Tag Archives: Canada
Should children get to vote?
Elections constitute an essential part of democracy, however it is not limited to voting once in a while. A democratic system is based on the idea of “polis”, i.e. a community in which every citizen must participate in debates and discussions to decide the faith of the group. It is common knowledge that voter turnout is on a downward slop, especially amongst young adults. For the 2008 federal elections, 58% of registered voters bothered to vote, less than 40% for people under 25. In my opinion, the fact that millions of Canadians chose not to vote is probably a consequence of the weakening of the second element of democracy: a culture of debate. Many radical solutions or simple adjustments have been proposed in the last few decades to face this democratic and participation crisis: incorporate a proportional representation element into the system, make voting mandatory (as many countries do) or making election days national holidays. We have not tried any of these so far to reverse this sad trend; even if I thought Jean Chrétien leaving politics would help… it did not.
Reiko Aokim, a Japanese professor, proposes to modify an important democratic tradition: voting age. Should we lower it to 16 o raise it to 21? Nope, we should simply abolish it, giving a vote to all citizens, starting day one – note to pro-life activists, fetus would not get that right-. So, 7 years old Tommy should be able to vote for the coolest politician or the brightest color party? In practice, parents would bear the responsibility to vote in name of their children. It seems logical to oblige adolescents (starting at 14 years old) to be present for a vote to count. To avoid disputes between divorced parents or conservative/NPD couples, father would vote for boys and mothers for girls.
This idea is based on two main arguments: education to democratic life and intergenerational equity. As mentioned earlier, the issue goes further than voter turnout, it touches our democratic culture as a whole. Giving a vote to every single Canadian could contribute to fomenting interest in electoral politics but also in political discussions in a larger sense. On one side, adolescents would have an incentive to ask, get informed knowing that someone (their father or mother) can cast an extra vote. On the other, parents would probably feel more responsible for their children’s votes than theirs, giving them an extra motivation to go vote and to engage discussions with their adolescents about political issues.
The other justification possesses a more philosophical twist. In a demographic context of aging population, youth interests or simple long term preoccupations are “doomed” to come second. Older citizens tend to be more preoccupied by security and heath care, while younger people by education and environmental issues. On the long run, children will have to face the implications of today’s political decisions. Furthermore, most of us would agree that both education and the environment are far from being federal or provincial priorities. We can probably assume that a majority of parents would take in consideration their children’s future when it comes to vote. Abolishing voting age could therefore contribute to increase the importance of long term political and social issues, by taking into account children’s interest.
18 is clearly an arbitrary number. By no means reaching 18 signifies that one knows anything about politics, just like at 16 someone can be well informed and ready to make an intelligent choice. As a personal experience, I remember with great details the 1995 Quebec referendum, in which I could not vote (I was 15 at the time). I was not happy about the whole “you’re too young to vote” thing. My grandmother, who was full of wisdom thought I had more to gain or lose than her. She offered to vote in my name, so she ended up being the only one at her retirement home to vote yes (please keep reading anyway… complaints about hosting a separatist on the blog can be addressed to the editors). Voting by in name of children does not mean that they would actual get to chose, however, in large part their interest will be taken into account and as they grown up, adolescent will be gradually introduced in democratic life.
Obviously, there is no guarantee that parents would consider their children’s opinion or interest, as my grandmother did or that parents would have a greater interest in politics because of this modification. Nonetheless, in theory this idea seems to offer positive inputs and should be debated. One thing is certain, something has to be done to foment our modern “polis”, since our democratic life is in bad shape.
Monarchies Suck or God Save the Queen?
David Lloyd Johntson seems like a good guy. Three names, Cambridge grad, a mediator. Not a bad guy for the job. Oh, what job you ask? He’s the appointed member of Canadian government has the power to prorogue, is the chief of chiefs, the regal legal head of our country. A representative of the Queen of Canada (her official title on the books on this side of the water). He’s got a sweet pad in Ottawa, some cash to entertain and visit, and gets invited to all the right parties.
Why, oh why do we have this person as the head of our government? He exclaims, exasperated.
So I’m not a monarchist. That’s not the point of this posting. It’s bigger than that.
