The Kamloops Story - lacking truth.
https://www.theamericanconservative.com/articles/billy-remembers/
https://www.theamericanconservative.com/articles/billy-remembers/
Kamloops Residential School - Time for the myth to be exposed.
https://nep-humanism.ca/2022/01/08/canadas-fake-news-of-the-year/
https://nep-humanism.ca/2022/01/08/canadas-fake-news-of-the-year/
Residential Schools - Myth vs Evidence Published 2018 by Mark DeWolf
https://fcpp.org/wp-content/uploads/EF43MythVsEvidence.pdf
https://fcpp.org/wp-content/uploads/EF43MythVsEvidence.pdf
The Unmarked Graves True Story
https://fcpp.org/2021/10/21/are-there-really-thousands-of-missing-indigenous-children/ Retired Judge from Manitoba uses his analytical skills to debunk the propaganda about unmarked graves in Canada.
https://fcpp.org/2021/10/21/are-there-really-thousands-of-missing-indigenous-children/ Retired Judge from Manitoba uses his analytical skills to debunk the propaganda about unmarked graves in Canada.
PART ONE - Truth about Residential Schools in Canada - Professor Hymie Rubenstein
https://c2cjournal.ca/2021/08/digging-for-the-truth-about-canadas-residential-school-graves-part-one/
https://c2cjournal.ca/2021/08/digging-for-the-truth-about-canadas-residential-school-graves-part-one/
PART TWO - Truth about Residential Schools in Canada - Professor Hymie Rubenstein
https://c2cjournal.ca/2021/08/digging-for-the-truth-in-canadas-residential-schools-graves-part-two/
https://c2cjournal.ca/2021/08/digging-for-the-truth-in-canadas-residential-schools-graves-part-two/
Scapegoating Residential Schools in Canada
http://www.ainlay.ca/datafiles/Ourdeva/IndianResidentialSchools.pdf
http://www.ainlay.ca/datafiles/Ourdeva/IndianResidentialSchools.pdf
Historians Rally vs. “Genocide” Myth
OPEN LETTER - August 12, 2021
to the Council of the Canadian Historical Association and the Canadian public.
We write to express our grave disappointment with the Canadian Historical Association’s “CANADA DAY STATEMENT”. The Council of the CHA claims that “the existing historical scholarship” makes it “abundantly clear” that Canada’s treatment of Indigenous peoples was genocidal and that there was “broad scholarly consensus” as to the evidence of “genocidal intent.” The CHA Council also attacks the profession in stating that historians have turned a blind eye to the tragedies that have marked Canadian history.
There are no grounds for such a claim that purports to represent the views of all of Canada’s professional historians.
The recent discovery of graves near former Indigenous residential schools is tragic evidence of what the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) documented in Volume 4 of its final report - a report that we encourage all Canadians to read. We also encourage further research into gravesites across Canada and support the completion of a register of children who died at these schools. Our commitment to interrogate the historical and ongoing legacies of residential schools and other forms of attempted assimilation is unshaken.
However, the CHA exists to represent professional historians and, as such, has a duty to represent the ethics and values of historical scholarship. In making an announcement in support of a particular interpretation of history, and in insisting that there is only one valid interpretation, the CHA’s current leadership has fundamentally broken the norms and expectations of professional scholarship.
With this coercive tactic, the CHA Council is acting as an activist organization and not as a professional body of scholars. This turn is unacceptable to us.
The issue represents a lively debate amongst scholars, many of whom differ in their assessments of this question. Differing interpretations are to be expected in a vibrant scholarly community that welcomes open debate, viewpoint diversity, and a commitment to assessing the past based on primary evidence.
By pretending that there is only one interpretation, the directors of the CHA are insulting and dismissing the scholars who have arrived at a different assessment. They are presenting the Canadian public with a purported “consensus” that does not exist.
They also are insulting the basic standards of good scholarly conduct and violating the expectations that Canadians have of academia to engage in substantive, evidence-based debate. No matter the good intentions of those who have made this statement, it is especially important that scholarly organizations remain committed to viewpoint diversity and open debate especially on issues where many feel a moral impulse to insist on a particular historical interpretation. It is precisely in situations like this that our intellectual principles are tested and must be upheld.
