
After spending nearly $8 million dollars searching for the bodies of Indian children said to be buried on the grounds of Canada’s infamous Kamloops Residential School, none have been found, according to a new report.
- The Kamloops Indian Residential School was hailed as one of the largest in Canada and was used to assimilate Indian children into Western cultural norms. It was run by the Catholic Church until the government assumed control of it in the 1960s.
- According to a spokesman for the Department of Crown-Indegenous Relations, $7.9 million had been allocated for the fieldwork, records searches, and other expenses needed to discover the bodies of Indian children said to be buried in unmarked graves at Kamloops.
- Despite this, no bodies have been found since First Nation leaders aired the allegations in 2021. Additionally, how the money has been spent has never been disclosed to the public.
- “Evidence” of unmarked graves found at Kamloops is based on “disruptions in the ground” felt after a female anthropologist used ground-penetrating radar at the site. First Nation allegations of genocide stem from the claims of this individual, who said these “disruptions” could be “the likely presence of children.”
The Big Picture: The Western world was outraged after the discovery was officially announced by First Nation leaders in 2021, prompting an outcry among leftists and antiracist activists.
- The incident would give way to widespread protests, violence, and arson attacks, which targeted Christian churches and White Canadians for their perceived complicity in the “genocide” of Indian peoples.
- According to reports, At least 33 Churches have been burned to the ground in Canada since May of 2021, with law enforcement confirming 24 of these to have been the targets of politically motivated arson attacks.
- Many have speculated that the arsons were launched as a direct response to the allegations of dead children at schools like Kamloops, despite a crucial lack of DNA evidence.
Connecting the Dots: False claims of ‘Genocide’ and other acts of racial wrongdoing at the hands of White people is a trend that persists across the Western world.
- In the United States, a monumental amount of resources has been spent trying to find Black victims of an alleged “race massacre” in Tulsa, Oklahoma. So far, three dig sites have produced only seven corpses, all confirmed to be non-victims of the “massacre” and had been buried with historical documentation.
- Despite this, the Black community has persistently called for monetary reparations for having been “victims” in the riot, which culminated in 26 Black and 10 White dead in Tulsa’s Greenwood neighborhood, referred to at the time as “Black Wall Street.”
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