ᯓ★ silkfromvenus
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
The Bowery Presents
wallacepolsom
official daine visual archive
almost home
Today's Document
$LAYYYTER
Game of Thrones Daily
Keni

bliss lane
untitled
No title available
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

izzy's playlists!
art blog(derogatory)
taylor price

gracie abrams
trying on a metaphor

Andulka
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
seen from United States
seen from Canada

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Bangladesh

seen from United States
seen from Colombia

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Netherlands
seen from Colombia
seen from T1
@timidaf
ᯓ★ silkfromvenus
by Rachel Dowda
Just a gurl with a thicc booty... and a thing leaning on it.
Just a guy and his rabbit
Calls for inquiry into fatal police shootings ahead of N.B. election
While many election issues are timeless, every election cycle sees specific issues rise above the others. In New Brunswick, the discussion surrounding systemic racism has become top of mind for many voters.
It’s been three months since Chantel Moore and Rodney Levi were shot and killed in separate incidents by New Brunswick law enforcement.
26-year-old Chantel Moore was shot and killed while local police were conducting a wellness check in Edmundston, N.B., on June 4.
Just a week later, 48-year-old Rodney Levi was killed by the RCMP near the Metepenagiag Mi'kmaq Nation on June 12.
Moore and Levi’s deaths have sparked calls for an Indigenous-led independent inquiry into systemic bias within New Brunswick’s policing and justice systems.
During this election campaign, those calls have only grown.
“We are very firm in what we are asking for,” says Darrah Beaver of the Tobique First Nation. “We as Indigenous people deal with systemic racism every single day. We live in a new century, 2020, let’s all come together and make change.”
“The demand for Indigenous issues to be put higher on the list of priorities will not come from Indigenous people,” says Chief Allan Polchies Jr. of the St. Mary’s First Nation. “It will come from non-Indigenous people calling on their candidates to say, this is a priority.”
It’s an issue that has made its way to the top of two political parties’ lists.
“Aboriginal women make up five per cent of the female population of Canada, yet 48 per cent of the women incarcerated in our country are First National women,” says N.B. Liberal leader Kevin Vickers. “So the systemic outcomes that happen are flowing from systemic discrimination and systemic racism.”
Vickers spent Saturday afternoon in Red Bank, N.B., reaffirming his commitment to launch a public inquiry if he became premier.
New Brunswick Green Party leader David Coon has also said launching a public inquiry would be one of the first things he would do if his party formed government.
N.B. NDP leader MacKenzie Thomason says he supports an inquiry too.
But while N.B. Progressive Conservative leader Blaine Higgs acknowledges there is a problem, he has not committed to an inquiry, saying many of the issues are nation-wide.
“I do believe there is a systemic problem here in New Brunswick,” said Higgs on June 17.
N.B. People’s Alliance Party leader Kris Austin said in June that he’d like to see more data collected, to see how extensive the problem is.
“Our Indigenous people don’t get the justice that is deserved, and it is really tragic,” said Martha Martin, Chantel Moore’s mother, speaking at a rally held in front of the New Brunswick legislature on August 20.
The shootings of Moore and Levi are currently being investigated by Quebec’s police watchdog unit.
from CTV News - Atlantic https://ift.tt/325QkuY
"One nurse was fired. However, two were involved. Her losing her job is a mere slap on the hand for murdering a woman. They knowingly murdered a woman, justice will be served when they are charged with murder. Sign this petition to generate attention for this atrocious act committed at the hands of people who are supposed to take care of us. Systematic racism is alive and well."
Yesterday, September 28th, 2020, a native woman, Joyce Echaquan, was murdered by two nurses working at the CISSS de Lanaudiere in Joliette, Quebec. She was neglected for hours on end. The nurses gave Joyce a dose of morphine, after being told not to (allergic) by her next of kin, which ultimately stopped her heart. She was known for heart problems.
Video footage caught these nurses telling Joyce the following:
“We’re gonna leave her on the ground for bit”
“You dumb f*ck”
“Are you f*cking done fooling around f*ck?? you’re so f*cking dumb"
“ what would your children think if they seen you like this?? think about them a little”
