Friday, March 20, 2026

When Values Matter More Than Idols

 When Values Matter More Than Idols: Why Dave Bautista Covered His Tattoo

There’s something powerful about changing your mind publicly—and even more powerful about acting on it.

Dave Bautista, known to many as Batista from WWE and later as Drax in Guardians of the Galaxy, once had a tattoo honoring someone he respected:
Manny Pacquiao.

At the time, Pacquiao wasn’t just a world-famous boxer—he was someone Bautista admired and had a connection with. The tattoo represented respect, loyalty, and shared history.

But then something changed.

In 2016, Pacquiao made widely criticized homophobic comments, sparking backlash around the world. For many, it was disappointing. For Bautista, it was personal.

His response wasn’t just a tweet. It wasn’t silence either.

He covered the tattoo.

Not out of anger—but out of principle.

Bautista has spoken openly about why this mattered so deeply to him: his own mother is part of the LGBTQ+ community. Supporting equality isn’t abstract for him—it’s family.

That decision—to permanently alter his own body—says something we don’t often see in a world of celebrity loyalty and image management:

👉 You can admire someone… and still walk away when their values no longer align with yours.
👉 You can change your mind—and take responsibility for what you once supported.
👉 You can choose people over idols.

In a culture where people often double down, defend, or stay silent, this was different.

It raises questions worth asking ourselves:

  • What do we do when someone we admire crosses a line?
  • Do we excuse it—or do we reassess?
  • What are our values worth when it becomes uncomfortable to stand by them?

Because sometimes, integrity isn’t loud.

Sometimes, it’s as quiet—and as permanent—as covering a tattoo.


🔑 Keywords

Dave Bautista, Manny Pacquiao, tattoo cover up, celebrity values, LGBTQ rights, homophobia controversy, standing by principles, celebrity accountability, personal integrity, Hollywood activism


They Burned the Books — But Not the Knowledge

🌿They Burned the Books — But Not the Knowledge

There’s something deeply unsettling about realizing how much has been lost.

Not by accident.
Not by time.
But deliberately.

When the Spanish arrived in Mesoamerica, they didn’t just conquer land—they tried to erase memory. Under Diego de Landa, sacred Maya books were burned during the Auto-da-fé of Mani. These were not just texts—they were entire systems of knowledge: astronomy, medicine, ceremony, history.

Today, only a few codices remain, like the Dresden Codex. The rest—gone.

Or at least, that’s what we’re told.

Because here’s the truth that doesn’t get said enough:

They burned the books. But they didn’t burn the people.

The Maya peoples are still here.
And so is their knowledge—just not in the way Western systems expect.


🌊 Not Everything Is Written Down

We live in a world that demands proof:

  • Where is the study?
  • Where is the documentation?
  • What is the name of the ritual?

But what happens when knowledge was never meant to be stored in books?

What happens when it lives in:

  • the body
  • the land
  • the water
  • the stories passed quietly, person to person

I was reminded of this when I heard a story from a Squamish Nation elder. A woman, grieving, would enter the cold river every morning. Not to “fix” herself. Not to analyze her pain. But to move it. To let the water carry what she could no longer hold.

No fancy name.
No viral post.
Just practice.


🔥 The Internet Wants a Ritual It Can Package

Recently, I saw a viral post claiming a Lakota ritual called “Star Feeding,” complete with steps, symbolism, and even statistics from Johns Hopkins University.

It sounded beautiful.

But it wasn’t real—not in the way it was presented.

And that’s the problem.

We’ve created a world where:

  • lived wisdom isn’t enough
  • it needs a name
  • a structure
  • a percentage of success

We don’t trust something unless it’s packaged.


🌽 What Still Lives

Despite everything—the burnings, the bans, the attempts to erase entire ways of being—Maya traditions continue.

Not as museum pieces.
Not as perfectly preserved rituals frozen in time.

But as living practices:

  • fire ceremonies
  • offerings
  • herbal knowledge
  • relationship to land and ancestors

Grief is not hidden.
It is shared.
Moved.
Witnessed.


🌱 Maybe We’re Asking the Wrong Questions

Instead of asking:

  • “Is this ritual scientifically proven?”
  • “What is it called?”

Maybe we should be asking:

  • What does it mean to be witnessed in grief?
  • What happens when we let nature hold what we can’t?
  • Why do we need everything to be validated before we believe it has value?

✊🏽 They Tried to Erase It

And in many ways, they succeeded.

Languages were silenced.
Ceremonies were outlawed.
Knowledge was driven underground.

But not destroyed.

Because knowledge that lives in people—in practice, in memory, in relationship—doesn’t disappear so easily.


🌊 Final Thought

We are living in a time where people are searching for healing everywhere.

