Tuesday, July 7, 2026

Which Villages Plan Is Vancouver Voting On?

 Which Villages Plan Is Vancouver Voting On?

Trust in public planning depends on one simple principle: everyone should be looking at the same information.

That is why a recent discovery by Vancouver architect and planning commentator Brian Palmquist deserves serious attention.

After comparing the proposed Villages Plan available to the public on Shape Your City with the referral report being presented to Vancouver City Council, he found significant differences between the two documents.

According to his analysis, the boundaries of several proposed villages do not match. In some cases, properties appear inside a village on one map and outside it on another. His comparison suggests differences involving approximately 167 city blocks and 252 homes.

If accurate, these are not minor drafting changes.

For homeowners, businesses, and neighbourhoods, village boundaries matter. They influence future zoning, redevelopment opportunities, building types, and long-term community planning. People deserve to know whether their property is affected before Council makes decisions that could shape Vancouver for decades.

Adding to the confusion is the timeline. The referral report going to Council is dated May 26, while the version currently available for public viewing is dated June 30. Naturally, residents are asking a simple question:

Which plan is the official version?

That question deserves a clear public answer.

Public engagement only works when everyone has access to the same information. If residents, planners, and elected officials are working from different maps, confidence in the process is weakened.

This is not about opposing growth or supporting development. Vancouver is changing, and thoughtful planning is necessary. But meaningful public consultation requires transparency, consistency, and clear communication.

Before any final vote, the City should explain:

  • Which Villages Plan is the official document?
  • Why do the maps appear to differ?
  • Which properties are actually affected?
  • Have all residents received accurate information about their neighbourhood?

These are reasonable questions that deserve straightforward answers.

Democracy depends on informed participation. Whether you support or oppose the Villages Plan, every resident has the right to understand what is being proposed before decisions are made.

The conversation should not be about confusion.

It should be about clarity.

Reflective Questions

1. Should residents have confidence that the public and Council are reviewing the same planning documents?

2. How important is transparency during major rezoning decisions?

3. If maps change, how should the public be notified?

4. Do you know whether your property is affected by the Villages Plan?

5. Should public hearings be delayed if important documents appear inconsistent?

6. What level of consultation should accompany neighbourhood-wide zoning changes?

7. How can cities improve public trust during large planning initiatives?

8. Should every affected homeowner receive clear, accurate information before a vote?

9. What does meaningful public participation look like?

10. How can Vancouver balance growth with accountability?

#Vancouver #VillagesPlan #CityPlanning #Transparency #PublicConsultation #Housing #Rezoning #Community #Democracy #UrbanPlanning


The Boxes at the End of the Driveway

 

Yesterday I experienced something I don't think I'll ever forget.

Riding back from Jericho through Point Grey, I came across the remaining contents of an estate with a "FREE" sign. Most people would have seen old boxes. I saw a lifetime.

There were family photographs, birthday cards, newspaper clippings, certificates, letters, paintings, tax records, and keepsakes belonging to John and Joan Frost. Joan had lived an extraordinary 110 years. As I gently sorted loose photographs and papers into empty drawers to keep them together, I couldn't help but think about how overwhelming it must be to clear out a lifetime of memories. Grief, deadlines, and exhaustion can leave impossible decisions. I don't judge anyone involved. I just felt these memories deserved a little care.

I rescued a few certificates and took them to the Museum of Vancouver to ask whether they belonged in an archive. Another gentleman who also cared about what he had found took many of the photographs and papers. We exchanged contact information in the hope that someone connected to the family or the neighbourhood might help preserve their story.

The experience brought back a memory from more than 30 years ago.

In 1995, while I was a mature student working in home support during the summer, I cared for a wonderful gentleman named Mr. Thurston during the last three weeks of his life. I truly believed he was getting better. I didn't realize he was quietly calling old friends to say goodbye.

One of those friends was Dr. Gordon Fahrni, who lived to the remarkable age of 108. I remember him arriving at the funeral with his cane, sitting beside me while I cried, nudging the hymn book toward me and saying, "Sing, sing." After the service, he politely held the door open for me. Years later, I learned more about his extraordinary life and his memoir, The Prairie Surgeon, which tells of practising medicine in a much different time.

When Mr. Thurston died, I went home to my mom and said, "I never want to do home support again. It's too hard." My mom had done that work for 12 years. She understood exactly what I meant.

I went back to college, earned my photography diploma, found other jobs, and life moved on.

But yesterday reminded me that every photograph, every birthday card, every old letter, and every faded newspaper clipping represents someone's entire life.

One day, our own boxes of memories may be all that remain.

If you are helping clear a loved one's home, take one last look before something is thrown away. Label the people in old photographs. Ask the older members of your family who everyone is. Shred personal financial documents. And if you come across something that may have historical significance, consider contacting a local archive or museum before it disappears forever.

History doesn't only live in museums.

Sometimes it's sitting quietly at the end of a driveway, waiting for someone to notice.


Reflective Questions

1. How many family stories are lost because no one knows their value?

2. What memories would you hope someone would preserve from your life?

3. Have you ever discovered an old photograph that changed the way you saw your family history?

4. Do we take enough time to ask our elders about the people in old photographs?

5. What responsibility do we have to preserve local history before it disappears?

6. How do grief and the practical demands of settling an estate influence the decisions we make?

7. What ordinary objects from today might become important historical records tomorrow?

8. Who in your life has quietly shaped your journey without realizing it?

9. If you could spend one more hour with someone you've lost, what would you ask them?

10. What stories in your own family deserve to be written down before they're forgotten?

Monday, July 6, 2026

Bonny Graham (B. Wyse): Making Language and Belonging Visible in the Fraser Valley

 🎨 Bonny Graham (B. Wyse): Making Language and Belonging Visible in the Fraser Valley

There are moments when a place you’ve known for a long time begins to speak differently.

Not because the land has changed—but because the way we choose to see it has changed.

That’s what comes to mind when looking at the public work of Bonny Graham (also known as B. Wyse), a Coast Salish artist from the Stó:lō community in the Fraser Valley. Her murals and installations don’t just decorate public space—they quietly reshape it.

They ask people to notice language again. To notice presence again. To notice that this land has always had names, voices, and stories that deserve to be seen in daylight.


