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Hymie Rubenstein's avatar

I should have noted that the claim “The Musqueam people have been stewards of their traditional territory since time immemorial” is based on questionable hearsay evidence -- statements made outside of court that are presented in court to prove the truth of the matter asserted -- a form of documentation normally considered inadmissible unless it meets very specific exceptions recognized by law.

These exceptions have been expanded by woke judges to include unsubstantiated indigenous oral history based on the premise that Canada's aboriginals, unlike all other people, never prevaricate, distort, misinterpret, forget, or exaggerate.

The hearsay evidence in cases like these, even if truthful, originated hundreds of years ago and was passed down orally from generation to generation by people without a written language. Illiteracy is all the more reason to doubt their accuracy, given that oral history, even if this "history" is only a few minutes long, is subject to change whenever it is repeated, as a wealth of scientific evidence has shown (see https://duckduckgo.com/?t=ffab&q=oral+history+is+fallible+&atb=v322-1&ia=web).

Canadasceptic's avatar

Oral history = because I said so. Yes, let's put the issue of private property rights in the crosshairs of activists judges using the "because I said so" standard of evidence and upend fee-simple titles we have all assumed confer ownership. And how many years will it take to sort out the various oral history-based claims among competing Indigenous groups? Canada is not a serious country.

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