Saturday, May 30, 2026

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 ๐Ÿคฅ 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

Thursday, May 28, 2026

Sen̓รกแธตw, “Normal Rent,” and the Reality of Aging in Vancouver

 ๐Ÿ  Sen̓รกแธตw, “Normal Rent,” and the Reality of Aging in Vancouver

I’ve been looking at the new rental prices at Sen̓รกแธตw and thinking about something a lot of people are quietly adjusting to in Vancouver:

$1,690 for a studio is no longer considered “high rent.”

It is now normal market rent.

That sentence feels strange to say out loud, because it wasn’t always like this.


๐Ÿ“Š What “normal rent” has become

In Vancouver today, new rental buildings often look like this:

  • Studios: $1,600–$2,100+
  • 1 bedrooms: $2,200–$2,800+
  • 2 bedrooms: $3,000–$4,000+

So yes — Sen̓รกแธตw pricing fits into what the market now calls “standard.”

But that’s only one side of the story.


๐Ÿง“ The other side: fixed incomes haven’t changed at the same speed

Many people in Vancouver live on incomes like:

  • CPP
  • Old Age Security (OAS)
  • Guaranteed Income Supplement (GIS)
  • part-time or casual work
  • disability or assistance programs

For example, a low-income senior may have around $1,900–$2,100/month total income at age 65.

That means:

One “normal” studio rent can take up most of a monthly income.

Even when rent is “normal,” it can still be overwhelming.


๐Ÿงญ The gap people don’t always see

What’s happening is not just “high rent.”

It’s a gap between two systems:

  • ๐Ÿข Housing prices shaped by the market
  • ๐Ÿง“ Income systems shaped by pensions and support programs

Those two systems are not rising together.

So even when rent becomes “normal,” it can still be out of reach for many people — especially seniors, people on fixed incomes, and low-wage workers.


๐Ÿก Why Sen̓รกแธตw still matters to me

Sen̓รกแธตw is also personal.

This area has been part of my life since 1997, on and off. It feels familiar. It feels like home in a way that is hard to explain to someone who hasn’t lived in a place for decades.

So when I look at new buildings going up here, I’m not just seeing housing prices.

I’m seeing continuity, change, and questions about who gets to stay in places they’ve always known.


๐Ÿ’ฌ Where SAFER and support programs fit in

Programs like SAFER do help seniors with rent, but they are partial supports, not full coverage.

They can reduce pressure, but they don’t fully match new rental prices in places like Vancouver’s west side.

That means many people still have to bridge a gap — even when they are eligible for assistance.


๐ŸŒฑ A small hope

I’m hoping to visit a unit soon.

Not just to see the space, but to understand what “normal rent” actually looks like in real life now — and how people are making it work.

Because behind every number is a life, a history, and a question of belonging.


๐Ÿค” Reflection questions

  • What does “affordable housing” mean when “normal rent” has doubled faster than income?
  • Who gets to stay in neighbourhoods they’ve lived in for decades?
  • How do we measure fairness when systems don’t rise together?
  • What would housing look like if it was designed around real incomes instead of market pressure?


#VancouverHousing #Senakw #AffordableHousing #HousingCrisis #SeniorHousing #BCHousing #IncomeInequality #FixedIncome #HousingJustice #WestEndVancouver #Kitsilano #RentInVancouver #SocialIssues #UrbanChange


๐ŸŒพ Who Owns BC’s Farmland? Billionaires, Broken Rules, and What Could Actually Change

๐ŸŒพ Who Owns BC’s Farmland? Billionaires, Broken Rules, and What Could Actually Change

There’s been a lot of noise lately about farmland in British Columbia—and for good reason.

The BC Greens recently raised concerns that wealthy investors, including ultra-rich individuals, are buying up agricultural land. The argument is simple: farmland is becoming an asset class instead of a place where food is grown and local farmers can survive.

And whether you agree with their framing or not, the underlying issue is real.

Something is shifting.


๐Ÿงบ Farmland is no longer just farmland

In theory, BC’s Agricultural Land Reserve (ALR) was created to protect farmland from urban sprawl. That part has worked reasonably well.

But there’s a gap in the system:

The ALR protects the land use
It does not strongly control who owns the land

That means farmland can still be:

  • bought by investment groups
  • held as long-term assets
  • used for luxury estates or recreational use
  • priced far beyond what working farmers can afford

So while the land may still technically be “protected,” access to it is becoming more limited in practice.


๐Ÿ’ฐ Why wealthy buyers are interested

This isn’t just about farming anymore.

Large land purchases are often driven by:

  • long-term investment security
  • inflation protection
  • lifestyle properties (privacy, hunting, recreation)
  • portfolio diversification

Farmland has become part of global wealth storage.

And local farmers? They’re competing with global capital.


๐Ÿงญ The uncomfortable tension in BC policy

BC is trying to balance three things at once:

  1. Food security (we need local agriculture)
  2. Property rights (land ownership is legally protected)
  3. Investment reality (land is now a global asset)

The conflict is that you can’t fully optimize all three at the same time.

So the system ends up in a middle zone:

  • protected enough to stop subdivisions
  • open enough to allow speculation
  • expensive enough to push out smaller farmers

๐Ÿง‘‍๐ŸŒพ What this feels like on the ground

For many people in farming communities, it looks like:

  • fewer young farmers entering agriculture
  • rising land prices disconnected from farm income
  • more absentee ownership
  • consolidation into large holdings

Even when land is still “farmland,” the culture of farming changes.

And once that breaks, it’s hard to rebuild.


๐Ÿ›️ What BC could realistically change

๐Ÿšœ 1. Restrict who can own farmland

Stronger rules could limit ownership to:

  • Canadian residents
  • active farmers
  • approved agricultural operators

Quebec already uses a review system for farmland transactions.


๐Ÿ“‰ 2. Enforce land use requirements

Farmland could require:

  • active agricultural production
  • penalties for idle speculative land

๐Ÿ’ฐ 3. Tax speculation more heavily

Instead of banning ownership:

  • increase taxes on non-farming farmland
  • reduce benefits for passive holding
  • target speculative resale profits

๐Ÿง‘‍๐ŸŒพ 4. Support new and local farmers

  • land access programs
  • low-interest farm loans
  • retirement-to-new-farmer land transfers
  • cooperative farming models

๐ŸŒฑ 5. Expand public or community farmland trusts

  • provincially held farmland banks
  • Indigenous-led land stewardship models
  • municipal agricultural land reserves

⚖️ The real question underneath it all

This debate is not just about billionaires or policy.

It is about this:

Do we treat land primarily as:

  • a financial asset
    or
  • a food system and shared necessity?

BC is currently trying to do both—and the tension is showing.


๐ŸŒ Final reflection

Farmland is one of the only forms of land that directly produces survival needs.

