Further to the REAL Women REALity Update of Tuesday, September 30, 2025 – RCMP Investigation Finds No Graves, we thought our members would find of interest several articles, see below, on the same subject, in which other organizations have reached the same conclusion on the issue as REAL Women of Canada – that the current narrative is false.
JUNO NEWS
https://www.junonews.com
On the ‘National Day for Truth and Reconciliation’ (Orange Shirt Day)…
Juno News co-founder Candice Malcolm on the legacy of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, and why we cannot have TRUE reconciliation as a nation while distorting history and dividing Canadians
Sep 30, 2025
Today is ‘Truth and Reconciliation Day’ in Canada, a creation of the Orwellian Truth and Reconciliation Commission and its sophomoric report released back in 2015.
I call it Orwellian, because so much about the Commission, its report and this corresponding holiday are NOT rooted in Truth. Because of that, true Reconciliation is impossible.
From Day One, the process was stacked against Canadians. It was run by activists with a hateful, anti-Canadian agenda. Call it what you want: critical race theory, cultural Marxism, post-modernist and post-truth. The goal was always to divide Canadians by race, demoralize us about our past and our history, create a permanent divide between “oppressors” and “the oppressed” and create permanent victim status based on race.
Facts were never central, and so truth was often neglected. The Commission’s purpose became an airing of grievances – based on “my truth” and “my lived experiences.” Emotions were rewarded and these grievances became increasingly divorced from fact or history.
And the Commission was not about confronting and closing painful wounds in Canada’s history so that we can all move forward together as Canadians, but rather blowing those wounds open wider for future political gains.
It was all about a narrative – that early Canadians were settlers, colonizers, oppressors and the first nations were always peaceful, innocent and oppressed.
This is not to suggest that everything our country has done in the past was perfect. Clearly there have been wrongs committed in Canada’s history. Instead, the activists attempt to remove all historical context, even trying to cancel Sir John A. Macdonald, Canada’s founding prime minister (arguably, Canada would not exist today if not for Macdonald).
In 2015, the term “cultural genocide” was added to our lexicon, a crude way of saying “integration” or “cultural assimilation.”
By 2021, when the media pushed a hoax of the unmarked graves, the “cultural” qualifier was dropped. Suddenly, Canadians were literal Nazis, our education system was rebranded as concentration camps, and we were all collectively accused of genocide.
It is of course no coincidence that Canada has been plagued by over 100 church burnings and vandalisms in recent years as this toxic collective guilt narrative took hold.
This deranged and unhinged narrative was then peddled militantly by our elite institutions: the government, the legacy media, K-12 education, academia, band leaders and politicians of nearly all stripes.
The goal of this exercise is brow-beating. They want Canadians to feel demoralized, humiliated and defeated, so they can assert power and control.
Just look at what happened to Lindsay Shepherd, my former colleague at True North who is now a political staffer at the provincial legislature in Victoria, B.C., who posted the following in a now-deleted tweet:
“The Orange Shirt and the Orange Flag perpetuate untruths about Canadian history, such as the grandest lie of all that 215 children’s graves were unearthed in Kamloops.
It is a disgrace that this fake flag flies in front of the provincial parliament buildings, and it is a disgrace to see the shirt of lies framed prominently and permanently beside the coast of arms so that locals and tourists cannot view our insignia without having their eye drawn and redirected to the Orange Shirt.”
Lindsay spoke the truth. So, she was punished.
NDP MLAs piled on to demand that she be fired. Provincial leaders smeared her as a “denialist” – obviously trying to evoke comparisons to Holocaust denial – and the ugly, hateful threats began pouring in. Even her own party – the BC Conservatives – forced her to delete the social media post.
Lindsay’s treatment, however unreasonable, pales in comparison to what happened to Professor Frances Widdowson during her weekend appearance at the University of Winnipeg. She was confronted, attacked, assaulted and denied her basic Charter rights – all for the crime of speaking the truth.
I’ll be frank: if we don’t stand up to this insane bullying, Canada will not survive.
Let’s not forget that in response to the Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women report in 2017 (another doozy), Justin Trudeau declared that Canada was engaged in an ‘ongoing genocide’ (RCMP statistics report that roughly 70% of indigenous missing and murdered women were the victims of indigenous men).
We cannot have a country when one ethnic group believes the majority is engaging in an ONGOING GENOCIDE against it.
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We cannot have a country if nearly two in three young Canadians (58%) believe that Canada is an illegitimate country and that the country “belongs” to indigenous people.
We cannot have a country if courts rule that Indigenous land title (based on an oral retelling of “history”) supersedes current private property rights.
And we cannot have a country if we force people to wear orange, repeat these false narratives, and embrace a post-truth Canada.
