Friday, July 3, 2026

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? πŸ€”πŸŒŠ

 Who Owns the Deep Ocean? πŸ€”πŸŒŠ

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. 

πŸ πŸ‘πŸ¦πŸ¦‘πŸ¦žπŸ¦‘πŸšπŸ¦€πŸ™πŸ¬πŸ‹πŸ³πŸ¦ˆπŸͺΈπŸͺΌπŸŒπŸŒŽπŸŒŠπŸ’§

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.


πŸ€” 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, πŸ’° 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 JosΓ© "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 JosΓ© 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


Harm Reduction: A Different Way of Seeing People

 Harm Reduction: A Different Way of Seeing People

I want to share something I came across through the work of the Peer2Peer Indigenous Society, an organization I follow on Facebook, because it speaks to something many people still misunderstand about harm reduction.

One of the biggest misconceptions is that harm reduction means “accepting addiction” or making drug use easier.

That is not what it is.

Harm reduction is a public health approach rooted in a simple truth:
People cannot change if they are not alive.

For too long, society has tried to use shame, punishment, and suffering as tools for change. But addiction is not a moral failure. It is a complex health condition shaped by trauma, brain chemistry, environment, poverty, mental health, and isolation.

Shame does not heal.
Stigma does not reverse an overdose.
Abandonment does not create recovery.

Connection does.

Harm reduction starts with a radical idea:
A person’s life has value before they are ready to change — not after detox, not after treatment, not after meeting someone else’s definition of “recovery,” but right now.

This is why harm reduction services matter.

Naloxone saves lives by reversing overdoses.
Fentanyl test strips help prevent accidental poisonings.
Syringe service programs reduce HIV, hepatitis C, and infection.
Wound care treats people who are too often ignored by the system.
Medications for opioid use disorder like methadone and buprenorphine reduce overdose risk and stabilize lives.
Housing support reduces harm by giving people safety instead of survival conditions.

These are not “enabling” services. They are survival services.

And survival is what makes recovery possible.

The person who is revived today may enter treatment tomorrow.
The person who is treated with dignity today may reconnect with healthcare.
The person who is not abandoned today may choose a different future.

You cannot shame someone into healing.
You cannot punish someone into wellness.

Harm reduction does not compete with recovery — it creates the pathway to it.

Because behind every person who uses substances is someone’s child, someone’s parent, someone’s friend. A full human life that still exists, even in struggle.

The goal is not to make addiction comfortable.

The goal is to reduce death, disease, and suffering — while keeping the door to change open.

Because the opposite of harm reduction is not recovery.
It is watching people die and calling it a lesson.


Mobile Wound Care & Outreach Services (Victoria, BC)

The Peer2Peer Indigenous Society is also providing Mobile Wound Care & Outreach support in Victoria for people experiencing homelessness and barriers to healthcare.

They are currently seeking healthcare professionals with wound care experience to volunteer with their multidisciplinary outreach team.

🩺 Wednesdays | 11:00 AM – 2:00 PM
πŸ“ 900 Block of Pandora, Victoria

They welcome Registered Nurses, Licensed Practical Nurses, Nurse Practitioners, physicians, and other qualified professionals with wound care experience.

πŸ“ž 250-667-5756
πŸ“§ peer2peerindigenouscoalition@gmail.com

This is low-barrier, trauma-informed care focused on dignity, access, and human connection.


Reflective Questions

  • What does “deserving help” mean in society, and who decides it?
  • How does stigma influence whether people seek or avoid healthcare?
  • Can punishment and shame actually lead to long-term recovery? Why or why not?
  • What role does connection play in healing from addiction or trauma?
  • How might harm reduction change the way communities think about human value?
  • What would healthcare look like if saving lives came before judgment?
  • How do housing, poverty, and isolation shape substance use outcomes?
  • What responsibilities do we have to people who are still actively struggling?


