Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Thank you. I still want to call you “Chief”.
Chief Ross has become a good friend over the years, being a fellow British Columbian.
I'm glad you brought up reconciliation—what we're talking about today in this committee—in the way that you did. You talked about examples of how to do it and how not to do it.
I'll quote an article of yours from the past, just a couple years ago:
Foreign influence is nothing new, but what we are seeing today is a well-executed campaign financed by the likes of Tides Canada and the U.S.-based Rockefeller Foundation.
It goes on:
Caught in the middle are First Nations such as the Wet'suwet'en, whose people are being divided.... The other group that's caught in the middle are everyday British Columbians—including fellow Aboriginals who just want to get home, to work or to the hospital.
How does government support for radical NGOs and their agendas help reconciliation?