A Pickering city councillor is facing backlash from community members and her council colleagues after penning an op-ed saying she does not support the concept of Black History Month, which led to public outcry and some demanding an apology.

In the op-ed, which was published online Sunday in the Oshawa Durham Central Newspaper, Coun. Lisa Robinson denounced the idea of celebrating Black History Month, arguing that "the race to equality is not the celebration of one race over another.

“We are so hung up on North American history and the historical trafficking of primarily African people that we have lost sense of time and period,” she wrote.

  • @xmunk@sh.itjust.works
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    79 months ago

    Some peoples have walked a more difficult road - if we deny to acknowledge that we let that inequality persist.

  • @ILikeBoobies@lemmy.ca
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    9 months ago

    I find the non-government flag raising laws because of pride funny

    My area had that law for decades, originally to prevent the raising of Confederate and Nazi flags back in the 80s. Then maybe 10 years ago a local pride group sued because they wanted their flag raised

    Then a few years later all these anti-gay politicians started pushing those laws

  • AutoTL;DRB
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    29 months ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    A Pickering city councillor is facing backlash from community members and her council colleagues after penning an op-ed saying she does not support the concept of Black History Month, which led to public outcry and some demanding an apology.

    “We are so hung up on North American history and the historical trafficking of primarily African people that we have lost sense of time and period,” she wrote.

    Pickering Mayor Kevin Ashe addressed the op-ed during an executive committee meeting on Monday, where he said the sentiments expressed by Robinson in the piece "run counter to the values we at council have collectively championed.

    “It is disheartening to witness such displays of insensitivity towards Black History Month, a time when we should be celebrating the rich contributions of Afro-Canadians to our great nation,” he said.

    In May 2023, Robinson encouraged a crowd at a Durham District School Board meeting to lobby politicians and to attend an upcoming Pickering city council meeting en masse in support of her motions to ban drag shows and pride parades anywhere children could be present, to limit non-government flag raising and to change city policy to mandate people use gender-specific washrooms.

    Pickering city council voted to suspend her pay for a period of 60 days as a result — something Robinson told CBC Toronto Monday that she intends to seek a judicial review for, as it was based on “unfounded allegations and distortions of the truth.”


    The original article contains 739 words, the summary contains 232 words. Saved 69%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!

  • @rbesfe@lemmy.ca
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    -79 months ago

    I think the outrage over this is overblown. Are her comments insensitive and missing the point of black history month? Sure. Are they racist? I don’t see it.

    • @girlfreddy@lemmy.caOP
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      99 months ago

      They are racist because they deny the history of racism in Canada, by denying that we owe Black, Indigenous and Brown people our time and effort to remember what we’ve done and to honour their lives, both past and present.

    • @mosiacmango@lemm.ee
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      9 months ago

      Hmmm, lets see. The article points out homophobic, transphobic, islamphobic and racist remarks shes made. It states shes been officially sanctioned twice for bigoted remarks, losing 3 months of pay overall. They show her advocating for the exact same policies as the American far right, a blatantly racist group.

      But nah, no way shes racist.

    • @LostWon@lemmy.ca
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      9 months ago

      We can’t ever move past racism or other forms of prejudice by ignoring them. Rather, that’s how they get preserved. But more important than that, African Canadian history isn’t just about slaves or oppressed people any more than European Canadian history should be considered to be about slave owners or oppressors.