Saturday, May 31, 2025

Tropical Storm Alvin’s Hidden Toll

 

🌪️ The Story You Might Have Missed: Tropical Storm Alvin’s Hidden Toll

By Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita

While much of the mainstream media focused on political drama or celebrity scandals, a critical environmental story unfolded quietly across Latin America. Tropical Storm Alvin, the first named storm of the 2025 Eastern Pacific hurricane season, may have seemed like "just another tropical event" to some—yet it left real impacts in its wake, especially in El Salvador and Chiapas, Mexico.

Alvin never made landfall. It spun in the Pacific Ocean with maximum winds of 60 mph, then quickly weakened. The storm officially dissipated by May 31. But like many modern climate-related events, its precursor system caused far more damage than the storm itself. And unless you're scouring multiple sources or know where to look, you probably didn’t hear about it.


🌧️ El Salvador: Injuries and Coastal Destruction

On May 27, the coast of El Salvador—particularly areas like El Majahual—was battered by strong winds and torrential rain linked to Alvin’s early formation. Over 50 people were injured, homes were damaged, and coastal flooding took a toll on infrastructure. This wasn’t front-page news.

Emergency responders were dispatched, and communities are still recovering. But without international headlines or viral social media posts, many will never know what El Salvador endured.


🌀 Chiapas, Mexico: Flooding and a Tragic Death

In Chiapas, over 90 mm of rain fell rapidly, flooding at least four municipalities. Tragically, one person died, and others were displaced. For those living on the edge—where a heavy rainstorm can wash away everything—this was a major event.

And yet again, it barely registered in North American media.


💧 Ripples Across the Pacific: Arizona, California, and Climate Signals

Although Alvin remained offshore, its remnants carried tropical moisture into the U.S. Southwest, affecting Arizona and parts of California. Rain and higher humidity disrupted usual patterns. Meteorologists noted this was highly unusual pre-monsoonal behavior, possibly tied to long-term climate changes.

These storm systems are warning signs—harbingers of instability in our environment. But their stories are being lost in the noise.


🔇 Why the Silence?

Why aren't we hearing more about this?

  • Media consolidation means fewer voices and limited global coverage.
  • Climate fatigue makes editors wary of “just another storm” stories.
  • Economic interests may discourage reporting that challenges tourism, development, or fossil fuel reliance.
  • And frankly, disasters in the Global South don’t get the same coverage as those in wealthier nations.

This is censorship by omission—and it's just as harmful as suppression. When the suffering of marginalized communities is ignored, when the warning signs of climate disruption are buried, we all lose.


🔥 The Bigger Picture: Climate Chaos Is Here

Whether it’s rising ocean temperatures fueling earlier and stronger storms or rainfall patterns becoming more erratic, climate change isn’t future tense—it’s happening now. Storms like Alvin might not destroy cities, but they chip away at the margins, damaging those least able to recover.

The Pacific hurricane season has only just begun, and Mexico's National Meteorological Service expects up to 18 named storms and 10 hurricanes. Alvin is just the start.


🌱 What Can We Do?

  • Share stories like these—lift up the voices of those affected.
  • Hold media accountable for what they choose to prioritize.
  • Support grassroots responders and local reporting.
  • Advocate for climate action that considers justice and equity, not just emissions targets.

📣 Let’s Talk About It

Have you experienced censorship or media silence around environmental disasters? What stories need to be told in your community?

Drop a comment. Share this post. Let’s break the silence together.

✊💚
– Tina Winterlik / Zipolita
#TropicalStormAlvin #ClimateCrisis #CensoredNews #VoicesUnheard #ZipolitaWrites #JusticeForTheSouth

Everything Is Burning

 🔥🌪️ Everything Is Burning While We Scroll

They say the world is on fire—and it is.
San Diego. Saskatchewan. Manitoba.
The boreal forests of Canada torching the skies.
Tropical Storm Alvin stirring in the Pacific.
It might change names, like Agatha did,
but the chaos doesn’t forget.

We forgot, though.
That firestorm three years ago?
Moved inland, renamed, reborn as destruction—
but we were already distracted by the next trending topic.


Meanwhile, people ride electric bikes to deliver fast food
to people watching climate collapse
from behind triple-glazed windows.
Clicking "like" on a photo of a burning skyline,
then refreshing their cart for a new pair of sneakers
made from mined lithium and exploited labour.


We are disconnected from food,
from nature,
from each other.
We treat water like waste,
land like profit,
and Earth like a product.

We drive petroleum cars
while condemning oil spills.
We shout “sustainability”
into microphones made of mined metals
and powered by coal-fired servers.


And when someone—
a journalist, an activist, a kid with a cardboard sign—
tries to speak the truth?
They’re shadow banned,
mocked,
dismissed as naïve or radical.

Because there’s always someone ready to debate:
“Not all billionaires,”
“Not all mining,”
“Not all cars.”

And that’s the point.
Keep us arguing while the planet burns.
Keep us fighting each other
so the billionaires can keep building bunkers
and buying land above the flood lines.


It's not just climate collapse. It's spiritual collapse.
We forgot we were animals.
We forgot how to grow food,
to sit with silence,
to listen to wind,
to fear fire.


But I still write this.
Even if it feels useless.
Even if no one listens.
Because someone might.
And when the next Alvin becomes the next Agatha,
when the smoke reaches new skies,
when even denial can’t cover the cracks in the system—
maybe those words will still be there,
waiting to be heard.

Solar Storms Are Affecting Us More Than We Realize —

 🌞 Solar Storms Are Affecting Us More Than We Realize — Let's Talk About It

By Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita

Have you ever felt anxious, dizzy, or just "off" for no apparent reason — and then found out a solar flare had just hit Earth?

You're not alone.

We're entering a highly active time in the Sun's cycle. Solar storms — bursts of energy and particles from the Sun — are happening more frequently. And while they paint the skies with stunning auroras, they also quietly mess with our technology, our planet, and some of us personally.


⚡ What Is a Solar Storm?

Solar storms are caused by eruptions on the Sun like:

  • Solar flares (radiation bursts),
  • Coronal Mass Ejections (CMEs) — magnetic plasma clouds,
  • High-speed solar winds.

When these reach Earth, they rattle our planet’s magnetic field and ionosphere.


📡 What Do They Affect?

  • Satellite systems (GPS, internet, airline communication)
  • Power grids (past storms have caused blackouts)
  • Cell towers and wireless tech
  • Radio signals and even pipeline corrosion

🌿 But What About Us?

This is the part most people aren’t talking about.
Some of us are deeply sensitive to changes in energy — and geomagnetic storms seem to trigger things like:

  • Headaches, migraines
  • Sleep disturbances
  • Anxiety or emotional swings
  • Feeling “unplugged” or extra sensitive

You might feel electric in your skin or as if you’re carrying static in your bones. If you know what I mean… you know.


🌀 You’re Not Imagining It

The body has its own electromagnetic field. We’re living antennas, and it makes sense that solar storms — which disturb Earth's magnetic field — could affect our balance, sleep, and emotions. Some studies suggest solar activity even affects heart rate variability, blood pressure, and serotonin production.

This doesn’t mean you’re broken. It means you’re tuned in.


🧘‍♀️ What Helps?

Here’s what I try:

  • Go outside (even in the rain — I'm heading out right after posting this)
  • Walk barefoot on grass or sand if you can — grounding really works
  • Drink more water
  • Turn off devices when you can
  • Rest and be gentle with yourself

🌌 Final Thought

The world is noisy, electric, and overwhelming — and during solar storms, it all gets amplified. But if we pay attention, we can work with these waves rather than being thrown off by them.

Maybe this storm is asking us to slow down. To breathe. To remember we’re part of something much bigger.

💖 Sending calm, grounded energy to those who feel this deeply. You’re not alone.


~ Zipolita ~


FLOOD THE STREETS AND DEMAND SAFETY FOR WOMEN AND GIRL

 🚨ENOUGH IS ENOUGH: TIME TO FLOOD THE STREETS AND DEMAND SAFETY FOR WOMEN AND GIRLS🚨

By Zipolita aka Tina Winterlik

I am sickened. Enraged. Heartbroken.

A 14-year-old girl was sexually assaulted at knifepoint in broad daylight in Vancouver, and the man arrested was already on probation for another sexual assault. Let that sink in.
He was out. On the streets. Free.
And now a young girl has to carry that trauma for the rest of her life.

Where is the justice?
Where is the protection for women and girls?
Where is the outrage?

We used to march.
Women used to organize and walk at night to Take Back the Night. We knew the streets belonged to us too, and we weren't going to be afraid.
Now? The predators are let out over and over, and we’re told to stay vigilant, carry pepper spray (which is illegal here!), and avoid walking alone.

But when do they face consequences?

There have been a string of sexual assaults in Stanley Park and other parts of Vancouver lately, and it feels like no one in power is doing a damn thing.
We’re gaslit into thinking things are "mostly safe" — while women and girls are being hunted in public spaces.

I used to feel safe. I don’t anymore.
And I know I’m not alone.


So here’s my call:
Let’s flood the streets again.
Let’s organize.
Let’s rise up like the women before us did.

Let’s TAKE BACK OUR CITY.

March. Scream. Hold signs. Demand change.
Because if we don’t, they will keep letting them out — and more girls, more women, more people will be hurt.


DEMANDS TO START WITH:

  • Mandatory psychological assessment reviews before parole for violent or sexual offenders
  • Real consequences for breaching probation
  • Transparency from the justice system about high-risk offenders in our communities
  • Immediate public forums and safety plans from local government
  • Restore and increase funding for women’s shelters, trauma support, and legal advocacy

That young girl — she could have been any of us.
Any of our daughters, sisters, nieces, or friends.

