Saturday, May 11, 2024

Anti-Climate Change Government Uses Climate Change-Driven Events To Justify Term Extension.


Weather'sGoodThere
InTheFall(Maybe)Ville



You think I'm joking?

From the invaluable blogging/reporting man on the other side of the Rockies, David Climenhaga:

The United Conservative Party announced yesterday it would use the potential for spring forest fires three years from now as an excuse to extend its term in office by four and a half months...

{snip}

“With natural disasters like wildfires, drought, and floods more likely to occur in the spring and summer months, moving Alberta’s election date from May to October just makes sense,” said Justice Minister Mickey Amery, who was also trotted out at the news conference along with the Environment Minister Rebecca Schulz, Forestry Minister Todd Loewen, and Emergency Services Minister Mike Ellis...



Imagine that!


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Earworm in the sub-header?...Of course....This!

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Friday, May 10, 2024

Winslow Arizona On The Fraser?

PlentyOfFlatbedFords
NotSoFarFetchedVille



This time we're not talking about gambling.

Instead, the topic of the day is drought:

Parts of British Columbia will likely enter "unfamiliar territory" with drought if they see another hot, dry summer, says the head of the province's River Forecast Centre...

{snip}

...Pockets of the Interior are especially dry. (The B.C. River Forecast Centre's Dave) Campbell said he's most worried about the effects of drought on smaller rivers and creeks in the central Interior.

"Prince George, Quesnel, Williams Lake, Vanderhoof, that's kind of the hot spot, and then the other (area) that would be a concern would be up in the northeast," he said...


Meanwhile, the very fine fellow who was kicked out of the provincial soccer party for, at least in part, wurlitzering anti-climate science propaganda and stating that "real harm" is being done by global climate policies aimed at reducing carbon emissions is now apparently in a dead heat (pun very much intended) with Mr. Eby:

...Among decided voters, the company’s (Yorkville Strategies) survey found 37 per cent support for the Conservatives under leader John Rustad and 35 per cent for Premier David Eby’s incumbent NDP...


Sheesh.


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First quoted story, unbylined, in the Canadian Press...Second quoted story from Andrew MacLeod in The Tyee....But...Beware the reappearance of the Pantazopoulos and take his alleged 3.9% MOE with a very large grain of salt.
Image at the top of the post...Low water levels in the Quesnel where it meets the Fraser last winter...From a piece by Frank Peebels in the Quesnel Cariboo Observer.
Obliquious, non brain-eating ear worms in the header and the subheader?...This! and This!


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Thursday, May 09, 2024

The Casino-Industrial-Complex Deal Is Done.


Bet365
24/7Ville



It would appear that the potential deal we talked about earlier this week is done, at least as it pertains to Lotusland Central:

Vancouver city council voted this week to allow for applications to increase the number of slot machines and tables at the city’s two casinos, on the condition they be accompanied by an assessment of their social and economic impacts.

The request to amend the city’s 2011 gambling moratorium was made by the B.C. Lottery Corp., which told council the city’s population has increased 22 per cent in the past decade and that the amendment is a first step to allow BCLC to look at ways of expanding its two existing facilities — the Parq casino in Yaletown and Hastings Racecourse in East Vancouver — rather than building more casinos...


The only question that remains is whether there will once again be organized, sustained pushback from the citizenry as there was last time.


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Quoted piece
is by Joanne-Lee Young writing in the Vancouver Sun.
The thing that really makes me wonder about motives here is the fact that the changes for the Parq-no-longer-Paragon and Hastings Park are only supposed to be worth a measly few million to the CoV....So, does that mean that this change is a proof-of-principle prelude for the backers of some really  big deal lurking out there somewhere?


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Dr. Beer 'N Hockey On That Recent Bridge Bashing In Baltimore.


It'sAlwaysSomething
NewVille



Beer 'N Hockey is back.

And he is now a doctor.

More importantly, however, he is also writing again.

To wit, on that recent bridge bashing in Baltimore:

I noted there were no tugboats escorting the container ship out of Baltimore harbour. That, my friends, is what deregulation gets you: death and destruction. The firms which lobbied to save money for their shareholders by decreasing harbour safety ought to be ashamed of themselves. Yeah right. All they give a f*ck about is having the best lawyers in town.


Go give his 'new' place a visit, where 'power is not happiness', when you get a chance.


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Wednesday, May 08, 2024

Macau On The Fraser?

KnowYourLimit
SoWeCanJackItVille



Further to yesterday's post (and today's muted headlines)....

A very good backgrounder on the request from the BC Lottery Corp that the City of Vancouver 'modify' the moratorium against super/mega/uber casinos in Lotusland was written by Sandy Garossino, Ian Pitfield and Andy Yan and published in The Tyee.

