30 Replies to “Stories You Won’t Find At The CBC”

  1. obviously Home Depot, Lowes and Canadian Tire are all out of shovels, and have been for the last year, otherwise excavations could have been started way back in May of last year

    1. The fraudsters are milking this as long as possible because it means more cash.

  2. Aboriginal Ground Penetrating Radar.
    If we could just get ahold of some of that technology and reverse engineer it,we would own the Ground Penetrating Radar Market.
    No more “Call before yea dig”,no more digging at archeological sites,no more dryholes ,where the treasure ain’t.
    Obviously our Liberal Party is holding out on us and denying the world the cure for all buried mysteries..
    In fact a GPR that can tell you so much amazing information ,why that would be the cure for all landmines and abandoned warzones..
    Aboriginal GPR is amazing..
    It has located the graves of “Murdered Aboriginal Children” and confirmed the crimes of ???
    Without requiring a single spade of dirt to be moved..
    Once we get this astounding technology to market,there will be no ancient mysteries left to unearth…

    Oh wait?
    What you mean?
    That AGPR is as real as BreX Gold?
    Works as well as a Liberal Promise?
    And can be trusted exactly as much as any self serving “Oral History”.

    Time to take a backhoe.
    Dig up the graves and replace those within,with those seeking to exploit them once again.
    The idiocy,gullibility and dishonesty..ever the Can Ahh Nadian Way eh?

  3. I volunteer my July of this year to go to Kamloops with a shovel and dig up a grave each day. In the unlikely event I discover a body, I will quit digging and call the medical examiner and let them take over as many claim this to be a crime scene. It is odd that no-one wants to investigate a crime scene.

  4. dig a hole ..Grift is over.. So no holes you racist, not on Sacred Land.

    1. Yup, really don’t want the public to find out diseases run rampant back in the day…
      Can’t do it sacred land and sacred bodies.
      Digging is forbidden.
      Just take our word that genocide by the whites did it.
      Just give us more money honey and shut the hell up.

    2. Bad medicine … disturbing the resting place of a murdered Brave … is heap bad medicine. Haven’t you seen Jeremiah Johnson?

  5. I know someone who was responsible for expanding a certain type of communications infrastructure across the country. Often this meant putting stuff on reserves. Every job went like this – “You can’t site your tower at this ideal location, that is a sacred burial site. Do you prefer cheque or electronic transfer? My mistake, the burial site is on the other side of the hill”. This was part of the budget process for this company.

  6. This issue is actually a multi-billion dollar industry and all the interested players have NO desire to discover any facts via excavation. The B.C. government has adopted UNDRIP, and the downtrodden victims of the absurdly named “First Nations” stand to become the wealthiest people in the country outside the Desmarais family and a few others.
    Every development in B.C. now has to have FN permission and that comes only if they get a piece of the action, so it isn’t hard to see how much money is at stake in this resource rich province.

    Canada has become just like Russia after the USSR collapsed,they were glad to do business but bribery was the norm, as many disillusioned CEO’s stated after trying to do business there. Now in Canada, a business has to bribe the Indians or they’ll just withhold permission, and the government won’t do a thing to help.
    Btw, PM Trudeau declared Canada a “genocidal Nation”, so why do so many people complain about Canadian companies doing business with foreign dictatorships? As a genocidal nation we don’t hold the moral high ground, we’re just another bunch of sinners.

  7. DAMNED if you do and DAMNED if you don’t.. Imagine if we did nothing beyond the letter of the treaties.. We would be guilty of a whole new series of so called crimes.. You simply can not appease everything belongs to me..

    We are guilty of showing up with cool stuff and wanting to do business.. Facts is the locals didn’t matter either way because it was Europeans competing with Europeans.. The locals did what they could on their own terms but it was over before it even started..

    They wanted the gun and the horse as much as the Africans did.. They came to our fires and we invited them in and did business with us.. Everybody got what they wanted at the time.. You lost you land because you were militarily weak.. Culture had nothing to do with it..