This city has failed her.
Let’s make sure it doesn’t fail anyone else.

#TakeBackTheStreets
#JusticeForSurvivors
#NoMoreSilence
#VancouverSafetyNow



Friday, May 30, 2025

Athabasca Glacier – Then and Now

 📸 Athabasca Glacier – Then and Now: My 1993 Photos Waiting to Be Found

Back in 1993, I visited the Athabasca Glacier, part of the majestic Columbia Icefield in Jasper National Park. It was a powerful, humbling experience — standing at the foot of this massive river of ice, camera in hand, capturing a frozen moment in time.

That was before digital, so I have actual prints tucked away somewhere in my storage. My hope is to come across them soon. They’re probably in one of those boxes I packed and forgot after moving, tucked behind some old books and photo albums.

But I’ve been thinking more and more about them lately. Why?

Because the Athabasca Glacier has shrunk dramatically since then. And my photos — taken over 30 years ago — could now be considered historical evidence of a changing planet.

🧊 What’s Happened Since 1993?

The Athabasca Glacier has retreated by over 400 meters (that’s more than 1,300 feet!) since I was there. That’s enough to completely change the landscape.

Where I once stood right near the toe of the glacier, people now have to hike over dry land to reach what’s left of it. The glacier has lost both length and thickness, and the retreat continues every year — a powerful sign of climate change in motion.

🔍 I Did Some Digging – Here’s What I Found

While I search for my own photos, I decided to do a little research and here’s what I discovered:

📷 Great Resources to See the Glacier's Decline:

Google Earth Timelapse

https://earthengine.google.com/timelapse/

Watch Athabasca Glacier shrink from 1984 to today.

NASA Earth Observatory

Search: “Athabasca Glacier site:earthobservatory.nasa.gov” for satellite views and comparisons.

Flickr & Reddit

Search terms like:

"Athabasca Glacier then and now"

"Athabasca Glacier 1993 vs 2023"

🧭 Want More Detail? Try These:

"Athabasca Glacier retreat site:gc.ca" for government climate data.

"Columbia Icefield glacier change report" for scientific research and maps.

Mountain Legacy Project and Glacier Photo Comparison Project are collecting before/after glacier images for educational use.

🕰️ When I Find My Prints...

When I find those prints — and I will — I’d love to scan and share them. Maybe I can even return one day and take a “then vs now” photo. It would be an eye-opening comparison — and maybe even inspire others to reflect on what we’re losing, and how fast.

If you’ve been to the glacier, or have your own old photos, I encourage you to dig them up too. Together, these little snapshots become a visual story of change, one we can’t ignore.

Let’s remember what once was — and act so future generations have something left to photograph.

📌 Have you visited the Athabasca Glacier? Do you have before/after shots? Share your thoughts below — or tag me @Zipolita if you post them.


The Cost of Climate Inaction

The Cost of Climate Inaction: Living with the Consequences

On May 28th, 2025, the peaceful village of Blatten, Switzerland was buried by a catastrophic glacier collapse. Millions of tons of ice, rock, and debris thundered down the mountainside, blocking the Lonza River and burying 90% of the town. A lake is now forming behind the landslide. One man remains missing.

They had early warning signs. They evacuated. But what if this happened at night? Without warning? Or closer to home?

🏔️ Could This Happen in Canada?

Yes. And we’re not ready.

This summer, thousands of people will vacation across British Columbia, Alberta, and the Yukon — hiking, skiing, and exploring glacier-fed valleys and peaks. Most won’t realize they’re walking through areas vulnerable to collapse, landslides, or sudden outburst floods.

Melting glaciers, thawing permafrost, and heavy rainfall make our mountain communities increasingly unstable. This isn’t just a Swiss disaster. It’s a warning for every mountain town in Canada.

🌍 It’s Not Just About Whistler

Yes, Whistler is high risk — with heliskiing, luxury condos, and ski resorts sitting below melting glaciers. But this is bigger than Whistler.

  • ⛰️ Banff & Jasper (AB)
  • ⛰️ Golden, Revelstoke, and Nelson (BC)
  • ⛰️ Pemberton, Lillooet, and Bella Coola (BC)
  • ⛰️ Yukon glacier regions

Any of these places could experience a glacier-related disaster — and none have a dedicated national safety plan in place.

📢 What We’re Calling For

  • 🛰️ Real-time monitoring of glaciers and landslide zones across Canada
  • 🚨 Emergency alert systems for landslides, glacier collapses, and outburst floods
  • 🧓🏽👧🏽 Inclusion of Indigenous Elders and Youth in all climate and hazard planning — their knowledge must be respected
  • 🏞️ A national Glacier & Mountain Safety Strategy before more lives are lost

⚠️ What You Can Do Right Now

If you live in or near mountain regions — or are visiting this summer — here are steps you can take to help protect your family and community:

  1. Talk to your local government: Ask what plans are in place for glacier collapses, landslides, or debris floods. Demand public awareness campaigns and signage.
  2. Contact your MP and MLA: Tell them you want federal and provincial glacier hazard monitoring and early warning systems.
  3. Share this story: Use your voice. Post this blog, talk to your hiking group, and raise awareness before another tragedy occurs.
  4. Listen to Indigenous communities: They’ve warned about these land shifts for generations. Invite their guidance and elevate their voices in local decisions.
  5. Join or create a local advocacy group: Push for climate adaptation planning that includes tourism zones and backcountry trails.

🌿 This Is About More Than Tourism

It’s about putting life over luxury, prevention over PR, and honouring the land before it takes more than we can give back.

Tourists may not know. But our governments should.
If they stay silent, they’ll have to answer for the consequences.

⏳ Don’t Wait for a Canadian Blatten

📢 Speak now. 📡 Prepare now. 🛑 Protect now.

Written by Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita
#ZipolitaSpeaks #ListenToTheLand #CanadianClimateAction #GlacierRiskCanada

From Darkness to Indifference: A Human Crisis / De l’obscurité à l’indifférence / De la oscuridad a la indiferencia

 

Here are the translations in French and Spanish 


🇫🇷 French Translation

De l’obscurité de New York à l’indifférence glaciale de Vancouver – Sommes-nous vraiment si différents ?
Par Tina Winterlik alias Zipolita

Il fut un temps — pas si lointain — où New York représentait à l’échelle mondiale le symbole de l’obscurité urbaine. La criminalité faisait rage, la violence était une norme quotidienne, et les gens avaient cessé de se soucier des autres. Ils passaient à côté de personnes agressées, attaquées, ou pire encore. Le célèbre meurtre de Kitty Genovese en 1964 dans le Queens est devenu une histoire glaçante racontée dans le monde entier — une jeune femme poignardée à mort devant son appartement, tandis que des dizaines de témoins auraient regardé ou entendu… sans rien faire. Des rapports ultérieurs ont suggéré que l’histoire avait été exagérée, mais peu importe la vérité : l’impact fut immense. Nous étions choqués par l’apathie.

Times Square dans les années 70 et 80 était rempli de cinémas porno, de trafiquants de drogue et de prostitution. Le Bronx était littéralement en feu, les propriétaires abandonnaient leurs immeubles, et les crimes étaient si courants que personne ne tressaillait en entendant des cris la nuit.

C’est facile de secouer la tête et dire : « Wow, ça devait être horrible. »

Mais… nous sommes ici maintenant. À Vancouver. À Surrey. En 2025.

Et je dois poser la question :
Avons-nous vraiment changé ? Ou sommes-nous simplement arrivés au même point ?

J’ai vu des gens — des êtres humains réels, vivants — allongés sur les trottoirs. Pas seulement endormis. Pas seulement drogués. Certains, j’en suis sûre, étaient en train de mourir… et tout le monde passait à côté. Personne ne vérifiait. Personne n’appelait le 911. Les gens les contournaient ou les enjambaient, les yeux rivés sur leur téléphone, pressés d’aller vers quelque chose de plus « important ».

J’ai vu la vie quitter des visages, et toujours personne ne bougeait. Je suis restée figée tandis que d’autres détournaient le regard. Et je me pose cette question, et je vous la pose à vous qui lisez :

Et si c’était VOUS, allongé au sol ?
Victime d’une crise cardiaque.
D’un AVC.
D’un anévrisme cérébral.
Effondré sous la canicule sur un trottoir brûlant en juillet.

Ne voudriez-vous pas que quelqu’un s’en soucie ?

Ce que nous vivons actuellement à Vancouver et Surrey n’est pas seulement une crise du logement ou de la santé. C’est une crise humaine. Une crise de lien, de compassion, de conscience. Et même si nous pointons du doigt — à juste titre — les systèmes corrompus et les gouvernements défaillants, nous devons aussi nous regarder nous-mêmes.

Parce que ce qui rend une ville vraiment sombre, ce n’est pas seulement le crime ou la pauvreté.
C’est quand les gens cessent de se soucier les uns des autres.

Nous y sommes. Nous sommes arrivés. Et nous devrions le crier sur tous les toits.

Mais peut-être, juste peut-être, qu’en parlant, en partageant ce que nous voyons, en refusant de détourner les yeux — nous pouvons commencer à revenir du bord du gouffre.

Alors je vous le demande à nouveau, avec amour et urgence :
Dans quel monde voulez-vous vous réveiller demain ?

Parce que nous sommes en train de le construire aujourd’hui, à chaque choix que nous faisons… de nous soucier, ou pas.

