The Great Canadian Flag Debate

There have been many issues that have divided Canada in its history. There was the conscription crisis of 1917, or the referendums that threatened to break up Canada. Even things like Medicare caused furious debate across Canada.

One event that was hotly debated across Canada, loved by some, and hated by others at the time, was the debate over Canada’s flag. For most countries, a flag is created early in its history and there is little debate over its creation. In Canada, no national flag existed until almost 100 years after the formation of the country. Other flags had existed, de facto national flags, but nothing was official.

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Sir John A’s Defenders Are Fighting Back

Macdonald is richly deserving of harsh assessments but many people have grown concerned that the criticism has gone too far. Macdonald is being measured against 21st century standards and both his intentions and his administration are being interpreted wrongly and, sometimes, dishonestly, writes Patrice Dutil.

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State school standards banish lessons about World War I, II, Holocaust, Civil War

Replacing those significant history topics will be “systemic racism,” how democracy has “excluded certain groups,” an “awareness” of “the LGBTQ+ community” and how the disenfranchisement of freed blacks during Reconstruction connects to “persistent discrimination and inequity” today.

h/t Mom

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Liberal Education Group Uses Capitol Riots to Push Reparations

The Zinn Education Project, a progressive network that develops teaching resources, sent an email to its 125,000 followers on Wednesday recommending a lesson plan in which students craft their own reparations legislation. The email says the activity will help students reflect on “what a path toward justice might look like” following the riots. It also compares the Capitol riots to the Civil War and claims that following the war, the United States cared more about “traitorous Confederates” than African Americans.

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Historic Lincoln Statue Removed from Downtown Boston

The statue depicted a formerly enslaved man and was taken down after officials unanimously voted for its removal.

Boston Mayor Marty Walsh, a Democrat said “After engaging in a public process, it’s clear that residents and visitors to Boston have been uncomfortable with this statue, and its reductive representation of the Black man’s role in the abolitionist movement.”

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Virginia Military Institute begins process of moving Stonewall Jackson statue to museum

On Monday, the VMI announced that the process of moving the statue from in front of the barracks on campus to the Virginia Museum of the Civil War and New Market Battlefield State Historical Park has started. Once the statue is removed, contractors will spend several days repairing the stone pedestal before it is moved to the museum. In total, the process will cost $209,000, and it will be paid for out of the VMI’s facility maintenance and operations budget.

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‘A Day That Will Live In Infamy’: Pearl Harbor Remembered In Silence 79 Years Later

What I did in 2019 to mark the 78th anniversary of Pearl Harbor would be absolutely unthinkable today in 2020.

I joined a group of veterans — several of whom were veterans of the Pacific Theater in World War II — along with a few of their family members and my own fifteen-year-old daughter. We attended a special screening of the film “Midway.”

I watched these men, who were in their mid-nineties, stand tall and salute the “Missing Man” table that was set up at the front of the theater.

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