Thursday, 29 December 2011

Christmas Day and After

Christmas Day McCann clan gathering was all about enjoying relaxed time together, a huge dinner with turkey and lamb roasts and ham, chatting on the phone with James and on Skype with Jonty, Luisa and Mark, and opening presents from our not-so-secret Santa's. Everybody got the requests that they had emailed Santa so that worked out really well :-)

Here's a gallery of pictures from the day.

Christmas Tree 2011

Duck Prosciutto by Sean










Claire with kitty hat from Aunty Lulu

Claire standing on head - decoration on bum

Miriam at about the same age that Claire is now

Another photo of Miriam on the same day




























Winter came late.
It was not a white Christmas. Winter came 3 days later...
Back yard 3 days after Christmas
Looking across to the neighbours

Telephone cable in sheath of snow










And now for something completely different - MIDI controller for mizmar/zurna.
Andy is a family friend, a few years older than Miriam, who goes a long time back into the deep mists of time. An accomplished musician and performer, he also builds his own instruments as a hobby. Take a look and listen for yourself as Andy presents his latest creation.
You don't know what a zurna is? Don't worry, I had never heard of one before either. Click here to read up about the zurna and mizmar.

Saturday, 24 December 2011

Love, Joy and Peace at Christmas

Christmas is the time when we at Kwa-McCann celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ, the Prince of Peace.


We recognise that not all of our friends see Jesus in the same way that we do and we respect that.




No matter. At this time we wish all of our friends all the blessings that this season offers: love, joy, peace, goodness.




Love,
Terry, Ingrid and all the family.

Tuesday, 20 December 2011

Pre-Christmas December update


Sinterklaas 2011
Sam, Geoff, Claire
We had our annual visit from Sinterklaas and his helpers on the first weekend of December.  As in previous years, young Sam (now 5) and his parents, Vikki and Peter joined us. Sam is a True Believer. He tried hard to sing the songs because he understands that this is how Sinterklaas knows which house to visit as he rides past on his white horse, Schimmel. Sam couldn't wait for the moment when Sinterklaas would come and throw sweets and candy everywhere - right up until the moment Sinterklaas knocked on the front door, at which point young Sam leaped from his mother's side and dove under the legs of the people sitting on the couch!

Pieter opens his gift
Mark and Judith
For the same event we also had a visit from an old family friend, Pieter Grootes. Piet, Mark and Sean were in cubs and scouts together, so that goes back a few years. We really enjoyed having Pieter visit us and bring us up to date with all the goings-on oorsee in Madibaland, or should that now be Zumaland?  For his part, Piet seemed to enjoy getting the warm, leather gloves that Sinterklaas brought him after he helped us sing the Sinterklaas liedjes so nicely.

Claire encounters Santa Claus
Claire and Santa Claus
The day before that, Miriam took Claire to get her picture taken with a certain Santa Claus - all very confusing. No wonder Claire regarded this guy with a great deal of suspicion. This picture shows the very closest she was prepared to get to him.

December Birthdays - Jonty Turns One
Jonty getting ready for Sinsterklaas
The following weekend we all trooped out to Peterborough to celebrate three birthdays: Heather (Stephen's fiancĂ©e), Mark Dankowych (Judith's boyfriend), and Jonty - his First Birthday!  Yep, it's been a whole year since Jonathan Tiago arrived three week early - and all that went with that.  If and when his dad shares some pictures with us I will put them up on the blog. Meanwhile, have a look at the December page of their Christmas letter - shared on my last blog entry.

30 Bottles of Wine
Ingrid and I decided to give each other a Christmas gift of 30 bottles of Cheeky Monkey Pinot Noir assisted by a local wine making shop. We bottled, corked and labelled them two weeks ago. One night last week Mark was here for supper and he prevailed on us to open one and then had the audacity to tell us it was "obviously" still quite young !

Aunty Bessie and Telkom
Penny, Dick and Joan with Aunty Bessie
Last Saturday we phoned Aunty Bessie in South Africa and found her quite upset - which is most unusual for someone who is normally sparkling and full of laughter - even at the age of 95. She had been having phone problems for nearly two weeks and from the noise and other dialling tones on the line as we spoke she was clearly still having phone problems. Judith had tried phoning a few days before and Aunty Bessie could hardly hear a thing and told Judith to try again another day. Her neighbour phoned the telephone service (presumably Telkom) and was told it would cost R200.00 to send a technician and another R200.00 for a phone replacement! What? Hello? He was told to forget it and Aunty Bessie burst into tears. She is blind to all practical purposes and the telephone is her only communication with the outside world if her neighbours aren't around - which will be the case over Christmas. Thankfully, a friend of a friend has invited Aunty Bessie to have Christmas dinner with them so she will get to go out on Christmas Day.
Aunty Bessie

Here is one of the best recent photos of Aunty Bessie that I have seen, and another of Aunty Bessie with her wonderful neighbours who show her such love and caring friendship: Penny, Dick and Joan. Photos courtesy of Ken, Penny's son.