Essentially the trio ask what the hurry is and why the need for such quietude:

Thirteen years after the BC Lottery Corp. failed in a major casino expansion effort in Vancouver, it’s back to try again.

And already things seem sketchy. The public is not getting the whole story. And the BCLC doesn’t want to give it to us.

BCLC is backing a motion before city council (in committee) on Wednesday morning to lift the moratorium on gambling expansion in Vancouver. There’s a hushed urgency to this whole process. What’s the rush here? And why so quiet?...



Clearly, there is something we are not being told here.

And I have a feeling that thing involves yet another push to make us Pottersville on the Salish Sea or, worse, Macau on the Fraser.

If you get my drift.


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Tip O' The Toque to reader Graham for the heads-up.


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Tuesday, May 07, 2024

Vancouver Not Vegas (Maybe)...


BagsFullOfCash
'RUsVille


Here we go again...

Vancouver council is being asked to "modify" the 2011 moratorium on gambling expansion to allow Hastings Racecourse and Parq Casino to expand the number of slot machines and table games at its locations.

Parq currently operates 600 slots and 61 gaming tables, while Hastings has 446 slots and no tables. A staff report that goes before council May 8 doesn’t say how many slots or tables could be added to the two gambling venues.

The report, however, says the BC Lottery Corporation (BCLC) has projected the City of Vancouver’s share of potential increased revenues to be in the range of $2.6 million to $5 million.

For any expansion to be considered, council would have to lift or modify the gambling expansion moratorium established in 2011 by the Gregor Robertson-led Vision Vancouver council...


Gosh.

I guess that means that the laundry 'problem' has been taken care of, right?

VANCOUVER — Self-professed students were buying multimillion-dollar homes in the Vancouver area, with dubious sources of income, or none at all.

A family of modest means transferred at least 114 million Canadian dollars to British Columbia.

Loan sharks cleaned their dirty money by giving garbage bags and hockey bags full of illicit Canadian 20 dollar bills to gamblers who took it onto casino floors.

Those were just some of the findings from a long-awaited report into money laundering in Canada’s western province of British Columbia...


Monday, May 06, 2024

It's Not Christmas Time, But...


AugieWasPhotographing
TimeVille


We are on our way to summer.

Which means that we are also just about as far away from Christmas as you can get on the calendar.

But with the death of writer Paul Auster last week, regardless the season, now is the time for one great Christmas story.

Augie Wren's Christmas story:


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The story was first published on the New York Times OpEd page on December 25, 1990...My copy, which like the story itself and Augie Wren's camera, is not my own. It actually belongs to our oldest kid and was published by Henry Holt and Company in 2004...I gave it to her that very Christmas...How do I know this?...Because the inscription says it's so.
If you prefer, you can listen to and watch Harvey Keitel, playing Mr. Wren in the movie tell the story to William Hurt...here.


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Friday, May 03, 2024

Mr. Mayor, You Keep On Using That Word.


CliffsOf
InsanityVille


From a report by Les Leyne in Glacier Media on  the huge increase in the cost of hosting World Cup soccer games in Lotusland:

“We are literally hosting 30 to 40 Super Bowl equivalents,” he (Vancouver Mayor Ken Sim) said.


Hmmmmm.

Inconceivably, Mr. Sim keeps on using that word, literally.

As Inigo Montoya might say.... I do not think it means what he thinks it means.



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Thursday, May 02, 2024

The Fine Young Man Who Once Tried To Make Canada Alabama.

GotAManOfThePeople
SaysKeepHopeAliveVille



Recently, we've been discussing how workers in the Southern US'ian states have started to push back against 'right-to-work' edicts that have been designed to shut out unions and depress wages and benefits as much as possible.

And it looks like a Mercedes-Benz plant in Alabama might be next:

...Thursday the National Labor Relations Board announced voting will take place May 13 and 17 on whether workers at Mercedes-Benz U.S. International will join the United Auto Workers union. Vote totals are expected May 17.

That’s after the most successful, and one of the fastest campaigns, the union has ever had, signing a supermajority of the plant’s more than 6,000 employees in less than five months...


Which is both interesting and inspiring from a 'tides turning' point of view.

But here's something of historical interest that you may not know (and/or may have forgotten).

Something that Linda McQuaig noted in her most recent Toronto Star column.

Which is that, about a decade ago, a fine young politician in our then most Harperian midst did his best to turn the country of Canada into a worry-free, fully-liberated right-to-work state.

It's summarized in the Star's archives, circa 2012, in a story by Tim Harper:

Meet the young man who would be the father of right-to-work legislation in Canada.

If you think Pierre Poilievre is a young dad, at age 33, he has the prime minister's confidence and his ear, has been rightly tagged one of the most powerful persons in the national capital, and is already in his fourth term as the MP for Nepean-Carleton...

