Friday, June 12, 2026

Beyond Status: Identity, Rights, and Reconciliation

 Beyond Status: Identity, Rights, and Reconciliation

Discussions about Indigenous status, rights, and reconciliation often focus on legislation and government policy. Yet behind every law are real people, families, and communities whose lives are shaped by those decisions. These questions invite us to think more deeply about the relationship between identity, belonging, and social well-being.

1. What does identity mean beyond legal recognition or government documentation?

Identity is far more than a number in a government registry or a legal category. Identity is family, ancestry, culture, language, community, history, and personal experience. Governments can create laws that recognize or deny status, but they cannot define the full meaning of who a person is.

For many Indigenous people, identity is rooted in relationships—to family, Nation, territory, and community. Legal recognition may affect access to certain rights and programs, but it does not create or erase a person's connection to their ancestors and heritage.

2. How can the denial of status affect a person's sense of belonging and connection to their community?

When governments determine who is recognized and who is not, the impacts can extend far beyond paperwork. Losing status or being denied recognition can create feelings of exclusion, disconnection, and uncertainty.

Many families have experienced generations of separation caused by discriminatory policies. Some people grow up knowing they have Indigenous ancestry but are told by government systems that they do not qualify for recognition. This can create emotional, social, and practical barriers to belonging and participation within their communities.

3. Why do many advocates argue that the Indian Act still contains discriminatory elements?

Many advocates point to the continuing effects of historical provisions that treated Indigenous women and their descendants differently from Indigenous men and their descendants. While several amendments have addressed aspects of this discrimination, many people argue that inequities remain, including concerns about the Second Generation Cut-Off and other registration rules.

Critics argue that these provisions continue to affect who is recognized under federal law, potentially reducing the number of people eligible for status over time. They believe that equality and self-determination require a more comprehensive approach.

4. How are issues such as housing, poverty, and homelessness connected to discussions about Indigenous rights?

Housing, poverty, and homelessness do not exist in isolation. They are often connected to historical and ongoing policies that have affected access to land, economic opportunities, education, health care, and community support.

When people are disconnected from resources, opportunities, or community networks, the effects can be felt across generations. Addressing Indigenous rights is therefore not only about legal recognition but also about creating conditions where people can live with dignity, security, and opportunity.

5. Can legal recognition alone address the challenges faced by vulnerable communities? Why or why not?

Legal recognition is important, but it is rarely enough on its own.

Recognition may restore rights or correct historical injustices, but communities also need access to affordable housing, health care, education, employment opportunities, cultural supports, and safe environments. Lasting change requires both legal reforms and practical measures that improve quality of life.

Without addressing broader social and economic conditions, legal changes may not fully resolve the challenges people face.

6. What responsibilities do governments have when policies create unintended harm?

Governments have a responsibility to examine the impacts of their policies and take action when those policies cause harm, whether intended or unintended.

This includes listening to affected communities, acknowledging mistakes, making necessary changes, and ensuring that future policies respect human rights and equality. Accountability requires more than recognizing a problem; it requires meaningful efforts to address it.

7. How can Canadians better understand the relationship between identity, rights, and social well-being?

Understanding begins with education and listening.

Many Canadians were not taught the full history of Indigenous peoples, residential schools, discriminatory legislation, or the ongoing effects of those policies. Learning from Indigenous voices, reading historical accounts, listening to survivors and families, and engaging in respectful dialogue can help build a deeper understanding.

Identity, rights, and social well-being are interconnected. When people are denied rights or excluded from opportunities, the impacts often extend beyond individuals and affect families and communities.

8. What would meaningful reconciliation look like in practice?

Meaningful reconciliation goes beyond apologies and symbolic gestures.

It includes addressing inequalities, respecting Indigenous rights, supporting self-determination, protecting languages and cultures, improving housing and social conditions, and ensuring that future generations have opportunities to thrive.

Reconciliation also requires honesty. It means acknowledging difficult truths about Canada's history while working together to build a more just future.

Ultimately, reconciliation is not a destination. It is an ongoing commitment to fairness, respect, and the recognition of our shared humanity.

Final Reflection

The conversation about Indigenous rights is not simply about legislation or status cards. It is about people. It is about families. It is about belonging, dignity, and the ability of every person to live with hope and opportunity.

When we ask questions about identity, rights, housing, poverty, and reconciliation, we are really asking what kind of society we want to build—and whether we are willing to learn from the past in order to create a better future.


#IndianAct #End2ndGen #SecondGenerationCutOff #FirstNations #IndigenousRights #Reconciliation #TruthAndReconciliation #IndigenousWomen #SocialJustice #HousingCrisis #PovertyInCanada #HumanRights #MissingAndMurderedIndigenousWomen #BillS2 #Canada


Thursday, June 11, 2026

Identity, Rights, and Belonging: Why Indian Status Is About More Than Benefits

Identity, Rights, and Belonging: Why Indian Status Is About More Than Benefits

The testimony by Indigenous Services Canada Minister Mandy Gull-Masty before the House Indigenous Affairs Committee has sparked concern because Indian status is about far more than access to benefits.

For many First Nations people, status is connected to identity, family ties, community membership, culture, language, political participation, and the ability to exercise rights that have been recognized through treaties, legislation, and court decisions. 

Reducing status to a question of "benefits" overlooks the deeper social, cultural, and legal impacts that losing or being denied status can have.

The consequences can be especially significant for First Nations women and children who are already disproportionately affected by poverty, homelessness, violence, family separation, barriers to education, and lack of access to culturally appropriate services.

Critics argue that discrimination embedded in the Indian Act, including the second-generation cut-off, continues to create real harms that affect people's sense of belonging, safety, and connection to their communities.

At the same time, it is important to recognize that expanding status alone will not solve many of the challenges Indigenous and non-Indigenous people face today, including the housing crisis, lack of affordable healthcare, poverty, addiction, and homelessness. 

Recognition of rights and identity is essential, but governments must also address the broader social and economic conditions affecting all vulnerable people.

Identity matters. Rights matter. Belonging matters. But meaningful change also requires action on the issues that impact people's daily lives.

Reconciliation is not simply about acknowledging the past. It is also about ensuring that policies today do not continue patterns of exclusion and discrimination.

 Real progress requires listening to those directly affected and addressing both systemic inequities and the everyday realities faced by people struggling to survive.

Reflective Questions

1. What does identity mean beyond legal recognition or government documentation?

2. How can the denial of status affect a person's sense of belonging and connection to their community?

3. Why do many advocates argue that the Indian Act still contains discriminatory elements?

4. How are issues such as housing, poverty, and homelessness connected to discussions about Indigenous rights?

5. Can legal recognition alone address the challenges faced by vulnerable communities? Why or why not?

6. What responsibilities do governments have when policies create unintended harm?

7. How can Canadians better understand the relationship between identity, rights, and social well-being?

8. What would meaningful reconciliation look like in practice?

#IndianAct #End2ndGen #SecondGenerationCutOff #FirstNations #IndigenousRights #Reconciliation #TruthAndReconciliation #IndigenousWomen #SocialJustice #HousingCrisis #PovertyInCanada #HumanRights #MissingAndMurderedIndigenousWomen #BillS2 #Canada



Day 112 — 231 Calls for Justice Call for Justice 11.2

 Day 112 — 231 Calls for Justice

Call for Justice 11.2

There are truths in public reports that are easy to quote, but harder to sit with. This Call for Justice from the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls is one of those.

“We call upon all educational service providers to develop and implement awareness and education programs for Indigenous children and youth on the issue of grooming for exploitation and sexual exploitation.”

At its core, this call is simple, but it points to something deeply structural: harm is often preceded by silence, confusion, and lack of language. When children are not taught what manipulation looks like, they are left to interpret it alone. And when systems fail to provide that knowledge, responsibility shifts unfairly onto the most vulnerable.

