Avengers # 10: Canadian Complications
Apr. 25th, 2013 07:37 pmIt's possible that I should leave this to
lawmultiverse to deal with in their own time. But Jonathan Hickman wrote this one up to be set in a city I called home for about twelve years before moving to Ottawa.
( Spoilers after the cut )
More as it occurs to anyone interested and reading this.
![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-syndicated.gif)
( Spoilers after the cut )
More as it occurs to anyone interested and reading this.
Speaking of Rolling Back Clocks
Aug. 18th, 2011 05:54 amThe practice, as ever, is not confined to comic book publishers.
Seems the HarperGov has it in mind to some extent for the Canadian Forces as well in terms of the naming of their component commands:
http://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/story/2011/08/16/royal-army-navy.html
I have to admit that I'm lukewarm to monarchism in principle at best. And I grew up knowing not much of the pre-1968 history of the Forces before I got my interest in military history primed by other causes. So I'm not thrilled with the restoration of the "Royal" tag to the air force and navy. "Air Command", "Land Forces Command" and "Maritime Command" might not sound exciting, but they're what I grew up with as a civilian.
Seems the HarperGov has it in mind to some extent for the Canadian Forces as well in terms of the naming of their component commands:
http://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/story/2011/08/16/royal-army-navy.html
I have to admit that I'm lukewarm to monarchism in principle at best. And I grew up knowing not much of the pre-1968 history of the Forces before I got my interest in military history primed by other causes. So I'm not thrilled with the restoration of the "Royal" tag to the air force and navy. "Air Command", "Land Forces Command" and "Maritime Command" might not sound exciting, but they're what I grew up with as a civilian.
I don't know quite whom to thank or blame for raising this one. By right of lack of expertise on the subject, I should be passing this one on to Law and the Multiverse. This might not be entirely fair to the authors of that weblog, seeing as their primary expertise is in American law.
So...
( Minor spoilers to follow re: Alpha Flight v.4 # 1 after the cut! )
So...
( Minor spoilers to follow re: Alpha Flight v.4 # 1 after the cut! )
I mentioned somewhere that I felt ashamed of showing up late for the ceremony today at the Peacekeepers' Monument. Granted that the event as such is only one year old, but the work was and still is important. 82,000 people from however many nations, including 65 from mine, are doing it in various parts of the world as I type these words. It matters.
I should also have expected the ceremony to start at somewhen between 10:30 and 11:00 AM, given our history of commemorating such things. Planning accordingly would certainly have helped. But I digress.
I've read stories of ongoing derision of peacekeeping over the last few years as the work of wimps. I've also read - today - of people who accuse those who have respect for peacekeeping of basing that respect in some kind of stupid naivete. (Calling Mr. Granatstein...)
I don't think either of those camps really has it right.
It takes a special kind of self-discipline for this work. As special in its way as anything else any nation's soldiers, sailors, aircrew and police can be honourably called upon to do. I believe I know for a certainty that I don't have that self-discipline. I could, perhaps, find out the hard way years from now that I am wrong in such self-criticism. But right now, at this point, I doubt it.
That people sometimes kill and die performing this service? This is understood. I wish that it weren't so, but it still happens, despite the ongoing efforts of many around the world to put an end to it. The wars that are fought these days, I am told, take fewer lives less often than they once did, so I am inclined to suspect that the peacekeepers and the diplomats backing them are having some measure of success at their work.
So Peacekeepers Day has a certain amount of earned respect for itself by virtue of the reasons for its creation. Which leaves me thinking of myself as less than respectful today to those who deserve better.
Much better.
I should also have expected the ceremony to start at somewhen between 10:30 and 11:00 AM, given our history of commemorating such things. Planning accordingly would certainly have helped. But I digress.
I've read stories of ongoing derision of peacekeeping over the last few years as the work of wimps. I've also read - today - of people who accuse those who have respect for peacekeeping of basing that respect in some kind of stupid naivete. (Calling Mr. Granatstein...)
I don't think either of those camps really has it right.
It takes a special kind of self-discipline for this work. As special in its way as anything else any nation's soldiers, sailors, aircrew and police can be honourably called upon to do. I believe I know for a certainty that I don't have that self-discipline. I could, perhaps, find out the hard way years from now that I am wrong in such self-criticism. But right now, at this point, I doubt it.
That people sometimes kill and die performing this service? This is understood. I wish that it weren't so, but it still happens, despite the ongoing efforts of many around the world to put an end to it. The wars that are fought these days, I am told, take fewer lives less often than they once did, so I am inclined to suspect that the peacekeepers and the diplomats backing them are having some measure of success at their work.
So Peacekeepers Day has a certain amount of earned respect for itself by virtue of the reasons for its creation. Which leaves me thinking of myself as less than respectful today to those who deserve better.
Much better.
Peacekeepers Day 2009
Aug. 9th, 2009 01:03 pmDid you know that August 9th was National Peacekeepers Day in Canada?

http://www.flickr.com/photos/dwight_ew/sets/72157621989525086/

http://www.flickr.com/photos/dwight_ew/sets/72157621989525086/
Respect for the Fallen of September
Oct. 2nd, 2006 08:13 amCall this an "honour roll edition", ( with my apologies for the format... )