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10 votes
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Fellow Canadians, what's on your mind this week?
I'm preoccupied with a couple of things. The first being that the federal budget was just released and I'm feeling like a national school lunch program and an injection of money into housing with...
I'm preoccupied with a couple of things.
The first being that the federal budget was just released and I'm feeling like a national school lunch program and an injection of money into housing with the expectation that cities build higher density dwellings is... Something they should have done mid mandate?
Is there even time to implement this stuff? Are we getting close to the point where we've spent too much?
Second is a quote from a compilation of personal accounts from travellers into this country's north in the 1800s. Farley Mowat assembled the stories and wrote the forward for "Tundra" in the 1960s and says the following
"Until 50 or 60 years ago, the Arctic was a living reality to North Americans of every walk of life. It had become real because men of their own kind were daring it's remote fastness in search of pure adventure", unprotected by the vast mechanical shields that we now demand whenever we step out of our air conditioned sanctuaries".
He goes on to talk about how -- most of all -- easily heated dwellings and running water had a softening effect on people, and that (basically) we fear and avoid Canada's climate far more than our forebearers did.
Wondering what people's thoughts on this are.
From what you learned from grandparents or earlier generations about spending time outside, would you agree that the comforts of home are just too damned seductive?
13 votes -
The Houthis are very, very, pleased
24 votes -
They're always guilty ... or are they?
22 votes -
Why joining a club is good for democracy
11 votes -
Fifty years since Sweden first introduced state-funded parental leave for couples to share – pioneering policy offers some surprising lessons for other countries
19 votes -
Links forged half a century ago with Gaza City mean that support for Palestine goes well beyond gesture politics in Tromsø, Norway
8 votes -
Sandra Day O’Connor, first woman US Supreme Court justice, dies at 93
34 votes -
Sweden halts adoptions from South Korea after claims of falsified papers on origins of children
10 votes -
The extreme ambitions of West Bank settlers
44 votes -
The costs of not investing in American public infrastructure, research, and education
29 votes -
Political warfare comes home to the US - the founder of the Nixon presidential library comments on the history of US disputes over presidential succession and the Trump indictments
14 votes -
Finland's long road to NATO – Russia's attack on Ukraine in 2022 revived memories of 1939 and was the catalyst that led the Nordic country into the Alliance
2 votes -
The invasion of Iraq was a turning point on to a path that led towards Ukraine
9 votes -
Italy has a fascism problem. Why?
4 votes -
Dutch prime minister apologizes for the Netherlands’ role in the slave trade
7 votes -
Denmark to try out first grand coalition government since 1970s – been without a permanent government for forty-two days, beating the previous record
5 votes -
The big trouble if DC becomes the 51st state
6 votes -
The conservative Supreme Court's favorite judicial philosophy requires a very, very firm grasp of history — one that none of the justices seem to possess
16 votes -
War with Russia? Finland has a plan for that.
6 votes -
Six people who were part of a failed 1950s social experiment have won compensation from Denmark's government and will receive a face-to-face apology from the prime minister
5 votes -
Envy
15 votes -
I am getting sick of writing these pieces to respond to people like Rick Santorum
13 votes -
Denmark's prime minister has apologised to twenty-two children who were removed from their homes in Greenland in the 1950s in a failed social experiment
11 votes -
Who was American politician Ross Perot, and what if he won in 1992?
11 votes -
With Obama saying "the filibuster is a 'Jim Crow relic' ”, it’s looking more and more like Democrats will abolish the filibuster if they win back the Senate
21 votes -
The time Bernie Sanders almost ran against Barack Obama, explained
5 votes -
Our country is in chaos. But it's a great time to be an American.
12 votes -
The Republican choice: How the GOP chose to spend five decades making itself the white voter's party
21 votes -
Trump's "law and order" rhetoric won't help him like Nixon in 1968
10 votes -
Riots are the American way: The US was founded on revolutionary blood; the Civil War took 400,000 lives and the civil rights movement was a reaction to white violence
18 votes -
1968 and 2020: How they resemble each other and how they don't
9 votes -
The corruption of the US Republican Party: The modern GOP is best understood as an insurgency that carried the seeds of its own corruption from the start
10 votes -
Grading the US Electoral College: C for chaos
4 votes -
The paranoid style in American politics: It had been around a long time before the Radical Right discovered it (1964)
5 votes -
Republicans are sacrificing other Americans' freedoms for their own, like once happened in the American Civil War
9 votes -
A documentary called 'Mrs America' shows how Phyllis Schlafly partidarized the Equal Rights Amendment, birthed the culture war and pioneered modern Conservative rhetoric
7 votes -
Modern Venezuela shows the eerie conclusion of illiberal politics
5 votes -
How the US has changed to become gradually more democratic over time
4 votes -
The George (H.W) Bush promise that changed the Republican party
7 votes -
Is the USA evil?
17 votes -
India and Sri Lanka's violent fight over fish
3 votes -
Why has India embraced the far-right?
12 votes -
Reckless in Riyadh: Some American policymakers and scholars are questioning whether the alliance with Saudi Arabia still makes sense for the US
4 votes -
The fight for rent control
5 votes -
Thirty years after Tiananmen protests, 'the fight is still going on for China'
7 votes -
What Milwaukee can teach the Democrats about socialism
9 votes -
South Africa confronts a legacy of apartheid: Why land reform is a key issue in the upcoming election
7 votes -
A 1950s TV show had a fear-mongering conman named Trump who wanted to build a wall.
7 votes -
What America can learn from the fall of the Roman republic (Interview with historian Edward Watts about his book "Mortal Republic")
10 votes