Any of you ever been to Haida Gwaii? How about to the Queen Charlotte Islands? Right…they’re the same place, thankfully changed to a name that actually represented the people who lived there. Here I write from a province called British Columbia (which is neither British nor Columbian, nationally speaking) with our capital city, Victoria and a whole bunch of other towns and cities named for our royal overlords of yesteryear. And who’s on our coins and the $20? Right. A old queen who lives in a castle in a distant land. Do you know how much it cost us to bring Prince Chuck over here for a few weeks? $2.57 million. And how much news did the new royal engagement garner? Too goddamn much.
The point of this posting is about having symbols and governmental practices that mean something to us as a group of people; the names we give places, our ferries, how we dissolve government, the mandatory information our new Canadians must learn in order to be part of our country. Last I checked, we haven’t been written a cheque by the Family of Windsor for this branding. What’s the deal? How come our country is stuck in our colonial past?
Some have told me, “it’s one of the few things keeping us from being American.” And, apologies United Statesers, but that is not a direction many of us favour. Others have said, “it’s tradition. Why do you wanna go and change everything?” Others have the fear of having President Harper in charge of things. Re-writing the constitution seems like a lot of work, no?
Here’s a list of places and things I’d like to change:
- Nova Scotia (it’s not even that Scottish anymore)
- Regina, SK (think about it)
- London, ON (so dumb)
- Prince Albert, BC
- Prince George, BC
- Prince Rupert, BC
- British Columbia
- Prince Edward Island
- Victoria, BC
- Fredericton, NB
And can we please have someone else on our money? I swear we’re not putting Prince Chuck on my coins (“ears or tails” would be the new phrase). I want people to swear allegiance to Canada, not to the Queen of England. No more lieutenant governors, no more governor general, no more monarchy! Give me Tommy Douglas on my $20. Give me Terry Fox on my toonie! Our ships are not Her Royal Majesty’s.
A federal community and the symbols that link us together across this huge expanse of land tickles the unity we feel with our neighbours. Let’s step it up and make it more about us and not an old lady in a castle in a far away land.
How will you remember?
Tomorrow is Remembrance Day. For many, this somber day is uncomplicated and direct. Wake up. Put on dapper attire (perhaps medals). Place poppy over heart. Attend parade. Sing at concert. Educate a young person. Be silent for a moment. Now. Some might say that reducing such a complex like – like war – to a simple cliche is inaccurate and, perhaps, irresponsible. I say, yes. Yes it is. Geoff Dyer’s opening line in The Mission of the Somme did the same thing about the First World War:
First World War – Cause unclear but fun at first. All over by Christmas, ha,
ha, ha. Trenches. Stalemate. Lions led by donkeys. Piles of corpses. Horror
beyond words. Completely pointless.
And that’s the problem. When you condense an event – like a war – into a single cliche or a one-dimensional memory, well, you create a monoculture of pride-in-tragedy, um, culture, that kinda sorta celebrates war and conflict by the way it remembers such events. Check out this recent ad for Remembrance Week.
Funnily enough – and I use that term very purposefully because I’ve written about humour and war before – human beings don’t really conceptualize war as “tragic” at all. I mean, certain individuals and relatively small groups do, but they’re pretty much always overwhelmed by the shouting champions of the military industrial complex who celebrate the fighting force of their nation. Let’s be honest, though. If we thought war was that tragic then we wouldn’t do it anymore. For thousands of years, strapping on sticks or swords or muskets or rifles or machine guns or lasers is how we’ve solved problems once words lose meaning and power. But if war shouldn’t be remembered as tragic, how the heck should it be remembered?
Today – and every day-before-Remembrance Day – I’ll make a case for humour being included in what is a multi-dimensional modern memory of war in Canada and beyond. The fact is that, believe it or not, Rick Mercer and Stephen Colbert are more accurate cultural representations of how we – people – respond to war and conflict than, say, Wilfred Owen and John McCRae.
A soldier’s recollection of Passchendaele or pictures of 1 July 1916 on the Somme or the graveyards near Verdun or the memorial at Vimy Ridge all account for the truthful poignancy of clichéd responses to the war; however, it is dangerous to rely solely on such reactions, as they supplant many other facets of the war, such as humour, and simplify a very complex event of the past.
