Wednesday, March 18, 2026

When Headlines Get Ahead of the Law:

 When Headlines Get Ahead of the Law: How Media Framing Is Rewriting Canada’s MAID Debate


🇨🇦 The Reality: What the Law Actually Says

Canada does NOT currently allow Medical Assistance in Dying (MAID) when mental illness is the sole condition.

As it stands today:

  • ❌ Mental illness alone → NOT eligible for MAID
  • ⏳ Expansion has been delayed until March 17, 2027
  • ⚠️ Reason: experts and policymakers say the system is not ready

This delay didn’t happen casually. It reflects serious concerns:

  • How do you determine if a mental illness is truly incurable?
  • How do you separate a MAID request from suicidal ideation?
  • What safeguards are strong enough for irreversible decisions?

Even within the medical and policy community, there is no clear consensus.


🧠 Now the Headline

From Global News:

“Majority of Canadians support MAID for mental illness patients”


🚨 Why This Is Deeply Misleading

This isn’t just a matter of wording — it’s a matter of public perception vs. legal reality.

Because that headline:

  • Presents a future, unresolved policy as if it’s already normalized
  • Removes all mention of conditions, safeguards, or uncertainty
  • Ignores the fact that the government itself has paused implementation multiple times

👉 In short:
It collapses a complex, unsettled issue into a single, confident conclusion.


🔍 The Questions That Should Be Asked

Instead of accepting the headline at face value, we should be asking:

Why present this as settled public opinion
when the law itself is still under review?

What exactly were Canadians asked?
Did “support” mean:

  • under strict safeguards?
  • as a last resort?
  • in rare, extreme cases?

Or was it interpreted broadly?

Why is the delay missing from the story?
If policymakers say “we are not ready,”
why isn’t that central to the narrative?

Where are the difficult cases?
There have already been disputed MAID cases where:

  • families objected
  • questions of consent were raised

Why are those not part of the same conversation about “growing support”?


⚖️ When Reporting Becomes Framing

There’s a difference between:

  • reporting what people think
    and
  • shaping how people understand an issue

When a major outlet emphasizes “majority support” on a policy that:

  • isn’t legal yet
  • has been repeatedly delayed
  • and remains deeply contested

…it doesn’t just inform the public.

👉 It nudges the conversation forward — whether we’re ready or not.


🪶 Final Thought

This isn’t about being for or against MAID.

It’s about accuracy.

Canada does not currently allow MAID for mental illness alone.
The law has been delayed because experts say the system is not ready.

So why are headlines suggesting society has already made up its mind?

When complexity is stripped away from life-and-death issues,
we don’t just lose nuance—

👉 we risk losing trust.


🪶 Final Reflection: Who Gets to Shape the Story?

This isn’t just about one headline.
It’s about how easily complex, unresolved issues can be presented as settled — and how that shapes what we believe, question, or stay silent about.

Before accepting what we’re told, it’s worth pausing… and asking:


If you were a politician:
Would headlines like this pressure you to move policy forward faster than the system is ready for?


If you were a teacher:
How would you help students see the difference between informed reporting and simplified narratives?


If you were a doctor:
What would concern you most when public opinion — shaped by media — begins to move ahead of medical certainty?


If you were a teenager:
Would reading that “most people support this” make you feel your own questions don’t matter?


If you were a caregiver:
How would it feel to see deeply personal suffering reduced to a single line about “majority support”?


If you were an Indigenous elder:
What wisdom, context, or cultural understanding might be missing from a headline like this?


If you were incarcerated:
How would your trust in institutions be affected when powerful narratives seem incomplete or one-sided?


If you were living with mental illness:
Would you feel accurately represented — or simplified into something the public can more easily accept?


If you were a journalist at Global News:
Where would you draw the line between simplifying a story and reshaping it?


And as readers — all of us:
When we don’t question what’s missing, are we being informed… or influenced?


Because in the end, this isn’t just about MAID.

👉 It’s about who frames the conversation —
and whether we’re willing to look beyond the headline.

PART 4: Beyond the Scandal — What Should Canada Learn? 🇨🇦

 PART 4: Beyond the Scandal — What Should Canada Learn? 🇨🇦

The story involving Mike Duffy began with disputed expenses, a controversial $90,000 repayment, and a long investigation by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.

After a dramatic trial at the Ontario Superior Court of Justice, Justice Charles Vaillancourt dismissed all 31 charges — pointing to vague rules within the Senate of Canada.

But even after the legal case ended, the larger questions did not disappear.

⚖️ How can public institutions avoid rules so unclear that they create confusion?
🔎 How can accountability be pursued without massive public expense?
🏛️ And how can governments ensure transparency before scandals grow this large?

Many Canadians were left with the feeling that the real lesson was not just about one senator or one payment.

It was about how systems are designed.

When rules are unclear, institutions become vulnerable to controversy.
When systems break down, the cost is not only political — it is also financial and social.

💭 Imagine if the same energy devoted to political damage control was directed toward solving urgent problems Canadians face every day:

🏠 affordable housing
👵 seniors struggling to live on fixed incomes
👩‍👧 single parents working multiple jobs
🥫 food banks trying to meet growing demand

Political scandals often dominate headlines for months or years.

But the deeper question citizens can ask is this:

Are our systems designed to serve the public as well as they could?

Democracy is not only about elections.

It is also about citizens paying attention, asking questions, and encouraging institutions to improve.

As anthropologist Margaret Mead once reminded us:

"Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world."

Sometimes that change begins with simply asking:
What can we learn from the past — and how can we do better?

Tuesday, March 17, 2026

PART 3: The $90,000 Question 💰

 PART 3: The $90,000 Question 💰

The controversy surrounding the Duffy affair began with about $90,000 in disputed expenses.

But the real cost of the scandal may have been far greater.

Consider what was involved:

🚓 Years of investigation by federal police
⚖️ A lengthy criminal trial
👨‍⚖️ Prosecutors, defense lawyers, and court resources
🏛️ Government staff dealing with the crisis
📺 Massive media coverage across the country

All of this raises an uncomfortable but important question.

How much did the entire process cost taxpayers?

No single person is responsible for those broader costs.

But it invites reflection.

At the same time this was unfolding, many Canadians were struggling with serious issues:

👩‍👧 single parents trying to make ends meet
🏠 seniors facing housing insecurity
🥶 people experiencing homelessness

Imagine how many community programs, housing supports, or food security initiatives might have been funded with similar resources.

