Politics: June 2008 Archives

From The Globe and Mail

BEARCAT
Vancouver police to get armour on wheels

ANNA MEHLER PAPERNY

June 25, 2008

The Vancouver Police Department is beefing up its fleet, and the new machine's no puny gizmo: The city has approved $345,000 for an armoured rescue vehicle that will act as a mobile ballistic shield.

Inspector Tony Zanatta of the Vancouver police emergency response team says the armoured car will let officers go where they couldn't go safely before. They will be able to approach armed suspects with vehicles and barricaded in houses, deal with bomb scares and transport wounded people out of dangerous situations without fear of being shot.

"It's not a tank, it's a tool. It's simply that. It's a shield, it's a ballistic shield that's mobile," he said.

Some police forces in U.S. cities - including Los Angeles and New York - use Lenco "BearCat" armoured vehicles, one of the options Vancouver is considering.

bearcat.jpg

Very comprehensive, very revealing.

DTES Demographic Study Final June 2008.pdf

Fearing it would hurt the poor, demonstrators want proposed development quashed

VANCOUVER -- Housing activists made a last-ditch effort to derail a Downtown Eastside condominium project at a city hall hearing yesterday, claiming the development would fuel "class hatred" and make it more difficult for low-income people who live in the neighbourhood to obtain decent housing and services.

"We need some indication that there is a future for poor people in this neighbourhood - otherwise these condos are a slap in the face," Carnegie Community Action Project spokeswoman Wendy Pedersen said yesterday at a development permit board meeting.

Ms. Pedersen and other activists attended the meeting to register their objections to the 160-unit Greenwich condominium project, which developer Concord Pacific has proposed for a downtown site at 58 West Hastings St.

The area is now dominated by single-room accommodation hotels and the rough edges of Vancouver's drug trade.


Priority will be getting a 'better handle' on crime, Rix says

"If you want happiness for a year, inherit a fortune. But if you want happiness for a lifetime, help somebody else."
 
Bruce Constantineau
Vancouver Sun

Friday, June 20, 2008

The Vancouver Board of Trade's new chairman says Vancouver businesses have to become more philanthropic and he'll push that concept aggressively over the next year.

"You can count on that," Donald Rix, 77, said in an interview Thursday after he became board chairman at the organization's 121st annual meeting.

The chairman of LifeLabs Diagnostics Inc. and Cantest Ltd., who's also a well-known philanthropist, told the meeting a recent U.S. survey found just 39 per cent of business leaders believe corporate citizenship is part of their business planning.

"To be successful over the long term, companies have to be involved and invested in their community," Rix told the meeting at the Fairmont Hotel Vancouver. "Not just chequebook involvement, but personal involvement.

"If you want happiness for a year, inherit a fortune. But if you want happiness for a lifetime, help somebody else."
The NDP here in BC are being totally pathetic, siding with the auto addicts who are seeing the cost of their fix rising and then a tiny additional price rise from the government apparently pushes them over the edge.

And then you have ridiculous (and revealing) pieces like this:

Rising gas prices and shrinking wallets could lead to broken hearts
The Canadian Press, OTTAWA - 1 hour ago
High gas prices are taking an emotional toll on these couples who are already working hard to keep the spark alive, says Marilyn Belleghem, a registered ...

So high gas prices threaten relationships - or do they truly just expose addiction?

Then a survey from Atlantic Canada reveals even more crazily addicted people saying that gas prices beat all other issues....

Original here

Atlantic Canadians are currently more worried about the cost of gasoline than any other issue, a new poll has found.

Corporate Research Associates said escalating fuel prices have translated into a sharp increase in anxiety about the cost of gas.

About 20 per cent of 1,507 adults surveyed in the four Atlantic provinces picked gas prices as the most important issue facing the region.

Halifax-based CRA conducted the poll between May 7 and June 1. Its results are considered accurate within 2.5 percentage points, 19 times out of 20.

Gas prices had ranked third in a similar poll conducted in February.

The latest poll found that concerns about unemployment, which had been the top-ranked issue in the previous survey, fell -- with 26 per cent of respondents citing it as the key issue in the winter, compared to 18 per cent this spring.

Health care also fell, from 20 per cent this winter to 11 per cent this spring.

CRA president Don Mills said worries about gas prices are affecting consumer behaviour.

"Discretionary spending, such as leisure activities and vacation travel, has likely been impacted by high gas prices already and will be even more impacted in the coming months," Mills said in a statement.

The price of gas was the top issue identified by survey respondents in New Brunswick, Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island. In Newfoundland and Labrador, though, respondents selected unemployment as the most important issue.