On Holiday
My good news is that I am officially on vacation as from this afternoon. Judith is already home from Chiropractic College. Ingrid starts her holidays on Thursday. I'm already in the holiday mood.

O come, Emmanuel
Happy Chanukah

Tuesday, 13 December 2011

Kyoto R.I.P. - Peter and the Goose


When my children were in school, as when I was in school, one of the big things in history class was learning the causes of, and events leading up to, different wars. I am fully convinced that, in a similar vein, future generations of school children will learn the causes of, and events leading up to, the great collapse of major ecological systems and the environmental shifts of the 21st Century. The results of these catastrophic events in terms of human misery, particularly in Africa, will surely be no less gut wrenching than those of the great World Wars and some of the more recent genocides.

As always, kids will have to learn the major players; the countries and political leaders who made a significant contribution to the outcome, for good or bad. It is difficult not to imagine that the U.S.A., Canada, China and India will be singled out as bad guys in the history books.  I think the chances are good that the names Stephen Harper, Barack Obama and Peter Kent will be referenced and remembered for things other than how they would like to be remembered.

Playing off the economy against the environment will be seen as a false dichotomy that even school children will grasp so easily that they will marvel at the depths of selfish stupidity of these leaders and the people who elected them because "it's about the economy, Stupid." The right, balanced combination of environment and economy are as inseperable and critical as the right combination of oxygen and hydrogen for the formation of water.

The best and most obvious metaphor, I would think, is Aesop's fable about the goose that laid the golden eggs. In the long term, keeping the goose healthy has to be a more important priority than trying to extract ever more and more golden eggs to the detriment of the goose. Some people don't get it; others refuse to get it; yet others choose to put their trust in the first two groups instead of thinking for themselves.

Saturday, 10 December 2011

Uncomfortable reading and viewing - Apartheid in Canada?


Susan Delacourt tweeted: If you can only read one column today, http://bit.ly/s8iB9J by @ChantalHbert, on Jekyll&Hyde government. Hyde side isn't pretty. #cdnpoli

I read the column and am grateful for the recommendation from Delacourt. I agree. This is a must read: HĂ©bert: Expanded Parliament, better governance? Not likely

Canada: Apartheid Nation?
I also came across a few YouTube videos on the subject of Attawapiskat and First Nations living conditions. Coming from South Africa and having lived through apartheid days, albeit as a White Umlungu, it hits a raw nerve for me when people equate what is happening here in Canada with apartheid in South Africa. There was lots of inequality in the world in the days of apartheid. What made apartheid so repulsive and odious was the fact that the inequality was enshrined in the laws of the land. If the law cannot protect a statistically significant proportion of the general population identified, in the case of Canada, as First Nation then one could make a case for apartheid. I don't know enough about it to make a judgement, but watching these videos it seems one could make a case for calling this apartheid.

I'm not going to blame the Conservatives alone although their current performance is worse than pathetic - possibly criminal. This is clearly something that has been piling up for decades. First Nations issues have been conspicuously absent from all the Federal elections since I have been eligible to vote. It's always been about the economy. Ingrid and I were listening to a talk show in the car today. The talk show host mentioned that poverty is not only in the "remote" communities and wondered aloud who was remote; is it the people on Hudson Bay, or us?

Canada: Apartheid Nation (2011 - Official Trailer)
"Canada: Apartheid Nation" is a documentary short which sheds light on the devastating situation that many Northern First Nations people in Canada are forced to live in.
Canada: Apartheid Nation





ATTAWAPISKAT HOUSING-CRISIS - Charlie Angus
Footage from November 2011 site visit by MP Charlie Angus.

Tuesday, 6 December 2011

Winter Wonderland

The drive to work this morning was quite, quite spectacular with the snow clinging to every branch and twig all the way from home through the Oak Ridges Moraine area - about a 20km drive. It's the kind of effect and extent that I've only seen about 5 or 6 times since coming to Canada. The effect was almost silver rather than white, I suppose because of the grey on the underside of the branches. I had a serious battle with myself not to whip out my BB and take some photos while driving.
I thought it would all be gone when I drove home but it was still there in all its beauty, and magic, even in the fading light. I am so blessed to have all this beauty around me.

Friday, 2 December 2011

'Tis the Season

The sight that greeted us this morning
This was the sight that greeted Ingrid and me from our kitchen window this morning...








'Tis the season to clean your car
and this is what faced us before we could drive off.

