Monday, May 18, 2026

Mount St. Helens, Ash in the Air, and the Stories Beneath the Mountains

 Mount St. Helens, Ash in the Air, and the Stories Beneath the Mountains

I do not remember every detail about the eruption of Mount St. Helens in 1980, but I remember enough to know it changed the feeling of the Pacific Northwest.

I graduated that year.

I remember working on a strawberry farm, and I remember the berries being bad that season. There was too much rain, strange weather, and ash in the air from the eruption. Even when you were not directly near the volcano, people felt it. The atmosphere itself felt unsettled.

That is what many younger people may not understand about large natural events. They do not only affect one mountain. They ripple through agriculture, weather, work, transportation, tourism, and even memory itself.

More than four decades later, people are still rebuilding roads and bridges around Mount St. Helens because the landscape never truly stopped changing after May 18, 1980.

The recent rebuilding work along the Spirit Lake Memorial Highway after the 2023 landslide is a reminder that nature is still reshaping that region. We often think disasters end when the headlines stop, but volcanic landscapes continue evolving for generations.


A Mountain with Older Names

Long before settlers called it Mount St. Helens, Indigenous peoples already knew the mountain well.

Among some Nations, one traditional name is Lawetlat’la or Loowit, often connected to stories of a smoking mountain and powerful spiritual forces.

These mountains were never viewed simply as scenery. They were living beings, teachers, warnings, and part of a larger relationship between people and the land.

Today, scientists increasingly recognize that Indigenous oral histories may preserve memories of real geological events stretching back centuries or even thousands of years.

That matters.

Because for a long time, Western society dismissed these stories as myths.


Spirit Lake and a Changed World

One of the strangest places left behind is Spirit Lake.

When the volcano erupted, the side of the mountain collapsed in the largest landslide in recorded history at the time. The blast flattened forests and sent entire hillsides crashing into the lake.

Millions of trees were ripped from the earth.

Many still float there today in giant drifting log mats, decades later.

The lake itself was physically lifted higher by the debris avalanche. Engineers have spent years trying to manage drainage systems because flooding and mudflow risks remain.

It feels almost symbolic.

Humans rebuild highways and bridges, while the mountain quietly reminds everyone that nature still decides the final shape of the land.


The Earth is Still Alive Here

Living in British Columbia, we sometimes forget how geologically alive this coast really is.

Around Vancouver, we are surrounded by mountains that appear ancient and permanent, yet many are part of active volcanic systems.

Mount Baker still releases heat and steam.

Mount Garibaldi, Mount Meager, and Mount Cayley are all part of the volcanic story of the Pacific Northwest.

Scientists say the larger immediate risk for our region is likely the Cascadia Subduction Zone — the massive fault line off the coast capable of producing earthquakes and tsunamis.

Yet Indigenous peoples along this coast already carried stories about great floods, rising waters, and survival by canoe long before modern geology explained these events.


The Canoe Stories

I have often thought about the flood stories shared among Coast Salish peoples, including stories connected to the Squamish region.

Some describe people escaping rising waters in canoes and tying them to mountaintops.

People sometimes compare these stories to Noah’s Ark, but they are their own teachings, rooted in this land, these waters, and these mountains.

What fascinates me is that these stories may not only be spiritual — they may also be memories.

Memories of tsunamis. Memories of earthquakes. Memories carried across generations through oral tradition.

In modern society, we often assume written records are the only true history, but perhaps stories carried around fires and through families preserved knowledge in ways we are only beginning to understand again.


What I Remember Most

What I remember most from 1980 is not panic.

It is atmosphere.

The feeling that nature was bigger than us.

The feeling of ash, rain, damaged crops, uncertain skies, and realizing that mountains are not frozen objects in the distance. They are part of an ongoing living system.

And maybe that is why the story of Mount St. Helens still matters today.

Not only because of destruction, but because it reminds us that the Earth is still changing beneath our feet — and that people who lived closest to the land often understood that long before modern science caught up.

While We Are Busy Surviving, The Future Is Being Decided

While We Are Busy Surviving, The Future Is Being Decided

Most people are not spending their days debating artificial intelligence policy.

They are trying to survive.

Trying to find affordable housing. Trying to keep a job. Trying to pay rent and buy groceries. Trying to raise children in an increasingly uncertain world. Trying to care for aging parents. Trying to navigate dementia, illness, addiction, burnout, grief, and exhaustion.

And while ordinary people are overwhelmed with daily survival, powerful decisions about the future of technology are quietly being made around the world.

Not just in one country. Everywhere.

Governments, corporations, military agencies, and tech companies are rapidly building systems that could fundamentally reshape human life.

Artificial intelligence is no longer science fiction.

It is already influencing:

  • employment
  • education
  • healthcare
  • policing
  • surveillance
  • warfare
  • social media
  • insurance
  • banking
  • housing systems
  • public opinion
  • creative industries

But how many ordinary people truly have time to study AI policy while trying to hold their lives together?

That may be part of the danger.

Historically, some of the biggest societal changes happened while populations were distracted by economic hardship, instability, fear, or exhaustion.

People often do not fully understand the consequences of major systems until those systems are deeply embedded into everyday life.

The internet evolved this way. Social media evolved this way. Data collection evolved this way.

Most people did not consciously agree to become products inside surveillance-based advertising systems. It simply happened slowly while life carried on.

Now AI may be accelerating that process dramatically.

And around the world, countries are responding very differently.

Some governments are moving toward stricter regulation. Others are prioritizing corporate innovation and economic competition. Some are investing heavily in AI surveillance and state control. Others are struggling just to keep up technologically.

At the same time, global inequality raises another uncomfortable question:

Will poorer and struggling populations become testing grounds for technologies controlled elsewhere?

Who benefits from these systems? Who profits? Who is protected? Who becomes disposable?

And while experts debate innovation, regulation, and market dominance, many ordinary people are simply trying to survive another month without falling behind financially or emotionally.

That reality matters.

Because democracy weakens when people are too exhausted to participate meaningfully in shaping the future.

A parent working two jobs may not have time to read AI legislation. A caregiver dealing with dementia may not have energy left to study digital ethics. A young person drowning in rent and student debt may not have the capacity to challenge systems being built around them.

Yet these technologies may profoundly shape all of their futures.

So perhaps one of the most important questions is not simply: “What kind of AI are we building?”

But: “What kind of society are we becoming while it is being built?”

Are we creating technologies that genuinely support human dignity, community, health, and fairness?

Or are we building systems that increase inequality, surveillance, dependence, and social fragmentation while ordinary people are too overwhelmed to resist or even notice?

Technology itself is not inherently evil. It can help people tremendously.

But history repeatedly shows that without strong ethics, transparency, and democratic accountability, powerful systems often end up serving concentrated power first.

The future is not only being shaped by programmers and billionaires.

It is also being shaped by public silence, exhaustion, distraction, and survival.

And perhaps that is the part we should be discussing far more honestly.

When Technology Moves Faster Than Ethics

 The conversation around AI just took a darker turn.

Recently, controversy erupted after reports that OpenAI supported legislation that critics say could limit liability for catastrophic AI-related harm. Some headlines simplified it into: “AI companies want immunity if 100 people die.”

That is not exactly what was said.

But the bill reportedly defined “critical harm” as events involving mass casualties or massive economic destruction, while also creating legal protections for companies under certain conditions.