Lori Culbert
Vancouver Sun

Friday, June 20, 2008

VANCOUVER - Gladys Radek will be thinking of her niece Tamara Chipman, who vanished along the Highway of Tears, when she leaves Vancouver Saturday to walk to Ottawa to demand justice for missing and murdered women.

She and other walkers planned to gather with supporters tomorrow morning at Trout Lake for a send-off breakfast before beginning their trek, which is scheduled to end Sept. 15 on Parliament Hill in Ottawa. 

Meet Vancouver's next mayor

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From The Globe and Mail

VANCOUVER -- The next mayor of Vancouver is a bicycle-riding environmentalist who is super fit, loves the outdoors and has a passion for social justice. In his hippie phase, he went back to the land, became a farmer and grew organic produce. City councillor Peter Ladner winces at this list of typical West Coast clichés. Ruefully, he admits they're all true. The trouble is, they're also true of his opponent, Gregor Robertson. One or the other is going to be elected Vancouver's Olympics mayor this fall (unless Carole Taylor, who says she's not running, changes her mind).

But how will voters tell which one is which? "I have much more experience," Mr. Ladner says. Until last week, people expected Sam Sullivan to be Vancouver's Olympics mayor. But Mr. Sullivan's leadership wasn't nearly as inspiring as his life story - a quadriplegic who triumphed over adversity. So his party turfed him and nominated Mr. Ladner, instead.

A work in progress - Stephen


An Hour or So With a Mexican Scribe
From The Washington Post

Is this the way ahead?

Seemingly backwards?

The wonderful Schumacher used the phrase 'intermediate technology' to refine the distinction between tools which put the power into the producers of the tools and home made tools which perhaps don't offer the mechanical advantage necessary.

In the villages of old, imagined societies, not everyone did everything. You had a fletcher - putting the flights on arrows, a blacksmith - shoeing horses, a baker - baking the bread.

A local person was skilled and revered for their skill. That skill was passed down through families. It grew upon a natural aptitude as well as something in the blood.

So no one failed. The large boned blacksmith wasn't forced to use his large fingers to be clumsy with delicate feathers.

In today's societies we are somehow made addicted to self-sufficiency.

I recall an incident about 20 years ago when the sister of a friend of mine wanted her bicycle serviced and asked me to do this for her. I remember being very angry at her refusal to learn from me how to do it herself. I had become obsessed with the self-reliant, we must all do everything approach and this incident exposed my unease with it.

So the story of Mexican scribes using electric typewriters to compose bills, love letters or contracts seems refreshing.

In westernized Vancouver, obsessed with formal learning, of course this would combat the idea of an educated population.As Daniel Quinn points out in 'My Ishmael' and Ivan Illich says everywhere, a child knows everything they need by about 12 years old. The last six years just turn them into insatiable consumers. Consumers of goods and of 'training'.

***   ***   ***

So the poor people who did not write would be sent to school in shame and pity.

Equality would be cited; you have to be equal Equally dependant on capitalist baubles and trinkets.

The electric typewriter scribes would be sent for 'upgrading', in shame and pity, to become obsessed with computers and be current or modern and keeping up with the times.

But why should everyone be able, read lonely and independent, enough to know how to do everything that the educational and capitalist society wants?

Could it be that capitalism needs everyone to do everything to sell more of everything?

The photographer used to be called in to take photographs, now everyone has to have a digital camera.

So instead of one camera per say 1000 people there are 500.

A true graphic designer or illustrator used to be a talented person who had a gift.

Now everyone with a computer and a silly amonut of money to buy Photoshop thinks they are talented instead of just tooled.

Every house in a street has its own lawnmower, electric drill and other assorted owned tools used so infrequently that sharing could reduce dependency by perhaps 100 to 1/

So the illiterate would swap their illiteracy for dependence on typewriter and computers.

The social interaction with the scribes would be gone.

The scribes would have no work.

But everyone would have imbibed the expectation to purchase expected tools and be so called self-sufficient.

Progress.
 
Globe editorial

The rights of drug addicts

From Thursday's Globe and Mail

May 29, 2008 at 6:09 AM EDT

Insisting that a Vancouver clinic be allowed to provide potentially life-saving supervision for heroin and cocaine addicts to inject their drugs, as a British Columbia judge did this week, is the right thing to do. It's right as a policy choice, but it's also right as a use of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms to protect addicts from the arbitrary reach of the criminal law.



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From social activism, to homelessness in a wealthy city, to respectful workplaces, you'll find something to stimulate.

Working as an employment counsellor and mentor, I also question assumptions and offer resources for those in this important field.

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