Apps.
Therapies.
Protocols.

And maybe some of the answers aren’t new.

Maybe they’ve been here all along—just not written in a way we were taught to recognize.

They burned the books.
But they didn’t burn the knowledge.


🔑 Keywords

Maya codices, Indigenous knowledge, cultural erasure, Diego de Landa, trauma healing, traditional practices, oral history, censorship, spiritual resilience, Mexico culture


🌺

Everyone Remembers the Mask, But Forgets the Women Behind It

🌿 Everyone Remembers the Mask, But Forgets the Women Behind It

I saw a post recently—an Indigenous woman wearing Zapatista-style gear, a powerful image. The caption said something like: the Zapatistas got it right—no single face of the movement.

And then, as always, the comments.

People talking about the pipe.
About Marcos.
About the mythology.

And I thought… is that really what people remember?


🌎 A Memory That Never Left Me

The first time I went to San Cristóbal de las Casas, it was around 1990.

It was beautiful—vibrant, colorful, full of culture. Markets, textiles, people moving through daily life with quiet strength. But even then, there was something else underneath it. Something harder to name.

A few years later, the uprising happened in 1994.

Suddenly, the world was looking at Chiapas.

For many people, that was the beginning of the story.

For others—especially the people who lived it—it had been building for generations.


🔥 What the Zapatistas Were Really About

This wasn’t just a rebellion.

It was about land.
About dignity.
About survival.

Indigenous communities were being pushed further and further into poverty, their land stripped of value unless it could be exploited, their ability to grow food eroded.

Sound familiar?

It should.

Because this isn’t just a story about southern Mexico. It connects to Guatemala. To migration. To the systems that force people to leave their homes just to survive.

It connects to everything we’re still seeing today.


🎭 The Face Everyone Remembers

Yes, there was a man with a mask and a pipe.

Educated. From Mexico City. A storyteller. A communicator.

He knew how to speak to the world in a way the world would listen.

And it worked.

But here’s where the story gets distorted.

People started to believe he was the movement.


🌺 The Leadership People Forget

Behind the mask—beyond the image—were Indigenous leaders.

Women.

Women who organized. Who spoke. Who fought for rights not just as Indigenous people, but as women within their own communities.

One of them was a small, quiet, incredibly powerful woman who helped shape what became the Women’s Revolutionary Law.

She didn’t become a global icon.

She didn’t become a brand.

But she was the movement.


⚖️ Why There Was Never Meant to Be One Face

The idea that “no one is the face” wasn’t accidental.

It was protection.

It was resistance to the exact systems that elevate individuals, turn movements into personalities, and then erase the collective power behind them.

The mask wasn’t about hiding.

It was about saying:

You see one of us, you see all of us.


🌍 Why This Still Matters

The same forces are still at work:

  • Land inequality
  • Food insecurity
  • Economic systems that benefit a few and displace many
  • Migration driven by necessity, not choice

We still see people leaving their homes, not because they want to—but because they have to.

And we still simplify their stories.


💭 What We Choose to Remember

It’s easier to remember the pipe.

The mask.

The myth.

It’s harder to remember the women.

The communities.

The centuries of struggle that don’t fit into a single image.

But those are the parts that matter.


🌿 A Personal Reflection

I remember buying small souvenirs years later—images of Zapatistas on horseback, symbols turned into keepsakes.

At the time, it felt like remembering.

Now, I wonder if I understood what I was remembering at all.

Because memory isn’t just about what we saw.

It’s about what we were taught to notice.


✨ Final Thought

Maybe the Zapatistas did get it right.

Not because they had no face.

But because they refused to let the world reduce them to just one.


🔑 Keywords

Zapatistas, Chiapas uprising, Indigenous rights, Subcomandante Marcos, Zapatista women, land rights, migration, inequality, Mexico history, San Cristobal de las Casas



The Truth About the “Filles du Roi”:

 The Truth About the “Filles du Roi”: History, Misconceptions, and the Power of Narrative

There are moments online when a single comment can shift the tone of an entire conversation—especially when it sounds authoritative, a little shocking, and just plausible enough to make people question what they thought they knew.

Recently, I came across one of those comments. It claimed that the term “les filles du roi”—used to describe women sent from France to Canada in the 1600s—could also mean “the whores of the king,” suggesting these women were taken from prisons or the streets.

It’s the kind of statement that sticks. But it’s also a powerful example of how history can be twisted, simplified, or sensationalized—especially when it comes to women.

Let’s slow this down and look at what’s actually true.


Who Were the Filles du Roi?

Between 1663 and 1673, under the reign of Louis XIV, approximately 800 women were sent to New France (primarily what is now Quebec).

