21 Matching Annotations
  1. Oct 2021
  2. ecampusontario.pressbooks.pub ecampusontario.pressbooks.pub
    1. The committee members also watched a video of an Australian Aboriginal woman talking about racism in her society and who said that Indigenous people have, for too long, stood on the sidelines as non-Indigenous legislators made decisions about their lives.

      It'd be interesting to compare the lives of Australian Indigenous with those of Canada and elsewhere.

      Come back to this later.

    2. “We don’t ever get to turn off the Indian. We are always Indians in this city.

      Very thought-provoking.

    3. “I only had two heroes in my life and one of them was Martin Luther King Jr.,” he says, “And, if he couldn’t fix it, I hope you’re not expecting me to.”
    4. “I only had two heroes in my life and one of them was Martin Luther King Jr.,” he says, “And, if he couldn’t fix it, I hope you’re not expecting me to.”

    5. “When you have a reputation, when you are trying to build a community, when you are trying to attract professionals to your city, when you are trying to attract doctors and engineers,” he adds, negative talk, “doesn’t make that job any easier.”

      The issue of racism is systemic and wont change in a real way until we refuse to accept lies and general bullshit from the government.

      • If we were educating our country from preschool ages about Indigenous history - factual history - about Aboriginal people, I guarantee you there would be a significant shift in attitudes ...hearts and minds.

      I learned 85% on my own, and 15% from growing up in Thunder bay with many native friends and family (through marriages and such). Im a naturally curious person...have travelled and lived in Europe...pretty unusual and making me an anomoly. Most Canadians arent that curious and have little to no natural curiousity...they believe whatever they hear through their friends/ family and on the news (95% fabrication/ gaslighting and social engineering to achieve some political/ economical result).

    6. “If you are a non-Indigenous person in Thunder Bay, you love cross-country skiing and you love the Sleeping Giant and it’s absolutely beautiful,” says Ms. Boucher, a First Nations advocate and inspirational speaker. “And if you’re an Indigenous person in Thunder Bay, you worry about your kids surviving high school and not ending up in the river, and you deal with eye rolls from store clerks because we use our status cards, and just these constant stereotypes. Racial slurs and jokes are still considered funny in Thunder Bay.”

      An underreported sad state of Thunder Bay norm. When I was living in Montreal I had a Kenyan roommate. A model actually. There would be times when I'd happen to be walking benind her on a city sidewalk....and some of the glares and comments were unimaginably cruel. "...fucking parasite." "Invader!" "Can't see her til she smiles eh? haha so dark". People from Kenya are commonly very dark-skinned, tall, and slim. Completely beautiful in my opinion. It was through the glares and under-the-breath comments in passing, or louder ones if only spoken to me directly. There were times I felt such a sense of disgust and embarrasssment that I wasnt sure if I should pity the person making the comments or hate them. Usually it was complete embarrasment. The stunning Evangeli Anteros:

  3. ecampusontario.pressbooks.pub ecampusontario.pressbooks.pub
    1. European powers used treaties to settle land disputes. In 1763, King George III of England issued the Royal Proclamation, which became the constitutional basis for negotiations between Europeans and Aboriginal people. As such, it has sometimes been referred to as the Indian Magna Carta, which alludes to the Magna Carta, an eleventh-century English document that was key in the historical development of constitutional law in the Western Hemisphere

      It bares thought and contemplation to define "treaty". The government of canada defines treaty as "Early partnerships between Indigenous nations and colonial governments were forged through treaties as well as trade and military alliances were based on mutual respect and cooperation.

      Lets compare the Government of Canada's definition of the word to the definition on Google: "formally concluded and ratified government between countries.

      If Canada was not already a country, in England's view...there would be no need for a treaty.

      Just think about that for a minute.

    2. H5P TAG HERE

      wtf is a H5P tag?! If someone knows and reads his, please help a girl out and tell me?

  4. Sep 2021
  5. ecampusontario.pressbooks.pub ecampusontario.pressbooks.pub
    1. And she desperately needs to add five officers to her criminal-investigations branch, which is understaffed and undertrained.

      Look into this later; understaffing result of underfunding from Mauro?

