Excessive Eagerness and a Sense of Ambush
Feb. 28th, 2022 05:23 pmI'm not comfortable with the latest relaxation of the Pandemic rules now coming into force in Ontario and Québec. Yes, I have my three vaccination doses. Yes, everyone else in the house is likewise dosed.
Also, we all have our own individual, additional medical issues which combine to leave me with a sense of Complications lying in wait. My sense of ambush is grumbling, not screaming. For now. Premiers Ford and Legault are too eager to get back to their preferred version of normal for my liking.
Not going to give up my mask, not soon, though, even with the provinces signing off.
Also, we all have our own individual, additional medical issues which combine to leave me with a sense of Complications lying in wait. My sense of ambush is grumbling, not screaming. For now. Premiers Ford and Legault are too eager to get back to their preferred version of normal for my liking.
Not going to give up my mask, not soon, though, even with the provinces signing off.
Assorted Items of Interest - 2 Jan 2022
Jan. 2nd, 2022 09:56 am1. Canada needs a revision of our own dictionaries. And it doesn't stop with our dialects of English. Oh, no...
2. The Québec COVID Curfew is not being taken well in some cities.
3. Speaking of the Legault/CAQ government in Québec at the moment, a number of cities across Canada are putting up a fight against Bill 21 specifically...as a group, as noted by Shawn Micallef in the Toronto Star. I'd link to it, but...paywall to non-subscribers.
4. TBDL.
2. The Québec COVID Curfew is not being taken well in some cities.
3. Speaking of the Legault/CAQ government in Québec at the moment, a number of cities across Canada are putting up a fight against Bill 21 specifically...as a group, as noted by Shawn Micallef in the Toronto Star. I'd link to it, but...paywall to non-subscribers.
4. TBDL.
National Indigenous Peoples' Day 2021
Jun. 21st, 2021 03:03 pmI expect that whatever celebrations of Canada's existence, survival and evolution - hopefully to a much kinder coalition of nations - we have in future will be more distributed over the course of at least ten days. Not July 1st alone, not anymore. And it will start with this day. From Indigenous Peoples' Day to St. Jean-Baptiste Day to Canada Day. Ten days of observance, rather than celebration, makes more sense to me these days. At least for now.
News: Pas d'encore, M. Legault!!!
May. 14th, 2021 08:15 amHere we go again.
Québec premier François Legault is looking to aggravate the language situation yet again. Details here:
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/montreal/quebec-bill-101-language-revamp-1.6023532
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/montreal/bill-96-quebec-language-laws-1.6025859
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottawa/pontiac-quebec-language-law-joanne-labadie-1.6025706
The second article's headline invoking the word "reforms" is a horrible word choice for describing this idea.
So much for peace within Québec in particular and Canada in general...and we should have expected as much from the CAQ.
Québec premier François Legault is looking to aggravate the language situation yet again. Details here:
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/montreal/quebec-bill-101-language-revamp-1.6023532
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/montreal/bill-96-quebec-language-laws-1.6025859
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottawa/pontiac-quebec-language-law-joanne-labadie-1.6025706
The second article's headline invoking the word "reforms" is a horrible word choice for describing this idea.
So much for peace within Québec in particular and Canada in general...and we should have expected as much from the CAQ.
Boom Lowered in Ontario and Québec
Mar. 23rd, 2020 02:46 pmSo, here is us. On the raggedy edge.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/coronavirus-covid19-march23-canada-world-1.5506430
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/coronavirus-covid19-march23-canada-world-1.5506430
QUEBEC/WEALTH: Interesting connections
Nov. 10th, 2019 03:57 pmSo I read this opinion piece by a "Peter White" in the Globe and Mail the other day, which I see as a rant about how the rest of us outside of Québec need to shut up and let Françcois Legault and the CAQ off the hook about Bill 21. Despite our qualms, he expects our silence.
There has been some informed - and not-so-informed argument over how sensible Mr. White's assertions and warnings really are. I do worry about Alberta's current government using the current government in Québec as either an excuse, a role model or both in the present circumstances.
At my community-owned ISP's user-managed message boards, we've had some interesting discussion about it too. Being headquartered in Ottawa the city, with the municipality of Gatineau and the rest of Québec's Western Townships right across the Ottawa River, you should expect that to be the case. One of my acquaintances there pointed out Mr. White's publicly-viewable work history as he's curated it. In addition to his associations with Brian Mulroney and Daniel Johnson...twenty-five years as a Director at Hollinger. Conrad Black's Hollinger.
So I wonder what he gets out of telling the rest of us to shut up and back off about our neighbours' rights.