💔😢

– Tina Winterlik / Zipolita


🇪🇸 Spanish Translation

De la oscuridad de Nueva York a la fría indiferencia de Vancouver – ¿Realmente estamos tan lejos unos de otros?
Por Tina Winterlik alias Zipolita

Hubo un tiempo — no hace tanto — en que la ciudad de Nueva York era el símbolo internacional de la oscuridad urbana. El crimen era rampante, la violencia era la norma diaria y la gente había dejado de preocuparse. Caminaban como si nada mientras otros eran asaltados, atacados o peor. El infame asesinato de Kitty Genovese en 1964 en Queens se convirtió en una historia escalofriante contada en todo el mundo: una joven fue apuñalada hasta morir frente a su apartamento mientras decenas de testigos supuestamente miraban o escuchaban… sin hacer nada. Informes posteriores sugirieron que la historia fue exagerada, pero la verdad no importaba tanto como su impacto: nos horrorizó la apatía.

Times Square en los años 70 y 80 estaba lleno de cines porno, traficantes de drogas y prostitución. El Bronx literalmente ardía mientras los propietarios abandonaban los edificios, y el crimen era tan común que nadie se inmutaba ante los gritos en la noche.

Es fácil negar con la cabeza y decir: «Vaya, qué horrible debió haber sido eso».

Pero… ahora estamos aquí. En Vancouver. En Surrey. En 2025.

Y tengo que preguntar:
¿Realmente hemos cambiado? ¿O simplemente hemos llegado al mismo lugar?

He visto personas — seres humanos reales y vivos — tiradas en las aceras. No solo dormidos. No solo drogados. Algunos, estoy segura, estaban muriendo… y todos pasaban de largo. Nadie se detenía. Nadie llamaba al 911. La gente simplemente los rodeaba o los pasaba por encima, con los ojos en sus teléfonos, apurados por llegar a algo que, en ese momento, parecía más importante.

He visto la vida desvanecerse de los rostros, y aun así nadie reaccionaba. Me he quedado paralizada mientras otros apartaban la mirada. Y me pregunto, y te pregunto a ti que estás leyendo esto:

¿Y si fueras TÚ quien está tirado en el suelo?
Por un infarto.
Un derrame cerebral.
Un aneurisma cerebral.
Colapsado por un golpe de calor sobre una acera abrasadora en julio.

¿No querrías que alguien se preocupara?

Lo que vivimos ahora en Vancouver y Surrey no es solo una crisis de vivienda o de salud. Es una crisis humana. Una crisis de conexión, de compasión, de conciencia. Y mientras señalamos con el dedo a los sistemas corruptos y gobiernos rotos — con razón — también debemos mirar hacia dentro.

Porque lo que realmente oscurece una ciudad no es solo el crimen o la pobreza.
Es cuando la gente deja de importarles los demás.

Ya estamos allí. Hemos llegado. Y deberíamos estar gritando eso desde cada rincón.

Pero quizás, solo quizás, al alzar la voz, al compartir lo que vemos, al negarnos a mirar hacia otro lado — podamos comenzar a alejarnos de ese precipicio.

Así que pregunto de nuevo, con amor y urgencia:
¿En qué tipo de mundo quieres despertar mañana?

Porque lo estamos construyendo hoy, con cada decisión que tomamos… de importarnos, o no.

💔😢

– Tina Winterlik / Zipolita



Thursday, May 29, 2025

New York’s Darkness to Vancouver’s Cold Indifference

From New York’s Darkness to Vancouver’s Cold Indifference – Are We Really So Far Apart?

By Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita

There was a time — not too long ago — when New York City was the international symbol of urban darkness. Crime was rampant, violence was a daily norm, and people stopped caring. They walked by as others were mugged, attacked, or worse. The infamous 1964 murder of Kitty Genovese in Queens became a chilling story told around the world — a young woman was stabbed to death outside her apartment while dozens of witnesses reportedly watched or heard and did nothing. Later reports suggested the story was exaggerated, but the truth didn’t matter as much as the impact: we were shocked by the apathy.

Times Square in the 1970s and ’80s was filled with porn theaters, drug dealers, and prostitution. The Bronx was literally on fire as landlords abandoned buildings, and crime was so common that no one flinched at screams in the night.

It’s easy to shake our heads and say, “Wow, how awful that must’ve been.”

But… we’re here now. In Vancouver. In Surrey. In 2025.

And I have to ask:
Have we really changed? Or have we simply arrived at the same place?

I’ve seen people — real, living humans — lying on sidewalks. Not just asleep. Not just high. Some I am certain were dying… and everyone walked by. No one checked. No one called 911. People just stepped around them or over them, eyes on their phones, rushing to whatever mattered more in that moment.

I’ve watched the life fade from faces, and still no one flinched. I’ve stood stunned while others looked away. And I ask myself and ask you reading this:

What if it was YOU lying on the ground?
From a heart attack.
A stroke.
A brain aneurysm.
Collapsing from heatstroke on a scorching sidewalk in July.

Wouldn’t you want someone to care?

What we’re experiencing now in Vancouver and Surrey is not just a housing crisis or a healthcare crisis. It’s a human crisis. One of connection, of compassion, of consciousness. And while we point fingers at corrupt systems and broken governments — rightly so — we also need to point inward.

Because what makes a city truly dark isn’t just crime or poverty.
It’s when people stop giving a damn about each other.

We’re there now. We’ve arrived. And we should be screaming that from every corner.

But maybe, just maybe, by speaking out, sharing what we see, refusing to look away — we can begin to pull ourselves back from that edge.

So I ask again, with love and urgency:
What kind of world do you want to wake up in tomorrow?

Because we're building it today, with every choice we make to care… or not.

💔😢

– Tina Winterlik / Zipolita

Rest in Power, Matthew Hutchings 💔

 

💔 Rest in Power, Matthew Hutchings 💔

Date: May 30, 2025
By: Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita


Today, with a heavy heart, I join many in mourning the tragic death of Matthew Hutchings, a 20-year-old UBC student whose life was cut short far too soon. His body was found near the SkyTrain tracks by Commercial-Broadway Station on May 29, 2025.

This is a heartbreaking loss — one that shakes our community and leaves deep questions, grief, and anger in its wake.

Matthew mattered. He was someone’s son, someone’s friend, someone who had dreams, plans, and love to give. His disappearance gripped many with concern. And now that concern has turned into sorrow — and for many of us, rage.

I write this not just in mourning, but in frustration.
Because just two weeks ago, I saw something disturbing near the SkyTrain tracks — a man lying on his back, his friends watching helplessly or high, the scene full of pain and danger. I tried to report it to TransLink. They told me to call police. They were rude. I was shaken. And now I wonder...

Did I witness someone dying? Did I witness Matthew — or someone like him — in their last moments?

We may never know.
But I do know this: it’s not enough to say “no foul play suspected.” When someone dies from toxic drugs, that is foul play. When someone lies helpless on the ground and the system doesn’t respond, that’s a crime. When our society allows people — especially youth, especially Indigenous women, especially the vulnerable — to die silently near public transit stations, alone and ignored, that’s a failure.

Matthew deserved better.

We owe it to him — and to every soul lost in this poisoned, indifferent world — to say their names. To see them. To speak out. And to demand that compassion, support, and justice no longer be optional.

Rest in Power, Matthew.
You will not be forgotten.

💔🕊️
—Zipolita


Plugged In and Tapped Out-Conclusion

Thank You for Joining the Conversation

Thank you for following our series on British Columbia’s energy challenges and the impact of climate change.

We’ve explored the risks of shrinking water supplies, the hidden costs of AI and data centers, the dangers of relying on imported power, and the urgent need for local renewable solutions.

Now it’s time to take what we’ve learned and keep pushing for a sustainable, resilient energy future.

Resources to Learn More and Get Involved

Feel free to share this series, discuss these issues with your community, and stay engaged.

Together, we can help shape a better future.

Fast-Tracking or Back-Tracking?

Fast-Tracking or Back-Tracking?
Bill 14, Bill 15 and B.C.’s Broken Promise to the Land

by Tina Winterlik / Zipolita – May 29, 2025

1. Déjà vu from Clayoquot to Wet’suwet’en

In 1993, we packed lunches, wore out hiking boots, and locked arms in the War in the Woods to defend Clayoquot Sound. Thirty-one years later, the B.C. legislature has forgotten that lesson. Late last night, Bill 15 – the Infrastructure Projects Act – squeaked through on a 46-46 tie, broken only by Speaker Raj Chouhan’s deciding vote. Minutes earlier its sibling, Bill 14 – the Renewable Energy Projects Streamlining Act – passed by just four votes.

These laws hand cabinet sweeping power to declare almost any development “provincially significant,” short-circuiting environmental assessment, public input and – most alarmingly – constitutionally protected Indigenous consent. Premier David Eby insists they are about “schools and hospitals,” not mines or pipelines, but those limits are nowhere in the text.

2. Why the Uproar?

Who’s sounding the alarm? What they’re saying Source
First Nations Leadership Council (Tsartlip Chief Don Tom) “The era of trust is over… the NDP makes decisions unilaterally.” Public statements, May 2025
Former NDP Minister Melanie Mark Bills “bypass constitutionally protected Indigenous rights.” May 2025
Sierra Club BC Cuts “public input, environmental safeguards and First Nations consultation.” Media release
West Coast Environmental Law Could green-light projects that trigger “another Mount Polley-style disaster.” Legal analysis, May 2025

3. Divide-and-Conquer Economics

A handful of Nations backing specific wind or mining ventures have been spotlighted to imply broad Indigenous support. In reality, colonial policy forces communities to choose between poverty or risky developments on their own lands. That tension – visible in Wet’suwet’en and now in Bill 15 – is exactly why the U.N. Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) was adopted into B.C. law in 2019: to guarantee free, prior and informed consent, not post-hoc lawsuits. These bills reverse that progress by shifting risk and legal costs back onto Nations.

4. What This Means on the Ground

  • Speed without safeguards: Consultants hired by developers can now “self-certify” permits the public never sees.
  • Environment pushed to the sidelines: The Wilderness Committee calls Bill 15 a “slap in the face to democracy and the environment.”
  • Litigation inevitable: Chiefs have already signalled court challenges – draining Band coffers while projects march ahead.

