B.C. chiefs tell MP Aaron Gunn to ‘chillax’ about land acknowledgments
VANCOUVER — The chiefs of four British Columbia First Nations are telling Conservative MP Aaron Gunn to “chillax” after he criticized land acknowledgments spoken before public events.
In a joint statement, the chiefs from the Tla’amin, Homalco, K’omoks and Klahoose nations say “harmless” land acknowledgments only recognize “the history of the place” where people are holding events.
The nations say land acknowledgments “have never seized private property, cancelled a mortgage, repossessed a pickup truck or altered a single title deed anywhere in Canada.”
North Island-Powell River MP Gunn had criticized the practice of land acknowledgments on Monday., saying on social media that the federal government should stop making them if it “truly believes in the private property rights of Canadians.”