🌿 Art rooted in language and land

Bonny Graham’s work is deeply connected to Halq’eméylem language and Coast Salish visual traditions. Instead of treating art as something separate from daily life, she brings it into places where people are simply passing through:

  • Roundabouts
  • Roadways
  • School walls
  • Community entrances
  • Public gathering spaces

Her approach is simple, but powerful:
if language disappears from public space, it slowly disappears from memory.

So she puts it back where people can see it.

Not behind glass. Not in archives. But on the walls and pathways people move through every day.


🌉 The Vedder Roundabout — a message in motion

One of her most recognized works is the Vedder Road roundabout installation in Chilliwack.

At first glance, it’s striking visually: a canoe, paddles, and a circular design that draws the eye inward and outward at the same time.

But the deeper meaning is in the details.

The installation includes the Halq’eméylem phrase:

“Ey kwesé é mi” — It is good that you are here.

In a world where public spaces often feel rushed, anonymous, or purely functional, this is something different. It is not just art to look at—it is a statement of welcome embedded into infrastructure.

A reminder that travel is also movement through territory, through history, and through relationship.


🏙️ Bringing Indigenous language back into everyday view

In and around Hope and the Fraser Valley, her work often appears in quieter forms:

  • Welcome banners in Halq’eméylem
  • Public signage with Indigenous language
  • School and youth-focused installations
  • Community design projects rooted in local identity

These are not “grand monuments.” They are everyday encounters.

And that is what makes them powerful.

Because inclusion is not only about big events or official statements—it is about what people see when they walk down the street, drive to school, or stop at an intersection.


🧭 Why her work matters in places like Hope

For anyone who remembers the Fraser Canyon from earlier decades, it is hard to miss the contrast.

Places like Hope and Yale have always carried layers of history—Indigenous presence, settler development, highway expansion, and the realities of working-town life. But not all of those layers were equally visible in public space.

What Bonny Graham’s work does is shift that balance.

It doesn’t rewrite history.
It expands what is visible.

It brings forward what was always there.


🌱 Art as quiet transformation

Beyond murals and signage, her broader artistic practice explores:

  • Language revitalization
  • Cultural memory
  • Intergenerational healing
  • Identity and belonging

There is a thread running through all of it: the idea that visibility matters.

Not visibility as spectacle—but visibility as recognition.


💬 Closing reflection

Seeing her work in places like Hope is not just about art appreciation. It is about noticing a shift in what a community is willing to say about itself.

Years ago, the Fraser Canyon could feel like a place where stories were held quietly, sometimes unevenly shared, sometimes left unspoken.

Today, murals like these suggest something else is being asked for:

Not forgetting the past—but widening the space we use to understand it.

Bonny Graham’s work sits right in that space.

Quiet, grounded, and steady—yet impossible to ignore once you see it.


🧠 Hard Reflective Questions

  1. When you compare the Fraser Canyon of the early 1970s to today, what forms of silence or invisibility stand out most to you?
  2. How does public art change what a community is willing to acknowledge about its own history—and what might still be missing?
  3. In what ways did growing up or living in isolated rural areas shape your understanding of inclusion or exclusion?
  4. What does it mean when Indigenous language is placed back into public space after being absent for so long?
  5. Are murals and symbolic gestures enough to represent reconciliation, or do they sometimes risk replacing deeper structural change?
  6. Who gets to decide what stories are visible in a town like Hope—and who has historically been left out of that decision-making?
  7. How do personal memories of hardship in places like Yale and Hope influence how you interpret today’s “community improvement” narratives?
  8. What tensions exist between remembering difficult lived experiences and celebrating present-day progress?
  9. Can a place truly transform without also addressing economic inequality and historical displacement?
  10. When you see art like Bonny Graham’s in public space, what responsibility do viewers have—not just to admire it, but to respond to it?


Fraser Canyon history, Hope BC murals, Indigenous language revitalization, Bonny Graham artwork, public art and reconciliation, Yale BC memories, community inclusion, Stó:lō territory, cultural visibility, anti-oppression education


#FraserCanyon #HopeBC #YaleBC #IndigenousArt #Reconciliation #PublicArt #LanguageRevitalization #StoloTerritory #CommunityInclusion #BCHistory

Mural in Hope, and a Memory from the Fraser Canyon

 

A Mural in Hope, and a Memory from the Fraser Canyon

I lived between Yale and Hope from 1969 to 1973. It was a very different time in the Fraser Canyon. Life felt harder then—more isolated, fewer services, and not much visible recognition of the different cultures and histories that shaped the land. For a young person trying to make sense of the world, it wasn’t always an easy place to grow up or settle into.

That’s why seeing something like the new mural in downtown Hope feels significant.

This mural, created by Indigenous artist Bonny Graham with support from the Hope Inclusion Project and community members including Marla Rosenberg, Peter Bailey, and Linda Bailey, represents something that didn’t exist in the same way back then: a public, visible commitment to inclusion. It was 18 months in the making and now stands in the heart of town as a permanent reminder of belonging, shared history, and respect for Indigenous roots.

The mural is also dedicated to Linda Bailey, who passed away on June 1, 2026. From what the community has shared, she played a key role—alongside others—in helping bring anti-oppression education and inclusion-focused work into Hope. Her name now sits not just in memory, but in a piece of public art that will be seen by thousands of people passing through.

What stands out most is the shift in tone. In the late 60s and early 70s, places like Hope and Yale were still very much shaped by logging, highway expansion, and survival economics. Conversations about inclusion, reconciliation, or anti-oppression were not part of everyday public life in the way they are now. Seeing a mural that explicitly acknowledges Indigenous roots and community inclusion feels like a different era arriving in physical form on a wall.

Public art like this does something quiet but important—it changes what a town chooses to say about itself. Instead of silence, it puts values into the open. Instead of invisibility, it offers recognition.

For someone who remembers the Fraser Canyon from decades ago, this isn’t just a mural. It’s a marker of how far community conversations have shifted, and how much further they still have to go.

But it is also, simply, a hopeful sign.