They became known as the Filles du Roi—“Daughters of the King”—because their travel and dowries were funded by the Crown.

At the time, the colony had a major imbalance: far more men than women. Without families, there was no stable future. This program was designed to change that.

These women were not random. They were selected.

Many were:

  • Orphans
  • From poor or working-class backgrounds
  • Recruited through religious institutions or charitable networks

They were given an opportunity—one that came with risk, yes—but also with the potential for land, marriage, and a new life.


The Language Myth: “Filles” Does NOT Mean What They Claim

The argument hinges on the word “filles.”

Yes—like many words, it had multiple meanings depending on context. But its primary meaning was “girls” or “daughters.” That is how it was used in official records, church documents, and royal policy.

The phrase “les filles du roi” clearly translates to: “The King’s daughters”—not in a literal biological sense, but as women under royal protection and support.

If the intention had been derogatory, it would not have been used as an official term in a state-sponsored program.


Were They Criminals or Sex Workers?

This is where myth turns into distortion.

France did, at times, send prisoners to colonies—but that is not what defined this program.

Historical records—marriage contracts, parish documents, immigration lists—show that:

  • Most of these women were not criminals
  • Most were not sex workers
  • Many were vetted by clergy or local officials before being sent

Were some from difficult circumstances? Of course.

But reducing them to a stereotype erases their humanity—and their legacy.


Why Not Call Them “Demoiselles”?

Another claim suggests that if they were respectable, they would have been called “demoiselles.”

But that ignores social reality.

  • “Demoiselle” implied higher social status—often noble or bourgeois
  • These women were largely from lower economic backgrounds
  • “Fille” was the accurate and commonly used term for unmarried young women

This wasn’t about disrespect—it was about class.


Why This Matters

This isn’t just about a word. It’s about how easily women’s stories—especially poor women’s stories—are reshaped over time.

It’s about how survival gets reframed as shame.

It’s about how people who took enormous risks to build new lives are reduced to something sensational, something dismissive.

The truth is far more powerful:

These women crossed an ocean into the unknown.
They built families, communities, and futures.
Many people today—especially in Canada—can trace their ancestry back to them.

They were not a footnote. They were foundations.


A Reflection

Before repeating a claim that sounds dramatic or controversial, it’s worth asking:

  • Who benefits from this version of the story?
  • What evidence supports it?
  • And whose voices are being diminished or erased?

History deserves better than distortion.
And so do the women who lived it.

 Filles du Roi, New France history, Louis XIV, Canadian ancestry, women in history, colonial Canada, historical myths, French settlers, genealogy, women’s legacy


Thursday, March 19, 2026

When “Supervision” Fails: Who Is Protecting Women?

When “Supervision” Fails: Who Is Protecting Women?

A man known to be violent toward women is released back into the community in Vancouver — even after cutting off his ankle monitor.

Let that sink in.

This is not a minor administrative mistake. This is not a paperwork delay. This is a person who already demonstrated he does not follow the rules — and yet, the system has decided to give him another chance, in the same society where women and girls are simply trying to live their lives safely.

How does this happen?

How does someone remove a monitoring device — a clear, deliberate act of defiance — and still qualify for release?

Where is the logic?

Where is the accountability?

Where is the protection for the public?

Because let’s be honest: when officials say “the community,” they don’t mean an abstract concept. They mean real people. They mean women walking home at dusk. They mean young girls taking transit. They mean mothers, sisters, daughters.

They mean your family.


If This Were Personal…

What if it were your child?

What if it were your sister?

What if it were your mother — coming home from work, unaware that someone with a known history of violence and a proven disregard for monitoring conditions had been released nearby?

Would you feel reassured?

Would you trust the system?

Or would you feel that something has gone deeply, dangerously wrong?


A System That Reacts — Instead of Prevents

Time and time again, we see the same pattern:

  • A known offender
  • A breach of conditions
  • A release decision
  • And then public concern — after the fact

Why are we always reacting instead of preventing?

An ankle monitor is supposed to be a safeguard. If removing it doesn’t trigger meaningful consequences, then what is it? A suggestion?

What message does that send?


Women’s Safety Is Not Optional

Violence against women is not a “side issue.”
It is not secondary to economic discussions, political campaigns, or policy debates.

It is fundamental.

Because without safety, there is no real freedom. There is no equality. There is no dignity.

So we have to ask:

Why does it feel like this issue is constantly pushed aside?


Leadership — Where Are You?

To leaders and decision-makers:

What are you doing about this?

While attention is focused on economic policies, financial systems, and political positioning — where is the urgency when it comes to protecting women?

Where is the national conversation?

Where are the concrete actions?

Because safety should never be negotiable.


