Showing posts with label Natives. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Natives. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 6, 2016

A real nation would not let this happen

A great opinion piece from last year when election campaign in Canada was all the noise (& news) in the media.

We Canadians like to think that we are all one nation & we care for each other. Non-Canadians come to visit Canada & see the urban, down-town real estate developments & enjoy the urban amenities, & consider Canada a great place to be. Canadian cities are regularly rated to be great place to live & work by international organizations.

But all that happens because nobody takes a peek behind the curtain to see how Canadian Aboriginals are faring on the forgotten reserves & even in the urban areas. Nobody, including politicians, wants to hear / see their plight. That's the same case everywhere around the world. Be it Aboriginals of US or Australia, or even poorest of the poor people, forgotten in the back country, of countries on African, Asian, & European continents.

Although, blaming the developing countries for forgetting the poorest of the poor might not be justifiable, since their urban (so-called, "middle-class") populations also struggle to make ends meet, but it is inexcusable when developed countries put millions, if not billions, in the outstretched hands of the rich suburbanites because they are a few dollars short for their new home renovations, new electronics, vacation trips, night life shenanigans etc.

The author is correct to say that although we think we are one nation; be it Canadians in Canada, Americans in America, Australians in Australia, Pakistanis in Pakistan, Indians in India, South Africans in South Africa & so on & so forth, when it comes down to our selfish interests, it is me against everyone else. We always want more. We always have less. Why?

Because we forget to look at people who are below us in our society. Perhaps, then, we can satisfy our constant hunger for more. We forget that, as a democratic nation, it is the responsibility of the general populace to reject the latest handout in the elections & annual budgets, & compel our politicians to take care of the least unfortunate & needy among us. After taking care of the humanity on the national level, all of us, as humans, are obligated to tell our politicians & international organizations to take care of the least unfortunate among us on an international level. Heck, a lot of animals (wolves & lots of grazing animals, for instance) take care of the whole herd, instead of taking care of their own little family. Are we humans worse than animals?

Michael Moore, the documentary film maker, said in one of his documentaries (if I may recall correctly, it was on the American healthcare system) that a nation is judged by how it takes care of the sick, old & needy.

Perhaps, we are eligible to call ourselves humans, only when, we take care of the whole humanity; be it in our own backyards, on our streets, in our cities, in our provinces / states, in our countries, on our continents, & in the world.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------


If it’s a typical eight weeks in Canada, then 1,425 Aboriginal kids dropped out of school, a rate three times the national average. Since the campaign began, 45 Aboriginal children died in infancy; they would have lived longer if they’d been born in Sri Lanka. As Canadian politicians bickered on the evening news, 1,074 Aboriginal children & 6,265 Aboriginal women were sexually assaulted. Since the writ dropped, 33,534 Aboriginals were violently victimized. Another 182 committed suicide, roughly eight times the national rate. And, if the last two months were anything like the last decade, 11 were murdered, at a rate almost seven times higher than the national average.
...


Politicians are pushing each other out of the way as they scramble to give the hard-pressed suburban middle class the help they need. Meanwhile, other Canadians living on reserves & in the inner city are disappearing, assaulting & killing each other & themselves, at a rate typically only seen in countries that have been torn apart by war.
...


The party leaders build their campaigns on ... isolated, focused announcements. Small promises for small men & women, them & us—because this strategy only works if we respond. And we do.

We respond because we are nothing more than a collection of special interest groups. We are dairy farmers or oil workers, urban or rural, francophone or anglophone, Manitobans or Nova Scotians. But we are not a people, not a nation, not really. If we were, we would not be able to ignore each other, ignore other Canadians, the way we ignore the Aboriginal community. We would not allow our politicians to reduce us to Pavlovian demographics, salivating at the sight of a specially crafted handout. We would be unleashing a full-throated cry of anger & dismay, that so many fellow Canadians are growing up alone & lost, that so many of us are living in abject poverty & then dying miserably.