“they’re better at having sex than anything else especially since we’re the ones paying for this”
“who do you think is paying for this????”
Joyce was a mother of 7 children, a sister, a daughter, a friend. If this happened to someone close to you, what would you do? How would you feel?
One nurse was fired. However, two were involved. Her losing her job is a mere slap on the hand for murdering a woman. They knowingly murdered a woman, justice will be served when they are charged with murder. Sign this petition to generate attention for this atrocious act committed at the hands of people who are supposed to take care of us. Systematic racism is alive and well.
Francois Legault offered his condolences to Joyce’s family. However, refused to acknowledge that this was an act of racism and that systematic/institutional racism is an issue First Nations people face on daily. We are living in a settler-state where First Nation lives are at the hands of murderers.
Long live her legacy. Rest in POWER, Joyce.
Sign the petition!
Tagging: @politicsofcanada
Joyce Echaquan used her last moments of life to share with the rest of the country what nearly every Indigenous person in Canada already knows.
I say this as a healthcare provider who has filed formal complaints on behalf of my abused patients for the humiliation, emotional torment, physical assault, & substandard care that I have personally witnessed & done my best to stop in the moment. Education efforts are ongoing.
I truly hope this is just the beginning of the unveiling of the systemic racism rotting our country.
If any of this sounds outrageous to you, that’s because it is. Hush, listen. If you don’t think there’s a problem, you’re the problem.
Peace, sister
Regrann from @survivorsinsk - I have no words. 😡😡😡#justicefortinafontaine #nojusticenopeace #missingandmurderedindigenouswomenandgirls #canada #manitoba #indigenouslivesmatter #indigenouswomenmatter #indigenousgirlsmatter #tinafontaine #humanrights - #regrann
#JusticeForColten
Absolutely disgusting and heartbreaking. I’m ashamed of Canada.
Gerald Stanley was found not guilty of second-degree murder of the death of Colten Boushie, 22, from the Red Pheasant First Nation in Saskatchewan. In 2016, a group of First Nations kids were driving around the backroads in rural Saskatchewan. They got a flat tire and sought help by the neighbouring homes, which were all farms. The group went up to Gerald Stanley’s farm to get help and Colten was shot in the back of the head. Since then, the case has been a disaster.
Gerald Stanley claims it was self defence because the group entered his property, as if it were some wild west movie. He felt threatened that the group was on his property and thought the group was out to steal and cause harm to his wife and son. The group was only on his property because they needed help with their tire, they had no choice. Stanley told his son “get the gun!” and attacked the group. Boushie was asleep in the back. He got up and sat in the front. Stanley claims a: he only shot to scare them off but later, b: “it just went off”.
If you’re shooting to scare someone off, and you accidentally shoot them, you’d immediately call 911 and run over to help. And if you’re trying to scare them off you shoot elsewhere, not right at them. Also he claims the gun “just went off”, yet he managed to walk over to the passenger side of the vehicle, aim at Colten, and shoot him in the back of the head 3 times. Right after that, Stanley and his family went inside, sat at the table, and finished their coffee as Colten laid lifeless outside.
Following the shooting, Colten’s friends have been treated as if they were the criminals. They were held in custody for 18 hours following the incident and were interrogated by the police. They were asked why they were there in the first place. They were asked how much they were drinking. They were asked what did they steal. They were asked numerous questions, despite being innocent the whole time. Colten’s family was kept in the dark as well with during the entire trial on most details. Yet Gerald Stanley was portrayed as the victim in the mainstream media. As the “poor farmer defending his family”.
It’s systematic racism at it’s best here, with the all white jury, all white lawyers, and white judge defending this white murderer for murdering a young First Nations man. Had they been a white group of teens coming on to a Reservation, the native man would go to jail for life with no parole for shooting a white youth.