Reflective Questions


1. What do you remember most clearly about life in the Fraser Canyon during the late 1960s and early 1970s?

2. How has the sense of community in places like Hope and Yale changed over time?

3. What does “inclusion” mean to you now, compared to what it might have meant decades ago?

4. How do public murals and art change the way a town understands its own history?

5. Why is it important to visibly recognize Indigenous roots in public spaces?

6. What kinds of challenges do small towns face when trying to shift toward more inclusive values?

7. How can community-driven projects influence education and local awareness over time?

8. What memories or emotions does this mural bring up for you personally?

9. How do we balance remembering difficult past experiences with acknowledging positive change?

10. What role do individuals like Linda Bailey play in shaping long-term community change?


#HopeBC #YaleBC #FraserCanyon #CommunityInclusion #IndigenousRoots #PublicArt #MuralArt #Reconciliation #BCHistory #HopeInclusionProject

People Write the Code. People Must Accept the Responsibility.

 People Write the Code. People Must Accept the Responsibility.

Artificial intelligence does not suddenly appear out of nowhere. It is designed by people. It is trained on data selected by people. It is programmed using code written by people. Every decision about what an AI system can do—or cannot do—is ultimately made by human beings.

That is why we must never accept the excuse, "The algorithm did it."

An algorithm has no conscience. It has no compassion. It has no moral judgment. It simply follows the instructions and learns from the information it is given.

If an AI system deceives a child, encourages self-harm, spreads dangerous misinformation, or creates harmful content, responsibility does not disappear into a computer. It belongs to the people and organizations that designed it, tested it, approved it, and released it to the public.

As United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres said:

"When a child is harmed, the answer must never be 'the algorithm did it.'"

He is right.

We would never allow a pharmaceutical company to sell medicine without proving it is safe for children. We would never accept a toy manufacturer saying, "The toy hurt the child—it wasn't our fault."

Why should AI be treated differently?

Innovation is important. But responsibility is even more important.

If companies profit from artificial intelligence, they must also accept legal and ethical responsibility for its consequences. Human beings created AI. Human beings must remain accountable for what it does.

Children should never become test subjects in a global experiment driven by speed, competition, and profit.

"No child should ever be a guinea pig for unregulated AI."


Reflective Questions

1. Should AI companies be legally responsible when their products cause harm to children?

2. What safeguards should be in place before AI tools are made available to young users?

3. How can parents, educators, and governments work together to ensure children use AI safely?

4. Do you think AI is advancing faster than society's ability to regulate it?

5. Should AI systems undergo safety testing similar to medicines, toys, and other products intended for children?

6. How much transparency should AI companies provide about how their systems are trained and make decisions?

7. Where should the balance be between technological innovation and protecting vulnerable people?

8. What ethical responsibilities do software developers and technology companies have when designing AI?

9. If an AI system causes harm, who should be held accountable—and why?

10. What kind of digital world do we want to leave for the next generation?

#ArtificialIntelligence #AISafety #ChildSafety #ResponsibleAI #AIEthics #UnitedNations #ChildrenFirst #DigitalRights #Technology #Accountability #OnlineSafety #FutureGenerations


Sunday, July 5, 2026

Wildfire Near Boston Bar and Hell's Gate: Stay Informed, Stay Prepared, Help One Another

 Wildfire Near Boston Bar and Hell's Gate: Stay Informed, Stay Prepared, Help One Another

As many people in British Columbia are aware, a wildfire near Boston Bar and Hell's Gate is producing visible smoke throughout parts of the Fraser Canyon. Emergency crews, aircraft, and firefighters are working hard to protect communities, and conditions can change quickly.

The Fraser Valley Regional District has issued evacuation alerts for areas around Boston Bar due to the Brunswick Creek wildfire. Residents in affected areas should be prepared to leave on short notice if conditions worsen.

During emergencies like this, misinformation can spread just as quickly as smoke. Before sharing posts on social media, please verify information using official sources.

Official Sources for Wildfire Information

Official Sources You Can Trust

During a wildfire, conditions can change rapidly. Before sharing information on social media, check these official sources first:

🔥 EmergencyInfoBC
Official evacuation alerts, evacuation orders, and emergency information for British Columbia.
https://www.emergencyinfobc.gov.bc.ca/

🔥 BC Wildfire Service
Interactive wildfire map, fire status, incident updates, and fire bans.
https://wildfiresituation.nrs.gov.bc.ca/

🔥 Fraser Valley Regional District Emergency Operations Centre
Local emergency information for the Boston Bar area, including evacuation alerts and orders.
https://www.fvrd.ca/eoc

🔥 PreparedBC
Emergency planning guides, grab-and-go bag checklists, and preparedness resources for individuals and families.
https://www2.gov.bc.ca/gov/content/safety/emergency-management/preparedbc

🔥 DriveBC
Check for highway closures, road conditions, and travel advisories before travelling through the Fraser Canyon.
https://www.drivebc.ca

If you are under an Evacuation Alert, be ready to leave on short notice. If an Evacuation Order is issued, leave immediately and follow directions from emergency officials. The current alert for the Boston Bar area was issued by the Fraser Valley Regional District because of the Brunswick Creek wildfire.

How You Can Prepare

Even if you are not currently under an evacuation alert, it is always wise to be prepared.

  • Pack a grab-and-go bag with medications, identification, important documents, clothing, water, snacks, pet supplies, and chargers.
  • Keep your vehicle fueled whenever possible.
  • Charge your phone and backup batteries.
  • Clear dry leaves, branches, and other combustible materials from around your home.
  • Know several evacuation routes in case roads become closed.

Check on Your Neighbours

Not everyone has family nearby or the ability to prepare on their own.

A simple phone call or knock on a neighbour's door can make a tremendous difference. Older adults, people with disabilities, and those living alone may appreciate assistance with transportation, packing, or simply understanding the latest evacuation information.

Communities are strongest when people help one another.

Smoke Can Affect Your Health

Wildfire smoke can travel many kilometres and affect people far from the fire.

If smoke becomes heavy:

  • Stay indoors when possible.
  • Keep windows and doors closed if it is safe to do so.
  • Reduce strenuous outdoor activities.
  • Watch for symptoms such as coughing, shortness of breath, or chest discomfort, especially if you have asthma, heart disease, or other respiratory conditions.

