Today is Louis Riel DayLouis David Riel (English: /ˈluːiː…



Today is Louis Riel Day

Louis David Riel (English: /ˈluːiː riːˈɛl/, French pronunciation: ​[lwi ʁjɛl]; 22 October 1844 – 16 November 1885) was a Canadian politician, a founder of the province of Manitoba, and a political leader of the Métis people of the Canadian Prairies.[1] He led two rebellions against the government of Canada and its first post-Confederation prime minister, John A. Macdonald. Riel sought to preserve Métis rights and culture as their homelands in the Northwest came progressively under the Canadian sphere of influence. Over the decades, he has been made a folk hero by the Francophones, the Catholic nationalists, the native rights movement, and the New Left student movement. Riel has received more scholarly attention than practically any other figure in Canadian history.
Wikipedia

books0977: Grand Duchess Maria Nikolaevna of Russia reading in…



books0977:

Grand Duchess Maria Nikolaevna of Russia reading in a formal portrait (1906).

Grand Duchess Maria (1899-1918) was the third daughter of Tsar Nicholas II of Russia and Tsarina Alexandra Fyodorovna (Alix of Hesse). Her murder following the Russian Revolution of 1917 resulted in her canonization as a passion bearer by the Russian Orthodox Church.

Why is Cannabis Illegal?French pioneer apothecary Louis Hébert…



Why is Cannabis Illegal?

French pioneer apothecary Louis Hébert was the first European farmer in Canada. Cannabis Sativa, a plant known as “hemp,” was one of his crops.

The sails of sailing ships, canvas, rope, and linen were all manufactured from the rugged fibres of the hemp plant. As was the earliest known paper.  Hemp dominated the paper trade until it was replaced by wood fibre in the 1800s.

When the Indian strain of Cannabis that had been used in Eastern medicine for thousands of years became a popular ingredient in 19th Century Western medicine, French biologist Jean-Baptiste Lamarck “came up with the name Cannabis indica to distinguish Indian cannabis from European hemp.”

War On Drugs

There were no illegal drugs in Canada prior to the 20th Century.  Deputy Minister of Labour William Lyon MacKenzie King changed all that in 1908.

[Read more of “Why Is Cannabis Illegal”
Part I in the WRGreens Cannabis Legalization Series
]

BLACK DONNELLYSSATURDAY MORNING!!Apollo CinemaSaturday November…



BLACK DONNELLYS

SATURDAY MORNING!!

Apollo Cinema
Saturday November 18th, 2017
11am - 12:30pm


The history of the infamous 1800s feud between the Donnelly family and the town people of Lucan, Ontario is finally being told on the big screen in this highly anticipated local production. After a land dispute went sour, a man lay dead and the Donnellys found themselves in the midst of a growing feud. On one side an Irish immigrant family known for their quick tempers and fighting prowess, on the other side an scorned mob dead set on revenge, and young love caught in the middle . The true story told at last, unbiased and unfettered.


APOLLO CINEMA
141 Ontario Street North, Kitchener, ON N2H 4Y5


Runtime: 45 minutes + Q&A Screening


presented by EMP
Written & Directed by Aaron Huggett
www.facebook.com/BlackDonnellysFilm
www.BlackDonnellysMovie.com

advance tickets from
EVENTBRIGHT
https://www.eventbrite.ca/e/black-donnellys-movie-screening-with-qa-kitchener-tickets-39348383073
or
allevents.in
https://allevents.in/kitchener/black-donnelly-screening-kitchener/318589158601379

**Note: this is not a cartoon

Why I’m NOT #Proud of #Canada150

Electoral Reform?

For someone generally proud to be lucky enough to be Canadian, instead of being excited about Canada Day on our nation’s 150th Anniversary, I was embarrassed to be a Canadian. Not because Prime Minister Justin Trudeau believes himself to be an all powerful autocrat with the right to over rule his own party’s overwhelmingly adopted policy and thumb his nose at the majority of Canadians who believe Canada ought to provide citizens with fair representation.   That was bad, that was really, really bad, but that isn’t it.

Money?

We had a big coast to coast half a billion dollar party CBC reports that More than 70% of Canada 150 swag made outside the country

Oh, but that’s not the government’s fault:

The government argues that international trade agreements don’t allow it to restrict the competition for government contracts to Canadian companies or manufacturers — even when it comes to Canada 150 merchandise.

Its all the fault of those pesky “free trade” agreements, not the governments who negotiated these agreements in secret then sign & ratify them so they have no choice but to require massive changes to our domestic law (and now unaccountable international corporate trade tribunals to fine us if we fail) to comply.  This excuse is a classic case of adding insult to injury.

Annoying as that is, that is not my problem.

Colonialism150?

Bingo!  The problem is colonization, something that didn’t just happen hundreds of years ago, but a process continuing as Canadian government policy to this day.  It is simply unfathomable to me that, KNOWING about all the horrors of “residential schools,” instead of embarking on a path to Reconciliation, our Canadian Government is continuing policies of Cultural Genocide. Residential Schools killed many more victims — all children — than people died in the 9/11 Twin Towers.  In response to the Twin Towers Canadian Governments were quick to change our laws to increasingly erode the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.   But Canadian Governments had to be legally compelled to establish the Truth and Reconciliation Commission.  And now, instead of working hard to implement TRC recommendations, the Canadian Government has gone to court to fight for the right to continue to discriminate against Indigenous children and Indigenous women.