    1. Most of the land was gladly ceded for the promise of peace (they were constantly butchering each other) for a constant supply of food, I believe the Chief got a cow annually the rest of the households got a pig. Education for their children in those horrible residential schools, and medical attention.

  8. The residential schools were built because some bright spark who had never had reason to doubt where his next meal was coming from thought the Indian could be trained to do drudge work and be willing to do it for less than a white man would.

    More Indian drudges would mean lower wages and more money for rich whites to spend on their own vanity and the vanity of their mistresses.

    That’s why the residential schools were closed in the late twentieth century. With the floodgates now open to Third World immigration, cheap Indian labour was no longer required.

    The most important lesson to be drawn from the experience is that there are few things more costly than cheap labour.

  9. I am willing to concede that a residential school graveyard will have plots where the earth has been disturbed (that is all ground penetrating radar reveals), further there are likely to be human remains at that location, whether it is a residential school scholar is unknown, could just as well be a caucasian worker or nun. We do not know. Even if these unmarked plots mark the location of an Indian child, the likelihood that the child died of some disease or illness is more far likely than murder or abuse.
    In this overly emotive age we are led to believe that an unmarked grave is some dastardly attempt to avoid recognition of the person. This of course is absolute nonsense, it is most likely that the buried person was memorialized by a wooden cross, said cross will, due to forces of weather disintegrate and whoever was charged with maintaining the graveyard in a tidy fashion would eventually remove the remains of the cross. Had the family of the deceased had any interest in ensuring that the person be remembered for a longer period they could easily have erected a stone marker. These unmarked graves are the norm, families who could afford stone memorials being very much in the minority.
    As it happens, during the covid lockdowns I researched my own causasian family history. For approximately seven generations they lived in a very small village in Norfolk, England with one church and graveyard. I have the death or burial record of more than 300 people for those families. Within the graveyard is ONE stone memorial attributable to these families. There is nothing sinister about unmarked graves, they are actually the norm, and they are certainly not evidence of any racially motivated attempt to hide anything.
    Turdeau and his grifter friends will continue to exploit their emotive nonsense, because canaduh has become a post-factual third world hellhole, and as Don Morris correctly states this is a multi-billion dollar grift which requires librano affiliated lawyers at every turn.

    1. In the cemetery where my grandfather and great-grandmother are buried, I am guessing that more than half the graves are unmarked including most of the old graves. My 2 ancestors are marked only because 30ish years ago my mother paid a small fee for a small stone as part of a government cemetery grant program.

  10. FYI

    Last week I sent a missive to my MP asking for an update on forensic examinations to confirm identity and most importantly to give the remains a proper burial.
    I don’t expect an answer will be forth coming, but it gives my MP a nudge to cause some mischief with the official narrative.
    Cause hey, all children matter.

  11. Not for the first time I am guilty of commenting before thoroughly reading the referenced link.

    This page is especially interesting, a group has done the work to actually research most of the “missing” children from Kamloops Residential School, result of 51 “missing” students records, 40 were quickly found, all had died of natural causes, many died on their home reserve, their burial location was recorded it was often on their home reserve.

    https://fcpp.org/2021/10/21/are-there-really-thousands-of-missing-indigenous-children/

    If these children have unmarked graves then their parents are responsible, and that implies no malice because as I previously stated my ancestors erected but one somewhat permanent memorial. Poor people cannot afford such extravagances.

  12. Just out of curiosity, I checked the flight-radar website. Flight CFC3701, a Canadian Forces Challenger, shortly after 1:00 local, today, flew from Kamloops to Victoria. Is it surf-season in Tofino already?

  13. Prediction: no backhoe will be allowed anywhere near any of the so-called “unmarked” or “mass” graves because they will quickly be labelled as “sacred ground” by both Indians and those in government to further perpetuate the Indian industry where so many have grown fat for decades. Would be a shame if all they found were old root systems of the apple trees that once grew there. Better to keep up the narrative and suckle some more at the nozzle of government largesse and fake virtue.

    1. “old root systems of the apple trees”

      I was thinking footings for the original school that burned in the 1920s.

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