In this op-ed, Nahanni Fontaine, longtime advocate for Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls (MMIWG) and New Democratic Party Member of Legislative Assembly for St. Johns, explains how the death of 15-year-old Tina Fontaine mobilized a movement, despite no justice from the courts. tn 3 magma "I called some of my friends from Silicon Valley, some of the best digital marketers in the world, and asked how you scale this stuff," Kushner toldForbes tn 3 magma Over the past several years, I’ve seen people — some once so wholly removed from the issue — organize, lobby, and pursue justice in her name. Tina was a change-maker in its truest meaning and reflection. She also became a symbol of all MMIWG, and it’s in this sacred space that Tina became the quintessential beacon of hope. Hope for justice, resolution, understanding; hope for creating family within the Canadian collective; and hope for an end to the slaughter of Indigenous women and girls in the nation. tn 3 magma When it comes down to it, the right to free speech has never been extended to everyone, and the founders that so many Constitution-huggers venerate so loudly never even intended that to be the case. As early as 1798, Congress passedlegislation tn 3 magma
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| Temps: | 2026-01-11 22:28:32 |