With that in mind, here are three things that should be included in tomorrow’s Remembrance Day Ceremonies:
1. A Trench Song. During a Remembrance Day concert, throw out a fun, spirited trench ballad! If it’s an adult-only event, well, make it a bawdy one! Did you know that none of the poems read at Remembrance Day ceremonies were actually published during the wars that they’re about? War poetry didn’t become popular or even circulate in the public discourse until the 1930s, when a charismatic young fellow named Hitler began beating the European war drums once more. In fact, between 1914-1918 songs helped to pick-up some understandably unhappy fellows who were knee-deep in muck and fighting for more and more foggy reasons as the days turned into years. Funny songs were – and still are – factual artifacts from horribly violent events. They’ll also lighten the mood a bit.
2. A Cartoon (above). These cultural artifacts got a tonne of play in the First World War – the event that inspired Remembrance Day. There are literally millions to choose from and it is easy to tie their message to some general – or specific – themes of the conflict(s) you’re remembering.
3. Compelling – hilarious – stories from Veterans. These men have, literally, laughed in the face of death. I’ve met these Veterans and heard these stories. A more human perspective on remembering war and conflict is one that incorporates a myriad representation of emotion.
So there it is. By no means is this article an argument for not remembering war as perhaps the most vulgar expression of humanity.War truly is tragic. And we should never, ever do it. But it is inaccurate and a bit dishonest to reflect on events like the First World War as being solely tragic ones.
Because if war was really so bad we would never, ever do it. Ever.
From We to Me: A Canadian’s Guide to Democracy Inaction
Yesterday some amazing news flashed across my screen. It came in two parts – each more sensationally exciting than the last. First, Maxime Bernier, who last week claimed that – during his his tenure as Industry Minister – his office received over 1,000 emails per day complaining about the census, shrugged-off skepticism that the number 1,000 seemed a really, really big one. “So we had a discussion with my staff and we cannot prove it because all these emails have been deleted from that time, four years ago,” said Bernier. I mean, when you’re getting that many emails per day of course you’re going to delete them. MPs don’t use gmail, man.
The second piece of news was perfect comic juxtaposition, which is a fancy way of saying “putting two incongruent things next to each other so that a humorous result is created.” Enter up-and-coming news agency, The CBC. They discovered that, around the time of the 2006 census, between 25-30 complaints were submitted to Statistics Canada about the long-form, mandatory census. Not per day. For the entire year. Certainly, this doesn’t take into account made-up deleted letters. So, that was a pretty well-timed joke.
But it gets better, especially if you’re a selfish, ego-maniacal, anti-community Libertarian like me. [Editor's note: I've been waiting for a moment like this for, like, 29 years!]
On hearing about the 3,650,000 letters-per-year vs. 25 letters-per-year descrepency, my man (Industry Minister) Tony (Clement) said, “Even if only one Canadian complains we need to take that issue seriously.”
Really, Tony? That’s amazing, because I actually have a few complaints and/or reasonable requests that I’d like you to address. In no particular order, here they are:

Bigger than PEI. Farther from the Mainland than PEI. And it just looks more like a province, doesn't it?
1. Mountie uniforms (see image). Are you kidding me with these?! We’re an international laughing stock. Replace them with powder white ninja suits right away.
2. The Sun. I’m allergic to it and I can’t go outside in the summer without looking ridiculous. Please erect a giant umbrella over Canada that blocks the Sun. Also, I’d like you to make this a UN Security Council issue.
3. Hockey Teams. Bring Les Nordiques back to Quebec City, the Jets back to Winnipeg and put two of the Lightning, Panthers, Thrashers, or Hurricanes in Hamilton and Regina. It’s the right thing to do.
4. Stop pouring billions into our feeble attempt at militarism. Create the world’s best anti-terrorism and disaster-relief units. Battleships and fighter jets aren’t gonna help when we’re sandwiched between Russia and the United States.
5. Make Yann Martel Minister of Something. I’m not the guy’s biggest fan, but he sent our book club a hilarious letter and, well, people have been appointed to higher places for stupider reasons.
6. Be funnier. Start openly (like in the House of Commons) comparing Michael Ignatieff to that blue eagle from the muppets. Their resemblance is uncanny and I can’t believe this connection isn’t part of our public discourse.
7. Transfer the right to be a province from Prince Edward Island to Vancouver Island. The last 133 years have been embarrassing for everyone on the West Coast. Please change this.
8. Ban the Internet. Let’s face it, the Twitterverse is a giant time waster and its pre-packaged facts, findings and information is slowly destroying the hippocampus in our brains.
9. Transform the tax system. Carbon emissions and inefficiency should be taxed, while work (ie. income from my job) and efficiency should rewarded. Check this out for more details. Or read anything by Paul Hawken.