Thursday, 1 December 2011

Movember comes to an end

Movember has come to an end. I am very pleased and proud at how our team, the Mo Stashed Hairiers, came through at the end. Of course this was impossible without the support and generosity of all our sponsors. Please go on over and have a look at the moustaches, the men (Mo Bros) behind the mo's and the supporters behind the team (Look for the Sponsors On A Roll.)

Also note how other teams with past associations with us helped us raise combined donations of over $10,000. Click on the link to see how Movember closes with a BANG.

Sunday, 27 November 2011

A Babysitting Weekend


Claire and Aunty Lulu showing off fashion

This past weekend Ingrid and I had the opportunity to babysit not just one but both of our grandchildren. On Friday night we babysat Claire so that Geoff and Miriam could go to a show, and on Saturday night we babysat Jonty so that Luisa and Mark could participate in a Curling bonspiel with their friends. The really cool part was that Luisa, Mark and Jonathan spent the night with us on Friday so that Luisa could do a couple of things with friends on Friday night and Saturday. This meant that Jonty and Claire had plenty of time to play together - and what an enjoyable time they had.

Claire demonstrating how it's done
It is so gratifying to see how well they get on together. Claire is very exceptional in that, at 17 months, she is prepared to SHARE! This is truly amazing. I don't think she got that from any McCann genes that I can think of. With a very superior air, oozing patience, she watches Jonty playing with something that she wants and is quite prepared to wait until he tires of it. You can almost hear her thinking, "He hasn't got a clue how to really play with that thing." Then she takes over and shows him how it is done. You can see something of this exchange in the photo I have added where Claire is demonstrating how the fold-up action works in her book and Jonty is looking in awe knowing that he can never be as clever as his cousin - doomed, as he is, to be forever 5 months younger.

Claire and Jonty enjoying (?) a splash in the bath.



Jonty demonstrating the Zombie Walk. He only took his first two steps 3 weeks ago.

Sunday, 13 November 2011

Toronto City Council Hardship Fund Vote - a case of split personalities?


This week the Toronto Star published an editorial entitled, Balancing a budget on the sick and disabled.  Toronto city council, in a decision to abandon the poor being helped by The Hardship Fund project, recommended by a vote of 23 to 22 that city staff consider killing the fund to save on next year’s budget .

The Hardship Fund is a program helping the poor and disabled receive basic medical aid so they can stay in their own homes and out of hospital. It’s called the Hardship Fund and it serves 1,300 people in Toronto yearly.

Who are these councillors who, sailing under the colours of Mayor Rob Ford, voted against the fund?

Here are the 23 who voted against the program as listed in the Toronto Star's editorial: Mayor Ford and councillors Paul Ainslie, Michelle Berardinetti, Gary Crawford, Vincent Crisanti, Mike Del Grande, Frank Di Giorgio, Doug Ford, Mark Grimes, Doug Holyday, Norman Kelly, Gloria Lindsay Luby, Giorgio Mammoliti, Peter Milczyn, Denzil Minnan-Wong, Ron Moeser, Frances Nunziata, Cesar Palacio, John Parker, James Pasternak, David Shiner, Karen Stintz and Michael Thompson.

Good Guys or Bad?
Now, here's what I don't get. All of these councillors present themselves as veritable Florence Nightingales and Mother Theresas.  I did an Internet search of self descriptions on a number of them and found involvement in the following:

The Boy Scouts of Canada (at least two), the Canadian Cancer Society, the Knights of Columbus, the Friends of Fort York;  involved in a number of fundraising and educational awareness campaigns for a variety of charitable organizations including Providence Healthcare, Variety Village, Toronto Humane Society and local feline and canine rescue groups;  Daily Bread Food Bank - Community Awareness, Advocacy and Fundraising; Annual Police Chief's Children's Games; Neighbourhood Watch, Block Parent, Church Treasurer and Religious Instructor; volunteer for the North York General Hospital Foundation,  sponsors annual community clean-up days, has annual skating parties and created the Community Spirit Award;  board member of Eva's Initiatives which operates two youth shelters in North York (Eva's Place and Eva's Satellite) and one in Toronto (Eva's Phoenix).

So, we clearly have a bunch of councillors who, on the face of it, should have a good understanding of how the poor are struggling with hardship and suffering, and the people who are being helped by the Hardship Fund in particular. They should also have a good understanding of the economics: that helping people stay at home with the Hardship Fund in thousands of dollars is saving millions of dollars in hospital and long-term facility frail care costs. A bit like saving money by not changing the oil in your car.

How, then, explain the discrepancy in the behaviour of these councillors, solicitously involved in the community on the one hand, kicking the poor further into the gutter on the other?