Knowledge is protection

This Call for Justice is not asking for children to be exposed to fear. It is asking for clarity.

There is a difference between fear-based messaging and prevention-based education. Fear isolates. Prevention equips.

Children can be taught:

  • what unsafe attention can look like
  • how manipulation can start small and escalate
  • that boundaries are valid and worth protecting
  • that trusted adults should make them feel safer, not confused or pressured

This is not about creating fear of the world. It is about removing secrecy from harm.

Why this matters in context

The National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls documented how systemic neglect, colonial violence, and jurisdictional gaps contributed to disproportionate harm experienced by Indigenous women, girls, and 2SLGBTQ+ people across Canada.

Education is one of the few intervention points that exists before systems fail a person entirely. But it only works if it is:

  • consistent
  • culturally relevant
  • trauma-informed
  • and actually delivered, not just written into policy documents

Education is not fear

There is a misconception that talking to children about exploitation “takes away innocence.” But innocence is not protection. Awareness is.

Silence does not prevent harm—it only delays recognition of it.

When young people are given language early, they are more likely to:

  • recognize unsafe situations sooner
  • ask for help without shame
  • trust their instincts
  • understand that grooming is not their fault

The responsibility is collective

This Call for Justice is directed at educational service providers, but the responsibility extends further:

  • families
  • community organizations
  • youth programs
  • policymakers
  • and anyone who claims to care about child safety

Protection cannot depend on chance or individual awareness alone. It must be built into education systems in a consistent way.

Closing thought

“Share this if you believe children deserve to be protected before harm happens.”

But beyond sharing, the deeper question is implementation:
What does it look like when prevention is not optional, but embedded into how we educate?

Because children should not have to learn danger through experience first.

They deserve language before harm.


Reflective Questions

  1. What does “knowledge is protection” mean in the context of child safety and education?
  2. How can schools teach about grooming and exploitation in a way that is age-appropriate and non-fear-based?
  3. What happens when children are not given language to describe unsafe or manipulative behavior?
  4. How might cultural safety and Indigenous-led approaches improve education on prevention?
  5. Who should be responsible for ensuring this education is consistently delivered—schools, governments, communities, or all of them?
  6. What are the risks of avoiding these conversations in the name of “protecting innocence”?
  7. How can trust between children and adults be strengthened so disclosures are taken seriously?
  8. In what ways do systemic gaps contribute to ongoing vulnerability for Indigenous youth?
  9. What would effective, trauma-informed prevention education actually look like in practice?
  10. How can communities move from awareness into sustained action and accountability?


#231CallsForJustice #MMIWG2S #CallForJustice11_2 #ProtectIndigenousYouth #IndigenousJustice #EndExploitation #ChildSafety #EducationForPrevention #IndigenousRights #AwarenessMatters #YouthProtection #KnowledgeIsProtection #TraumaInformedEducation #MissingAndMurderedIndigenousWomenAndGirls #CommunityResponsibility



Wednesday, June 10, 2026

Follow-up: Clarifying My Earlier Post on Online Safety Concerns

 

Follow-up: Clarifying My Earlier Post on Online Safety Concerns

After sharing information about online exploitation concerns in the West Shore area, I want to add clarification so this topic stays grounded, accurate, and useful.

This is an important conversation, but it needs to stay balanced so we avoid fear and focus on real protection.


What is confirmed

The Royal Canadian Mounted Police has confirmed they are investigating reports involving online exploitation concerns targeting youth in the West Shore area.

Local leadership, including the Songhees Nation, has also helped bring attention to youth safety and wellbeing in the community.

This tells us:

  • There are real concerns being taken seriously
  • Authorities are encouraging awareness and reporting
  • Youth safety online is an active priority

What is still not fully clear

Some names circulating online (such as “764” or similar labels) are:

  • not formal organizations
  • not stable or clearly defined groups
  • sometimes reused or reshaped across online spaces

What matters most is not the label, but the pattern of behaviour that can occur in private online spaces.


Why I am updating this

When information spreads quickly, it can:

  • increase fear
  • blur what is confirmed vs. unclear
  • make the online world feel unsafe overall

That was never the intention.

The goal is awareness, not alarm.


What actually matters most

Across different reports and warnings, the real concern is consistent:

  • grooming and manipulation of vulnerable youth
  • emotional dependency built online
  • secrecy and isolation from trusted adults
  • escalation in private digital spaces

These behaviours can exist anywhere online, regardless of what they are called.


How we keep communication open in a disconnected world

Today, many homes and families are physically together—but mentally elsewhere:
headphones on, screens up, conversations reduced to messages.

That makes early communication harder, but not impossible.

Simple ways to rebuild connection

  • No-interrogation check-ins Instead of “What are you doing online?”, try:

    “Anything online feel weird or stressful lately?”

  • Parallel time (not forced conversation) Sitting in the same room doing different things: reading, drawing, cooking, or scrolling — but together in presence

  • Headphone breaks Small, regular moments like:

    • dinner without devices
    • 10-minute “no headphones” walks
    • morning coffee/tea check-ins
  • Normalize sharing weird online moments Adults sharing their own:

    • scams they received
    • strange messages
    • things that made them uncomfortable online
  • Make it safe to say “this feels off” The goal is not perfect judgment — it is early sharing without fear

  • Ask curiosity-based questions Instead of control:

    “What apps are people using to talk these days?”
    “What feels fun online right now?”


Reflective questions

These are not easy questions — but they matter.

  • Do the young people in my life feel safer talking to me about online experiences than they do hiding them?
  • When was the last time I had an uninterrupted conversation with someone in my household?
  • Have we replaced conversation with “co-existence in silence”? If so, what changed?
  • If something online made a child uncomfortable, would they feel safe telling me immediately? Why or why not?
  • Are we more focused on monitoring behaviour than building trust?
  • What does “connection” actually look like in a household where everyone is physically present but digitally separate?
  • If I had to rebuild trust from scratch, what would I change first—rules, or communication style?

Hard question:

  • If harm begins in private digital spaces, how do we make honesty feel safer than secrecy?

Final thought

Online safety is not only about monitoring risk.
It is about rebuilding communication in a world where attention is constantly pulled away.

The strongest protection is still simple:

A person who feels safe telling the truth early.


#OnlineSafety #ProtectOurKids #CyberSafety #YouthProtection #InternetSafety #RCMP #WestShoreBC #SongheesNation #DigitalWellbeing #StopOnlineGrooming


Urgent Online Safety Warning: “764” Network Targeting Youth in West Shore

 

Urgent Online Safety Warning: “764” Network Targeting Youth in West Shore 

Urgent Online Safety Warning: “764” Network Targeting Youth in West Shore

There is an active investigation by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) into three reported incidents involving a violent online group targeting children and youth in the West Shore area.

The group, known as “764,” is reportedly linked to a larger online network referred to as “The COM.” These groups are believed to target vulnerable youth through online platforms and may use manipulation, coercion, and harmful psychological pressure to exploit them.

This type of activity can take place across social media, messaging apps, gaming platforms, and private chat spaces, often beginning in subtle ways before escalating into more serious harm.


Why this matters

Online exploitation is not always visible. It can happen gradually, through trust-building, isolation, secrecy, and emotional control.

Many young people do not realize they are being targeted until they are already deeply involved.

This is why awareness, conversation, and early intervention are critical.


Warning signs to be aware of

While every situation is different, possible indicators may include:

  • Sudden secrecy around phones or online activity
  • Withdrawal from family or long-term friends
  • Emotional instability after being online
  • New online “friends” they won’t explain
  • Fear of losing access to devices or accounts
  • Changes in sleep patterns or increased isolation

If you are concerned

If you believe a child or youth is being targeted or exploited online:

  • Contact your local police immediately
  • Do not engage with or confront suspected individuals online
  • Save evidence if it is safe (screenshots, usernames, messages)
  • Seek support from trusted community or professional services

More information from RCMP:


Helplines & Support (Canada)

If you or someone you know needs support:

  • Kids Help Phone
    24/7 support for youth
    Call: 1-800-668-6868
    Text: CONNECT to 686868
    Chat:

  • Cybertip.ca (Canadian Centre for Child Protection)
    National tip line for online exploitation and abuse
    Report online:

  • In emergencies: Call 911 or your local police immediately


Reflective questions (for readers)

These are not easy questions—but they matter.