We demand that the CHA Council retract its statement and commit itself instead to its real mission of upholding the values of viewpoint diversity and open scholarly debate. Its job is not to promote a single “consensus” history of Canada.
We know we speak also for a multitude who fear to support this open letter for fear of endangering their tenure and promotions or who occupy official positions that prevent them from speaking out.
As the CHA celebrates its hundredth anniversary, it should honour its best traditions and act as a truly professional organization that stands unreservedly for the protection of objectivity, doubt, debate and unfettered access to the resources that will help historians shine a light on even the darkest corners of Canada’s past.
Frédéric Bastien - Collège Dawson
Eric Bédard - Université TELUQ
David J. Bercuson - University of Calgary
John Bonnett - Brock University
Robert Bothwell - University of Toronto
Félix Bouvier - Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières
Gerry Bowler - Frontier Centre for Public Policy
Patrick H. Brennan - University of Calgary
Phillip Buckner - University of London
C. P. Champion - Editor - The Dorchester Review
Marie-Aimée Cliche - Université du Québec à Montréal
Rodney Clifton - University of Manitoba
Robert Comeau - l’Université du Québec à Montreal
Terry Copp - Wilfrid Laurier University
Jack Cunningham - University of Toronto
Kenneth Dewar - Mount Saint Vincent University
Christopher Dummitt - Trent University
Patrice Dutil - Ryerson University
Lucia Ferretti - Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières
Dany Fougères - Université du Québec à Montréal
Yves Gingras - Université du Québec à Montréal
J. L. Granatstein - York University
Roger Hall - University of Western Ontario
René Hardy - Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières
Geoffrey Hayes - University of Waterloo
Michiel Horn - York University
P. Whitney Lackenbauer - Trent University
Gilles Laporte - Cégep du Vieux Montréal et l’Université du Québec à Montreal
Margaret Macmillan - University of Oxford
Susan Mann - York University
David B. Marshall - University of Calgary
Joe Martin - University of Toronto
Kathleen E. McCrone - University of Windsor
Ken McLaughlin - St. Jerome's University
Barbara Messamore - University of the Fraser Valley
J. R. Miller - University of Saskatchewan
Allen Mills - University of Winnipeg
Toby Morantz - McGill University
Doug Owram - University of British Columbia
John Pepall - Historian
Isabelle Perrault - sociologue
Stephen J. Randall - University of Calgary
John Robson - Historian
Jacques Rouillard - Université de Montréal
Jean Roy - Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières
Donald B. Smith - University of Calgary
Arthur Silver - University of Toronto
J. D. M. Stewart - Teacher and Author
Mark Theriault - Collège Dawson
Ryan Touhey - St. Jerome's University
Jonathan F. Vance - University of Western Ontario
Jean-François Veilleux - Historien
Robert J. Young - University of Winnipeg
LINK TO ORIGINAL LETTER
to the Council of the Canadian Historical Association and the Canadian public.
We write to express our grave disappointment with the Canadian Historical Association’s “CANADA DAY STATEMENT”. The Council of the CHA claims that “the existing historical scholarship” makes it “abundantly clear” that Canada’s treatment of Indigenous peoples was genocidal and that there was “broad scholarly consensus” as to the evidence of “genocidal intent.” The CHA Council also attacks the profession in stating that historians have turned a blind eye to the tragedies that have marked Canadian history.
There are no grounds for such a claim that purports to represent the views of all of Canada’s professional historians.
The recent discovery of graves near former Indigenous residential schools is tragic evidence of what the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) documented in Volume 4 of its final report - a report that we encourage all Canadians to read. We also encourage further research into gravesites across Canada and support the completion of a register of children who died at these schools. Our commitment to interrogate the historical and ongoing legacies of residential schools and other forms of attempted assimilation is unshaken.
However, the CHA exists to represent professional historians and, as such, has a duty to represent the ethics and values of historical scholarship. In making an announcement in support of a particular interpretation of history, and in insisting that there is only one valid interpretation, the CHA’s current leadership has fundamentally broken the norms and expectations of professional scholarship.
