Ontario's covid dystopia problem solved: public health brownshirts get owned by native restaurateur
Ontario's covid dystopia problem solved: public health brownshirts get owned by native restaurateur

Credit Instagram's @apiarygurl.

Unfortunately the restaurant was unidentified.

Ontario has numerous aboriginal reserves [0].

It used to be the fashion to call aboriginals Indians, and to call the Indian warriors braves.

Notable for the displays of Indian bravery in recent Ontario memory are the 1990 Oka Crisis [1], the Ipperwash Crisis [2] and the Grand River land dispute [3].

The first conflict occurred over more than two summer months over a Mohawk [4] burial site located in the town of Oka, Quebec; it involved Mohawk braves and since the reserve straddles Ontario and Quebec, I include it here to give my international and/or young readers a taste of the terroir.

The second conflict, also related to a burial site, occurred near Ojibwe territory on the shores of Lake Huron.

The third conflict involves the Six Nations of the Grand River in a dispute over a vast tract of land that stretches from Waterloo to near Niagara Falls.