Happening tonight on Syilx territory / in Kelowna!
To encourage, inspire, challenge and unify any community on turtle island. please consider…
“Until all of us are free, those who think they are remain tainted with enslavement.”
Our itinerary so far. Leaving in 11 days!!!!!
Ward Clapham is a 28-year retired veteran of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP). Until recently, he led the men and women who served within the third largest RCMP detachment, located in Richmond, British Columbia, Canada—a diverse multicultural community within the Metro Vancouver area.
Ward’s philosophy is that every breakthrough first requires a break with the old paradigms, practices, and principles that tether people and organizations to the status quo. Over his long tenure in policing, Ward has broken with many beliefs and behaviors that were ineffective and unproductive, hence the title of his book series Breaking With the Law. The Positive Tickets idea started with a simple vision—imagine cops catching kids for doing things right! Imagine police officers hunting for the positive in youth, instead of just the negative. Ward’s vision was inspired by Keith Pattinson, master storyteller and teacher, when he heard Pattinson speak on the 40 Developmental Assets™. Hundreds of thousands of Positive Tickets later, Ward has seen his simple vision grow into a reality with enviable results.
Ward has now taken his vision of cops and kids one step further. In addition to transforming police departments and communities, Ward is now assisting organizations on ways they can put the Positive Tickets philosophy into action by rewarding and recognizing employees and customers to improve the bottom line.
Touring across kanata (canada) Spring 2013
tami starlight = cree two spirited elder – peguis nation (manitoba)
currently residing on occupied and unceded coast salish territory (vancouver)vanessa bui = vietnamese youth born on traditional lekwungen territory (victoria)
currently residing on occupied and unceded coast salish territory (vancouver)Basics:
Touring from western kanata to eastern kanata for the Spring of 2013.Willing to travel to any community, as long as basic needs are met.
This is not about money making (working on not using the queens money at all) – this is about being of service to communities in need/that are interested.Workshop itinerary:
- Decolonization 101
- Anti-Oppression 101
- Basics of grassroots, horizontal, democratic anti oppressive, collective community organizing.
Possible locations:
- sto: lo nation territory (unceded/fraser valley region)
- sechelt unceded (sunshine coast region)
- vancouver island region (many nations unceded)
- kamloops/kelowna/nelson/revelstoke (interior salish)
- banff/jasper (settler names)
- calgary/red deer/edmonton (etc. ceded under duress)
- saskatoon/regina
- winnipeg (stopping in peguis – tami’s home nation)
- eastern kanata to the coast
Needs/Wishlist:
- Booking/securing community spaces
- Gas (vancouver to halifax & back) inexpensive car runs on petrol
- Stopping at multiple urban centers/cities/towns.
- Food – prefer organic/vegan/vegetarian (collective meals)
- Accommodation (couch surfing/hostels/tenting)
Please contact the email/post here if you and your community are interested!
decolonizeantioppression at gmail dot com
Anyone in canada interested in meaningful dialogue about anti-oppression and decolonization should consider this opportunity. It starts late April heading east and heads back west early June.
Although much denigrated by the right these days, union activists are, as the old saying notes, “the people who brought you the weekend.”
The right apparently wants you to believe that the weekend is now out of date.
Prime Minister Stephen Harper and Ontario Conservative Leader Tim Hudak, along with influential members of the corporate and media world, are hostile to unions, rarely missing an opportunity to portray union leaders as autocratic “bosses.”
Yet, if you’re middle class, a union probably helped you or your ancestors get there. In the 19th century, workers typically toiled 10 to 16 hours a day, six or seven days a week. Unions fought to change that. In the decades that followed the Great Depression, unions won higher wages and better working conditions for their members, setting a standard with ripple effects that led to a better deal for all workers.
But in recent decades, many of the precious, hard-fought union gains — job security, workplace pensions, as well as broader social goals like public pensions and unemployment insurance — have been under fierce attack by the corporate world (where workers really are under the thumb of unelected “bosses”).
Part of the strategy has been to pit worker against worker. So, as private sector workers have lost ground, they’ve been encouraged to resent public sector workers, whose unions have generally been stronger and better able to protect them.
With workers increasingly baited into a dogfight against each other, it’s been easier to make the case that unions are no longer relevant.
But, given the intensity of the attack, unions are likely more necessary than ever. If you’ve grown attached to the weekend, not to mention the eight-hour day, this probably isn’t the time to throw unions under the bus.
In fact, they’re really the only organized line of defence against the broad right-wing assault on a wide range of social programs and government regulations important to most Canadians.
We’re told that many of these benefits and protections have to be cut back to make our economy more flexible in an era of globalization.
In fact, what is referred to as “globalization” is simply the set of laws governing the global economy. There’s nothing natural or inevitable about these laws, which have been crafted by corporate interests and their think-tanks. They just reflect the growing political muscle of the corporate elite, which has reshaped international and domestic laws in recent decades to their own advantage.
One of the most outrageous attacks on hard-won benefits was Harper’s decision last year to raise public pension eligibility by two years. Most commentators supported the move, noting that people are living longer.
But this misses the point. The real question is: as the country has grown richer, who should benefit? Under the more egalitarian system that prevailed during the early postwar decades, the economic benefits would have been more widely shared and could have been used to actually lower the retirement age (or extend holiday time, such as in Scandinavia, where the norm is six weeks paid vacation).
A few decades ago, North Americans often whimsically posed the question: in the future, what will we do with all our leisure time?
As it turned out, our leisure time shrunk (with two years of it now snatched away by the Harper government).
Indeed, instead of being widely shared, almost all the benefits of economic growth in recent decades have been siphoned off by a small corporate elite.
It’s that same corporate elite, and its political and media supporters, who now assure us that unions are no longer relevant.
This is curious, since corporations still see the wisdom in collective action for themselves; they band together to form business lobby groups. But, when it comes to working people, collective action is apparently out of date.
Lined up against today’s worker is the corporate world — the most powerful set of interests in history.
But, hey, why would a worker want to act collectively when she could take on this corporate Goliath all on her own?
So I just did a survey on the Conservatives party website…
Why are asians so good at being white?
i can’t believe ppl think canadians are super nice
I think the worst thing Canada as a country has done is convince itself that it’s not racist. So much shit slips under the radar unaddressed because we didn’t mean it because we’re not racist. That’s not actually how not being racist works. You don’t get a “not racist” stamp on the back of your hand that’s good forever. It’s a constant process. You have to work at it. And Canada really, really needs to work at it.
I think Canada also gets away with a lot of shit because we “aren’t as bad” as our neighbour down south. Fuck Canada.
(Source: sluttybitchingcunt, via whatabouttrees)
On January 3, 2013 CN Railways had a collision involving two locomotives. This was not reported in the news, only that a small leak had occurred. This video documents the gross incompetence and lack of oversight of which CN employs in their day to day business.
“Our emergency response usually does it.”
“Is that them over there?”
“No.”
“Where is emergency response?”
“Well.. we are emergency response.”
I am actually cracking up at this. It’s actually really sad and terrible, but I just cannot help but laugh. But seriously, what the fuck?