#HarmReduction #PublicHealth #OverdosePrevention #NaloxoneSavesLives #TraumaInformedCare #AddictionRecovery #SubstanceUseSupport #HealthEquity #SocialJustice #CommunityCare #IndigenousHealth #HousingCrisis #EndStigma #CompassionInAction #MobileHealthCare #WoundCareOutreach #DignityForAll #HealthcareAccess #RecoveryIsPossible #PeerSupport

πŸ•―️ The Execution of Lady Jane Grey — A Life That Never Got to Begin

 πŸ•―️ The Execution of Lady Jane Grey — A Life That Never Got to Begin

When I look at the painting The Execution of Lady Jane Grey, I can’t just see history — I see a child.

A young girl, barely 16 or 17 years old, standing in a moment that no human that age should ever have to face.


 Execution of Lady Jane Grey


She could be your niece. 

Your younger sister. 

A girl you might see walking home from school, laughing with friends, still figuring out who she is becoming.

And yet, in 1554, Lady Jane Grey was led to her execution.

She briefly became Queen of England for just nine days, placed there by powerful adults and political forces far beyond her control. She did not seek power. She did not build armies. She did not choose the fate that was placed on her shoulders.

She was a teenager caught in a world where decisions were made for her — and where power mattered more than innocence.

What stays with me most is this:

She never had a chance to live a full life.

No adulthood shaped by her own choices.
No freedom to explore who she might become.
No chance to fall in love, to grow older, to become a mother if she had wanted that path.

Her story ends before it ever truly begins.

The painting captures her in a moment of vulnerability — blindfolded, reaching out, unsure of where to place her final steps. It is one of the most haunting reminders that history is not just made of kings and queens, but of real human lives.

When I stand in front of this image, I don’t just think about the past.

I think about how easily young lives can be shaped — and sometimes destroyed — by systems of power.

And I ask myself:

How many voices like hers were never heard?
And how many young lives today are still shaped by forces they cannot control?

Lady Jane Grey’s story is not just history. It is a reminder.

A reminder of innocence.
A reminder of power.
And a reminder of how fragile a single human life can be.


🀍 Reflective Questions 

How does it change your view of history when you see her as a teenager rather than a “queen”?

What systems today might still place pressure on young people in ways they cannot control?

Why do you think stories like hers still affect us emotionally hundreds of years later?

What does innocence mean in a world shaped by power?


#LadyJaneGrey

#HistoryThroughArt

#HumanStories

#NeverForgotten

#WomenInHistory

#ChildhoodInterrupted

#PowerAndPolitics

#EmpathyInHistory

#ArtAndEmotion

#ZipolitaBlog

#DigitalHorizonZ

#ReflectAndRemember

Are We Really So Different? Humans, Animals, and the Question of Violence

 “Are We Really So Different? Humans, Animals, and the Question of Violence”

People often think humans are separate from nature—but moments in the natural world challenge that idea.

Chimpanzees, for example, sometimes show violent behaviour, including infanticide in rare cases linked to dominance and survival. Orcas and other whales show complex social behaviour, cooperation, and even what looks like protection or grief.

When we see this, it raises a difficult question:

Are humans really that different?

In many ways, we are not separate from nature. We share instincts with other animals—fear, protection, aggression, bonding, and survival behaviour.

But humans also do something unusual: we reflect on it.

We don’t just act—we question:

Is this right?

Should this happen?

Can we do better?

That ability has led to both harm and healing. It has created war, but also human rights. It has created systems of control, but also systems of protection.

Peace, then, is not a natural permanent state—it is something we build. Through laws, education, relationships, and daily choices.

Even small things matter:

how we treat each other in conflict

how we raise children

how we design systems of fairness

how we respond to suffering when we see it

Peace is not one moment in history. It is a continuous effort to reduce harm and increase understanding.

And maybe the most important question is not just “how did we get here?” but:

How do we choose to move forward from here?


Reflective Questions 

What do we consider “acceptable” in society today that future generations might question?