5. Where Do We Go From Here?

  1. Flood the inboxes: Email and phone your MLA, Premier Eby, and Infrastructure Minister Bowinn Ma demanding the bills be withdrawn and redrafted with full Indigenous participation.
  2. Signal-boost frontline voices: Follow and share updates from the Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs, First Nations Leadership Council, and groups like the Wilderness Committee and Sierra Club BC.
  3. Document everything: If your community faces a “fast-tracked” project, chronicle the process – FOI requests, local knowledge, photos. Evidence matters in court and media.
  4. Stand in solidarity – visibly: Peaceful rallies kept Clayoquot in the headlines; presence still matters.
  5. Support independent media: Outlets like The Narwhal and IndigiNews rely on reader support to keep digging when mainstream coverage moves on.

6. Reflect & Respond

“Progress without justice isn’t progress – it’s erasure.”
  • Questions for readers:
    • What safeguards would you require before supporting any “streamlined” approval?
    • How can we ensure Nations pursuing their own economic visions aren’t pitted against those defending their territories?
    • Have you experienced censorship or algorithmic suppression when sharing land-defence stories? What strategies help you break through?
  • Quick poll (yes/no in the comments): Should the legislature suspend Bills 14 & 15 until full UNDRIP-compliant consultation occurs?

7. When Leaders Overstep: From Trump’s Tariffs to Eby’s Fast-Track Bills

This week, a U.S. federal trade court ruled that former President Donald Trump illegally imposed tariffs under a law that gave him emergency powers. The court declared that only Congress has the authority to regulate foreign commerce. Although a temporary appeal has reinstated them for now, the ruling is a reminder that no leader is above the law.

Here in British Columbia, Premier David Eby’s Bills 14 and 15 mimic this dangerous pattern. By pushing legislation that hands power to the executive branch and bypasses constitutional rights, he’s engaging in the same kind of democratic overreach. Just like Trump, Eby claims it’s “for the public good,” but when oversight, transparency, and consultation are stripped away, that “good” becomes a smokescreen for unchecked authority.

Whether it's Trump’s tariffs or Eby’s infrastructure blitz, the message is clear: fast-tracking injustice is still injustice.

Final Thoughts

If Premier Eby thought British Columbians had forgotten the lessons of the War in the Woods, he just reminded us why they mattered. Our elders taught us that the land is not a line item. These bills gamble with histories, futures, and ecosystems for the sake of speed. Let’s meet that gamble with the one thing no fast-track can outrun: collective, persistent resistance – online, on the ground, and in the courts.

Keep speaking. Keep writing. The algorithms may muffle us, but the forest still echoes. 🌲💔

Drowning in Bots? You’re Not Imagining It.

🤖 Drowning in Bots? You’re Not Imagining It.

By Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita

Over the past week, social platforms have been flooded with bots and trolls, many of them pushing pro-Musk or pro-Tesla propaganda, while others are spreading disinformation, threats, and harassment.

Let’s be clear: This isn’t random. This is part of a growing and deliberate tactic to suppress authentic voices, especially those who speak out against powerful interests or advocate for justice.


💻 Bots Are the New Propaganda Machines

These accounts don’t argue in good faith. They copy and paste the same lines across dozens or hundreds of posts, create the illusion of widespread agreement, and attack critics to silence dissent.

This is nothing less than digital psychological warfare — designed to manipulate public opinion and control the narrative.


👀 You Might Have Noticed...

  • The same odd praise showing up across different posts
  • Unfounded claims repeated over and over
  • People being harassed for sharing basic facts

If you’re feeling overwhelmed, censored, or unsure what’s real — you’re not alone. This is exactly how these campaigns work: wear you down, confuse you, and make you give up.


🧠 This Is Political — And It’s Not New

Ed Martin, a former Trump official, was named in court documents for using bots to target judges and coach others on how to make bots seem “organic.”

Now we’re seeing these tactics spill over into defending billionaires, corporations, and systems that profit off misinformation and division.

This isn’t just trolling. It’s organized digital manipulation.


💥 Bluesky vs. Facebook/Reddit

Bluesky has been doing great work — banning nearly 5,000 bots a day. But on other platforms like Facebook or Reddit, bots and troll accounts often go unchecked — or worse, rewarded for engagement.

Until these companies take it seriously, it’s up to us to block, report, and educate.


🛡️ How to Fight Back

  • Block or ban repeat spammers — don’t engage.
  • Look for patterns: same text, generic avatars, vague bios.
  • Support and follow platforms that prioritize integrity over profit.
  • Use your voice — don’t let them drown us out.

🗣️ Why This Matters

Many of us — especially those advocating for housing, environmental justice, Indigenous rights, or economic fairness — have been targeted, buried, or gaslit online.

We’re told our concerns don’t matter, that we’re alone. But we’re not.

This flood of fake accounts is a symptom of a system afraid of truth and solidarity.

Stay loud. Stay clear. Stay connected.

I see you. I hear you. I am you.


Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita

Rainy Day, Empty Condos, and a Protest Few Can Attend

🌧️ Rainy Day, Empty Condos, and a Protest Few Can Attend

By Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita

It’s a cold, rainy, miserable day in BC — the kind of day where your bones feel the dampness, and your heart feels heavy too. I’m thinking about all the people out there without shelter. The ones walking through puddles with no dry place to go. The ones trying to stay warm under awnings or bus stops. The ones with nowhere safe to sleep tonight.

Today was supposed to be a protest in Victoria. People were planning to gather, raise their voices, demand change. But this weather will keep many away. Especially those with disabilities, chronic illnesses, or no means to get there.

And the irony? This is exactly what we're fighting for. A right to live with dignity. A place to call home.


🏚️ From $630 to Couchsurfing: My Story

I used to live in a modest apartment in Vancouver. In 1997, rent was $630.
By 2003, it jumped to $825.
In 2007, $900.
And when I moved across the street in 2019? $1,414.

I haven’t been able to afford a place here since.

I rented in Mexico for a time. I stayed with my sister for a year. Now I’m couchsurfing — like so many others pushed out by rising rents, renovictions, and a system that values profit over people.


🏗️ Renovictions: Legal Theft

This week, a Hamilton landlord was fined $100,000 for illegal renovictions — displacing tenants under the guise of repairs, only to jack up rents afterward. The court acknowledged the “devastating” impact.

But in BC, this has happened for decades — both discreetly and out in the open. In my building, the renovations kept coming, tenants kept leaving, and the rents kept rising.

Where is our justice?


🏙️ 2,000 Empty Condos, and Social Assistance Can't Cover Rent

We have over 2,000 empty condos in this city, yet people sleep in doorways. The shelter portion of social assistance is $375 — not even enough for a single room, unless you’re in a derelict SRO not fit for any living being.

Is this not a crime against humanity?


💔 This Isn't Just Bad Policy — It's Cruel

We’ve allowed housing to become a commodity, not a human right. The result? Generations of people priced out, displaced, or left to fend for themselves in the cold.

And when a protest comes — the one day people try to speak out — the weather reminds us just how vulnerable we really are.

So even if no one shows up in Victoria today, we still need to speak out.

I see you. I hear you. I am you.

We won’t be silent. Not today. Not ever.


✊🏽 What You Can Do:

  • Share your story. Online, in letters, at community meetings.
  • Support or join tenant unions and housing advocates.
  • Demand real action: Vacancy control, livable assistance rates, social housing, and empty home penalties.
  • Speak for those who can’t make it to protests — because their voice matters too.

Stay dry. Stay safe. Stay strong.


Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita


#HousingCrisis #BCPoli #EndRenovictions #RaiseTheRates #AffordableHousing #DignityForAll #Zipolita #TenantRights #HomelessnessCrisis #ActivismMatters

It’s Burning in Manitoba – While Others Try to Make It Rain

 



🔥 It’s Burning in Manitoba – While Others Try to Make It Rain

By Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita
May 29, 2025

It’s burning in Manitoba again. People are being evacuated. Families are fleeing their homes. The forests are engulfed in flames, and the skies are thick with smoke. It’s painful to watch. It’s heartbreaking.

And it’s not just a fire. It’s a symptom. A sign. A warning.

We’ve been told the jet stream is shifting, moving slower, creating lopsided weather. Up north, like in Manitoba, it’s hot, dry, and burning. Down south, it’s raining—sometimes too much. These extremes aren’t random. This is what climate change looks like: heat domes, stalled weather patterns, and increasingly violent cycles of fire and flood.

But while Manitoba burns, some people are asking a strange question:
Why don’t we just make it rain?


☁️ Making Rain: The Science and the Risks

Cloud seeding is real. It’s a process where chemicals like silver iodide are released into clouds to help raindrops form. It’s been used for decades in places like the U.S., China, and especially the United Arab Emirates (UAE). The idea is to increase rainfall—by about 5–15%—in dry regions.

But there’s a catch:
💧 It only works if there are already clouds.
💰 It’s expensive, localized, and not a guarantee.
⚠️ It comes with ethical and environmental concerns we still don’t fully understand.

And then there’s the example of Dubai


🌧️ Dubai Flooded: When Rain Becomes a Disaster

Earlier this year, Dubai faced historic flooding, drowning highways and paralyzing the city. Many pointed fingers at their aggressive rainmaking program. Officials denied it was to blame, saying the storm was natural. But the truth? We just don’t know for sure.

Dubai, a place where rain is rare and precious, spent millions to make it fall—only to be overwhelmed when it arrived all at once.

I once took a plane ride beside a man from Dubai. He told me that everyone, even children, are expected to pray for rain every day. That really struck me—this idea of combining spiritual tradition with modern desperation. And now? They’ve gone from praying for rain to making it… and still, they’re not safe.


