tv Documentary RT November 20, 2022 10:30am-11:01am EST
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income is that its like social security for the rest of us, a basic income would be a monthly payments and that would go to everyone. does a $1000.00 a month, no strings attached. he is a however, i will like their me. i don't know. i just won't go crazy. the reason that i am a fan of guaranteed income because it is this idea that everybody is deserve it. and just about virtue of your being here. ah.
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so somebody put me in the chair and my feet. they're up can't even touch the floor . and they turn the power on electricity. when the cat, when the electricity goes, you candidly goal? cuz the gen the electricity makes you tighten it. he can't like go to you. you were tortured like that. ah, ah, a book. because they want to learn will they broke their children? what did i know? did this or do anything i was just the child
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canada has more than 2000 reserves like this one. they were set up in the late 19th century by the indian act. the law governing the indigenous population. this racist bill made them 2nd class citizens separate from white people. ah, today they are known as 1st nations peoples. back then they were savages. i am designated asked indian oh lives inside i reserve to separate the we are hidden people of canada here and here the government wants to call and preserve for the i call it my grandfather's land.
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the indian act is still applicable to day it was introduced in an attempt to settle and thus better control a nomadic people along with their territory and resources. the reserves were run by nuns and priests, and their mission was to evangelize the savages to assimilate them while we're building a garden the for pictures from the school. so this one is good business where the students girls been months. and these are the brothers. are blade brothers and that prisoners are here.
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it's hard to resist. at that time, very hard to resist. ah, ah, in from the age of 4 or 5 children were torn from their families and handed over to missionaries to be educated. ah, they were sent to it were referred to as residential schools. ah. the system was mandatory under the indian any families refusing to release their children or persecuted oh and denied the meagre state allowance. i had long hair and i put it in rates. so somebody comes behind me,
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cuts my brain off, my hair falls over, it looks like this. ah . as soon as the children or anything that identified them as indian was eliminated, their clothes were burned. they were forbidden to speak their own language. ah, they were issued with a uniform and a number is going to be the 1st is that's right. and these are to be ready for the aim was to make them good little white children. and good to be christians. i mean edmond and his cousin spent their childhood at saint em's the school on their reserve. our building they didn't leave until they were 15.
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i remember my 1st day. i remember looking at my mom to other were walking loan. she was very quiet. and a, somebody else took me by them, but by then i was overwhelmed with the the school i didn't see my mom living anteaus. she was gone. and then when i tried to run back or go after her, they closed the door and oh, you cried. lowered in slow flute while losing her mom, you're losing here. losing your mom is come up on this account for 8 years. the 2 cousins suffered cruelty and ill treatment.
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it was an experience that mark them for life. even though the escape the very worst of the abuse the rapes post o a dead sea brother broadway can be using a child and took them from the dormitory and the 3rd floor brought him down to the basement. and that's where you talk to grow. your group after we finish with the quote that i had the u. haul it or not to provide you they were like, oh, but if i, if i could never sleep because i always knew there was something there somebody, i could hear somebody moving her own or just it was the worst part for me was always waiting every night just like there was somebody there that's gonna grab you. that's no place to be for any
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child. ah, we all came home with a dark secret generation after generation. well say dance is an infamous school. it was only one of dozens. in a little over a century, 150000 children attended these institutions. ah, 4000 of them lost their lives. the last residential school closed down in 1996. 0, you take the children and you eliminate all their knowledge of their history. their culture then you're basically killing the people that grew up on these lamps
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that knew the land that were connected to the lab. and that's what these policies were. to take the indian out of the bush to take the indian the way from the bush milan and assimilate him indoctrinate him? to a genocide, i guess it was the way of killing a people the way of killing a, a culture, a nation killed indian yet. ah ah ah ah, ah luis of canter russian state total narrative outside as i'm phoning us. 19. divest again. all sense and
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we don't need the pope to tell us what to do with the school is right here. because 3 stories building is big enough for 200 students with you know what we never gave the missionaries. we never show them our tiers. we never cried. he can be slapped around like this, bang, bang, bang, bang, bang, right, right on your head and face, slap, slap, slap, slap, slap, and kneel on the floor and eat your vomit electrocution. but i'm still here, i'm still standing up, but they're gone. with
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the last traces of the missionaries, presidents are to be found nearby in the reserve. okay. just follow me. i'll make a trail here. it's an infamous a place. nobody comes to any more. these abandoned huts were the priests, summer residences. it's too dirty. you don't want to be here. bad spirits here. father le warriors to run over here after a bish somebody and run here and seek cap solution and no weapon south. there's a whip there. punish himself. everybody saw him running away from the school. so they said i did it again. now, i guess he was running all the time too. for the cabin here,
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sir brittany or something happened? ah. abandon since the late 19 ninety's, the huts are almost intact. time had stood still. ah, the ghosts are all that remains of the trauma that haunts edmund and the 1st nations peoples every single day. ah, that's how i grew up in it is really hard to to get over that. how do you get over that? when they wake up in jail? good. thank.