There has been some informed - and not-so-informed argument over how sensible Mr. White's assertions and warnings really are. I do worry about Alberta's current government using the current government in Québec as either an excuse, a role model or both in the present circumstances.
At my community-owned ISP's user-managed message boards, we've had some interesting discussion about it too. Being headquartered in Ottawa the city, with the municipality of Gatineau and the rest of Québec's Western Townships right across the Ottawa River, you should expect that to be the case. One of my acquaintances there pointed out Mr. White's publicly-viewable work history as he's curated it. In addition to his associations with Brian Mulroney and Daniel Johnson...twenty-five years as a Director at Hollinger. Conrad Black's Hollinger.
So I wonder what he gets out of telling the rest of us to shut up and back off about our neighbours' rights.
Keeping Watch
Oct. 7th, 2018 10:18 pmKeep those protestors safe...
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/montreal/anti-racist-demonstration-montreal-1.4854245
And I have to watch for linkages elsewhere...
https://www.thestar.com/politics/provincial/2018/10/07/one-hundred-days-in-has-premier-doug-ford-delivered.html
https://www.thestar.com/news/canada/2018/10/07/rise-of-right-wing-extremists-presents-new-challenge-for-canadian-law-enforcement-agencies.html
https://www.thestar.com/news/canada/2018/10/07/right-wing-extremism-not-welcome-in-canadian-armed-forces-but-clearly-its-in-here-says-top-soldier.html
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/montreal/anti-racist-demonstration-montreal-1.4854245
And I have to watch for linkages elsewhere...
https://www.thestar.com/politics/provincial/2018/10/07/one-hundred-days-in-has-premier-doug-ford-delivered.html
https://www.thestar.com/news/canada/2018/10/07/rise-of-right-wing-extremists-presents-new-challenge-for-canadian-law-enforcement-agencies.html
https://www.thestar.com/news/canada/2018/10/07/right-wing-extremism-not-welcome-in-canadian-armed-forces-but-clearly-its-in-here-says-top-soldier.html
NEWS: Bad News From Ville de Québec
Oct. 1st, 2018 09:18 pmGod help Québec.
God help Canada.
No love for this crew that just got into government in Ville de Québec.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/montreal/quebec-election-result-1.4846201
God help Canada.
No love for this crew that just got into government in Ville de Québec.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/montreal/quebec-election-result-1.4846201
Reaction to Brexit
Jun. 28th, 2016 12:36 pmIt’s been not quite a full week since the Brexit vote happened. There’s a lot of wreckage to assess and understand the nature of here. To be fair, I am not certain that I do understand any of it just yet.
There’s the demographics of it. Scotland and Northern Ireland versus England and Wales. Old versus young. The splitting of the Conservatives’ ranks, along with UKIP versus everyone else.
There’s the murder of Jo Cox.
That last item doesn’t seem to get much attention since the results of the vote broke. Not from the commercial news services, or the publicly-owned ones either. And the sick joke of it is that her killer – judging by his reply when asked his name for the court’s records – may have gotten exactly what he wanted.
That makes me angry.
As a Canadian, I am one of those people across the planet indirectly affected by the Brexit vote. Most likely, the effect will be on what there are of my retirement savings. But since I’m not a citizen of any of the components of the United Kingdom, there are a number of people who will no doubt tell me that it’s not my knitting to worry about.
The problem with that is, as I have said, that I am affected by the choices of others regardless of that fact. The same applies to the American election process underway at the point when I wrote these words. I am going to be hit by consequences. I have a stake in the outcome of these things, despite not having a lawful vote in most of them.
As a Canadian, I cannot help but look back at the two referenda on Québec independence. As a non-Québecois, I had no legal voice in the outcome, but as a Canadian, my future was going to be impacted anyway. And there were those people who – some cheerfully, some in resentful anger over past offences against them by others – told the people in my situation that ours was to shut up and let it happen to us.
That too made me angry.
That anger couldn’t be allowed to overwhelm me. Others did allow it in their own hearts. Still more channeled that anger in more productive ways, or so I think looking back. That’s part of why there’s still a mostly united Canada.
Another part is the Clarity Act. Brought in during the Chrétien administration, it set up rules for how referenda on seccession from Canada should be held: with clear Questions and a clear majority percentage to trigger the beginning of any negotation process that results from the answers to such Questions. By contrast, the political parties of the UK seem to have made the error of going with a simple majority instead. Not unlike the “Fifty plus one” stance of the Québec separatistes and those who agreed with such rules elsewhere in Canada, whatever else they thought of the separatiste project to begin with.
