Are you referring to unmarked graves? Or graveyards?Ok. the rhetoric that has developed around this issue is becoming absurd. You state that "I'm sure there are thousands more tiny broken skeletons buried in holes in the ground.'
There are millions of tiny broken skeletons buried in holes in the ground across North America and Europe and Africa. That was reality in the 19th and early 20th century. Disease was the number 1-5 killers of people in that period. Disassociate reality at that time, and political thinking now, and then post.
Did the Canadian government or Catholic Church bury non-Indigenous bodies in unmarked graves?
Should we assume that all schoolyards from, say, before 1950 have bodies buried around them?