Scandals often focus on individuals.

But sometimes the bigger lesson is about how systems work, how governments respond, and how public resources are used.

These are questions worth asking — especially for the next generation of voters.

Democracy works best when citizens stay curious, informed, and engaged. 🇨🇦

Listen to the Frontlines: Why Voices Like “Street Dr. Jill” Matter

 Listen to the Frontlines: Why Voices Like “Street Dr. Jill” Matter

There are people talking about the crisis…
And then there are people living it, every single day.

Jill Chettiar — known to many as Street Dr. Jill — is one of those people.

If you haven’t come across her work yet, I encourage you to pause… and listen.


Scroll through her posts, and you won’t find polished narratives or distant statistics.

You’ll find reality.

You’ll see what’s happening on the streets of Vancouver — not filtered, not softened. People in crisis. People struggling to survive. People too often ignored, judged, or turned into content.

And in the middle of it, you’ll hear her voice.

Clear. Direct. Human.


What stands out most isn’t just what she shows—it’s what she refuses to accept.

She calls out the normalization.
The filming.
The laughing.
The quiet indifference that has started to creep into everyday life.

She reminds us that these are not “scenes” or “moments.”

These are human beings.


Her work is not easy to watch.

It’s not supposed to be.

Because comfort is part of the problem.

When something becomes too familiar, too visible, too constant—we risk forgetting how serious it really is. We adapt. We look away. We keep walking.

But voices like hers pull us back.

They say: No. Look again.


This isn’t just about addiction.

It’s about dignity.
It’s about care.
It’s about what kind of society we are becoming.


So this is just a simple encouragement:

Take a moment to visit her page.
Listen before reacting.
Sit with what you see.

You don’t have to have all the answers.

None of us do.

But paying attention—really paying attention—is a place to start.


Because change doesn’t begin with turning away.

It begins with seeing clearly.

And choosing not to accept that this is “just the way things are.”

When a Crisis Becomes the Background Noise

When a Crisis Becomes the Background Noise

I watched a video today from Dr. Jill in Vancouver, and the anger in her voice stayed with me.

Not just anger—grief.

She was speaking about something that should never be normalized: people filming and laughing at human beings caught in what many now call the “fentanyl bend.” Bodies folded, spirits dimmed, lives paused somewhere between survival and disappearance.

And I felt that.

Because I’ve seen it too.

In Vancouver. In Surrey. At bus stops. On sidewalks. Outside shops. Not hidden—just… there. As if suffering has become part of the streetscape.


There was a time when seeing someone overdose would stop everything.

People would rush. Call for help. Panic. Cry.

Now?

One person walks by.
Then another.
Then another.

And something shifts.

It becomes background noise.


I’ve been away for a few months now, and I realize something uncomfortable: my nervous system has softened. I haven’t had to brace myself walking down the street. I haven’t had that split-second scan—Is that person breathing? Do I need to help? Am I safe?

And the thought of going back… it’s heavy.

Not because I don’t love home.

But because I don’t recognize what it’s becoming.


This isn’t about blame. Not really.

Yes, there are layers—housing, poverty, policy failures, the long shadow of COVID, overwhelmed systems, and cities growing faster than they can care for people. There are newcomers trying to survive, long-time residents being pushed out, and a widening gap between those who are okay and those who are falling through.

But standing on the street, looking at someone bent over in that silent posture… none of those explanations feel like enough.

Because in that moment, it’s simple:

A human being needs help.


So why aren’t they getting it?

Why are we debating whether someone should be taken to a hospital, to treatment, to safety—when they are clearly not okay?

Why has compassion become complicated?


And maybe the hardest question:

What does it do to us to see this every day?

To step over it.
To film it.
To normalize it.

It changes us.

Quietly.

We become a little more numb. A little more distant. A little less shocked. And that might be the most dangerous shift of all.

Because once something like this feels “normal,” it becomes harder to fight.


I don’t have the answers.

But I know this isn’t it.

We are not meant to live in a world where people collapse in public and the response is indifference—or worse, entertainment.

We are not meant to carry on as if this is just part of city life.


I’m sitting far away as I write this, trying to stay cool, trying to breathe, trying to make sense of it all.

And I find myself asking:

What would it look like if we treated this like the emergency it actually is?

Not tomorrow.
Not in another report.
Not after another committee.

Now.


Because every person in that “bend” is still here.

Still someone.

Still worth stopping for.


And maybe the first step is this:

Refusing to accept that this is normal.


Monday, March 16, 2026

PART 2: 31 Charges — And Then None ⚖️

 PART 2: 31 Charges — And Then None ⚖️

After investigating the scandal, the RCMP charged Senator Mike Duffy with 31 criminal counts.

These included allegations such as fraud and breach of trust.

The trial began in 2015 and quickly became one of the most closely watched political court cases in Canada.

📂 Hundreds of emails from inside government offices were examined.
📺 Media coverage was constant.
⚖️ Lawyers and prosecutors spent months presenting evidence.

Many Canadians assumed the outcome was already clear.

But in 2016, the judge delivered a stunning decision.

Every single charge was dismissed.

The court ruled that the Senate’s expense rules were vague and confusing, making it extremely difficult to prove that Duffy had knowingly broken the law.

In other words, the problem may not have been just one individual.

The problem may also have been the system itself.

But this raises a question many Canadians still ask today.

If the original issue involved about $90,000, how much public money was spent investigating, prosecuting, and managing the entire scandal?

➡️ In Part 3, we’ll look at that bigger question.

The Rise of Porch Pirates – Part 4

 The Rise of Porch Pirates – Part 4

Is Stopping Porch Piracy Really Rocket Science? 🚚📦🚔

In this series, we’ve looked at how package theft has exploded in recent years.

In Part 1, we talked about how packages can disappear within seconds of delivery.

In Part 2, we asked a deeper question: what changed in our communities?

In Part 3, we explored clever ways people are fighting back — from cameras to glitter bomb traps inspired by Mark Rober. ✨

But now we come to an important question.

Who should actually be responsible for fixing this problem?

Because right now, it often feels like the burden is entirely on homeowners.


The Companies Creating the Delivery Boom 📦

Online shopping has exploded in recent years.

Millions of packages are delivered every day by companies like Amazon, UPS, FedEx, and Canada Post.

Doorsteps have essentially become temporary storage spaces for valuable goods.