So here is my message for all Canadians:
- Do NOT wear orange.
- Do NOT allow your children to participate in a humiliation ritual.
- Do NOT allow our country to be hijacked by an anti-Canadian, post-truth narrative.
- Do NOT submit to lies meant to divide us and destroy what our ancestors have built.
Celebrate Canada. Celebrate peace, prosperity and friendship with the First Nations. Do that with an understanding of history, facts and truth.
That’s the only way we survive as a nation.
God Bless Canada,
Candice Malcolm
Founder
WESTERN STANDARD
https://www.westernstandard.news
Opinion
CARPAY: False claims and race-based laws undermine reconciliation
Equality before the law — not race-based privilege — is the only path to real reconciliation.
Kamloops IRS students Archives Deschâtelets-NDC
Published on:
30 Sep 2025, 11:07 am
Truth and reconciliation are goals worth pursuing.
Which is why all Canadians, whether Aboriginal or non-Aboriginal, should not settle for the hypocritical virtue-signaling displayed through land acknowledgments. Nor should we embrace false claims that foster division, or race-based laws that generate strife.
In May 2021, Canadian media propagated the claim that the remains of 215 children had been found at the Kamloops Indian Residential School. This inflammatory assertion was based on ground penetrating radar, which can only locate soil disturbances beneath the ground, and cannot locate human remains. Excavation must take place to determine the truth about what those soil disturbances consist of. These facts did not stop CTV from proclaiming, “Remains of 215 children found at former residential school in British Columbia,” with the CBC and other media unthinkingly accepting allegations as established fact. This unproven claim does not foster reconciliation between Canadians of different ethnicities.
Rather, this unsubstantiated claim fosters the hatred that was on display when, following the May 2021 allegation, dozens of churches in Canada were burned and destroyed by arson, with dozens more vandalized and desecrated.
It is an understatement to say that the claim about 215 bodies of children buried in Kamloops is “unproven.” The Tk’emlúps te Secwe̓pemc First Nation received $12.1 million in funding from taxpayers to conduct excavations that would prove — or disprove — their May 2021 claim about a mass, unmarked grave. The Department of Crown-Indigenous Relations has censored all details of what became of the $12.1 million. However, the First Nations Health Authority did itemize partial expenses for a nine-month period, including $37,500 for “marketing and communications,” $54,000 in travel, $100,000 as six months’ pay for two trauma counsellors, and $405,000 in “administrative costs,” including speaking fees and tent rentals.
More than four years later, no field work has been conducted. The Tk’emlúps te Secwe̓pemc First Nation has received $12.1 million from Canadian taxpayers to uncover the truth, and deliberately refuses to spend these funds to find the truth. This strongly suggests — but does not prove — that the claim about buried bodies is false. Do the Tk’emlúps te Secwe̓pemc fear embarrassment and humiliation if an excavation fails to turn up the remains of 215 children? Where is their respect for the taxpayers’ money that was provided to them for a specific purpose? How is this refusal to conduct an excavation helpful to the goal of reconciliation?
Another serious impediment to reconciliation is closing public parks to non-indigenous Canadians, as is now happening in BC. This blatantly racist practice is condoned by BC’s Ministry of the Environment and Parks, which is helping Aboriginals to exclude Canadians of Asian, African, and European descent from using public parks.
Ultimately, true reconciliation among Canadians can only be achieved after we have abolished laws that are based on race, ethnicity, ancestry, or descent. When some Canadians — based on their ancestry or descent — have special, different, or superior rights, it necessarily leads to friction, strife, and resentment.
Should the descendants of French and English settlers, some of whom can trace their Canadian-born ancestry as far back as the 1500s, have superior legal rights over Canadians of Chinese and Japanese ancestry, who can trace their Canadian-born ancestry only to the 1800s? Should Canadians of Chinese and Japanese ancestry have superior legal rights over new immigrants who have no Canadian-born ancestors at all? Giving Canadians of different ethnicities different legal rights, based on how long their ethnic group has lived in Canada, is a very bad idea.
The best way to achieve reconciliation is for all Canadians to pay the same taxes, for all Canadians to have equal access to public spaces, for all Canadians to enjoy the same hunting and fishing opportunities, and for all Canadians to be equal before the law. Anything else is, quite simply, racist.
John Carpay is president of the Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms (jccf.ca).
WESTERN STANDARD
https://www.westernstandard.news
Opinion
OLDCORN: Truth and Reconciliation Day: A national farce masquerading as mourning
Taxpayer money squandered on ‘unmarked graves,’ while hospitals crumble and kids go without. Time to bury this hoax for good.
