White privilege

snopro

Active VIP Member
Joined
Mar 3, 2009
Messages
108,805
Reaction score
105,763
Location
Milo,Alberta
Jeeeze.... they are gonna feel that, might as well team up with Gillette and make a commercial too
Lots of beeeotching on some of the Nascar sites I follow. Lots of guys saying they are done with Nascar.
 

tejay

Active VIP Member
Joined
Dec 20, 2010
Messages
2,040
Reaction score
8,207
Location
stoke
It’s hard to comprehend the protesting and tearing down of statues . Rush to the front to be offended by something that ancestors did. Erase that history, coming soon book and movie burnings in your town square, defund the police. Covid is done we have moved on to protest season. WTF
 

snopro

Active VIP Member
Joined
Mar 3, 2009
Messages
108,805
Reaction score
105,763
Location
Milo,Alberta
It’s hard to comprehend the protesting and tearing down of statues . Rush to the front to be offended by something that ancestors did. Erase that history, coming soon book and movie burnings in your town square, defund the police. Covid is done we have moved on to protest season. WTF
Hmmmmm incidentally HBO Max just took the movie Gone With The Wind from their programming because of what they call "racial depictions". Also to get the ax yesterday but the 2 TV series "Cops" and "Live PD." And don't forget those Disney characters Elmer Fudd and Yosemite Sam both losing their fire arms in the Looney Tune reboot. Now Elmer has a large scythe and boxes of TNT. You cant make this stuff up.
 

Legend14

Active VIP Member
Joined
May 4, 2020
Messages
1,115
Reaction score
3,625
Location
Hills
The west is spiraling down the drain, gotta look forward to the reset if you survive!
 

turbo392

Active VIP Member
Joined
Sep 27, 2013
Messages
574
Reaction score
1,166
Location
Cochrane, Alberta
My grandparents(dads) raised 8 kids in a 3 room house near Perigord Saskatchewan, and my Great grandparents immigrated in the late 1800's. There were no handouts and they earned everything they got through hard work. My other grandparents (moms) mother was a scotish war bride to my grandpa. My grandpas family came to Canada just before WW1 started (they were German). They settled in Anneihiem Sask. Some farmed and my Grandpas cousins eventually founded Doepker manufacturing, today building truck trailers. Both sides of my family busted their asses to build a good life for us. It burns me to see whats happening in Canada right now.

Was 160 acres of land for free, not a handout?
 

ABMax24

Active VIP Member
Joined
Sep 10, 2013
Messages
4,883
Reaction score
14,168
Location
Grande Prairie, Alberta, Canada
Was 160 acres of land for free, not a handout?

Sure it was, but there is a difference. If they got bush quarters like my grandparents did the value really was zero. If you wanted 100 acres to plant crops you first had to clear the trees and bush on all 100 acres. At that time there was very little for services, roads were little more than a muddy trail, you were pretty much on your own. The only way to have the areas settled was to give the land away.

My family got empty land they had to work with basic tools, mostly by hand. They had to build their own shelter, water system, cut and haul firewood for heat, plant a garden and raise animals or hunt for food. With no social assistance to help if they failed. Compare this to today's immigrants that walk into this country, get welfare from the government, government assisted housing, easy access to credit, language and job training. Comparing the 2 I'd say it's the people today that get handouts.
 
Last edited:

2kDoo

Active VIP Member
Joined
Jul 23, 2012
Messages
2,520
Reaction score
4,728
Location
s
Sure it was, but there is a difference. If they got bush quarters like my grandparents did the value really was zero. If you wanted 100 acres to plant crops you first had to clear the trees and bush on all 100 acres. At that time there was very little for services, roads were little more than a muddy trail, you were pretty much on your own. The only way to have the areas settled was to give the land away.

My family got empty land they had to work with basic tools, mostly by hand. They had to build their own shelter, water system, cut and haul firewood for heat, plant a garden and raise animals or hunt for food. With no social assistance to help if they failed. Compare this to today's immigrants that walk into this country, get welfare from the government, government assisted housing, easy access to credit, language and job training. Comparing the 2 I'd say it's the people today that get handouts.

