Wednesday, June 24, 2026
ADVT 
National

Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin Suggests Using Electronic Media To Help End Aboriginal Stereotypes

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Oct, 2015 11:01 AM
    SASKATOON — Canada's chief justice says modern media could be used to end stereotypes of aboriginal people created by old western movies and TV shows such as "The Lone Ranger."
     
    Beverley McLachlin told an administration of justice conference in Saskatoon that media have been used to shape a certain perception of indigenous people, sometimes in very negative ways.
     
    McLachlin says she is not an educator or a movie-maker, but suggests things such as videos or games could show the reality of aboriginals.
     
    And she says the best time to increase that knowledge is in grade- school-level education.
     
    McLachlin says changing perceptions could help a judicial system that many aboriginal people fear or mistrust.
     
    She also says new Canadians might fear the legal system, too, if they come from countries where justice is equated with oppression and where the courts are corrupt.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Former NHL Enforcer Pleads Guilty To Assault, Three Driving Charges In B.C.

    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A former NHL enforcer has pleaded guilty to an assault charge and three charges of driving while prohibited in separate incidents last year in Kamloops and Merritt, B.C.

    Former NHL Enforcer Pleads Guilty To Assault, Three Driving Charges In B.C.

    Hundreds Attend Memorial For 11-Year-Old Girl Slain On Northern Manitoba Reserve

    Hundreds Attend Memorial For 11-Year-Old Girl Slain On Northern Manitoba Reserve
    WINNIPEG — More than 200 mourners have attended a memorial service in Winnipeg for an 11-year-old girl whose partial remains were found on a northern Manitoba reserve.

    Hundreds Attend Memorial For 11-Year-Old Girl Slain On Northern Manitoba Reserve

    Winnipeg Woman Sent Home In Cab Had Trouble Breathing In Hospital: Nurse

    WINNIPEG — A woman who died hours after being sent home in a cab from a Winnipeg hospital was too ill to undergo diagnostic testing the day she was released.

    Winnipeg Woman Sent Home In Cab Had Trouble Breathing In Hospital: Nurse

    Wildfires Force About 4,000 People To Evacuate Homes In Northern Alberta

    Wildfires Force About 4,000 People To Evacuate Homes In Northern Alberta
    Wildfires have forced about 4,000 people from their homes in north- central Alberta but officials don't believe any houses have been lost.

    Wildfires Force About 4,000 People To Evacuate Homes In Northern Alberta

    Residents Of Flooded B.C. Village Offered Disaster Financial Aid From Province

    Residents Of Flooded B.C. Village Offered Disaster Financial Aid From Province
    With shovels and wheelbarrows, backhoes and dump trucks, residents of Cache Creek, B.C., spent Monday scooping up and hauling away mud and debris deposited across their community by a devastating weekend flood.

    Residents Of Flooded B.C. Village Offered Disaster Financial Aid From Province

    Postmedia Appoints New Editors At Toronto Sun And Ottawa Sun

    Postmedia Appoints New Editors At Toronto Sun And Ottawa Sun
    TORONTO — Postmedia has announced two new editors at papers in Toronto and Ottawa as it works to bring its operations together with its recently purchased Sun Media properties.

    Postmedia Appoints New Editors At Toronto Sun And Ottawa Sun