10. Create a hybrid Atlantic-Pacific-Supersalmon. Ideally, this new genetically modified species will be able to re-produce more than once, thus providing us with a deliciously fishy renewable resource that will give our country a pronounced market advantage in global food production, light industry, heavy industry, defense, information technology, and the Olympics. This product will be the Canadian equivalent of high-fructose corn syrup. We can put it in everything.
So there it is, Tony. A few reasonable requests from a single Canadian. Given this magazine’s expansive readership, I’m pretty confident that we can get 25 more people to back at least one of the above ideas. I now ask you, my fellow Gumbooteers, which one of these issues should we take to Ottawa?
Let the lobbying begin!
It Would Take a Really Long Time to Walk Around Canada
If you don’t believe me, check out these numbers I came across on the Government of Canada’s website. I did the math myself.
If you started to walk the length of Canada’s coastlines from the Strait of Juan du Fuca on the West Coast to the Bay of Fundy on the east coast, covering 20 kilometres** a day at a moderate walking pace, you would complete your journey in approximately 33 years. That seems like a remarkably long time to cover the whole of Canada’s coastlines, especially when you compare it to how long it takes to cross the country on foot. At 5000 kilometres from coast to coast, you could walk across Canada in a little under a year. Then again, when you consider how many fjords, bays, inlets, and ice packs you’d have to cover along our country’s coastlines, 33 years sounds a little more believable. Now consider the time and effort it would take to keep these coastlines clean from human litter.
From September 18th to 26th, Canadians across the country will organize clean-ups along Canada’s ocean, lake and river shorelines in what is known as the Great Canadian Cleanup. Last year during the cleanup, organizers covered 2, 457 km and picked up a total of 160, 914 kg of trash.
Cigarette butts take the cake as the number one item picked up by organizers with over 367, 010 found on our country’s shores. Food wrappers, plastic bags, bottles and dishes follow as the next most popular litter items on the list.
As a program, the shoreline cleanup originated in Vancouver in 1994. Over the last 16 years, it’s grown to become national in scope. Over 1,000 different cleanup sites have been registered across the country. Another 600 sites and it will smash last year’s record-breaker of over 1,500 sites.
You can join a clean-up or organize one yourself. If you would like to read more about the Great Canadian Shoreline Clean-up, visit their website here.
It’s time to clean house, gumboot-style.
**Gumboots may, in fact, slow you down. They’re known for their sexy good-looks and H2O protection, but they’re not the best at long distances.
(A similar version of this post also appears on TheBigWild.org. The Big Wild is an online partnership between Mountain Equipment Co-op and the Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society. With the help of Canadians, it’s dedicated to protecting large areas of wilderness across the country.)
Blackberry World vs Saudi Arabia, UAE, etc.
This just in – the much of the Saudia Arabia and the United Arab Emirates are gunning for private blackberry information. And if they don’t get it, they’re threatening to cut all messenger services in their countries.
RIM is in negotiations as we speak. But even if successful, these negotiations could jeopardize the growth of RIM, the Canada’s most important tech exporter. It could also set a horrible precedent, breaking the super-secure network to potentially hostile government scrutiny.
As negotiations progress the list of states who say they intend to review their policy and potentially add their name to the list of countries willing to cut down the blackberry community is growing.
In addition to Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, India is in talks with the company over gaining access, and both Lebanon and Algeria, according to a newspaper report, are reviewing the situation and might soon also might join the list. India in particular has pointed to the casualties caused by the terrorist attack in 2008 in Mumbai and when militants used wireless phones to direct attacks. They say it all comes down to national security and want to be able to monitor Blackberry traffic.
But many feel there’s a lot more at stake than monitoring the wireless emails of select terrorists. RIM co-CEO Mike Lazaridis’ summed it up in a recent Wall Street Journal article:
“Everything on the internet is encrypted. This is not a BlackBerry-only issue. If they can’t deal with the internet, they should shut it off.”
For Lazaridis such a move to monitor the electronic communications would significantly undermine the world’s e-commerce. The potential for abuse would be enormous and goes to the heart of what the internet is all about. Free access to information and communications of that information for all.