When it becomes purely an investment asset, the consequences are not immediate—but they slowly shape who can farm, what food costs, and how resilient local food systems really are.

The question is not whether farmland exists in BC.

It is whether it remains accessible.


๐Ÿค” Reflective Questions

  1. Who should have priority access to farmland in BC—farmers, residents, or investors?
  2. Should land that produces food be treated differently from other types of real estate?
  3. What happens to local food security if farmland becomes too expensive for new farmers?
  4. Is it fair for global wealth to compete with local communities for land ownership?
  5. Should BC limit who can buy farmland, even if it affects property rights?
  6. What would your community look like if more land stayed in active local farming?
  7. How do we balance private ownership with public food security needs?

# Hashtags

#BCFarming #FarmlandCrisis #FoodSecurityBC #AgriculturalLandReserve #ALR #LandRights #HousingAndFood #RuralBC #SustainableAgriculture #LandUsePolicy #BCPolitics #FarmersMatter #CommunityFoodSystems #LandSpeculation #ClimateAndFood



BC farmland, Agricultural Land Reserve BC, land ownership Canada, farmland investment, food security British Columbia, land speculation BC, farming crisis Canada, rural land policy, Quebec farmland rules, sustainable agriculture BC, local food systems, BC Greens farmland policy, billionaire land ownership, agricultural land protection



What If BC Built Seniors Villages Instead of Just Institutions?

 What If We Thought Bigger About Seniors Housing in BC?

The devastating fire that destroyed the future Skaha Seniors Community project in Penticton is heartbreaking. A 200-bed long-term care home that seniors and families were counting on is now delayed, at a time when wait lists across British Columbia are already overwhelming.

But maybe this tragedy also forces us to ask a bigger question:

What if we stopped thinking only in terms of giant institutional buildings?

What if we thought more creatively, more compassionately, and more urgently?

After hearing the news, I started imagining something different — not just another care facility, but an actual seniors village.

Imagine 200 small modular or mobile homes grouped together into beautiful neighbourhood-style clusters with:

  • accessible wheelchair pathways,
  • community gardens,
  • art and hobby spaces,
  • exercise and wellness hubs,
  • shared kitchens and gathering spaces,
  • therapy gardens,
  • pet-friendly areas,
  • shaded walking loops,
  • outdoor music and movie nights,
  • and different levels of support depending on people’s needs.

Not a warehouse for aging people. A community.

Many seniors do not just suffer from medical issues. They suffer from isolation, loneliness, loss of independence, and disconnection from nature and purpose.

What if long-term care could feel more human?

And here’s the thing: modular and mobile housing already exists.

Across BC and Western Canada there are:

  • unused mobile homes,
  • aging RV parks,
  • workforce camp units,
  • surplus modular housing,
  • and tiny home builders already creating compact, efficient housing.

Could some of these units be retrofitted for accessibility and grouped into villages faster than waiting years for massive institutional developments?

Of course there would still need to be:

  • nurses,
  • healthcare staff,
  • emergency systems,
  • accessible bathrooms,
  • transportation,
  • and proper infrastructure.

But maybe solutions do not always need to come in the form of one giant building costing hundreds of millions of dollars.

Maybe smaller, community-based villages could become part of the solution.

This idea could also create opportunities for:

  • local trades,
  • Indigenous partnerships,
  • young healthcare workers,
  • gardeners,
  • artists,
  • therapists,
  • students,
  • and community volunteers.

It could bring generations together instead of separating people into isolated systems.

And perhaps most importantly, it gives people something many are desperately lacking right now:

Hope.

Because right now families across BC are terrified about aging, housing insecurity, healthcare shortages, affordability, and what happens when loved ones can no longer live independently.

People want solutions. People want dignity. People want imagination. People want leaders willing to think differently.

Maybe the future of seniors care is not bigger institutions.

Maybe it is smaller connected communities built around humanity, nature, accessibility, and belonging.

What do you think a compassionate seniors village should include?

I asked ChatGtp to make this.


 #BCHousing #SeniorsCare #LongTermCare #TinyHomes #ModularHousing #Penticton #AgingWithDignity #CommunityCare #AffordableHousing #BCPolitics

From Nova Scotia to BC: Why Canadians Should Pay Attention to the Return of Fracking

 Tim Houston, Fracking, and Why British Columbians Should Pay Attention

Many people in British Columbia are so focused on pipelines, housing costs, inflation, and local politics that they are missing what is happening across the country. But what happens in one province often spreads to another.

In Nova Scotia, Premier Tim Houston has become one of the strongest voices pushing for expanded resource extraction, including hydraulic fracturing — better known as fracking.

For years, Nova Scotia had a ban and moratorium on fracking after major public concern about drinking water, environmental risks, earthquakes, climate impacts, and lack of social licence. That opposition included environmental groups, health advocates, and Mi’kmaw leadership.

Then in 2025, Houston’s government introduced legislation to lift the fracking ban and reopen the discussion around uranium exploration and mining. The government argued the province needed “energy security,” economic growth, and less dependence on outside energy sources.

Shortly after, Houston intensified his focus on energy development and eventually appointed himself Energy Minister while still serving as Premier, signalling how central resource extraction had become to his political agenda.

Supporters say:

  • Nova Scotia could create jobs
  • local energy production could reduce imports
  • newer technology is safer
  • Canada should develop its own resources instead of relying on foreign energy markets.

Critics say:

  • the public was not properly consulted
  • Indigenous rights and treaty obligations were ignored
  • environmental risks remain unresolved
  • climate goals are being undermined
  • governments are increasingly aligning with corporate extraction interests over long-term ecological protection.

Mi’kmaw chiefs strongly opposed the move and discussed legal action, stating that fracking should not proceed in unceded territory without meaningful consultation.

What should concern people in BC is not just fracking itself.

It is the larger pattern happening across Canada:

  • politicians increasingly talking about becoming “energy superpowers”
  • economic fear being used to justify rapid resource expansion
  • environmental protections being reframed as barriers to growth
  • governments centralizing power around energy and development decisions
  • growing tensions between Indigenous rights, climate concerns, and resource extraction

British Columbia already knows these battles well: old-growth logging, LNG expansion, pipelines, mining conflicts, housing pressures tied to speculation and resource economies, and increasing climate disasters including fires, droughts, floods, and heat domes.

Many Canadians still think these issues are isolated provincial stories. They are not.

The same debates are happening coast to coast: Who controls the land? Who benefits from extraction? Who absorbs the environmental risk? And how much public consultation is enough before irreversible decisions are made?

Whether someone supports or opposes fracking, Canadians should at least be paying attention.

Because once governments normalize reopening previously banned industries in the name of economic survival, the political landscape can shift very quickly.