From my reading I gather that these are all favoured leaders of Ford Nation. From the way they voted on the issue of the Hardship Fund it strikes me that, when the chips are down, these 'Yes' men and women are all going to do precisely what Mayor Rob Ford tells them to do and vote precisely as he tells them to vote, regardless of their personal convictions or their publicly projected images. This means that, if Mayor Rob Ford cannot find the gravy that he campaigned on, they will agree to gut programs for the poor instead of the rich to help the mayor save face.  The poor are soft targets and alienating them is likely perceived as not seriously influencing an election.

Let the citizens of Toronto take note and remember at the next election.

Thursday, 10 November 2011

A Time For Remembrance... And Reflection



Three poems, three perspectives on war and the ultimate sacrifice

Anthem for doomed youth
What passing-bells for these who die as cattle?
Only the monstrous anger of the guns.
Only the stuttering rifles' rapid rattle
Can patter out their hasty orisons.
No mockeries now for them; no prayers nor bells;
Nor any voice of mourning save the choirs, -
The shrill, demented choirs of wailing shells;
And bugles calling for them from sad shires.
What candles may be held to speed them all?
Not in the hands of boys but in their eyes
Shall shine the holy glimmers of goodbyes.
The pallor of girls' brows shall be their pall;
Their flowers the tenderness of patient minds,
And each slow dusk a drawing-down of blinds.

Wilfred Owen
September - October, 1917
Wilfred Owen was killed at Ors, near the French Belgian border, on 4 November 1918, at the age of 25.




Entrenched
Trembling down in the trench, thinking of nothing but home,
Above I hear a roar, another mine has blown.
There is no turning back, the battle must go on,
Nonetheless it seems to me all meaningless and wrong.

As if one shot from me, will help the war at all,
My task is to 'go o'er the top', to fire and then to fall.
Of course I love my country, but I'm too young to die,
Echoing all around I hear the bitter battle cry.

I wish I hadn't come, I wish I wasn't here,
But it is far too late, and I'm overcome with fear.
I once felt so very proud that I was going to fight,
But how can any man have pride, after seeing this harrowing sight.

I long for freedom, and yet more for peace,
The day when this endless war will cease.
But for now I value every given breath,
For the time draws near when I shall meet my certain death.

Pippa Moss
A poem written when the author was fourteen-years-old.




Lest We Forget
What do we forget when we remember
What are the stories left untold
What do we think each November
As we march down that glory road
As we march down that gory road

One hundred million
Don’t come home from war
Another eight hundred million
Who lived to bear its scar
Who lived to bear its scar

Lest we forget
What they were dying for
Lest we forget
What they were killing for
Lest we forget
What the hell it was for

What do we forget when we remember…

Owen Griffiths
Owen Griffiths is an Associate Professor of History at a university in Canada. His area of study is especially modern East Asia (Japan and China mainly).
He writes: " I have never been to war but both grandfathers (both British) fought in WWI and my father fought with the RAF in Europe and Asia in WWII. My mother worked in a mortar shell factory and a pig farm in England during WWII. My parents immigrated to Canada after the war in 1949, among the many who passed through Pier 21 in Halifax (Canada's Ellis Island). My father was a navigator on the Argus for the RCAF so I lived on air bases in Canada until I was 10.  Professionally, I currently have two main research fields: One, examines how Japanese society from the 1890s to the 1930s became increasingly militarized by analyzing the stories written for children in mainstream print media. The other argues for a reorientation of our systems and tropes of remembrance to include killing and dying on all sides in the hopes of constructing more honest and accurate representations of war as universal tragedy and as a common ground of human inhumanity."


I found these poems on The War Poetry Website

http://www.warpoetry.co.uk/

Thursday, 3 November 2011

Movember Has Begun. Time for the Mo Grow

With the start of Movember most of my blogging efforts this month will go into my Movember blog site,The Mo Stashed Hairiers. Please head on over there and follow our fortunes. I have also added two pages of information on prostate cancer and on men's health issues which I urge you to read. Women, if you have a significant man in your life I recommend you read it as well. Quite a large proportion of men finally get to see their doctor because their wives are persistent about the need for them to do so.

To the men I say, with Nike, Just do it! You can do it! Get your checkup!

Sunday, 30 October 2011

Claire - The Great Pumpkin

I just have to share these pictures of Claire, The Great Pumpkin, taken today courtesy of Sherri Schommer Snaith. Thank you, Sherri.

The Commonwealth and South Africa's Shame

When I was a teenager, South Africa left the Commonwealth and stepped into isolation because of the 'shaming' action and condemnation undertaken by other member nations of the Commonwealth.
Once again, South Africa is 'shamed' in the eyes of all in the world who value human rights. South Africa has chosen to join with those Commonwealth countries where human rights are being trampled upon - forced marriages, laws against homosexuality, political repression - in objecting to a proposal for a rights commissioner.
A shame on you, South Africa.
I wonder if there is any moral relevance to the continued, not inexpensive existence of this no longer august body which is the Commonwealth?

