So after a really long day, my wonderful girlfriend treated us to her own recipe for miso soup. Surprisingly filling, and aesthetically pleasing, as well.
So I was just in Save-On and saw someone wearing this shirt. He told me that a few years ago there were two families from Prince George living in Italy, so they had a big street party with over one hundred guests to celebrate their hometown. This included street hockey and these awesome shirts. He let me take the picture on the condition he not be in it.
It’s almost sort of summertime, and we’re starting to move into our yard for the first time since buying our house. It’s a decent size, not as big as either of the ones we grew up with, but it works. One major issue, though, is the complete lack of a garden. Yesterday, being a nice warm day with no obligations, we finally started one. Here’s our progress:
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| After |
OK, so it’s not the most dramatic change, but it’s enough for the start of a small vegetable garden which, depending on how well we do, will be able to expand year after year. We’re going to focus on edibles because, well, it seems more rewarding somehow. I’m also looking into an apiary. We’ll see if I follow through on that one.
Before I start, I need two extremely important disclaimers.
First, as always, the opinions expressed here are my own, and do not necessarily reflect those of anyone else.
Second, my criticisms here are not leveled at the entirety of the Citizen staff. Unfortunately, the views being expressed in their editorials are unsigned and therefore, rightly or wrongly, tend to reflect on the editorial board as a whole.
I tend not to get too political on this blog, at least not beyond the local governance level. There are a few reasons for this, primary among them being that we have a robust public sphere that I don’t feel is hurting too much from the lack of my own commentary.
But I do feel the need to respond to the editorial printed into today’s issue of the Prince George Citizen. One reason is that as the local daily, it may, to some extent, deem to speak for the citizenry of Prince George (look at what it’s called). And as a citizen, I am allowed to respond.
But my primary motivation for responding is that it is addressed to me, specifically. Yes, that’s right– today’s editorial takes aim at a wide host of targets, myself among them. Not only am I parasite, but as it turns out, I just might be a traitor to my country.
And what earns me this title in the eyes of the Citizen’s editorial board? I work for the CBC. Granted, I’m only there once a week, and my role is largely relegated to tracking down stories on souffle and new rules at the mall, but they seem to be painting in broad enough strokes that I’m implicated along with the rest of the organization. Here’s what they say: (full editorial: http://tinyurl.com/y69poxu)
“From self-serving politicians in the Liberal and NDP parties, and the left wing B.C. Civil Liberties Union backed by their friends in the CBC and Toronto Star, the campaign to discredit our brave men and woman fighting in Afghanistan continues unabated…
“Not only do our soldiers have to deal with the post-traumatic stress of the horrors of war and seeing their brothers maimed and killed but now they have to contend with parasites back home seeking to cast doubt about their competency and their honour. Shame…
Thank God the B.C. Civil Liberties Union wasn’t around during the Second World War, filing complaints against out troops for violating the rights of Nazi storm troopers?
War is hell and it is certainly no place for politicians looking for an excuse to discredit their opponents.
By asking our soldiers to risk life and limb on our behalf, in that quagmire where so many have perished, we owe them the benefit of our full and unequivocal support.
The time for second guessing and the whining of intellectual Quislings can wait until after 2011, when Canada has vacated Afghanistan for good.
In the meantime, those pushing for public inquiries and media exposes should be viewed for what they are – traitors.
Traitors to those in the midst of battle and traitors to the memory of the 142 Canadians who have paid the ultimate price. “
I’m not going to get into a debate about the efforts in Afghanistan, the detainee question, or any of the other politics. What I am going to get into is the implication that anyone who seeks to question the military and/or government is a traitor, akin to a Nazi collaborator.
Before we proceed, let me make it clear: I have never been involved in reporting or covering anything remotely related to the war in Afghanistan in a professional capacity. Lest someone fact check me, I will go ahead and say that I did write on it a few times as a volunteer at my university newspaper. If you search “andrew kurjata”+afghanistan on Google, the top hit is an editorial I wrote criticizing Dr. Michael Byers for employing a logical fallacy in his argument that Canada should no longer be involved in Afghanistan. So when it comes to criticizing faulty arguments about Afghanistan, I am an equal-opportunity offender.
So let’s get on with it, shall we?
The editorial implies that all those who seek to criticize or question the methods of those in power should be viewed as traitors. I can’t believe I actually have to make such an elementary point to a someone who purports to be a professional journalist, but isn’t the ability to criticize and question those in power the exact point of democracy? And isn’t that exactly what our military is meant to defend and uphold?
What if the BC Civil Liberties Union had been around during World War II? the Citizen asks. Well, what if it had? Better yet, what if it had been around on the German side? And actually had power? And the German citizenry had the power to find out exactly what their government and military were doing, and then had the power and tenacity to question it, and maybe open some inquiries? No, wait, that would make them turncoats and parasites, at least in the Citizen’s eyes. Better that we blindly follow our leaders, then. Lord knows that never has negative consequences.