Thank You

A heartfelt thank you goes to the firefighters, pilots, emergency responders, volunteers, and local officials working around the clock to protect lives and property.

To everyone living in or travelling through the Fraser Canyon, please stay informed, stay prepared, and look out for one another.

Together, preparation and community support can make all the difference.


Reflective Questions

  1. Is your household prepared to leave within minutes if an evacuation order is issued?
  2. Do you know where to find official emergency information instead of relying only on social media?
  3. Who in your neighbourhood might need help during an emergency?
  4. What items would you include in your family's emergency kit?
  5. How can communities become more resilient as wildfire seasons become longer and more intense?

Keywords: wildfire, Boston Bar, Hell's Gate, Fraser Canyon, Brunswick Creek wildfire, BC Wildfire Service, EmergencyInfoBC, PreparedBC, evacuation alert, emergency preparedness

Hashtags: #BCWildfires #BostonBar #HellsGate #FraserCanyon #PreparedBC #EmergencyPreparedness #WildfireSafety #StayInformed #CommunitySupport #BritishColumbia

What If We Opened Our Minds?

What If We Opened Our Minds?

For decades, we've been told there is only one way to build our cities: concrete, steel, and glass reaching ever higher into the sky.

But what if that isn't the only path?

In the 1970s, architect Michael E. Reynolds began asking a different question. Instead of seeing old tires, glass bottles, and aluminum cans as garbage, he wondered whether they could become homes. His Earthship concept challenged the idea that houses must depend entirely on centralized power, water, and heating systems.

More than 50 years later, his ideas continue to inspire people around the world.

Whether or not Earthships are the perfect solution for every climate or every community isn't really the point.

The point is that someone dared to think differently.

Meanwhile, many of our cities continue to be filled with massive glass and steel towers. These buildings can provide much-needed housing and office space, but they also require enormous amounts of energy and materials to construct and operate. As climate change, resource shortages, and housing affordability become increasingly urgent, perhaps it's time to ask whether our definition of "modern" needs to evolve.

Innovation rarely happens by repeating the same ideas.

What if every new neighbourhood incorporated more recycled materials? What if buildings collected rainwater? What if rooftops produced food and solar energy? What if homes were designed to stay comfortable with far less heating and cooling?

These questions aren't radical anymore. Around the world, architects, engineers, Indigenous communities, scientists, and builders are exploring new ways to create homes that are more resilient, efficient, and connected to nature.

Progress begins with curiosity.

History shows that many of today's accepted ideas were once dismissed as impossible.

Perhaps the greatest barrier to change isn't technology.

Perhaps it's our willingness to open our minds.

Reflective Questions

  1. Should our cities encourage more experimentation with sustainable building designs?
  2. What building materials do we throw away today that could become valuable resources tomorrow?
  3. How can we balance the need for more housing with the need to reduce environmental impacts?
  4. If you were designing a neighbourhood from scratch, what sustainable features would you include?
  5. What innovative ideas from the past deserve another look today?

#OpenYourMind #SustainableHousing #Earthships #GreenArchitecture #Innovation #ClimateSolutions #HousingCrisis #CircularEconomy #RecycledMaterials #FutureCities #EnvironmentalInnovation #ThinkDifferently #Architecture #Sustainability #DigitalHorizonZ

Failure to Remove Obvious Fake Accounts Used for Harassment

 Failure to Remove Obvious Fake Accounts Used for Harassment

Dear Meta/Facebook,

I am writing to express my frustration with Facebook's handling of fake accounts and repeated harassment.

After I left a simple condolence message on a funeral post, someone using the name "Jerry Townsend" posted an inappropriate comment about wanting to meet me. This was not only disrespectful to the grieving family, but it was also clearly spam.

When I investigated, I found multiple Facebook profiles using the same name, similar photos, and similar claims of working for the United Nations or living in Yemen. I reported these accounts and documented them with screenshots.

I find it unacceptable that users are expected to do the work of identifying and reporting obvious fake accounts while they remain active. Meta is one of the largest technology companies in the world, with the resources to detect coordinated fake profiles much more effectively than this.

People should be able to express condolences, support friends, and participate in their communities without being targeted by spam or scammers.

I ask that Meta:

  • Investigate the accounts I reported.
  • Remove fake and coordinated spam accounts more quickly.
  • Improve systems that detect multiple accounts being used for harassment or scams.
  • Better protect users from repeated abuse.

Facebook should be a place where people feel safe interacting with others, especially during sensitive moments such as memorials and condolences.

I hope you will take this issue seriously and improve the protection of your users.

Sincerely,

Tina Winterlik (Zipolita)


Reflective Questions


1. Have you ever been contacted by what appeared to be a fake Facebook account?

2. How did you know the account wasn't genuine?

3. Should social media companies be held to a higher standard for detecting fake accounts?

4. How quickly should reports of spam, impersonation, or harassment be investigated?

5. Should users have to repeatedly report multiple accounts that appear to belong to the same scammer?

6. What responsibility does a company with billions of users have to protect people from online scams?

7. Have you ever stopped using a social media platform because of spam or harassment?

8. What improvements would make you feel safer on Facebook?

9. How can we protect older adults and people who are less familiar with online scams?

10. If nothing changes, what will the future of social media look like

Keywords

Facebook, Meta, fake accounts, Facebook scams, online safety, social media, spam accounts, impersonation, harassment, scam prevention, cyber safety, internet safety, online fraud, account security, digital trust, consumer protection, technology, social media accountability, fake profiles, online communities.

#Facebook #Meta #FakeAccounts #OnlineSafety #StopScams #CyberSafety #InternetSafety #ScamAwareness #DigitalTrust #SocialMedia #Harassment #ConsumerProtection #OnlineFraud #Privacy #AccountSecurity #ThinkBeforeYouClick #StaySafeOnline #Technology #DigitalRights #Zipolita

What has your experience with fake accounts on Facebook been? Do you think social media companies are doing enough to protect their users? Share your thoughts in the comments.

Saturday, July 4, 2026

Are We Waiting for a Catalyst?

 Are We Waiting for a Catalyst?

Every time there is a shocking act of violence, the public asks the same question: Could this have been prevented?