But when those goods are stolen, homeowners are often left dealing with the stress, frustration, and inconvenience.

So many people are beginning to ask:

Should delivery companies share more responsibility for protecting packages?


A Simple Idea: Catch the Thieves 🚔

Here’s a surprisingly simple idea that some residents have suggested.

If porch pirates often follow delivery trucks, why not occasionally have security teams follow the thieves?

Imagine this scenario:

🚚 A delivery truck drops off packages
👀 A thief begins following the route
🚓 A security team or police officer quietly follows behind

The moment the thief grabs a package…

they’re caught in the act.

Even doing this occasionally could send a powerful message:

Porch piracy is not risk-free anymore.

Sometimes the most effective deterrent is simply the possibility of being caught.


Other Ideas Being Discussed 💡

Communities are also talking about other solutions.

Some possibilities include:

📦 Secure neighborhood package lockers

📷 Better camera systems integrated with delivery services

📍 Temporary GPS trackers in decoy packages

👮 Partnerships between delivery companies and local police

📱 Delivery apps that allow customers to schedule exact delivery windows

Even small changes could reduce theft dramatically.


The Role of Law Enforcement 🚔

Package theft may seem like a minor crime, but repeated theft across neighborhoods can add up to significant losses and community frustration.

When theft becomes organized or widespread, police involvement becomes more important.

Many communities are calling for:

• better reporting systems
• more consistent follow-up on theft cases
• cooperation between delivery companies and police

Because if thieves believe they will never face consequences, the crime will continue.


A Larger Conversation 🌎

Porch piracy may seem like a simple problem, but it reflects something larger.

It touches on questions about:

🏡 respect for other people’s property
🤝 trust within communities
⚖️ accountability for criminal behavior
📦 responsibility in the modern delivery economy

Solving the problem may require cooperation between residents, delivery companies, and authorities.


Reflective Questions 🤔

  1. Should companies like Amazon, UPS, and FedEx play a bigger role in preventing package theft?
  2. Would occasional security teams following delivery routes help catch porch pirates?
  3. Should cities create secure public delivery lockers?
  4. Should repeat package theft be treated more seriously by law enforcement?
  5. How can communities work together to discourage theft?
  6. If someone who is not a legal resident is caught committing theft, should immigration consequences such as deportation be considered, or should the criminal justice system handle the case first?

A Final Thought 🌍

Communities become stronger when people look out for one another.

As anthropologist Margaret Mead once said:

“Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world; indeed, it's the only thing that ever has.”

Porch piracy thrives on opportunity and anonymity.

But when communities stay informed, speak up, and work together, those opportunities begin to disappear.

And maybe one day soon, stolen packages will once again become a rare exception instead of a common story. 📦

Jöns Andersson (1870–1951)

 Jöns Andersson (1870–1951)

A Swedish Immigrant Who Built a New Life in British Columbia

Jöns Andersson, later known in Canada as Jens or James Anderson, was born on December 23, 1870 in Södra Åsum in Malmöhus County, Sweden. He grew up in rural southern Sweden during a time when economic hardship and limited opportunity led many young people to dream of life overseas.

In 1902 he married Edith Paulina Persson in Malmöhus County. That same year the couple welcomed two daughters, Esther Paulina and Anna Nancy. Like many young families of their generation, they soon began considering a future beyond Sweden.

During the early 1900s thousands of Scandinavians immigrated to North America, drawn by the promise of land, work, and opportunity. Around 1905 Jöns made the journey to Canada, eventually settling in British Columbia.

The Anderson family made their home in the Kootenay region, near Grand Forks and Cascade. These were growing industrial communities supported by mining, smelting, logging, and railways. Immigrant labour was essential to these industries, and men like Jöns provided the hard work that helped build the region.

By 1911 Jöns was working in a foundry in Grand Forks. Census records show that he worked long hours—often more than fifty hours per week—to support his family. Over the years he and Edith welcomed many more children, including Walter, Charles, Arvid, Harry, Mildred, Nels Anton, and Madeline.

The family maintained their Swedish heritage while adapting to life in Canada. Jöns spoke Swedish as well as English, and records show he could both read and write. Though originally raised Lutheran, the family later became connected with the Anglican church in their community.

Life was not always easy. Industrial work was physically demanding and sometimes uncertain. The 1921 census records periods of unemployment for Jöns, reflecting the ups and downs common in the logging and milling industries of the time.

Yet through hard work and perseverance, Jöns and Edith built a strong family foundation. Their children grew up in British Columbia and became part of the developing communities of the region.

Jöns Andersson lived to the age of eighty. He passed away on September 21, 1951 in Penticton, British Columbia and was laid to rest in Evergreen Cemetery in Grand Forks.

Today his descendants carry forward the story of a Swedish immigrant who crossed the ocean to build a new life in Canada.

Joseph Onesime Poirier (1829–1898)

 Joseph Onesime Poirier (1829–1898)

A French Canadian Voyageur Who Helped Settle Sooke

Joseph Onesime Poirier was born on March 3, 1829, in Quebec, Canada, the son of Jean Baptiste Poirier and Marguerite Boudreau. His life would take him far from his birthplace, across the continent, and into the early history of Vancouver Island.

Like many young French Canadian men of the early nineteenth century, Joseph was drawn westward by the fur trade. French-speaking voyageurs formed the backbone of the trading routes that connected eastern Canada to the vast territories of the west. As a young man, Joseph left Quebec and joined the movement of traders and settlers traveling through the Red River settlement, in present-day Manitoba.

From there he continued south and west to Fort Vancouver on the Columbia River, which at the time served as the western headquarters of the Hudson’s Bay Company. Nearby, a large French Canadian farming community had developed in the Willamette Valley. Many former fur traders had settled there with their Indigenous wives and families.

Everything changed in 1846 when the Oregon Treaty established the border between the United States and British territory. With the Willamette Valley now part of the United States, many French Canadian settlers chose to relocate north into British territory, where Hudson’s Bay Company influence remained strong.

Joseph Poirier joined a group traveling north toward Vancouver Island. Among those traveling with him were members of the Brulé family. Jean Baptiste Brulé and his wife Marguerite, who was from the T’Sou-ke First Nation, eventually settled along the east bank of the Sooke River.

Joseph followed this group to the Sooke area, where he found work falling timber for the sawmill of Captain W. C. Grant, one of the first independent settlers in the region. Like many pioneers, Joseph soon took up land of his own near the Sooke River, in the area later known as Milne’s Landing.