  • How confident am I that I would recognize online grooming if it started slowly?
  • Do young people in my life feel safe telling me about uncomfortable online interactions? Why or why not?
  • At what point do we intervene—when something is “proven harmful,” or when something just “feels off”?
  • Are we giving children enough real-world tools to understand manipulation online, not just “don’t talk to strangers”?
  • What systems fail when a child becomes isolated online but still appears “fine” in daily life?
  • How do we balance privacy with protection without pushing youth further into secrecy?
  • If a warning sign appeared today, would I know what step to take next?
  • What responsibility do schools, platforms, and governments each carry—and where are the gaps?

Hard question:

  • If harm is happening in a digital space we cannot fully see, how do we respond without waiting for proof that may come too late?

#OnlineSafety #ProtectOurKids #CyberSafety #RCMP #WestShoreBC #ChildProtection #InternetSafety #StopOnlineExploitation #YouthSafety #DigitalAwareness #KidsHelpPhone #CyberTip #CommunityAwareness #SaferInternet #ProtectYouthOnline



Monday, June 8, 2026

When Appliances Had Personality 😊

 When Appliances Had Personality 😊

The other day I saw the most beautiful refrigerator from the 1950s. It wasn't stainless steel or gray. It was rose, gold, and white, with charming compartments and clever little storage spaces. It looked like something from a dream kitchen.

It got me thinking about all the things that used to have personality.

I remember my grandma's wood stove. She cooked on it every day, feeding the fire with pieces of wood and filling the kitchen with warmth. In winter, it wasn't just a stove. It was the heart of the house.

Old appliances weren't always perfect, but many had character. They came in cheerful colors—turquoise, pink, cream, yellow, and bright red. They seemed designed to make people smile.

Today, everything seems to come in shades of gray, black, or stainless steel. Practical? Sure. But sometimes I miss the creativity and charm.

Maybe that's why people love vintage kitchens and old farmhouses. They remind us of a time when everyday objects were not only useful but also beautiful.

What about you? Do you remember a favorite appliance, kitchen gadget, or household item from your parents' or grandparents' home?

I'd love to hear your stories. 😊

#VintageLiving #RetroKitchen #Nostalgia #GrandmasKitchen #WoodStoveMemories #VintageAppliances #SimplePleasures #OldHouseCharm #Memories #EverydayHistory

Sunday, June 7, 2026

First they come for the writers, then the artists…

 First they come for the writers, then the artists…

There is an old poem often attributed to the German pastor Martin Niemöller. It has many versions, but the core idea stays the same:

First they came for the communists… and I did not speak out…
Then they came for me—and there was no one left to speak for me.

Over time, it has been rewritten and expanded in different ways—workers, activists, intellectuals, and artists—always pointing to the same warning: when voices are removed one by one, it becomes harder to notice the pattern until it is too late.


https://youtu.be/ZcridvxfLBo?si=3BND07fYQdPdmhe8


That’s what has been on my mind watching what is unfolding at 60 Minutes, once one of the most respected investigative journalism programs in the world.

For decades, 60 Minutes represented something rare in mainstream media: long-form reporting that challenged governments, corporations, and powerful institutions. It was the kind of journalism that helped shape public accountability before the age of social media fragmentation.

Now, there are growing reports of major internal upheaval:

  • senior correspondents leaving or being removed
  • disputes over editorial direction and reporting decisions
  • allegations from journalists about pressure, censorship concerns, and shifting newsroom control
  • and a broader restructuring of leadership and editorial oversight at CBS News

Some journalists involved have spoken publicly, describing what they see as a loss of editorial independence and a culture shift inside the organization. CBS leadership, meanwhile, says the changes are about modernization, rebuilding trust, and adapting to a changing media landscape.

But regardless of where people stand on the details, the pattern being debated is familiar:

When journalists, writers, and storytellers begin to feel constrained… when difficult stories become harder to publish… when experienced voices leave or are pushed out… people start to ask what kind of media system is emerging in its place.

This is not just about one program.

It is about something bigger: Who gets to tell the story? Who decides what the public is allowed to see? And what happens when those answers begin to shift inside the institutions we once trusted the most?

The poem warns us that silence is rarely sudden. It arrives in steps.

And history has shown that by the time people notice the pattern clearly, the room for speaking out has already narrowed.

I don’t think the point is to jump to conclusions.

The point is to pay attention while the story is still unfolding.

🤔 Reflective Questions

At what point do changes in journalism become a loss of independence rather than “modernization”?


Who benefits when experienced journalists leave major news institutions?


How do we recognize censorship when it appears gradually rather than all at once?


Can a news organization still be trusted if its internal voices are saying they feel constrained?


What responsibility do audiences have when trusted institutions begin to shift?


Are we still receiving investigative journalism, or curated information shaped by corporate risk?


What happens to democracy when investigative reporting becomes weaker or less frequent?


How do we protect truth-telling in systems that are also businesses?


When does silence inside an institution become more important than what is being broadcast?


What would “accountable media” look like today?

60 Minutes, journalism, media independence, censorship, investigative reporting, CBS News, editorial control, press freedom, corporate media, media accountability

#60Minutes #PressFreedom #Journalism #MediaEthics #InvestigativeJournalism #Censorship #MediaLiteracy #FreedomOfThePress #CorporateMedia #TruthMatters #Democracy #EditorialIndependence #Whistleblowers #MediaAccountability #CriticalThinking

Saturday, June 6, 2026

Everything Is Broken — A Walkman Memory Across Borders

Everything Is Broken — A Walkman Memory Across Borders

There are songs that don’t just stay in your ears — they travel with your life.

I first heard Everything Is Broken by Bob Dylan sometime around 1990.

https://youtu.be/pndhO5DcSI0?si=TGIqdc2oVDD1T8eB

 I bought the tape at A&B Sound in Surrey, after driving in from Abbotsford. Back then, that already felt like a journey — planning, fuel, time, intention. Music wasn’t something you clicked into; it was something you went out to get.

I took that cassette with me to Mexico.

It became the soundtrack to long train rides and bus rides — the kind where the landscape slowly dissolves into dust, wires, fields, small stations, and waiting. A Walkman, cheap headphones, rewinding the tape with a pencil or finger when it got eaten or tangled — that whole physical ritual is part of the memory now.

The song itself is built like a list of fractures:

Broken nights, broken days
Broken leaves on broken trees
Broken treaties, broken vows...

Everything named in pieces. Nothing held together.

At the time, I don’t think I was trying to analyze it. I was just absorbing it. But looking back, it feels like it matched the feeling of travel in a developing awareness of the world — not just seeing beauty, but also seeing how many systems, people, and promises don’t quite hold.

Long-distance travel has a way of doing that. Hours stretch. Sleep breaks apart. Conversations disappear. You sit with your own thoughts and the movement of the world outside the window. The song becomes a kind of companion to that state — not comforting exactly, but honest in a way that feels steady.

What stays with me now isn’t just the lyrics or the melody. It’s the physicality of it all: the cassette tape, the Walkman clipped somewhere on my body, the road between Abbotsford and Surrey, and then further — Mexico unfolding mile by mile.

Music used to be something you carried.

Not in a phone. In your hands. In your luggage. In your memory.

And somehow, that made it last longer.