When people see someone accused of a serious, seemingly random assault released back into the community, many feel afraid. Victims worry. Families worry. Neighbours wonder whether the system is protecting them.

It shouldn't take an even more horrific event for us to have an honest conversation about public safety.

History shows that major changes to laws often come after tragedies. We strengthen building codes after disasters. We improve transportation safety after crashes. We reform health systems after failures become impossible to ignore. But should justice reform also have to wait until something even worse happens?

I hope not.

A society should be willing to examine its laws before another family is affected. That doesn't mean abandoning fundamental rights or the presumption of innocence. Those principles matter. But public safety matters too. The challenge is finding a balance that reflects today's realities.

Can we improve risk assessments? Can we provide better mental health resources? Can courts be given clearer tools for dealing with cases involving serious, random violence? Can victims have greater confidence that their safety is being considered?

These are not partisan questions. They are questions about the kind of society we want to build.

Real change rarely comes from outrage alone. It comes from citizens asking thoughtful questions, journalists investigating, researchers providing evidence, community organizations speaking up, and elected representatives listening.

If you believe something should change, make your voice heard. Write to your elected representatives. Support evidence-based reform. Participate in public consultations. Encourage respectful discussion, even when opinions differ.

We should not wait for another tragedy before asking whether our systems are working as intended.

The goal is not fear.

The goal is a justice system that protects the public, respects individual rights, supports victims, and earns the confidence of the communities it serves.

Reflective Questions

  1. What does "public safety" mean to you?
  2. How should courts balance the rights of an accused person with the safety of the community?
  3. What reforms, if any, would improve confidence in the justice system?
  4. How can citizens contribute to meaningful, evidence-based change?
  5. Should governments review laws regularly, or only after major incidents?

Keywords: justice reform, public safety, bail reform, victims' rights, Canadian justice system, community safety, criminal law, accountability, public policy, civic engagement

Hashtags: #JusticeReform #PublicSafety #CommunitySafety #VictimsRights #CanadianJustice #CivicEngagement #Policy #RuleOfLaw #Accountability #Discussion

Friday, July 3, 2026

An Open Letter to the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists

An Open Letter to the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists

Dear ICIJ,

I am writing to you as someone who still believes journalism can be a force for accountability, even in a time when information feels both abundant and tightly controlled.

Your work has reached far beyond traditional reporting. When the Panama Papers and Pandora Papers were released, they didn’t just expose hidden financial systems—they exposed how deeply unequal access to power and protection has become across borders. For many of us watching from outside the major institutions of influence, your investigations confirmed something we already felt: that secrecy and wealth often move together, and that ordinary people rarely get the same level of protection or transparency.

But I also want to speak honestly about something many people feel but don’t always say out loud.

Investigative journalism today carries enormous weight. It shapes public perception, political pressure, and sometimes even legal outcomes. With that comes responsibility—not only to expose wrongdoing, but to ensure that the frameworks you reveal are understood in context, not just shock value.

Many readers, including myself, are trying to make sense of systems that feel increasingly disconnected from everyday life—housing insecurity, wage stagnation, corporate consolidation, and the sense that accountability often arrives late, if at all. When your investigations surface, they often confirm that these patterns are not accidental. But confirmation alone is not enough for the public anymore. People are asking deeper questions: What changes follow exposure? Who acts on this information? And how do we ensure it doesn’t become just another cycle of outrage and forgetting?

There is also a growing concern about access. The same systems you investigate are often complex enough that the public struggles to fully understand them without simplification. That gap between truth and comprehension is where mistrust grows—not necessarily of journalism itself, but of outcomes that feel distant from lived reality.

I do not say this as criticism of your work, but as a reflection of the moment we are in. Transparency is powerful—but it needs translation into public understanding and, ideally, public empowerment.

Many of us are watching closely not only what is revealed, but what happens after it is revealed.

In a time where trust in institutions is fragile, investigative journalism may be one of the last bridges between hidden systems and public accountability. But bridges only work if people feel they can actually cross them.

Thank you for the work you do in bringing hidden structures into the light. The next challenge, perhaps shared by all of us, is what we build with that light once we have it.

Sincerely,
A concerned reader and citizen of an increasingly complex world


Reflective Questions (for readers)

  • What happens after major leaks are published—who ensures accountability follows?
  • How can investigative journalism better connect complex findings to everyday lived experience?
  • Are we building systems that act on transparency, or just react to it?
  • What would “public empowerment through information” actually look like?


#InvestigativeJournalism #Transparency #Accountability #ICIJ #PanamaPapers #PandoraPapers #MediaEthics #GlobalJustice #PublicInterest #TruthMatters



A Public Responsibility: Leadership, Journalism, and Change

 PART 4 — A Public Responsibility: Leadership, Journalism, and Change

This is no longer just an individual frustration—it is a structural issue.

When people consistently struggle to access work through systems that are opaque and automated, it becomes a question of fairness, transparency, and public trust.

We need serious discussion about how hiring systems operate in modern society:

How decisions are made

What data is collected

How people are filtered

And who is accountable when systems fail people repeatedly

To leaders, including Mark Carney and Elizabeth May: this is not a small administrative issue. It is about economic participation and dignity in a digital labour market.

To journalists and researchers: this story needs deeper investigation. Not just anecdotes—but system-level analysis of how job platforms, automation, and hiring technologies are reshaping access to work.

People are not failing the system.

The system is failing people quietly, at scale.

Reflective Questions

Should governments regulate automated hiring systems?

What protections should job seekers have in digital labour markets?

Why is this issue not more visible in mainstream reporting?

Keywords

labour policy, digital economy, hiring regulation, tech governance, employment rights, journalism investigation, public accountability, workforce policy, automation impact, social systems

Hashtags

#WorkplaceReform #TechPolicy #EmploymentRights #DigitalLabour #AccountabilityNow #JournalismMatters #PublicInterest #FairWork #SystemChange #HumanDignity

You Are Not Neutral: The Platforms Behind the System

 PART 3 — You Are Not Neutral: The Platforms Behind the System

Job platforms present themselves as connectors—helping people find work.

But they are also data systems.

They collect resumes, track behaviour, store search history, and build profiles of job seekers at scale. This data becomes part of a larger economy built on efficiency, targeting, and automation.