Wednesday, 26 October 2011

Is the long-gun registry a boondoggle?


If it wasn't a boondoggle before it certainly will be now that Stephen Harper and Vic Toews have decided to destroy all records collected over the last 16 years, not merely stop new registrations. Hell, I have difficulty bringing myself to throw away an old cell phone if it's still in working condition. They will happily consign one to two billion dollars of working system to the crematorium and then toast their victory.

It shows the hypocrisy of the initial accusation.

The ultimate irony is that getting rid of something that police forces across the country access thousands of times a day for their and our safety is being trashed by the Minister for Public Safety. Criminals must be laughing their heads off.

Sunday, 23 October 2011

Jonathan Tiago pushing his walker

Ingrid and I had the pleasure of babysitting Jonty last night (Saturday night) while his parents went to a wedding. Today, somewhere in between watching the second ODI between South Africa and Australia and the Rugby World Cup final I managed to get this video of the little man walking around holding on to his little car cum walking aid. He is sooo cute.




While we are looking at videos, here's one of Evey, Mark Dank's (Judith's boyfriend) dog, showing her disapproval of the kitchen calendar - too funny.

Sunday, 16 October 2011

Remember, Remember the Month of Movember

Please go on over and regularly visit the Mo Stashed Hairiers by clicking the link. Over the next few weeks we will be assembling once more for our assault on prostate cancer and the promotion of men's health. We will be counting on your support once again.

Please watch and listen to our YouTube video Movember song and see all our heroes from last year.

Friday, 14 October 2011

Paedophile Clerics - Bishops still don't "get it"

From web site of Diocese of Kansas City-St Joseph
I read a news item in The New York Times today, U.S. Bishop Is Charged With Failing to Report Abuse.  Allegedly Bishop Robert Finn,  Bishop of Kansas City-St. Joseph, was informed in December, 2010 by a computer technician of inappropriate pictures of children on the computer of a diocesan priest, Father Shawn Ratigan, but waited 5 months until May before taking these to the police. At the indictment today the good bishop pled not guilty and  said in a statement: “We will meet these announcements with a steady resolve and a vigorous defense.”

Digging a little bit around the article I came across two community updates from Bishop Finn dated May 20 and 27 of this year. The first is a personal apologia that seeks to explain how Bishop Finn's actions were reasonable to any clear thinking person - except the parent of a little girl who might have been abused by Shawn Ratigan. A few things in the communication of the 27th got my attention.

I must also acknowledge my own failings. Yesterday evening, I read, for the first time, the memorandum prepared in May 2010 by our principal at St. Patrick School.  There, she reported her concerns about Shawn Ratigan’s inappropriate behavior with children at her school.

In the following days, Diocesan Vicar General Msgr. Murphy gave me a brief verbal summary of the report and his meeting with Shawn Ratigan, which had occurred immediately after the report was received.  Msgr. Murphy told me that he had thoroughly discussed these concerns with Shawn Ratigan, and how he was to change his behaviors. Shawn Ratigan expressed both the willingness and the desire to make these changes.

To the best of my knowledge, no one on my staff, other than Msgr. Murphy, read the report.  Hindsight makes it clear that I should have requested from Msgr. Murphy an actual copy of the report.  And, so, I also have to change.
Please understand that at the time of the May 2010 report, we had no knowledge of any inappropriate photographs or images in Shawn Ratigan’s possession. Those were not discovered until December 2010.

This is astounding. The bishop's humility is laudable but it is far exceeded by his and the vicar general's naiveté and ignorance, both of which, in my opinion, are culpable given the positions of authority and responsibility which they hold. If they are truly that naive then they are not fit for the office they hold.

Maybe they were not yet aware of the "inappropriate photographs or images"  but the diocese was first warned about Father Ratigan’s inappropriate interest in young girls as far back as 2006. Hello?

When the Diocese of Kansas City ~ St. Joseph reported its concerns about Father Shawn Ratigan to the Kansas City Police Department on May 12, we set into motion a series of events that have provoked feelings of concern, anger and shame.

Shawn Rattigan
The day after the bishop was informed of the "inappropriate" images of children in December, Father Ratigan attempted to commit suicide and left a suicide note "apologizing to the children, their families and the church."  There can be no doubt that the vicar general and the bishop were both aware of what had happened and the causal proximity to the reporting of the photographs . Why did they wait until May for the diocese to report its concerns to the police? From December to May nothing was done by the bishop or the vicar general to warn parents or protect the children with whom Father Ratigan still came into contact. Why? Why? Why? Instead, the bishop relied on Father Ratigan's word, which he broke to the detriment of young children, and his self-control of which nothing more needs be said. Giving the "protection" of a priest from shame and legal consequences priority over the good of the victims, innocent children, is a perpetuation of the root cause of what got the Church into this mess in the first place.