How does history shape what we think is normal or normalised?

Where do you see systems today that create harm without anyone directly “choosing” it?

What does peace actually mean to you—absence of conflict, or something deeper?

How do fear and power influence decisions in societies, past and present?

In what ways do humans reflect both nature and something beyond it?

Can awareness of suffering lead to change, and if so, how?

What role do empathy and discomfort play in creating a more peaceful world?

How do media and storytelling influence how we understand violence and justice?

What small actions in daily life contribute to either conflict or peace?


#HumanHistory

#LadyJaneGrey

#PowerAndPolitics

#PeaceBuilding

#SocialJustice

#HumanRights

#HistoryMatters

#UnderstandingViolence

#NatureAndHumanity

#EmpathyInAction

#SystemicChange

#CriticalThinking

#IndigenousWisdom 

#ClimateAndPeace

#ReflectiveWriting

#TruthAndMemory


#DigitalHorizonZ


#ZipolitaBlog



How Did We Get Here? From History to Human Behaviour

 “How Did We Get Here? From History to Human Behaviour”

We often look back at history and ask how people could live with things like public executions, political killings, or the suffering of young people caught in power struggles—like Lady Jane Grey, a teenage girl who briefly became Queen of England before being executed in 1554.

It’s hard to understand from a modern point of view. But history shows us something important: societies don’t change overnight—they evolve through fear, power, belief systems, and survival thinking.

Back then, power was concentrated in a few hands. Kings and queens ruled without elections. Religion and politics were deeply connected. And survival often depended on removing rivals quickly, even when those rivals were children or teenagers.

What seems shocking today was once seen—by some—as “necessary.”

But this raises a bigger question:

How did we get here, and are we really that different now?

Today, we no longer see public executions in most places, but we do see large-scale systems that still create harm—war, inequality, environmental damage, and political conflict. The scale has changed, but the question of human behaviour remains.

The past isn’t just something behind us. It is a mirror asking us what we still accept today

Reflective Questions 

What do we consider “acceptable” in society today that future generations might question?

How does history shape what we think is normal or normalised?

Where do you see systems today that create harm without anyone directly “choosing” it?

What does peace actually mean to you—absence of conflict, or something deeper?

How do fear and power influence decisions in societies, past and present?

In what ways do humans reflect both nature and something beyond it?

Can awareness of suffering lead to change, and if so, how?

What role do empathy and discomfort play in creating a more peaceful world?

How do media and storytelling influence how we understand violence and justice?

What small actions in daily life contribute to either conflict or peace?


#HumanHistory

#LadyJaneGrey

#PowerAndPolitics

#PeaceBuilding

#SocialJustice

#HumanRights

#HistoryMatters

#UnderstandingViolence

#NatureAndHumanity

#EmpathyInAction

#SystemicChange

#CriticalThinking

#IndigenousWisdom 

#ClimateAndPeace

#ReflectiveWriting

#TruthAndMemory

#DigitalHorizonZ

#ZipolitaBlog


Friday, June 26, 2026

Hard Questions We Need to Ask Before the Next Heat Wave

 πŸ”₯ Hard Questions We Need to Ask Before the Next Heat Wave

If Europe can lose an estimated 80,000 people in a single heat event (2003), and BC already saw a deadly heat dome in 2021, then the real question is not if it could happen again — but what are we actually doing to stop it?

🏠 Housing & safety

  • Why are we still building and approving apartments that overheat to unsafe levels in summer?
  • How many rental buildings in Vancouver have no cooling system at all?
  • Why is “affordable housing” sometimes also heat-vulnerable housing?
  • Should indoor temperature safety standards exist the same way fire safety standards do?

πŸ§“ People at risk

  • Who checks on elderly people living alone during multi-day heat events?
  • Why do so many deaths happen quietly in homes instead of visible emergency settings?
  • What happens to people with disabilities, chronic illness, or mental health conditions during prolonged heat?