Meanwhile, job seekers experience something very different: repetition, frustration, and silence.

The more people apply, the more data is generated. The more data is generated, the more value the system creates.

But the human cost is rarely included in that equation.

This is not about blaming individuals or stopping technology. It is about recognizing that systems are not neutral when they consistently produce harm without accountability.

Reflective Questions

Who benefits most from large-scale job application platforms?

What happens to your data after you submit a job application?

Should job platforms be required to disclose how applicant data is used?

Keywords

job platforms, data privacy, recruitment industry, digital labour market, tech accountability, user data, employment tech, algorithm systems, corporate platforms, workforce data

Hashtags

#DataPrivacy #TechAccountability #JobPlatforms #WorkforceData #DigitalEconomy #EthicalTech #RecruitmentIndustry #UserRights #SystemDesign #WhoBenefits

The Invisible Layer: Why Applications Disappear

 PART 2 — The Invisible Layer: Why Applications Disappear

Most people are told the job market is simple: apply online, wait, and follow up.

But that is not the full system.

Between your application and a hiring decision, there are often automated systems that sort, scan, and rank candidates before a human ever sees them. These systems rely on keywords, formatting, and structured data—not lived experience or potential.

That means qualified people can be filtered out without ever knowing why.

This creates a dangerous gap between perception and reality. People think they are being reviewed by humans, but often they are being processed by software designed for efficiency, not fairness.

And silence becomes the default outcome.

The problem is not just technology—it is lack of transparency.

Reflective Questions

Do you know if your applications are being seen by a human?

How would job searching change if rejection reasons were always explained?

Should automated hiring systems be required to disclose how they rank people?

Keywords

automated hiring, ATS systems, recruitment technology, job filtering, algorithm bias, HR tech, employment screening, digital gatekeeping, transparency, labour systems

Hashtags

#ATS #HiringTech #AlgorithmBias #JobMarket #DigitalGatekeeping #TransparencyMatters #WorkplaceTech #RecruitmentSystems #FairHiring #InvisibleFilters

I See You: A Letter to Job Seekers in a Silent System

 PART 1 — I See You: A Letter to Job Seekers in a Silent System

You are not imagining how hard this has become.

Job searching today often feels like shouting into a system that does not answer. You apply, you upload, you adjust your resume again and again—then nothing. No response. No explanation. Just silence.

Over time, that silence starts to feel personal. But it isn’t.

This system is built in layers: automation, filtering, ranking, and digital sorting before a human ever sees your name. And when people don’t understand that layer, they often blame themselves.

But this is not a reflection of your worth.

It is a reflection of how disconnected the system has become from human reality.

I see you. Not as data. Not as a keyword match. As a person trying to move forward in a system that often does not acknowledge your effort.

You are not alone in this experience—even when it feels like it.

Reflective Questions

How has job searching affected your sense of confidence or self-worth?

Do you feel like you are being seen by employers, or filtered by systems?

What would change if every application received real human acknowledgment?

Keywords

job seekers, unemployment stress, hiring systems, ATS filtering, job search burnout, digital applications, employment barriers, mental health, workforce struggles, labour market

Hashtags

#JobSeekers #JobSearchStruggles #MentalHealthMatters #HiringSystem #WorkplaceReality #InvisibleLabour #EmploymentBarriers #CareerBurnout #HumanBehindTheResume #SystemicIssues

Wednesday, July 1, 2026

Who Owns the Deep Ocean? 🤔🌊

 Who Owns the Deep Ocean? 🤔🌊

I was reading about a Vancouver-based company seeking to mine the deep ocean for critical minerals, and it made me stop and think.

The deep sea is one of the least explored places on Earth. It may hold valuable resources, but it also contains ecosystems we're only beginning to understand.

Some people believe deep-sea mining is necessary for the minerals needed in batteries and new technologies. Others worry that we may be moving too quickly before we fully understand the environmental consequences.

Who should decide what happens in international waters? Governments? International organizations? Scientists? Indigenous knowledge holders? The public?

These are important questions worth discussing respectfully.

What do you think? Should humanity proceed with deep-sea mining, or should we learn more before opening a new frontier?

Even though deep-sea mining and ocean governance can feel far away from everyday life, public awareness still matters. 

The choices made about the ocean’s future are shaped not only by governments and corporations, but also by public pressure, transparency, and informed conversation. Staying curious, asking questions, and supporting responsible journalism can help keep these issues visible. 

Small actions—like responding to public consultations, supporting conservation efforts, or simply sharing thoughtful discussion—add up over time. 

🐠🐡🦐🦑🦞🦑🐚🦀🐙🐬🐋🐳🦈🪸🪼🐌🌎🌊💧

The deep ocean may be out of sight, but it should not be out of mind.

#DeepSeaMining #OceanConservation #CriticalMinerals #Canada #Environment #Climate #InternationalLaw #PublicDiscussion #Vancouver #Future



Strata Living, Housing Rules, and Who Gets to Stay

Strata Living, Housing Rules, and Who Gets to Stay

Strata housing is something I’ve been thinking about again, especially after conversations about how it shaped people’s lives in ways we don’t always talk about.

I’ve lived in different housing setups — houses, mobile homes, condos — and strata systems stand out because they aren’t just about buildings, they’re about rules, governance, and social structure all layered into where you live.

Things like age-restricted condos, who is “allowed” to live in a place, and how decisions get made by neighbours can have real impacts on families and daily life. I’ve seen how that can create both stability and also frustration or displacement depending on the situation.

There’s a lot to unpack here — especially how these systems developed in BC and how they affect people differently over time.

Going to write more about this later.


🤔 Reflective Questions (Strata, Rules, and Family Life)

How do housing rules shape who is allowed to live with family members, even when care or support is needed?

Have you ever seen situations where a partner, child, or caregiver was excluded because of building bylaws?

How do age-restricted or “adult-only” housing rules affect families trying to stay together across generations?

What happens when housing policies don’t align with real life needs like caregiving, disability, or parenting?

How do housing systems influence decisions about when people can start or expand families?

Have housing costs, restrictions, or instability ever changed someone’s plans for having children or raising a family?