With this coercive tactic, the CHA Council is acting as an activist organization and not as a professional body of scholars. This turn is unacceptable to us.
The issue represents a lively debate amongst scholars, many of whom differ in their assessments of this question. Differing interpretations are to be expected in a vibrant scholarly community that welcomes open debate, viewpoint diversity, and a commitment to assessing the past based on primary evidence.
By pretending that there is only one interpretation, the directors of the CHA are insulting and dismissing the scholars who have arrived at a different assessment. They are presenting the Canadian public with a purported “consensus” that does not exist.
They also are insulting the basic standards of good scholarly conduct and violating the expectations that Canadians have of academia to engage in substantive, evidence-based debate. No matter the good intentions of those who have made this statement, it is especially important that scholarly organizations remain committed to viewpoint diversity and open debate especially on issues where many feel a moral impulse to insist on a particular historical interpretation. It is precisely in situations like this that our intellectual principles are tested and must be upheld.
We demand that the CHA Council retract its statement and commit itself instead to its real mission of upholding the values of viewpoint diversity and open scholarly debate. Its job is not to promote a single “consensus” history of Canada.
We know we speak also for a multitude who fear to support this open letter for fear of endangering their tenure and promotions or who occupy official positions that prevent them from speaking out.
As the CHA celebrates its hundredth anniversary, it should honour its best traditions and act as a truly professional organization that stands unreservedly for the protection of objectivity, doubt, debate and unfettered access to the resources that will help historians shine a light on even the darkest corners of Canada’s past.
Frédéric Bastien - Collège Dawson
Eric Bédard - Université TELUQ
David J. Bercuson - University of Calgary
John Bonnett - Brock University
Robert Bothwell - University of Toronto
Félix Bouvier - Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières
Gerry Bowler - Frontier Centre for Public Policy
Patrick H. Brennan - University of Calgary
Phillip Buckner - University of London
C. P. Champion - Editor - The Dorchester Review
Marie-Aimée Cliche - Université du Québec à Montréal
Rodney Clifton - University of Manitoba
Robert Comeau - l’Université du Québec à Montreal
Terry Copp - Wilfrid Laurier University
Jack Cunningham - University of Toronto
Kenneth Dewar - Mount Saint Vincent University
Christopher Dummitt - Trent University
Patrice Dutil - Ryerson University
Lucia Ferretti - Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières
Dany Fougères - Université du Québec à Montréal
Yves Gingras - Université du Québec à Montréal
J. L. Granatstein - York University
Roger Hall - University of Western Ontario
René Hardy - Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières
Geoffrey Hayes - University of Waterloo
Michiel Horn - York University
P. Whitney Lackenbauer - Trent University
Gilles Laporte - Cégep du Vieux Montréal et l’Université du Québec à Montreal
Margaret Macmillan - University of Oxford
Susan Mann - York University
David B. Marshall - University of Calgary
Joe Martin - University of Toronto
Kathleen E. McCrone - University of Windsor
Ken McLaughlin - St. Jerome's University
Barbara Messamore - University of the Fraser Valley
J. R. Miller - University of Saskatchewan
Allen Mills - University of Winnipeg
Toby Morantz - McGill University
Doug Owram - University of British Columbia
John Pepall - Historian
Isabelle Perrault - sociologue
Stephen J. Randall - University of Calgary
John Robson - Historian
Jacques Rouillard - Université de Montréal
Jean Roy - Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières
Donald B. Smith - University of Calgary
Arthur Silver - University of Toronto
J. D. M. Stewart - Teacher and Author
Mark Theriault - Collège Dawson
Ryan Touhey - St. Jerome's University
Jonathan F. Vance - University of Western Ontario
Jean-François Veilleux - Historien
Robert J. Young - University of Winnipeg
LINK TO ORIGINAL LETTER
Activists who hate Canada
Activist Historians in Canada do not wish to view Canadian History with new eyes. Activists demand to change history and in so doing create lies about Canadian Past. These (so called historians/lawyers) deserve to have their false assertions critically judged and exposed to the public. These activists follow Karl Marx:
“The major weakness of Marxism is that it does not work in the real world. This is because it does not take into account the essential greediness and selfishness of the human being. Marxism relies on people to work hard just because they should and to forego the ability to get rich from their efforts.” It will never work in a Canadian context.