Reflective Questions

  1. Should provinces reopen industries that were previously banned for environmental reasons?
  2. How much consultation should governments be required to do before major resource decisions?
  3. Can economic growth and environmental protection realistically coexist under the current system?
  4. Should Indigenous communities have veto power over projects affecting their traditional territories?
  5. Are Canadians being asked to choose between jobs and environmental protection?
  6. How much influence do corporations and industry lobbyists have on energy policy?
  7. Are governments responding to public needs — or market pressures?
  8. What lessons should BC learn from what is happening in Nova Scotia?
  9. Who benefits most financially from large-scale resource extraction projects?
  10. What kind of future do Canadians want to build over the next 20 years?


Hashtags:
#TimHouston #Fracking #NovaScotia #BritishColumbia #EnergyPolitics #ClimateChange #IndigenousRights #Canada #ResourceExtraction #EnvironmentalJustice

Metro Vancouver transit workers have voted 99% in favour of possible strike action

 Metro Vancouver transit workers have voted 99% in favour of possible strike action.

That does NOT mean a strike is happening right now. Buses and SeaBus services are still running normally.

A strike vote is often used as leverage during negotiations. It is workers saying: “Things are serious enough that we are prepared to take action if needed.”

And honestly, this is just another layer of stress many people in this city do not need right now.

The strange thing is… the weather is beautiful. The mountains are glowing. Patios are packed. Tourists are arriving. Everything looks fine on the surface.

But underneath that postcard image, a lot of people are stretched thin: high rents, long commutes, job insecurity, burnout, traffic, financial stress, and now uncertainty around transit.

If possible job action does happen, many people will feel it: workers trying to get to shifts, students, seniors, people with disabilities, parents, and anyone already struggling to afford life in Vancouver.

So what can people do right now to lower stress?

  • Don’t panic or spread rumours online
  • Stay informed through official transit updates
  • Give yourself extra travel time
  • Talk to neighbours or coworkers about carpooling options
  • If you can work remotely, plan ahead
  • Be patient with transit workers and with each other
  • Take breaks from doomscrolling and constant outrage cycles

Most people are exhausted already. Constant anger helps nobody.

And what can people in power do?

  • Negotiate seriously and transparently
  • Stop waiting until systems reach crisis levels
  • Address affordability pressures affecting workers
  • Improve staffing and working conditions
  • Remember that public transit is essential infrastructure, not a luxury
  • Think long term instead of reacting only when disruption threatens tourism or major events like the 2026 FIFA World Cup

A healthy city is not measured only by how beautiful it looks in the sunshine.

It is measured by whether the people keeping it running can still afford to live, work, breathe, and function within it.


#Vancouver #TransLink #MetroVancouver #TransitStrike #PublicTransit #CostOfLiving #Burnout #UrbanStress #BCPolitics #FIFAWorldCup

Blue Skies, Burnt Out City

 Vancouver feels strange sometimes.

The sky is blue. The mountains are out. Patios are full. People are walking seawall trails with iced coffees like everything is perfectly fine.

Meanwhile: Transit workers vote 99% in favour of strike action. People are juggling rent, groceries, job rejections, exhaustion, long commutes, uncertainty.

It’s like living in two cities at once.

One is the postcard version. The other is the pressure underneath it.

And maybe that’s why people seem so emotionally tired lately.

Not because every day is a disaster… but because modern life feels like constant low-grade stress mixed with beautiful scenery.

The strange thing about Vancouver is that even burnout can happen under perfect weather.

Maybe especially then.

Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Almost 2 Million Views Later…

 Almost 2 Million Views Later…


Printscreen of views


Back in 2004, I took a contracting and consulting course. I don’t think I realized at the time that it would quietly lead me toward blogging, photography, web design, social media, storytelling, and years of documenting the world around me.

I had a few blogs before this one. Some I deleted while trying to figure out my voice, my direction, and what I actually wanted to say. That took time. A long time.

By 2008, this blog became the main one — the baby.

Not because it made money. It didn’t.

I never had enough followers for ads to matter, and back then ads often meant needing credit cards and systems I didn’t even have access to. I tried promoting other people, hoping community support would come back around, but most of the time it didn’t.

Still, I kept posting.

Through changing algorithms. Through shadow banning. Through censorship. Through watching the internet become more commercialized and controlled.

At one point, I shut things down for almost four years. I was honestly afraid — afraid of the political climate, the anger online, the fanaticism growing everywhere during the Trump era. Sometimes it felt dangerous just to speak honestly or ask difficult questions.

Screenshot of # of posts per year



But then I realized something:

If people like me stop using our voices, then fear wins.

Writers matter. Artists matter. Independent voices matter.

There’s that famous poem: “First they came…”

And history keeps reminding us how quickly silence can spread when people become afraid to speak.

So I came back.

Not because I think I’m always right. Not because I know everything. But because I believe in questioning things, fact-checking, observing, documenting, and speaking my truth as honestly as I can.

If I worked for a corporation, had sponsors, or depended on advertisers, I probably couldn’t say half the things I’ve written over the years.

That freedom matters to me.

Sometimes my blog is about activism. Sometimes photography. Sometimes politics. Sometimes grief, housing, work, poverty, climate, travel, or strange little observations about humanity.

People, places, and things. Nouns.

Even when I write about difficult topics, I still try to leave room for hope, humour, reflection, or some kind of positive direction forward.

Nearly 2 million views later, I still see these blogs less as “content” and more as libraries — collections of memories, stories, ideas, warnings, photographs, and moments in time.

A digital trail of one human being trying to make sense of the world while living through it.

And somehow, people kept reading.

Thank you to everyone who stopped by over the years, whether for one minute or many years.

Still here. Still creating. Still questioning. Still documenting.

— Tina Winterlik / Zipolita

Blogger, Artist, Photographer, Web Designer, Social Media Creator

Tina Winterlik Blog: http://tinawinterlik.blogspot.com

Sea Otters: A Warning From History

Otter Mural by Zipolita 2025

Sea Otters, Colonialism, and the Cost of Profit

By Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita

Happy World Otter Day ๐Ÿฆฆ๐ŸŒŠ

Today people post beautiful photos of sea otters floating peacefully in kelp forests, holding paws and looking playful and innocent. Most people do not realize how close humans came to wiping them out forever.

Sea otters once lived across the entire North Pacific Rim, from Japan to Alaska, British Columbia, and down the California coast. Then greed entered the story.

During the fur trade of the 1700s and 1800s, sea otter pelts became one of the most valuable commodities in the world. Their incredibly soft and dense fur was highly desired in China, where wealthy buyers paid enormous prices for luxury garments. Russian fur traders, followed by British and American traders, saw massive profits waiting along the Pacific coast.

What followed was not simply “trade.” It was part of a colonial system that reshaped entire ecosystems and Indigenous communities.