{snip}

...Poilievre doesn't buy this concept that collective bargaining and trade unions are somehow in the Canadian DNA and he believes workers' freedom mirrors individual freedom as a deeply ingrained Canadian trait.

Opponents, he says, are hung up on the U.S. experience and the domino of right-to-work states, which U.S. President Barack Obama has argued is a race to the bottom...


Man of the people, indeed.

Sheesh.


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Earworm
in the sub-header and the kicker too?...Of course, this!


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Tuesday, April 30, 2024

A Graph For British Columbia's Young People.

PayThee
PayTheeThyMoneyDownVille



Norman Farrell is a numbers guy.

And his numbers never lie.

Here is one of Norm's latest graphs that is based on such numbers:



So....

Any young person in British Columbia who is just starting out and wondering if they should take a chance on either the BC Soccer Party or the HardRockConCandy Party might want to consider what their life would be like if they were living on one of those flat blue lines.


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Norm's larger point
is that rising minimum wages don't wreck economies - and he has the numbers to back that up as well in this post...Of course, some return-to-work older folks, who are probably more likely to be in in the Soccer and/or HardCon target demo, might want to think a little about that rising orange line as well before they cast their votes in the upcoming election.
And, as for all that talk of a coming Soccer/HardCon PartyParty amalgamation that has been making its way through the Promedia herd recently...The Dean of the Legislative Press Gallery ruminates on the forced extremist, expedient-driven floor vote fusion that took place in the ledge this week.
Earworm in the Subheader?...This!....And, for the real older than olds....This!


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Monday, April 29, 2024

Old Men In Flannel...

DancingAcrossThe
WaterVille



Old men in flannel just keep on keepin' on...


From the first stop of the Crazy Horse tour that brings them to Lotusland in the summertime. 


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Sunday, April 28, 2024

How We Actually Find Out About Stuff.

There'sSomethingHappening
ThereVille


I don't know about you but I've been somewhat at a loss to fully understand what the kids are up to on a number of US'ian campuses, and at least one Canadian school, these days.

Why?

Well, of course, part of it is my rapidly advancing age.

And then there is the matter of all the bombast-driven invective that makes it possible to find just about whatever you want in the sludge flooding all the media zones all the time.

Which is why I found a recent piece from Columbia University alumnus and current NY Times Opinion columnist Lydia Polgreen particularly illuminating.

It turns out that Ms. Polgreen decided to try and find out what has been happening on the lawns of Columbia University by, well, you know, reporting:

...I tried to figure this out the only way I know how: by reporting. I happened to have been on campus on April 18, the day Columbia’s president, Minouche Shafik, decided to call in the New York Police Department to clear the protesters from campus, and I returned a week later to spend the day reporting on the protests and the mood on campus.

What I saw were moving, creative and peaceful protests by people seeking to end the slaughter in Gaza, where more than 34,000 people have died, the majority of them women and children. I also saw things that left me quite troubled, and heard from Jewish students both inside and outside the camps navigating a campus fraught with emotions. But while reporting on the protests up close gave me insight into how unsettling some aspects of activism can be, it doesn’t mean the protesters’ actions are misguided. These young people seek a worthy cause: to end what may be the most brutal military operation for civilians in the 21st century...


Ms. Polgreen also went to the edge of Columbia's campus where the scene was decidedly different:

...Just outside the campus gates, the scene was more tense. The protests have become a destination for opportunists of all kinds. Nasty purveyors of chaos. Gavin McInnes, right- wing founder of the Proud Boys, turned up, student journalists reported. On Thursday, Christian Nationalists descended on Columbia to stage their own, ostensibly pro-Israel protest, screaming through the campus gates to the student protesters inside: “You want to camp? Go camp in Gaza!” according to a reporter on the scene...


Now.

A few of the student protestors have made statements that are problematic in the extreme, perhaps most notably the following:

...On Thursday (April 25th), video began circulating of one of the student protest leaders at Columbia, Khymani James, saying that “the same way we are very comfortable accepting that Nazis don’t deserve to live, fascists don’t deserve to live, racists don’t deserve to live, Zionists, they shouldn’t live in this world,” and “be grateful that I’m not just going out and murdering Zionists.” James later released a statement apologizing for the video...


But do isolated incidents such as the one noted above and questionable chants at rallies delegitimize the broader message of the students?

Ms. Polgreen, after considering historical precedent at Columbia, decides that they do not:

...It is easy when looking backward to remember the fight for a good cause as pure and untainted, even if it did not seem so at the time. In the same way, we now remember the Vietnam War as an American tragedy. The students at Columbia University who protested it seem, in retrospect, to have been right. But our memories elide some of their more outré tactics. A list of popular chants employed by antiwar protesters at a time when thousands of American soldiers were dying each year fighting in the war included things like “One side’s right, one side’s wrong, We’re on the side of the Viet Cong!” and “Save Hanoi, Lose Saigon, Victory to the Viet Cong!”