🔥 A World on Fire, A World in Flood

So here we are.

  • One part of the world burns.
  • Another part floods.
  • Some pray for rain.
  • Others manufacture it.

All the while, communities like those in Manitoba, who had little part in causing the climate crisis, are living the consequences.

It raises questions we can’t ignore:

  • Should we keep tinkering with nature using tech “solutions” to fix problems we created?
  • What are the risks of interfering with weather systems we barely understand?
  • Where’s the line between innovation and arrogance?

And most of all:

  • What happens to the people left behind?

💔 Fire Is a Warning — But So Is Rain

Maybe the fire in Manitoba and the floods in Dubai are both part of the same message. A message from the planet that says: slow down. Reconnect. Rethink how we live.

We can’t keep patching the climate with tech alone. We need deeper change—cultural, political, spiritual. Indigenous knowledge, community resilience, respect for nature. We need to listen. Because the Earth is speaking louder and louder every year.


🙏🏽 Final Thought

To the people in Manitoba and all those on the front lines—my heart is with you. May your skies clear, may the rains fall gently when needed, and may we all have the courage to act before more is lost.


Zipolita / Tina Winterlik

📸 Instagram | 🌎 Blog | 📹 YouTube



When the Sky Shifts – Feeling Off, Storms, and Solar Flares

Yesterday felt strange—unsettling, heavy. I couldn’t quite put my finger on it at the time, but I knew something was off. The temperature soared to 30°C, unusually hot for this time of year, especially in Vancouver. Everything felt tense, like the air itself was buzzing with something unseen.

Turns out, I wasn’t imagining things.

On May 29th, a surprisingly strong G3-class geomagnetic storm hit Earth. It wasn’t expected to be that intense—NOAA had only predicted a minor event. But a co-rotating interaction region (CIR), a turbulent zone where fast and slow solar winds collide, struck our planet with shockwave-like force. These CIRs can behave like miniature CMEs (coronal mass ejections), disturbing Earth’s magnetic field and lighting up the skies with auroras in some parts of the world.

But beyond the beauty, there’s a side to geomagnetic storms that doesn’t get talked about enough: how they make us feel.

Many people report feeling tired, anxious, or just “off” during high geomagnetic activity. Whether it’s our nervous system, our sleep cycles, or even our energy levels, something shifts. I definitely felt it—exhausted and out of sorts without knowing why. Now I do.

As if that wasn’t enough, today brought a complete shift: heavy rain. From 30°C heat to a soaking downpour. It's like nature can't find a middle ground anymore—just swing to extremes. One day it’s summer; the next it’s monsoon season.

To top it all off, Tropical Storm Alvin is brewing in the Pacific, potentially becoming the first named storm of the 2025 hurricane season. It’s far from here but still adds to the sense that the world is vibrating with change. Too hot, too wet, too wild.

I’m not sure if it’s the Earth trying to get our attention, the cosmos reminding us we’re part of something larger, or just coincidence. But it’s impossible not to notice the extremes. And impossible not to feel them.

Have you felt off lately too? Maybe there’s more going on above and around us than we realize.

Zipolita (Tina Winterlik)

A Whisper From A Tree

 Have you read my blog "The Alchemy of Ivy Mae"


🌿 

Welcome to The Alchemy of Ivy Mae — a space where memory, myth, and resistance intertwine. Here, stories bloom from whispers in the wind, from lullabies passed down through generations, and from the songs that refuse to die. In this today’s post, “A Whisper from the Tree,” we follow Jas as they uncover a forgotten melody—a resistance song disguised as a childhood rhyme. Through echoes of the past and the wind in the branches, a voice long buried returns to speak truth to power.

Step into the story. Let it sing to you.
🔗 Read “A Whisper from the Tree”


https://thealchemyofivymae.blogspot.com/2025/05/a-whisper-from-tree.html

Wednesday, May 28, 2025

Pavlov’s Dog, Lottery Dreams & the Dopamine Trap

 

Do You Remember Pavlov's Dog-?


🔔 Pavlov’s Dog, Lottery Dreams & the Dopamine Trap: How We’re Still Being Trained

Over 30 years ago, I learned about something called Pavlov’s Dog. Maybe you did too — or maybe you didn’t. But once you understand it, you start to see how deeply it still affects us, every day.

In the early 1900s, Russian scientist Ivan Pavlov discovered that if he rang a bell every time he fed his dogs, eventually the sound of the bell alone would make them salivate. They had learned to associate the bell with food. This is called classical conditioning, and it forms the basis of much of our behavior — even today.

But the “bells” of today look different. They’re notifications, lottery tickets, red tags, headlines, sales pitches, and even loud voices. And just like Pavlov’s dogs, we react without thinking.


🧠 Dopamine: The Drug Inside Us

Neuroscience tells us something even more startling: money lights up the brain like heroin.

When we receive money — especially suddenly, like winning the lottery — our brain releases dopamine, the same chemical that floods our system during sex, gambling, or drug use. It feels amazing… for a moment. Then it fades. So we chase the high again.

The brain doesn’t care if it’s a $5 scratch ticket or a $500,000 windfall. It just knows: This made us feel good. Let’s get more.

This is behavioral conditioning — just like Pavlov's dogs. And it shows up everywhere: lottery lines, online shopping, social media likes, hustle culture, stock markets, and more.


😨 Trauma & Yelling: The Other Side of Conditioning

But not all conditioning is about chasing pleasure.

Some of it is about avoiding pain.

If you grew up around yelling, slamming doors, or loud angry voices, you may notice your body tensing, shutting down, or panicking when it happens — even years later.

That’s not drama. It’s not oversensitivity.
That’s trauma-based conditioning.

Just like Pavlov’s dogs reacted to a bell, our nervous systems can be trained to react to tone of voice, volume, even certain words or body language — because those signals once meant danger.

For some, yelling = fear.
For others, loud noises = panic.
That’s not weakness. That’s survival.

Understanding this helps us move from judgment to compassion — especially for ourselves.


🎰 The Lottery Bell & The High We Chase

Now combine that pain-response conditioning with a society that constantly dangles pleasure triggers: money, fame, status, and stuff.

The lottery is a classic example:

  • Flashy lights, cheerful music, the dream of instant wealth.
  • Stories of people "just like you" who won.
  • Dopamine hits from even small wins.

You buy the ticket, scratch the surface, get a rush — and whether you win or not, your brain is being trained.

The bell rings, and you come back for more.


🏦 Money & Addiction

And it’s not just scratch tickets.

Big money — promotions, sales, jackpots, crypto spikes — all tap into that same brain circuitry. The more you get, the more you want. The more you fear losing it. The more anxious you become.

We’re not just trained — we’re hooked.

Like the article titled: “Money hits the brain like heroin.”

And when people are desperate for the next hit — whether it’s money, power, or attention — they can betray their values, their loved ones, even themselves.


🌍 A Different Bell: Indigenous Teachings

But not all bells are traps.

From an Indigenous perspective, true wealth isn’t about hoarding — it’s about harmony.

🌱 Real wealth is in:
– Giving freely
– Living simply
– Sharing with community
– Honoring Mother Earth
– Knowing when enough is enough

These teachings remind us that we were never meant to live for the next hit, the next purchase, or the next praise.

We were meant to live in connection, not reaction.


🙏 Final Thought: What Bells Are You Responding To?

Whether it’s a loud voice that freezes your body, or a sales ad that hijacks your mind — these are all learned responses. You’re not broken. You’re conditioned.

And that means you can re-train yourself.

You can choose:

  • Calm over chaos.
  • Community over consumption.
  • Compassion over comparison.

 — All My Relations.
We are all connected. May we remember what truly matters.

#PavlovsDog #DopamineAddiction #TraumaAwareness #LotteryTrap #MindfulLiving #IndigenousWisdom #AllMyRelations #WakeUpCall #HealingStartsHere


Plugged in and Tapped Out -Part 7

Looking Ahead: Building Resilience in a Changing Climate

BC’s energy challenges are a clear example of how climate change affects every part of our lives—from the water we depend on, to the power that keeps our homes running.

But they’re also an opportunity: to rethink how we produce, consume, and manage energy; to build stronger partnerships with Indigenous communities; and to create a future that’s cleaner, fairer, and more resilient.

The road ahead won’t be easy. It will take commitment, innovation, and collective action.

But with informed citizens and bold leadership, British Columbia can navigate these challenges and emerge stronger.

Thank you for following this series. The conversation doesn’t stop here—keep learning, sharing, and acting.

Tuesday, May 27, 2025

Reclaiming the Arbutus Lot: A Vision

Reclaiming the Arbutus Lot: A Vision for a Community of Care, Creativity, and Hope

By Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita

There’s a piece of land between 7th and 8th Avenue off Arbutus in Vancouver — a place that could become something beautiful. Originally proposed as a social housing site, the project was scrapped, and now it sits empty, surrounded by a city with over 2,000 empty condos and rent prices between $2,800–$3,400/month.

Why can’t we do something different?

What if we reimagined it entirely — not just as “social housing” but as a community village, built with heart, sustainability, and dignity in mind?

A New Vision: The Courtyard Village

Let’s build a village of stacked tiny homes surrounded by courtyards — inspired by the warmth of Mexican neighborhoods, where family, community, and colour fill the air. This wouldn't just be housing. It would be home.

A new name. A new model. A prototype for hope.

