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Author Topic: Oh Canada - The Good, The Bad and The Ugly  (Read 13944 times)
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Mark CDT
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Time for Social and Economic Justice !

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« Reply To This #40 on: August 11, 2008, 07:53:23 AM »

I'm sure Canada will get a medal soon!


-Scott

Yes - we are expected to get several Gold Medals in both snowball-fighting and igloo building - oh, shoot - that's the Winter Olympics

Anyway, here's one of our athletes in training

« Last Edit: August 11, 2008, 06:22:06 PM by Mark CDT » Logged

Universal peace among all peoples is not possible until all peoples are equal.
Evelyn Yvonne Theriault
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« Reply To This #41 on: November 22, 2008, 08:55:26 PM »

Jessica Flannery seems to have visited Ontario recently.

Ontario Association of Food Banks to welcome Kiva.org microlending pioneer
    TORONTO, Oct. 27 /CNW/ - Social entrepreneur (see www.kiva.org) Jessica
Flannery (http://oafb.ca/index.php?id=404), co-founder of Kiva Microfunds (see
http://www.kiva.org/about/how/), the groundbreaking online organization that
allows individuals to lend money directly to entrepreneurs in the developing
world, is making her first Canadian appearance next month as guest speaker at
the Ontario Association of Food Banks' (www.oafb.ca) upcoming second annual
Thought for Food Gala 2008.
    "Jessica uses the 'hand-to-hand' idea of helping others and
revolutionized the way ordinary people can create positive change on a global
scale," said Adam Spence, Executive Director of the OAFB. "By inviting Jessica
to our event, we hope to demonstrate that it is possible to make substantial
change in the lives of others through small, targeted efforts. OAFB counts on
this kind of effort every day."
    To date, more than 350,000 lenders from 78 countries have provided
funding for 66,000 entrepreneurs in 41 developing countries through Kiva.org,
the first organization to use an innovative peer-to-peer lending model to fund
micro-entrepreneurs. More than $47 million has been loaned through Kiva.org
from as little as $25 per loan.

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Evelyn Yvonne Theriault, Teacher
Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world. Nelson Mandela
Evelyn Yvonne Theriault
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« Reply To This #42 on: November 22, 2008, 09:27:40 PM »

Link to a Canadian blog entry about Kiva - Croft's Travels:

http://croftstravels.blogspot.com/2008/06/kiva-chance-to-make-difference.html

Extract:
Thursday, June 19, 2008
Kiva – A Chance To Make A Difference
How can a retired Telephone Worker in Canada have a direct impact on the lives of a few Working Poor in Developing Nations? I think I have just found out how!
During our travels through Mexico we got to see first hand how people can create a thriving business and provide for their families with a very small initial investment. We saw a tiny business operating out of a stairwell, cutting up mixed fruit and selling it in plastic cups to people walking down the street. We saw tiny (two or three plastic table) Taco Stands doing a thriving business with nothing more than a small gas barbecue to cook on. There are countless other examples but the commonality between all of them is that only a very small initial investment is needed to get them operational and to break the cycle of poverty. It is hard for us to realize but a large percentage of the world’s families live on less than $5 per day......

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Evelyn Yvonne Theriault, Teacher
Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world. Nelson Mandela
A Nonny Mouse
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« Reply To This #43 on: March 02, 2010, 10:24:59 PM »

Not much has been said on KF about the 2010 Olympics just completed in Vancouver.  It has been great, however, to see one of my favorite countries in the headlines every day for something good.  Bill Plaschke is a sports writer for The Los Angeles Times, and while he's usually a crusty, curmudgeonly sort of writer, he wrote an article for the Sunday issue that I really loved and wanted to post here, for the country and the KFs I have such affection for:



Goaltender Robert Luongo displays his country's flag at Canada Hockey Place after the Canadians' 3-2 victory Sunday over the U.S.

Canada is a Winter Games Wonderland

From Vancouver, Canada

It was after midnight, a week ago, the U.S. had earlier defeated Canada in a preliminary-round Olympic hockey game, the emptying streets wet, the mood soggy.

I was returning from our nightly visit to the giant four-pronged Olympic flame with my 15-year-old daughter, Mary Clare, who was wearing an American flag like a cape, and a smile like a necklace.

It was one of the first times she wore something that didn't represent her high school or favorite sports team. It was one of the first moments she may have realized the pride in being an American.

And here came the Canadian.

He appeared to be in his late 20s. He was wearing a scruffy beard, a pale bandanna, and wild stare. He jumped in front of Mary Clare on a darkened patch of sidewalk and started shouting.

"Eh, eh, eh!" he said.

She froze. Her brave and resourceful father also, um, froze.

At which point the man stuck out his hand.

"High-five, eh?" he said. "Great game, America. You won fair and square. We'll see you in the finals."

Before disappearing into the shadows, the man looked back at me with what appeared to be a wink.

"I know what you were thinking, but that's not how we do it here," he said. "We're Canadian."

I thought of this incident later when, spying on Mary Clare's Facebook page as all brave and resourceful fathers should do, I came across a line about her Olympic experience that stunned me in its simple honesty.

"I love Canada," she wrote.

Come to think of it, so do I. Forget the medal counts and podium ceremonies, there was only one true winner here, the beauty and breadth of its land equaled only by the daily kindness of its people.

Canada, you were gold. For two weeks, you lived your anthem, your hearts glowing like that moon that hung nightly over the Burrard Inlet, a light on the front porch of a house that felt like a home.

There was tragedy here in the death of Georgian luger Nodar Kumaritashvili, embarrassment in the opening ceremony torch malfunction, carelessness in the ice resurfacing machines that broke during long-track speedskating, crassness of a gold-medal- winning Canadian women's hockey team celebrating on the ice with booze and cigars.