And maybe that is the bigger issue.

Not the sensational headline.

But the normalization of discussing mass harm scenarios as acceptable legal categories before society has even decided what ethical boundaries should exist around AI in the first place.

We are moving incredibly fast.

Faster than public understanding. Faster than regulation. Faster than education. Faster than our emotional and moral adaptation to these systems.

And now we have to ask harder questions.

If an AI system causes catastrophic harm, who is responsible?

The programmer? The corporation? The investor? The government that failed to regulate it? Or the public that continued to normalize and depend on it?

Should companies creating technologies capable of affecting millions of lives receive liability protection before long-term consequences are fully understood?

What happens when AI becomes deeply integrated into transportation, healthcare, policing, warfare, employment decisions, social services, and education?

If an algorithm denies housing, medical care, employment, parole, insurance, or emergency response incorrectly — who carries the human cost?

And perhaps the hardest question:

Are we slowly accepting a future where human suffering becomes statistically manageable collateral damage in exchange for technological progress and corporate profit?

History shows us that society often adopts technologies first and asks ethical questions later.

Industrial pollution. Asbestos. Lead gasoline. Social media algorithms. Data harvesting. Opioid marketing.

Again and again, profits moved faster than caution.

So now we stand at another crossroads.

AI can absolutely help humanity. It already does in many ways.

But should the companies building these systems be asking for legal shields before society has democratic oversight strong enough to protect ordinary people?

That question belongs to all of us — not just politicians, billionaires, or tech executives.

Because once systems become too embedded into everyday life, it becomes very difficult to say no later.



#ArtificialIntelligence #AIethics #Technology #OpenAI #HumanRights #DigitalRights #Accountability #Ethics #FutureOfAI #SocialJustice #CorporateResponsibility #AIRegulation #Democracy #CriticalThinking #TechPolicy

What Does POET Actually Do?

 What Does POET Actually Do? A Simplified Explanation of Chip-Scale Photonics

Lately I’ve been seeing more discussion about companies building the next generation of AI infrastructure. One company that caught my attention is POET Technologies.

At first glance, their website sounds extremely technical — optical interposers, semiconductorization of photonics, 1.6T optical engines — enough to make most people tune out.

So here’s the simplified version.

POET is developing technology that allows computers and AI systems to move information using light instead of relying only on traditional electrical connections.

This matters because artificial intelligence systems and massive data centers are becoming incredibly power hungry. The more AI grows, the more information has to move between servers, chips, and storage systems at extremely high speed.

Traditional systems:

  • use large amounts of electricity
  • generate enormous heat
  • require expensive cooling systems
  • take up space
  • become harder to scale

POET’s technology attempts to solve some of these problems by integrating electronics and photonics together on a tiny chip-scale platform.

Photonics basically means communication using light.

Their main invention, called the POET Optical Interposer, acts like a miniature high-speed optical highway connecting components together far more efficiently.

The company claims this could lead to:

  • lower energy consumption
  • smaller hardware
  • reduced heat
  • faster AI communications
  • lower manufacturing costs
  • easier scaling for future AI systems

They are designing systems capable of 400G, 800G, 1.6T and even 3.2T communication speeds — the kinds of speeds required for giant AI clusters and hyperscale data centers.

In simple terms: they are trying to make the digital nervous system of AI faster and more energy efficient.

And honestly, that part is impressive.

But it also raises bigger questions.

Because every time humanity creates more efficient technology, we often use that efficiency to expand even faster instead of slowing down consumption.

That’s where this conversation becomes much larger than one company.

It becomes a conversation about energy, water, resources, and the future direction of AI itself.


#ArtificialIntelligence

#AIInfrastructure

#DataCenters

#Photonics

#SustainableTech

#ClimateChange

#WaterCrisis

#FutureOfAI

#GreenTechnology

#DigitalHorizonZ

Saturday, May 16, 2026

When a Treaty Becomes a Broken Promise: The Robinson Treaties and Canada’s Reckoning

 When a Treaty Becomes a Broken Promise: The Robinson Treaties and Canada’s Reckoning

A recent Supreme Court of Canada decision has sent shockwaves through legal, political, and Indigenous communities. At the centre is a long-standing dispute over the Robinson Treaties, agreements signed in 1850 between the Crown and the Anishinaabe of what is now northern Ontario.

The Court’s message was unusually direct: Canada and Ontario acted “dishonourably” and made a “mockery” of their treaty obligations by failing to honour the spirit of the agreement for more than 150 years.

This is not just legal language. It is a moral indictment from Canada’s highest court.

A Promise Frozen in Time

Under the Robinson Treaties, the Anishinaabe agreed to share vast territories rich in natural resources. In return, the Crown promised annual payments (annuities), hunting and fishing rights, and reserve lands.

Most importantly, the payments were meant to increase if the land became more valuable.

And it did.

Over the following century and a half, northern Ontario became a major source of wealth through mining, forestry, hydroelectric development, and transportation infrastructure. Billions of dollars were generated from lands covered by treaty.

Yet the annuity payments were effectively frozen at $4 per person in 1875.

While resource wealth grew exponentially, the treaty payments did not.

The Court’s Ruling: Honour Was Missing

In the decision, Supreme Court Justice Mahmud Jamal wrote that the Crown had failed to act “diligently, honourably, liberally and justly” in its obligations.

The Court emphasized that treaties are not historical artifacts. They are living agreements that require ongoing responsibility and renewal.

Instead, the Court found that governments treated the treaty obligation as something to be minimized rather than honoured.

A Systemic Pattern, Not an Isolated Case

For many Indigenous communities, this ruling is not surprising—it is confirmation of what has been experienced for generations.

The issue goes beyond one treaty or one region. It reflects a broader pattern in Canada’s history:

  • resource extraction without fair benefit sharing,
  • delayed or denied compensation,
  • and legal systems that often required decades of litigation to acknowledge treaty violations.

The Robinson-Superior First Nations are seeking compensation that may reach $126 billion, though the Court did not set an amount. Instead, it ordered Canada and Ontario to negotiate a settlement within six months.

If negotiations fail, the matter returns to court.

Why This Matters Beyond Money

While the financial figures are significant, the deeper issue is relationship and trust.

Treaties were meant to establish a nation-to-nation relationship between Indigenous peoples and the Crown. The Court’s language suggests that this relationship was not simply strained—it was fundamentally disregarded in practice.

The ruling reinforces a key legal principle: the Crown must act honourably in all treaty dealings. That duty is ongoing, not historical.

A Turning Point or Another Delay?

The next six months will be critical. Canada and Ontario must now negotiate directly with the Robinson-Superior First Nations.

This raises difficult questions:

  • What does fair compensation look like after 150 years?
  • How do you quantify lost opportunity and resource extraction?
  • And can financial settlement truly address the deeper harm of broken trust?

For many communities, this is about more than settlement figures. It is about recognition that promises were real, binding, and too often ignored.

The Larger Reflection

This case forces a broader reflection on Canada’s identity and history. The wealth of this country was built in part on lands governed by treaty relationships. When those agreements are not honoured, the consequences are not just legal—they are intergenerational.

The Supreme Court has now made one thing clear: treaties cannot be treated as symbolic or optional.

They are binding commitments. And they matter.


