It isn't. Though this is something you usually hear about happening in Europe, I doubt that's the only place it happened.My concern is that I worry that this isn’t an isolated incident.
--Patrick
It isn't. Though this is something you usually hear about happening in Europe, I doubt that's the only place it happened.My concern is that I worry that this isn’t an isolated incident.
The death of a few is a tragedy. The death of many is a statistic. And some deaths are multiplied by brains absolutely refusing to come to grips with how horrific something is, out of self defense.As was posted in another thread here (I think?), half your country was sitting sympathies when 16 hockey players died. 215 indigenous children, eh yeah, it's bad isn't it, gosh what a weather we're having.
(I do not mean to imply Canada/Canadians are in any way alone in this. American natives, aboriginals, the Congolese, Armenians, the Uygurs, there's far too many people in similar or worse situations.)
I think the disassociation is because these aren't new deaths, unlike the 16 hockey players. It's like digging up an old artifact. If it was reported 215 childen died at once today, then people would react differently. This is more like unearthed history.As was posted in another thread here (I think?), half your country was sitting sympathies when 16 hockey players died. 215 indigenous children, eh yeah, it's bad isn't it, gosh what a weather we're having.
(I do not mean to imply Canada/Canadians are in any way alone in this. American natives, aboriginals, the Congolese, Armenians, the Uygurs, there's far too many people in similar or worse situations.)
Bishop Grandin or St Vital? Winnipeg's FULL of it.Canadians aren't being quiet about this either, everyone I know is mad about it. My city's local government is being inundated by calls and such. Half this city is named after one of the architects and shepherds of residential schools in western Canada. I went to two fucking schools named after top residential school Catholic folks. An entire neighborhood is named after him. Roads are named for him.
This is hopefully the event that helps Canadians finally start doing something to make amends for the brutal, terrible treatment of the native people.
Seems like a good time for insurance fraud in areas where the congregation has dropped to the level where it could be handled by a smaller church that would be cheaper than the current one’s insurance policy pays out.So I think you need more than one hand's worth of fingers to count the number of churches that have MYSTERIOUSLY been burned to the ground now.
You think the heat knocked down those statues too?Politics aside, all the churches are located close to each and all of them are out west, in the once in a 10,000 year heatwave.
No I was mentioning that as the church fires could easily spread.Alberta UCP MLA's are being accosted at Canada Day celebrations by insane anti-vaxx people.
I'd feel bad for them, but you know, you reap what you sow.
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You think the heat knocked down those statues too?
Erm, what happened to them all? Are they quitting? Not wanting to go in because of being overworked? I'm hearing similar rumblings happening in New Brunswick, as well.So, a good friend of mine has been a nurse for like 20 years now. She's worried about things in hospitals for the first time ever. The hospitals are deserted. The one she works at (the busiest) had to close a third of it's ER beds because of lack of staff. Edmonton is calling in EMT help from neighboring towns and cities because it's are so depleted.