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The Bobington Daily News's avatar

My gosh…we passed 2,000 subscribers overnight. Either you’re all extremely loyal, or you’ve fully lost it. Either way—I’m honored.

Thank you for showing up. Thank you for following me here. Thank you for reminding The Woman that a formerly stray cancer-killing machine with strong opinions and questionable table manners still has pull.

Now if you’ll excuse me, I have to get spiffed up for my checkup with Dr. Kenny—the only human I willingly allow to poke, prod, and praise me.

I’ll report back later…

hasif 💌's avatar

sometimes i wonder how many versions of myself i’ve outgrown without even noticing. i look back at old photos and remember the thoughts i used to carry, the dreams i thought would save me. it’s strange how you can live inside yourself every day and still not realize you’re evolving. it’s only when you look back that you realize how far you’ve come, how many lives you’ve already lived in the same skin.

You made it, you own it

You always own your intellectual property, mailing list, and subscriber payments. With full editorial control and no gatekeepers, you can do the work you most believe in.

Achea Redd's avatar
My 3-Word Mantra
Huy Nguyen's avatar

Sometimes I fantasize about disappearing.

Not dying.

Just logging off.

Getting a job no one cares about.

Growing tomatoes.

Writing poems in the margins of a notebook no one reads.

Not as a failure.

But as a kind of freedom.

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Joe C.'s avatar

If you want to be a strong writer, read and support strong writing! Like Momma said, “You are what you eat.”

Bari Weiss's avatar
The Great Canadian Mass Graves Hoax

Dear Bari, I feel it is unfair to call the mass grave claims a hoax. The word suggests the people who made the claims were trying to deceive the public, and there is no evidence to support such an assertion. While it may seem strange to most of us that no bodies have been exhumed, we must take into account the cultural sensitivities around respect for the deceased in Indigenous communities. There has been disagreement within the Tk’emlups te Secwepemc First Nation in Kamloops about whether the bodies should even be exhumed. Remember ground-search radar suggesting hundreds of people were buried at former residential school properties was done in 2021. The Tk’emlups te Secwepemc First Nation announced a plan to repatriate remains of the people allegedly buried in Kamloops on May 25, 2022 - just a day before Terry Glavin wrote his provocative piece for the National Post. In my opinion, that article was premature. Perhaps there are not 215 bodies buried there and hundreds more at other locations. But I would be shocked if there were none. One was too many. Also, this First Nation does not have to proceed according to a skeptic's timetable. They must take the feelings and well-being of families and communities into account.

If you look into the eyes of Indigenous people who speak about this issue, you see a world of hurt. Yes, the New York Times and others got it wrong by using the term "mass graves." But those errors do not negate the possibility that children wrested away from their families and home communities died at residential schools and may have been buried there. So, let's be more careful about our language and avoid calling the whole thing "a false story." This piece would have benefited from the voice of an Indigenous person. May I suggest you have a conversation with Duncan McCue, an Anishiaabe former CBC journalist and now a professor at Carleton University's School of Journalism in Ottawa.

Bari, I love the Free Press and most of the work you do. But I encourage you to seek a different perspective on this issue.

4 Likes
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Apr 11, 2023
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12:10 PM