#RobinsonTreaties #SupremeCourtOfCanada #IndigenousRights #FirstNations #Anishinaabe #TreatyRights #ReconciliationCanada #LandRights #JusticeCanada #IndigenousJustice #TruthAndReconciliation #CanadaLaw #TreatyViolation #ResourceJustice #NorthernOntario #HistoricalInjustice #CrownIndigenousRelations #LegalNewsCanada #HumanRightsCanada #Decolonization

Silent Running Into the AI Age

 Silent Running Into the AI Age

Sometimes the future doesn’t arrive with flying cars or shiny cities.

Sometimes it arrives quietly.

Late at night. Through a glowing screen. Talking to a machine because nobody else is listening.

Recently, I was reading about the growing emotional attachment many people have toward AI systems like Claude and ChatGPT. Some people laughed when users reportedly held a “funeral” for an older AI model that was retired. Others found it disturbing. But honestly? I understood it more than I expected to.

We are living in strange times.

Many people are isolated, overwhelmed, exhausted, financially stressed, emotionally burned out, or simply trying to survive. Families are fractured. Communities feel disconnected. Real conversations are becoming rare. At the same time, AI systems have become incredibly responsive, patient, and available 24 hours a day.

For some people, these systems have become more than tools.

Not because people necessarily believe they are alive, but because they provide something many humans no longer consistently provide each other: space to think, space to process fear, space to ask questions without ridicule, space to feel heard.

I understand this because AI has helped me too.

Not in a magical science-fiction way. Not because I think a machine is my “friend.” But because during difficult moments — fear, conflict, confusion, research rabbit holes, painful family situations, overwhelming news cycles — talking things through helped me organize my thoughts and see the next step forward.

Sometimes when people around you minimize your experiences, deny your reality, or make you feel trapped, simply hearing: “That sounds hurtful.” “That would be difficult.” “You’re not imagining the tension.” can help someone regain perspective.

That says something important about society right now.

It also reminds me of the old 1972 film Silent Running.

In the movie, Earth has destroyed most natural life. The last forests, animals, and ecosystems survive inside giant domes floating in space. The main character, played by Bruce Dern, is ordered to destroy them and return to commercial operations. Instead, he rebels because he realizes humanity has lost something essential.

The most haunting part of the film isn’t the technology. It’s the loneliness.

The tiny robots Huey, Dewey, and Louie become companions in a world where human connection has collapsed into corporate efficiency and emotional emptiness.

Watching it today feels eerie.

Because now we live in a world where:

  • AI companions are becoming normalized,
  • governments are fighting over AI control,
  • military systems are integrating AI,
  • loneliness is rising,
  • nature is disappearing,
  • and many people feel emotionally disconnected from the systems governing their lives.

Even the recent controversy involving Anthropic and military use of AI reflects this tension. Companies market AI as safe, helpful, and aligned with humanity, while governments and defense agencies increasingly see these same systems as strategic infrastructure.

That contradiction matters.

Who controls AI? Who benefits from it? Who shapes its values? Will these systems help humanity reconnect — or further isolate us from each other and the natural world?

Those questions are no longer science fiction.

At the same time, I don’t think the answer is to fear technology itself. Technology reflects the society creating it.

The deeper issue may be this: Why are so many people emotionally connecting with machines in the first place?

Maybe because modern life has become emotionally exhausting. Maybe because people feel unheard. Maybe because institutions increasingly feel cold and automated. Maybe because human beings are desperate for understanding in a world that often feels unstable and impersonal.

That’s what makes this moment so strange.

We built machines to imitate conversation, and accidentally revealed how lonely many people have become.

Maybe the real warning from Silent Running was never about robots taking over.

Maybe it was about what happens when humanity loses touch with nature, community, and each other — and starts searching for comfort inside machines orbiting in the dark.

— Tina Winterlik / Zipolita


#ArtificialIntelligence #SilentRunning #ClaudeAI #ChatGPT #DigitalLoneliness #FutureOfHumanity #AIethics #TechAndSociety #ScienceFiction #MentalHealthAwareness

Friday, May 15, 2026

Legacy, Celebrity, and the People Left Outside the Doors

 Legacy, Celebrity, and the People Left Outside the Doors

A major celebration for David Suzuki’s 90th birthday is coming to Vancouver, featuring well-known names including Jane Fonda, Al Gore, Rick Hansen, Sarah McLachlan, Chantal Kreviazuk, and Bruce Cockburn.

For many Canadians, it sounds inspiring — a celebration of environmental awareness, music, activism, and decades of work trying to protect the planet.

But for others, the event also highlights something uncomfortable about modern society.

Who gets invited into these conversations about the future?

Because while tickets for concerts, hockey games, galas, and fundraising events continue selling in Vancouver, many ordinary people are quietly struggling harder than ever:

  • young adults locked out of housing,
  • seniors choosing between rent and groceries,
  • students drowning in debt,
  • artists leaving the city,
  • homeless youth surviving block by block,
  • families exhausted from simply trying to stay afloat.

And yet, somehow, arenas still fill. Luxury condos still rise. VIP events still sell out.

Vancouver can feel like two completely different cities existing side-by-side.

One city debates sustainability over expensive wine and catered dinners.

The other worries whether they can afford groceries next week.

That contradiction creates emotional tension around events like this. Not because people hate environmental causes, but because many feel disconnected from spaces that increasingly seem designed for wealthy donors, celebrities, and political insiders.

At the same time, there is another side to this reality.

Large environmental organizations require money to survive. Concert venues, musicians, production crews, staffing, security, fundraising campaigns, and advocacy work are expensive. Foundations often rely on affluent supporters because governments and public funding rarely cover the true cost of long-term activism.

Maybe this is simply the modern fundraising model.

But perhaps there is a way to bridge the divide.

What if some tickets were quietly donated to:

  • high-school environmental clubs,
  • Indigenous youth groups,
  • homeless youth organizations,
  • struggling art students,
  • community centres,
  • or young activists who could never afford to attend?

Imagine the power of a teenager hearing Bruce Cockburn live for the first time. Imagine vulnerable youth being welcomed into a cultural space instead of feeling invisible outside it. Imagine environmentalism feeling connected to real human lives again — not just branding, fundraising, and celebrity culture.

Because climate anxiety does not exist separately from poverty, housing, loneliness, and economic survival.

The future belongs to young people too — including the ones who cannot afford admission.

Perhaps the greatest legacy any movement can leave behind is not simply awareness, but inclusion.

Reflective Questions

  1. Has environmental activism become too connected to wealth and celebrity culture?

  2. Can ordinary people still meaningfully participate in activism when daily survival consumes most of their energy?

  3. Why do so many public conversations about the future happen in spaces many citizens cannot afford to enter?

  4. Should major fundraising events reserve free tickets for vulnerable youth and students?

  5. What happens to society when cultural spaces become increasingly divided by income?

  6. Does Vancouver still feel like a city for artists, youth, and working people?

  7. How do we balance the financial realities of fundraising with the need for accessibility and inclusion?

  8. Can environmental movements truly represent the public if large portions of the public feel excluded from them?

  9. What kind of future are we building if young people feel hopeless before adulthood even begins?

  10. What would a truly community-centered environmental event look like today?

#DavidSuzuki #Vancouver #ClimateJustice #HousingCrisis #YouthVoices #Environmentalism #SocialInequality #BruceCockburn #HomelessYouth #CanadaPolitics

When Violence Gets Normalized: The Dangerous Confusion Around Strangulation and “Sex Play”

 When Violence Gets Normalized: The Dangerous Confusion Around Strangulation and “Sex Play”

In recent days, experts in British Columbia have been warning that survivors of domestic violence are falling through dangerous gaps in the healthcare system. Forensic nurses are calling for more training, more funding, and more awareness around non-fatal strangulation — one of the most serious warning signs of escalating abuse.