During the Leechtown Gold Rush of 1864, Joseph and members of the Brulé family found opportunity supplying food to miners heading for the gold fields. They rafted sheep and cattle along the river to provide meat for the growing mining population.

Joseph later married Ellen Thomas Brulé, one of the daughters of the Brulé family. Their marriage joined two families who were part of the earliest pioneer settlement of the Sooke region.

Joseph and Ellen built a cabin on the river flats and began raising a family. Over the years they would have fifteen children. Life in this remote settlement required strength and resourcefulness. Joseph became known as a skilled woodsman, hunter, fisherman, and farmer — the kinds of abilities necessary to survive in early Vancouver Island communities.

By the mid-1880s Joseph sold his land near the Sooke River to Edward Milne Sr. and moved his growing family to property near what is now Grant Road and Otter Point Road.

Their children would go on to become deeply rooted in the Sooke community. Many descendants married into other local families, and the Poirier name became connected to a wide network of well-known families in the region.

Joseph Poirier died on March 27, 1898, in the Sooke District of British Columbia. By the time of his death, he had helped establish a large pioneer family whose descendants continued to contribute to the life and development of the region for generations.

Today, the Poirier family name remains an important part of Sooke’s local history, reflecting the story of a young French Canadian who traveled across a continent and helped build a community on the western edge of Canada.


Ellen Thomas Brulé Poirier (1856–1925) – A Life in Early Sooke

 Ellen Thomas Brulé Poirier (1856–1925) – A Life in Early Sooke

Ellen Thomas Brulé was born around 1856 in the United States, during a time when the Pacific Northwest was still a frontier shaped by the fur trade and missionary settlements. She was the daughter of Joseph Brulé and Mary Ann Maranda dit Le Frise, families connected to the early multicultural communities that developed throughout the region.

A marriage record from Oregon describes Ellen’s father as the son of Jacques, identified as an Iroquois man, showing how Indigenous voyageurs from the east became part of the early fur-trade networks of the Pacific Northwest.

Ellen’s childhood was marked by loss at a very young age. Her father died in 1858 in Sooke, British Columbia, when Ellen was only about two years old. She was therefore raised primarily by her mother as the family established their life on Vancouver Island.

As a young woman, Ellen married Joseph Poirier, a member of another early pioneer family in the Sooke district. Together they settled in the Sooke area, where they would raise a large family during the early years of settlement on the island.

An 1881 census record places Ellen and Joseph living in the Sooke Lake and Highlands district, where they were raising several children. The census described Ellen as being of Indigenous origin, reflecting the diverse cultural heritage that was common among early families in the region.

Life in Sooke during the nineteenth century would not have been easy. These were rural communities where families relied on farming, fishing, and cooperation with neighbours to survive. Ellen spent much of her life raising children and managing a busy household while the community around her slowly grew.

Over the years Ellen and Joseph had many children, including Joseph Jr., Mary Ann, Adolphus, Louise, Ellen, James, Victoria, Peter, Edward, Sarah, and Cecilia. Their family became part of the growing network of families living along the southern coast of Vancouver Island.

Ellen’s husband Joseph Poirier died in 1898, leaving her widowed. Despite this loss, she continued to live in the Sooke area. By the 1921 census, Ellen appears as the head of her household, living with her son Adolphus in the Otter Point district. The record shows she spoke both English and French and practiced the Roman Catholic faith, reflecting the cultural traditions carried west by French-Canadian and Métis families.

Ellen Thomas Brulé Poirier died in 1925 in Sooke, British Columbia, after a life that spanned the transformation of the Pacific Northwest from fur-trade frontier to settled communities.

Although records of her life are scattered through census documents and church records, they reveal the story of a woman whose family roots connect Indigenous, French-Canadian, and pioneer histories of the Pacific Northwest.


Joseph (Iroquois) Brulé – A Life Between Worlds (1831–1858)

 Joseph (Iroquois) Brulé – A Life Between Worlds (1831–1858)

In tracing family history, sometimes a single document opens a window into an entire world. For our family, one of those documents is the marriage record of my 3rd great-grandfather Joseph Brulé, dated August 7, 1848, in the Willamette region of the Oregon Territory.

The record reads:

“M. 6 – Joseph Brule and Marie Ann Maranda, August 7, 1848. Joseph Brule, young son of deceased Jacques Iroquois and Margaret Brule; and Marie Ann Maranda, young daughter of Louis Maranda called Frise. Witnesses: J.B. Brule, Louis Maranda called Frise. A. Langlois, Priest.”

At first glance the wording is confusing, but when carefully interpreted it tells a remarkable story.

The document explains that Joseph Brulé was the son of a man named Jacques, described as “Iroquois,” and Margaret Brulé. The wording “young son of deceased Jacques Iroquois” indicates that Joseph’s father had already passed away by the time of the marriage. His bride, Marie Ann Maranda, was the daughter of Louis Maranda, who was also known by the nickname “dit Frise,” a common French-Canadian naming tradition where families were known by an additional identifying name.

The marriage was witnessed by relatives, including J.B. Brulé and Louis Maranda himself, and performed by Father A. Langlois, a Catholic missionary serving the early frontier communities of the Pacific Northwest.

What is particularly significant about this record is the word “Iroquois.” In nineteenth-century missionary and fur-trade records, “Iroquois” was often used to describe Indigenous men from the eastern nations of the Haudenosaunee Confederacy who had traveled west as voyageurs and fur traders. Many of these men worked throughout the continent’s fur trade network and eventually settled in communities across the Pacific Northwest.

This suggests that Joseph’s father, Jacques, was likely an Indigenous man of Iroquois origin who had traveled west through the fur trade and established a family in the Oregon Territory.

Joseph himself was born around 1831 in Oregon, during a time when the region was still shaped by the fur trade and early missionary settlements. Life there was a blending of cultures — Indigenous nations, French-Canadian voyageurs, Métis families, and incoming American settlers all interacting in a rapidly changing frontier.

Joseph married Marie Ann Maranda dit Le Frise when he was still quite young. Together they were part of this multicultural society forming in the Pacific Northwest. Their daughter Ellen Thomas Brulé was born in 1856.

Tragically, Joseph’s life was short. Records indicate that he died in 1858 in Sooke, British Columbia, at only 27 years old. Like many people living in frontier settlements, the causes could have been illness, accident, or the harsh realities of life in remote coastal communities.