But Lazaridis and the RIM team aren’t the only one kicking up a fight on this one. While the Canadian government is coming down firmly on the side of RIM, more importantly, the issue has come to the attention of Hillary Clinton who’s already indicated an interest in hashing it out with any governments eager to get their hands on private data. Turns out business isn’t the only fan of the blackberry. They’re also been widely introduced to the US military. And when the US military is concerned, watch out.
Here’s hoping RIM will win these negotiations and stand firm. Else it’ll be a very slippery slope that most of us (with the exception of the police) probably don’t really want to go down.
Canada – Global AIDS Outcast
We’ve heard a lot in the news these days about AIDS and HIV thanks to the Vienna Conference. Last week upwards of 25,000 researchers, activists and government officials flooded Vienna to discuss AIDS related issues during the XVIII International AIDS Conference. Among the faithful were philanthropic rock stars Bill Gates and Bill Clinton as well as Vancouver”s own Dr. Julio Montaner, the president of the International AIDS Society and director of the B.C. Centre for Excellence in HIV/ AIDS.
According to Dr. Montaner and other AIDS treatment activists like Maxine Davis, ED of the Dr. Peter Centre, a Vancouver centre offering day care for vulnerable people suffering from HIV/AIDS, Vancouver is a global rock star. The research is cutting edge and the treatment has transformed places like the Dr. Peter Centre into a model on how to effectively treat some of the most difficult to care for. So sought after are these treatment models that treatment and policy experts have traveled from as far as Washington DC and Kaliningrad, Russia to learn from them. It should be a given that Vancouver’s successes should translate to a national reputation that would be a beacon for the world’s AIDS activists and researchers. Unfortunately, the Canadian government is singlehandedly sullying this international reputation of excellence.
At the end of the conference last week, the Conservative led federal government continued their long hostility to evidence-based health policy when they refused to support the Vienna Declaration. The declaration’s aims was to ensure governments take necessary steps to improve community health and safety, particularly as it pertains to HIV/ AIDS. So far the declaration has been endorsed by more than 12,000 people, including five Nobel Laureates, the former presidents of Colombia, Brazil and Mexico, and many leading medical and scientific organizations, such as the top medical journal The Lancet. Hard to believe anyone could find much fault in that.
But in the end the fact the Vienna Declaration included supervised injection as a method of harm reduction seems to have sealed its fate in the minds the Prime Minister’s policy makers. While his government continues to battle to destroy world-renown Insite in the courts, Canada’s Health Minister Leona Aglukkaq continually has refused to support the idea of supervised injection, despite the fact its a consensus among AIDS researchers and policy makers around the world that it saves lives. Instead of joining the overwhelming crowd, the Health Minister was in Vienna to announce funding for a maternal health program and a renewed Canadian HIV Vaccine Initiative, which is a Government of Canada and Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation collaboration.
The result of the Aglukkaq’s decision to ignore the Vienna Declaration is an embarrassment that can be likened to Canada’s equally ridiculous isolation around climate change in Bali in 2007. Talk about recluse from the global AIDS community. This lack of commitment to the very fundamentals of harm reduction hasn’t gone unnoticed by activists. Last Tuesday, the Canadian government’s booth was trashed by angry protesters. Later on in the week the Health Minister came under increasing fire and went to ground. On Friday, CBC Radio admitted that after days of trying to contact her, the ministry’s communications staff had used just about every excuse in the book. She still hadn’t commented on her position surrounding harm reduction.
Sadly the federal government still seems intent on taking credit where none is due. As time goes by and people continue to die on the streets across the country due to an antiquated drug-policy ideologically spearheaded by the Conservatives, here’s hoping something changes soon so Canada will no longer be isolated from the global scientific community.
Who’s Your Farmer? Part 1
On the surface, the food landscape of Canada looks pretty good. There is an abundance of food in our grocery stores. We now have more selection and year round availability. And for that food we’re now paying the smallest percentage of our household expenditure (just under 10%) that we’ve ever spent and North Americans spend one of the smallest percentages of our income on food in the world. The current food system seems to generally be working for the retailers and even sometimes for consumers, but what about farmers?
They are a community that obviously plays a major role in feeding us, but the way the food system is currently set up farmers have been marginalized and may even been teetering on exstinction. There are a lot of professionals out there where we get to make personal connections with like doctors, teachers, accountants and even Daily Gumboot correspondents. But do you have someone that you can put a face to that grows your food? And that you can trust is providing you with food that is safe, healthy, nutritious and delicious? The rest of this post is going to help you get to know Canadian farmers and a few of the challenges that they are up against (and then my next post will be a more positive one on farming innovation and what you can eat to help).