Reflective Questions

  • How has the way we listen to music changed the way we remember our lives?
  • Do physical formats (tapes, CDs, records) make music feel more meaningful or permanent than streaming?
  • What songs in your life are tied to travel, transition, or major life shifts?
  • Has convenience made music more accessible but less memorable?
  • When you think of a “soundtrack” to your life today, does it feel as grounded as it once did?
  • What did long, uninterrupted listening time allow you to feel or process that modern listening might interrupt?



Hashtags

#BobDylan #WalkmanDays #CassetteCulture #90sMusic #MusicMemory #TravelStories #AnalogLife #Nostalgia #RoadJourneys #MexicoTravel #SoundtrackOfLife #DigitalToAnalog #MusicHistory

Why Everything Feels Broken: Housing, Violence, and Government in Crisis

 Why Everything Feels Broken: Housing, Violence, and Government in Crisis

I don’t even know how to start this today.

Because like many people, I am trying to understand how we are living in a place where so many systems feel like they are failing at the same time.

In the City of Vancouver, in City of Vancouver, we talk about housing constantly. We hear announcements, debates, plans, disagreements, cancelled motions, and long discussions at city hall.

But on the ground, people are still struggling to find housing. Homelessness is still visible everywhere. Mental health crises are still unfolding in public spaces. And families are still being torn apart by violence, trauma, and systems that respond after the fact instead of before.

It leaves many of us confused, exhausted, and asking the same question:

Why does it feel like nothing is working?


Three levels of government, one human reality

Canada is divided into three levels of government:

  • municipal (city)
  • provincial
  • federal

Each one has different responsibilities.

In theory, this is supposed to create balance and efficiency.

In reality, it often creates something else:

fragmentation.

Because people do not experience their lives in separate government boxes.

Housing, mental health, income, policing, courts, addiction, and healthcare are all connected in real life. But they are handled by different systems that do not always move together, share data easily, or respond at the same speed.

So when something goes wrong, responsibility gets divided.

And when responsibility is divided, action becomes slower than the problem itself.


Why homelessness doesn’t go away, even with attention

Homelessness is not a single issue. It is a result of multiple pressures happening at once:

  • housing costs rising faster than incomes
  • mental health supports stretched beyond capacity
  • addiction services not meeting demand
  • income assistance not matching real living costs
  • long waitlists for treatment and housing

Most systems are still designed to respond after people are already in crisis.

Not before.

So we end up managing survival instead of preventing collapse.


Why it feels like government “argues but doesn’t act”

When you watch city council meetings, it can feel like repetition:

  • debates
  • amendments
  • disagreements
  • delays
  • cancellations

But what you are actually seeing is:

  • competing priorities
  • legal constraints
  • funding limitations
  • political disagreement
  • public pressure from different directions

Change is happening—but it is slow, negotiated, and often invisible in the short term.

And for people living the reality today, slow is not enough.


When tragedy breaks through everything else

Some days, a news story cuts through all of this noise and leaves people shaken.

When something violent happens—especially involving families—it brings forward a deeper discomfort that many people carry quietly:

“How is this happening in a system that is supposed to protect people?”

These moments sit at the intersection of:

  • mental health systems
  • legal systems
  • criminal justice processes
  • public safety systems

And they remind us that even with structure, prevention is not always happening early enough.

People are left grieving, confused, and searching for explanations that feel simple—but rarely are.


The deeper issue: systems that don’t fully connect

The real problem is not that nothing is happening.

It is that:

the systems were never fully built to function as one coordinated response to human life.

They were built in layers:

  • housing here
  • health there
  • justice somewhere else

But human reality does not separate itself that way.

So we end up with gaps between systems—and people fall into those gaps.


What this feeling of “nothing is working” actually means

That feeling is not irrational.

It is a signal.

It means:

  • the scale of the problem is larger than current systems
  • coordination is not keeping pace with need
  • people are experiencing outcomes faster than solutions arrive

It is not that nothing is happening.

It is that what is happening is not fast or connected enough to match reality.


Where this leaves us

I don’t think the answer is to give up.

But I also don’t think the answer is pretending everything is fine or that small adjustments are enough.

We need systems that:

  • talk to each other
  • respond earlier, not later
  • focus on prevention, not just crisis response
  • and reflect what people are actually living

Because right now, too many people are living between systems.

And that space is where suffering grows.


Final thought

I don’t have a simple conclusion today.

I only have this:

We are not confused because we are uninformed.

We are confused because we are watching systems that were built separately try to respond to problems that are completely connected.

And the gap between those two things is where so much pain is sitting.


#VancouverHousing #HousingCrisis #Homelessness #MentalHealthMatters #SocialJusticeBC #AffordableHousing #PublicPolicy #CityOfVancouver #UrbanIssues #CommunityVoices

Friday, June 5, 2026

Your Bag Should Have a Passport Too

 Your Bag Should Have a Passport Too

Recently, I have been following stories about travelers who were caught up in baggage mix-ups, luggage tag switching, and even criminal investigations because a bag was not what it appeared to be. Every time I read one of these stories, I think the same thing: "That could have happened to anyone."

Imagine arriving in a foreign country, excited for a vacation, a family visit, or a new job opportunity. Then imagine being told that something illegal was found in a bag connected to your name. Suddenly, you are trying to prove your innocence in a place where you may not speak the language, understand the legal system, or have access to family and support.

Many of us trust that airlines and airports have sophisticated systems to track luggage. Yet stories continue to emerge where bags are lost, delayed, damaged, or somehow end up connected to the wrong traveler. While most incidents are resolved quickly, some have far more serious consequences.

As travelers, there are a few things we can do to protect ourselves:

  • Photograph our luggage before leaving home.
  • Take photos of the baggage tags attached at check-in.
  • Keep baggage claim receipts.
  • Use distinctive luggage straps, ribbons, or markings.
  • Consider using a tracking device inside checked luggage.
  • Verify baggage tag numbers before leaving the counter.

But should the burden rest entirely on passengers?

In an age when a package can be tracked from a warehouse to a front door, why can't airlines provide a secure digital record of a bag's journey? Why isn't there a system that photographs luggage at check-in and records each transfer point along the way?

Perhaps it is time for a new approach.

Imagine an app that allows travelers to create a secure digital record of their luggage. Photos, baggage tags, flight information, weight records, and tracking data could all be stored in one place. If something goes wrong, travelers would have immediate access to documentation that could help demonstrate where their bag came from and how it traveled.

More importantly, airlines and airports should explore stronger chain-of-custody procedures that protect both travelers and staff. Accountability should not begin only after a problem occurs.

Most people board an airplane with good intentions. They are heading to a vacation, a reunion, a business meeting, or an adventure. They should not have to worry that a baggage error could turn their lives upside down.

Technology exists to improve this system. What is needed now is the will to implement it.

Maybe the future of travel isn't just about faster flights and better airports.

Maybe every piece of luggage should have a passport too.


Reflective Questions

  1. How much responsibility should airlines have when baggage handling errors occur?
  2. Would you feel safer if your luggage had real-time tracking?
  3. Have you ever experienced lost or delayed luggage?
  4. Should airports be required to photograph checked luggage?
  5. What protections should be available for travelers detained due to baggage errors?
  6. Could a luggage documentation app help prevent wrongful accusations?
  7. What balance should exist between security and passenger rights?
  8. How can international travelers better protect themselves?
  9. Should airlines compensate travelers for serious baggage-related consequences?
  10. What other innovations could improve baggage security?

#TravelSafety #ConsumerRights #AirlineAccountability #LuggageTracking #TravelTips #PassengerRights #AirportSecurity #TravelTechnology #TravelAwareness #ZipolitaWrites

National Gun Violence Awareness Day: The Stories We Don't Always Tell

National Gun Violence Awareness Day: The Stories We Don't Always Tell

Today is National Gun Violence Awareness Day.

Every year, statements are made, promises are repeated, and statistics are shared. But behind every number is a person, a family, and often a story that is never fully told.

When I was a child, my father took his own life with a gun. My mother believed in telling the truth. Others thought it should be hidden, explained away, or called something else. Many families face that same choice. How many children grow up carrying painful secrets because stigma makes honesty feel impossible?