We would shout down every stump speech about the “struggling” middle class & demand more for the least fortunate among us. We would scream in frustration as yet another young Aboriginal is found hanging, unnamed & unmourned.

But we don’t. We just stand there, heads down, hands out.

I don’t know who to be more ashamed of, our politicians or us.

Sunday, April 26, 2015

Danish politicians want Charlie Hebdo taught in schools

So, while we are at it, how about Danish schools become fair & balanced, & also teach about holocaust (not just the "official" version as dictated by the Israeli organizations), Spanish Inquisition, Israeli occupation of the Palestinian lands, & there are so many other topics (slavery & looting of African resources by Europeans, killings & gross violation of Natives' human rights by Europeans, brutal invasion & occupation of Americas & Australasia by Europeans etc.)

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The cartoon crisis, the Charlie Hebdo killings & the latest terrorist attack in Copenhagen on February 14 are such an important part of history they should have a permanent place on the school curriculum,” Conservative People’s Party spokeswoman Mai Mercado wrote in the Jyllands-Posten newspaper.
 
Another opposition party, the Danish People’s Party (DF), which has 19.6% of voter support, according to a recent poll, also supported the idea of ‘Mohammed cartoons lessons.’ Party members say that studying the Charlie Hebdo related crisis & its aftermath should be mandatory in all the country’s schools.
If you live in Denmark you should also be able to tolerate seeing the drawings,” party spokesman Alex Ahrendtsen told the daily Berlingske daily newspaper.
 
While the Conservatives want the cartoons to be taught in history class, the Danish People’s Party say it should be done in religious studies.
 
"One of our time's great challenges is the threat from Islamism & the pressure on freedom rights that have built up over many years,” said Martin Henriksen, the DF immigration spokesperson.
 
John Rydahl, president of the Danish Association, thinks the cartoons should be reprinted in students’ textbooks.
 
"The Muhammad crisis is an obvious topic for R.E. [religious education] teaching, & I'm surprised that so far no textbook has reprinted the cartoons. That should happen - & sooner rather than later," Rydahl told DR News.
 
However, Dennis Hornhave Jacobsen, president of the Danish Association of History & Social Studies Teachers, says a Mohammed cartoons class is a bad idea as “it could end any real discussion about the nature of freedom of expression, because there are children in schools who believe the Muhammad cartoons are objectionable & the discussion will stop there.”
 
Reportedly, many Danish schools already teach the Mohammed crisis in grade 9, but it’s not compulsory.
 

Friday, March 27, 2015

The Lone Ranger (Quote 1)

Although, "The Lone Ranger" was an action / adventure movie, there were still a few interesting lines in it.
--------------------------------------------------
Looking at the condition of our world today, nature is indeed out of balance today ... all done by "modern" humans !!!


IMDB          RottenTomatoes          Wikipedia

Sunday, March 22, 2015

Canada's race problem is worse than America's

Another great op-ed on racism in Canada. I posted my opinions & thoughts on another article on racism in Canada. I did include immigrants in that blog, & this op-ed does too, but nothing will change in Canada, until we all firmly believe & accept that there is racial discrimination in Canada, & it is only going to get worse as the economy worsens further.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the recently released Social Progress Index, Canada is ranked 2nd amongst all nations for its tolerance & inclusion.


Unfortunately, the truth is we have a far worse race problem than the US. We just can’t see it very easily.

Terry Glavin, recently writing in the Ottawa Citizen, mocked the idea that the US could learn from Canada’s example when it comes to racial harmony. To illustrate his point, he compared the conditions of the African-American community to Canada’s First Nations. If you judge a society by how it treats its most disadvantaged, Glavin found us wanting. ... By almost every measurable indicator, the Aboriginal population in Canada is treated worse & lives with more hardship than the African-American population. All these facts tell us one thing: Canada has a race problem, too.

How are we not choking on these numbers? For a country so self-satisfied with its image of progressive tolerance, how is this not a national crisis? Why are governments not falling on this issue?