After all that has happened - the Pope issuing multiple statements of remorse on behalf of the Church; the Pope meeting with victims; the Pope addressing bishops; priests going to jail; priests being removed from ministry; courts ordering dioceses (including that of Bishop Finn) to pay millions of dollars compensation to victims of clerical abuse; dioceses going bankrupt; bishops, including Bishop Finn, promising to immediately report anyone suspected of being a pedophile to law enforcement authorities;  mental health professionals repeatedly testifying that pederasts and pedophiles are one of the most difficult groups to rehabilitate - they still  don't "get it." They are still more interested in giving an umpteenth chance to priests who "express both the willingness and the desire to make these changes" than to showing basic human, let alone pastoral, concern for the care and protection of the victims - young children.

I'm sorry. I just don't "get it."

Wednesday, 5 October 2011

Toilet humour - sequel

So, coincidentally, an hour ago a Provincial inspector came to check that we had actually installed a toilet with the specs for which we had been granted a Provincial rebate. Talk about timing!
I asked him if he would like to use it but he said that he does not need to test it - just see it...
Sent from my BlackBerry

Sunday, 2 October 2011

Toilet humour and conviviality at Kwa-McCann


Other than Heather we had the whole clan, partners and grandkids over at Kwa-McCann today. For my birthday later this month I had requested that, instead of gifts and presents, the family would give me a gift of service: the shingles on my workshop roof need replacing. Today was the day that everybody was to come over and do the job.


Unfortunately, the day was also the day that it rained, contrary to the weather forecast three days ago; doing the workshop roof was out of the question. 
However, one day before the end of last year, and one day before a special Provincial rebate was to expire for homeowners who retrofit their homes with approved, green, energy efficient fittings, Ingrid and I bought an approved, water conserving, highly efficient muck-flushing toilet. I had never got round to installing it and had no idea how I would install it when the time would come. Well, it occured to me that, with the rain and all, today might be just the day, so I floated the idea, flushed with excitement, and was relieved that everyone agreed that this would be a good thing to do.

I won't bore you with the details. Suffice to say that, after we did an exchange at the Home Depot because Sean found a crack in the cistern of my brand new toilet, and assisted by a DIY video found on YouTube, the guys all did a great job on my new toilet and this was a burden of which I could wash my hands.

Ingrid had made a great lamb curry yesterday evening and, all in all, the day was a huge success.

Thursday, 29 September 2011

The Omnibus Crime Bill - Voices of Sanity

The omnibus crime bill is 103 pages long. It holds nine separate bills, some of which will create major changes to the Canadian justice system. Harper wielded his majority as a bludgeon this week and limited debate to a mere two final days before sending it to the Conservative dominated committees for approval.


Here's what the Canadian Bar Association had to say:
The Canadian Bar Association (CBA) has concerns with several aspects of the government’s proposed omnibus crime bill, including mandatory minimum sentences and overreliance on incarceration, constraints on judges’ discretion to ensure a fair result in each case, and the Bill’s impact on specific, already disadvantaged groups. 
The Bill’s approach is contrary to what is known to lead to a safer society. The CBA is also concerned about how this omnibus process is likely to limit appropriate careful parliamentary study of the Bill’s component parts. The Bill, Safe Streets and Communities Act, was introduced today (Sept 20).

“The impact on northern residents, Aboriginal people and people with mental illness will be especially profound,” says Dan MacRury, of Sydney, Nova Scotia, chair of the CBA’s National Criminal Justice Section. The CBA believes that the Bill will make already serious criminal justice system problems much worse, with huge resource implications.


Here's what Elizabeth May, Green Party leader and MP for Saanich Gulf Islands, had to say (she had the final word) during the prematurely closed debate on the omnibus crime bill:


