone with PTSD?) also sacrifice in defence of our nation. You don't know anything of this, even though, as an educator, you should. Your lack of knowledge is terrifying.

On Remembrance Day, you had one job - to unite your student body in gratitude for those who sacrificed to protect the miracle of our nation. Your grade is 0/5, F, needs extensive remediation.

You should seek to disabuse yourself of your lack of knowledge by serving those who serve our country. I challenge you to do something to take yourself off your false moral high-horse, like working to provide help to homeless veterans, or listening to military families who have a loved one out on deployment.

Shame on you; you dishonour our country. Your students should pay you no heed.

Hon. Michelle Rempel Garner, PC MP
Member of Parliament, Calgary Nose Hill
Proud Wife of a White Guy Who Had Something To Do With The Military
 
One school in the Lower mainland invited the Historical vehicle club to come to the school. they had permission to bring onto school grounds two Universal Carriers armed with deactivated machine gun, Bren and Lee Enfield rifles. With reenactors in WWII uniform and also a couple of wheeled vehicles.
That’s really cool!
 
"A white guy who has done something related to the military."

This morning, reports of an Ontario public school principal’s ludicrous decision to
politicize his school’s Remembrance Day ceremony is making national news for all the wrong reasons.

But the reason he used to justify for his decision equally as egregious (see below).
I suppose what he did shouldn’t come as a surprise to anyone - a sizeable portion of Canada’s educational system has fallen prey to a homogeny of woke thought that wouldn’t think to question this man’s incredibly stupid decision. In fact, it was probably encouraged, and will likely be defended.

Enough.

These sorts of things should not to go unnoticed, and change is desperately needed. I encourage you to speak up too.
Here’s my open letter to the Principal Aaron Hobbs, and to colleagues in the Ontario legislature.
**************************************************************
Dear Principal Hobbs,
This morning I woke up to reports that
you royally screwed up your school's Remembrance Day ceremony by choosing to play a song that engendered division and anxiety within your student body. And then, when confronted by members of your school's community about this dangerously irrational decision, you reportedly said this:
Principal Aaron Hobbs defended the selection during one of those meetings, saying it was chosen to bring diversity and inclusion to Remembrance Day that is usually only about "a white guy who has done something related to the military."

First, let me congratulate the students who blew the whistle, took this to the media, and confronted you—well done. It gives me hope that despite having the grievous misfortune of having their education overseen by you, they've been able to retain a sense of right and wrong.

My colleagues in the Ontario legislature must take this matter seriously. Canadians across the country are watching their response to your actions closely. I will be, too.

Now, onto the substance of the matter.

The actions you undertook politicized your school's Remembrance Day ceremony. It made kids who feel persecuted for their faith within their own community right now extremely uncomfortable. It divided your student body on a day when it should have been united in reverence for the sacrifices of Canadian men and women in defence of our pluralism and during a time when there's unrest in our streets.

And then, this:
"A white guy who has done something related to the military."

I've plumbed the depths of ignorance of this comment and have not yet found its end.

Do you not understand how divisive this false belief is? The defence of Canada is colour blind - ask anyone who serves. The contributions of men and women from every faith and ethnic background, including Indigenous persons, to Canada's Armed Forces are well documented. That people of diverse backgrounds stand shoulder to shoulder in defence of our pluralism is the miracle of Canada.

Remembrance Day is when we are charged with honouring Canada's military for the courage of their action, not the colour of their skin. It terrifies me that a person in charge of the education of hundreds of diverse students does not seem to understand any of this.

But your comment/belief also taints the contribution of countless men who died in service to Canada. The truth that your woke self needs to understand is that, yes, tens of thousands of white men died to protect Canada's peaceful, democratic pluralism. You owe your ability to freely spew your ignorance to their sacrifice, and you dishonour the freedom they won for you by infecting students with your preening idiocy.

Years of peace and prosperity have lulled Canadians like you into thinking that no power can take away what we have, or worse, that we have nothing to defend (
I wrote a piece about this yesterday, you should read it).

As an educator, you have an important role to play in imparting the sacred obligation of Remembrance within our children. And yet, here we are.

I am married to “a white guy who had something to do with the military” - served over twenty years in one of our allied country's military. He would have given his life to protect freedom and to liberate those being persecuted from evil. Anyone serving in Canada's military has done and will do the same thing. Their families (Do you know how challenging a deployment is for a military family? Do you know what it's like to be a spouse to someone with PTSD?) also sacrifice in defence of our nation. You don't know anything of this, even though, as an educator, you should. Your lack of knowledge is terrifying.

On Remembrance Day, you had one job - to unite your student body in gratitude for those who sacrificed to protect the miracle of our nation. Your grade is 0/5, F, needs extensive remediation.

You should seek to disabuse yourself of your lack of knowledge by serving those who serve our country. I challenge you to do something to take yourself off your false moral high-horse, like working to provide help to homeless veterans, or listening to military families who have a loved one out on deployment.

Shame on you; you dishonour our country. Your students should pay you no heed.

Hon. Michelle Rempel Garner, PC MP
Member of Parliament, Calgary Nose Hill
Proud Wife of a White Guy Who Had Something To Do With The Military
Not only that the principal is a GD Ginger - so white he's transparent....

haunted house wink GIF
 
Not true, she will receive praise behind closed doors from the sorts of people who ban uniforms at Remembrance Day events, and play pro-Hamas songs for Remembrance Day.

To have two high profile instances in a single year, and in different provinces, tells me that maybe there is a growing issue within the School Boards, and the teaching profession.
York U has been its own kind of crazy for a number of years now, and given the state of our post-secondary universe, particularly liberal arts campus', that's saying something.
 
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