Sitting Bull(shit)
Blog post headline shamelessly nicked from the NY Post article.
In the latest case of (fake) ancestral opportunism, a Canadian indigenous health expert turned out to be short on the indigenous.
Mary Kaye Linge writes at the NY Post:
A Canadian medical researcher who rose to become the nation's top voice on indigenous health has been ousted from her government job and her university professorship -- after suspicious colleagues investigated her increasingly fanciful claims of Native American heritage and learned she was a fraud.Carrie Bourassa, a public health expert who served as scientific director of the Canadian Institutes of Health Research's Institute of Indigenous Peoples' Health, was suspended on Nov. 1, five days after the state-owned Canadian Broadcasting Corporation published a lengthy expose on her background.
Far from being a member of the Métis nation, as she had long claimed, a laborious trace of Bourassa's family tree revealed that her supposedly indigenous ancestors were in fact immigrant farmers who hailed from Russia, Poland, and Czechoslovakia.
...Colleagues began to doubt Bourassa's story as she began to add claims of Anishinaabe and Tlingit heritage to her tale -- and took to dressing in stereotypically indigenous fashion.
It started to unravel in 2019, when she appeared in full tribal regalia -- draped in an electric blue shawl, with a feather in her partially braided hair -- to give a TEDx Talk at the University of Saskatchewan in Saskatoon.
"My name is Morning Star Bear," she said tearfully as the crowd cheered.
"I'm Bear Clan. I'm Anishinaabe Métis from Treaty Four Territory," she proclaimed as she described an impoverished childhood beset by violence.
But colleagues at the university, where Bourassa held a professorship, smelled a rat.
...When pressed to provide evidence of Native American heritage, Bourassa suddenly changed her story -- saying that she had been adopted into the Métis community by an unnamed Métis friend of her deceased grandfather, Clifford Laroque.
"Even though Clifford passed, those bonds are even deeper than death because the family has taken me as if I was their blood family," she insisted in a statement. "In turn, I serve the Métis community to the best of my ability."
The case is drawing comparisons to that of Rachel Dolezal, the white woman who claimed to be black as president of a local branch of the NAACP -- and to Sen. Elizabeth Warren, who claimed Native American ancestry on the strength of family lore and her "high cheekbones."
Where color and culture become ways to cut the line on candidates with mere merit, opportunists "of color" and "of culture" will pop up like slices of toast for the morning rush in a diner.








Speaking of ancestry... Happy Hanukkah godess!
Ben David at November 28, 2021 7:45 AM
There will always be opportunists who skirt the rules - no matter what the rules are. A variation of the old saw, "It is impossible to make something completely foolproof, as fools are so ingenious."
The trick is to create a system which the cheaters cannot exploit easily and installing safeguards which prevent them from easily attaining and/or exploiting the rules of the system - without creating a draconian system that punishes even the meritorious. Not an easy task, that.
When having Native American blood is a pathway to power, the ones with no moral qualms will immediately "find" they have Native American ancestry.
When access to vulnerable women is provided by claiming, without proof, that one is trans, the number of trans claimants will rise as the exploiters exploit.
It's the ones who claim, when implementing these systems, that no safeguards are necessary who are indifferent when the system gets exploited. Those same ones, protecting their social investment in that system, double down on defending the exploited system.
So, don't hold your breath waiting for the Canadian Institutes of Health Research to insist upon proof of one's First People's heritage from the next white claimant, not even where such claims are a quasi-qualification for an important position.
Conan the Grammarian at November 28, 2021 7:55 AM
More proof that whites and men aren't the groups that have privilege.
jdgalt1 at November 28, 2021 12:00 PM
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