I think the impact on the mainstream, of course, is obvious. If government documents on these events, be it historic events from the sixties and seventies or what's happening right now with the Trans Mountain pipeline and the criminalization of indigenous protesters, where you cannot access documents related to their arrests because they're seen as ongoing law enforcement issues.... I think that when you look at greater impact, whether it's contemporary or historic, it's a demonstration of institutional white supremacy.
If we have non-state organizations that are coming forth with apologies on these kinds of events yet state institutions are maintaining the status quo that they've kept for 40 years in terms of not disclosing or not being truthful on the kind of sabotage they performed during those exact events, then I hesitate to say what impact this has on the future of Canada, where so many different kinds of conflicts and different points of view are growing further apart.