Coastal Indigenous nations, including the Haida, Tlingit, Nuu-chah-nulth, and many others, became caught in this expanding global economy. Some traded willingly at first because European goods such as metal tools, weapons, and textiles had become useful and valuable. But the power imbalance was enormous. In Alaska especially, Russian colonizers violently forced Indigenous hunters into dangerous sea otter hunting expeditions.

The story of sea otters is not just about one animal. It is about how colonialism and global markets can turn living beings into commodities.

The demand for luxury fur in another part of the world nearly erased a species from the Pacific Ocean.

By the early 1900s, sea otters had almost disappeared completely. Entire coastlines that once depended on their presence changed dramatically.

Scientists now call sea otters a “keystone species.” That means their existence supports the health of entire ecosystems.

Sea otters eat sea urchins.

Sea urchins eat kelp.

Without otters, sea urchins multiply uncontrollably and destroy kelp forests.

Kelp forests are underwater ecosystems that provide shelter for fish, absorb carbon dioxide, protect coastlines, and support marine biodiversity. When otters disappeared, entire underwater forests vanished with them.

Humans often think we stand above nature, controlling it for profit, but the disappearance of sea otters showed how deeply connected everything really is.

Even today, the story remains complicated.

As sea otters recover in some regions, tensions have emerged around shellfish harvesting because otters also consume clams, crab, and abalone that coastal communities rely on for food and culture. Conservation cannot simply ignore Indigenous food systems and sovereignty. Real solutions require listening, cooperation, and balance rather than repeating old colonial patterns under a new environmental banner.

The sea otter story asks difficult questions.

How many ecosystems have been destroyed for luxury markets?

How many species were pushed toward extinction because humans viewed life as profit?

What lessons are we still refusing to learn?

Sometimes I think the sea otter is a symbol of both human destruction and resilience.

Against all odds, they survived.

Maybe there is still hope for the oceans too — if humans learn humility before it is too late.


10 Hard Questions for Leaders, Policy Makers, and Politicians

  1. If governments and corporations knew species like sea otters were being pushed toward extinction for profit, why was economic gain valued more than ecological survival?
  1. How many ecosystems must collapse before environmental protection becomes more important than short-term economic growth?
  1. Why do governments continue subsidizing industries that damage oceans, forests, and wildlife while ordinary people are told to “do their part” by recycling and conserving energy?
  1. How can leaders claim to support reconciliation with Indigenous peoples while continuing to approve projects that threaten Indigenous lands, waters, and traditional food systems?
  1. Why are luxury industries and corporate profits still prioritized while housing insecurity, food insecurity, and environmental destruction continue rising?
  1. What responsibility do wealthy nations have for repairing environmental damage caused by centuries of colonialism, extraction, and overconsumption?
  1. Why are scientists and environmental advocates often ignored until a crisis becomes impossible to hide?
  1. How can politicians speak about protecting future generations while approving policies that contribute to climate instability, biodiversity loss, and pollution today?
  1. If healthy ecosystems are essential for human survival, why are environmental protections so often treated as obstacles to economic development instead of the foundation of long-term prosperity?
  1. At what point do silence, inaction, and political compromise become forms of participation in environmental destruction?

To Premier Wab Kinew,

 To Premier Wab Kinew,

I want to share something honestly and respectfully.

I have been trying to understand my own roots and history, and through that process I’ve come to care deeply about protecting land, water, and future generations. These issues are not abstract for me — they feel urgent and personal.

So when I hear support for pipeline expansion into or through British Columbia, I feel confusion and disappointment.

I don’t see this as a simple or emotional reaction. I understand that leaders operate within economic pressures, federal-provincial negotiations, and competing priorities. But I am struggling to understand how this aligns with the climate reality we are living in — wildfires, floods, displacement, and increasing instability.

My questions are not meant as attacks, but as attempts to understand:

  • How does this direction align with climate science and long-term environmental protection?
  • How are communities that oppose these projects being included in decision-making?
  • What does reconciliation mean when there is disagreement about land and resource use?
  • How do we balance economic needs with the responsibility to future generations?

I am sharing this because many people feel a similar tension — between wanting stability and jobs, and wanting a livable future.

I am still trying to understand how these can be reconciled without continuing an extractive model that many of us are worried about.

Thank you for hearing these questions.


#NoNewPipelines, #ProtectTheLand, #IndigenousRights, #KeepItInTheGround, #ClimateCrisis, #WaterIsLife, #FutureGenerations, #GreenEnergyNow, #EnvironmentalProtection

The Real Cost of Homelessness: Why Canada Pays More to Manage Crisis Than Prevent It

 The Real Cost of Homelessness: Why Canada Pays More to Manage Crisis Than Prevent It

We keep being told Canada cannot afford to solve homelessness.

But what if the truth is: Canada cannot afford NOT to solve it?

Abe Oudshoorn’s 2025 article, “The Temptations of Trite: How Policymakers Avoid Addressing Homelessness as a Structural Challenge,” points out something many people living through this crisis already know:

We are managing homelessness in the most expensive way possible.

Not by preventing it. Not by building enough deeply affordable housing. Not by stabilizing people before they fall.

Instead, society waits until people are in full crisis and then spends enormous public money reacting afterward.

According to the article:

• A hospital bed can cost around $30,000 PER MONTH. • A shelter bed can cost around $6,000 PER MONTH. • Incarcerating someone in Canada costs over $150,000 PER YEAR. • Supportive housing could cost significantly less while giving people stability, dignity, and support.

Think about that.

How many seniors are ending up in hospitals because they cannot afford stable housing? How many people develop worsening mental and physical health conditions because of chronic stress, instability, or unsafe living conditions? How many people are criminalized for simply surviving in public when they have nowhere else to go?

And then taxpayers pay the bill afterward through emergency healthcare, shelters, policing, courts, cleanups, and crisis services.

This is what frustrates so many people: We are already paying massive amounts of money.

Just badly.

Meanwhile governments continue approving luxury towers, mega-developments, infrastructure projects, and investor-driven housing while deeply affordable housing remains painfully limited.

And ordinary people are left fighting over shrinking affordable rentals while wages, pensions, and assistance rates fail to keep up with reality.

The article also points out Canada announced over $100 billion through the National Housing Strategy, yet homelessness and housing insecurity continue worsening across the country.

So people naturally ask: Where did the money go? Who actually benefited? Why are tent encampments growing if the crisis is supposedly being addressed?

One of the saddest parts is how many people still think homelessness only affects “other people.”

But more Canadians are discovering how quickly stability can disappear: An illness. A divorce. A caregiving responsibility. Job loss. A renoviction. A rent increase. A disability. A delayed pension. A rejected job application.

And suddenly someone who spent their life working is couch surfing, living in fear, or trying to survive quietly without becoming another statistic.

This is not only a housing crisis.

It is a healthcare crisis. A mental health crisis. An aging crisis. A disability crisis. A dignity crisis.

