‘More people were involved than we would like to believe’ Re: Why so many children died at Indian Residential Schools , Tristin Hopper, May 29 I write from a position of sorrow, yet little surprise. As a Secwepemc person who walked the grounds as a guide in 1999 at the Secwepemc Museum, which is adjacent the former Kamloops Indian Residential School, I shared with visiting tourists the horrific stories of the school, including the numerous child.
The proposed legislation comes after a number of studies from Quebec's French-language watchdog found that the French language is in decline in the province.
Eating Healthy on a Budget with Crystal launches on Friday, May 7 at 6 p.m. on We re All In This Together! From meal planning and knowing your grocery store to making smart food substitutions, Crystal offers some sage advice in an accessible way to help you be more mindful of the importance of eating well, while making the most of every dollar! To watch the promotional clip of the episode, click here.
Crystal Baran is a Certified Integrative Nutrition Health Coach and Naturotherapist, specializing in helping people holistically realign themselves to reduce stress and regain confidence. Food is the foundational tool that she uses to guide her clients on a healthy track of building long-lasting, sustainable habits. She has made it her mission to create a space for every person to explore their personal capacity to heal.
Sizable minority of Canadians believe in COVID-19 conspiracies: poll
Last Updated Apr 30, 2021 at 12:44 pm EDT
A man wearing a face mask arrives at a COVID-19 assessment center in Toronto on Dec. 27, 2020. (Photo by Zou Zheng/Xinhua via Getty Images)
Summary
Thirty-seven per cent of Canadians think COVID-19 was manufactured in a lab and mistakenly released
Men more likely than women to believe at least one conspiracy
VANCOUVER (NEWS 1130) – From microchips in COVID-19 vaccines and the virus being created in a lab, to big pharmaceutical companies spreading it, new polling data suggests a sizeable number of Canadians are buying into pandemic conspiracy theories.