Gun violence is not only about crime. It is also about suicide, domestic violence, accidents, police shootings, and the lifelong trauma carried by survivors, witnesses, families, and communities.

Just days ago marked the anniversary of the death of Chantal Moore, a young Indigenous woman who was shot and killed by a police officer during a wellness check. Her family, like so many others, continues to live with loss and unanswered questions.

Here in British Columbia, we are also reminded of tragedies such as the recent events in Tumbler Ridge, where lives were lost and a community was left grieving. In moments like these, it is important to remember that healing begins with compassion, not blame.

Today is not just about awareness. It is about listening.

  • Listening to children who lost parents.
  • Listening to families who lost loved ones.
  • Listening to survivors who carry invisible wounds.
  • Listening to communities asking for prevention, support, accountability, and care.

No matter how gun violence touches our lives, the pain is real. And no one should have to carry that pain in silence.

Today, I am thinking of everyone who has lost someone, everyone who is grieving, and everyone who has been told their story is too uncomfortable to tell.

Your story matters.
Your loved ones matter.
And the truth matters.


Reflective Questions

  1. How does stigma affect the way families talk about suicide and gun violence?
  2. What support do children need after experiencing traumatic loss?
  3. Why do some communities feel unheard after tragedies involving police or firearms?
  4. What role does honesty play in healing after loss?
  5. How can we discuss gun violence while remaining respectful of those affected?
  6. What can governments and communities do to prevent violence before it happens?
  7. How do media narratives shape public understanding of gun violence?
  8. What lessons can be learned from past tragedies?
  9. How can we better support survivors and grieving families?
  10. What does meaningful awareness look like beyond a single day of recognition?

Final Thought

Awareness days matter, but real change happens when we create space for difficult conversations, support those who are grieving, and work toward a future where fewer families experience this kind of loss.


#NationalGunViolenceAwarenessDay #GunViolenceAwareness #MentalHealthAwareness #EndTheStigma #SuicideAwareness #CommunityHealing #TruthMatters #ChantalMoore #BritishColumbia #ReflectAndAct


"What difficult truth do you think society still struggles to talk about openly, and how can we create safer spaces for those conversations?" 💙


Should Surrey, BC Try Something Like Project Jog On?

Should Surrey, BC Try Something Like Project Jog On?

By Tina Winterlik (Zipolita)

I recently came across a story that caught my attention. At first, I thought it was happening right here in Surrey, BC. It turns out it was actually Surrey, England.

The program was called "Project Jog On." Police officers dressed as joggers and exercised in areas where women had reported being harassed. According to reports, the operation led to multiple arrests for a variety of offences.

Whether you agree with the approach or not, it raises an interesting question:

Should communities like Surrey, BC consider similar programs?

Many women have stories about being followed, catcalled, threatened, or made to feel uncomfortable while walking, jogging, waiting for transit, or simply going about their day. Some incidents may seem minor to one person but can feel frightening or intimidating to another.

The challenge is finding solutions that make people feel safer while also making the best use of public resources.

Would undercover operations help?

Would more visible patrols work better?

What about improved lighting, safer transit stops, community watch programs, or public education campaigns?

There are no easy answers.

What interests me most is not the policing strategy itself, but the larger conversation about public spaces.

Who feels safe using them?

Who doesn't?

And what can we do as a community to make everyone feel more welcome?

As someone who enjoys walking around neighbourhoods, visiting parks, painting outdoors, and talking with people from all walks of life, I think these conversations matter. Public spaces belong to all of us.

Perhaps instead of immediately arguing for or against a specific solution, we should start by listening to people's experiences.

Have you ever felt unsafe while walking or exercising outdoors?

Have you witnessed harassment?

What changes would make you feel safer?

I'd love to hear your thoughts.

Because building stronger communities starts with having honest conversations.

What do you think, Surrey?


Reflective Questions

  1. What makes a public space feel safe to you?
  2. Have you ever changed your routine because you felt unsafe?
  3. What role should police play in preventing harassment?
  4. Are there community-based solutions that could help?
  5. How can cities make parks and pathways safer?
  6. What is the balance between safety and privacy?
  7. Should more resources go toward prevention or enforcement?
  8. How can people report incidents more easily?
  9. What responsibilities do bystanders have?
  10. What would an ideal safe community look like?


#SurreyBC #CommunitySafety #PublicSpaces #Neighbourhoods #WalkingTogether #SafeCommunities #PublicDiscussion #CivicEngagement #MetroVancouver #ZipolitaWrites

Thursday, June 4, 2026

When Does the Artist Get Paid?

Artist:Tina Winterlik

 aka Zipolita 



 When Does the Artist Get Paid?

By Tina Winterlik (Zipolita)

Every year, millions of dollars are announced for arts and culture funding. The press releases are always full of celebration. Organizations receive grants. Festivals receive grants. Galleries receive grants. Cultural initiatives receive grants.

The public sees headlines announcing millions of dollars flowing into the arts sector.

But there is one question I have been asking since I first started applying for arts opportunities in 1997:

When does the artist get paid?

As an artist, photographer, and content creator, I have spent decades watching organizations receive funding while artists are repeatedly asked to volunteer, donate work, provide content for exposure, or participate in unpaid opportunities.

The pattern has become so common that many artists simply accept it as normal.

An arts organization receives funding. The organization hires staff, rents office space, pays administrative expenses, develops programs, and hosts events. Then artists are invited to contribute their talent, time, and creative work, often for little or no compensation.

The justification is usually that artists will receive exposure, networking opportunities, or the chance to be part of the community.

Exposure does not pay rent.

Networking does not buy groceries.

Community does not cover the cost of art supplies.

Artists are told that funding is supporting the arts. Yet many artists continue struggling to earn enough income to continue creating.

I am not suggesting that every organization is acting in bad faith. Running cultural organizations costs money. Staff deserve fair wages. Rent, insurance, equipment, and event costs are real expenses.

However, after nearly thirty years of observing the system, I believe the public deserves greater transparency.

When a cultural organization receives public funding, citizens should be able to easily see:

  • How much funding was received.
  • How much was spent on administration.
  • How much went toward salaries and management.
  • How much was spent on facilities and operations.
  • Most importantly, how much went directly to artists.

If supporting artists is the goal, then artist compensation should be one of the primary measures of success.

How many artists were paid?

What were they paid?

Were they paid fairly?

These questions should not be controversial.

Artists create the paintings, photographs, performances, music, stories, films, and cultural experiences that the public enjoys. Without artists, there is no arts sector.

Yet many artists continue to live with financial insecurity while organizations built around supporting artists continue to receive funding year after year.

I am not calling for less support for the arts.

I am calling for more support for artists.

If public funding is intended to strengthen culture, then artists themselves should be among the first to benefit.

After nearly three decades, I am still asking the same question:

When does the artist get paid?


Reflective Questions

  1. What does it mean to truly support artists?
  2. Should public arts funding prioritize artist compensation over administrative costs?
  3. How transparent should organizations be about how grant money is spent?
  4. Have you ever been asked to work for "exposure" instead of payment? How did it make you feel?
  5. What percentage of arts funding do you think should go directly to artists?
  6. How can communities ensure artists receive fair compensation for their work?
  7. What barriers prevent artists from earning a sustainable income?
  8. Should grant recipients be required to publicly report how much funding reaches artists?
  9. How would the arts sector change if artists were consistently paid fair rates?
  10. What role should governments, organizations, and the public play in supporting artists?


#ArtsFunding #SupportArtists #ArtistCompensation #CreativeEconomy #VancouverArts #ArtsAdvocacy #FairPayForArtists #CulturalFunding #ArtistsMatter #PublicFunding #VisualArtists #CanadianArtists #ArtsAndCulture #Zipolita #TinaWinterlik

"A culture that funds organizations but not artists risks losing the very creativity it claims to support." – Tina Winterlik (Zipolita)


Monday, June 1, 2026

Parenting in Vancouver: Loving Our Children Through Uncertain Times

 Parenting in Vancouver: Loving Our Children Through Uncertain Times

We all want what’s best for our children — but parenting isn’t always easy.

