Land, Freedom and Equity
Aug. 21st, 2021 04:35 pmThread begun on Twitter by Laurie Penny:
https://twitter.com/PennyRed/status/1429145164984078336
Lest we forget the consequences of our ancestors' choices.
More on other topics later...
https://twitter.com/PennyRed/status/1429145164984078336
Lest we forget the consequences of our ancestors' choices.
More on other topics later...
Migrations
May. 5th, 2018 09:22 amI am concerned that a lot of people now crossing the US-Canada border into Canada are doing so because they no longer see the US as "safe enough". And that they may well be right to see the situation in those terms. I think the "Safe Third Country" agreement may have to be set aside as a danger to people in need of real protection from real dangers.
That said, I recommend listening to this:
http://www.cbc.ca/radio/thehouse/government-musing-modernization-of-border-pact-1.4646943
That said, I recommend listening to this:
http://www.cbc.ca/radio/thehouse/government-musing-modernization-of-border-pact-1.4646943
CBC: Out in the Open - Hyphen State
Jul. 6th, 2017 09:32 pmPeople who live in or declare allegiance to what I call Canada are a mixture of people who come from all sorts of different places, different ways of thinking. From people who insist they're not Canadian because their allegiance is to a nation that pre-dates European contact to people who see themselves as Canadian no matter where else on Earth they may live and work...this was a collection of stories that filled me with joy, sadness, fear, hope...and wonder above all else.
http://www.cbc.ca/radio/outintheopen/hyphen-state-1.4184855
http://www.cbc.ca/radio/outintheopen/hyphen-state-1.4184855
Randy links to a tale of quieter heroes...
Originally posted by
rfmcdpei at [URBAN NOTE] "How construction barriers are bringing downtown's gritty past to life"
Originally posted by
CBC News' Lorenda Reddekopp looks at how archeologists are uncovering the history of Toronto's infamous Ward, a neighbourhood that was an early center for immigration.
Mavis Garland clearly remembers the sign stuck in the window of her stepdad's barbershop: "No Discrimination."
That was back in the early 1950s. Garland's mother, a white woman and British immigrant, made the sign. Her Chinese stepfather wanted clients of all races to know they were welcome.
Garland says it worked.
Her family's story is one of six depicted in an art project — called Picturing The Ward — on the wooden construction hoardings surrounding what will eventually be a new courthouse in downtown Toronto, at 11 Centre Ave., northwest of city hall.
The street art covers two blocks, recounting life stories from the gritty, impoverished area that used to be known as "The Ward." It was a first home for new immigrants to the city dating back to the 1800s.