In my experience, it’s tough being First Nations and living in the racist prairies (Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba). My parents have dealt with racism. My family has dealt with racism. My friends have dealt with racism. I’ve dealt with racism. I’ve gotten the glares and looks and have been called a “squaw” and a savage. I’ve heard and seen it all. It’s disheartening to see nothing change from my grandparents era to my parents era to present day - it’s all the same. Nothing’s changing, it’s only getting worse all over Canada. In the past few years alone, we have:
Tina Fontaine, who was murdered by a 50 year old caucasian man named Raymond Cormier. Tina was a 15 year old girl from the Sagkeeng First Nation in Manitoba who went missing in July 2014. On August 17, weeks later, her body was found wrapped in a plastic bag in the Red River in Winnipeg. Raymond Cormier has been charged for second-degree murder.
Barbara Kentner, who was murdered by Brayden Bushby in Thunder Bay, Ontario. Bushby, an 18-year-old caucasian man struck the 34 year-old mother with a trailer hitch. He deliberately slowed down the vehicle to throw the hitch at Barbara, yelling “I got one!” when he hit her. Kentner was hit in January and she passed away five months later after suffering from her injuries. Bushby has been charged for second-degree murder.
There were many other similar cases in the past few years alone of violence, police brutality, and murders against First Nations men, women, boys, and girls. Let’s remember Joey English. Christian Duck Chief. Loretta Suanders. Annie Pootoogook. Azraya Ackabee-Kokopenece. Bryan Black Star. All of the systematical injustices. All of the cases protecting the murderers and RCMP beatings. So let’s hope these two and all of the other cases don’t get the same results. Let’s remember Colten as the kind, gentle young man he was. He was training to become a fire fighter. His friends and family always remember him by his huge grin and contagious laugh.
If you are in the Calgary area, there is a memorial for Colten in Calgary at City Hall, Sunday February 11 at 6pm. There are numerous others all across Canada if you’d like to show your support, there are many Facebook pages with more information if you search his name.
Lastly, I have to say this: You can get away with murder in Canada. You can get murdered for just being First Nations. Something has to change. I am scared to be First Nations. I am scared to have a son or a daughter. “Canada is nice” is an absolute joke. Canada has never been nice to First Nations. Canada is only nice if you’re white.
NWAC / It Starts With Us
ALL 👏🏾 OF 👏🏾 THEM 👏🏾
This post goes harder than any post has ever gone before.
Don't even think about calling anyone/anything your spirit animal.
11. Contrary to what movies will tell you, we don’t need rescuing. Tell Kevin Costner: Dances With Wolves and other Hollywood westerns perpetuate the white savior narrative. Instead, watch films written, directed, and/or produced by Natives.
….
15. Expose your children to as many Indigenous activities as you can. The more children are exposed to the truth of a people, the less they will be affected by stereotypes.
….
25. Recognize that DNA does not equate to culture. Ancestry.com and 23andMe, for example, are in the business of biotechnology, not culture. Culture is the community, not your spit.
….
39. Stop buying “sage wands” at grocery stores. Sage, for traditional purposes, is not to be purchased. Sage, or “smudging,” as we call it, is meant to bless and cleanse a person or place. Purchasing some hippie sage wand diminishes its sacred meaning.
….
64. Don’t even think about calling anyone/anything your spirit animal.
….
66. Just because you lead your local Wiccan circle does not mean you understand 500 years of genocide. First, worshipping the gods and spirits of nature, which is a tenet of Wicca, is not directly comparable to Indigenous spiritualities, and second, please do not compare the Salem Witch Trials to the genocide of Native Americans. That’s not cool.
….
75. It’s worth remembering that reservations were first established as prison camps, and Hitler was inspired by them. America doesn’t want you to know that one.
….
87. Going camping with your pals whilst pounding booze in Patagonia jackets isn’t a “vision quest.” Please just go camping. No need to call it a “vision quest.”
….
93. Stop using the words, “tribes,” “tribe,” and “tribalism” as hip words for interest groups or groups of shared interest. This usage undermines the political, legal and social unique status of tribes.
….
99. Stop saying “Native Americans believed…” We believe. We survived. Being a better ally is about getting to know who we are and who we are not. We are not mascots. We are not mere relics of the past. We are writers, doctors, business owners, your classmate, neighbor. We are still here.
This is especially important in Canada @allthecanadianpolitics