Mr. Speaker, the clock is ticking and this debate is closing far too soon for those of us who believe that we are on the verge of a very large, serious mistake that future parliamentarians will have to struggle to correct.
First, let me say to the hon. government benches and the members here where we agree. I would happily vote for the Victims of Terrorism Act. I would vote to change the Criminal Records Act to replace the word “pardon” with “record suspension”. 
However, I will be forced to vote against this legislation if it comes packaged with sections that would cause this country nothing but grief.
I wish to say to all hon. members on the government side whose talking points have repeatedly forced them to say that those who question the flawed premise of mandatory minimum sentences have somehow sided with criminals against victims. Nothing could be further from the truth. Members of my family are involved in law enforcement. People close to me have been murdered.
It is not as though we side with criminals when we recognize a piece of legislation is so egregiously flawed that this place should say "no."  We look at all the evidence from criminologists, not just one or two, but all of them. We look at evidence from our own Department of Justice that studied this matter in 2002. We look at what is happening in the U.S., not only at the fact that its prisons are full of people but its prisons are full of people disproportionately low-income and black.
We also look at what could happen in this country. We have seen the report of the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples and the report on the Commission on Systemic Racism in the Ontario Criminal Justice System. We know that with this legislation, without a lot of changes in our system, we would disproportionately fill our jails with people who should not be in jail. 
We also know that this legislation would cost us billions, which has not been fully costed.  Yet, at the end of the day, it may actually result in weaker sentences for those who deserve higher sentences because we would ruin the opportunity for judicial discretion.
Thank you Mr. Speaker.

If you would like to contact your own Member of Parliament, click on the link for a suggested template letter and your MP's address.


Here follows the template content:
Dear Member of Parliament,

As a voter and one of your constituents, I want to clearly express to you my concerns with and opposition to Bill C-10 – the omnibus crime bill.

This legislation is severely flawed. While there are parts of the Bill that are indeed worthwhile, I believe many of the others will only undermine and shame our entire system and ideal of justice in Canada.

I don’t want police to be able to spy on my emails and internet communications without a proper warrant from a court of law.

I do not believe a teenager charged with possessing a few pot plants should be treated more harshly than someone charged with sexually molesting a child.

In Canada we have a correctional system, not a penal system. I do not believe mandatory minimum sentences serve the best interests of justice. This legislation will fill our jails with people who should not be in jail.

I have seen the news reports from the United States. I know this approach to justice has been tried there, and it has failed.

Furthermore, as a taxpayer, I am very concerned with what this legislation is going to cost me. Each new prisoner will cost an additional $108,000 per year of my money. I understand the new prisons that will need to be built to house these extra prisoners will also cost billions more. In this time of deficits, this is not how I want my government to spend my money.

As my representative in Parliament, I am therefore calling on you now to faithfully respect the wishes of your constituents and vote against Bill C-10.

Sincerely,

Thursday, 15 September 2011

Discrimination is Alive and Well in the Civilised World

What would you and the neighbours think of a mother who savagely beat her child for a speech impediment as the result of a cleft palate, or for not being able to walk quickly as the result of having a club foot?  Surely you would call the police who, in turn, would get in the social workers to do a family "investigation."  Once the newspapers got the story it would increase circulation for at least three days.

That it is happening in our midst and the parents are being protected is a point  powerfully made by Michael Coren in his article, "Common sense is the victim of discrimination."

Please read it.

Tuesday, 13 September 2011

Questions to ask Ontario's aspiring next premiers before going to the polls.

Tax credits for new immigrants
This whole brouhaha about the tax credit for businesses employing new foreign Ontarians (or Ontarian foreigners) is actually very unfortunate other than for the obvious reason of being xenophobic and culturally divisive. It serves Hudak right that he has gone down in the polls since he jumped on this in the hope that it would serve his purposes as a wedge issue.

However, it has served the purposes of both Hudak and McGuinty in that they can focus public attention on something relatively insignificant in the grand scheme of things and not have to explain how they will deal with the big issues of the day; somewhat like a conjurer using sleight of hand to distract you while he does his trick. From what I have been reading and reflecting upon, there are three cluster issues that politicians of the day need to address at provincial and federal levels: jobs and the economy; healthcare ; power generation and the environment. Overarching all three is the issue of taxes.

Jobs and the economy
There is a mantra that I keep hearing that lowering taxes will stimulate the economy; raising taxes will kill the economy. The assumption seems to be that if you lower taxes then people will spend that money locally in a way that will benefit local business. How much money are we talking about here? Let's say $360.00 per year for a middle class family. If that $30 per month does not result in new jobs being created locally, or in Ontarian businesses being able to use that $30 to generate another $10 or $20 or $30, then all that $30 amounts to is a politician buying votes by cutting services. An extra thirty dollars a month does not automatically spell an improvement in living standards if a single mom has greater difficulty finding a daycare spot or the family of someone who is mentally ill can no longer find the care their daughter/sister/mother needs. 

McGuinty, Hudak and Company, what exactly is your strategy for job creation and please don't tell me tax cuts or ending the gravy train.