MURRAY SINCLAIR - Head of the Truth and Reconciliation Committee that established outcomes before the 80 million was allocated and 5 billion was given out to all IRS students, even the ones that thanked IRS for an education.
Archaeologist Scott Hamilton’s report for the Truth and Reconciliation Commission into the burial of deceased Indian Residential School children included a wealth of information about how and why they died and what happened afterwards. This was available many years before the ground penetrating radar survey in Kamloops in spring 2021. Mr. Sinclair downplayed this reality in his final TRC Report.
One of the most frequently repeated criticisms of Canada’s residential school system is that nearly all aboriginal children attended such a school.
TheTRC’s lack of comparative and contextual data came under criticism in 2015 when it released its final report. But perhaps with such a tendentious mandate, it is not surprising that the TRC would not look too hard for factual data that might undercut its narrative of harm.
The Truth and Reconciliation Commission “was not tasked with a full analysis of the historical record,” according to Douglas Farrow, professor of theology and ethics at McGill University, and often failed to provide contextual and comparative data to underpin its incendiary conclusions. The 150,000 number the TRC put out was a guess and in the TRC’s six year mandate they could not prove how many students attended Residential Schools.
Mr. Sinclair and his followers have woven a tapestry of horror stories of how Indigenous children died at Residential Schools which Simpson related to the Guardian. But Mr. Sinclair had difficulty relaying the story with proof to back up his contentions.
**********
Niigaan Sinclair - “Genocide” promoter, Indigenous Studies University of Manitoba, editorial writer Winnipeg Free Press.
It has also become common for commentators to claim that residential schools were akin to “concentration camps”. This is a horrific charge that, if true, would bolster claims of genocide. If not, it is a vicious calumny. Like genocide, the term “Concentration Camp” entails many negative connotations, including varying forms and degrees of neglect and/or deliberate abuse such as malnourishment or forced labour. Truth is rising to the surface.
“One of the (Report Royal Commission Aboriginal Peoples) RRCAP’s disciples is Niigaan Sinclair, an Anishinaabe native studies professor at the University of Manitoba and son of former Senator Murray Sinclair, who has asserted that the economic, social, and political structures of pre-contact Aboriginal cultures were not only fundamentally different from but uniquely superior to those of the European colonists. So grander that Sinclair contends that those structures must replace western civilization to Save the World.” If he wanted an example of True Genocide Sinclair could have included how Iroquois engaged in the near-total annihilation of their their enemies the Huron between 1647 and 1649.”
By Hymie Rubinstein
Retired U of M Professor
**********
Sean Carleton -University of Manitoba Marxist believes illuminating Canada as desiring the elimination of Indigenous Canadians after 1867. Sean will be studying Residential Schools. He will present a bias account for his Critical Race Theory audience.
**********
Pam Palmater - “ true reconciliation “will only be found in the discomfort that comes with the exchange of land, wealth and power”. Pam gleefully demonstrated her pride that Ryerson University agitators vandalized and tore down a statue to Edgerton Ryerson who brought education to a mentally starved people in early 1800’s British North America.
Pam is a Marxist who believes in Critical Race Theory where Indigenous rise up against the government. Problem is Pam lives in Canada where Indigenous have not been treated badly and if truth be told Marxism was a failure whenever it was applied.
**********
Patrick Deane - Marxist Principal Queens University - Initiated removal of Macdonald’s name from Law Building with the assistance of Sean Carleton. We can not be surprised that Deane has also appointed TRC truth manipulator Murray Sinclair to Queens Board of Directors.
**********
Natasha Stirrett - Carleton University - Compared John A. Macdonald to Hitler as she lied her presentation to Kingston City Council. Natasha on an earlier occasion demonstrated her unbridled hatred by burning an effigy of Macdonald at the same time our Governor General was respecting John A’s accomplishment close by in Kingston where Macdonald grew up.