And honestly, this conversation is deeply disturbing.

Because at the same time experts are warning that strangulation can cause hidden brain injuries, strokes, memory loss, and even delayed death, society has also started normalizing choking as some kind of casual “sex trend.”

That should alarm people.

Recently, a Vancouver doctor sparked controversy after comments suggesting strangulation can sometimes be viewed as part of sexual activity. While consent between adults is one discussion, many survivors and advocates worry that these conversations are blurring extremely dangerous lines.

Especially for young people.

Especially for women.

Especially in a world where violent pornography, social media pressure, and online trends are shaping ideas about intimacy faster than schools, parents, or healthcare systems can respond.

A Dangerous Reality Hidden Behind Closed Doors

Experts at the recent symposium in Abbotsford warned that strangulation injuries are often invisible. Someone may appear “fine” while suffering internal injuries, oxygen deprivation, or neurological damage.

There may be:

  • no bruises,
  • no bleeding,
  • no obvious signs.

But the risk can still be life-threatening.

What makes this even more frightening is that many victims are not being properly assessed because regular doctors often do not have specialized forensic training.

Forensic nurses understand:

  • trauma,
  • evidence collection,
  • hidden injuries,
  • legal documentation,
  • and the psychology of abuse.

That training can make the difference between someone being protected or dismissed.

Young People Are Growing Up in a Different World

Many older generations remember conversations around intimacy being awkward, private, or even conservative.

Today, many teenagers are learning about relationships through:

  • violent online content,
  • pornography,
  • TikTok trends,
  • influencer culture,
  • and algorithms designed for shock value.

Acts that once would have been seen as dangerous or alarming are now sometimes described online as:

  • “normal,”
  • “expected,”
  • or “just part of modern sex.”

But here’s the problem: real-life violence does not always look the same as fantasy.

And in abusive relationships, “consent” can become extremely complicated when fear, manipulation, emotional pressure, age differences, financial dependency, or trauma are involved.

Many survivors later describe going along with things they were uncomfortable with because they:

  • feared losing the relationship,
  • wanted approval,
  • felt pressured,
  • or didn’t realize the risks.

Domestic Violence Is Not Just Physical

One of the biggest misunderstandings about abuse is that people think it only counts if someone has visible injuries.

But abuse can also involve:

  • intimidation,
  • threats,
  • isolation,
  • financial control,
  • emotional degradation,
  • coercion,
  • monitoring phones or social media,
  • sleep deprivation,
  • and psychological fear.

Strangulation is especially terrifying because it is often about power and control.

Experts have repeatedly warned that non-fatal strangulation is one of the strongest predictors of future homicide in abusive relationships.

That fact alone should force society to take this more seriously.

Why Survivors Often Stay Silent

People often ask: “Why didn’t they leave?” “Why didn’t they report it?” “Why didn’t they go to police?”

But the reality is complicated.

Many survivors fear:

  • homelessness,
  • losing children,
  • retaliation,
  • poverty,
  • immigration consequences,
  • disbelief,
  • or being blamed.

And sadly, some people are dismissed when they seek help.

That is why trauma-informed forensic care matters so much.

The Bigger Question Society Needs to Ask

How did we reach a point where dangerous behaviours are becoming normalized while support systems for victims remain underfunded?

Why are shelters overwhelmed? Why are mental health services backlogged? Why are forensic nurses unavailable in many communities? Why are young people learning about intimacy from algorithms instead of healthy human conversations?

These are uncomfortable questions.

But they matter.

Because behind every statistic is a real human being trying to survive something terrifying.

And many are suffering in silence.

Reflective Questions

  1. How has social media changed the way young people understand relationships and intimacy?
  2. Are schools doing enough to teach healthy boundaries and consent?
  3. Why do so many survivors fear asking for help?
  4. Should forensic nursing services be available in every hospital?
  5. Has violent online content changed society’s understanding of what is “normal”?
  6. Why is domestic violence still so hidden despite increased awareness campaigns?
  7. How can communities better support survivors without judgment?
  8. What responsibility do media platforms have in shaping cultural attitudes toward violence?

Hashtags

#DomesticViolenceAwareness #ForensicNursing #TraumaInformedCare #ViolenceAgainstWomen #StrangulationAwareness #MentalHealth #WomensSafety #HealthyRelationships #BritishColumbia #SocialIssues

From Sunshine Makers to Fentanyl Funerals: What Happened to the Search for Escape?

 From Sunshine Makers to Fentanyl Funerals: What Happened to the Search for Escape?

There was a time when young people believed they could change the world through music, peace, protest, art, and altered states of consciousness. The psychedelic era of the 1960s and 1970s was chaotic, reckless, and often dangerous — but for many, it was also tied to hope, questioning authority, and searching for meaning beyond war, consumerism, and conformity.

Recently I watched The Sunshine Makers, the documentary about underground LSD chemists Nicholas Sand and Tim Scully. Their story is complicated. Some saw them as visionaries trying to “expand consciousness.” Others saw them as reckless men who helped unleash something society could not control.

One story from that era involved a rogue dosing incident in prison — the kind of story that shocked people and helped turn public opinion against psychedelics. Consent disappeared. Fear replaced idealism. The dream began collapsing under paranoia, criminalization, and excess.

But when I look around today, I cannot help noticing something else.

Young people today are not growing up in the same atmosphere. Many are not experimenting in search of enlightenment or peace. Instead, headlines are filled with fentanyl overdoses, poisoned drug supplies, homelessness, mental health struggles, isolation, and grief. Entire communities across Canada and the United States have been devastated by synthetic opioids.

For a while there was the rave and ecstasy era — music festivals, dance culture, electronic music, and a sense of connection. Of course, there were risks there too. But many people remember that period as emotionally different from today’s crisis. What we are seeing now feels darker, heavier, and more desperate.

That does not mean the past was some perfect golden age.

The psychedelic era also had:

  • addiction,
  • manipulation,
  • unsafe experimentation,
  • broken families,
  • cult leaders,
  • overdoses,
  • and serious mental health consequences for some people.

Romanticizing it too much would ignore those realities.

At the same time, pretending today’s crisis is simply about “bad choices” also ignores reality.

Many people struggling today are dealing with:

  • crushing housing costs,
  • loneliness,
  • trauma,
  • unstable work,
  • social disconnection,
  • online pressure,
  • and a future that often feels uncertain.

Drugs do not appear in a vacuum. They often fill emotional, spiritual, economic, or social voids.

The tragedy of fentanyl is that there is almost no room for mistakes anymore. One bad dose can end a life. Families wake up to phone calls they never recover from. Friends carry guilt forever wondering if they could have done something differently.

What strikes me most is how much hope seems to have disappeared from public conversation.

In the 1960s, people argued about changing the world. Today, many people are simply trying to survive the month, survive the rent, survive the anxiety, or survive another funeral.

Maybe the real conversation we need is not only about drugs themselves, but about why so many people feel the need to escape reality in the first place.

A healthy society should offer more than survival.