Although his life was brief, Joseph stands at an important crossroads in our family story. His heritage connects Indigenous fur-trade history, French-Canadian families, and the early multicultural communities of the Pacific Northwest. These connections eventually lead forward through later generations to Vancouver Island and beyond.

Today, more than 170 years later, a small church entry written by a missionary priest preserves the memory of that marriage — and reminds us how many different cultures and journeys came together to shape the families we know today.

Edith Paulina Persson Anderson (1882–1955)

 Edith Paulina Persson Anderson (1882–1955)

The life of Edith Paulina Persson, my great-grandmother, stretched across continents and cultures during a time when survival often depended on courage and resilience.

Edith was born 12 June 1882 in Iowa, USA, to Swedish immigrant parents who were part of the great wave of Scandinavians seeking new opportunities in North America during the late nineteenth century. Like many immigrant families of that era, her early life involved movement and uncertainty. Records suggest the family eventually returned to Sweden, where Edith spent part of her childhood.

Tragedy struck early in her life. Her father, Per Andersson, died in 1889, leaving Edith’s mother to raise the children on her own. Life for widows in that period was extremely difficult, and families often had to rely on relatives or move again in search of work.

By the early 1900s Edith was living in Skåne, Sweden, where her life would soon change dramatically. In 1902, two daughters were born during a very short period of time — Esther in February and Anna Nancy in August. Only a few months after Esther’s birth, Edith married Jöns Andersson on 21 June 1902 in Malmöhus County.

The close timing of these events suggests a life moving quickly, with decisions made under pressure. For many women of that era, marriage, motherhood, and survival were deeply intertwined.

Within a few years, Edith and her husband made another enormous decision — leaving Europe behind entirely.

Around 1905, the young family immigrated to Canada, settling in the interior of British Columbia. They chose Grand Forks, British Columbia, a growing town in the Kootenay region that attracted many Scandinavian immigrants because of opportunities in mining, railways, and smelting.

Life there was far from easy. Early twentieth-century towns in the Kootenays were rugged frontier communities. Homes were simple, winters were harsh, and raising children required constant work.

Edith spent much of her life caring for a large family. Over the years she gave birth to many children, raising them in a busy household where survival depended on cooperation and determination. The 1911 Canadian census shows her living in Grand Forks with her husband and several young children, including Anna Nancy, who would later become my grandmother.

Like many pioneer women, Edith’s daily life would have been filled with cooking, washing, sewing, gardening, and caring for children — work that rarely appeared in official records but was essential to the survival of the family.

The Anderson children grew up during a time when British Columbia itself was still developing. Railways expanded, mining towns grew, and immigrant communities helped shape the region’s cultural fabric.

Edith lived long enough to see her children build their own lives across British Columbia. One daughter, Anna Nancy Anderson, eventually moved to Vancouver, where she married John Joseph Enos at St. Andrew's Cathedral in 1921.

After decades of raising children and building a life in Canada, Edith passed away on 16 August 1955 in Grand Forks, British Columbia, the community that had become her home.

Today, only fragments of her story remain in census records and family memories. Yet behind those records stands the life of a woman who crossed oceans, raised a large family, and endured the many challenges faced by immigrant women of her time.

Her story is one of migration, resilience, and quiet strength — the kind of story that built much of Canada.


Anna Nancy Anderson Enos (1902–1982)

 Anna Nancy Anderson Enos (1902–1982)

Anna Nancy Anderson was born August 1902 in Sweden, during a time when many Scandinavian families were leaving Europe for new opportunities across the Atlantic.

She immigrated to Canada as a small child, arriving around 1905 with her family. By 1911, census records show eight-year-old Anna living in Grand Forks, British Columbia, in the Kootenay region. Her father, James Anderson, was raising a busy household that included several young children.

Like many immigrant families, life required hard work and adaptation. Yet the census shows that Anna was already attending school and could read and write English, something that would help shape her future.

As a young woman, Anna trained and worked in healthcare. The 1921 census lists her living and working at St. Eugene Hospital in Cranbrook, where she was employed as a probationary nurse — an entry-level nursing position common at the time. Hospitals in the early twentieth century often functioned partly as training schools, and young women learned their profession through demanding hours of practical work.

Working as a nurse required discipline and resilience. Days were long, and the work could be physically and emotionally difficult. These early experiences likely helped form the strength that family members later remembered.

Later that same year, on 18 July 1921, Anna married John Joseph Enos at St. Andrew's Cathedral in Vancouver. She was nineteen years old, while John was twenty-eight.

Their marriage brought together two very different life journeys. Anna was a Swedish immigrant raised in the Kootenays, while John came from a family with deep roots in the Pacific Northwest, including Portuguese, Songhees, French, Iroquois, and Kalapuya ancestry. In early twentieth-century Vancouver, such a marriage would not always have been easy, yet they built a life together nonetheless.

Over time the couple established their home in South Vancouver near 51st Avenue and Ross Street, where they purchased land and built a house themselves. Family records recall a small notebook listing the cost of the land and building materials, showing how carefully they planned their future.

The house began as a cinderblock structure, later finished with stucco walls and a dark tiled roof. Around it, Anna created a beautiful garden, something she became well known for in the family. Flowers, vegetables, and fruit grew there, reflecting both her hard work and the tradition of self-sufficient households of that era.

Inside the home were rooms that grandchildren would remember many years later — brass beds, polished wooden furniture with mirrors, and soft satin bedcovers in shades of sage green and old rose. These memories come through the eyes of a five-year-old child, so the details may not be exact, but the feeling of warmth and comfort remains clear.

Anna and John raised their daughters in this home, where family life included laughter, gardening, and seasonal traditions such as berry picking, an activity deeply rooted in the Indigenous heritage of John’s family.

Anna lived a long life, witnessing enormous changes in British Columbia over the twentieth century — from frontier towns and early hospitals to modern cities and highways.

She died on December 1982 in Nelson, British Columbia, at the age of 80, and was buried at Evergreen Cemetery in Grand Forks, returning in a sense to the region where she had grown up as a young immigrant girl.

Though records only capture fragments of her life, family memories and historical documents together reveal a woman of strength, determination, and quiet resilience — someone who worked hard, cared for others, and helped build a home that would shape generations to come.