⚡ Infrastructure & responsibility

  • Why is air conditioning still treated as a “luxury” in a changing climate?
  • Should cooling be considered basic infrastructure like heat in winter?
  • Are cities preparing for multi-day heat waves, or just one-day hot weather alerts?

πŸŒ† Urban design

  • Why do so many neighbourhoods still act like heat traps (concrete, asphalt, glass)?
  • Where are the shaded public spaces that make it possible to survive extreme heat without money?
  • Are we designing cities for comfort — or for survival?

🧠 Public awareness

  • Why does extreme heat still feel “less serious” than storms or fires, even though it kills quietly?
  • Are people being told clearly enough that heat can be fatal inside your own home?
  • What would it take for society to treat heat waves like the public health emergencies they are?

🌍 Bigger climate reality

  • If Europe is seeing record-breaking heat now, what happens when these patterns shift more often toward North America?
  • Are we preparing for “rare events,” or for a new normal of repeated extremes?
  • Why do we keep treating climate adaptation as optional instead of urgent?

⚠️ The uncomfortable truth underneath all of this

Heat doesn’t usually kill dramatically.

It kills quietly:

  • in bedrooms at night
  • in apartments with no airflow
  • in people who “just didn’t recover” after a few days

That’s why the number matters. Not as a headline — but as a warning.

80,000 deaths is not a weather story. It’s a systems failure question.



extreme heat Vancouver, heat dome BC, climate change Canada, heat wave Europe 2026, Omega block weather pattern, urban heat island effect, indoor overheating apartments, climate adaptation housing, heat-related deaths, public health heat emergency, cooling centres Vancouver, vulnerable populations heat risk, climate resilience infrastructure


#HeatWave #ClimateChange #Vancouver #BCHeatDome #ExtremeHeat #ClimateCrisis #PublicHealth #HousingCrisis #UrbanHeatIsland #ClimateAdaptation #HeatSafety #EnvironmentalJustice #CanadaClimate #StayCoolStaySafe #ClimateResilience


When the Heat Doesn’t Leave the Apartment: A Vancouver Reflection on Extreme Heat Preparedness

 When the Heat Doesn’t Leave the Apartment: A Vancouver Reflection on Extreme Heat Preparedness

We often think of heat as something temporary — a hot afternoon, a beach day, a few uncomfortable hours before the evening cools everything down again.

But what happens when the heat doesn’t leave?

What happens when the temperature inside your home stays high through the night, and then rises again the next day, and the day after that?

This is not a theoretical question anymore. It is something Vancouver has already experienced, and something many places in the world are experiencing right now.

During the 2021 heat dome in British Columbia, thousands of people learned how quickly a “cool coastal climate” can become dangerous. Some homes became traps of accumulated heat. Some people went to bed in hot rooms and woke up still overheated. In many cases, it wasn’t just the daytime heat — it was the lack of nighttime cooling that made recovery impossible.

That is the part people underestimate.

The body relies on cooler nights to reset. When that doesn’t happen, stress builds. Sleep becomes shallow or impossible. Dehydration accumulates. Heat stops being a discomfort and becomes a physiological burden that compounds day after day.

In older or poorly insulated apartments, especially top-floor units or buildings without cross-ventilation or air conditioning, indoor temperatures can remain dangerously high even after sunset. Concrete and glass hold heat. Walls radiate it back into the room. Windows that were meant for light become heat collectors.

After a few days of that cycle, the body starts to feel like it cannot fully cool down anymore. Not because of fear — but because of biology.

This is where the question of preparedness becomes very real.

Vancouver is not a city built for sustained extreme heat. Many buildings were designed for mild summers, not prolonged heat events. While there have been improvements in emergency response and public cooling centres since the 2021 heat dome, the reality is that many residents still live in spaces that can become unsafe during multi-day heat waves.

This is especially true for people in apartments without air conditioning, people living alone, seniors, and anyone without easy access to cooler environments.