I’m not Indigenous, I’m a settler whose paternal ancestors arrived here before Confederation.  Some suggest “settler” is pejorative term, but it’s not.  It’s a simple statement of fact. Although my earliest ancestors came to this place before Confederation, I am not Indigenous.  My ancestors came from Alsace, Germany, the Netherlands and Russia, places I have never been.  Indigenous people’s ancestors came from Turtle Island.  While I make my home on native land, I acknowledge that Turtle Island indigenous peoples have prior claim.  Although I was very interested in history, I spent most of my life ignorant of the real Canadian history.

I am certainly not trying to speak for the Indigenous people’s of Canada; they are doing a brilliant job of speaking for themselves.  As Romeo Saganash did in the Globe and Mail: 150 years of cultural genocide: Today, like all days, is an insult

No, I’m writing this for other settlers. To explain why I sat out Canada Day for the first time. To explain why I bought my husband a Colonization150 Tshirt.  But most of all why I’ve spent the last little while reading and sharing articles about the real Canada that so many Canadian settlers still don’t know about.  Some over and over.

I am still learning myself, because, like most people, I bought into the idea of the mythological Canada the Good.  The Canada full of nice, polite people who respect human rights and care about each other. The Canada that helped fight and stop South African Apartheid.  The Canada that chose to be a Multicultural mosaic culture, the nation that made peace and not war and helped write the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, our own Canadian Bill of Rights and then the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. The Canada willing to dabble in socialism to ensure everyone has healthcare and the necessities of life, the representative democracy that looks out for our most vulnerable population.

But that, my friends, is the public relations version, not the real deal. The real deal is a country that sells arms to Saudi Arabia, one of the most egregious human rights abusers in the world. The Canada that unequivocably supports Israel’s unambiguous Palestinian Apartheid.   Of course it does: Canadian Governments have been perpetrating its own policies of Apartheid and Cultural Genocide for well over 150 years, and are still doing it today.

One of the ridiculous things I often hear Canadian settlers say is that the land issue was over a long time ago.  But we Canadians believe in property ownership. Our society is built on property law.  Canadians buy and sell property, we can own it and our heirs can inherit it from us when we die.

If I can inherit my father’s house, a house that he inherited from his father, who inherited it from his father before him, why should it be any different for Indigenous people?

Their ancestors made treaties — contracts — with the British Crown.  But instead of living up to these agreements, the British then later Canadian Governments have been trying to erase them one way or another ever since.  The Canadian Government took the land one way or another, and gave or sold it to settlers.   That’s the land we buy and sell and inherit today.  The authority for this high handedness dates back to a papal decree known as “The Doctrine of Discovery.” which was predicated on the idea that any land not populated by European Christians was empty.  After all, only European Christians were human beings with rights.

It’s 2017

Instead of living up to our obligations to the Indigenous population of Turtle Island, Canadian Governments have worked hard to enforce assimilation, to suppress Indigenous culture, eradicate Indigenous languages, and coralled them on a tiny unsustainable percentage of the land… a miniscule part of the land of Turtle Island, the whole of which they once roamed freely.  The full might of Canada’s government continues its anti-Indigenous policies, all of which are geared to dispossessing them further.

Money:  It would cost the Canadian Government a fraction of the money it is spending on Canada’s 150th Party to comply with the Human Rights Tribunal’s order to stop discrimination against Indigenous children.  What is more important than children?

Electoral Reform to Proportional Representation is necessary.  It took me a long time to understand why our supposedly “simple” electoral system never actually provided me with representation in Parliament.  The Representative Democracy we Canadians supposedly enjoy is hollow so long as some votes are worth more than others but most don’t count at all. If we used some form of Proportional Representation, the result would be more democratic governance.  This would empower us to elect politicians who would actually represent most of us.  And maybe even govern the way they promised they would.

Further Reading:
Three years later, is Canada keeping its Truth and Reconciliation Commission promises?
Why is Trudeau Government Opposing Charter Equality for Indigenous Women?
Cultural Genocide of Canada’s Aboriginal People
Chief Justice says Canada attempted ‘cultural genocide’ on aboriginals
Canada was ready to abandon 1948 accord if UN didn’t remove ‘cultural genocide’ ban, records reveal
Residential school system was ‘cultural genocide,’ most Canadians believe according to poll
The Canada most people don’t see
Canada 150 is a celebration of Indigenous genocide
150 years of cultural genocide: Today, like all days, is an insult
The long history of discrimination against First Nations children
Rights and Reconciliation: The future of Canada rests on adopting the balanced world view of Indigenous people.
12 Easy Steps For Canadians To Follow If They’re Serious About Reconciliation 
Dear Canada, It’s Not Me, It’s You It’s complicated.  
ACCOUNTING FOR HISTORIES: 150 YEARS OF CANADIAN MAPLE WASHING

IdleNoMore: Turn The Tables


Electoral Reform is NOT a new idea in Canada.CANADA ALTERS HER…



Electoral Reform is NOT a new idea in Canada.

CANADA ALTERS HER VOTING SYSTEM


Change Deemed Necessary with Three Parties Contesting


Parliament Passes “Alternative” Balloting Motion – Rejects “P.R.”


“Ottawa, Mar 9 — Canada’s Parliament has just taken an interesting step in the direction of Electoral Reform.  With the advent of a third party, the Progressives, as a vital factor in politics, it soon became clear that the old system of voting under the changed conditions could no longer guarantee satisfactory results.”

In 1909 the British Parliament at Westminster was considering…



In 1909 the British Parliament at Westminster was considering adopting the Single Transferable Vote Proportional Representation electoral system.  At the time Earl Grey, the Governor General of Canada told the press if it came to a vote, he’d be tempted to give up the cushy Canadian posting because:

“The present system,” said Earl Grey, “is government of the people by caucus for the party.”