John Joseph Enos (1893–1956)

 John Joseph Enos (1893–1956)

John Joseph Enos, my maternal grandfather, was born around 1893–1894 in Nanoose Bay, British Columbia. His heritage reflected several cultures that shaped the early history of the Pacific Northwest — Portuguese, Songhees, French, Iroquois, and Kalapuya ancestry passed down through earlier generations of the Enos and Poirier families.

His father, Joseph Enos, carried both Portuguese and Songhees roots, while his mother Mary Ann Poirier was born in Sooke, British Columbia, with Métis and Indigenous ancestry reaching back through French, Iroquois, Kalapuya, and T'Sou-ke lines. Like many families of mixed heritage at the time, parts of this identity were sometimes hidden or altered in official records because of discrimination.

In 1921, John married Anna Nancy Anderson, a young immigrant from Sweden, at St. Andrew's Cathedral in Vancouver. John was 28 years old, and Anna was 19. Their marriage brought together two very different backgrounds — John, a brown-skinned man of Indigenous and Portuguese heritage, and Anna, a fair-skinned woman newly arrived from Europe. In the Vancouver of the early 20th century, such differences were often noticed and not always accepted easily.

John worked as a machinist and marine engineer, part of the maritime world that connected Vancouver to the Pacific. At one point he served aboard the ocean liner Empress of Russia, travelling across the ocean to places such as Japan. Life at sea meant long periods away from home.

Despite the demands of his work, family memories describe John as a warm and humorous man who loved teasing his wife with playful jokes. When he was away, he sometimes wrote letters to his eldest granddaughter, who was the only one of the grandchildren old enough to know him well before he passed away. According to family stories, these letters included little drawings in place of certain words, turning them into playful messages that made children smile.

He was also known for taking his daughters berry picking, an activity deeply rooted in Indigenous traditions and seasonal life in the region. Even while living in the growing city of Vancouver, these moments kept a connection to the land.

John had a glass eye, something that fascinated his grandchildren. He kept it in a small blue glass bottle, which his daughter later kept. As children, they would sometimes hold the bottle and ask about it, though the story of how he lost the eye has been lost to time.

John and Anna eventually built their family home in South Vancouver near 51st Avenue and Ross Street, on land they purchased and developed themselves. The house began as a cinderblock structure and later became a distinctive home with stucco walls and a dark tiled roof. It was surrounded by a beautiful garden that Anna carefully tended.

Inside the house were rooms that grandchildren would remember many years later — brass beds, old wooden furniture with mirrors, and upstairs bedrooms with soft satin comforters in sage green and old rose. These memories come through the eyes of a five-year-old child, so some details may not be exact, but the warmth of the home is remembered clearly.

John Joseph Enos died on 21 April 1956 in Vancouver, just before one of his grandchildren was born. Family members later learned that he had suffered from several serious health conditions, including lupus, peritonitis, bowel obstruction, and diverticulitis. Medical treatment was very different in those days, and it is hard not to wonder whether he received the care he truly deserved.

Even so, the memories that remain describe him not through illness, but through humor, family outings, letters with drawings, and a life built through hard work and perseverance.


Frank Winterlik, 1873–1939

 

🌾 Frank Winterlik, 1873–1939

(Francis Joseph Vinterlik / Winterlik)

When I think about my grandfather Frank, I don’t first see a census record or a gravestone.

I imagine a man standing on the open prairie of Saskatchewan, looking out across land that must have seemed endless.

Wind moving through tall grass.
A wooden house behind him.
Children somewhere nearby.

But his story began very far away.

Frank Winterlik was born on December 27, 1873, in Klopodia, in what was then the vast empire of Austria-Hungary. His family roots were connected to Bohemia, and the language of home would have been Czech — often called Bohemian in the census records.

That language mattered.

When people crossed oceans in those days, they didn’t just leave land behind. They left behind their language, their songs, their humor, their prayers — the invisible things that make a place feel like home.

And yet somehow, they carried those things with them.


🗣️ The Language of Home

The census records say Bohemian was spoken in the household.

That may sound like a small detail, but it isn’t.

On the wide prairie, thousands of miles from the villages of Europe, language became a kind of anchor.

Inside the house, around the stove, in the kitchen where bread was baked and children were scolded or comforted, the old language lived on.

Czech words.
Old sayings.
The familiar rhythm of speech.

Outside the door was a new world — English, new customs, new neighbors.

But inside the house, they could still hear the language of home. 🏡

That must have been a comfort in a place that often felt harsh and unfamiliar.


🚢 The Journey West

Around 1904, Frank and his wife Mary crossed the Atlantic and made their way to Canada.

They eventually settled in the prairie lands near Saltcoats, Saskatchewan and Lipton, Saskatchewan.

There were no ancient villages waiting there.

Just prairie sky.

Wind.

And land that demanded hard work.

Frank became a farmer, building a life from the soil. 🌾


👨‍👩‍👧‍👦 A Farmhouse Full of Life

Frank and Mary raised a very large family.

My father was the youngest of eleven children who survived.

My grandmother endured thirteen pregnancies, which must have carried both joy and heartbreak. 💔

Still, the house they built must have been full of movement and noise — children growing up together, helping with chores, sharing stories, learning the rhythms of prairie life.

Large families were part of survival on the prairie.

But they were also part of building a future.


❄️ Winters That Tested Everyone

The winters in Saskatchewan could be brutal.

Blizzards could erase the world in minutes. Roads disappeared. Landmarks vanished.

My father told a story that always stayed with me.

During severe storms, families sometimes tied a rope from the house to the outhouse. If someone needed to go outside during a blizzard, they could follow the rope so they wouldn’t get lost in the whiteout.

Think about that. 😬🌨️

Something as simple as stepping outside could become dangerous.

Yet families like my grandparents endured it year after year.


🕳️ The Monster in the Well

My mom also told a story from my father’s childhood.

When he was little, his sisters warned him there was a monster in the well.

That was probably their way of keeping the youngest child from wandering too close.

And honestly, it made sense.

Old prairie wells were often nothing more than a deep hole in the ground, sometimes covered, sometimes not. For curious children running around a farm, they could be incredibly dangerous.

A monster in the well might have been a frightening idea for a child 👻 — but it probably kept him safe.

Even today, when I see a well somewhere, I think about how easily accidents could happen.

Those warnings were part of how families protected their kids.


📖 Stories Found Later

My father passed away when I was young, so I missed hearing many of his stories firsthand.

Later in life I searched out other family members — my Uncle Frank and my Auntie — and they shared many memories about those prairie years.

Each story added another piece to the picture.