So we have to ask an uncomfortable but necessary question:

What happens if a Europe-style heat wave pattern — the kind that traps heat for days under a stalled weather system — becomes more common here?

For some people, the answer will be simple and immediate: they will have to leave.

Not because they want to, but because staying would not be safe. Sleeping elsewhere, finding cooler spaces, or creating informal cooling networks may become part of how people cope — especially during prolonged events.

This is not alarmism. It is adaptation thinking.

Because the goal is not to panic. The goal is to recognize that heat is no longer just a seasonal inconvenience. It is becoming a sustained environmental condition that interacts directly with housing, inequality, and infrastructure.

And the most important shift may be this:

We stop thinking of heat as something we “tolerate” indoors, and start treating it as something we actively plan around — the same way we plan for storms, outages, or wildfire smoke.

The experience of heat is no longer just about weather.

It is about whether our homes can still keep us safe when the climate stops cooling down.

I Almost Became Part of BC's Earlier Brain Drain

 I Almost Became Part of BC's Earlier Brain Drain

Reading about the Vancouver Sun discussing a new brain drain in British Columbia made me stop and think.

Years ago, I had an opportunity to work in the United States scanning aerial photography. It would have been a completely different life. Instead, I made a different choice. I packed my bags and went to Mexico.

That one decision changed everything.

In Mexico, I met my child's father, and returned to BC and had my child here. 

I also had the opportunity to paint murals, travel, and immerse myself in a different culture. Becoming a mother led me to ask questions about where my family came from. That journey inspired me to research and learn more about both my Indigenous and European ancestry—something I might never have explored had my life taken a different direction.

Those experiences eventually led to years of photography, writing, blogging, and working on books about travel, history, social issues, and the environment.

Looking back, it's amazing how one decision can completely change the course of your life.

Today, we're hearing that many skilled people are once again leaving British Columbia because they can't afford to stay. Housing costs continue to rise, wages often don't keep up, and experienced workers are finding better opportunities elsewhere.

This isn't just about economists talking about a "brain drain." It's about real people making life-changing decisions. Behind every statistic is a person, a family, and a future that may unfold somewhere else.

How many artists, engineers, healthcare workers, tradespeople, researchers, teachers, photographers, programmers, and young graduates are wondering if they have a future here? How many have already left? And how many are standing at a crossroads, trying to decide whether to stay or go?

I almost became part of an earlier brain drain. Instead, I chose a different path, and that path gave me experiences, friendships, creativity, a deeper understanding of my heritage, and the greatest gift of all—my child.

Sometimes a single decision doesn't just change a career. It changes an entire life, and even future generations.

Have you ever made one decision that completely changed the course of your life?


Reflective Questions

  1. Have you ever made a decision that completely changed the course of your life?
  2. Do you think talented people are leaving British Columbia by choice or because they feel they have no alternative?
  3. How has travel or living in another place changed your perspective on life?
  4. What discoveries about your family history or ancestry have shaped your identity?
  5. What can governments and communities do to encourage skilled people to stay and build their futures locally?
  6. How do individual life choices influence future generations?
  7. If you had the opportunity to start over somewhere else, what factors would influence your decision?


Hashtags

#BrainDrain #BritishColumbia #Vancouver #LifeChoices #CareerJourney #Mexico #TravelChangesYou #Motherhood #FamilyHistory #Ancestry #IndigenousRoots #EuropeanHeritage #Photography #Murals #HousingCrisis #CostOfLiving #SkilledWorkers #PersonalJourney #CanadianStories #FollowYourPath


The Empty Condos Saga – Epilogue: Who Gets the Bailout?

 

The Empty Condos Saga – Epilogue: Who Gets the Bailout?

For years, we were told the market would solve everything.

Build more luxury condos. Foreign investment is good. Prices will keep rising. Developers know best.

Meanwhile, ordinary people watched housing become less affordable every year. Empty condos became symbols of speculation while homelessness grew, renters struggled, and young people wondered if they would ever own a home.