We Deserve Answers

This is not about fear — it’s about responsibility.

The public deserves clear answers:

  • Who made this decision?
  • What risk assessment justified it?
  • What safeguards are actually in place now?
  • And what happens if those safeguards fail again?

Because they already have.


Reflective Questions

  1. What level of risk should be considered acceptable when releasing someone with a history of violence?
  2. Should breaching monitoring conditions automatically disqualify someone from release? Why or why not?
  3. How can communities be properly informed without causing panic — but still ensuring safety?
  4. Do current justice system practices prioritize rehabilitation over public safety? Should they?
  5. What policies would you change immediately if you were in charge?
  6. How can we ensure violence against women is treated as a top priority — not an afterthought?
  7. What role should citizens play in demanding accountability and transparency?

This is not just a headline.

This is a warning sign.

And ignoring it is not an option.

Rozálie Kundratová: Life in Bohemia and Beyond

 Rozálie Kundratová: Life in Bohemia and Beyond

Rozálie Kundratová was born on a crisp September day in 1826 in the small village of Milotice, Central Bohemia. The daughter of Jan Kundrata and Anna Výletová, she grew up surrounded by the rolling fields, dense forests, and quiet rhythms of rural Bohemia. Life here was simple but not easy—hard work from sunrise to sunset, tending to family, farm, and home, was a way of life that shaped her into a woman of endurance and quiet strength.

At the age of 26, Rozálie married Tomáš Polášek, a man from nearby South Moravia. Together, they began a family, welcoming children into a world where survival was never guaranteed. Rozálie knew heartbreak intimately—over the years, several of her children died in infancy, a cruel reality of life in the 19th century. Imagine the sorrow of burying little ones while still caring for those who survived—a weight that only a mother could bear.

Yet Rozálie’s life was also marked by resilience. She and Tomáš made the courageous journey from their Bohemian homeland to Clopodia in the Banat region of Timis, Romania, likely seeking better land, safety, or a fresh start. This move meant leaving behind familiar villages, family neighbors, and the landscapes that had cradled her childhood.

Despite hardships, Rozálie lived to see her surviving children grow, carrying forward the Polášek legacy into new lands. She passed away in 1888, aged 61, leaving behind memories of a life filled with love, loss, and unwavering strength. Her story is a window into the lives of Bohemian women of her time—women who faced immense challenges, yet persevered, shaping the future of their families in the face of relentless hardships.

Rozálie’s life reminds us that family histories are not just dates and names—they are the echoes of courage, sorrow, and hope, connecting us to the landscapes, struggles, and triumphs of our ancestors.


The Polášek Family: Generations of Resilience and Heartbreak

 The Polášek Family: Generations of Resilience and Heartbreak

The story begins in Milotice, a village in South Moravia, Austria, where Bartoloměj Polášek was born on 11 August 1794. He married Klára Kulíšková in 1816, and together they built a life in a time of simplicity and struggle, bringing children into a world where survival was never guaranteed. Their son, Tomáš Polášek, was born on 11 December 1817 in Milotice, Central Bohemia.

Tomáš’s early life was marked by both love and sorrow. He married Františka Křížková in 1847, but she passed away just five years later in 1852, leaving Tomáš a widower at 34. In 1853, he married Rozálie Kundratová, and together they began a family that would face unimaginable hardships. Their first child, Frantisek Polášek (your great-grandfather), was born the same year, followed by a daughter, Kateřina, in 1855. But life was harsh: their son Jan died in infancy, and Tomáš himself would die relatively young in 1873, at just 55 years old, in Clopodia, Timis, Romania.

Life for Frantisek would echo his father’s struggles. In 1877, he married Albína Kundratová, and together they tried to build a family in the Banat region of Austria-Hungary (now Romania). But tragedy followed them closely. Many of their children—František, Františka, Jan, and two sons named Petr—died as infants or toddlers. Only Mary Ann Polasek Winterlik and Josef Polášek survived to adulthood. It’s heartbreaking to imagine the grief they must have carried, the empty cradles, the hopes dashed time and again. And yet, amidst the sorrow, Frantisek and Albína persevered, keeping their surviving children safe, loved, and hopeful.

The Polášeks were not just survivors of personal tragedy—they were part of a larger story of migration, resilience, and courage. Frantisek eventually moved to Saskatchewan, Canada, in 1904, taking a chance on a homestead in Dysart. He left behind familiar villages, languages, and traditions for the open prairies, forging a new future for the family in a land of opportunity and challenges.

From Bartoloměj and Klára in 1794, through Tomáš and Rozálie, to Frantisek and Albína, the Polášek family endured wars, migrations, and the heartbreaking loss of children. Yet through each generation, the family’s spirit remained unbroken—a testament to resilience, hope, and love that transcends centuries.

