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Rosedale Champagne Socialists

Feb. 9th, 2008 | 06:57 pm
mood: aggravated aggravated

I have recently been angered by the NDP fight to make property tax based on purchase price instead of a more market assessed value. Recently, Ontario announced that it would reassess inner-city neighbourhood that will make many wealthy homeowners pay a similar percentage of property values to suburban residents. NDP MP Paul Dewar came in on this provincial and municipal affair, claiming injustice on behalf of wealthy inner-city homeowners, land speculator, landlords, developers, inheritors and their ilk, claiming they deserve thousands in tax breaks because they were Greenier. Greener for what, their drafty early 20th century homes, European station wagons and the global travels to purchase ugly artwork. That is a lot of tons of wasted CO2.

If the NDP gets it 's way, most of the working people they claim to stand for that live in the suburbs because it is the only place they can afford housing, another big issue for the NDP, will be stuck with either thousands more in property taxes or few services as wealthy developers, landowners and inheritors get off with paying thousands less in taxes per year. I guess the NDP is just doing the rich more favours, especially after they brought down Liberals before their smoke in mirrors budget deal was fully implemented to get Steven Harper's "more war, less tax, jail 18 year olds for having sex with 15 years olds" agenda implemented and accomplishing not a single concrete result for working people since... medicare?

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Tories won't apologize for Canada's Aboriginal Concentration Camps

May. 2nd, 2007 | 07:41 pm

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/Page/document/v5/content/subscribe?user_URL=http://www.theglobeandmail.com%2Fservlet%2Fstory%2FRTGAM.20070327.wxnatives27%2FBNStory%2FNational%2F&ord=647590&brand=theglobeandmail&force_login=true

You maybe asking what do I mean by this? To quote wikipedia:

"Students were required to stay in residences on school premises, which were often walled or fortified in some manner, and were often forcibly removed from their homes, parents, and communities. Most students had no contact with their families for up to 10 months at a time due to the distance between their home communities and schools. Often, they did not have contact with their families for years at a time...

In 1909, Dr. Peter Bryce, general medical superintendent for the Department of Indian Affairs reported to the department that between 1894 and 1908 mortality rates at residential schools in Western Canada ranged from 35% to 60% over five years (that is, five years after entry, 35% to 60% of students had died). These statistics did not become public until 1922, when Bryce, who was no longer working for the government, published The Story of a National Crime: Being a Record of the Health Conditions of the Indians of Canada from 1904 to 1921. In particular, he alleged that the high mortality rates were frequently deliberate, with healthy children being exposed to children with tuberculosis.

Until the late 1950s, residential schools were severely underfunded, and relied on the forced labour of their students to maintain their facilities. The work was arduous, and severely compromised the academic and social development of the students. Literary education, or any serious efforts to inspire literacy in English or French, were almost non-existent. School books and textbooks, if they were present at all, were drawn mainly from the curricula of the provincially funded public schools for non-Aboriginal students, and teachers at the residential schools were notoriously under-trained.

In the 1990s, it was revealed that many students at residential schools were subjected to severe physical, psychological, and sexual abuse by teachers and school officials. Several prominent court cases led to large monetary payments from the federal government and churches to former students of residential schools.

The last residential school closed in 1996. Although a settlement has been offered to former students, the federal government has decided not to apologize for the system or any damage caused. "

A mortality rate of 30 to 60% across the whole system over a 5 year period is quite shocking. Under Stalin, the worst winter in the concentration camps or "gulag" had a 20% mortality rate, which included my great grandfather, and that was at a time when the Soviet Union began a successful push to stop the Nazis plan of enslaving and extermining Central and Eastern Europe, a burden British North America has been nowhere close to having. Had had the situation been worse, and the same tragity repeated 5 years in a row, that create a 5 year mortality rate of 68%. As well, the gulag has no assimilation or genocidial intension, rather it was for economic in nature and faciliated social control of dissidents, criminals and captures of war.

I know from my father's Polish background that Polish society still suffers from the scares and backwardness of the brutality of the 20th Century. One can say the same thing about many cultures and Canada's First Nations is one of them.

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