Sure. As I kind of laid out, indigenous people have fought for decades to have even just minimal representation at tables, whether at different public institutions or with the federal or provincial governments. To see that many of the opportunities, if not most of them, are going to non-indigenous people who are pretending to be indigenous....
That aspect of the struggle, of really having to work hard to have even basic representation, is something that we're not meeting as a society. We have decided to oftentimes hire the people we're most comfortable with and to not question their claim: They're a lot like us, as non-indigenous people, and we feel more comfortable having them around us and working for us.
There's an aspect of racism at work here that is very troubling. I think there are ways we can address it, but it doesn't seem like there's the political will at the moment to address it in any fundamental way.