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Marshall writes: "For a population currently struggling against the rapacious ravaging of the environment, let alone for survival, being told to 'get over it,' is another way of saying: 'just die, already.'"

Marshall: 'Naomi Lakritz wrote a syndicated column for the Calgary Herald on July 31, that First Nations people 'need to quit blaming the past' for the circumstances in which they live.' (photo: unknown)
Marshall: 'Naomi Lakritz wrote a syndicated column for the Calgary Herald on July 31, that First Nations people 'need to quit blaming the past' for the circumstances in which they live.' (photo: unknown)


A Brief Message for Canadians: Get Over It!

By Andrew Gavin Marshall, AndrewGavinMarshall.com

01 August 13

 

ANADIANS: Be ashamed that this newspaper column is what passes for the "public discourse" in this country: a raving, ignorant, arrogant, idiotic and racist rant telling Indigenous people to "get over it" - referring to the state-sanctioned racism, genocide, and imperialism - all of which is still taking place.

Naomi Lakritz wrote a syndicated column for the Calgary Herald on July 31, that First Nations people "need to quit blaming the past" for the circumstances in which they live, because they "have nobody to blame but themselves." First Nations people, suggested Lakritz, need to drop "the victimization mantle" and instead, start "with the concept of individual responsibility." In other words: get over it!

No, instead of Canadians acknowledging our history as a nation - the violent destruction, exploitation, domination, murder and discrimination exerted against the indigenous peoples of the land we invaded and occupied - this "journalist" thinks that Indigenous people should "stop blaming their history."

They are not blaming their history: they are pointing to their history so that we may learn our own. We have a 'shared' history, and it has led us to the present. If we - as Canadians - actually looked at our history, and traced its evolution up to the present, we would realize that our 'colonial' history has now evolved into a modern state-capitalist imperial present. Our historical injustices imposed upon Indigenous peoples have modern incarnations: the system of domination, exploitation, segregation, discrimination and - yes(!) - genocide, continues today.

If we learned about all that, we might want to change it. We might develop something called 'empathy' which can lead to something called 'solidarity.' These are very human characteristics, so I understand that they seem challenging to relate to in a deeply dehumanizing society; but remember, we have a shared history and we share the present. Our histories are intertwined and interdependent, and so too is our future.

We might look out at the fact that Indigenous people, not only in Canada but around the world, are rising up in rebellion against the rampant and accelerating destruction of the environment, which will lead the species to extinction. Indigenous people are on the front lines of the global struggle against human extinction and the preservation of the environment and earth we live on. If we looked at all that... we might join them.

Instead, we read articles like this gutter trash, intellectual abortion, which has been published in the Calgary Herald, The Province, Victoria Times-Colonist, and the Edmonton Journal. Interesting how in the two provinces of BC and Alberta where the Indigenous struggle against environmental destruction is currently very active, are the same provinces where this 'article' is published in the main newspapers for the four largest population centres... just in case you might get the 'right' idea.

Canada's corporate-owned media wouldn't want that, would it? Not when the corporation that owns all these newspapers - the largest newspaper company in Canada, Postmedia Network - has a board of directors who are reaping profits and power off of the destruction of the environment, sitting on multiple other corporate boards for banks, energy and oil companies.

Take Jane Peverett, on the board of Postmedia. Jane also sits on the boards of CIBC, the Northwest Natural Gas Company, and Encana, a major energy company. As recently as November, an Indigenous group in BC was taking action against the construction of a major pipeline project partly owned by Encana.

I'm not blaming Jane for this article; I think the author deserves the blame. But Jane - and her compatriots who sit on the boards of Canada's highly concentrated media system - maintain and wield significant influence over a media institution which promotes articles like this as contributing to the 'public discourse,' when all it does is promote ignorance, propaganda, passivity, and protects the interests of the powerful who own it. It's an institutional function. Jane is merely a cog in a much larger wheel, while Naomi Lakritz can barely be said to be cognizant.

It's institutional propaganda. Just as the discrimination, exploitation, domination and destruction of Indigenous people is institutional to our society. For a population currently struggling against the rapacious ravaging of the environment, let alone for survival, being told to "get over it," is another way of saying: "just die, already." And because the struggle is against the extinction of our species if we continue along our current path, saying, "get over it," is also like saying, "we're all going to die, but I don't want to do anything about it... and neither should you."

So for those Canadians who think the article above presented a 'reasonable' argument (and I KNOW you exist), and for those Canadians who think Indigenous people should stop "blaming history," take a piece of your own advice: get over it. Learn your history, know your world, find your brothers and sisters and join them in the struggle to save the species and the planet we live on.

When it comes to having people like Naomi Lakritz of the Calgary Herald lower the public discourse - or rather, maintain the public discourse at painful lows - it's really time that we get beyond this. Naomi Lakritz also thinks pot is a "dangerous drug" and legalization a "bad idea" (because once again, "get over" history, don't learn, just delude!), and who (shockingly) has problems with immigrants, and it's too perfect: she wants them to "leave [their] history at home" when they come to Canada... the nation with no history, apparently.

The deranged attempts by Lakritz to support the status quo when it comes to matters of injustice cannot be left as the level of discourse in a country which boasts the title of "the most educated country in the world." It's time to start acting like it. So it's time to stop listening to Lakritz and other 'rebels against rationality', and START listening to Indigenous people, who have a great deal that they are trying to teach us about our country, and are showing us ways that we can help change it for the better.

It's only our fate as a people, species, and planet that is at stake ... Get over it.


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