Possibly it is because our Fergusons are hidden deep in the bush, accessible only by chartered float plane: 49% of First Nations members live on remote reserves. ... Fewer than 40,000 live in Toronto, not even 1% of the total population of the Greater Toronto Area. Our racial problems are literally over the horizon, out of sight & out of mind.

If we don’t have a race problem then what do we blame? ... Us? For not paying attention. For believing our own hype about inclusion. ... For not acknowledging Canada has a race problem.

We do & it is bad. And it is not just with the Aboriginal peoples. For new immigrants & the black community the numbers are not as stark, but they tell a depressingly similar story.

If we want to fix this, the first step is to admit something is wrong. Start by saying it to yourself, but say it out loud: “Canada has a race problem.”

Friday, March 20, 2015

Racism in Canada

A long, but great, article. Racism is rampant in Canada. Until a few years back, most thought there was minimal racism in US; well, we can see how that went & still coming along since last year there.

Racism is not felt by the majority of Caucasians in Canada; be it education, jobs, & other social spheres of society. But, it is felt by non-Caucasians, be they be Natives or non-Caucasian immigrants from other countries. Assimilation is the word frequently thrown about & the society usually start blaming the immigrants (similar to in this case, Natives) for all their troubles they are facing in Canada.

As I commented in another blog post a few days ago that assimilation is a 2-way street. Natives or immigrants can only assimilate only when Caucasian Canadians also move in their direction & are willing to accept them as their equal, as Canadians.

Jobs, education, & personal safety are 3 of the most basic requirements for any person. Most parents want to see their progeny have a good education, get a good job & lead a happy, safe, & successful life. However, in many cases, be it the African-Americans in US, immigrants all over North America, or Natives in North America (US, Canada, & even Mexico), are not provided educational facilities & some who do get through the education system, they are not provided jobs, as per their education & skills dictate.

If most of the jobs are taken over by Caucasians & they are not willing to help, or "network" with, non-Caucasians (immigrants & Natives), then they are always going to feel inequality & injustice. As long as they are going to feel that way, rightly or wrongly, they will lash out against the majority populations through violent means, which then cause prisons to fill up with African-Americans in US, Natives & even immigrants in Canada, which in turn, feeds the thinking of the society that these groups of people are violent & not good for society.

We can even expand the scope & scale of this to go global. RCMP, FBI, CIA, CSIS are all trying to curb the growth of ISIS, which it is doing through recruitment of western youths. They are failing to understand this basic point that immigrant youths in the West feel rejected from the society. They see that their future seems to be bleak in the West & they feel powerless to do anything in the West. So, they find an easy outlet to move to Middle East, enroll themselves in ISIS, & start feeling like they are contributing something meaningful to a cause.

Then, we have this problem of personal safety. Be it the law enforcement agencies acting out against the minorities (cops in US assaulting minorities or even the judicial system meting out much harsher sentences to minorities for similar offences perpetrated by a Caucasian person) or general Caucasian public on the main street (American Muslims being gunned down). From a Muslim perspective, we can take the issue of Muslim women wearing hijabs in Canada. Regardless of why federal government is demonizing hijabs, the general public take that in the wrong sense & then harassing, verbally, & in some cases, physically abusing Muslim women, out on the street. Law enforcement agencies don't take those matter seriously (similar to Natives in this article). NCCM (National Council of Canadian Muslims) record multiple incidents of harassment & abuse of Muslims in Canada, but how many do we see being reported in the media?

No society can ever achieve peace until & unless it ends injustice & inequality in itself.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Oh Goddd how long are aboriginal people going to use what happened as a crutch to suck more money out of Canadians?” Winnipeg teacher Brad Badiuk wrote on Facebook last month. “They have contributed NOTHING to the development of Canada. Just standing with their hand out. Get to work, tear the treaties & shut the FK up already. Why am I on the hook for their cultural support?