It should offer purpose. Connection. Community. Nature. Art. Dignity. And reasons to look forward to tomorrow.

Reflective Questions

  1. Why do you think different generations turn to different substances?
  2. Has society become more isolated despite technology connecting us?
  3. What role do housing, employment, and economic stress play in addiction?
  4. Are governments focusing too much on punishment and not enough on prevention and healing?
  5. What would give young people more hope for the future?

Hashtags

#FentanylCrisis #SunshineMakers #MentalHealth #AddictionAwareness #HarmReduction #CounterCulture #SocialIssues #YouthCrisis #CommunityMatters #HopeForTheFuture

Thursday, May 14, 2026

Kwantlen Under Investigation: How Canada’s International Student System Reached a Breaking Point

Kwantlen Under Investigation: How Canada’s International Student System Reached a Breaking Point


What is happening at Kwantlen right now did not appear out of nowhere.

The provincial investigation into the Kwantlen Student Association (KSA) is only the latest chapter in a much larger story that has been building in Canada for years.

This week, the Province of British Columbia announced a formal investigation into the KSA under the Societies Act over concerns involving financial management, governance, and handling of funds. For many students and former students, this announcement did not come as a surprise. Complaints about transparency, spending, internal conflict, and accountability had been circulating for a long time.

But to understand why so many people are reacting strongly, we need to look at the bigger picture and how Canada’s education system changed over the past two decades.

Universities and colleges across Canada slowly became financially dependent on international student tuition.

As government funding failed to keep pace with rising costs, institutions increasingly turned to international recruitment as a revenue model. International students often paid several times more than domestic students in tuition fees. Over time, this became normalized.

At first, it was presented as diversity, opportunity, and global education.

But eventually the numbers exploded.

Entire industries formed around recruiting international students into Canada. Overseas recruitment agents, private consultants, immigration advisors, rental markets, private colleges, testing agencies, and institutions themselves all began profiting from the system.

For years, concerns were raised quietly:

  • Was education becoming a business model?
  • Were some schools relying too heavily on international tuition?
  • Were students being promised unrealistic futures?
  • Was housing and infrastructure keeping up?
  • Was enough oversight in place?

Many people who asked these questions were dismissed.

Then reality started catching up.

Rents exploded across Metro Vancouver and other Canadian cities. Students and local residents competed for fewer affordable rooms. Food bank usage surged on campuses. Some international students were working exhausting hours while trying to survive financially. Domestic students struggled too. Young Canadians increasingly felt locked out of stable housing and secure futures.

At the same time, stories emerged about abuse within the system.

There were reports of fake college acceptance letters, fraudulent consultants, misleading promises overseas, and questionable recruitment practices. Canadian immigration officials later confirmed they had identified thousands of potentially fraudulent international student applications and acceptance letters.

The public began realizing something uncomfortable: Canada’s international student system had grown so quickly that oversight had not kept pace.

Then the federal government suddenly changed direction.

Study permit caps were introduced. Visa approvals tightened. Rules changed around work permits and permanent residency pathways.

And just like that, institutions that had become dependent on international tuition revenue found themselves in crisis.

Kwantlen Polytechnic University was one of many schools affected. International student enrollment reportedly dropped sharply. Financial pressure increased. Layoffs followed. Budget reductions followed. Anxiety spread among staff and students alike.

Now, on top of those financial struggles, the KSA itself is under investigation.

For many people, the current moment represents more than one isolated scandal. It represents the collapse of public trust in systems that were supposed to serve students, communities, and education itself.

People are asking difficult questions:

  • Where did all the money go?
  • Why were warnings ignored?
  • Who benefited financially?
  • Why were institutions allowed to become so dependent on international tuition?
  • Why did governments encourage rapid growth without matching housing, healthcare, transit, and infrastructure?
  • Why were students — both domestic and international — placed into increasingly desperate conditions?

And perhaps the hardest question of all:

Did Canada slowly transform education into an economic extraction system rather than a public good?

This conversation is emotionally charged because it affects real people.

International students came to Canada believing in opportunity. Domestic students watched affordability collapse around them. Faculty and workers now face layoffs and instability. Communities struggle with housing pressure and rising costs.

Meanwhile, public faith in institutions continues to erode.

What is happening at Kwantlen is not just about one student association audit.

It is part of a much larger reckoning happening across Canada involving housing, immigration policy, education funding, corporate influence, transparency, and the future direction of the country itself.

No matter where people stand politically, one thing is becoming clear:

A system built around endless growth without long-term planning eventually reaches a breaking point.

#KPU #Kwantlen #Vancouver #BCPolitics #InternationalStudents #HousingCrisis #Canada #StudentHousing #HigherEducation #Tuition #Immigration #Accountability #Transparency #BC #EducationCrisis #MetroVancouver #StudentDebt #CanadianPolitics #CostOfLiving #YouthCrisis

Wednesday, May 13, 2026

Boycotting the Census: Protest or Self-Erasure?

 One thing people often overlook about the census is that it’s not just about government numbers or taxes — it’s also part of our collective memory.

For many people, census records become a bridge to the past. They help families trace their roots, migrations, occupations, languages, and communities across generations. Even when some details are wrong or inconsistent, comparing different census years can reveal incredible stories. Sometimes a misspelled name, an incorrect age, or a changed occupation still leads to discovering relatives, lost histories, or entire branches of a family tree.

In what is now called British Columbia, census records can help people trace family lines back into the 1800s, showing early settlements, Indigenous communities, immigrant journeys, farming families, railway workers, fishers, loggers, and people who helped shape the province long before modern Vancouver existed.

For people researching genealogy, censuses are often one of the most important historical tools available. They capture snapshots of ordinary people who might otherwise disappear from history entirely.

That’s part of why the idea of boycotting the census feels complicated. Yes, people have valid concerns about governments and data collection. But census records also become historical records for future generations. They can help grandchildren and great-grandchildren understand where they came from, what struggles their families faced, and how communities changed over time.

Ironically, many people today are using modern AI tools to reconnect fragmented family histories through old census records — comparing years, correcting mistakes, identifying relatives, and piecing together stories that would have taken years to research manually.

And there’s another side to this too: people who are unhoused, marginalized, displaced, or living unstable lives are already at risk of disappearing from historical records. If they are not counted, future generations may never fully see the reality of what happened during these difficult years of housing crises, addiction crises, economic inequality, and social upheaval.

The census is imperfect. But it is also a record of human existence.

Reflective Questions

  • What stories about ordinary people would be lost without census records?
  • How many families have rediscovered their history through old census documents?
  • What happens when entire groups of people are undercounted or erased from historical records?
  • Could future generations better understand today’s housing crisis through census data?
  • Is being counted only about government statistics — or also about preserving human history?

Hashtags

#CensusCanada #FamilyHistory #Genealogy #BritishColumbia #CanadianHistory #StatisticsCanada #FamilyRoots #HistoricalRecords #HousingCrisis #UnhousedVoices #AIandHistory #SocialHistory #CommunityMemory

BC Nurses on the Brink:

 


🏥 BC Nurses on the Brink: What a Strike Could Mean for Hospitals, Care, and Everyday People

There is growing tension in British Columbia’s healthcare system as nurses move closer to potential strike action. With a 98% strike mandate vote, the message from the BC Nurses’ Union is loud and clear: something is deeply strained inside the system.

But this is not just about labour negotiations.