And perhaps most disturbing of all: Many experts, advocates, and ordinary people have been warning about this for years while governments continued treating housing primarily as an economic commodity instead of a human necessity.

Reflective Questions:

  1. Why does society spend more money reacting to homelessness than preventing it?

  2. What would happen if even a fraction of emergency response spending went directly into deeply affordable housing?

  3. Why are hospital beds and prisons easier to fund than permanent housing?

  4. How many people are one crisis away from housing insecurity right now?

  5. Should housing policy primarily serve investors or communities?

  6. Why are seniors and disabled people increasingly struggling to afford stable housing in a wealthy country?

  7. How much public money is being lost through repeated crisis management instead of prevention?

  8. What happens to a society when basic stability becomes unattainable for growing numbers of people?

  9. Why are luxury developments increasing while affordable housing remains scarce?

  10. If governments can spend billions managing the consequences of homelessness, why can’t they prioritize preventing it?

Not Homeless Enough: When Housing Rights Exist More on Paper Than in Reality

 Not Homeless Enough: When Housing Rights Exist More on Paper Than in Reality

Yesterday I received another job rejection letter.

Ironically, it was connected to homelessness services.

I was told I did not have enough “cumulative lived experience.”

And honestly, sitting there reading it, I could not help thinking: What exactly qualifies someone as “homeless enough” in Canada now?

Do you have to sleep in a tent? Lose everything? End up in the hospital? Become completely broken before your experiences count?

Because many people are surviving in invisible ways: Couch surfing. Living in unstable housing. Living in fear of losing housing. Staying in unhealthy situations because rents are impossible. Skipping food to pay rent. Aging without security. Working precarious jobs while one emergency could collapse everything.

One of the hardest realizations for me has been discovering the difference between something being called a “human right” and something actually being protected in real life.

I was naive.

I truly believed that because housing is connected to Article 25 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, it meant governments were legally required to ensure people had safe housing.

I thought it was law.

Instead, I am learning that rights on paper and rights in reality are not the same thing.

Abe Oudshoorn’s 2025 article, “The Temptations of Trite: How Policymakers Avoid Addressing Homelessness as a Structural Challenge,” talks about this exact issue. The article argues governments often symbolically recognize housing rights while failing to create enforceable systems that truly protect people.

Meanwhile homelessness continues growing.

And what hurts the most is realizing society spends enormous amounts of money managing homelessness through shelters, hospitals, policing, courts, and prisons — while still not building enough deeply affordable housing to prevent people from falling into crisis in the first place.

We keep hearing there is “no money.”

Yet there always seems to be money for luxury towers, mega-projects, infrastructure expansion, developer incentives, and temporary emergency responses after people are already suffering.

The article points out that supportive housing can cost less than emergency shelters, hospital stays, and incarceration.

So why are we still doing this backwards?

I think many ordinary people assumed, like I did, that in a wealthy country basic human needs would be protected.

But more and more Canadians are discovering how fragile stability really is.

You can work hard your whole life and still end up one illness, one rent increase, one caregiving responsibility, one layoff, or one personal crisis away from losing everything.

Housing should not only exist for speculation and profit.

Housing is health. Housing is safety. Housing is dignity. Housing is survival.

And maybe one of the cruelest parts of this crisis is how often people are told they are either: “not struggling enough” to qualify for help, or “too broken” to recover easily once they finally do.

Reflective Questions:

  1. At what point does housing insecurity become “serious enough” for society to respond compassionately?

  2. Why do so many people experiencing instability remain invisible until they reach absolute crisis?

  3. Should access to housing support depend on proving extreme suffering?

  4. Why does society often spend more money reacting to homelessness than preventing it?

  5. How many working Canadians are only one emergency away from housing insecurity?

  6. What happens psychologically when people are repeatedly told their struggles are “not enough”?

  7. Why are luxury developments expanding while deeply affordable housing remains scarce?

  8. Should housing be treated primarily as an investment commodity or as a human necessity?

  9. What would a society look like if prevention and dignity were prioritized over crisis management?

  10. If housing is recognized as a human right internationally, why is it still so inaccessible for so many people?#HousingCrisis, #Homelessness, #AffordableHousing, #HousingIsAHumanRight, #PovertyInCanada, #SeniorsInPoverty, #InvisibleHomelessness, #CanadaHousing, #SocialJustice, #EndHomelessness

Tuesday, May 26, 2026

Other applicants whose cumulative life experiences better aligned

 It’s 5:30 in the morning. I wake up on a couch, check my phone, and there it is — another rejection letter.

Other applicants whose cumulative life experiences better aligned.”

That line hit hard.

I stopped applying for many jobs after hundreds — maybe over a thousand — applications over the years. People who have not lived through long-term job rejection do not understand what it does to a person psychologically. Every application takes energy, hope, tailoring resumes, writing cover letters, emotional labour, and then often silence or rejection.

Eventually, people stop because survival itself becomes exhausting.

I am now less than a year away from my pension, trying to survive nine more months in an economy that feels increasingly impossible. My dog-walking and house-sitting arrangement ended because the friend I was staying with became too ill to manage without professional care. Life changes quickly when you are already financially vulnerable.

Now I am couchsurfing.

I clean one house a week. I am trying to find more dog-walking work because so many jobs are either physically too demanding, emotionally draining, don’t pay enough to survive, or simply will not hire older workers with unconventional backgrounds.

And while ordinary people struggle harder than ever, we are constantly told there is no money.

I don’t believe that anymore.

There is money. Massive amounts of money. The question is where it goes, who controls it, and why so many systems designed to “help” seem unable to stop worsening poverty, homelessness, addiction, and hopelessness.

We need to have an honest conversation about the nonprofit industry in British Columbia.

Not every person working in nonprofits is bad. Many frontline workers are exhausted and trying their best. But the overall model is failing badly. Administrative structures continue growing while homelessness and housing insecurity explode across BC.

Look at the scandals we have already seen, including questions surrounding organizations like Atira. Meanwhile, more people are sleeping in vehicles, couchsurfing, living in fear of eviction, or one illness away from homelessness.

The unhoused and vulnerable in BC are being squeezed from every direction while governments prepare for global events like FIFA and market Vancouver as a world-class destination.

World-class for who?

Because for many residents, survival is becoming terrifying.

I recently saw a hiring video from Lake Louise. Out of almost everyone shown, nearly every worker appeared to be from overseas — many with English or Irish accents. Meanwhile, countless Canadians, older workers, and struggling locals cannot find stable work.

People feel discarded.

And maybe that is why so many are angry.

We are told to keep applying, keep smiling, keep adapting, keep “upskilling,” while rents skyrocket, wages stagnate, and social systems become increasingly bureaucratic and disconnected from real life.

Indigenous communities understood something modern society forgot during hard times: community survival matters. Shared food, shared knowledge, shared responsibility. Many Elders have pointed out that during the Depression, some communities survived because they still understood land, food preservation, mutual support, and collective care.