  6. ecampusontario.pressbooks.pub ecampusontario.pressbooks.pub
    1. Following the War of 1812 and Canadian Confederation in 1867, the new federal government could not identify a place for native cultures in the new Canada. It adopted a view that native cultures were inevitably to become extinct. In the interim, the native peoples became wards of the government, and were subsequently accorded very limited rights and territories by new treaties which were often incomprehensible to the native representatives who signed them, but advantageous to the government.

      You come into someone elses' land and dictate how *they should be living their lives and what they define as "right| and wrong. then seek to subjugate and control their lives based on your standards...

    2. They are also often portrayed as alcoholics, which ignores a common tendency by Aboriginal people to be genetically indisposed to a tolerance for alcohol.

      Is "tolerance" the right word for Aboriginals' so-called alcohol dependency?

    3. Typical propaganda.

    4. Even the meaning of justice is different in native cultures. While the Aboriginal concept of justice is focused on the restoration of peace and the reconciliation of both wrongdoer and wronged, the justice system to which they are subject is based on punitive concepts and measures that seek to integrate rehabilitated wrongdoers into society by isolating them from it. As such, Aboriginal people are systematically denied the benefit of justice circles that have served their culture for thousands of years.

      Punishment methodology may be too foreign a concept for Aboriginal peoples to internalize; ingrained in an Aboriginal person may be quite different to a non-native person.

    5. The native cultures of Canada were mostly semi-nomadic in nature, employed stone-age technology, and held a mystical view of nature. They built no enduring structures and monuments, and had no written language or centralized form of government. Their cultures were so unsophisticated and fundamentally different in comparison to those of Britain and France that the emissaries of those empires regarded North American Indians as little more than savage children, and thus treated them accordingly.

      ???

  7. ecampusontario.pressbooks.pub ecampusontario.pressbooks.pub
    1. The Liberal party won the election, and Trudeau took office in November 2015, vowing to repair relations with Indigenous communities. UN human rights expert Barbara Bailey praised Trudeau’s willingness to talk about the systemic inequality that Indigenous Canadians face. In January 2016

      Ah yes; lets all pretend the upper-management of Canada's "elected" arent engaged in an ass-licking circle jerk, congratulating themselves on getting more Twitter followers.

    2. According to Joanna Smith for the Toronto Star, in the run-up to the 2015 national election, all three major national parties pledged funding for First Nations and Aboriginal education as part of their campaigns, with Conservatives pointing to almost $450 million in the 2015 federal budget and Liberals committed to $2.6 billion. PM Harper had a tense relationship with Aboriginal peoples.

      I'd be very interesed in hearing the elders of these communities and their thoughts and first-hand experiences. We always hear about the politician's claims, but theyre demonstrated and proven liars. Canada needs permanent residence in government of representatives of various Aboriginal/ Indigenous interests.

    3. While the committee praised Canada for legal and institutional steps it had taken to implement the terms of the ICCPR, it noted several areas of concern, including the domestic abuse, disappearances, homicides, and murders of Aboriginal women and girls, and the government’s inadequate and ineffective response to these issues.

      The government is doing wonderful things in the world's eye to reconcile, but on the ground-level where there are no cameras or microphones?

    4. What does "reconciliation" mean? It is an offensive and hurtful assumption that those affected by residential schools will be "healed" without properly acknowledging, accepting and taking full accountability of this trajedy. Until that happens, the government is just vomitting words they dont believe or understand themselves.

    5. One positive development was the passage of the Indian Residential School Settlement Agreement, which was negotiated with the federal government in May 2006. Common experience payments were being processed and sent out by the fall of 2007. Unfortunately, this again has led to discrimination against Aboriginal peoples, as scam artists and others targeted recipients of these lump sums of cash, especially older, more vulnerable citizens.

      Although financially benefitial in the short-term, the long-term contstraints have negative social implications. We are effectively reinforcing the weakness and vulnerability Aboriginals may feel on a cellular level. They can do better - will do better. Thats what my education has taught me.

    6. While Aboriginal people made up only 4 percent of the Canadian population, the office reported, they made up 23 percent of the country’s incarcerated population. The office also found that rehabilitation programs systemically failed Aboriginal offenders, leaving a large gap in positive correctional outcomes between non-Aboriginal and Aboriginal people.

      Seems a familiar statistic with African-American people,