🏘️ What It Could Look Like:

  • 129 eco-conscious homes (300–400 sq ft), stacked 2–3 stories high
  • Private bathrooms, small kitchens, and sleeping/living space
  • Mini courtyards with trees, gardens, mosaics, and shade
  • A community greenhouse, shared kitchen, art studio, library, and play area
  • No shared showers — this is dignified, trauma-informed design
  • Living walls, rooftop gardens, solar panels, rainwater collection
  • Cob and timber details to make it feel warm and grounded

🔧 What It Would Take:

Here’s a rough breakdown of what we’d need:

🧱 Build & Design:

  • Modular or stacked tiny house construction (400 sq ft)
  • Estimated cost per unit: $100K–$150K
  • Total build estimate: $15M–$18M

🕓 Build Time:

  • Modular construction: 6–9 months
  • Site prep + utilities: 2–3 months
  • Final community handover: within a year

📜 Permits & Licenses:

  • Rezoning (if needed)
  • Environmental & engineering approvals
  • City of Vancouver + BC Housing partnership
  • Non-profit or Co-op operator

🌱 Why It Matters Now

People are struggling. Many are one paycheck from homelessness. Families are separated. Seniors are isolated. Youth are couch surfing. We need a new model of housing that heals, unites, and gives back.

Vancouver once came together to fight for the Arbutus Greenway Gardens. That same spirit can return. Let’s demand something better than vacancy and silence.

This village could be a blueprint for other underused lots across BC. It could be a start.

✊ Call to Action

  • 💬 What do YOU think? Would you support this idea?
  • 📩 Share this post. Tag your MLA, city councillor, BC Housing.
  • 🛠️ Are you a builder, designer, social planner, or architect? Let’s connect.
  • 🌿 Let’s plant the seeds of something lasting — together.

With love and hope,
Tina Winterlik (Zipolita)
Artist • Storyteller • Mother • Advocate

#TinyHouseVillage #AffordableHousing #CourtyardLiving #ArbutusCommunity #VancouverHousingCrisis #Zipolita #TinaWinterlik

Monday, May 26, 2025

Reflections on the Crown, Diana, and the Treaties: What Every Canadian Should Know

 Crown & Country: Truths Canadians Need to Know

Part 1: Diana, the Crown, and the Treaties 


By Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita

I was a teenager when Lady Diana Spencer married Prince Charles. Born in the same year as Diana, I felt a connection to her—her kindness, her grace, her vulnerability. Like many young women of my generation, I admired her deeply. She was the “People’s Princess,” and when I wrote her a letter asking for help to take a photography course I couldn’t afford, I was stunned to receive a response from one of her ladies-in-waiting. It felt like magic. I had no idea at the time how cruelly the media—especially the paparazzi—treated her. I was simply a young dreamer trying to find my way in the world.

Then came the day of her death. I remember the moment so clearly. The disbelief. I thought there had been a mistake. Diana, who had survived so much—surely she hadn’t died in that tunnel? It felt like the whole world paused in grief. Her loss shook me and millions of others, and I’ve never forgotten it.

But as I got older, my perspective changed. I began to understand more about the monarchy, about colonialism, and about the deep pain caused by the Crown’s legacy here in Canada. I learned about the treaties—agreements made not with the Canadian government, but with the British Crown. I learned about the horrors of the residential school system, and about how these institutions were part of a deliberate plan to erase Indigenous cultures, languages, and identities.

Here in British Columbia, much of the land is unceded. That means no treaty was ever signed. Our ancestors never gave up the land. It was taken. My family is of mixed heritage, including Indigenous roots that stretch back to time immemorial. My grandparents, and their grandparents, lived through eras of intense injustice—policies of erasure, control, and discrimination that still echo today.

Many Canadians don’t understand that the Crown still holds significance—not just symbolically, but legally. The treaties that exist were signed with the monarch, not with Canada’s Parliament or Prime Ministers. And that relationship carries ongoing responsibilities. So when King Charles visits Ottawa and delivers a speech, it may seem like pageantry—but it also connects to a very real, very unfinished story: the promise of nation-to-nation relationships and the broken agreements that must be addressed if reconciliation is ever to be meaningful.

It’s easy to dismiss the monarchy as outdated. But the Crown is written into Canada’s very structure. It's the legal basis for land treaties and constitutional protections—and also the source of deep historical trauma. It’s complicated. That’s why conversations like this matter.

I still carry empathy for Charles, especially now that he’s battling cancer. I can only imagine how heavy the burden of history must weigh—especially when it includes colonialism, privilege, and the ghosts of people like Diana, whose suffering was very public. But empathy doesn't mean silence. It means speaking the truth with care.

We need to keep asking: What does the Crown mean today? How do we honor Indigenous sovereignty? And how can Canadians become better informed—not just about royal visits, but about the stories that continue to shape this land?


Plugged in and Tapped out-Part 6

What Can You Do? Practical Steps to Help BC’s Energy Future

Feeling overwhelmed by all this? You’re not alone. But there are meaningful ways you can help build a more resilient and sustainable energy future for British Columbia.

  • Reduce your energy use: Simple actions like using energy-efficient appliances, turning off lights when not needed, and reducing air conditioning can add up.
  • Support renewable energy: Consider installing solar panels if you can, or advocate for community renewable projects in your area.
  • Stay informed and engaged: Follow local news about energy and climate policy, and participate in public consultations or community meetings.
  • Advocate for change: Write to your elected representatives demanding stronger climate action and support for renewable energy.

Every action counts. Together, we can push for the policies and investments BC needs to secure clean, reliable energy in a changing climate.

Sunday, May 25, 2025

Too Hot to Handle: Why Seniors Are Still Struggling to Get Air Conditioners in BC

 By Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita

In the summer of 2021, BC was scorched by a record-breaking heat dome that took the lives of at least 619 people — most of them seniors, low-income, or vulnerable. But emergency room workers and frontline responders say the real number could be more than twice that — closer to 1,500.

That summer changed everything — or at least, it should have.

The government made promises. Programs were announced. Free air conditioners would be made available to low-income seniors and people with health concerns. It sounded good… on paper.

But the reality?

My 75-year-old friend — living alone, on a fixed income — tried to get one. The process was so complicated, with online forms, confusing eligibility rules, and little to no support, that she gave up.

And I don’t blame her.

Where was the help? Where was the outreach? Why weren’t workers sent door-to-door, like they were with census or vaccine rollouts?

Fast-forward to this summer — 2025. Heat records are being broken again. Environment Canada is warning of warmer-than-normal temperatures. We don’t know if another extreme event is coming, but what we do know is:

  • Many of the most vulnerable still don’t have air conditioners.
  • Those free AC programs were one-offs, and new ones (if any) are buried in red tape.
  • New tariffs on imported goods could drive up the cost of air conditioners and fans, making it even harder for people on social assistance or pensions to prepare.

We need to ask the hard questions now — not after another tragedy.

  • Will BC Hydro offer meaningful help this summer — and actually make it accessible?
  • Will non-profits and housing agencies step up with real distribution plans?
  • Will the government finally take heat and housing seriously — not as luxury issues, but as matters of life and death?

Because if we wait until another crisis hits, it will be too late again — and the people paying the price will be the same ones ignored in 2021.

Let’s not let this be another “we didn’t see it coming” moment.

If you or someone you know is struggling to prepare for summer heat, let’s talk. Let’s share stories. Let’s build solutions.

We can't afford silence — or another cover-up.


As a Canadian Watching America — I’m Scared for All of Us

What if I told you the next U.S. election could be the last one?

I know that sounds extreme. But I’m Canadian, watching from the sidelines, and what’s happening in the U.S. right now should terrify all of us — because it won’t stop at the border.

On May 22, 2025, the U.S. House of Representatives passed something called the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act.” That name sounds harmless — even uplifting. But the details? They’re chilling.


What This Bill Means — In Real Terms

  • No more guaranteed elections. The president could delay or cancel them legally.
  • Court rulings can be ignored. The president could bypass Supreme Court decisions for over a year.
  • Workers fired for "disloyalty." If you disagree with the president, you could lose your job.
  • Judges lose power to enforce laws. The justice system becomes symbolic.
  • Protestors tracked and punished. Surveillance on dissenters could be legal.
  • LGBTQ+ rights rolled back. Education, health care, and free press targeted.
  • Internet freedom at risk. VPNs could be tracked, speech monitored, votes suppressed.

This bill doesn’t just break the rules. It rewrites them — to make it easier for a leader to become a dictator without breaking a single law.


It Passed — By Just One Vote

This is what makes it even scarier: It passed by ONE vote.

Thousands of people spoke up. Activists, veterans, journalists, and everyday citizens begged lawmakers to reject it. The debate was fierce. The vote was split. But in the end, one single vote was the difference between protecting democracy and dismantling it.

One vote. That’s all it took.

That tells us two things:

  • Every voice matters. People almost stopped it.
  • We’re on the edge. Next time, we might not get another chance.

Why This Matters to Canadians — And the World

When America changes, the world changes. We share borders, media, platforms, economy, and influence. If democracy collapses there, it puts pressure on Canada and other countries to follow.

Authoritarianism spreads through fear and silence. We can’t afford to look away.


What We Can Do

  • Speak up. Share this post. Tell others what's happening.
  • Support independent media. Truth is under attack. Fund it.
  • Pressure our leaders. Canada must stand up for democracy globally.
  • Protect the vulnerable. They are always the first to be harmed.

This isn’t just a U.S. crisis. It’s a global warning. The next U.S. vote could be the last — and we’ll all feel the consequences.


Como canadiense viendo EE.UU. — Tengo miedo por todos

¿Y si te dijera que la próxima elección estadounidense podría ser la última?

Suena extremo, lo sé. Pero soy canadiense, y lo que está pasando en EE.UU. es aterrador — y no se quedará allí.

La Cámara de Representantes aprobó la ley "One Big Beautiful Bill" por un solo voto. Esta ley permite cancelar elecciones, ignorar fallos judiciales, despedir trabajadores por opiniones políticas y castigar a manifestantes.