Family history often comes together that way.

A memory here.
A census record there.
A story passed down.

Slowly, the past begins to feel alive again.


🌎 The Long Journey of One Life

Frank Winterlik died in 1939 near Dysart, Saskatchewan and is buried at Saint John the Baptist Roman Catholic Cemetery.

I never had the chance to meet him.

But the life he built shaped everything that came after.

Because he and my grandmother crossed an ocean and built a prairie family, generations followed.

And now here I am — sitting in a hammock in Mexico, reading old records and trying to understand the lives they lived. 🌴📜

Sometimes researching family history feels like following footprints across time.

Each story brings me a little closer to the people who quietly made my life possible.

And somewhere along that long path, my grandfather Frank became part of the reason I am here. 🌾✨



Sunday, March 15, 2026

PART 1: What Was the Duffy Scandal? 🇨🇦

 PART 1: What Was the Duffy Scandal? 🇨🇦

More than ten years ago, a political controversy shook Ottawa.

Mike Duffy, a well-known television journalist turned senator, had been appointed to the Senate by Prime Minister Stephen Harper in 2008.

A few years later, questions emerged about his housing expense claims. Senators who live outside Ottawa can claim certain living expenses while working in the capital.

Duffy claimed that his primary residence was in Prince Edward Island.

But critics questioned whether he actually lived there most of the time.

The amount under dispute was about $90,000.

Then the story took an extraordinary turn.

Nigel Wright, Chief of Staff to the Prime Minister, personally gave Duffy $90,000 to repay the expenses.

💥 When this secret payment became public in 2013, it exploded into a national political scandal.

Questions flooded the news:

• Why was the Prime Minister’s chief of staff involved?
• Who knew about the payment?
• Was there pressure behind the scenes?

Soon the RCMP launched an investigation.

And the story was far from over.

➡️ In Part 2, we’ll look at what happened next: criminal charges, a dramatic trial, and a verdict that surprised the entire country.

The Rise of Porch Pirates – Part 3

The Rise of Porch Pirates – Part 3

Fighting Back: Clever Ways Communities Are Stopping Porch Pirates 🪤📦✨

In Part 1 of this series, we talked about how package theft can happen in seconds.

In Part 2, we asked the bigger question:
What changed in our communities that made this crime so common?

Now let’s talk about something more encouraging.

People are fighting back.

Across neighborhoods around the world, homeowners are getting creative in protecting their deliveries and deterring porch pirates.

Some of the solutions are surprisingly clever… and a few are even a little funny. 😄


The Famous Glitter Bomb Trap ✨🎁

One of the most famous anti-theft ideas came from engineer and YouTuber Mark Rober.

Frustrated by package thieves, he created a decoy package that looked like a normal delivery box.

But when the thief opened it…

💥 it exploded with glitter
💨 released a powerful stink spray
📷 secretly recorded the thief with hidden cameras

The video went viral and millions of people watched the reactions of porch pirates who suddenly found themselves covered in glitter.

While the idea was partly humorous, it also sent a powerful message:

Not every package is safe to steal.


Other Creative Deterrents 🪤

Since then, many homeowners have tried their own variations.

Here are a few ideas communities are experimenting with:

📷 Doorbell Cameras

Visible cameras are one of the most effective deterrents.

Many porch pirates simply move on if they see a camera.


📦 Secure Delivery Boxes

Lockable boxes allow delivery drivers to place packages safely inside.

Once closed, the package cannot be removed without a key or code.


📍 GPS Tracking Packages

Some people place small GPS trackers inside decoy packages.

If stolen, the package location can be tracked and reported to police.


🎨 Dye Packs

Similar to those used in banks, these release bright ink that stains clothing and hands.

Not something a thief wants to walk around with.


👀 Neighborhood Watch

Sometimes the best protection is simply neighbors watching out for each other.

Community message groups and neighborhood alerts can help people quickly retrieve deliveries.


Technology Is Helping 📱

Today’s technology also gives homeowners tools that didn’t exist years ago.

Apps connected to delivery services can now send alerts when packages arrive from companies like Amazon, UPS, FedEx, or Canada Post.

That means people can often grab their package within minutes.

And sometimes that’s all it takes to stop a thief.


The Power of Community Awareness 👥

Porch pirates rely on something simple:

opportunity.

If a neighborhood shows signs of being alert, connected, and watchful, thieves are much less likely to target it.

Signs of surveillance, active neighborhood groups, and quick reporting can make a huge difference.

Criminals usually look for easy targets.

Communities can make it clear they are not one of them.


Reflective Questions 🤔

  1. Would you consider installing a doorbell camera or delivery lockbox?
  2. Do creative deterrents like glitter bomb packages help discourage theft?
  3. Should neighborhoods organize stronger community watch systems?
  4. What technologies might help reduce porch piracy in the future?
  5. Should delivery companies provide safer delivery options for customers?
  6. If someone who is not a legal resident is caught committing theft, should immigration consequences such as deportation be considered, or should the criminal justice system handle the case first?

Coming Next in This Series 📚

In Part 4, we will ask an important question:

Who should really be responsible for solving this problem?

Should delivery companies like Amazon do more?

Could security teams follow delivery trucks and catch thieves in the act?

And what role should police and governments play?

Because many people are starting to wonder:

Is stopping porch piracy really rocket science? 🚚📦

Saturday, March 14, 2026

$435,000 Fine for Surrey Farm Raises Big Questions About Canada’s Migrant Worker System

$435,000 Fine for Surrey Farm Raises Big Questions About Canada’s Migrant Worker System

A farm in Surrey has been hit with a massive $435,000 penalty for breaching Canada’s migrant worker laws — one of the largest fines ever issued in the province.

The sanction was issued to Kanwar Walia Farms on February 13, 2026, after federal inspectors found serious problems during an investigation.

According to federal records, the employer:

🚫 Did not show up for a meeting with inspectors
📄 Failed to provide requested documents
🌾 Was not actively engaged in the business foreign workers were hired to work in

The farm had been approved to hire nearly 40 temporary foreign workers between 2020 and 2023 through Canada’s Temporary Foreign Worker Program.

Let that sink in.

Nearly 40 people brought to Canada for jobs that inspectors later questioned even existed.


Where Was the Oversight?

The Temporary Foreign Worker Program is supposed to ensure that migrant workers are only hired when there are no Canadians available for the job.

Before workers are brought to Canada, employers must receive approval through something called a Labour Market Impact Assessment (LMIA).

