To keep it really brief, I think that economic reconciliation recognizes the independence, sovereignty and jurisdiction of first nations.
We know that right up until very recently—and I already talked about this before—in the relationship with first nations the federal government saw the first nations as children unable to take care of their own affairs, and they legislated accordingly. That's where we got things like the Indian Act, residential schools, the sixties scoop, the ongoing child welfare situation today and underfunding for everything. There were a lot of instances of Indian agents stealing resources from first nations.
In order to reconcile, we need to hear the truth about what that relationship was and how lopsided it was, and really start to, like I said, decolonize that and go back to the original relationship, which was more, as equals, sharing the resources of the land and also the responsibilities of that as well. I think that's really what we want to do in terms of that reconciliation. It's more of a holistic thing and involves other things besides just economics.