Again, I’m not implying that Canada’s governing parties are akin to Hitler’s upper echelons, nor am I seeking to draw parallels between the Canadian military and the Nazis. But I would ask the mysterious writer of Citizen editorials that the next time they decide to start shouting out “traitor” and “parasite” to anyone who seeks to take advantage of the freedoms afforded to us by this country (and defended by our military), that they take a moment and think about the sorts of people who have used these tactics in the past.
There’s a survey asking for feedback on the BC Transit website. One of the questions is:
Do you have any other comments about the BC Transit website that you would like to provide?
To which I said:
This is a very outdated site. For a person unfamiliar with the city and existing routes, this website is actually inferior to using a physical, paper schedule. At least in that situation you can see overlapping routes easily and mark particular points using your fingers or a pencil. Here we get individual, hard-to-read images of this that are difficult to read and fail to integrate information from more than one page. As someone who has lived here my whole life and uses the bus on a daily basis, the website is only useful as a quick check to see schedule updates. If I were a new user, I would call a cab.
It would be nice to see ANY use of the advances in online map-making and trip planning on this site.
The fact that there isn’t an RSS feed for transit alerts is astounding– people should not have to navigate to the website everyday on the off-chance that there’s a transit alert. Transit alerts are just that– alerts– not regularly planned events. It is not something that’s going to be incorporated into most people’s daily schedules, nor should it be in the age of feed readers, Facebook pages, and Twitter. There is very little to making it possible for people to subscribe to alerts using SMS (text messaging), email, or RSS feeds, and I am surprised this has yet to happen.
The number-one comment that I hear from anyone when I mention that I take the bus is how difficult it is to figure out the bus system in this city (Prince George). A well-designed website could help alleviate at least part of that problem and bring in many more transit users, particularly casual ones who will not invest in the half-hour project that is trying to figure out how to get from point “A” to point “B” under the current system. Please, do not underestimate the value of this website to attracting new users. A well-designed, easily navigable public transit website is a key component to any long-term growth in ridership.
If you agree, say so (and feel free to copy and paste from me).
Today, the final physical copy of Cutbanks magazine hits newsstands, coffee shops, and bookstores throughout Prince George. This was a valiant one-man project taken on by my former co-volunteer-worker Tyler Clarke, when we were both editors at the UNBC newspaper Over the Edge. He was tireless then, and he became even more tireless as he took on the ambitious project of writing, producing, and distributing a monthly magazine devoted to the arts and culture scene in Prince George. Unfortunately, the costs and the time have proven to be not worth it, and he is retiring the physical version, with the online version continuing for as long as he still has the time. I feel bad I didn’t contribute more; it’s a great idea and it’s unfair that the burden has been entirely on him, especially when there is so much interest in it. I did, however, contribute one thing to it: some photos and this essay on my favourite piece of grafitti: the Listen Bird. Here it is, along with some photos and links.
****
The Listen Bird lives in my neighbourhood. At least that’s where I first encountered him, sitting on a garbage can at the entrance to the local park. I was amused by the simplicity of the design and the curious message, just a few circles and lines attached to a speech bubble intoning the viewer to do just one thing: “Listen.” I snapped a picture with my cellphone camera, made it my default background, and moved on.
Over the next few years, I started to encounter him everywhere I went. At first I thought he was limited to my immediate neighbourhood, the Heritage region near 1st and Foothills. Then I saw him cropping up downtown and thought he was a civic thing, but by the time I caught a glimpse of him on my commute through downtown Victoria, I realized that this was part of a much larger phenomena. When I started getting serious about photography (and by serious I mean actually owning and using a camera more than twice a year), collecting instances of the Listen Bird seemed like an obvious subject. And indeed it was, as someone had already started a Flickr pool (basically, a shared online photo album) devoted to sightings of the Listen Bird worldwide. Here, you can view pictures of the bird from coast to coast, be it the stylized versions found in Montreal alleys, the oversize blocks taking roost on top of the Edmonton skyline, or a bilingual pair recently spotted at a downhill ski resort.
According to discussion on the Flickr group, no one really knows who’s responsible for the first Listen Bird. It’s quite possible it originated as an armadillo in the mid-1980s, and was the work of a “bizarre songwriter and musician named Robin, last name unknown.” The geography, at least, seems credible, as an inordinate number of the birds posted to the group come from the Albertan capital. I’ve always thought of Edmonton as what Prince George would look like if it were to suddenly have a population boom and failed to do any urban planning, so perhaps there’s something innate to northern, semi-industrial cities that give the bird’s message poignance. While Vancouver and Montreal wear their culture on their sleeves, the charms of Prince George and Edmonton are apparent only to those who take the time to search for them, letting them soak in over the course of a number of years. Look at this magazine. It’s devoted to uncovering the hidden culture of Prince George, every issue flying in the face of the chorus of voices singing “There’s nothing to do here!” Against that backdrop, the Listen Bird’s message takes on an almost political tone.