**********
Tanya Talaga - This is an outcome, Talaga argues, of a long-seated policy of colonisation that expressly denies Indigenous people everywhere of the basic "determinants of health": the right to clean water, safe homes, access to education and healthcare. Tanya must have forgotten the billions the Canadian Taxpayer hand over to Chiefs and their Band Councils every year without any oversight on how the money is spent.
**********
Aric McBay - Full Spectrum Resistance Volumes 1 and 2 are perfect Activist manifestos for Indigenous Elites. Aric hasn’t seen an issue he doesn’t want changed. His diatribe in front of Kingston Council made him salivate with hate for John A. Macdonald.
**********
John Milloy - “Milloy’s research has convinced him that Macdonald and his officials built residential schools to exert political control over Indigenous people.” Could the truth be Macdonald wanted to save Indigenous lives. Macdonald in his second term spent more on Indian Affairs and IRS than any other department of the Canadian government.
**********
Political followers of “Activist” attempting to rewrite history. (Presentism)
Lisa Helps - Mayor of Victoria B.C. - Removed John A. statue without asking the citizens of Victoria if they wanted History erased. She now says she should have asked the residents but is not willing to do it.
**********
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau - Easily fits with Marxist beliefs as he swallows without question Indigenous Elite Beliefs.
**********
Jagmeet Singh - This NDP leader Is the most ardent supporter of the “Genocide Myth” promoted by Activist Historians. Jagmeet in a recent interview referred to Indigenous people as “Nation to Nation”. There is only one nation and it is called Canada.
**********
David Borys - Another Activist Historian of the podcast Cool Canadian History. I started by listening to Special Episode Canada 150 expecting to hear about contributions by Sir John A. Macdonald considering without him there would be no Canada. Borys said John A’s name once and then continued on a love affair over Canada’s treasonous blackmailer Louis Riel where Borys glowed with excitement at how the Métis were poorly treated under the hands of the Lawful Canadian Government. If this slight wasn’t enough Borys goes on to discuss mass graves that were recently discovered at IRSchools. A total untruth by Borys. The graves have been known about for decades.
Keeping the above reality in mind this activist historian has some rather insightful podcasts but be concerned David seems to follow the beliefs of those on this list who promote Presentism dogma and activist history.
**********
Harsha Walia - Fired head of BC Civil Liberties referring to the arson of the Churches in Canada blasted “Burn them all down!”
**********
Niki Ashton - MP Niki Ashton from Northern Manitoba was asked about the vandalism on the Manitoba legislature on July 1st. Niki stated “Decolonization on the grounds of our legislature on Treaty 1 Territory, the homeland of the Métis.” Her NDP leader has backed her during the 2021 election. Does Niki not want to honour Treaty 1? “This is a hate crime, period. The result of a racist colonial system.” Niki continued her lies.
**********
RoseAnn Archibald - Newly elected FNA head. RoseAnn desperately wants to dig up graveyards located at Residential School sites. She quickly bought into the lie promoted my Activist Historians lying their way across Canada followed by the sonic radar machines finding moving dirt. RoseAnn realizes the children died from diseases and eventually will admit it.
**********
Editorial Staff Winnipeg Free Press (Following Niigaan Sinclair and his manipulation of truth)
**********
Darlene Fitzgerald - During 2020 this high school principal in Halifax spent her time acquiring support across Canada to change the name of Sir John A. Macdonald high school. Darlene misled her public that she taught in an area of indigenous students. It is sad that an educator will go this far to support lies that Macdonald never achieved.
**********
Cindy Blackstock - Canadian Indigenous Advocate tells a story of lies aimed at Children about our founding father Sir John A. Macdonald. Cindy is attempting to change History to adapt to her modern beliefs.
**********
“The major weakness of Marxism is that it does not work in the real world. This is because it does not take into account the essential greediness and selfishness of the human being. Marxism relies on people to work hard just because they should and to forego the ability to get rich from their efforts.” It will never work in a Canadian context.