Yet somehow this company received approvals for dozens of workers.

Then inspectors discovered something deeply troubling:

👉 The employer was not actively engaged in the business those workers were hired to do.

So the obvious question becomes:

How did this get approved in the first place?


The Bigger Pattern

Investigations have already shown that British Columbia leads the country in penalties for violations involving migrant workers.

In fact, more than one-third of all federal penalties in Canada have been issued in B.C.

That raises uncomfortable questions about:

⚠️ oversight
⚠️ enforcement
⚠️ exploitation of vulnerable workers

Many migrant workers arrive in Canada believing they are coming for fair wages and opportunity.

But in too many cases they end up in situations where:

  • they cannot easily leave their employer
  • their housing may be tied to their job
  • their immigration status depends on staying quiet

This makes them extremely vulnerable.


A System That Needs Real Transparency

What is perhaps most frustrating about this case is that the federal government is refusing to release more details, citing privacy concerns.

That leaves the public wondering:

  • Were workers harmed?
  • Were wages withheld?
  • Were people brought to Canada for jobs that didn’t exist?

Without transparency, it’s impossible to know the full story.


Why This Matters

This issue isn’t just about one farm.

It’s about whether Canada’s immigration and labour systems are being used responsibly — or exploited.

If companies can:

• get approvals for dozens of workers
• fail to cooperate with inspectors
• refuse to provide documents

then something in the system is clearly broken.


Questions We Should All Be Asking

🤔 How did this farm receive approval to hire so many workers?
🤔 Who verifies that the jobs actually exist?
🤔 Why are details of investigations kept secret?
🤔 How many other farms are doing the same thing?

Transparency protects both migrant workers and Canadian workers.

Without it, abuse can hide in plain sight.


Final Thought

Canada prides itself on fairness and human rights.

But fairness requires accountability.

A $435,000 fine may sound large — but if the system allowed this to happen in the first place, we still have much bigger questions to answer.


NEW SERIES: The Duffy Affair

 NEW SERIES: The Duffy Affair — What Did Canadians Learn? 🇨🇦

More than a decade ago, a political scandal dominated headlines across Canada. It involved Senator Mike Duffy, disputed expense claims, a mysterious $90,000 payment, a police investigation, and a dramatic court trial.

But here’s the surprising part: after years of investigation and 31 criminal charges, the judge dismissed them all.

So what actually happened?

And how did a $90,000 expense issue turn into one of the most expensive political scandals in modern Canadian history?

In this three-part series we will explore:

🔎 What the Duffy scandal was really about
⚖️ Why the charges were thrown out in court
💰 And the uncomfortable question many Canadians still ask: how much public money was spent investigating and prosecuting this case?

At a time when many Canadians struggle with housing, rising costs, and poverty, it’s worth reflecting on how governments use public resources.

Sometimes scandals reveal more than individual mistakes.

Sometimes they reveal deeper problems in the system.

Stay tuned for Part 1 tomorrow.

The Rise of Porch Pirates – Part 2

 The Rise of Porch Pirates – Part 2

What Changed? When Did Stealing Packages Become Normal? 🤔📦

In Part 1 of this series, we talked about how package theft can happen in seconds 🚚💨 — sometimes before a homeowner even has time to open the door.

But that raises a much bigger question.

Why is this happening so often now?

A few decades ago, package theft existed, but it was relatively rare.

Today it has become so common that we have a name for it:

Porch piracy.

So what changed?


The Explosion of Online Shopping 📦📦📦

One obvious factor is the massive growth of online shopping.

Millions of packages are delivered every day by companies like Amazon, UPS, FedEx, and Canada Post.

Doorsteps have essentially become temporary storage spots for valuable goods.

To a thief driving through a neighborhood, a package sitting outside can look like an easy opportunity.

But increased opportunity alone doesn’t explain everything.


Deliveries Used to Be Different 🚚

Years ago, deliveries were often:

📦 less frequent
💸 more expensive
📬 handled mainly by postal services
📝 sometimes required signatures

People simply didn’t have multiple packages arriving every week.

But something else was different too.

Even when packages sat outside for a while, most people didn’t steal them.


The Question Many People Are Asking 🌎

So the real question might be cultural.

Has something changed in how some people view theft?

Many communities are starting to ask:

• Do some thieves see packages as “fair game”?
• Do they assume companies will simply replace the item?
• Do they think homeowners won’t bother reporting it?
• Do they believe police won’t pursue small theft cases?

When people believe there are no consequences, small crimes can quickly become widespread.


The Role of Social Trust 🤝

Communities rely on something invisible but powerful:

trust.

Trust that:

🏡 neighbors respect each other’s property
📦 deliveries will still be there when you get home
🚪 strangers won’t walk onto your property and take things

When that trust erodes, everyday life starts to feel different.

People install cameras 📷.
They worry about deliveries.
They feel less secure in their own neighborhoods.

Porch piracy may seem like a small crime, but it reflects a larger breakdown of community trust.


The Opportunity Factor 👀

Porch pirates often operate in simple ways.

They may:

🚗 follow delivery trucks
👀 watch neighborhoods where packages are frequently delivered
🏃 grab boxes quickly and leave
📦 sell stolen goods online

Some thefts are impulsive, but others are part of organized small-scale theft rings.

That’s why many people believe stronger deterrents are needed.


A Growing Debate 🗣️

As package theft increases, communities are beginning to debate solutions.

Questions being raised include:

• Should delivery companies design safer delivery systems?
• Should neighborhoods install shared delivery lockers?
• Should police treat repeated package theft more seriously?
• Should online marketplaces do more to prevent resale of stolen goods?

These are questions cities and communities around the world are now discussing.


Reflective Questions 🤔

  1. Why do you think package theft has become so common in recent years?
  2. Has online shopping unintentionally created new opportunities for crime?
  3. What role does community trust play in preventing theft?
  4. Should delivery companies change how packages are delivered?
  5. Should stronger penalties exist for repeat offenders?
  6. If someone who is not a legal resident is caught committing theft, should immigration consequences such as deportation be considered, or should the criminal justice system handle the case first?

Coming Next in This Series 📚

In Part 3, we’ll look at something fascinating:

How people are fighting back against porch pirates.

From security cameras to glitter bomb packages and tracking devices, some homeowners have created surprisingly clever ways to deter thieves.

And some of those stories are both ingenious and hilarious. ✨🎁