Unlikely as the allegation seems, Canadians were nevertheless quick to believe priests and nuns had murdered children at residential schools. Western Standard files
Published on:
30 Sep 2025, 12:27 pm
Here we go again, another “National Day for Truth and Reconciliation” is upon us. The federal government shuts down for the day. Flags are at half-mast. Across the country, Canadians are supposed to pause, reflect, and feel guilty for a manufactured fake holiday.
But pause we must, not to bow before this altar of invented outrage, but to ask when does this madness end?
This isn’t reconciliation. It’s a racket. A bold-faced swindle that preys on good hearts and empty promises, all propped up by a premise as flimsy as a house of cards in a hurricane.
Consider the spark that lit this firestorm back in 2021. Headlines screamed of “mass graves” at former residential schools — hundreds, thousands of tiny souls dumped like garbage. The nation was in shock. Churches were burned and politicians wept on cue.
Yet four years on, what have we got? Absolutely nothing. Not a single body as excavations came up empty.
Ground-penetrating radar found “anomalies” that proved to be tree roots or rocks, not coffins. As of early this year, the three official digs yielded no remains tied to the schools.
The so-called “genocide” narrative? It’s crumbling faster than the old residential school foundations.
And the cost to taxpayers? An eye-watering amount. Ottawa’s forked over $323 million since 2021 to fund these ghost hunts, with $320 million pledged in the aftermath, with more drizzled out for “healing” and “commemoration.”
That’s taxpayer cash for radar sweeps and somber ceremonies, all chasing shadows that were never there.
Imagine the hospitals we could staff. The classrooms we could equip. Instead, we’re bankrolling a myth that divides us deeper with every passing Orange Shirt Day.
Now zoom in on Saskatchewan, where the folly hits home hardest. Just Monday, Premier Scott Moe’s government inked a deal to cough up $40.2 million to survivors of the Île-à-la-Crosse School — a ramshackle outfit run by Oblates from the 1860s till the 1970s, then handed to locals.
Moe called it a “sincere apology,” a step toward “closure” and “equal opportunity.” Noble words. But noble? Hardly.
This payout — slated for court rubber-stamp in 2026 — comes as Saskatchewan is under immense strain. Wait times for cancer scans stretch months. School boards scrape for basics like books and buses. Why not redirect that $40 million to fix what ails us now? Pump it into northern health clinics, where doctors are ghosts themselves. Why not bolster trade programs to lift families out of poverty, not lock them in victimhood?
Moe’s mea culpa rings hollow when you tally the cost. Saskatchewan’s already shouldered billions in federal transfers for indigenous programs — good on paper but drowning in bureaucracy.
This latest cheque? It’s virtue-signaling on steroids, funneling funds to a third-party firm for “trauma-informed” claims processing. Trauma-informed? Try taxpayer-informed. Folks in Regina and Saskatoon deserve better than handouts chasing history’s phantoms. Real reconciliation builds bridges, not bottomless pits of victimhood.
Enter Maxime Bernier, the one voice in Ottawa’s echo chamber roaring sense into the void. On this very “holiday,” the People’s Party leader dropped a truth bomb on X, “On this ‘National Day for Truth and Reconciliation,’ let’s remember that no bodies were found, that the residential schools ‘genocide’ is a hoax, and that reconciliation requires an end to the bs, the victim mentality, the fake white guilt, and the grifting based on it.”
Bernier’s not mincing words, and he shouldn’t. The grift’s real as lawyers line their pockets, activists peddle perpetual grievance, and governments buy absolution with our tax dollars.
Enough! White guilt? It’s a chain around Canada’s neck, created by legacy media hysteria and pushed by politicians terrified of the social media mobs.
This statutory day off for the territories and federally for public servants mocks true progress. Residential schools were a tragedy, no denying it.
Forced assimilation scared generations. Abuses happened, dark and unforgivable. But inflating that into a “cultural genocide” with unmarked mass graves? That’s not truth. That’s propaganda, peddled to justify endless reparations and endless division. We honour the past by facing it square in the face and acknowledging wrongs without inventing horrors.
Real healing? It starts with jobs, not jubilees. Education that empowers, not excuses. Communities thriving side by side, not segregated by fake holidays.
So, here’s the rub, Canada. Ditch the orange shirts and the obligatory tears. Scrap this faux holiday before it devours more of our shared future. Demand audits on every dollar spent chasing graves that aren’t there. And tell the grifters that the show is over.
Reconciliation isn’t a cheque or a day off. It’s hard work, done together. Without the hoaxes holding us back.
If Saskatchewan can find $40 million for echoes of the past, why not the same money for the pulse of today? Moe, Carney, all of you, it’s time to step up or step aside. Our kids all deserve a country that builds, not one that kneels to myths.