Looking back through photos and records, one can almost imagine them: Bartoloměj and Klára walking the cobblestone streets of Milotice, Tomáš working the land in Timis, and Frantisek gazing across the vast Saskatchewan prairies, carrying the weight of generations yet still believing in the promise of life ahead.

František Polášek (1853–1926) – Great-Grandfather

 🌿 František Polášek (1853–1926) – Great-Grandfather

Born on 20 October 1853 in Milotice, Central Bohemia, František Polášek grew up in a small Czech village during a time of change and challenge. Central Bohemia, with its rolling hills, forests, and linden trees, would have shaped his childhood — a landscape where community gatherings often centered around these symbolic trees, celebrated in folk songs and legends.

Early Losses and Hardships

František’s early life was marked by tragedy. By the age of five, he had already lost a brother, and later in life, he would lose multiple children — sons and daughters who died in infancy. These repeated losses reflect the harsh realities of 19th-century life in rural Austria-Hungary, where disease and limited medical care were constant threats.

Migration to Banat

By his early twenties, František had moved with his family to Clopodia in Temes Megye, Banat, part of Austria-Hungary. This migration was common among Bohemian families, who sought fertile land and new opportunities. In Banat, František married Albína Kundratová on 13 November 1877, starting his own family in a multicultural region that included Czechs, Romanians, Germans, and Serbs.

Family Life and Tragedy

František and Albína had many children, but tragedy struck repeatedly. Among them were:

  • Mary Ann Polášek Winterlik (1878–1949) – my grandmother, the first generation in Banat to carry the family forward.
  • Several children who died in infancy, including sons František (1878, 1882), Jan (1887–1888), and Petr (1889–1895), and daughter Františka (1885–1886).

These losses must have weighed heavily on him, yet he persisted, continuing to raise his surviving children in a challenging environment.

Later Life and Move to Canada

In the early 20th century, František emigrated to Saskatchewan, Canada, applying for a homestead on 30 May 1904. This bold move represented hope for a better life — new land, opportunity, and safety for his family. František lived out his final years in Dysart, Saskatchewan, passing away around 1926, having endured a life full of hard work, loss, and resilience.

Imagining His Life

Picture František in Banat: walking fields, speaking Czech and maybe some German, hearing the mix of languages around him, tending his land and family while mourning those he lost. Later, imagine him arriving in the prairies of Canada, facing harsh winters but also the promise of a fresh start — a life of toil, courage, and determination.

His life story is more than dates on a page; it’s a journey of survival, migration, and hope. From Milotice in Bohemia to Banat, and finally to Saskatchewan, František embodies the strength and persistence of your ancestors.


I Knew It Was Toxic — Now Science Is Catching Up

I Knew It Was Toxic — Now Science Is Catching Up

I remember the exact moment.

It was a hot August day in West Vancouver. We were walking past a sports field on our way to Harmony Arts, and as we got closer, I noticed a strong smell—like gas, or something chemical, something off.

I stopped for a second and said to my kid, “Hold your nose and walk fast. This is toxic.”

At the time, I didn’t have scientific proof. Just instinct. Just that feeling in your body when something isn’t right.

Now, years later, I’m reading a study from the University of British Columbia—and it turns out that instinct may have been spot on.


What’s Actually in Artificial Turf?

That “grass” isn’t just plastic blades. The black rubbery material underneath—the stuff kids fall on, run on, breathe around—is made from crumb rubber, which is essentially ground-up old tires.

According to recent research, this material contains a chemical called 6PPD, used in tires to make them last longer.

But here’s the problem:

When 6PPD breaks down, it turns into 6PPD-quinone, a chemical that has now been shown to be deadly to coho salmon and harmful to other aquatic life.


From Playing Fields to Ocean Water

Researchers found that when it rains, tiny particles from these artificial fields wash into stormwater systems.

And here’s the part that really matters:

That water is often not treated before it flows into streams, rivers, and the ocean.

So what starts as a children’s sports field ends up impacting entire ecosystems.

The study found that the levels of this chemical can exceed what is lethal to salmon.

Let that sink in.


My Experience Wasn’t Just About Smell

That day in West Vancouver, the smell was intense—especially in the heat. That “gas-like” odor? It likely came from the rubber heating up under the sun, releasing chemical compounds into the air.

And now I’m thinking about all the kids playing on those fields:

  • Breathing it in
  • Falling on it
  • Absorbing it through their skin

We’re told these surfaces are safe. But safe for who? And for how long?


And Then I Saw It in Zipolite…

That’s when it hit me again.

I started seeing artificial turf being installed in Zipolite.

