Introduction: The Settler Nation state Canada is founded on the principles of systemic institutional racism targeting Indigenous Peoples inhabiting land the Settler state desires to possess and exploit for its sole benefit. This is how the Nation state was founded in 1867 and how the Indigenous Peoples where marginalized, isolated and subjugated to make way for the civilization of the land. Today, mainstream media knowingly plays an active role in continuing the marginalization through the way it reports on Indigenous issues. I say knowingly because there is ample information available on Indigenous stereotypes and the mechanics of perpetuation that render any excuses by media as meaningless and disingenuous. Reporting and editing of stories with Indigenous references or on Indigenous issues are frequently deficient in ways that foster the perpetuation of harmful stereotypes. Again there is no excuse for this. There are plenty of knowledgeable Indigenous People with credentials in both worlds that could provide useful skills to publishers to ensure there is true balance and honest representation of Indigenous worldviews in the stories. Mainstream media also contributes to the perpetuation of harmful stereotypes through social media sites like Facebook pages and comment sections on media websites. The guidelines and practices vary widely from publisher to publisher. The most harmful sites are those that allow the posting of anonymous comments with minimal or unskilled moderation. The situation has grown so bad and expensive to manage that PostMedia/Sun has switched to requiring Facebook credentials before individuals can make postings. CBC in December 2015 placed a moratorium on open comments on Indigenous story content. The comment forums are a hot bed of overt and covert anti-Indigenous racism. Publishers regardless their disclaimers, have an obligation to not promote hatred or at a minimum expose the identity of those engaging in hate speech. The following presentation will examine the mechanics of how stories are written and how these current methods encourage the promotion of stereotypes. I will show this through the comments that get posted as a direct consequence of the positioning and tone of the stories. I will also deconstruct the comments to show
how they are racists and why so a better understanding is achieved into how words are the weapons of hatred.
Presented by: The Coalition against Racism in Mainstream Media