In Vancouver today, many parents and caregivers are carrying worries that previous generations did not have to face in the same way. Rising housing costs, visible poverty, mental health struggles, and the ongoing toxic drug crisis have changed what it feels like to raise and protect children in this city.

Many parents are exhausted, anxious, and quietly overwhelmed.

And still, they keep going.

They send their kids out into a world that can feel unpredictable. They wait for text messages that say “I’m home.” They scan news headlines about overdoses, missing young people, and rising rents, and they wonder what kind of future is being built for the next generation.

The Daily Fear Many Parents Carry

A bus ride can expose young people to things many parents never experienced growing up. Public drug use, mental health crises, aggression, and vulnerability in public spaces are part of the daily landscape in some areas of the city.

Parents worry when their children don’t answer their phones. They worry when they travel through downtown. They worry about safety, influence, addiction, and survival in a world that feels increasingly unstable.

And yet, despite all of this, parenting continues — day after day, moment after moment.

The Hidden Grief of Estrangement

There is another reality that is often not spoken about.

Many parents know their children are unhoused.

Some know their son is sleeping in a shelter, couch surfing, or living outside. Some know their daughter is struggling with addiction, mental health challenges, or simply trying to survive in a system that offers very few safe options.

But knowing where your child is does not always mean being able to reach them.

Estrangement can come from many places — addiction, trauma, mental health struggles, conflict, poverty, or years of broken communication. Some young people step away to protect themselves. Others drift away because survival becomes the priority.

For parents, this can be a living grief.

They lie awake wondering where their child is sleeping. Whether they are safe. Whether they are alive. They see someone who looks like them on the street or in a crowd and feel their heart stop for a moment.

Many carry this pain silently, afraid of judgment. Society often asks, “What did the parents do wrong?” instead of asking what systems failed the family as a whole.

And yet, even in separation, love often remains.

Birthdays are still remembered. Holidays are still painful. Empty rooms stay unchanged. Parents keep hoping for a message, a sign, a moment of reconnection.

When Parents Are Struggling Too

There is another layer that is rarely acknowledged.

Not all parents have the resources to help.

Some are living in poverty themselves — in subsidized housing, precarious rentals, shared spaces, or relying on income assistance that barely covers basic living costs. Some are dealing with disability, illness, or job insecurity.

They want to help their children. They love them deeply. But they simply do not have the means.

The guilt can be overwhelming.

A mother may know her son is sleeping outside and feel she has failed him. A father may want to bring his daughter home but not have a safe home to offer. A grandparent may wish to help but struggle to afford groceries or rent.

This guilt is often misplaced.

Because these struggles are not only personal — they are structural. Housing costs, low wages, and inadequate social supports leave many families unable to support even their closest loved ones.

Sometimes, love is not the problem. The system is.

Parenting Also Requires Care for the Parent

Caregivers are often expected to carry everything quietly. But parents need care too.

The stress of constant worry, financial pressure, and emotional exhaustion can take a toll. Many caregivers forget that their own well-being matters as well.

Self-care does not need to be complicated. It can be simple and grounding:

  • Walking outside
  • Talking to someone you trust
  • Resting without guilt
  • Creating something with your hands
  • Limiting exposure to distressing news when needed
  • Asking for help when things feel heavy

Support for parents is not separate from support for children. They are deeply connected.

A Community Issue, Not Just a Family Issue

The challenges facing young people in Vancouver are not isolated to individual families. They reflect broader issues — housing affordability, mental health supports, addiction services, and social inequality.

Behind many unhoused young people are parents who love them deeply and worry every day.

Behind many struggling parents are years of rising costs, unstable housing, and limited support systems.

This is not about blame.

It is about understanding how deeply connected families are to the conditions of the society around them.

The Quiet Guilt of Parents Who Cannot Help

There is another layer of pain that is rarely spoken about.

Some of the parents who are most worried are also struggling themselves.

They may already know their child is unhoused — sleeping outside, in shelters, or moving between unsafe places. They may know their child is surviving the toxic drug crisis, trying to stay afloat in a city that feels increasingly out of reach.

And still, they cannot help in the way they want to.

Because they have no space to offer.

No extra room.

No stable housing.

Sometimes not even enough income for their own basic survival.

The guilt can be overwhelming.

A parent may think, “If I had a home, I could bring them back.”

Or, “If I had more money, I could save them.”

But this is where the truth becomes important:

Many parents are not failing their children — they are living inside the same broken system.

Housing costs in Vancouver have risen beyond what many families can manage. Social assistance and disability support often do not match the real cost of living. Even working parents can find themselves one crisis away from instability.

So when a child falls into homelessness, addiction, or survival living, the pain is shared across generations.

Parents grieve. Parents worry. Parents blame themselves.

Even when the reality is much larger than any one family.

This is not only a story about individual choices.

It is a story about systems that leave both young people and their parents struggling at the same time.

And still, love does not disappear.

It becomes worry.

It becomes waiting.

It becomes hope carried quietly in the background of everyday life.

Closing Reflection

No parent can protect their child from everything.

But many continue to show up with love, concern, and hope — even when the circumstances feel overwhelming.

If you are a parent carrying worry, grief, or guilt, you are not alone in that experience.

Many families in Vancouver are quietly carrying similar stories.

And perhaps one of the most important things we can offer each other right now is compassion — for young people navigating a difficult world, and for parents doing their best within it.

Because in the end, most parents are not asking for perfection.

They are simply hoping their children are safe, seen, and still within reach.


Reflective Questions

  1. How has parenting in Vancouver changed over the past generation?
  2. What fears do parents carry today that did not exist before?
  3. How does housing insecurity affect family relationships?
  4. What support do estranged families need to reconnect?
  5. How does addiction and mental health impact both parents and children?
  6. Why do many parents feel guilt even when circumstances are beyond their control?
  7. What community supports could reduce pressure on families?
  8. How can society better support unhoused young people and their parents?
  9. What role does compassion play in addressing these challenges?
  10. How can we create safer and more supportive environments for all generations?


#ParentingInVancouver #FamilySupport #YouthCrisis #HousingCrisis #MentalHealthAwareness #HomelessnessAwareness #ToxicDrugCrisis #Caregivers #CommunityCare #StrongerTogether #VancouverFamilies #SocialJustice #Compassion #SupportParents #HopeAndHealing

Sunday, May 31, 2026

Before the Lines on the Map

 Before the Lines on the Map

Recently, I came across an article discussing how Saskatchewan wanted access to Hudson Bay and how Canada divided territory among provinces in the early 1900s. The article focused on political boundaries, disputes between provinces, and decisions made in Ottawa.

As I read it, I found myself thinking about something deeper.

We often look at maps and assume they have always existed. We see the borders of British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Ontario, and Quebec and think of them as permanent. But these lines are relatively recent. They were drawn by governments, negotiated by politicians, and changed over time.

Before those lines existed, there were already people living on these lands.

When I think about my own family history, I am reminded of this. My great-great-grandfather arrived from the Azores long after these lands were home to Indigenous peoples. If we go back to 1762—more than a century before he arrived—the area we now call Victoria looked very different.

There was no Victoria.

There was no British Columbia.

There was no Canada.

The ancestors of my Songhees and T'Sou-ke relatives lived in a world shaped by relationships to the land, the ocean, family networks, trade routes, and cultural traditions that had existed for countless generations. The boundaries that seem so important today had not yet been drawn.

As settlers arrived, new governments created colonies, provinces, municipalities, reserves, and political borders. Decisions were made in distant offices about who would control which lands. Entire regions were divided, reassigned, and renamed.