One of my greatest fears is that one day an overzealous downtown beautifiation project will eradicate the Listen Bird’s presence. Yes, he’ll survive in the bathrooms of Books and Company, but what of the ones hidden away in bowling alley doorways, back alley bus stops, or the downtown post offices? The Listen Bird is public art in its purest form, given without compensation or credit, its message as open to interpretation as any other, its presence cropping up in unexpected places, giving the urban elements of Prince George a cohesive vibe while linking it to similar projects across the country. I don’t know if it’s one or two or more artists spreading the bird around the city, if there’s some underground movement in tagging culture that I’m not a part of, or if it’s just something that spreads virally, the way things used to before the days of YouTube and email forwards. And I don’t want to know. The anonymity of it gives the message a life of its own, untethered to a singular persona or public figure. Mao Tse Tung famously began his political journey with a 4000 character screed scrawled on the bathroom walls of his college, or so the story goes. Factual or not, it is true that many a political movement has galvanized public support by posting their message in public places where all can see, regardless of race or class or religious screed. And while the anonymous nature of the painter ensures they will never reach political notoriety, it also gives their message a time-and-placelessness that no personal manifesto can ever achieve.
As someone with no easily definable skills (communications professional with a political science degree?), I’ve had to spend a fair amount of time self-promoting. I’m not alone in this, as the internet age has rendered Google the new resume and Twitter the new handshake circuit. The Listen Bird is an antidote to all that. Whether he’s at the edge of the forest or the back of a bus stop, he serves as a reminder that there’s always a story left untold. The people and the things you can find in this city are as interesting and enlightening as anywhere else in the world. We have languages, bordering on extinction, that are absolutely unique to this geography and the culture that came out of it. Our history, written or oral, is as fascinating and as complicated as any metropolitan centre or rural outpost. The elements at play as we seek to define ourselves in the face of the 21st century can and does fuel debate as heightened as anything going on in the power corridors of Vancouver, Victoria, Ottawa. And the arts and music being created here may sometimes be messy and terrible, but they can also reach moments of unqualified greatness that I rank as among the best I’ve ever experienced. This is open to everyone. We can all find it. All we have to do is listen.
There’s a lot of emphasis put on connecting with online audiences these days, hell, I’ve carved out a very small niche for myself as someone who sort of understands how to use the internet (an area that I think will soon cease to be a matter of expertise and more a matter of course). But I don’t think you can underestimate the power of the physical poster for attracting a new audience: everyone goes grocery shopping, not everyone spends time clicking through local blogs. Which is why in the lead-up to an event I’m promoting, I’m attempting to map out everywhere in Prince George that posters can and should be placed. It’s an open project, so anyone with information to add can and should do so. You can find and add to the map here, and leave comments here.
Want to see how to redo your bathroom on the cheap? Here’s what we did:
First find, yourself some discarded tile. Look for local “freecycle” exchanges, or swap shops or whatever.
Then, smash ’em up.
Rip out the old floor.
Mix up some thinset:
Then lay the tile out like a freeform puzzle, “buttering” the back of each piece with the goop.
Finally, add the grout. We also did a coat of paint, just to change everything.
I should also note, this was entirely the vision of my far more artistically-inclined girlfriend. I would never have thought of this.
I haven’t been keeping up with music as much as I used to, which is ironic in light of my new job (although also changing because of it).
However, this morning proved to me that 2010 is shaping up to be a bumper crop of music, particularly of the Canuck variety (although that’s been the case for the last five years). This morning I found new tracks by the New Pornographers and Broken Social Scene, was emailed a new Said the Whale EP, and just now was directed to a new Feist track. And my favourite track of the year remains the new Besnard Lakes single.
If you’re like me and are just finding out about these, here they are for your listening pleasure:
New Pornographers – Your Hands (Together)
Broken Social Scene – World Sick
Said the Whale – the Fish and the Stars
Feist- He Was Free
Besnard Lakes – Albatross
*Update* And I forgot to mention, I’ve finally listened to the new Japandroids and Caribou tracks, both of which are great, especially since I’ve never liked Caribou before.
Japandroids – Art Czars
Caribou – Odessa
*Update 2*
via Brenda Lee, a new Mother Mother song:
* Views expressed in this blog are my personal opinion, and do not reflect the views of any of my
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April 20 2010 | ∞
There’s a new Shad song out, heavier than his past stuff, but still of his brilliant wordplay. This is just scratching the surface, the song is full of classic lines. These are just a few of the stand-outs:
“Maybe I’m not big because I don’t blog or Twitter… haha I’m bitter”
“My name ain’t L’il Wayne Gretzky but you know better than to check me”
“More mac than ten tech geeks dissing XP”
“the new Shad’s out, better spell it S-H-A-D-D the way I spaz out”
“Making fans multiply like a coefficient”
You can hear the whole things over at Exclaim!, then come back here and tell me your own favourites.
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