A place known for its raw beauty. Ocean air. Wildlife. Simplicity.

And I thought back to that moment in West Vancouver.

If these fields are leaching chemicals in a highly regulated place like Metro Vancouver—what happens here, where infrastructure is different and rainwater flows straight into the ocean?

Higher heat. Stronger sun. Coastal runoff.

The risks don’t disappear—they may actually increase.


We Need to Ask Better Questions

This isn’t about panic. It’s about awareness.

Artificial turf may seem convenient, but we need to start asking:

  • What is it made of?
  • Where do those materials go over time?
  • Who is being exposed—humans, animals, ecosystems?

Because sometimes, before the studies are published, before the headlines are written—

We already know.

We smell it. We feel it. We sense it.

And maybe we should trust that a little more.

From Lived Reality to Digital Numbness: What Have We Become?

From Lived Reality to Digital Numbness: What Have We Become?

There’s something I’ve been trying to understand lately, and it’s not easy to sit with.

I’ve been seeing more and more posts online—images of dead animals, blood, disturbing scenes, and people laughing or reacting in ways that feel… disconnected. Almost like it doesn’t mean anything.

And I keep asking myself: Is this normal now?

But to really ask that question honestly, I have to go back.


A Different Kind of Exposure

When I was younger, I made a decision: “I will never be poor.”

That decision came from somewhere deep—somewhere shaped by hardship, fear, and the need to survive. And it pushed me into jobs that most people would never choose unless they had to.

I worked in a duck farm cutting gizzards.
Later, in a turkey processing plant.

This was around 1987 to 1990—and at the time, it was considered good money. $5 an hour, then moving up to $9, even $12. That mattered.

But the work?

It was relentless.

Dead animals all day.
Blood.
The smell of death that doesn’t leave you when you go home.
Repetition that wears down your body and your mind.

And the environment wasn’t just physically hard—it could be emotionally brutal too. People turned on each other. Rumors spread. You had to keep going, no matter what.

I stayed because I needed to.
I pushed through because I believed it would lead somewhere better.

And in some ways, it did. That job helped me fix my teeth, rebuild my confidence, and move forward in life.

But it left something in me too: an understanding of what those images actually mean.


When Reality Becomes “Content”

So now, when I see people casually posting images of death, blood, or suffering, I feel a disconnect I can’t ignore.

Because for me, those things are not aesthetic.
They are not edgy.
They are not entertainment.

They are:

  • labor
  • survival
  • exhaustion
  • trauma, sometimes

And I find myself thinking: “If they had to live this—really live it—would they still post it like this?”


A New Kind of Desensitization

But then I stop and ask a harder question:

What if they’ve already seen too much… just in a different way?

Today, people are exposed to a constant stream of imagery:

  • violence
  • suffering
  • crisis
  • shock

All through screens. All day long.

But without context. Without responsibility. Without the physical reality.

And something happens when you see everything, but feel very little.

You don’t necessarily become stronger.
You don’t become a “war machine.”

You can become… numb.


The Moment That Stays With Me

Recently, I saw people filming someone clearly struggling—bent over, likely affected by drugs—and laughing.

That moment bothered me deeply.

Not just because of what was happening to that person, but because of the reaction.

I thought: When did we start observing suffering instead of responding to it?

But then again—if all you’ve known is watching through a screen, maybe that’s what feels normal.


Generations and Perspective

I’m 64 now.

Even people in their 40s feel like “kids” to me sometimes. I catch myself saying things like “back in 1990…” and realize many people I meet weren’t even born yet.

That creates a gap in understanding.

Not better or worse—just different.

I was shaped by:

  • physical work
  • direct experience
  • consequences you couldn’t scroll past

Many younger people are shaped by:

  • constant digital exposure
  • endless content
  • experiences filtered through a screen

What I Really Wonder

I don’t actually believe people are becoming heartless.

I think something else is happening.

I think many people:

  • don’t know how to process what they’re seeing
  • have been exposed too early, too often
  • are trying to cope in ways that look strange or unsettling

And some are simply pushing boundaries, because that’s what gets attention now.


If I Could Show Them

There’s a part of me that wants to take them back—like in an old story—
to walk them through what those images really feel like in real life.

The smell.
The repetition.
The weight of it.

Not to punish them.
But to reconnect the image with its meaning.

But I also know: that kind of exposure can damage a person too.


So Where Does That Leave Us?

Maybe the real issue isn’t that people are becoming “hard.”

Maybe it’s that we’re losing the connection between: what we see and what it actually means.

And when that connection weakens, empathy can slip quietly away.


A Small Moment of Hope

The other day, I called someone “kiddo” without thinking.