MURRAY SINCLAIR - Head of the Truth and Reconciliation Committee that established outcomes before the 80 million was allocated and 5 billion was given out to all IRS students, even the ones that thanked IRS for an education.
Archaeologist Scott Hamilton’s report for the Truth and Reconciliation Commission into the burial of deceased Indian Residential School children included a wealth of information about how and why they died and what happened afterwards. This was available many years before the ground penetrating radar survey in Kamloops in spring 2021. Mr. Sinclair downplayed this reality in his final TRC Report.
One of the most frequently repeated criticisms of Canada’s residential school system is that nearly all aboriginal children attended such a school.
- In a 2010 speech to the United Nations former TRC chair Murray Sinclair asserted that, “For roughly seven generations nearly every Indigenous child in Canada was sent to a residential school.” Further, it is often claimed that many or even all of these students were there against their will. (This lie permeates the TRC report.)
- Murray Sinclair was asked what his feelings were for September 30th - Canada’s first holiday for Indigenous reconciliation? Murray replied “It’s a Start” meaning bring on the Rent$$$. For Murray there is no end to milking Canadian taxpayers.
TheTRC’s lack of comparative and contextual data came under criticism in 2015 when it released its final report. But perhaps with such a tendentious mandate, it is not surprising that the TRC would not look too hard for factual data that might undercut its narrative of harm.
The Truth and Reconciliation Commission “was not tasked with a full analysis of the historical record,” according to Douglas Farrow, professor of theology and ethics at McGill University, and often failed to provide contextual and comparative data to underpin its incendiary conclusions. The 150,000 number the TRC put out was a guess and in the TRC’s six year mandate they could not prove how many students attended Residential Schools.
Mr. Sinclair and his followers have woven a tapestry of horror stories of how Indigenous children died at Residential Schools which Simpson related to the Guardian. But Mr. Sinclair had difficulty relaying the story with proof to back up his contentions.
- There is no credible evidence to support such horrific allegations of murder, and no mention of such events in the TRC’s many publications.
**********
Niigaan Sinclair - “Genocide” promoter, Indigenous Studies University of Manitoba, editorial writer Winnipeg Free Press.
It has also become common for commentators to claim that residential schools were akin to “concentration camps”. This is a horrific charge that, if true, would bolster claims of genocide. If not, it is a vicious calumny. Like genocide, the term “Concentration Camp” entails many negative connotations, including varying forms and degrees of neglect and/or deliberate abuse such as malnourishment or forced labour. Truth is rising to the surface.
“One of the (Report Royal Commission Aboriginal Peoples) RRCAP’s disciples is Niigaan Sinclair, an Anishinaabe native studies professor at the University of Manitoba and son of former Senator Murray Sinclair, who has asserted that the economic, social, and political structures of pre-contact Aboriginal cultures were not only fundamentally different from but uniquely superior to those of the European colonists. So grander that Sinclair contends that those structures must replace western civilization to Save the World.” If he wanted an example of True Genocide Sinclair could have included how Iroquois engaged in the near-total annihilation of their their enemies the Huron between 1647 and 1649.”
By Hymie Rubinstein
Retired U of M Professor
**********
Sean Carleton -University of Manitoba Marxist believes illuminating Canada as desiring the elimination of Indigenous Canadians after 1867. Sean will be studying Residential Schools. He will present a bias account for his Critical Race Theory audience.
**********
Pam Palmater - “ true reconciliation “will only be found in the discomfort that comes with the exchange of land, wealth and power”. Pam gleefully demonstrated her pride that Ryerson University agitators vandalized and tore down a statue to Edgerton Ryerson who brought education to a mentally starved people in early 1800’s British North America.
Pam is a Marxist who believes in Critical Race Theory where Indigenous rise up against the government. Problem is Pam lives in Canada where Indigenous have not been treated badly and if truth be told Marxism was a failure whenever it was applied.
**********
Patrick Deane - Marxist Principal Queens University - Initiated removal of Macdonald’s name from Law Building with the assistance of Sean Carleton. We can not be surprised that Deane has also appointed TRC truth manipulator Murray Sinclair to Queens Board of Directors.