Mine have the exact same story when they got on a boat at 16 from Eurooe in 1890....grandparents literally got told may as well go somewhere else because there is nothing here for you........just imagine the journey yours and i took...it biggles my mind how they did it
 

ferniesnow

I'm doo-ing it!
Joined
Dec 2, 2008
Messages
112,063
Reaction score
86,098
Location
beautiful, downtown Salmon Arm, BC
Was 160 acres of land for free, not a handout?
Yes and no. They had to make improvements to be able to hold the land. Housing, out-buildings, crops, gardens, etc.. I forget what happened if improvements were not made in the time frame they had. My grandparents homesteaded and both were in Saskatchewan. On my father's side, he nor any of his siblings stayed on the farm. They all left for education and to eventually work in town. The same on my mother's side. All the children left the farm for education, work, or marriage. The homesteads were sold.
 

ABMax24

Active VIP Member
Joined
Sep 10, 2013
Messages
4,883
Reaction score
14,168
Location
Grande Prairie, Alberta, Canada
Mine have the exact same story when they got on a boat at 16 from Eurooe in 1890....grandparents literally got told may as well go somewhere else because there is nothing here for you........just imagine the journey yours and i took...it biggles my mind how they did it

Yeah it was a different time. My family didn't really have a choice, they were forced out of Poland in the 1850's and settled in Crimea, then in the 1860's again faced an uncertain future with forced military conscription and made the move to the west in 1864. The entire family was headed for the US but shortly before they left Crimea my ancestor fell in love with a girl who's family was headed to Canada the next year, he was the only member that came to Canada and settled in a small town outside Winnipeg, of course marrying her a couple years later.

Going through my family tree and history books it sure puts it into perspective how trivial most of my "problems" are.
 

snowcannon

Active VIP Member
Joined
Oct 29, 2015
Messages
421
Reaction score
737
Location
Salmon Arm
Yeah it was a different time. My family didn't really have a choice, they were forced out of Poland in the 1850's and settled in Crimea, then in the 1860's again faced an uncertain future with forced military conscription and made the move to the west in 1864. The entire family was headed for the US but shortly before they left Crimea my ancestor fell in love with a girl who's family was headed to Canada the next year, he was the only member that came to Canada and settled in a small town outside Winnipeg, of course marrying her a couple years later.

Going through my family tree and history books it sure puts it into perspective how trivial most of my "problems" are.
Mennonite heritage?
 

snopro

Active VIP Member
Joined
Mar 3, 2009
Messages
108,805
Reaction score
105,763
Location
Milo,Alberta
Lots of Mennonites in this area of southern Alberta as well. All seem to be hard workers and good to see the extra bodies that help keep our grade school open here.
 

ABMax24

Active VIP Member
Joined
Sep 10, 2013
Messages
4,883
Reaction score
14,168
Location
Grande Prairie, Alberta, Canada
Poland to Russia, then to southern Manitoba and pacifists.
I have lived in Steinbach for 16 years. If you don't know where that is you ain't a true mennonite
Steinbach is a prime example what immigrants achieve...

Sorry for getting off topic

Lol small world. My family originally settled in Blumenhof (just east of Blumenort today) which as you know is just north of Steinbach.
 

niner

Active VIP Member
Joined
Mar 14, 2009
Messages
8,607
Reaction score
61,916
Location
lacombe
Yeah it was a different time. My family didn't really have a choice, they were forced out of Poland in the 1850's and settled in Crimea, then in the 1860's again faced an uncertain future with forced military conscription and made the move to the west in 1864. The entire family was headed for the US but shortly before they left Crimea my ancestor fell in love with a girl who's family was headed to Canada the next year, he was the only member that came to Canada and settled in a small town outside Winnipeg, of course marrying her a couple years later.

Going through my family tree and history books it sure puts it into perspective how trivial most of my "problems" are.
We are probably cousins. Have lots of family in the Rosenort area. Large Mennonite families. My dad was the oldest of 14 kids.
 

west coast

Active VIP Member
Joined
Jan 16, 2010
Messages
314
Reaction score
1,851
Location
bc
Sure it was, but there is a difference. If they got bush quarters like my grandparents did the value really was zero. If you wanted 100 acres to plant crops you first had to clear the trees and bush on all 100 acres. At that time there was very little for services, roads were little more than a muddy trail, you were pretty much on your own. The only way to have the areas settled was to give the land away.

My family got empty land they had to work with basic tools, mostly by hand. They had to build their own shelter, water system, cut and haul firewood for heat, plant a garden and raise animals or hunt for food. With no social assistance to help if they failed. Compare this to today's immigrants that walk into this country, get welfare from the government, government assisted housing, easy access to credit, language and job training. Comparing the 2 I'd say it's the people today that get handouts.
These are the types of stories I want to see. People forget the hardships earlier generations faced. It aint magic dirt its hard ****en work
 
Top Bottom