Modern society replaced much of that with systems, paperwork, administration, and profit-driven thinking.

Now many people feel trapped inside systems that no longer function for ordinary human beings.

This is not just about me waking up to another rejection letter at dawn.

This is about a growing number of people quietly living on the edge, exhausted, aging, underhoused, and wondering how a wealthy country became so difficult to survive in.

  1. At what point does repeated job rejection stop being “motivation” and start becoming psychological harm?

  2. Why are so many older workers struggling to find stable employment despite decades of life and work experience?

  3. How can homelessness and housing insecurity continue rising in one of the wealthiest countries in the world?

  4. Are nonprofit organizations being structured in ways that truly solve problems, or mainly manage ongoing crises?

  5. Why do governments and corporations always seem to find money for mega-events, development, and marketing, but not enough for affordable housing or income security?

  6. What happens to a society when more people feel disposable, invisible, or economically trapped?

  7. Have modern systems become too bureaucratic and disconnected from real human needs and community care?

  8. What can we learn from Indigenous and traditional community models about survival, food security, and mutual support during difficult times?

  9. How many people are quietly couchsurfing, underhoused, or one emergency away from homelessness without being counted in official statistics?

  10. What kind of future are we creating if ordinary people must live in fear of aging, illness, or losing housing in order to survive?


Canada Needs Pension Reform

 Canada needs pension reform that reflects today’s reality — not the economy of 40 years ago.

Many Canadians over 55 are struggling with rent, food costs, healthcare expenses, and age discrimination in the workforce. Women are especially vulnerable because many spent years raising children, caregiving, or working lower-paid jobs, leaving them with smaller CPP contributions and little retirement security.

A humane society should guarantee basic needs: housing, food, healthcare, and dignity.

We need: • Earlier support for struggling Canadians 55+ • Better protections for older women and caregivers • Affordable housing for seniors • Pension reform that recognizes unpaid caregiving work • Stronger supports for low-income retirees

At the same time, seniors with very high incomes and significant wealth should receive reduced benefits. Public money should go first to those who truly need it.

Tax fairness matters. While ordinary Canadians struggle, corporate profits and extreme wealth continue to grow. Governments should focus on fair taxation and reducing inequality instead of forcing vulnerable generations to compete against one another.

A society should be judged by how it treats its elders — especially those who worked hard their entire lives and still cannot afford to live with dignity.


Here are some deeper, more challenging reflection questions and scenarios you can use to help people understand what it can feel like to be unemployed but unwilling (or unable) to rely on welfare systems that feel inadequate, stigmatizing, or hard to survive on:


Scenario-based questions

What would you do if:

  • You lost your job at 58 and every application you submit says “overqualified” or gets no response?
  • The only support offered is welfare that covers rent in theory, but not in the actual rental market you live in?
  • Accepting assistance means reporting requirements that feel invasive or demeaning, but refusing it means falling behind on basic bills?
  • You are told to “just retrain,” but training programs don’t lead to actual hiring in your area?
  • You have worked your whole life, but the system now treats you like you failed rather than like someone who contributed?

Identity and dignity questions

  • At what point does “help” stop feeling like help and start feeling like survival at the cost of dignity?
  • If you accept welfare, but it still leaves you unable to afford food, rent, or stability, is it truly support or just paperwork relief for the system?
  • How would it feel to be told you must prove your poverty repeatedly to receive less than a living income?
  • What does it do to a person’s sense of self when they are willing to work, but the economy has no place for them?

System fairness questions

  • If someone worked and paid taxes for 30–40 years, what should they reasonably expect when they fall out of work at 55 or 60?
  • Is a system fair if it assumes full employment is always available, even when the labour market says otherwise?
  • Should survival depend on navigating bureaucracy, or should it be guaranteed as a basic right?
  • Why is refusing inadequate assistance sometimes seen as “pride” instead of a signal that the system isn’t working?

Hard ethical reflection

  • If a person refuses welfare because it still leaves them in poverty, is that irrational—or a rational response to a broken safety net?
  • What does society lose when experienced workers disappear into poverty instead of being supported to transition with dignity?
  • At what point does “personal responsibility” become an excuse for systemic gaps?


#UnemploymentReality

#DignityInWork
#HiddenPoverty
#AgeismInEmployment
#55PlusStruggles
#BrokenSafetyNet
#CostOfLivingCrisis
#WelfareGap
#WorkingPoor
#InvisibleUnemployment
#EconomicInequality
#SocialJusticeCanada
#RetirementSecurity
#PensionReformNow
#CaregivingMatters
#LivingWithDignity
#SystemicInequality
#VoicesOfExperience
#SurvivalNotLuxury
#HumanDignity

Monday, May 25, 2026

Beading: A Shared Human Story of Art, Healing, and Connection

 Beading: A Shared Human Story of Art, Healing, and Connection

By Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita

Beadwork is often associated with Indigenous cultures of North America, especially First Nations, Inuit, and Mรฉtis communities. But the deeper history of beading tells a much larger human story — one that stretches across continents and thousands of years.

Long before colonization, Indigenous peoples around the world created intricate adornments using shells, stones, bones, seeds, pearls, quills, clay, and carved materials. Archaeologists have discovered beads dating back over 100,000 years in Africa and the Middle East. Humans have always decorated themselves, not simply for beauty, but for spirituality, storytelling, protection, identity, trade, and ceremony.

In the Americas, many Indigenous nations practiced highly sophisticated decorative arts long before European contact. Across Turtle Island, porcupine quillwork flourished among many nations and required immense patience and skill. Wampum belts carried political and spiritual meaning among Eastern Woodlands peoples.

Further south, the Maya civilization created elaborate beadwork and jewelry using jade, shells, obsidian, bone, and precious stones. Jade held deep spiritual importance in Maya culture and was associated with life, breath, fertility, and power. Beads were used in ceremonial dress, offerings, and sacred rituals.

In Mexico, the Huichol people — who call themselves Wixรกrika — became known for extraordinary bead art filled with vibrant spiritual symbolism. Their beadwork often depicts deer, corn, peyote, serpents, the sun, and sacred visions connected to their cosmology and ceremonies. Each color and symbol carries meaning rooted in ancient traditions and connection to nature.

When Europeans arrived in North America, they introduced glass trade beads through Spanish, French, British, and Dutch trade networks. These beads spread quickly because they were colorful, durable, and adaptable. Indigenous artists transformed these materials into entirely new artistic traditions.

Mรฉtis floral beadwork is one beautiful example of cultural blending. Influenced by European floral embroidery motifs and Indigenous artistic traditions, Mรฉtis artists developed breathtaking floral beadwork styles that became iconic. The Mรฉtis became known as the “Flower Beadwork People,” creating designs that reflected both adaptation and cultural innovation.