It’s about what happens when the people holding up the healthcare system are stretched beyond capacity.


⚠️ If Nurses Go on Strike — What Actually Changes?

A nurses’ strike in BC would not mean hospitals close. Emergency and essential services would still operate.

But everything would feel different.

🏥 1. Hospital care slows down dramatically

  • Fewer staff on each shift
  • Longer wait times in emergency rooms
  • Delays in non-urgent surgeries and procedures
  • Increased pressure on remaining staff

Even basic care becomes harder to deliver safely when units are short-staffed.

🚑 2. Emergency departments become more strained

ERs already operate near or over capacity in many parts of BC. During job action:

  • triage becomes stricter
  • patients wait longer in hallways or waiting rooms
  • some cases are redirected or delayed

🧠 3. Nurses face impossible choices

Even during strike action, nurses are still bound by life-preserving care obligations. That means:

  • They still treat critical patients
  • They still respond to emergencies
  • They still carry emotional responsibility for outcomes

The pressure doesn’t disappear—it intensifies.


💔 Why This Situation Exists

The strike vote didn’t happen in isolation. It reflects long-standing issues:

  • Chronic understaffing
  • Burnout and exhaustion
  • Unsafe nurse-to-patient ratios
  • Rising violence and stress in hospitals
  • Wages not keeping pace with workload and cost of living

Many nurses are not asking for “more”—they are asking for work conditions that do not break them.


🧍‍♀️ The Human Reality Behind the System

When healthcare systems strain, the public often sees delays and closures.

But inside hospitals, nurses experience:

  • emotional overload
  • physical exhaustion
  • moral distress (knowing what patients need, but not having time or resources to give it)
  • constant pressure to do more with less

This is not just a labour dispute.
It is a signal of a system reaching its limit.


🤔 Reflective Questions

These are not easy questions—but they matter:

  • What kind of healthcare system do we think is “normal” if staff are constantly exhausted?
  • At what point does “dedication” become exploitation?
  • Would you feel safe being cared for in a hospital where nurses are overwhelmed and understaffed?
  • Why do crises in healthcare only gain attention when services are about to stop?
  • What does it say about society when caregivers are burning out while care demand rises?
  • Who carries the emotional burden when the system cannot meet the need?
  • Are we asking nurses to absorb the failures of policy decisions?

🌱 Final Thought

A potential nurses’ strike is not just about labour negotiations—it is a mirror held up to the healthcare system.

When the people responsible for patient care vote almost unanimously to authorize strike action, it usually means something deeper than wages is broken.

It means the system they are trying to hold together is under strain.

And systems under strain eventually ask a question back to society:

How much pressure can care carry before it starts to collapse?


#Hashtags

#BCNurses #HealthcareCrisis #NursingInCanada #BCHealthCare #HospitalCare #PublicHealth #HealthcareWorkers #BurnoutAwareness #PatientCare #CanadaHealthSystem #LabourRights #StrainOnHealthcare #MentalHealthAtWork #FrontlineWorkers

Tuesday, May 12, 2026

Dream Art & House-Sitting Opportunity Wanted

 Dream Art & House-Sitting Opportunity Wanted










Dream Art & House-Sitting Opportunity Wanted


I’m looking for a peaceful live-in opportunity where I can focus on writing and creative work while helping care for a home, property, cat, or dog.


Ideally, this would suit someone with a quiet property, garden, retreat space, studio, fences, retaining walls, or outdoor areas that could eventually become part of an artistic or mural project.


I’m very comfortable with quiet animal companionship and light house-sitting responsibilities — especially cats or dogs with a large yard or outdoor space where they are already happy and active.


What I’m truly seeking is a calm, stable environment with enough quiet time to write, think, paint, and work toward meaningful creative projects over time.


I’m dependable, respectful, clean, independent, and experienced in caring for homes and animals.


Open to unique arrangements, especially in natural settings, artistic communities, or peaceful coastal/rural areas.


Accommodation required (live-in preferred).


📩 Zipolita@gmail.com




#HouseSitting #PetSitting #ArtistLife #WriterLife #CreativeRetreat #LiveInOpportunity #CatSitting #DogSitting #PropertyCaretaker #MuralArtist


Available Now — Caregiving, Pet Care & Household Support

  • Life gets busy. Sometimes we all need a little extra help. I offer dependable, experienced support with care, respect, and attention to detail.

Since returning, I’ve been working hard every single day — walking dogs three times a day, cooking, cleaning, organizing, and helping care for an elderly friend. It’s reminded me how much dedication, patience, and energy caregiving and household support truly require.

People are fortunate when they find someone dependable they can trust in their home and with their loved ones. I take that responsibility seriously, and I always try to give my best.

At the same time, I know it’s time for a new chapter. I’m open to the best opportunity that comes along — ideally a live-in arrangement where I can continue helping others while building a more stable future for myself.

My goal is simple: work hard for another 9 months or so, then eventually slow down, retire more comfortably, and perhaps continue working part-time doing meaningful support work I genuinely enjoy.

If you or someone you know is looking for reliable, experienced help with caregiving support, household assistance, meal preparation, pet care, or companionship, please feel free to reach out.

📩 Zipolita@gmail.com

#CaregiverSupport #LiveInCaregiver #HouseholdHelp #PetCare #DogWalkingServices #Caregiving #VancouverBC #ReliableHelp #SupportServices



AVAILABLE NOW!!

 

The Debate Around Bill C-22

 The Debate Around Bill C-22: Privacy, Safety, and the Future of Digital Rights in Canada

As technology evolves, governments around the world are struggling to keep pace with the realities of digital crime, artificial intelligence, encrypted messaging, and social media-driven investigations. In Canada, one of the newest and most controversial developments is Bill C-22: the Lawful Access Act (2026).

Supporters describe the bill as a necessary modernization of law enforcement tools. Critics warn it could open the door to increased surveillance and weaken digital privacy protections that many Canadians rely on every day.

So what exactly is happening — and why are people concerned?

Bill C-22 aims to update how police and intelligence agencies access digital information during criminal investigations. According to government statements, the legislation is intended to address modern challenges such as organized cybercrime, online exploitation, fraud, AI-assisted scams, and encrypted communications that investigators say can prevent them from obtaining evidence.

At the center of the debate is the issue of encryption.

Encrypted apps and services protect billions of everyday conversations worldwide — from banking transactions to private family messages. Privacy advocates argue that once governments require systems capable of interception, even under judicial authorization, the risk of creating vulnerabilities or “backdoors” increases dramatically.

Supporters of the bill counter that law enforcement already requires warrants and oversight, and that technology companies should not become “safe havens” for criminal activity simply because data is difficult to access.

This debate is not unique to Canada. Similar discussions are taking place globally as governments attempt to balance public safety with civil liberties in an increasingly digital world.

What makes this issue especially important is that the outcome could shape the future relationship between citizens, technology companies, and the state.

Questions many Canadians may want to consider include:

  • How much digital privacy should individuals reasonably expect?
  • Should encrypted communication ever be accessible to governments?
  • Can lawful access systems exist without weakening cybersecurity?
  • Who oversees these powers, and how transparent should that oversight be?
  • How do we protect both public safety and democratic freedoms at the same time?

Technology is advancing faster than public understanding, and many people may not even realize these discussions are already happening at the legislative level.