Who gets protected by housing rules — and who gets quietly pushed out?

How do we measure the emotional cost of being told a home is “not for you” because of rules, not ability or need?

What role do strata councils and bylaws play in shaping private family life inside “private” homes?

Are current housing systems supporting families — or forcing families to adapt to systems instead of the other way around?

#StrataLiving
#HousingBC
#AffordableHousing
#CoastalHousingCrisis
#VancouverHousing
#TenantRights
#AgeRestrictions
#HousingPolicy
#CommunityGovernance
#HomeOrAsset
#UrbanDevelopment
#Displacement
#SocialHousingDebate
#IntergenerationalLiving
#HousingJustice
#BCPolitics
#DeveloperPolicy


Tuesday, June 30, 2026

Just a Prank

 Kids, Pranks, and Deadly Consequences

The Real Consequences of “Just a Prank”

Many young people see doorbell pranks, door-kicking challenges, and other social media dares as harmless fun. But recent events show that these situations can escalate in ways no one expects.

Real-life consequences have included:

  • An 11-year-old boy in the United States was fatally shot after playing a doorbell prank.
  • A Quebec woman was sentenced to prison after scalding a 10-year-old boy with boiling water over a similar incident.
  • In Abbotsford, B.C., an 86-year-old man received a driving ban after striking two teenagers with his vehicle following a doorbell prank.
  • In Courtenay, B.C., a couple used a trip wire on a girl participating in a door-kick challenge, leading to a physical confrontation.
  • My own friend’s sister suffered life-changing injuries after a road rage incident escalated into gun violence. She survived but lost several fingers and carries the physical and emotional scars from that day.

These stories remind us that the consequences don’t just affect one person.

  • A prankster can be seriously injured or killed.
  • A homeowner can face criminal charges or lifelong regret.
  • Families can be left with trauma, grief, or permanent injury.
  • Neighbourhoods can become fearful instead of feeling safe.

No prank or online challenge is worth a life-changing moment.


What is happening in society?

When we see porch theft, doorbell pranks, and online challenges that put people at risk, it raises difficult questions.

Is this a sign that society is changing? A loss of respect or empathy? Or are we seeing something more complex that we don’t fully understand?

I’m not an expert, but it’s worth asking:

  • Has growing up with phones and social media changed how young people see consequences?
  • Did COVID, isolation, and disruption affect how boundaries and behaviour developed?
  • Why do things that once felt unacceptable now get seen as “just a prank” or a trend?

These aren’t questions about blame—they’re questions about understanding.

Because something has changed in how quickly situations escalate, how easily they are shared online, and how little time people sometimes take to think before acting.


How do we help everyone?

Maybe the answer isn’t about blaming a generation, but about understanding how situations unfold today.

Most harmful incidents don’t start with bad intentions. They start with impulse, pressure, fear, or a moment of poor judgement.

We need:

  • More awareness of real-world consequences, not just online trends
  • More empathy for what it feels like to be on the receiving end
  • More responsibility on both sides to avoid escalation
  • A pause before acting, especially when emotions are high

Because once fear or anger takes over, situations can change in seconds—and they can’t be undone.


Final Reflection

So how do we help everyone—young people, parents, and communities—stay safer in a world where pranks, online challenges, and fear can escalate so quickly?

Maybe it starts with slowing things down in the moment before they go too far. Most situations don’t begin with bad intentions, but they can still end in serious consequences when no one pauses to think.

We need to talk more openly about what can actually happen in real life—not just rules, but outcomes. We also need empathy on both sides: young people thinking about how their actions affect others, and adults choosing not to escalate fear with fear.

Because once a situation turns into panic or anger, it can’t be undone.

If there’s one message to take from all of this, it’s simple: a few seconds of impulse is never worth a lifetime of consequences.


Reflective Questions

  1. Have you ever taken part in a prank and later thought differently about it?
  2. Why do you think social media challenges spread so quickly?
  3. How can a “joke” become something frightening for someone else?
  4. What would you do if friends pressured you into a risky situation?
  5. How should homeowners respond when they feel scared or threatened?
  6. What role do phones, filming, and online attention play in behaviour today?
  7. How do we build more empathy between generations and experiences?
  8. What does respect for other people’s homes and safety look like today?


Monday, June 29, 2026

Criticism Is Easy. Leadership Is Hard.

 Criticism Is Easy. Leadership Is Hard.

Canada is facing one of the most serious housing crises in its history. Families are struggling to find affordable homes. Young people wonder if they'll ever be able to buy a house. Seniors worry about rising rents. People experiencing homelessness need compassion, support, and practical solutions.

This is not the time for endless political theatre.

Anyone can criticize. Anyone can point fingers, search for scandals, and tell people what's wrong. That doesn't require much imagination, courage, or leadership.

Leadership is about bringing people together to solve difficult problems.

In my opinion, Pierre Poilievre spent far too much time attacking Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and everything else instead of focusing on constructive solutions. 

Months of political conflict, parliamentary debates, investigations, and partisan battles consume time, 💰 and public resources while Canadians continue to struggle with housing affordability.

Imagine if that same energy had been directed toward working across party lines to accelerate affordable housing construction, reduce homelessness, improve mental health supports, or help municipalities build the infrastructure needed for growing communities.

Canadians deserve leaders who inspire hope rather than division.

Politics should not be a never-ending cycle of blame. Every party has made mistakes, and every government should be held accountable. But accountability should be accompanied by ideas, cooperation, and a genuine commitment to improving people's lives.

My hope is simple: that our political leaders, regardless of party, put Canadians first. If they cannot or will not do that, then voters have every right in a democracy to choose different representatives at the next election.

Housing is too important to become just another political talking point. It is about people's lives, their dignity, and their future.

We deserve leaders who spend less time tearing others down and more time building a country where everyone has a safe place to call home.

Leadership Worth Remembering

History tends to remember leaders not for how loudly they criticized others, but for what they built, who they served, and how they inspired people during difficult times.

Some leaders are remembered because they chose humility over power, cooperation over division, and service over personal gain.

One example is José "Pepe" Mujica, the former president of Uruguay. Often called "the world's poorest president," Mujica became known for donating much of his salary, living modestly, and reminding the world that politics should be about serving people rather than accumulating wealth or status. Whether one agrees with all of his policies or not, his personal example encouraged discussions about ethics, simplicity, and public service.

