Okay, do y'all know what "Home Children" are? 🙋‍♂️

I'm a 🇨🇦 history nerd, and literally had no idea what this was until this morning.

It turns out it's a weird and twisted part of history, 🇨🇦 plays an active role in hiding.

<thread> 🧵👇
2/ Basically if you were an orphan in the UK or commonwealth, you were rounded up and used as a slave.

This also happened to poor families that were tricked into giving up their kids "temporarily" into better care, only to come back and find out their kids were gone.
3/ Eventually there was too many kids, so they decided they would export them.

"Parents" in countries like Canada would go to homes, pay an "adoption fee," and get kids under indentured contracts.
4/ Indentured contracts are when someone is forced to work, beaten, and often compensated with a minor wage withheld until they complete the job.

It's slavery. Except owners also have incentive to work the person to death before the contract was up, so they don't have to pay.
5/ Anyway, so Canada brought in over 100,000 of these kids to work on farms, factories, etc. This happened until 1948.

These adoption agencies were also pioneers in customer service. You could return the kid at anytime as well.

Coincidentally also avoiding paying the kid money.
6/ It also turns out "orphan" is a loose use of the term.

One organization specializing in reuniting these families estimates fewer than 12% were actually orphans. The rest were stripped from intact families as labor, with a fake story for history.

canadianbritishhomechildren.weebly.com
7/ To give an idea of the scale, it's estimated one in ten Canadians are from the bloodline of Home Children.

They just don't know it, because many immigrant children at the time thought it was just how things were, and it would be embarrassing if it wasn't.
8/ Most of this was hidden until around ~2007. The UK and many other countries acknowledged this was an atrocity, and apologized.

Not Canada. In 2010, the then minister of foreign affairs refused to apologize.

Jason. Fucking. Kenney. 🤦‍♂️

thestar.com/news/canada/20…
9/ and technically, Kenney wasn't wrong. Canadians aren't interested in the story of Home Children.

Most would rather pretend Canada is and has always been perfect, never having slavery. Morally superior to those Americans. 🙄
Seriously though. If you don't read the Star article, just read this lede to get an idea of where the government's at.

For American friends, this is the guy that was elected to now run a whole province.
Wait. You know the patriotic stories they tell in 🇨🇦 about kids lying about their age to join to fight in the World Wars?

Dark twist. Many of them were Home Children trying to escape their situation, and reunite with their families in Europe.

medium.com/exploring-hist…

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More from @StephenPunwasi

5 Nov
Pst... my threads aren’t random.

A few people have told me they appreciate the randomness of my threads.

Some threads seem like they’re social justice-y.

Some threads seem like they’re about making money.

They’re actually all about labor, wealth, and inequality.
2/ Take my thread on Home Children. Canada used over 100,000 children as indentured slaves.

We’re told they were shipped to 🇨🇦 for a better life.

BS.

They were shipped because 🇨🇦 needed *cheap* labor.

Criminals were literally sent to do the same thing as punishment.
3/ It’s actually a thread on how the early European Canadians got a head start on the backs of others.

A similar lesson is found in my thread on HBC. They weren’t here to find homies, they were a company looking to pillage and plunder.
Read 8 tweets
4 Nov
Quick rant on knowledge shaming. 👨‍🏫

When I explain something, I explain it assuming the other person has ZERO knowledge.

It doesn’t matter if the person is a 14 year old, or a fund manager that summoned me to challenge an area he’s an expert in.

I just do. 1/5
2/ It’s easier for everyone to have important details repeated, than for them to figure out what they’re missing.

Not everyone has the same background.

This can be for any reason, from cultural upringing, to socioeconomic status, to a lack of prior interest.
3/ It doesn’t matter why they didn’t know the bit of info. It’s just important they know it now.

When you respond to a fact someone finds interesting with, “how could you not know that?”

... you *think* it makes you look smart. Really it just makes you a dick.
Read 6 tweets
3 Nov
Who wants a quick thread on money laundering with cars? 🙋‍♂️

You might have noticed 🇨🇦 cities known for money laundering also have a large number of luxury vehicles.

Recently they discovered part of this has to do with the cars being used to launder.

<thread> 🧵👇
2/ It's stupid easy. You buy a car with a bag of cash, then sell the car back to the dealership a year later.

Dealerships aren't equipped to determine how you got the money. They don't have the resources or training.
3/ You could be a dad who saved $100/week to buy the car of your dream, or a guy that just chopped someone up with a cleaver for $250k. They have no clue.

The money goes into the dealership's account, where it's processed as legit business, and you drive away with a super car.
Read 8 tweets
2 Nov
The difference between 🇨🇦 and the 🇺🇸 in terms of libel is something every Canadians should know.

In 🇺🇸, defendants are considered innocent until proven otherwise.

In 🇨🇦, the defendant is basically lying until proven otherwise.

Now this is *super* important.

<thread> 🧵👇
2/ You're thinking, if you're going to say something, it should be true. Correct.

However, you need to be able to prove it in court *legally.*

Money disappeared, and the person in charge of it has the exact amount in their pocket? May not be enough evidence.
3/ This slants what issues get covered, and challenged in Canada. A media company, and some journalists, will not touch certain people and companies because they have deep pockets.

Yes, you will be reimbursed if you win. You still need to front the funds for defense.
Read 8 tweets
20 Oct
Fun fact: Car engines were originally designed to work with ethanol. That way farmers could make fuel.

Ethanol couldn’t be patented though, so they wanted to use gasoline.

Engines knocked with gasoline, so they had to add something to it. That would be ethanol.

Quick 🧵👇
2/ DuPont hated ethanol though, because since it was easy to produce.

So when an engineer named Thomas Midgley Jr. at General Motors came up with a solution - tetraethyl lead TEL, everyone jumped for joy.

Except TEL was a known poison at the time.
3/ DuPont even said it was “very poisonous if absorbed through the skin” in the early 1920s. They went ahead with it anyway.

The first gas station with this fuel opened in February 1923. Midgley Jr., the inventor couldn’t attend the opening though.
Read 6 tweets
19 Oct
Canadians perpetuate the idea Mounties are just friendly good guys in red suits from up north...

... Like they’re the Santa Claus of policing.

In reality, it’s an insane and insulting portrayal.

Here’s 3 things the RCMP is historically known for.

<thread> 👇
2/ The RCMP was founded as the NWMP in 1873, to ensure white Canadians could move West with “minimal” blood shed.

They originally enforced an apartheid-like system. They were to arrest First Nations people that didn’t stay on land designated by 🇨🇦.
3/ That brings us to our first stop, the pass system. By 1885, RCMP’s “Indian agents” would require First Nations to have documents stating they could leave the reserve.

No papers? You were arrested. Reserves were essentially turned into open air prisons.
Read 11 tweets

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