Esto no es solo una crisis estadounidense. Es una señal de advertencia mundial.

Solo un voto. Así de cerca estamos de perder la democracia.


En tant que Canadien observant les États-Unis — j’ai peur pour nous tous

Et si je vous disais que la prochaine élection américaine pourrait être la dernière?

Cela semble extrême. Mais ce que je vois se passer aux États-Unis est effrayant. Et cela ne s’arrêtera pas là-bas.

La Chambre des représentants a adopté la loi « One Big Beautiful Bill » avec une majorité d’un seul vote. Cette loi autorise le report ou l’annulation des élections, l’ignorance des décisions de justice, le licenciement pour motifs politiques et la surveillance des manifestants.

Un seul vote. C’est tout ce qu’il a fallu. La démocratie est en danger, et nous devons agir.


If you're reading this — please share it. Democracy depends on people speaking up before it's too late.

What the Headlines Didn’t Say: Metro Vancouver’s CEO Makes Over $700K While Services Suffer

  What the Headlines Didn’t Say: Metro Vancouver’s CEO Makes Over $700K While Services Suffer

By Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita

On May 23, 2025, Global News published a story titled:
“Metro Vancouver board makes changes after damning governance report.”
It covered some superficial reforms—cutting a few meeting stipends and tweaking travel policies. But do you know what it didn’t mention?

Metro Vancouver’s Chief Administrative Officer (CAO), Jerry Dobrovolny, made over $700,000 last year.
Yes. Over $711,000 in salary, benefits, and expenses in 2023.
In 2024, his base salary alone increased to $542,657.

That’s more than the Prime Minister of Canada and the Premier of British Columbiacombined.

Meanwhile…

  • Metro Vancouver’s North Shore Wastewater Treatment Plant is nearly $4 billion over budget.
  • Projects are delayed.
  • Utility bills keep rising.
  • Social services are stretched thin.
  • And the public is being told to accept token reforms.

How is this acceptable?

Officials claim his salary is “in line” with leaders at BC Hydro, TransLink, and YVR. But we are not running a corporation—we’re supposed to be managing public services with accountability.

Where is the real transparency?

Where is the media coverage that connects these dots?

Why wasn’t this massive salary mentioned in a story about Metro Vancouver’s governance failures?

We need to start asking hard questions and demanding answers. Public trust depends on it.


Do you think public money is being spent wisely? Should executive salaries be capped in public service? Let me know in the comments. Share if you agree it’s time for change.

#MetroVancouver #Accountability #ExecutivePay #PublicMoney #CivicGovernance #TransparencyMatters #ZipolitaSpeaks


Friday, May 23, 2025

Plugged in and Tapped Out-Part 5

Solutions on the Horizon: Renewable Energy and Community Power

The good news? There are promising solutions emerging to address BC’s energy challenges.

The provincial government’s recent calls for renewable energy projects show an awareness of the problem and a commitment to action. Wind farms, solar arrays, and small-scale hydro projects are all part of the mix.

More importantly, many of these projects involve partnerships with First Nations communities, bringing local knowledge and stewardship to energy development.

Community Power: Taking Control Locally

Community-led renewable energy initiatives offer a powerful way to build resilience and keep energy dollars within BC.

By investing in decentralized, clean energy sources—like rooftop solar panels, small wind turbines, and microgrids—local communities can reduce dependence on distant dams and power plants.

It’s a model that strengthens communities, creates jobs, and helps protect the environment.

But these efforts need support: policy backing, funding, and public awareness.

Should We Scrap the Temporary Foreign Worker Program (TFWP)?

A Conservative MP Wants to End the Temporary Foreign Worker Program – Here’s Why That Matters

A new petition has been launched by a Conservative MP calling for an end to the Temporary Foreign Worker Program (TFWP)—and honestly, it's something we need to talk about.

I believe this program has been horribly abused. Many employers use it to avoid paying fair wages or offering decent working conditions. And while the idea was to fill labor shortages, the reality has often been exploitation.

Yes, it’s true: people coming here are escaping difficult conditions, but that doesn't mean it's fair to let employers take advantage of them or use them to suppress wages for everyone else.

So what would happen if we ended the program? Here’s a breakdown:


CURRENT NUMBERS
As of the end of 2023:

  • 1.27 million temporary foreign workers in Canada (a 300% increase since 2015).
  • Of those, about 188,000 are under the TFWP (mostly in agriculture, caregiving, and food processing).
  • That’s roughly 6.25% of Canada’s total workforce.

POTENTIAL BENEFITS OF ENDING THE PROGRAM

  • More jobs open to Canadians and permanent residents
  • Pressure on employers to offer better wages and working conditions
  • Less abuse and exploitation of vulnerable migrant workers
  • Shift toward permanent immigration and stronger community roots

BUT THERE ARE RISKS TOO:

  • Labor shortages in key industries
  • Higher prices for goods and services (especially food)
  • More under-the-table work and black-market hiring
  • Disruption for people who came here legally under this system

SO WHAT’S THE SOLUTION?
Instead of scrapping the TFWP entirely, we could:

  • Crack down on abusive employers
  • Turn temporary pathways into permanent immigration options
  • Invest in training and support for Canadians to do these jobs
  • Cap usage and monitor it by region and industry need

Canada needs a serious conversation about how we treat all workers. Maybe this petition will spark it. But we need thoughtful, fair, and long-term solutions—not just quick fixes.

Let me know what you think.

—Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita
#TFWP #CanadaJobs #WorkersRights #TinaWinterlik #Zipolita


Trees Remember a Solar Storm So Massive, It Could Fry Our Tech Today

  Trees Remember a Solar Storm So Massive, It Could Fry Our Tech Today — And Almost No One’s Talking About It

What if I told you that 14,000 years ago, the sun blasted Earth with a storm so intense that trees still remember it? And what if I told you that most Canadians haven’t heard a word about it?

This isn’t sci-fi. It’s science.

A newly published study has uncovered the biggest solar storm ever detected — way bigger than the famous Carrington Event of 1859. This storm happened in 12,350 BC, and scientists only just pieced it together by studying ancient tree rings in France and ice cores from Greenland. Both show spikes in carbon-14 and beryllium-10 — telltale signs of a cosmic particle onslaught from the sun.

These kinds of events are called Miyake Events (named after scientist Fusa Miyake, who discovered the first one in 2012). They’re rare, extreme solar storms that leave a global radioactive fingerprint in nature. And they’ve happened at least six times that we know of — and probably more.

But this one? It’s the biggest ever found.

Using a powerful new model developed by researchers in Finland, scientists estimate that the 12,350 BC event was 500 times stronger than the worst solar storm we’ve ever seen in the modern era.

If it happened today, it could:

  • Knock out satellites and GPS
  • Cripple power grids
  • Disrupt air travel and communications
  • Shower airline passengers with dangerous radiation
  • Break pretty much everything we rely on for daily life

But here’s the thing... nobody’s talking about it.

Canada used to have a strong network of local newspapers and community journalists. But in recent years, many of them have shut down. Big tech companies hoard ad revenue, and once-vibrant newsrooms are now empty. That means stories like this — ones that help us understand our world and prepare for the future — just don’t reach people anymore.

That’s why I wanted to share this today. Not to scare you. But to spark curiosity, awareness, and maybe even some action.

Because maybe... just maybe... the trees have been trying to warn us all along.

Let’s listen.


Want to learn more? I’ll be weaving this research into a future part of my storytelling project and book, The Alchemy of Ivy Mae, where ancient knowledge, motherly wisdom, and solar mysteries collide.

Let me know what you think — and share this with someone who loves nature, science, and big questions.


Plugged in and Tapped Out- Part 4

Facing the Heat: Rising Demand and Our Energy Crunch

Hotter summers are becoming the new normal in British Columbia. With heat waves increasing in frequency and intensity, more people are turning to air conditioners and cooling systems to stay safe and comfortable.

This surge in cooling demand is putting extra pressure on an already strained electricity grid.

Remember: BC’s hydroelectric system depends on water—water that’s becoming less reliable every year due to shrinking snowpacks and droughts.

The Perfect Storm: More Heat, Less Power

Here’s the challenge:

  • More heat → higher electricity use for air conditioning and cooling
  • Less water → less hydroelectric power available to meet that demand
  • More AI and tech growth → even greater power needs

Without smart planning and investment, we risk blackouts, higher power costs, and an unstable grid.

It’s clear: we need to adapt our energy system to the new climate reality or face serious consequences.

Thursday, May 22, 2025

Reconciliation Means Something Very Different in Canada and the U.S. — And That Matters

 


 "Reconciliation Means Something Very Different in Canada and the U.S. — And That Matters"
by Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita

When I hear the word reconciliation here in Canada, it immediately brings to mind the ongoing and urgent efforts to repair the damage done to Indigenous peoples through colonization, residential schools, land dispossession, and systemic injustice. For many Canadians, reconciliation is a process of truth, healing, and responsibility — one rooted in the 94 Calls to Action issued by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC).

But recently, I came across the term "reconciliation bill" in the context of U.S. politics, and it made me stop. At first, I thought it might be a bill related to Indigenous justice in the U.S., or something tied to racial healing — but I was wrong. In the U.S., reconciliation means something completely different.

Reconciliation in Canada: Healing, Justice, and Indigenous Rights

In Canada, reconciliation refers to our collective responsibility to recognize and repair the legacy of colonialism. This includes:

  • Confronting the trauma caused by the residential school system
  • Restoring Indigenous languages and cultures
  • Supporting land back initiatives
  • Addressing systemic inequality in healthcare, education, housing, and justice
  • Honoring treaties and promoting nation-to-nation relationships

Reconciliation in Canada is about truth, respect, and restoring dignity to Indigenous peoples.