She laughed and said no one had called her that in a long time.

It was such a small, human moment.

And it reminded me: people still want connection. They still want to be seen, not just watched.


Final Thought

I don’t have all the answers.

But I do know this:

There is a difference between
living something
and
scrolling past it.

And maybe what we need isn’t more exposure—
but more understanding, more context, and more moments that bring us back to being human with each other.


Reflective Questions

  1. When you see disturbing content online, how does it make you feel—and why?
  2. Do you think repeated exposure to shocking imagery changes how we respond emotionally?
  3. What is the difference between witnessing something in real life vs. through a screen?
  4. Have you ever felt disconnected from something that should have felt serious?
  5. Why do you think some people laugh or film in moments of distress?
  6. How can we rebuild empathy in a world of constant digital exposure?
  7. Do you think younger generations are more desensitized, or just coping differently?
  8. What responsibility do social media platforms have in what we see?
  9. Can sharing real-life experiences help others better understand the weight behind images?
  10. What does “being human” look like to you in today’s world?

Keywords: digital desensitization, social media culture, empathy loss, graphic content, lived experience, generational differences, online behavior, trauma awareness, human connection, modern society

Under the Same Story: Ireland, Indigenous Worlds, and What Was Taken

 🌊 Under the Same Story: Ireland, Indigenous Worlds, and What Was Taken

There are movies you watch… and then there are stories that stay with you.

The Secret of Roan Inish is one of those.

On the surface, it’s a selkie tale—of a woman whose seal coat is stolen, of a child lost to the sea and raised by seals, of longing, return, and belonging. But underneath, it carries something much heavier.

It begins with a story.

A grandfather remembering a relative who was punished simply for speaking his own language. Forced to wear a wooden collar. Shamed. Silenced.

That moment is easy to miss—but it changes everything.

Because suddenly, this is no longer just an Irish story.

It becomes a universal one.

Across Ireland, people were punished for speaking Gaelic. Their language—tied to land, memory, and identity—was treated as something to erase. And alongside that came displacement, famine, and the stripping away of traditional ways of life.

And if that feels familiar… it should.

Across North America and around the world, Indigenous peoples experienced similar violence:

  • Children taken from families
  • Languages forbidden in schools
  • Culture labeled as something to “correct”
  • Land removed, renamed, repurposed

Different places. Same pattern.

The selkie becomes more than myth.

She is a symbol of what happens when someone is cut off from who they truly are.

Her coat is taken. Her freedom is taken. Her identity is hidden away.

She lives a life that isn’t hers.

Until one day… she finds her coat again.

And she leaves.

Not because she doesn’t love—but because something deeper is calling her home.

That’s what makes the story so powerful—and so painful.

Because for many people, that “coat” was never returned.

Languages were lost. Stories were silenced. Connections to land were broken or buried.

And yet—like the child raised by seals—there is also resilience.

Memory survives in unexpected places. Culture finds a way to return. Stories are remembered… even generations later.

Maybe that’s why this film stays with us.

It doesn’t shout.

It whispers.

And in that quiet, it reminds us: What was taken matters. What survives matters. And what we choose to remember… matters most.


🌱 Reflective Questions

  1. What does “home” mean to you—place, people, or something deeper?
  2. Have you ever felt disconnected from a part of your identity?
  3. Why do you think language is so powerful—and so often targeted?
  4. What stories were passed down in your family, and which ones were lost?
  5. How do we honor cultures that were suppressed or silenced?
  6. What does resilience look like across generations?
  7. Can something taken ever truly be returned?
  8. What responsibility do we have to remember history?
  9. How does storytelling help heal cultural loss?
  10. What is your “seal coat”—the part of you that connects you to who you truly are?


UV Awareness, Memory, and Creative Protection 🌈

 ☀️ Under the Same Sun: UV Awareness, Memory, and Creative Protection 🌈

There’s something about living by the ocean that teaches you quickly—the sun here is not the same sun you grew up with.

For the past few days in Zipolite and nearby Puerto Ángel, the UV warnings have been consistent: “Limit sun exposure.” And I listen. Not out of fear, but out of respect.

Because UV (ultraviolet radiation) is invisible. You don’t feel it right away. It doesn’t always come with heat. But it’s there—quietly affecting your skin, your eyes, your energy. And in places like the Oaxacan coast, it reaches extreme levels, even early in the morning.


🌎 Then and Now

I think back to my younger years—working in the fields, berry picking all day under the sun. We didn’t talk about UV index back then. We didn’t check apps or warnings. We just lived in it.

But things are different now.

Part of it is geography—the sun here is more direct, more intense. Part of it is awareness—we understand more about long-term exposure. And part of it may be changes in our environment over time.