None of it was the fault of the Canadian people, who turned the Winter Olympics into the Warmer Olympics, filling the city with friendliness, filling the stands with good cheer even while booing the USA hockey team, sharing not only their streets but themselves.

There were women giving me directions as if they were my mother reading me a recipe, hand on my back, walking me toward my destination -- "OK, now, you go down here a little ways, pass that cute little syrup store, make a left at that fountain."

There were guys who, standing in one of the endless lines here that the Canadians accepted with such good humor, would ask me if I'm having fun, and did I need anything, and oh, here, let me explain curling, everyone a cousin, every gathering a family reunion.

Then there was the Canadian who literally gave me the shirt off her back. She was a manager at a local bakery that properly boasted of Vancouver's best cheesecake. After a couple of memorable visits there, I wondered whether they sold T-shirts featuring the name of the shop.

The manager went into the back and came out with red shirt that looked similar to the one she had been wearing. Take it, she said. No charge. Thanks for coming.

Finally, there was the ski lift.

I may be the first person in Winter Olympics history to admit this, but I'm terrified of ski lifts. A horrible experience on a long and rickety Alaskan lift 25 years ago made me swear to avoid them forever. Imagine, then, my nerves upon learning that in order to cover the Alpine ski events here, I had to take a ski lift up to the media center.

Sitting next to unsuspecting colleague Chris Dufresne, I held my breath going up and survived. The problem was coming down. It was late, and there was nobody working the lift. Just riding that sucker was hard enough without figuring out how to climb aboard and pull down the bar and actually get off.

That is when she appeared, a local volunteer returning to her family. As she prepared to board the lift, I shouted for her to wait for me. She did.

I told her my problem. She understood.

She helped me board with my giant briefcase, asked about my family as we rode down through the tops of the trees, then carefully instructed me how to climb off at the bottom without falling on my face, drawing a few deserving snickers from some nearby teenagers.

"Hey, he doesn't do this much, OK?" she said, scolding.

Canada, you were gold.
~~~

 Kiss
« Last Edit: March 02, 2010, 11:06:28 PM by A Nonny Mouse » Logged
Jan & John
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« Reply To This #44 on: March 02, 2010, 11:33:40 PM »

Nonny, you're a really really nice person. Smiley

Many of us here in Calgary relived the excitement from Calgary '88...

and yes, we are proud to be Canadian (although I did turn off the closing ceremonies early).

Like everywhere, there are good apples and bad, but all round...

it's a great place to live.

-jan-  Kiss back
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AccountAbility
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« Reply To This #45 on: March 03, 2010, 12:48:11 PM »

Every day I look over at Canada-- some days with longing, others with little thought.  It's one of of those "you can see it but you can't get there from here" situations.  Each year we try to get a Vancouver "fix"; we've only been to Whistler in the summer.

Although the US didn't win that final hockey game for the gold, I thought it was fitting for Canada to win.  After all, it was theirs at the start, back at the first Winter Olympics.  To quote factcheck:

"In the first Olympic Winter Games, in 1924, the Canadian hockey team won all five of their games and outscored their opponents 110 to 3. Source: Vancouver Organizing Committee."

So, Yay Canada.

Dan
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Charlee
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« Reply To This #46 on: March 07, 2010, 01:35:21 AM »

Dan it is nice to know a fellow Washingtonian who was OK with Canada winning THE Hockey Game. 
If we couldn't win Canada was the country to loose to.
 
Two of my grown kids made it up to Vancouver to watch the 4 man bobsledding which we took gold in.  They had an absolute blast and said the people were friendly and helpful.

All I can say is        "WAY TO GO CANADA"   
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Canadian Here
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« Reply To This #47 on: March 07, 2010, 06:55:56 PM »

Thanks, Charlee!  Thank You
Glad to hear that we treated your kids well and that they had a good time and got to see their "home country" take home a gold medal...awesome!
It's always nice to get favourable comments from visitors.
Next time, you ought to come, too!

Lorna (& "The Critters")

P.S. Glad you've visited Dan. Come again, soon! (Sorry we beat your team in men's hockey but it IS our national sport!)
« Last Edit: March 07, 2010, 07:00:13 PM by Canadian Here » Logged
Oriana
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« Reply To This #48 on: March 08, 2010, 08:22:54 PM »

During the Vancover Olympics NBC (?) had a program on Canada hosted by Tom Brokaw which documented how the people of Gander helped Americans whos flights were diverted on 9/11, the people of Gander gave of everything they had. My husband and I were moved to tears by their overwhelming generosity. I rarely see a program about Canada, it was really, really nice to get to learn about Canada during the 2010 Olympics and now Canada will always have a very special place in our hearts.
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alan
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« Reply To This #49 on: March 08, 2010, 11:05:30 PM »

I was in Gander last September. It's a funny town in that it's not very old, built in its current form after WW II, and well inland. Most towns in Newfoundland are hundreds of years old and on the coast. Gander is where it is because it's flat, and that was a good place to put an airport. Originally it was little more than an aerodrome which got plenty of use as a refuelling stop for airplanes crossing the Atlantic, especially during the war. With the arrival of longer-range jets, the airport lost its purpose for Transatlantic flights.

The town of Gander was originally built with a street grid in the shape of a goose (a male goose is a "gander"). It still has a big airport which is big enough that it's an alternate landing site for the Space Shuttle. And it's a handy place to divert planes that are on the way across the Atlantic and need to land in a hurry.
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"Poverty is the parent of revolution and crime."
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