These slogans are sickening. But by 1968, when the protests reached their peak, the U. S. government had already realized, according to the Pentagon Papers, that the war was all but unwinnable. Yet its brutal killing machine ground on for another five years, and an additional 38,000 Americans, and countless more Vietnamese, Cambodian and Laotian people died pointless deaths in a senseless, futile war.

There are clear signs that Israel is prosecuting a war just as brutal, and unwinnable, as the United States did back then. Some people might not like the slogans, tactics or proposals of today’s pro-Palestine protesters. But the truth is that a majority of Americanshave qualms about Israel’s pitiless war to root out Hamas, whatever the consequences for civilians. As politicians send riot police onto campuses to try to smother a new protest movement, we’d do well to keep in mind why we’ve forgotten the ugliest aspects of the Vietnam protests: Those memories have been replaced, instead, by an enduring horror at what we did.


Actual reporting and informed context - clearly, both still matter when you want to try and get to the bottom of things.


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Earworm in the sub-header...This...Which was actually about protests of a very different kind, indeed.

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Thursday, April 25, 2024

New Media Narrative(s) Rising In B.C.?


ParticipationBias?
WeDon'tNeedNoStinkingParticipationBias!Ville


You know it had to be coming...

The following is from pollster Mario Canseco writing in various and sundry Glacier Media organs:

...The proportion of British Columbians who would like to see BC United and the BC Conservatives merge before the election has risen from 32 per cent in January to 39 per cent in March, and encompasses small majorities of people who would cast a ballot for each of the individual parties (53 per cent and 54 per cent, respectively)...

What will follow?

Well, if this narrative does gather serious steam I would take pretty short odds that there will soon a spate of 'The Greens could once again hold the balance of power' - type columns from the Dean and his herd.

Imagine that!


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Sunday, April 21, 2024

Norma Rae And All Her Brothers And Sisters Win In Tennessee.


MayAllTheirPeaksAndValleys
BeTheirOwnAuthorityVille



As per a recent post about the Achille's heel of our multinational corporate overlords, the following, as reported by Jeanne Whalen and Lauren Gurley in the Washington post, is a most interesting, and hopeful, development:

Volkswagen workers in Chattanooga, Tenn., passed a historic vote to join the United Auto Workers on Friday, making the auto factory the first in the South to vote to unionize since the 1940s.

Nearly three-quarters of 3,613 workers voted yes in a three-day election that drew high turnout, giving the union an impressive first win in its campaign to organize the factories of a dozen automakers in the South...


Which is great for those folks in Chattanooga and potentially even greater more widely:

...Local “right to work” laws in Southern states, as well as political and cultural traditions, have made it difficult for unions to expand. That could change if the UAW’s momentum continues in the region, Rutgers University labor professor Rebecca Givan said.

“There will be an opportunity to raise standards across the South,” Givan said. “Other employers will not be able to compete for workers in a tight labor market if they don’t keep up. We’ll likely see organizing in manufacturing and areas where there already have been campaigns — everything from Starbucks to hospitals.”...


Somewhere, the spirit of Crytsal Lee Sutton, the real life Norma Rae, is smiling.


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Image and subheader?
...This (for the historical) and...This (for the warbled acoustical, non-Mellencampian cover).


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Friday, April 19, 2024

Stop Making (Non) Sense.


Can'tSeemToFaceUpTo
TheFactsVille


From media coverage of BC Police Chiefs speaking to a federal committee about issues with drug decriminalization.

First, the sensical:

...(Fiona Wilson, president of the BC Association of Chiefs of Police) said she supports B.C. and Ottawa trying to add exceptions to decriminalization in areas like skate parks and playgrounds, so that police could ask people to move along and arrest them if they refuse to comply...

{snip}

...(Provincial NDP Government) Premier David Eby is attempting to create more exceptions, by banning open drug use in places like beaches, bus shelters and businesses. But that legislation is tied up in a court challenge...


Next, the nonsensical:

...“Prior to decriminalization, if someone was using drugs in a problematic circumstance, for example at a playground, or a bus shelter or a beach, community members were able to call 911, police were able to attend and address that circumstance,” she (Wilson) said...

...“In the wake of decriminalization, there are many of those locations where we have absolutely no authority to address that problematic drug use, because the person appears to be in possession of less than 2.5 grams and they are not in a place that is an exception to the exemption.”

It was a stark comment, and not one we hear B.C. police leaders often say out loud — perhaps out of fear of retribution from the provincial NDP government...


Why is the second contradictory passage, above, nonsensical in the extreme?

Because the second passage comes from exactly the same piece as the first one. Specifically, both were written by Rob Shaw and published by Glacier Media.

Imagine that!


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Earworm In The Header and the Subheader?....This.


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