Now the market has changed.

Developers are slowing projects. Condo sales have cooled. Investors are nervous. And suddenly governments are talking about helping the development industry.

Many people are asking an uncomfortable question:

Where was this urgency when renters, seniors, people with disabilities, working families, and people experiencing homelessness needed help?

This isn't a simple issue. If developers stop building completely, future housing supply could shrink even further. Governments worry about construction jobs disappearing and projects being abandoned.

But many people feel frustrated because it seems like help arrives quickly when large financial interests are affected, while ordinary people often wait years for meaningful action.

At the same time, I recently had a hopeful conversation with a young Indigenous man from the Squamish Nation. Although he grew up in Eastern Canada, he is returning to attend UBC. Through his Nation he has access to housing, and he'll pay about $1,400 for a one-bedroom apartment.

That's still expensive, but it reminded me that there are different ways to approach housing. Indigenous governments, co-operatives, non-profits, municipalities, and private builders all have roles to play. The question is whether they can work together instead of pulling in different directions.

Right now, everyone seems to be fighting.

Politicians blame each other. Developers blame government. Governments blame the market. The public blames everyone.

Meanwhile, people still need somewhere to live.

Housing should never become just another financial product. It is the foundation of health, education, family life, and community.

Perhaps the next chapter isn't about empty condos at all.

Perhaps it's about finally building a housing system designed for people instead of speculation.

Because if we don't learn from the Empty Condos Saga, we'll simply repeat it under a different name.


Reflective Questions

1. Should housing be treated primarily as a human right or as an investment?

2. What responsibility do governments have when housing markets fail ordinary people?

3. Is it appropriate to provide financial support to developers if it leads to more housing, or should public funds be directed elsewhere?

4. How can Canada encourage new housing construction while ensuring homes remain affordable?

5. What lessons should Vancouver learn from the Empty Condos Saga?

6. What role can Indigenous housing initiatives, co-operatives, and community-led projects play in addressing the housing crisis?

7. How can citizens hold governments and the development industry accountable for housing outcomes?

8. What would a housing system designed for people, rather than speculation, look like?




#HousingCrisis #AffordableHousing #EmptyCondos #Vancouver #BritishColumbia #HousingForPeople #HousingJustice #Homelessness #RealEstate #Speculation #UrbanPlanning #TinyHomes #CooperativeHousing #IndigenousHousing #SquamishNation #CostOfLiving #CommunityHousing #MarkCarney #DavidEby #BuildHomesNotSpeculation #DigitalHorizonZ #TinaWinterlik #Zipolita

Dredging Burrard Inlet: More Oil Exports, More Tankers, and Growing Concerns for Whales and Marine Life

 Dredging Burrard Inlet: Why So Many People Are Upset

The approval to dredge Burrard Inlet at Second Narrows has left many British Columbians feeling frustrated, disappointed, and unheard.

The project is being presented as a way to improve shipping efficiency and allow larger oil tankers loading at the Trans Mountain Westridge Marine Terminal to carry more oil. Supporters argue it will strengthen Canada's trade and economy.

But for many residents, this isn't simply about trade. It is about the future of one of the most ecologically important waterways on the West Coast.

Many people feel they had little or no meaningful say in a decision that could permanently change Burrard Inlet. Once dredging begins, the environmental consequences may last for generations.

More Oil Tankers, More Risk

The purpose of the dredging is clear: larger tankers will be able to leave with fuller loads, increasing the amount of oil exported from Canada's west coast.

Every additional tanker travelling through Burrard Inlet raises concerns about:

  • Increased risk of oil spills.
  • Greater underwater noise.
  • More disturbance to marine life.
  • Higher greenhouse gas emissions from fossil fuel exports.

Even if spills are rare, the consequences of a single major accident could be devastating.

What About the Whales?

The Southern Resident killer whales are already struggling to survive.

