Commentary On the inaugural National Day for Truth and Reconciliation, I asked some university students what percentage of their holiday federal bureaucrats spent, on average, reflecting about truth and reconciliation. It was obviously a trick question. No one in the class knew the answer because no one anywhere could know the answer. The day was newly designated to mark the most serious moral issue facing the country: how Canada reconciles it’s past to align its future with just and honourable treatment of indigenous people. Did anyone involved in its planning think to track what Canadians actually did in that regard? Apparently not. All we know for certain is that federal public servants got another paid day off. The prime minister himself was no exception, of course. The PM, we learned at the end of the National Day of Truth and Reconciliation, had slipped out of his Ottawa office under the …