Another day in Winnipeg, another hateful screed against the city’s growing indigenous population. This one from a teacher (now on unpaid leave) at Kelvin High School, long considered among the city’s progressive schools.

Badiuk’s comments came to light the day Rinelle Harper—the shy 16-year-old indigenous girl left for dead in the city’s Assiniboine River after a brutal sexual assault—spoke publicly for the first time after her recovery. She called for an inquiry to help explain why so many indigenous girls & women are being murdered in Winnipeg, & elsewhere in Canada.

Badiuk’s comments came while the city was still reeling from the murder of Tina Fontaine, a 15-year-old child from the Sagkeeng First Nation who was wrapped in plastic & tossed into the Red River after being sexually exploited in the city’s core.

They came the very week an inquest issued its findings in the death of Brian Sinclair, an indigenous 45-year-old who died from an entirely treatable infection after being ignored for 34 hours in a city ER.

They came in the wake of a civic election dominated by race relations after a racist rant by a frontrunner’s wife went viral: “I’m really tired of getting harassed by the drunken native guys” downtown, Gord Steeves’s wife, Lori, wrote on Facebook. “We all donate enough money to keep their sorry asses on welfare, so shut the f–k up & don’t ask me for another handout!” The former city councillor & long-serving, centrist politician didn’t bother apologizing.

We value dogs more than we do these women,” says indigenous playwright Ian Ross.

When measuring racism, social scientists tend to rely on opinion polling & media analyses. Last year, for example, Winnipeg recorded the highest proportion of racist tweets of the 6 Canadian cities known for high levels of hate crime, according to data collected by University of Alberta researcher Irfan Chaudhry. (Manitoba recorded the second-highest rate of hate crimes last year, after Ontario, according to a recent report.)

1 in 3 Prairie residents believe that “many racial stereotypes are accurate,” for example, higher than anywhere else in Canada. In Alberta, just 23% do, according to polling by the Canadian Institute for Identities & Migration (CIIM). And 52% of Prairie residents agree that Aboriginals’ economic problems are “mainly their fault.” Nationally, the figure drops to 36%.

1 in 3 North End residents drop out of school before Grade 9.... 1 in 6 children are apprehended by Manitoba’s Child & Family Services. Girls as young as 11 or 12 routinely work the stroll. On North Main Street, traffic slows to a stall when intoxicated residents stumble across the street. Solvent abuse is as common as alcoholism here, & rising. Even in December’s cold, kids as young as 9 clutch gas-soaked rags; some have begun stuffing them directly into their mouths for a more powerful high.

I used to tell myself I wouldn’t live to see my sweet 16,” says 24-year-old Jenna Wirch. “I was sure I was going to die before then.” Both Wirch’s sisters committed suicide when they were growing up. 4 of her closest friends have also died by suicide. One hung herself in an alley using her dog’s leash. She was 11. Wirch’s mom put her to work in the sex trade before her 10th birthday. She ran away at 11, then bounced between the street & a long list of foster homes. One was a crack house. Two friends were stabbed to death in front of her, one with a machete. This is a North End childhood.

The area’s hospitalization rate for violence is almost 7 times that of the wider city. Within a year, roughly 20% of youth treated for violence will be back in hospital seeking treatment for another injury, says Carolyn Snider, an ER doctor at the core area Health Sciences Centre.

That’s just a reality of having brown skin in Winnipeg, says Jacinta Bear, who manages the North End Hockey Program. ... “Our team has heard it all,” says Bear .... “Even opposing coaches & refs call our kids ‘dirty little Indians.’”

A few years ago, the federal government investigated claims that indigenous Winnipeggers were being denied housing due to discrimination. The Canadian Mortgage & Housing Corporation pulled together a random survey of Aboriginal renters. The results were damning. 1 in 3 told the CMHC that after showing up to visit an available suite they were told it had “just been rented.” More than 30% felt they had been driven to neighbourhoods in the core, where the poverty rate & the incidence of crime more than doubles the wider city & jobs are scarce.