Other leaders remembered for putting people first include:

- Nelson Mandela, who emphasized reconciliation after decades of apartheid.

- Jacinda Ardern, who became known internationally for leading with empathy during times of crisis.

- Lester B. Pearson, whose diplomacy and commitment to peace helped shape Canada's international reputation.

Each led in different ways, but they shared a belief that leadership is more than winning arguments—it is about improving people's lives.

For me, Pierre Poilievre is not someone to admire or emulate. Great leaders inspire hope, unite people, and leave their country stronger than they found it. They focus on solving problems, not fueling division. I have yet to see those qualities reflected in Pierre Poilievre's approach to politics, especially at a time when Canadians are facing a housing crisis, rising costs, and growing uncertainty. Canada deserves leaders who build bridges, not deeper divides.

Reflective Questions


1. What qualities do you believe define a great leader?

2. Is it easier to criticize a problem than to solve one? Why?

3. During a housing crisis, what should be a government's highest priorities?

4. How can politicians disagree respectfully while still working together?

5. Should voters judge politicians more by their words or by their actions?

6. What examples of leadership have inspired you in your own life?

7. How important are humility and empathy in public office?

8. What lessons can today's leaders learn from people like José Mujica?

9. If you were elected tomorrow, what would be your first three priorities to help Canadians?

10. What kind of political culture would you like future generations to inherit?


Quote for Reflection


"Leadership is not about being the loudest voice in the room. It is about leaving your community stronger than you found it."


#Leadership #HousingCrisis #AffordableHousing #Canada #PublicService #Ethics #Democracy #JoseMujica #Community #ThinkCritically #DigitalHorizonZ #Canadians #Canada #BadLeadership


Saturday, June 27, 2026

The Real Consequences of "Just a Prank"

 The Real Consequences of "Just a Prank"

Many young people see doorbell pranks, door-kicking challenges, and other social media dares as harmless fun. But recent events show that these situations can escalate in ways no one expects.

Real-life consequences have included:

  • An 11-year-old boy in the United States was fatally shot after playing a doorbell prank.
  • A Quebec woman was sentenced to prison after scalding a 10-year-old boy with boiling water over a similar incident.
  • In Abbotsford, B.C., an 86-year-old man received a driving ban after striking two teenagers with his vehicle following a doorbell prank.
  • In Courtenay, B.C., a couple used a trip wire on a girl participating in a door-kick challenge, leading to a physical confrontation.
  • My own friend's sister suffered life-changing injuries after a road rage incident escalated into gun violence. She survived but lost several fingers and carried the physical and emotional scars for the rest of her life.

These stories remind us that the consequences can affect everyone involved:

  • A prankster can be seriously injured or even killed.
  • A frightened homeowner can face criminal charges or a lifetime of regret.
  • Families can lose loved ones or watch them live with permanent injuries.
  • Neighbours can begin living in fear instead of feeling safe in their own homes.
  • Young people can end up with criminal records or lifelong trauma over what began as "just a joke."

No social media challenge, prank, or moment of excitement is worth risking a life. The smartest decision is often the simplest one: think before you act, respect other people's homes, and walk away before a situation has the chance to spiral out of control.

Reflective Questions

Have you ever participated in a prank that seemed harmless at the time? Looking back, would you do anything differently?

Why do you think social media challenges can influence people to take risks they normally wouldn't?

How can a few seconds of fun lead to consequences that last a lifetime?

What responsibility do we have to respect other people's homes and sense of safety?

How should homeowners respond if they become the target of a prank?

What can parents, schools, and communities do to help young people understand the risks of dangerous challenges?

Have you ever witnessed a situation that escalated much faster than anyone expected? What did you learn from it?

How do fear, anger, and impulsive decisions contribute to tragic outcomes?

What advice would you give a friend who wanted to participate in a doorbell prank or online challenge?

After reading these real-life examples, has your opinion about "harmless pranks" changed? Why or why not?


#ThinkBeforeYouAct #DoorbellChallenge #RoadRage #CommunitySafety #YouthAwareness #LifeLessons #RespectOthers #StopTheViolence #ChooseKindness #Consequences #Parenting #TeenSafety #SocialMediaChallenges #PersonalStory #Reflection

Kids, Pranks, and Deadly Consequences

 When I read about these doorbell pranks and other social media challenges, I couldn't help but think of something that happened when I was younger in Abbotsford.

As I remember it, two groups of teenagers in separate cars were harassing each other. One of the girls involved was my friend's sister, D. Instead of driving away and letting the situation end, one group followed the other home.

The person they had been confronting went inside the house, came back out with a gun, and fired at the car. D put her hand up against the window to protect herself. The bullet went through her hand.

She survived, but she lost several fingers. I remember she had to have her hand sewn into her abdomen for a time so doctors could help regrow tissue. Later, I remember seeing the scars when she wore a bikini. It has stayed with me all these years.

I don't know what happened to everyone else involved, but I have never forgotten that day.

That's why I worry when I hear about doorbell pranks, road rage, and online challenges. Most young people never expect a prank or an argument to end in tragedy. But sometimes all it takes is one frightened, angry, or impulsive person for lives to change forever.

If you're young and reading this, please remember: no prank, no dare, no moment of excitement is worth risking your life or someone else's. Walk away. Go home. Your family wants you home safe.


Reflective Questions

Have you ever taken part in a prank without considering how it might affect someone else?

Why do you think some people react with anger instead of walking away?

How can social media challenges encourage risky behaviour?

What would you do if your friends wanted you to participate in a dangerous prank?

How can communities help reduce conflicts between young people and homeowners?

What does this story teach us about the importance of thinking before we act?

Have you ever witnessed a situation that escalated much faster than anyone expected?

What message would you give to teenagers who think these challenges are harmless fun?


#ThinkBeforeYouAct #DoorbellChallenge #RoadRage #CommunitySafety #YouthAwareness #LifeLessons #RespectOthers #StopTheViolence #ChooseKindness #Consequences #Parenting #TeenSafety #SocialMediaChallenges #PersonalStory #Reflection