Noise from ships interferes with their ability to communicate, hunt, and navigate using echolocation. Increased tanker traffic adds to an already noisy marine environment.

Other whales, porpoises, seals, sea lions, and dolphins also depend on healthy coastal waters.

Many people wonder how expanding oil exports can be reconciled with efforts to protect endangered marine species.

Shellfish and the Marine Food Web

Burrard Inlet is home to shellfish, crabs, shrimp, sea stars, kelp forests, eelgrass beds, and countless organisms that form the foundation of the marine ecosystem.

Dredging stirs up sediments that have accumulated over decades. Those sediments can reduce water quality and disturb habitats used by fish and shellfish.

Healthy shellfish populations are not only important for wildlife—they also support Indigenous cultural practices and are part of the natural food web that keeps the inlet alive.

Indigenous Stewardship

For thousands of years, Indigenous Nations have cared for Burrard Inlet and relied upon its waters for food, culture, and ceremony.

Many Indigenous communities have consistently emphasized the importance of protecting these ecosystems for future generations.

The health of the inlet is about far more than economics—it is tied to history, identity, and responsibility.

Economic Growth vs. Environmental Responsibility

Canadians often hear that projects like this are necessary for jobs and economic growth.

But many ask another question:

At what cost?

Economic benefits today may be outweighed by environmental damage tomorrow if ecosystems are pushed beyond their limits.

Climate change, biodiversity loss, declining salmon populations, and endangered whales are already warning signs that our oceans are under increasing pressure.

Democracy Means Listening

One of the biggest frustrations expressed by many British Columbians is the feeling that major decisions affecting their environment are made without broad public support.

Whether people support or oppose the project, citizens deserve transparent decision-making, meaningful consultation, and confidence that environmental protection is more than just a promise.

Looking Ahead

Burrard Inlet is more than a shipping corridor.

It is home to whales, salmon, seabirds, shellfish, Indigenous cultures, recreational users, and communities that treasure its beauty.

Once habitats are damaged, restoration is difficult and sometimes impossible.

Many British Columbians believe that protecting healthy oceans is an investment in future generations—not an obstacle to prosperity.

As this project moves forward, Canadians will continue asking an important question:

Are we building an economy that works with nature, or one that continues to put it at risk?

Reflective Questions


1. How should Canada balance economic development with protecting marine ecosystems?

2. Do you believe local communities were given enough opportunity to influence this decision?

3. What responsibilities do governments have to protect endangered whales and other marine species?

4. How might increased tanker traffic affect future generations living around Burrard Inlet?

5. What role should Indigenous knowledge play in decisions affecting coastal waters?

6. If an oil spill were to occur, who would bear the greatest consequences?

7. What actions can ordinary citizens take when they disagree with major environmental decisions?

8. What does a healthy Burrard Inlet mean to you?


Keywords

Burrard Inlet, Second Narrows, dredging, Trans Mountain Expansion, TMX, oil tankers, Vancouver Harbour, Port of Vancouver, Vancouver Fraser Port Authority, marine conservation, Southern Resident killer whales, whales, orcas,  consultation, environmental advocacy

#BurrardInlet #SaveTheWhales #ProtectOurCoast #NoPipelinesNoTankers #StopTMX #MarineConservation #OceanProtection #SaveOurSeas #ProtectMarineLife #SouthernResidentOrcas #Orcas #Shellfish #Biodiversity #ClimateAction #EnvironmentalJustice #BritishColumbia #Vancouver #StandForNature #WaterIsLife #ProtectWhatWeLove #FutureGenerations #ActForNature #KeepItInTheGround #HealthyOceans #WestCoast

What kind of legacy do we want to leave for future generations—a healthier ocean filled with life, or one increasingly shaped by industrial expansion?



Thursday, June 25, 2026

Was My Songhees Great-Great-Grandmother Affected by the Indian Act?

 Was My Songhees Great-Great-Grandmother Affected by the Indian Act?