The article I read described Canada dividing Canada. Saskatchewan wanted one piece of territory. Manitoba received another. Ontario and Quebec expanded northward. The Northwest Territories were reduced and reorganized.

But looking further back reminds us that these weren't empty spaces waiting to be divided. They were already inhabited. They already had histories, names, and relationships attached to them.

Understanding this does not require rejecting one history in favor of another. In my own family, both stories exist. There is the story of ancestors who arrived from Europe seeking opportunity and a new life. There is also the story of Indigenous relatives whose connection to these lands reaches back long before Canada existed.

Both histories matter.

Perhaps one of the most important things we can do is remember that the maps we inherit are not the beginning of the story. They are only one chapter in a much longer history.

When we look beyond the political boundaries, we begin to see a richer picture—one that includes Indigenous nations, settlers, immigrants, explorers, workers, families, and communities who all helped shape the place we now call home.

The next time you look at a map of Canada, it may be worth asking a simple question:

What was here before the lines were drawn?


Reflective Questions

  1. How often do we think about what existed before the provincial and national borders we see on maps today?
  2. What stories might be missing when we only view history through the lens of governments and political boundaries?
  3. How did Indigenous nations govern and care for these lands before Canada was created?
  4. What responsibilities do we have to learn about the history of the places we call home?
  5. How might our understanding of Canada change if we began our history lessons before Confederation?
  6. In what ways do family histories connect us to larger historical events and social changes?
  7. Why is it important to recognize that maps and borders can change over time?
  8. How can we honour both Indigenous and immigrant histories without diminishing either experience?
  9. What can we learn from elders and knowledge keepers about the history of a region?
  10. When you look at a map today, what questions come to mind about the people who lived there before the lines were drawn?


#CanadianHistory #IndigenousHistory #Songhees #TSouke #BritishColumbia #HistoryMatters #KnowYourHistory #FamilyHistory #Reconciliation #Colonialism #HistoricalReflection #LandAndPeople #LearningTogether #ExploreHistory #CanadaPastAndPresent



The Broken Ladder: When Hard Work No Longer Buys a Home

 The Broken Ladder: When Hard Work No Longer Buys a Home

Recently, I read a story about a father who was frustrated that his 21-year-old son had moved back home.

The father believed his son lacked motivation. He questioned him about job applications, made comments about discipline, and quietly compared his son's life to his own.

Then one day they drove past the father's first home.

The father proudly explained that he had purchased the small house at age 24 for $48,000 while earning about $22,000 a year.

His son looked up the address.

The same modest two-bedroom home had recently sold for $417,000.

Suddenly the father's assumptions began to crumble.

When he bought the house, it cost a little more than twice his annual income. For his son, it represented more than ten years of income before taxes.

The father realized something many people are only beginning to understand:

His son wasn't refusing to climb the ladder.

The first rung had been lifted out of reach.

The story is powerful because it asks an important question:

Are young people truly less motivated, or are they facing a world that has fundamentally changed?

As moving as the story is, I couldn't help but think about British Columbia.

Because here, the situation is often even more extreme.

The house in the story sold for $417,000.

Many young people in Metro Vancouver would celebrate if detached homes were available for that price.

Today, starter homes in many Vancouver neighbourhoods can cost $1.5 million, $2 million, or more.

A young worker earning $50,000 to $75,000 a year isn't facing a house that costs ten times their income.

They may be facing one that costs twenty, thirty, or even forty times their annual earnings.

The math simply does not work.

Yet many older generations continue to compare today's young adults to the world they experienced decades ago.

A world where:

  • Housing costs were far lower relative to wages.
  • Tuition was more affordable.
  • Student debt was often minimal or non-existent.
  • Stable full-time jobs were easier to find.
  • A single income could support a family.
  • Home ownership was considered a realistic goal.

Today's young adults face a very different reality.

Many are dealing with:

  • Skyrocketing rents.
  • Student debt.
  • Contract and gig work.
  • Entry-level jobs demanding years of experience.
  • Rising food and transportation costs.
  • A housing market increasingly treated as an investment vehicle rather than a human necessity.

This is not simply about economics.

It is about expectations.

For decades, society told young people:

"Work hard. Get an education. Get a job. Buy a home. Build a life."

Many followed those instructions.

What they discovered was that the price of admission had changed while the advice stayed the same.

In British Columbia, I have watched housing transform from shelter into a commodity.

I have watched people work full-time and still struggle to pay rent.

I have watched seniors, people on disability, young families, and working adults compete for a shrinking supply of affordable housing.

I have watched governments celebrate rising property values while many residents wonder if they will ever have a secure place to live.

The result is growing frustration between generations.

Parents may see a lack of effort.

Young adults may feel blamed for circumstances beyond their control.

The truth is that most people are working harder than ever.

The problem is that effort alone no longer guarantees the opportunities it once did.

The father in the story eventually sat down and listened.

Really listened.

His son explained the realities of today's job market, the cost of rent, the pressure of debt, and the embarrassment of moving back home.

That conversation changed everything.

Perhaps that is the lesson.

Before judging young people, we need to understand the world they inherited.

Before assuming someone lacks ambition, we should examine the obstacles they face.

And before telling them to climb the ladder, we should make sure the ladder still exists.

Because for many Canadians today, especially here in British Columbia, the problem isn't laziness.

The problem is that the math no longer works.

And until we address housing affordability, wage stagnation, and economic inequality, more and more young people will find themselves staring at a dream that grows further away each year.

Not because they failed.

But because the rules changed.

#HousingCrisis #BrokenLadder #VancouverHousing #BCHousing #CostOfLiving #GenerationGap #AffordableHousing #EconomicReality #HousingForAll #DigitalHorizonZ

Saturday, May 30, 2026

What Is Happening to 60 Minutes? Why It Matters

 What Is Happening to 60 Minutes? Why It Matters

By Tina Winterlik (Zipolita)

Many younger people may not know what 60 Minutes was or why so many journalists are concerned about the changes taking place there today.

For decades, 60 Minutes was considered one of the most respected investigative journalism programs in the world. It was the show that politicians feared, corporations watched closely, and whistleblowers trusted when they needed the public to hear their story.

Founded in 1968, 60 Minutes built its reputation by asking difficult questions and investigating powerful institutions. Long before social media, podcasts, and YouTube channels, it was one of the few places where journalists had the resources and audience to challenge governments, corporations, and other powerful interests.

One of the most famous moments in the program's history inspired the 1999 film The Insider, starring Al Pacino and Russell Crowe.

The film was based on the true story of Jeffrey Wigand, a former tobacco executive who exposed what he claimed were dangerous practices and deception within the tobacco industry. Journalists at 60 Minutes worked to bring his story to the public.

However, the interview was delayed after concerns were raised within CBS about legal risks and corporate consequences. The controversy sparked a major debate about whether business interests were interfering with journalism.

Eventually, the interview aired, but the incident became a warning about what can happen when corporate pressures collide with the public's right to know.

Today, some journalists are drawing comparisons between that period and the changes currently taking place at 60 Minutes.

Recent reports describe internal conflicts, the departure of respected journalists, and allegations that certain stories have been delayed, altered, or discouraged. Critics argue these changes may weaken editorial independence. CBS leadership disputes those claims and says it is working to modernize the organization and rebuild trust.

Regardless of where one stands, the discussion raises important questions.

Who decides what stories get told?

How much influence should corporate owners have over news organizations?

Can journalists remain independent when legal, political, and financial pressures are involved?

These questions are not new. They have existed for as long as journalism has existed.

For many people, 60 Minutes symbolized the idea that powerful institutions should be held accountable and that difficult stories deserve to be told, even when they make influential people uncomfortable.

Whether the current concerns prove justified or not, the debate serves as a reminder that a free and independent press is not something that can be taken for granted.