**********
Natasha Stirrett - Carleton University - Compared John A. Macdonald to Hitler as she lied her presentation to Kingston City Council. Natasha on an earlier occasion demonstrated her unbridled hatred by burning an effigy of Macdonald at the same time our Governor General was respecting John A’s accomplishment close by in Kingston where Macdonald grew up.
**********
Tanya Talaga - This is an outcome, Talaga argues, of a long-seated policy of colonisation that expressly denies Indigenous people everywhere of the basic "determinants of health": the right to clean water, safe homes, access to education and healthcare. Tanya must have forgotten the billions the Canadian Taxpayer hand over to Chiefs and their Band Councils every year without any oversight on how the money is spent.
**********
Aric McBay - Full Spectrum Resistance Volumes 1 and 2 are perfect Activist manifestos for Indigenous Elites. Aric hasn’t seen an issue he doesn’t want changed. His diatribe in front of Kingston Council made him salivate with hate for John A. Macdonald.
**********
John Milloy - “Milloy’s research has convinced him that Macdonald and his officials built residential schools to exert political control over Indigenous people.” Could the truth be Macdonald wanted to save Indigenous lives. Macdonald in his second term spent more on Indian Affairs and IRS than any other department of the Canadian government.
**********
Political followers of “Activist” attempting to rewrite history. (Presentism)
Lisa Helps - Mayor of Victoria B.C. - Removed John A. statue without asking the citizens of Victoria if they wanted History erased. She now says she should have asked the residents but is not willing to do it.
**********
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau - Easily fits with Marxist beliefs as he swallows without question Indigenous Elite Beliefs.
**********
Jagmeet Singh - This NDP leader Is the most ardent supporter of the “Genocide Myth” promoted by Activist Historians. Jagmeet in a recent interview referred to Indigenous people as “Nation to Nation”. There is only one nation and it is called Canada.
**********
David Borys - Another Activist Historian of the podcast Cool Canadian History. I started by listening to Special Episode Canada 150 expecting to hear about contributions by Sir John A. Macdonald considering without him there would be no Canada. Borys said John A’s name once and then continued on a love affair over Canada’s treasonous blackmailer Louis Riel where Borys glowed with excitement at how the Métis were poorly treated under the hands of the Lawful Canadian Government. If this slight wasn’t enough Borys goes on to discuss mass graves that were recently discovered at IRSchools. A total untruth by Borys. The graves have been known about for decades.
Keeping the above reality in mind this activist historian has some rather insightful podcasts but be concerned David seems to follow the beliefs of those on this list who promote Presentism dogma and activist history.
**********
Harsha Walia - Fired head of BC Civil Liberties referring to the arson of the Churches in Canada blasted “Burn them all down!”
**********
Niki Ashton - MP Niki Ashton from Northern Manitoba was asked about the vandalism on the Manitoba legislature on July 1st. Niki stated “Decolonization on the grounds of our legislature on Treaty 1 Territory, the homeland of the Métis.” Her NDP leader has backed her during the 2021 election. Does Niki not want to honour Treaty 1? “This is a hate crime, period. The result of a racist colonial system.” Niki continued her lies.
**********
RoseAnn Archibald - Newly elected FNA head. RoseAnn desperately wants to dig up graveyards located at Residential School sites. She quickly bought into the lie promoted my Activist Historians lying their way across Canada followed by the sonic radar machines finding moving dirt. RoseAnn realizes the children died from diseases and eventually will admit it.
**********
Editorial Staff Winnipeg Free Press (Following Niigaan Sinclair and his manipulation of truth)
**********
Darlene Fitzgerald - During 2020 this high school principal in Halifax spent her time acquiring support across Canada to change the name of Sir John A. Macdonald high school. Darlene misled her public that she taught in an area of indigenous students. It is sad that an educator will go this far to support lies that Macdonald never achieved.
**********
Cindy Blackstock - Canadian Indigenous Advocate tells a story of lies aimed at Children about our founding father Sir John A. Macdonald. Cindy is attempting to change History to adapt to her modern beliefs.
**********