By Tina Winterlik (Zipolita)

Recently, while researching my family history, I came across a record for my second great-grandmother, Theresa Eliza (Songhees) Enos. According to the records, she was born around 1836 and was a Songhees woman from what is now British Columbia. In 1876, she married JoΓ£o (John) Ignacio d'Almada, a Portuguese immigrant, in Nanaimo.

At first glance, it seemed like a simple family history discovery. But the date immediately caught my attention.

1876 was the same year the Canadian government passed the Indian Act.

The Indian Act was not designed to preserve Indigenous cultures or protect Indigenous rights. It was created to control Indigenous peoples and encourage assimilation into Canadian society. One of the ways it did this was through rules that treated Indigenous women differently from Indigenous men.

For generations, if an Indigenous woman married a non-Indigenous man, she could lose her legal Indian status. Meanwhile, an Indigenous man who married a non-Indigenous woman kept his status, and in many cases his wife gained status through marriage.

This was not simply a bureaucratic change. Women lost legal recognition, community ties, rights, and sometimes even the ability to live in their own communities. Their children and grandchildren often became disconnected from their Indigenous identity in the eyes of the government.

As I looked at my ancestor's marriage record, I began to wonder:

Did Theresa lose legal status because she married a Portuguese man?

Were her children treated differently because of that marriage?

How many descendants were affected by laws designed to reduce the number of legally recognized Indigenous people?

These questions are especially relevant today because Indigenous women have spent decades fighting these discriminatory provisions.

One of the most prominent activists was Jeannette Corbiere Lavell, an Anishinaabe woman who challenged the Indian Act after losing her status when she married a non-Indigenous man in 1970. Although her initial court challenge was unsuccessful, her efforts helped build momentum for reforms.

In 1985, Bill C-31 restored status to many women who had lost it through marriage. However, it created another problem known as the "second-generation cut-off."

Under these rules, status could gradually disappear from future generations when descendants married non-status individuals. Critics argue that the second-generation cut-off functions as an "extinction clause" because it reduces the number of people recognized under the Indian Act over time.

Today, Indigenous leaders and activists continue to push for reforms to eliminate the remaining discriminatory effects of these laws.

Looking at my own family tree, I cannot help but wonder how many Indigenous families have similar stories buried in old records.

A marriage certificate from 1876 may seem like a small historical document. Yet behind it lies a much larger story about identity, belonging, family, and the long-term consequences of government policies.

My great-great-grandmother was Songhees. She married a Portuguese man. More than 150 years later, her descendants are still asking questions about how those laws affected our family.

Genealogy is often described as the study of names and dates. But sometimes it reveals something much deeper. Sometimes it reveals history itself.

Questions for Readers

  1. Have you discovered Indigenous ancestors in your family tree?
  2. Were any of your ancestors affected by the Indian Act or similar laws?
  3. How should Canada address the remaining inequalities in status registration?
  4. Should Indigenous identity be determined by communities rather than federal legislation?
  5. What role can genealogy play in uncovering forgotten histories?

Quick Quiz

  1. In what year was the Indian Act passed? a) 1867 b) 1876 c) 1901 d) 1985

  2. What happened to many Indigenous women who married non-Indigenous men under the Indian Act? a) Nothing changed b) They gained additional rights c) They could lose their legal status d) They automatically became chiefs

  3. What was Bill C-31 designed to address? a) Fishing rights b) Gender discrimination in status registration c) Taxation d) Immigration

  4. What is the second-generation cut-off? a) A census rule b) A treaty provision c) A registration rule that can eliminate status over generations d) A land claim process

Answers: 1-b, 2-c, 3-b, 4-c


#Songhees #SongheesNation #IndigenousHistory #FirstNations #IndigenousWomen #IndianAct #BillC31 #SecondGenerationCutOff #Decolonization #FamilyHistory #Genealogy #Ancestry #CanadianHistory #BCHistory #VancouverIslandHistory