Posted on 09/07/2022 11:04:31 AM PDT by Steely Tom
59 past convictions?
One is dead-—still searching for the other.
2 brothers
No one should be judged based on how he behaved on his 59 worst days.
Robert Sanderson, 49, of James Smith Cree Nation, Saskatchewan. Younger brother kills both older brothers? Then goes on deranged killing spree, making it an "all in the tribe" crime.
Apparently, none of the reporters are allowed to use the term ‘Indian’.
The victims are all Native, and the attackers both looked Native. I noticed six of the victims had the same last name - a family dispute that eventually involved outsiders who were in the wrong place at the wrong time?
Yes, he was crying out for help. The oppression finally became to much for him to bear.
Beat me to it. (i.e., family dispute theory)
Oh my goodness no. They are "First Nations People."
Where is Billy Jack when you need him?
Poor soul. He was just too high strung.
“I noticed six of the victims had the same last name - a family dispute that eventually involved outsiders who were in the wrong place at the wrong time?”
That might not mean much. Reserves are usually made up of a small number of large extended families. They will often have 1000 people and only four surnames.
59 past convictions?
,it is not talked about but there is dysfunction in those communities that is often ignored because we cannot say or suggest anything....God grant some kind of peace to all the friends and families remaining.
Weird. Of the two suspects, one is found dead.
Also, another of the victims shares a surname with the two alleged attackers.
The two did the attack on a reservation so it would be logical that all the victims were indians.
That's why the memory hole beckons.
I don’t know much about this particular group of people, but I am curious about their opinions on gun ownership and self-defense. What did they have at their disposal in order to protect themselves? It doesn’t appear they had much. I wonder if it because of their own core values that led them to be relatively defenseless, or did they get that way by trusting the government?
Curiosity on the subject of First Nations People is not something that will get you much in the way of psychic rewards.
according to the BBC, was released early from a four-year prison term in February, parole board determining that “his release would contribute to the protection of society”; breached attached parole conditions April/May, but not re-arrested.
The justice system has failed law-abiding folks in Canada just as in the UK and the USA. At this stage, it’s deliberate.
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