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The outrage over the discovery of the remains of 215 children at the former Kamloops Indian Residential School is palpable and understandable.
The desire by some to channel that anger by tearing down names, statues and buildings is the wrong path.
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Try refreshing your browser, or LILLEY: Looking hard at history, not erasing it, is how we honour the memory of the 215 Back to video
We are being asked to vandalize our history in order to atone for past sins, it’s something that has been tried in other countries in the past and never worked.
Floodwaters brought risk of fuel contamination into Dehcho homes and the soil that surrounds them. Assessors will be on the ground in Fort Simpson, N.W.T., this week, but the mayor says it’s taken too long.
The government of the Northwest Territories has unveiled its plan for economic recovery, dubbed “Emerging Stronger” but the plan is light on details about new initiatives to help the economy recover.
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