Perhaps It Wasn’t Genocide.

Blacklock reviews a book that explains the high mortality rate among children in Canada during the 1930s. It was higher at the time, than in South Africa. Perhaps lazy or activist journalists should examine that before ranting about genocide against Indians. http://www.blacklocks.ca

22 Replies to “Perhaps It Wasn’t Genocide.”

  1. My maternal grandmother (English/Irish) gave birth to 17 children (in Canada). 11 survived to adulthood. As far as I know, none of them even saw a residential school.

  2. It does not serve The Sacred Narrative. Studying source documents is not a task worthy of an Inquisitor Grand General of the Woke Inquisition.

  3. This again? It was a hoax no different than Jussie Smollet’s nonsense. But when the gov’t cuts you $600M/year you’ll do their bidding. We were browbeaten and held to account for our sins but strangely Pierre Trudeau and Jean Chretien weren’t, which is kinda weird. Of the 20th century, Liberals governed for 70 years. That wasn’t brought up a whole bunch either.
    However – Canada Day was cancelled, flags are still at half mast as a constant reminder, white people are devils, charred Catholic churches are in the double digits and Indians still have to boil their water.
    Mission accomplished.

    1. Not just Catholic churches – Catholic churches that aboriginal Christians built, Coptic churches and Vietnamese Protestant churches (please see True North News for a map).

      Who wants to make this an election issue? Let’s see a show of hands.

  4. And speaking of burning churches its odd that they haven’t announced how the fire that destroyed Litton started.
    Apparently it started near the hospital which s next to the church. They will probably NEVER announce it.

  5. Obviously, the hustlers aren’t embarrassed by their ignorance of history. Maybe civilization and advanced technology do lead to increasing feminization and infantilization; so many seem cocooned from reality. It’s baffling because, on the one hand, they rail about and fabricate a sinister past but, on the other, have great faith in that same system to protect them. I don’t think most of them would fare well, if they could be dropped into the world of even a hundred years ago, where danger, tragedy, suffering and loss was always hanging over everyone’s head.
    Of course the hucksters were front and center with their wildly extrapolated claims and inflammatory accusations: abuse, neglect, murder, Nazi genocide. They wouldn’t get away with it if the public didn’t fall for technological and medical “presentism”, or if the public had even a small semblance of historical context. Their narratives expose a profound ignorance of how people lived in the past and what they had to work with.
    Of course, we know that it is an occasion to express faux empathy and selective compassion. Their maudlin sentimentality is strangely missing when it comes to all the children, urban or rural, rich or poor, in whatever era, on whatever continent who died from TB, diphtheria, sepsis, malnutrition, or an impacted wisdom tooth. My point is, just as they take their phones and internet for granted; they cannot walk in the shoes of someone who lived in a world without electricity, mass production, plastics, antibiotics, plentiful food, clean water………

  6. My “colonist“ grandmother was born and raised in a sod roofed hut on the Alberta prairie. One sibling died shortly after birth, and another carried away at age nine by scarlet fever. If anyone tells me to my face about Siberian-immigrant “mass graves,” they may find themselves on the receiving end of a jet of spittle.

  7. So have there been any exhumations of these “mass graves” yet?

    No?

    Imagine my shock.

  8. Thanks for the link. In my opinion, everyone should know and revere the name of John Snow.

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