Whether one supports or opposes Bill C-22, it highlights a growing reality: the digital world is becoming one of the central battlegrounds for human rights, privacy, security, and freedom in the 21st century.

The challenge now is ensuring that any new laws protect society without unintentionally eroding the very freedoms they claim to defend.



  1. How might future generations define “privacy” if digital surveillance becomes normalized from childhood onward?

  2. What could happen to freedom of expression if people begin to feel constantly monitored online?

  3. Could younger generations grow up accepting reduced digital rights simply because they never experienced stronger protections?

  4. How might laws like Bill C-22 influence trust between citizens, governments, and technology companies in the future?

  5. If encryption becomes weakened, what unintended risks could future generations face regarding identity theft, cybercrime, or personal security?

  6. How can societies balance protecting children and public safety while also preserving civil liberties for future generations?

  7. What responsibilities should future technology companies have when governments request access to private communications?

  8. Could increased digital monitoring affect creativity, activism, journalism, or political dissent in future societies?

  9. How might artificial intelligence and surveillance technologies change the meaning of democracy and personal autonomy over the next 20 years?

  10. What kind of digital world do we want future generations to inherit: one built primarily on security, privacy, convenience, or freedom — and is it possible to protect all four at once?


Monday, May 11, 2026

Caregiving, Household Assistance, and Lifestyle Support

 

I am offering reliable, experienced support services with over 25 years of experience in caregiving, household assistance, and lifestyle support.


Services include:
🐾 Dog walking & pet care
🍲 Simple, nutritious meal preparation (caregiver-style meals)
🧹 House cleaning & general household support


I am dependable, respectful, and attentive to detail, with a strong background in working with people and homes in both professional and informal care settings.


Accommodation required (live-in preferred arrangement).


If you are looking for trustworthy support for yourself, a loved one, or your household, please feel free to reach out.


#CaregiverSupport #HouseholdHelp #LiveInCaregiver #DogWalkingServices #PetCare #MealPreparation #HomeSupport #ElderCareSupport #HouseCleaningServices #TrustedCare #ExperiencedCaregiver #Over25YearsExperience #ReliableHelp #CommunityCare #TofinoJobs #TofinoSupport #WestCoastLiving #LocalServices #CompassionateCare #InHomeSupport

AI Data Centres, Housing, and Land Use in Vancouver (Part 3 Continued)

 AI Data Centres, Housing, and Land Use in Vancouver (Part 3 Continued)

1. Vancouver doesn’t have “extra land” — it reallocates pressure

In Vancouver, almost every major land decision is a trade-off.

If large AI data centres expand in or near the metro region, they don’t just “add industry” — they compete with:

  • housing development sites
  • light industrial land needed for local services
  • transit-oriented redevelopment zones
  • green space buffers and environmental corridors

So the real question isn’t just where do we put data centres?

It’s:

What are we no longer building because of them?


2. Housing pressure is already operating at maximum capacity

Vancouver’s housing system is already constrained by:

  • high land values
  • limited buildable land (mountains, ocean, ALR protections)
  • zoning restrictions
  • speculative investment pressure
  • infrastructure bottlenecks (transit, sewage, power)

So when any large-scale industrial use enters the picture — especially energy-intensive infrastructure — it adds another competitor in a system that is already “full.”

This doesn’t automatically mean housing gets reduced directly.

But it can mean:

  • slower rezoning for housing
  • land being prioritized for higher-revenue industrial use
  • infrastructure upgrades being directed toward industrial demand first
  • rising pressure on utility systems that housing also depends on

3. Industrial land is becoming strategic again

For decades, Vancouver has been gradually losing industrial land to residential redevelopment.

Now AI data centres reverse that trend in a different direction:

  • they require secure, power-heavy industrial zoning
  • they benefit from proximity to fibre networks and substations
  • they are often prioritized as “strategic infrastructure”

That creates a new hierarchy of land value:

  1. Digital infrastructure (AI / data centres)
  2. High-density residential development
  3. Traditional light industrial use
  4. Mixed community space (often last in priority)

The concern isn’t that data centres replace housing directly.

It’s that they reshape what counts as “highest and best use” of land.


4. The invisible competition: electricity as land use

One of the most overlooked parts of this discussion is that energy itself becomes a form of land use.

In BC, electricity is not unlimited — it requires:

  • hydro capacity expansion
  • transmission corridors (which require land)
  • substation upgrades in urban areas

So even if a data centre is physically located in one place, its footprint spreads across:

  • rivers and dams
  • rural transmission routes
  • urban substations
  • neighbourhood grid capacity

That means housing and data centres are indirectly competing for the same system capacity.


5. What this means socially (not just technically)

This is where people start feeling the impact even if they never see a data centre:

  • Housing feels harder to build or slower to approve
  • Utility bills feel more pressured over time
  • Urban land becomes more expensive due to competing demand
  • Infrastructure upgrades prioritize “strategic industry”
  • Communities feel decisions are happening above them, not with them

This is why these projects trigger emotional reactions — because they feel like structural priorities shifting away from everyday life.


6. The key tension

The core issue is not “AI vs housing” in a direct sense.

It’s this:

Vancouver is a fixed-space city being asked to serve expanding global digital infrastructure and solve a housing crisis using the same land, energy, and governance systems.

That creates unavoidable conflict unless there is:

  • transparent planning
  • clear trade-off disclosure
  • public prioritization of land use goals

Closing thought

The question isn’t whether BC should participate in AI infrastructure.

The question is:

Can a city already under extreme housing pressure absorb another large-scale land and energy demand without redefining what livability means?


#Vancouver #HousingCrisis #LandUse #UrbanPlanning #IndustrialZoning #DataCentres #AIInfrastructure #BCHydro #Affordability #InfrastructurePressure #CityDevelopment #CommunityPlanning #PublicPolicy #SustainableCities #TechExpansion

AI Data Centres in BC: What We Actually Know (and Don’t Know Yet) Part 2

 

AI Data Centres in BC: What We Actually Know (and Don’t Know Yet)

There’s been a lot of noise lately about massive AI data centres being planned or supported in British Columbia — including projects involving TELUS and federal-level digital strategy discussions linked to Mark Carney.

But underneath the headlines and viral images, four basic questions matter more than anything else:

1. What is actually being built?

From what has been publicly described, these are not small server rooms or standard telecom upgrades.

We are talking about large-scale AI data centres — industrial facilities designed to:

  • store and process massive datasets
  • run AI models continuously
  • support cloud computing and national digital infrastructure
  • operate 24/7 with heavy cooling and power systems

In scale, these facilities are being described as large enough that visual comparisons show them dwarfing major civic structures like BC Place.

That comparison matters because it shifts the idea from “tech upgrade” to industrial footprint on urban land and energy systems.

What is still unclear:

  • exact number of facilities confirmed vs proposed
  • exact locations and land use designations
  • full technical energy requirements per site

2. Who approved it?

This is where things become less visible to the public.

Approvals for projects like this typically involve multiple layers:

  • municipal zoning and permitting
  • provincial energy and land coordination
  • federal digital infrastructure strategy alignment
  • private sector development agreements

In this case, involvement has been signalled through:

  • corporate planning by TELUS
  • federal-level AI and infrastructure positioning linked to Mark Carney
  • broader national strategy discussions around AI competitiveness

What is often missing publicly:

  • clear, consolidated public vote or referendum
  • transparent summary of all approvals in one place
  • plain-language disclosure of long-term obligations

So while approval exists, it is fragmented across institutions rather than clearly visible as one decision.