First off, there aren’t that many farmers in Canada anymore. Only 2.4 percent of us are farmers and this is the fewest farmers we’ve ever had (we peaked at 32 percent in the 1930s). And the farmers that we do have overwhelmingly fit into a very specific demographic profile: aging (the average age is over 50 now), caucasian and male. Almost half of farm operators are reporting non-farm income (basically they need to have a second job). In terms of farms, there are fewer of them and they are bigger. 98 percent of the farms are still family businesses but they are under fairly serious threat, whether it is from land being bought up, farmer debt or corporate financing of farm inputs. Farmers are increasingly moving toward corporate control and as a result farmers are losing the ability to do even basic things like save seed from year to year.
The food system has also been changing in a way that is making it harder for a lot of farmers to distribute or process their goods. There are a lot of examples out there. The last fruit cannery closed in Niagara a couple of years ago and a lot of farmers had nowhere to sell their fruit. The result was perfectly productive fruit orchards being uprooted and farmers having to scramble to move to new crops. There is also an abattoir crisis in Ontario. 15 years ago there were 900 businesses to process meat and poultry and now there are about 130. The main cause of the closers has been a dramatic change in the standards, where small and medium sized abattoirs need to meet the same standards as the large scale ones (even if the small and medium ones don’t have the same safety issues as the large ones). Even the standardization
of grocery store produce is a roadblock for farmers to get their goods into grocery stores. A farmer now needs to grow and package their lettuce in the same way that California does or many grocery stores and restaurants won’t buy it. Most farmers don’t have the resources to set up on site processing and when they do they struggle to navigate local land use planning to get it set up and if they are lucky enought to get that far they have their taxes go through the roof because they now have a commercial property (at least inOntario this is the case).
Canada’s farming community is facing significant pressures from a number of directions. But despite these challenges, I’ve met a lot of farmers, who want to continue farming and their kids, who want to stay in the family business. And with the raising awareness about local food, there already are opportunities for the farming community to move into new niches, new farmers to get their start and for innovative new businesses to bridge the gaps that exist in the middle of the food system between producers and consumers. Part 2 of “Who’s Your Farmer?” (to be posted 2 weeks) will have ideas on how you can get to better know your farmers and help farming in Canada become viable once again.
Discovering a Town Square
It rained, and rained, and rained.
Early spring on the west coast can be like that.
Somehow we’d managed to be on the ball enough to all be in Squamish on the same weekend. That in itself was a major triumph for a group comprised of a dad, a gypsy pirate with no fixed address, a serious diver who lives on the island, and a Northerner with two massive (and massively high-maintenance) dogs that need a dedicated sitter if he’s away for more than 5 minutes.
Yahoos, the lot of us.
So there we were, on the best granite around, but it was wet.
Soaked.
Even the bouldering, half-protected by trees, had gone damp.
Smearing was really smeary, more like spreading butter than sticking rubber, you could aid up a crack that would normally be a walk in the park, desperately fighting for every inch of vertical progress.
I should mention we’re not the supermen and superwomen mountaineers who climb massive mixed routes or redpoint/onsight/free climb. We’re regular humans who got bitten by the climbing bug a few years ago in Northern BC, when dragged out to a little top-rope crag outside of Chetywnd.
We’ve led 5.10’s, but been scared as hell doing it.
So, being in a climbing locale and not being able to climb, we did the next best thing, maybe the next-next-next best, it depends on how you feel about trundling, rock-fights, and tea-in-caves) we invaded public swim at the rec-centre.
Only, we weren’t really invading much, because a good three-quarters of the people there were yahoos too. Mostly concentrated around the hot tub, conversations started with nods and “hey weren’t you working on…” questions.
We soaked our battered selves in the tub, and as we sat there it dawned on me that this was the town square of a community focused on active living – and a beautiful thing.
There’s been a lot of debate in Vancouver over where the real Town Square is or ought to be, even here on the ‘boot, but the more I connect with communities of practice or interest, rather than of physical space, the more I find a town square can be anything from your local haunts, to the dog-park, or even your own home.
Dear readers give some thought to your communities and let us know, where’s your town square – the hub of your community? Is it more important during your downtime, or is connecting there part of your daily routine?