Art has always evolved through exchange between peoples. Cultures influence one another through travel, trade, migration, marriage, and shared experience. Creativity itself is deeply human.

That is why it makes me sad when people feel they must announce their ancestry before attending a beading class. Some feel they need permission. Others fear judgment. Some wonder if they are “allowed” to create.

Of course, respect matters. Learning the history matters. Supporting Indigenous artists matters. Understanding sacred versus non-sacred traditions matters.

But healing art forms also connect humanity.

Beading can be meditation. Beading can be storytelling. Beading can be grief work. Beading can be community. Beading can be survival. Beading can be joy.

For many people, sitting quietly with beads is a way to slow down in a world moving too fast. It reconnects hands, mind, spirit, and memory.

Perhaps that is why beadwork appears again and again throughout human history — across oceans, continents, and cultures. Humans have always searched for ways to create beauty from small pieces and turn them into something meaningful together.

Maybe beadwork reminds us that we are all connected strand by strand.

❤️

Reflective Questions

  1. Why do you think humans across so many cultures developed beadwork independently?

  2. How can art forms become spaces for healing and community?

  3. What is the difference between cultural appreciation and cultural appropriation?

  4. Why is it important to learn the history behind traditional art forms?

  5. Have you ever experienced creativity as a form of meditation or emotional healing?

  6. How do shared art traditions help bridge divides between cultures?

  7. In what ways can modern society reconnect with slower, hands-on creative practices?

  8. What stories, memories, or emotions might people weave into beadwork without even realizing it?

  9. How has colonization changed or transformed traditional artistic practices around the world?

  10. What responsibilities do artists and teachers have when sharing cultural art forms with others?

#beadwork #metis #wixarika #huichol #maya #indigenousart #community #healingarts #education #creativity #culture #beading #indigenousowned #artandhealing

Remember the movie Erin Brockovich…?

๐Ÿ’ง Remember the movie Erin Brockovich…?

The one where contaminated water quietly made people sick — until someone finally connected the dots and asked the uncomfortable questions about responsibility, negligence, and accountability.

Now think about something closer to home.


⚠️ Metro Vancouver workers are now in job action.

That means they are starting to refuse overtime and escalate pressure in negotiations with management.

And this isn’t just about pay.

It’s about the systems that keep our water clean, our sewage treated, and our cities safe.


๐Ÿšฐ These workers are the ones:

  • Maintaining drinking water systems for millions of people
  • Running and repairing sewer infrastructure
  • Working in confined, dangerous environments
  • Covering staff shortages and constant overtime pressures

And they’re raising concerns about:

  • Worker safety
  • Chronic staffing shortages
  • Contracting out public work to private companies
  • And major “administrative” failures, including cost overruns on key infrastructure projects

๐Ÿ’ฐ At the same time, the top administrative layer earns very high salaries, and large public projects have faced significant cost overruns and delays.

So people are starting to ask:

How do we balance executive pay, public spending, and frontline safety in systems we all depend on every single day?


๐Ÿง  This is where it becomes bigger than a labour dispute.

Because when essential systems are understaffed, stretched thin, or poorly coordinated, the risk isn’t just financial.

It’s public health.


⚠️ We don’t need to look far to understand what can go wrong when water systems fail.

The Walkerton tragedy in Ontario (2000) remains a painful reminder of how quickly contaminated water and system breakdowns can turn into a public health disaster.

No one wants anything like that — anywhere, ever again.


๐Ÿงญ This is why this matters.

It’s not just about negotiations or headlines.

It’s about:

  • Whether frontline workers have the support and staffing they need
  • Whether public systems are run with enough accountability and care
  • And whether the people maintaining essential infrastructure are being heard before problems become crises

๐Ÿ’ฌ Most of us don’t think twice when we turn on the tap.

But behind that simple act is a system that has to work perfectly, every single day — and the people doing that work are now saying the pressure is building.


๐Ÿค” Reflective Questions

  1. Should a public-sector chief executive earn more than the Prime Minister of Canada for managing essential services?

  2. Where is the balance between fair executive compensation and responsible use of public money?

  3. At what point does high leadership pay stop being “market rate” and start becoming a question of public priorities?

  4. How do we justify executive salaries over half a million dollars while frontline workers struggle with staffing shortages and safety concerns?

  5. Why do many people on social assistance in BC live on less than $15,000 a year in one of the most expensive regions in the country?

  6. What does it say about our system when essential workers maintain critical infrastructure but are still stretched thin?

  7. How can we talk about fairness when some people cannot afford housing, while others manage billion-dollar public systems?

  8. If water is life, why are so many Indigenous communities in Canada still living under long-term boil water advisories?

  9. What does it mean for justice when access to safe drinking water is still not universal in a wealthy country like Canada?

  10. Where does Vancouver’s drinking water actually come from, and how many people know the answer?

  11. How old is the infrastructure that delivers our clean water and removes our waste?

  12. What happens if staffing shortages continue in the systems that protect public health?

  13. Are we investing enough in the people who physically maintain our water and sewer systems?

  14. Who is ultimately accountable when large public infrastructure projects go over budget or experience major delays?

  15. What kind of society do we become if essential services are taken for granted, but the people maintaining them feel unheard?

๐Ÿ’ง At the heart of this conversation is something very simple: water is life. Yet behind the tap in every home is a massive system of infrastructure, labour, and decision-making that most people never see. Metro Vancouver workers are now in job action, raising concerns about safety, staffing shortages, contracting out, and the way major public projects are managed. At the same time, questions are being asked about balance — executive compensation at the top of the system, frontline wages at the ground level, and how public priorities are set in a region where many people struggle to afford basic living costs. When we step back, it raises deeper questions about fairness, accountability, and what we truly value as a society. Where does Vancouver’s water come from? How old is the infrastructure we depend on? And how do we ensure that essential systems are protected, properly staffed, and managed with care before problems become crises?


#Hashtags

#MetroVancouver #WaterIsLife #PublicInfrastructure #WorkersRights #SocialJusticeBC #CostOfLivingCrisis #AccountabilityMatters #PublicServices #BCNews #HousingAndAffordability #CleanWater #EssentialWorkers #InfrastructureMatters #IncomeInequality #CommunityVoices

Sunday, May 24, 2026

๐Ÿ“š Almost 2 Million Views… Thank You So Much! ๐Ÿ’›✨

 

๐Ÿ“š Almost 2 Million Views… Thank You So Much! ๐Ÿ’›✨

Wow… I honestly can’t believe I’m writing this.