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a daily grind of alcohol and drugs, dental life and fishery that no one pays any attention to any more. in the frozen downtown streets you survive anyway, you can o y a you know, 48 october is a survivor veritable miracle. like the rest of his family. he belongs to the last generation, taught by nuns and priests with for a long time drowned his pain in alcohol like almost half the men in his community.
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for you. this music has kept me alive, kept me alive all these years. now is 1112 years old when going to voice code excursions, priest the like and c. name ralph roy, you know, you know, are all full of, took advantage of a lot of a lot of us there was no winter boys walking on the ice, going to the trap line. and we couldn't go back because we're already we crossed the lake going in the bush. and night time the priest decided to come and sleep said me why my sleeping way towards the night
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he went zip my and my my my sleeping bag and grab the man that's very good. i can hear some of them are my relatives didn't make it jigging themselves to death over doses. suicide, man, you know, and i've done that before. i put a gun there before. stick a needle in my arm to hoping to overdose. and i've been to jail. you know, got drug charges. i got a domestic violence beating up my ex wife, being out my girlfriends. and as with that it's, it's hard for her 3rd,
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the scary thing to talk with. in his plight, otto has been able to count on his and yeah, coffee. just, i know his lucky star coffee, grady cocker i'm from the baron plan. you said it was my grandmother, she always said to me, i never go to bed with dirty dishes on the table because little people walk around at night, spit on things as to why people get sick. she says, and that's what i do. i usually try and do my dishes before i go to sleep. all the time. i know suffered a lot too. when the residential schools it is
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a memory she still finds hard to talk about oh, i have when i had my parents in here so i can say he's 20 here. what i had to say. so natalie say, now it is mad. namely talking about it. but yet it made me, it made me the person i am today because i'm a beta i don't give up with anything i know has always wanted to break the vicious circle of trauma. she
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remained silent on the subject to protect her grandchildren, bear them the fate to befalls most of the communities. youngsters. ah, unlike their loved ones, they have not experienced residential schools. ah, yet all seem to carry the burden and 43 percent of 1st nation youths between the ages of 12 and 24 have addiction issues. women are the biggest victims. in canada, indigenous women are 7 times more likely to die or to be killed than white women. victims of the violence inflicted by men, whether white or indigenous,
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broken by the inherited trauma of colonization, we are targeted as easy prey. this time aside, phenomenon was acknowledged by the state after a 2 year nationwide study. oh i i am a product of the residential school. i was raped by a priest when i was young on my reserve. i was raped by 2 police officers here in thunder bay,
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one of 20012014. i've been beaten by men by my partners. really bad, where my doctor's, my doctor file is about that sick with pictures of you couldn't even recognize my face. broken bones no more stolen sisters. no more stores. no more. it's stolen sister with stolen sisters more than 4000 of them in 30 years. it's a phenomenon rooted in the country's history. oh
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oh oh oh boy, is this the best of both? no issue. my for the mobile, when you visit annual g d. p per capita is about $4000.00 euros. how long does that? we've got drugs falling in a mold or mildew, a wash fish, lee. i was up a man, i got an air planner, coffee seal. i'm quite a civilian kid. but when you're printers where you find him all the line to come out, nature let go of thought they would have thought of unemployment is off the charts, moldova territorial integrity and sovereignty. we respect of the country which enjoys financial support from the u. s. n. b, you is constantly roth, by political and corruption scandals. but all that didn't stop mo, google obtaining you candidate status in 2022.
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ah, i ran with wow. we have, which are ours. we make, you know, i'm not let you to really, you care about me. if you care about the play. i wish somebody could just tell me why her hair off, lately, lynching, beating poverty, why supremacy is just the disgusting ambulance. the people in mississippi voted on a flyer, and 65 percent of the people voted to keep the car flag. our purpose is to, to play in the good name and the confederates held because of these monuments that you see everywhere or not. can they not mine elect to the confederate government?
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there monuments to the, to the soldiers, to i don't know if we're going to be offended by everything. every negative part of our history. we have to get rid of everything. oh, a headlines here. what are you into national europe, the largest nuclear power plant comes under attack. moscow says that's epidemiology facility has been shelled by 13 times over the weekend. although ukraine is nuclear energy agency is accusing russia here, back tracks on its claims that russia was behind a deadly missiles drive on polish territory. that admits parts of the project called likely ukrainian us off of the us, nato, and of warsaw. official said was almost certainly launched by ukrainian air defense system also ahead for you.
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