Documentary exposes shady 'reconciliation industry,' BC NDP moves to ban MLAs from using funds to make film like it again

Subhead:One B.C. Party’s new documentary Making a Killing: Reconciliation, Genocide, and the Plunder of Canada challenges mass-grave narratives and exposes a lucrative taxpayer-funded industry — prompting the B.C. government to explore rules that would stop MLAs from ever funding similar films again.#

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In Victoria on December 1, a new documentary was screened inside the B.C. legislature that the governing NDP clearly doesn’t want British Columbians to see.

The film, produced by the One B.C. Party and titled Making a Killing: Reconciliation, Genocide and the Plunder of Canada is a fact-driven examination of residential schools and modern reconciliation policy that is so politically inconvenient, the NDP has openly discussed changing the rules on how political parties are allowed to use their funds so films like this can’t be made again.

In other words, unpopular truths about residential schools and “Truth and Reconciliation” are off-limits for MLAs when not its politically correct.

Making a Killing is the first documentary of its kind where a political party publicly challenges what many describe as “the greatest hoax in Canadian history.”

It begins by tackling the false claim that launched a national reckoning in 2021: when the Tk’emlúps te Secwépemc band government told the world that ground-penetrating radar at the former Kamloops Indian Residential School revealed the remains of 215 children as young as three years old.

Author: contributor

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