My little blog is now approaching 2 MILLION views. ๐Ÿคฏ๐Ÿ“š✨

From late-night writing sessions…
to sharing photography, thoughts, activism, travel stories, art, frustrations, observations, and moments from life… somehow people from all over the world kept reading. ๐ŸŒŽ๐Ÿ’ป

And for that, I just want to say:

THANK YOU ๐Ÿ’›

Thank you for reading.
Thank you for commenting.
Thank you for sharing posts.
Thank you for quietly visiting without ever saying a word.
Thank you for agreeing… and even disagreeing sometimes.
Thank you for sticking around through all the different phases of this blog. ✨

There were times I almost stopped blogging completely.
Times when social media algorithms buried posts.
Times when writing felt exhausting.
Times when it felt like nobody cared anymore.

But somehow… people kept finding my words. ๐Ÿ“š

This blog has never been about perfection.
It has been about honesty.
Curiosity.
Creativity.
Questions.
Art.
Freedom of thought.
And trying to make sense of a very strange world. ๐ŸŒ

Seeing these numbers rise is surreal:

๐Ÿ“– 3307 posts
๐Ÿ‘€ Almost 2 million views
๐Ÿ’ฌ Conversations from readers around the world



Screenshot of views

Screenshot of views


That means more to me than people probably realize.

Sometimes one post can make someone feel less alone.
Sometimes one photograph can calm someone’s anxiety.
Sometimes one uncomfortable conversation can spark awareness.
And sometimes people simply need a place that feels more human in an increasingly artificial online world.

I appreciate every single person who took time out of their day to visit my blog. ๐Ÿ’›

Whether you came for:

  • travel stories ๐ŸŒด
  • photography ๐Ÿ“ธ
  • activism ✊
  • reflections on society ๐ŸŒŽ
  • strange world events ๐Ÿ‘€
  • food discussions ๐ŸŒฎ
  • art and creativity ๐ŸŽจ
  • mental health reflections ๐ŸŒฟ
  • or just curiosity…

…thank you for being here.

As I get closer to 2 million views, I hope to keep creating content that encourages people to: ✨ think critically
✨ stay curious
✨ question systems
✨ appreciate beauty
✨ spend more time outdoors
✨ support each other
✨ and not lose their humanity online

The internet changes constantly.
Algorithms change.
Platforms change.
But real human connection still matters. ๐Ÿ’›

So from the bottom of my heart…

THANK YOU FOR READING ๐Ÿ“š✨

— Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita ๐ŸŒบ


Reflective Questions ๐Ÿ’ญ

  1. How has the internet changed since you first started using it?
  2. Do blogs still matter in the age of short videos and algorithms?
  3. What kind of content do you wish existed more online?
  4. Have you ever read something online that truly changed your perspective?
  5. Why do authentic voices often struggle against algorithms?
  6. How much of your online experience is controlled by recommendation systems?
  7. What role does creativity play during difficult times?
  8. Do you think social media connects people or isolates them more?
  9. Why do independent creators continue creating despite challenges?
  10. What kind of digital world do you hope future generations inherit?


#Blogging #ThankYou #2MillionViews #Blogger #Photography #WritersLife #IndependentMedia #Zipolita #CreativeLife #SocialMedia #ArtAndActivism #Gratitude



When a Tank of Gas Costs More Than Groceries

 ⛽ When a Tank of Gas Costs More Than Groceries

And Why So Many People Feel Like Modern Life Is Breaking Down

By Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita ✌️

The other day I realized something shocking.

I stopped driving regularly about 25 years ago, so somewhere in my brain, gas still costs:

  • around 60 cents a litre
  • or maybe $2.50 a gallon

Then I looked at today’s prices in Vancouver.

๐Ÿ’€ Around $2.15 a litre.
๐Ÿ’€ Over $8 a gallon.

I nearly fell off my chair.

Not because I didn’t know prices were high… but because I suddenly understood just HOW much daily life has changed.

Remember When $20 Meant Something? ๐Ÿš—

Years ago:

  • $20 could get you pretty far
  • maybe even fill a smaller tank
  • and still leave money for coffee or groceries

Now?

$20 barely moves the gas gauge.

A regular tank of gas can now cost:

๐Ÿ’ธ $120–$150

That’s not “just gas money” anymore.

That’s:

  • groceries
  • a hydro bill
  • internet
  • medication
  • transit
  • cat food
  • a week of simple meals
  • or the difference between surviving and falling behind

The Real Problem Isn’t Just Gas ⛽

Gas prices are symbolic of something much bigger happening.

Everything basic is rising at the same time:

  • food
  • rent
  • utilities
  • insurance
  • repairs
  • transit
  • phone bills
  • internet
  • medication

Meanwhile many wages barely moved compared to the actual cost of living.

And for people on:

  • disability
  • pensions
  • social assistance
  • part-time work
  • gig work
  • unstable jobs

…it can feel impossible.

The Psychological Cost ๐Ÿ˜”

People talk about inflation like it’s just numbers on a chart.

But inflation changes behaviour.

People start asking:

  • “Can I afford to go out today?”
  • “Can I afford fresh vegetables?”
  • “Can I afford to visit family?”
  • “Can I afford to drive anywhere?”

And eventually:

  • people stop socializing
  • stop traveling
  • stop taking risks
  • stop helping others
  • stop dreaming

Not because they want to… …but because survival mode takes over.

Vancouver Feels Especially Intense ๐ŸŒง️

In Vancouver, even owning a car can feel like a luxury now:

  • gas
  • insurance
  • parking
  • repairs
  • bridge toll mentality
  • endless traffic

Sometimes people spend hundreds every month just to sit in congestion.

And then they’re too exhausted to enjoy life afterward.

So What Happens? ๐Ÿค”

More people:

  • bike
  • walk
  • take transit
  • stay home
  • avoid outings
  • avoid spending
  • or quietly disappear from public life altogether

You can feel it in society.

People are tired.

Not lazy.
Not weak.
Tired.

Maybe This Is Why So Many People Feel Anxious

Because deep down, many people know:

  • the math no longer works
  • the old “work hard and get ahead” system feels broken
  • and even basic stability now feels fragile

A tank of gas should not feel emotionally devastating.

But for many people now… it does.

Final Thought ✌️

When a tank of gas costs more than a week of groceries once did, people start questioning the direction society is heading.

And maybe we should.

Because a healthy society should not make ordinary people feel punished simply for:

  • eating
  • traveling
  • existing
  • or trying to participate in daily life.

Reflective Questions ๐Ÿค”

  1. When did you first notice prices becoming overwhelming?
  2. Has inflation changed how often you leave the house?
  3. What daily activity now feels like a luxury?
  4. Do you think wages kept up with real living costs?
  5. How has transportation changed in your city?
  6. Have rising costs affected your mental health?
  7. What sacrifices do people quietly make now?
  8. Do politicians truly understand daily financial stress?
  9. What would make life feel affordable again?
  10. What kind of future are we creating if basic survival keeps getting harder?

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#Inflation #GasPrices #CostOfLiving #Vancouver #AffordabilityCrisis #FoodPrices #EconomicStress #ModernLife #SocialJustice #Zipolita