Reconciliation in the U.S.: A Budget Trick

In the United States, however, “reconciliation” is a budgetary procedure — a tool used by Congress to fast-track certain legislation related to taxes, spending, or debt. It allows a bill to bypass the usual 60-vote requirement in the Senate and instead pass with a simple majority (51 votes). This process has been used to pass major and often controversial legislation, including tax cuts, healthcare changes, and stimulus bills.

So when U.S. politicians talk about a “reconciliation bill,” they’re not talking about justice or healing. They’re talking about money — and using a loophole to get around political gridlock.

Why This Matters

Words matter. When Canadians hear the word reconciliation, it stirs deep emotions, a sense of responsibility, and a call to action. But if we’re not careful, these important meanings can be diluted or misunderstood — especially when American political jargon dominates media headlines.

We must protect the meaning of reconciliation in the Canadian context and keep reminding people that this isn’t just a buzzword — it’s about acknowledging truths, restoring rights, and building a future based on respect and justice for Indigenous peoples.

Let’s not let a technical term from another country override the powerful and necessary work still being done here at home.


Want to learn more? Check out the Truth and Reconciliation Commission’s 94 Calls to Action and support Indigenous-led initiatives in your community.

#Reconciliation #IndigenousRights #TruthBeforeReconciliation #CanadaVsUS #WordsMatter

What Sets Us Free

 What Sets Us Free

Inspired by "Mona Lisa's Smile" and the voices of women past and present

There’s a line in Mona Lisa’s Smile that always stays with me — about girdles. Not just the garment, but what it symbolized: control, restriction, and the cultural expectation that women should shrink themselves — physically, mentally, and emotionally — to be accepted.

It was never just about a girdle.
It was about the patriarchy — how it told women what to wear, how to speak, how to feel, and what to want.
And still does.

But across generations, strong, creative, and courageous voices have risen to challenge it.

Katherine Watson, the fictional professor in Mona Lisa’s Smile, dared her students to think for themselves — to be more than wives, more than accessories.
Rachel Carson wrote Silent Spring, risking everything to challenge chemical giants and protect the Earth.
Elizabeth Warren speaks truth to power, championing economic justice in a world designed to crush the vulnerable.
Gloria Steinem, brilliant and bold, helped ignite second-wave feminism and still inspires today.
Emily Carr painted the spirit of the land and culture long before Canada was ready to honour it.
Nellie McClung, Judy LaMarsh, Doris Anderson, Ursula Franklin — Canadian women who pushed back against silence, telling stories the system tried to erase.

These women — real and imagined — cracked open cages so the rest of us could begin to fly.

But freedom… it’s not guaranteed.
Not in 2025.
Not yet.

Today, women are told they must do it all: birth babies, raise them, build careers, stay beautiful, stay quiet. And if they can’t? They feel like failures.

Childcare is expensive and elusive. Many children are raised by overworked nannies while their mothers chase a version of “success” sold by glossy influencers — often empty, often harmful.

Girls are bombarded by messages: that they need Brazilian bikini waxes at 13, or lip fillers by 16. That beauty is value. That value is likes. That aging is failure.

Meanwhile, the next generation is awakening — claiming their truths as girls, boys, both, neither. Trans kids, nonbinary youth, queer voices — all pushing against the binary the patriarchy once held sacred.

And yes, the patriarchy is scared.
Because they know they need us.
Because they always have.

But still, they try to destroy what they fear. They twist media narratives. They turn feminists into punchlines. They tried to humiliate Gloria Steinem for speaking her mind. They criticized Julia Roberts for aging gracefully. They made us believe Botox was better than wisdom.

But here’s what sets us free:

Truth. Courage. Connection. Story. Love.

We are not here to be like men.
We are not here to mimic their power.
We are here to transform it — to lead from empathy, creativity, and inclusion.

And yes — men and boys are hurting too.
Capitalism told them to be tough, rich, emotionless.
Now they are lonely, afraid, and unsure where they fit in a world finally waking up.

But the future is not female alone.
The future is all of us — listening to each other, lifting each other, learning from the past and choosing a different path forward.

We are at a crossroads.
Poverty is rising. Housing is unaffordable. The Earth is crying out.
Canada is in crisis. The U.S. is on fire — literally and metaphorically.
But there is still hope.

Because you are reading this.
Because you care.
Because we are not alone.

Let’s raise our voices.
Let’s tell our stories.
Let’s honour the ones who came before us — and be the voices others will thank in the years ahead.

No more girdles.
No more cages.
No more silence.

We are what sets us free.


Broken Promises: Vancouver's Troubled History with Affordable Housing Commitments

Vancouver is once again facing controversy as a downtown tower development fails to deliver on its promise of below-market-value suites. Buyers were enticed with the prospect of private Porsches and a blend of luxury and affordability. However, the developer is now under fire for abandoning its commitment to include affordable housing units—a story that echoes past failures in the city.

Olympic Village: A Broken Model

The 2010 Olympic Village in Southeast False Creek was originally touted as a shining example of sustainable, inclusive urban living. Its Official Development Plan promised a balanced mix: one-third market housing, one-third affordable housing, and one-third social housing for those in deepest need.

Over time, however, the commitment eroded. By 2007, the non-market housing allocation was slashed from 66% to 20%, and deeply affordable units shrank to just 8%. Financial setbacks—including the 2008 financial crisis and withdrawal of funding by Fortress Investment Group—forced the City of Vancouver to intervene and eventually take over the project.

In 2010, the province rejected all three bids to manage the social housing component. Ultimately, the city sold 67 remaining condo units to the Aquilini Group for $91 million, failing to fulfill its promise of creating substantial affordable housing in the area.

Woodward's Building: Gentrification Disguised as Inclusion

Another example is the redevelopment of the historic Woodward’s Building in the Downtown Eastside. The plan included 200 non-market housing units among 536 condominiums. Critics argue the development accelerated gentrification, displaced low-income residents, and increased local rents, undermining its inclusive intent.

Metro Vancouver Today: Homes for Ghosts, Not People

A recent report shows over 2,000 newly built condos across Metro Vancouver sitting empty. With affordability at crisis levels, high listing prices and market instability keep potential buyers and renters at bay. Meanwhile, the city council recently approved $11.15 million for 330 affordable rental homes. But can this funding undo decades of broken promises?

Why It Matters

These recurring failures highlight the gap between public commitments and actual delivery. Whether due to financial pressures, poor planning, or lack of oversight, vulnerable residents are left behind while developers reap the rewards.

What Can Be Done?

Greater transparency, stronger enforcement of housing agreements, and community oversight are urgently needed. Vancouver’s future depends on whether it can learn from its past and truly commit to equitable housing for all.

Share this post to help raise awareness about Vancouver’s ongoing housing challenges.


Wednesday, May 21, 2025

No More Silence

No More Silence: It's Time to Stand Together – A Call for Justice for BC’s Forgotten Families

By Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita

For decades, people in British Columbia—especially single mothers and their children—have suffered in silence. We’ve endured the consequences of heartless cuts to social assistance, housing, and essential services under former Premier Gordon Campbell and successive governments. And it’s not over.

Many of us are still paying the price, day after day.

I recently learned about the courageous single mothers in Nova Scotia who stood up against discriminatory policies. Back in the 1980s, they formed Mothers United for Metro Housing (MUMS) to challenge unfair housing laws that made it legal for landlords to refuse them shelter just because they had children or were on welfare. Today, single mothers in Nova Scotia are still fighting against cruel policies like the child support clawback—which takes money meant for their children and deducts it from their already meager social assistance.

Sound familiar?

Here in BC, we’ve lived through similar injustices. Under the Campbell government in the early 2000s, the social safety net was torn apart:

  • Thousands were kicked off welfare rolls under stricter eligibility.
  • The Human Rights Commission was eliminated.
  • Disability support was slashed.
  • Affordable housing vanished while rents skyrocketed.
  • Legal aid and education funding were gutted.
  • Services for women, children, Indigenous communities, and people with disabilities were decimated.

The impact? Devastating.

Single moms were forced into deeper poverty.
Children grew up without stability.
Some lost their homes. Others lost hope.
Many of those children are now adults—struggling with trauma, housing, mental health, and discrimination rooted in policies made when they were just kids.

We Need to Make This Right.

We’re calling for a Class Action Lawsuit—against the government policies that caused irreversible harm.

We want to unite everyone who suffered under those cuts: single parents, people with disabilities, former foster kids, homeless individuals, and anyone who still carries the weight of that injustice.

But we need your help to do this.


JOIN US: Rally for Justice

Date: Thursday, May 29
Location: Insert location here (e.g., Vancouver Art Gallery or BC Legislature)
Time: Insert time here

Let’s show up in numbers. Let’s speak up. Let’s show the government we won’t be ignored any longer.


Here’s What You Can Do Right Now:

  1. Sign the PetitionStart or sign here
  2. Write a Letter – To your MLA, to the Premier, to the media. Tell your story.
  3. Share This Post – Help spread the word far and wide.
  4. Offer Support – Are you a lawyer, advocate, or journalist? We need you.
  5. Join the Rally – Bring a friend, bring your truth, bring your power.

Calling All Organizers:

If you're planning a rally, event, or action on May 29 (or after), please copy and paste this post to your own blogs, pages, or emails. Add your group name, contact info, and rally details.

We are stronger together.


We’ve been suffering in silence for far too long.
Now it’s time to rise together and demand dignity, justice, and change.

If you're someone who lived through the cuts…
If you’re still struggling because of them…
If you care about fairness and equity in BC…

Stand with us. May 29 is just the beginning.

#JusticeForBC
#RiseUpBC
#MakeThemPay
#ClassActionNow
#ZipolitaSpeaks