Colonialism didn’t just impact Aboriginal people,” says Perry Bellegarde, the new national chief of the Assembly of First Nations. “It forever changed the way the European population on the Prairies would see Aboriginals as a problem, never a partner.”

The province imprisons a higher proportion of its indigenous population than apartheid South Africa did its black population. 65% of inmates at Stony Mountain Penitentiary, a medium-security prison just outside Winnipeg, are indigenous, the country’s highest Aboriginal incarceration rate measured by jail.

Tuesday, March 10, 2015

How the West was stolen

A good summary article to highlight what American settlers did to the Natives. It didn't happen in the dark ages but after the European enlightenment period (after all, settlers were from the old continent). Atrocities conducted by "enlightened" settlers or even what American soldiers did during 20th-century wars are actively censored from traditional media so we may still falsely believe that we are the "civilized" world.

On top of that, as Dr. Saunt also says that the terminology is being changed now to effectively erase this history, by modern descendants of settlers now (Caucasian Americans) being called as "indigenous".

Now, these Natives are confined to reserves, with living standards, which are so far below a 3rd-world country's living standards that it's horrifying. Many reserves don't even have basic plumbing for running water & sanitation; forget the systems in place for education & jobs (that's why, Natives are far behind in education & employment in US & Canada).

North American NGOs pour millions of $$$ & actively work in Africa & Asia but ignore the abysmal conditions most of these Natives' reserves are in their own backyards. Why? because it makes far good PR from both NGOs & respective governments' perspectives to export the good deeds instead of help improve the living conditions of Natives.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Between 1776 and 1887, white conquerors razed across 1.5 billion acres of occupied land, claiming it for their own. By 1800, Native Americans only accounted for 15% of the nation, compared to the settlers' 85. A survey taken in 1900 showed the Indians to make up just 0.5% of the US population.

 
It is a history that many claim to be ignored by the majority of non-indigenous Americans, who focus on the lives lost during the Civil War & European atrocities of the 19th century.
 
Dr Saunt explains the 'rapid & murderous' sweep by quoting California's first governor John Sutter:
 
'That a war of extermination will continue to be waged between races, until the Indian race becomes extinct, must be expected,' Sutter said in 1851.
 
In the 21st century, the canvas is being stretched for a change of perspective.
 
Now, more than 1% of Americans identify as indigenous - 'an increase,' Dr Saunt writes, 'that reflects not a substantive demographic shift but a newfound willingness & desire to identify as indigenous.'
 
He concludes: 'A history that glosses over the conquest of the continent is partial, in both senses of the word. It misleads people about the past & misinforms their debates about the present. In charting a course for the future, Americans would do well to put the dispossession of native peoples back on the map.'

Sunday, March 8, 2015

International Women's Day 2015: something to be proud of?

So, International Women's Day (IWD) was on March 8th & a lot of rallies were taken out & lots of beautiful speeches were given around the world. If you didn't know already, IWD has been celebrated for over a century now:

1. Thanks to fashion show runways (e.g. Victoria's Secret), objectification of women's bodies is now perfectly fine in our “modern” society:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/article-2891936/Oh-degrading-year-women-writes-SARAH-VINE.html

2. Thanks to silence of the media, sexual assaults & murders of almost 1,200 indigenous Natives women, in the past 30 years, in Canada, don’t even register on the government’s radar to do something about it (it is still just “talk” & more “discussion”):
http://www.cbc.ca/news/aboriginal/international-women-s-day-indigenous-women-still-not-equal-in-canada-1.2985100

3. Thanks to silence of the UN on the rape & human trafficking of women, even by its own peacekeepers (soldiers hailed from developed countries; US, Canada, Germany, France, UK, Netherlands etc), has not only silently condoned the abhorrent practice but has helped flourish it in almost 11 countries around the world:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Whistleblower

Is this what IWD has been celebrating for the past century? Is this what IWD has been working towards for the past century? Are these some of the many “accomplishments” to be proud of?