Many younger readers may never have watched 60 Minutes. They may not know the names Mike Wallace, Ed Bradley, Morley Safer, Diane Sawyer, Steve Kroft, or Leslie Stahl.

But the principle they represented remains important:

A healthy democracy depends on people willing to ask difficult questions, investigate powerful interests, and publish what they find—even when doing so is unpopular or inconvenient.

The story of 60 Minutes is not just about one television program.

It is about who controls information, who gets to tell the story, and whether the public receives the full picture.

Those questions matter today as much as they ever have.

60 Minutes, CBS News, investigative journalism, media freedom, press freedom, journalism ethics, corporate media, censorship, whistleblowers, The Insider movie, Jeffrey Wigand, Mike Wallace, Al Pacino, media accountability, freedom of the press, news media, editorial independence, journalism history, corporate influence, public interest journalism


#60Minutes #Journalism #PressFreedom #InvestigativeJournalism #MediaEthics #FreedomOfThePress #CBSNews #TheInsider #JeffreyWigand #Whistleblower #MediaAccountability #CorporateMedia #NewsMedia #TruthMatters #EditorialIndependence #Democracy #MediaLiteracy #CriticalThinking #Zipolita #TinaWinterlik

A Note on Fear, Change, and Staying Grounded

 A Note on Fear, Change, and Staying Grounded

When I write about technology, copyright, and artificial intelligence, it can sometimes sound heavy or even overwhelming. That isn’t my intention.

I think what many of us are feeling right now is not just fear of new technology, but exhaustion from how fast everything keeps changing.

I’ve lived through several major shifts in creative work—darkroom photography, the rise of digital imaging, the internet, social media, and now artificial intelligence. Each stage brought uncertainty. Each stage raised the same questions about control, ownership, and authenticity.

And yet, creativity didn’t disappear.

It adapted.

One thing I keep reminding myself is this: technology changes the tools, but it does not replace the human experience behind the work. A photograph is still a moment seen through someone’s eyes. A story is still shaped by lived experience. A piece of music still carries emotion that no machine fully understands in the human sense.

There is also something important that often gets lost in the noise: awareness itself is power.

The fact that people are questioning AI, copyright, and digital identity means we are not passive in this process. We are actively trying to understand it, shape it, and set boundaries around it.

That matters.

It’s easy to imagine worst-case scenarios, especially when headlines feel extreme. But in reality, most change happens gradually, through pushback, discussion, law, and everyday decisions about what we accept and what we refuse.

Creativity has survived every technological shift so far—not because it stayed the same, but because people kept creating anyway.

So instead of thinking of this moment as the end of control, I try to think of it as another turning point. A messy one, yes. But also one where more people than ever are talking about fairness, consent, and respect for creative work.

That conversation itself is a form of hope.

From Copyright Fears to AI Clones

 From Copyright Fears to AI Clones: A Photographer's Journey

By Tina Winterlik (Zipolita)

When I started the Professional Photography Program at Langara College in Vancouver in 1993, photographers were already worried about copyright.

The industry was changing. Digital imaging software was becoming more common, and Photoshop would soon become the dominant tool. We spent countless hours discussing the future of photography, digital editing, and ownership.

Back then, the fear was simple.

Someone might copy your photograph.

Years later, when I studied web design, I tried everything I could think of to protect my images online. Watermarks. Scripts. Right-click protection. Various tricks that were supposed to stop people from downloading photos.

A friend showed me how easy it was to get around those protections.

That was the moment I gave up.

I realized there were only two choices.

Share my work or hide it.

I chose to share.

For decades I uploaded full-resolution photographs, artwork, videos, and writing. Sometimes I wondered where those images ended up. Were they sitting on a hard drive somewhere? Used in a presentation? Printed in another country? I will probably never know. Once something enters the internet, control becomes an illusion.

Those concerns extended beyond my own work. Long before AI entered the conversation, I was cautious about who photographed my child and where those images might end up. Later, when social media became popular, I explained to younger people that privacy settings were never a guarantee of privacy. Someone could take a screenshot. Someone could photograph a screen with another device. Someone could download and share an image in ways never intended.

Technology has always been a double-edged sword.

It allows us to connect with people across the world, share our creativity, and preserve memories. At the same time, it can take away our ability to control how those memories, images, and ideas are used.

But even then, the issue was still copying.

Today we face something stranger.

Artificial intelligence can absorb millions of images, songs, articles, and videos and generate something new from them. The debate is no longer about someone downloading a photograph. It is about machines learning from entire lifetimes of creative work.

That is why recent stories involving artists discovering AI-generated versions of their work caught my attention.

The technology has moved beyond copying files.

It is now capable of imitating people.

For creators, that changes everything.

The irony is that many of us accepted the risks of sharing online because we believed the benefits outweighed the costs. We wanted our work to be seen. We wanted to connect with others. We wanted to participate in a global conversation.

Nobody imagined that decades later the conversation would include software capable of creating synthetic versions of artists, musicians, writers, and photographers.

The copyright debates of 1993 suddenly seem simple.

Back then we worried about someone stealing a photograph.

Today we are trying to understand what happens when technology can imitate the photographer.

Reflective Questions

  1. Have you ever discovered your work, photos, writing, or ideas being used without your permission?
  2. How much privacy do we really have once something is shared online?
  3. Do the benefits of sharing outweigh the risks?
  4. Should AI companies be required to obtain permission before using creative works for training?
  5. How can artists protect themselves in a world where technology can imitate their style and voice?
  6. What responsibilities do technology companies have when developing AI systems?
  7. Have our copyright laws kept pace with technological change?
  8. What would a fair balance between innovation and creator rights look like?
  9. Is authenticity becoming more valuable in the age of AI?
  10. What kind of digital world do we want future generations to inherit?


Hashtags

#ArtificialIntelligence #Photography #Copyright #DigitalRights #CreatorRights #AIArt #DigitalPrivacy #Technology #PhotographyHistory #Zipolita #TinaWinterlik #DigitalHorizonz #CreativeRights #OnlinePrivacy #FutureOfAI


Friday, May 29, 2026

When AI Starts Inventing Your Biography

 When AI Starts Inventing Your Biography: My Experience With a False Cullen Commission Summary

Today I searched my own name together with the Cullen Commission on

Screenshot of AI 🤥 lying

Google and was shocked by what appeared in an AI-generated summary.

The summary claimed I was:

  • an “anti-money laundering activist,”
  • a “prominent citizen advocate,”
  • and that I “attended” Cullen Commission hearings.

That is simply not true.

I have written blog posts and shared public information about the Cullen Commission and related issues in British Columbia, including casinos, housing, money laundering concerns, and government oversight. Like many British Columbians, I followed the inquiry with interest because the issues affect our communities and economy.

But I never attended hearings as an official participant or advocate.

What concerns me is how confidently the AI presented assumptions as facts.

This is a growing problem online.

Artificial intelligence systems are now scraping blogs, social media, articles, and public discussions, then combining fragments into polished biographies that may sound authoritative but contain invented details. Once these summaries appear in search engines, other systems may repeat them, causing misinformation to spread quickly.

The strange part is that the wording almost sounded like a professionally written profile: “grassroots engagement,” “bridging the gap,” “prominent advocate.”

It reads impressively, but parts were fabricated.

This raises larger questions:

  • Who is accountable when AI creates false information about real people?
  • How many ordinary people already have inaccurate AI-generated profiles online?
  • What happens when search engines begin rewriting people’s identities?
  • How do we correct misinformation once AI systems start copying each other?

Ironically, the Cullen Commission itself dealt with transparency, accountability, oversight, and hidden systems operating without enough scrutiny.

Now we may be entering a new era where AI-generated information systems also require public accountability and oversight.

As someone who has blogged independently for many years, I believe it is important to document these experiences publicly. If AI systems are going to summarize people’s lives and work, accuracy matters.

The internet should not become a place where algorithms quietly invent biographies for real human beings.

— Tina Winterlik / Zipolita