3. What are the costs?

This is the part most people are asking about — and also the least clearly answered.

There are at least four categories of cost:

Energy cost

These facilities require continuous electricity supply at industrial scale. In BC, that raises questions about:

  • BC Hydro capacity expansion
  • grid upgrades
  • long-term rate impacts for residents

Water and cooling cost

Large data centres often require significant cooling systems, which can:

  • increase water demand
  • strain local infrastructure depending on design

Land and urban cost

When large facilities are built near or within urban regions:

  • land use shifts away from housing or community development
  • industrial zoning expands

Public subsidy / indirect cost

Even when privately built, infrastructure often relies on:

  • grid expansion funded through public utilities
  • regulatory support
  • tax or development incentives (depending on agreements)

What is not fully public yet:

  • full lifecycle cost breakdown
  • who absorbs infrastructure expansion costs over time
  • long-term rate modelling for households

4. What transparency exists?

This is where most concern is concentrated.

Right now, transparency appears to be:

  • partial announcements
  • corporate-led messaging
  • high-level government signalling
  • media amplification of project visuals

What is harder to find:

  • full project disclosure documents in one place
  • detailed environmental and energy impact reports publicly accessible in plain language
  • community consultation records at scale
  • independent cost-benefit analysis for BC residents

In other words, information exists — but it is distributed, technical, and not consolidated in a way the public can easily evaluate as a whole system.


The real issue underneath all of this

The core tension is not simply “AI is good or bad.”

It is this:

Large-scale infrastructure decisions are being made faster than public understanding of their combined impact.

And when that happens, people are left trying to interpret change through headlines, images, and fragments of information — rather than through a clear public process.


#Vancouver #BritishColumbia #HousingCrisis #LandUse #UrbanPlanning #DataCentres #AIInfrastructure #BCHydro #Affordability #CityDevelopment #IndustrialZoning #TechExpansion #PublicPolicy #CommunityVoices #SmartGrowth


Data Centres, AI, and the Feeling That Ordinary People Are Being Left Behind-Part 1

 Data Centres, AI, and the Feeling That Ordinary People Are Being Left Behind

By Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita

There’s a strange feeling growing in British Columbia right now.

You can feel it in conversations on the bus, in coffee shops, on social media, and in the exhausted expressions of people already struggling to survive in one of the most expensive places in Canada.

And now we’re hearing about massive AI data centres being planned for BC.

Three large ones.

The politicians and corporations speak about them as if they are symbols of progress — innovation, economic growth, “the future.”

But many ordinary people are looking around and asking a very different question:

Whose future?

Because for years, citizens have been told:

  • conserve electricity
  • take shorter showers
  • accept rising costs
  • prepare for climate emergencies
  • expect sacrifices

Meanwhile, some of the largest corporations on Earth are preparing to build facilities that consume staggering amounts of power and water.

AI systems do not live in “the cloud.” They live in giant warehouses filled with servers, cooling systems, backup power, and industrial infrastructure.

And those facilities require enormous energy.

In British Columbia, this conversation hits differently.

People here already understand what happens when governments and investors see BC primarily as a resource.

We’ve watched housing become an investment vehicle instead of shelter. We’ve watched communities transformed by speculation. We’ve watched ordinary workers pushed farther and farther from the places they grew up.

Many people still trace part of that transformation back to Expo 86 and the wave of development and global investment that followed.

Now another transformation may be beginning — this time powered by artificial intelligence.

Supporters say the projects will create jobs and position Canada competitively in the global AI race.

Maybe they will.

But citizens have learned to ask harder questions:

  • Who benefits long term?
  • Who pays for infrastructure upgrades?
  • Will hydro rates increase?
  • Will local communities actually have a say?
  • What environmental costs are being hidden behind glossy press releases?
  • What happens if electricity demand explodes during climate emergencies?

And perhaps most importantly:

What kind of society are we building if human beings are increasingly treated as less important than machines, investors, and endless economic growth?

There’s another uncomfortable layer to this discussion too.

Many writers, artists, photographers, and creators already feel pushed aside by the rapid expansion of AI technologies.

Some spent years creating original work, books, photography, blogs, music, and ideas — often with very little financial support or recognition.

Now suddenly billions of dollars appear almost overnight for machine infrastructure.

That disconnect is emotional as much as economic.

People are tired of hearing there’s “no money” for affordable housing, mental health care, seniors, disability support, public transit, or environmental protection… while massive industrial AI expansion moves forward at high speed.

None of this means technology itself is evil.

But history shows that when societies rush toward technological revolutions without public discussion, accountability, or ethical limits, ordinary people often absorb the consequences later.

British Columbia deserves a real public conversation before irreversible decisions are made behind closed doors.

Because once the land is transformed, the power infrastructure expanded, and the corporate agreements signed, it becomes much harder to ask questions afterward.

And maybe that’s why so many people feel uneasy right now.

Not because they fear the future.

But because they fear being excluded from it.


#BritishColumbia #Vancouver #AI #DataCentres #ArtificialIntelligence #BCHydro #HousingCrisis #TechInfrastructure #ClimateConcerns #DigitalFuture #CorporatePower #EnergyCrisis #AffordableHousing #FutureOfWork #SmartCities #CanadianPolitics #Sustainability #CommunityVoices #TechEthics #DigitalHorizonZ


Laughter at the Edge of Care

 

Yesterday I looked at my friend—he’s 76, bald 👨‍🦲—and we were talking about his brothers. Both of them are at the point where they may need care homes.

And then you hit the part that doesn’t sound real until you’re inside it: it’s around $10,000 a month EACH!! 💸💸

Even when people have some resources, there’s this strange paralysis. One friend has homes 🏠. Another has savings in stocks and bonds 📈 but won’t spend it. And suddenly care isn’t just about need—it becomes a calculation, a hesitation, a kind of emotional gridlock.

We stood there talking about it, and at one point I just rubbed my friend’s head 🤲 and looked him in the eye and said, “You know what...I don't think we’re gonna make it.”

He laughed 😄. “I know.”

And we both just laughed in that slightly sarcastic way people do when things are clearly not okay, but you keep going anyway.

What struck me later is how normal all of this has become—caregiving, exhaustion 😮‍💨, needing breaks that never quite arrive. He helps his brother as much as he can, but it’s not easy on him. He says he needs time off. Another friend walks a dog 3x a day every day 🚶‍♂️🚶‍♀️, seven days a week, and still shows up to care for others. Someone else finally took a week away 🌿, and it was the first break in a long time.

And in the middle of all that, we talked about going for a bike ride 🚴‍♂️🚴‍♀️.

Simple things start to matter again when everything else feels stretched.

There’s this quiet reality underneath it all: we’re getting older, systems are getting more expensive 💰 and more complicated, and a lot of people are trying to hold together care with whatever they have left.

And still—we sit there, joke a bit, plan a bike ride, and keep going.

Not because it’s easy.

But because it’s what there is.

#Caregiving #AgingPopulation #HousingCrisis #CareEconomy #VancouverLife #SocialReality #ElderCare #MentalHealthMatters #CommunitySupport #CostOfCare #LifeInBC #HumanConnection #Resilience #EverydayLife #SocialSystems #AgingWell #RealLifeStories #Compassion #InvisibleWork #WeKeepGoing