What hasn’t changed is this: We still need to adapt.


☂️ Protection Doesn’t Have to Be Expensive

I lost a hat I had for years. Replacing it here? Around 300 pesos. And I know myself… I lose hats.

But I remembered something.

Once, years ago in Cancún, traveling with my child, I bought a beautiful pink umbrella with a silver lining. I loved it—not just because it was pretty, but because it worked. It gave shade, comfort, and a sense of care.

So instead of buying something new, I decided to create something.


🎨 The Rainbow Umbrella Project

I took a simple black umbrella and started painting it.

Rainbow colors. Layers of meaning. A little bit of memory woven in.

Not only is it beautiful—it’s practical. An umbrella gives full shade for your face, shoulders, and upper body. It travels with you. And when you make it yourself, it becomes something more than just an object.

It becomes a statement: We can adapt creatively.


🌿 Living with Awareness, Not Fear

UV warnings aren’t meant to scare us—they’re meant to inform us.

We don’t need to hide from the sun. But we do need to understand it:

  • Early mornings can still carry strong UV
  • Sand and water reflect exposure
  • Damage is cumulative over time

Small choices matter:

  • Walking in shade
  • Covering up lightly
  • Using simple tools like an umbrella

🌈 Creativity as Protection

There’s something powerful about turning protection into art.

Instead of buying something expensive, I created something meaningful. Something I won’t mind carrying every day. Something that tells a story.

And maybe that’s the real lesson here.

We don’t just protect ourselves physically—we support ourselves emotionally, creatively, and practically.


💭 Reflection

What small, creative change could you make in your own life that supports your well-being?

What have you adapted over the years without even realizing it?

And how can we continue to live fully under the sun… while still respecting its power?



🌿 Reflective Questions (Multiple Choice)

1. What does a high UV Index primarily indicate?
A) The temperature is high
B) The sun feels hot
C) The level of ultraviolet radiation is strong
D) It will be a clear day

2. Why is UV exposure often stronger in places like Zipolite?
A) The air is more humid
B) The sun is more direct at lower latitudes
C) There are more tourists
D) The days are longer

3. What is one reason UV can still be dangerous even in the morning?
A) The air is cooler
B) The sun rises faster
C) UV radiation can already be high early in the day
D) The ocean heats up quickly

4. Which surfaces can increase your UV exposure by reflection?
A) Grass and trees
B) Sand and water
C) Asphalt only
D) Buildings only

5. What is one long-term risk of repeated UV exposure?
A) Improved eyesight
B) Skin sensitivity to cold
C) Eye conditions like cataracts
D) Faster hair growth

6. What did the umbrella represent in this story?
A) A fashion accessory
B) A replacement for sunscreen
C) A creative and practical form of protection
D) A travel souvenir only

7. Why might someone underestimate their sun exposure?
A) They don’t feel immediate heat or burning
B) The sky is too bright
C) The wind is strong
D) They are wearing sandals

8. What lesson can be learned from painting the umbrella?
A) Buying expensive items is better
B) Creativity can be a form of self-care and protection
C) Only professionals should paint
D) Color doesn’t matter

9. In the story, how did the interaction with the man in the bathing suit highlight awareness?
A) It showed that everyone agrees about sun safety
B) It showed that people may believe they are protected without fully understanding UV risk
C) It showed tourists avoid the sun
D) It showed sunscreen is always enough

10. What broader message does the blog post encourage?
A) Avoid the outdoors completely
B) Follow strict rules about clothing
C) Live fully while respecting natural forces like the sun
D) Only travel in colder climates


☀️ A Moment of Awareness

The other day, I saw a man walking by in only a bathing suit. His skin was shining—whether from sunscreen or oil, I wasn’t sure.

I asked if he spoke English. He did.

I mentioned the UV warning, just gently, just sharing information. He told me he was wearing something—some kind of protection.

And maybe he was.

But that moment stayed with me.

Because sometimes, we think we are protected… but we don’t fully understand what we’re up against. UV isn’t always visible. It doesn’t always feel dangerous in the moment. And that’s where awareness matters.


👁️ Noticing What’s Around Us

Something else I’ve noticed here—many women have visible eye conditions, including what appears to be cataracts.

Cataracts can develop over time, and one of the contributing factors is long-term exposure to sunlight without adequate eye protection.

It’s not something people talk about often.

But it’s part of the bigger picture: The sun doesn’t just affect our skin—it affects our vision, our long-term health, and our quality of life.


🌿 Final Reflection

Awareness isn’t about judging others.

It’s about noticing, learning, and making small changes where we can.

A conversation.
A bit of shade.
A painted umbrella.

These are simple things—but they add up.


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.