That the Brexit referendum is officially non-binding seems to cut no ice at all with the winning side, nor with the leaders of the Remain forces. Certainly not with key figures of the European Union who insist that “leave means leave”. The call from such people now is to bind the whole of the UK to such results. No matter the narrowness of the Leave side’s win, no matter the breakdown of the vote’s demographics, no matter the misgivings of many who did vote Leave and now find themselves shocked at the reaction and consequences.
Simply bind and damn them all.
And that too makes me angry.
And I do not know where to put that anger yet.
There’s the demographics of it. Scotland and Northern Ireland versus England and Wales. Old versus young. The splitting of the Conservatives’ ranks, along with UKIP versus everyone else.
There’s the murder of Jo Cox.
That last item doesn’t seem to get much attention since the results of the vote broke. Not from the commercial news services, or the publicly-owned ones either. And the sick joke of it is that her killer – judging by his reply when asked his name for the court’s records – may have gotten exactly what he wanted.
That makes me angry.
As a Canadian, I am one of those people across the planet indirectly affected by the Brexit vote. Most likely, the effect will be on what there are of my retirement savings. But since I’m not a citizen of any of the components of the United Kingdom, there are a number of people who will no doubt tell me that it’s not my knitting to worry about.
The problem with that is, as I have said, that I am affected by the choices of others regardless of that fact. The same applies to the American election process underway at the point when I wrote these words. I am going to be hit by consequences. I have a stake in the outcome of these things, despite not having a lawful vote in most of them.
As a Canadian, I cannot help but look back at the two referenda on Québec independence. As a non-Québecois, I had no legal voice in the outcome, but as a Canadian, my future was going to be impacted anyway. And there were those people who – some cheerfully, some in resentful anger over past offences against them by others – told the people in my situation that ours was to shut up and let it happen to us.
That too made me angry.
That anger couldn’t be allowed to overwhelm me. Others did allow it in their own hearts. Still more channeled that anger in more productive ways, or so I think looking back. That’s part of why there’s still a mostly united Canada.
Another part is the Clarity Act. Brought in during the Chrétien administration, it set up rules for how referenda on seccession from Canada should be held: with clear Questions and a clear majority percentage to trigger the beginning of any negotation process that results from the answers to such Questions. By contrast, the political parties of the UK seem to have made the error of going with a simple majority instead. Not unlike the “Fifty plus one” stance of the Québec separatistes and those who agreed with such rules elsewhere in Canada, whatever else they thought of the separatiste project to begin with.
That the Brexit referendum is officially non-binding seems to cut no ice at all with the winning side, nor with the leaders of the Remain forces. Certainly not with key figures of the European Union who insist that “leave means leave”. The call from such people now is to bind the whole of the UK to such results. No matter the narrowness of the Leave side’s win, no matter the breakdown of the vote’s demographics, no matter the misgivings of many who did vote Leave and now find themselves shocked at the reaction and consequences.
Simply bind and damn them all.
And that too makes me angry.
And I do not know where to put that anger yet.
Media Gaps
Apr. 28th, 2012 10:33 amYou might want to have a listen to the media panel discussion in the April 27, 2012 podcast from CBC's Q. (Which will apparently be active for the next year from that day.)
Something about anglo-Canadian coverage of what goes on in Québec that came up during the course of that panel discussion disturbs me: it may be that we're just naturally averse to knowing what goes on in Québec if it doesn't involve gang warfare or national unity, but I doubt that.
Two questions for the room as a whole to close this entry:
How well-attended was the Montréal rally for Earth Day?
What do you know about the student strikes currently in progress in Québec?
Something about anglo-Canadian coverage of what goes on in Québec that came up during the course of that panel discussion disturbs me: it may be that we're just naturally averse to knowing what goes on in Québec if it doesn't involve gang warfare or national unity, but I doubt that.
Two questions for the room as a whole to close this entry:
How well-attended was the Montréal rally for Earth Day?
What do you know about the student strikes currently in progress in Québec?
A quick thought on medicare
Mar. 30th, 2009 08:33 pmI have to admit to a certain degree of schädenfreude at this news from Québec on this subject of private health insurance.
I do like my social safety net.
I do like my social safety net.
Crossposted from
viarail_fandom:
Looks like Queen's Park and Ville de Québec are taking another look at the idea of high-speed rail in the Windsor-Ville de Québec "Corridor".
Seems to me - as to the premiers - that the urgency of adding this kind of capacity has only grown in the years since the last study on the subject. No?
![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-community.gif)
Looks like Queen's Park and Ville de Québec are taking another look at the idea of high-speed rail in the Windsor-Ville de Québec "Corridor".
Seems to me - as to the premiers - that the urgency of adding this kind of capacity has only grown in the years since the last study on the subject. No?