Healthcare
The median and the average ages of the population are getting older. At the same time as a large number of Ontarians start leaving the workforce, more and more of those retirees are going to need more and more acute and long-term healthcare. Put in another way, more public healthcare is going to be needed with proportionately fewer people to pay for it. Right now, Healthcare is paid for almost entirely by taxes. Our politicians are all pledging enormous amounts of money for the future of Healthcare. Some of those same politicians are pledging to reduce taxes. Hmmm. It doesn't take a rocket scientist to work out that something's got to give, somewhere. The American model is that anything can be fixed if you throw enough money at it. Oops. We've just hit the wall on that one. No more money. Healthcare may need more money, but it also needs a new solution in terms of structuring, priorities and who can give what care and where and to whom. The present model is simply not sustainable in the medium term, let alone the long term. Not to mention the fact that many chronic illnesses have their origins in our CO2 polluted environment or exposure to other toxins in the air we breathe or the water we drink - all of which is getting worse.

McGuinty, Hudak and Company, what exactly is your strategy for ensuring the medium and long term healthcare needs for Ontarians, and please don't tell me you are going to throw money at the problem? We all know that there IS no money because you are not going to raise taxes or cut services.

Power generation and the environment
In 2007, CTV News quoted Stephen Harper as saying that Canada "must act" to curb global warming, and John Baird as saying, "We've clearly got to take action. I think Canadians don't want to hear what can't be done but they want to hear what action will be taken by their government and we hear that call."

Yes. Well, that was 2007 and Canadians are still waiting to hear. Meanwhile global warming and other environmental issues are getting worse at an increasing rate and the world's accusation is that Canada is one of the worst offenders. At the same time we need to decide now and start implementing now our green power generation programs so that we are positioned to supply the energy needs that the future expanding economy, with all the new jobs, is going to need when it all starts happening. A lesson from South Africa is that you cannot wait until you need it to start building your new power generators.

McGuinty, Hudak and Company, what exactly is your strategy for new power generation, and please don't tell me energy from coal, oil, gas or nuclear fission?

Taxes
I want good, affordable healthcare, the more so as I grow older. I want good roads to drive on and reliable public transit when I need it; I want good schools for my grandchildren. I want my garbage collected. I want clean drinking water and I want health inspectors to ensure that I can go to a restaurant and enjoy a meal without spending the rest of the night suffering the bi-directional after effects of bad hygiene in the chef's kitchen. The list could go on and on. If I go to hospital I want to know that certain standards of cleanliness and hygiene are the norm and that I will be treated by properly qualified medical staff. To ensure all this and so much more I am more than happy to pay taxes. I would complain if I felt I was not getting a good bang for my tax dollar but, honestly, I cannot say that. On the contrary, I would be quite happy to pay more if I knew it would help address the issues above. I long for the day when some honest politician stands up and says, "Here's my platform. You've got to pay more taxes. Here's why this is a good thing that you should jump at: etc., etc." If nothing else, people would know they're being honest.

Monday, 5 September 2011

Asbestos, Kyoto, the Alberta Tar Sands: the Judgement of History?

There are many good things that Stephen Harper and the Conservative Party have done since coming to power in 2006, and especially since attaining majority government in May of this year, unfettered by the lefty Liberals and the anti-capitalist, proletariat pumping NDP; I know it intuitively but I just cannot think of anything right now. There must have been something.

However, as the future decades roll by I have little doubt that the legacy for which Stephen Harper and this Conservative Government will be most remembered  will be these three things:  Asbestos,  Kyoto, the Alberta Tar Sands.  Further, I do not expect the judgement of history to be kind or to be swayed by the argument that these policies are in the best interests of the economy, especially when it is shown that, short or long term, they are NOT economical, neither for Canada nor globally,  when full-cost accounting is employed and the dollars and cents impact on health-care (especially cancer and cardio-pulmonary disease), drinking water, agricultural land and global warming mitigation is calculated, not to mention the incalculable cost of environmental and associated species loss.

One other thought. How much money does the Harper Government spend each year on promoting Canada's image, trying to counter all the (deserved) negative publicity?  Maybe we should run a competition something like this one sent to me by a friend in Australia (thanks MOM) which attempts to help the town of Asbestos in Quebec.

How to sell Asbestos, Canada | The Gruen Transfer



Tuesday, 23 August 2011

Blatchford could have learnt from Jack Layton

It's fitting his death is a public spectacle - National Post today.


What a pathetic, ill-timed, inappropriate, vainglorious piece of journalistic spectacle expectorated by Christie Blatchford. As I listened to the news today somebody was quoted as saying, "She has the right to write it, I have the right to trash it."  I couldn't agree more.

As someone who has cancer myself I have to ask what or where is the journalistic ethic of pitting one cancer sufferer against others? Or of comparing one grieving family against others? Her behaviour in writing this "piece" is common and completely lacking in the common touch - something she could certainly have learnt from Jack Layton. Stephen Harper himself could teach her a lot about largesse and a spirit of generosity - and regular readers of this blog will know that I am not a fan of his.

This sort of "journalism" is fit only for the garbage.