Archive for October, 2007

Oct 29 2007

Peace in our time, Stopwar.ca style

Who likes war? Not me. Neither does anyone I know. Yet the latest outing by the Stopwar.ca people outside the Vancouver Art Gallery just showcased the problem with the peace movement today: hijacking by loopy people.

Millions of Canadians would protest for peace if it didn’t mean standing next to dinks holding giant banners stating that 9/11 was an inside job.

How would it have felt for featured speaker Afghan parliamentarian Malalai Joya (suspended from the Afghan parliament for rightly calling out her fellow politicians for being war criminals and drug lords) to realize that she’d fallen in with a bunch of wingnuts? It must have been a hard thing for someone with such apparent integrity to make that sacrifice in order to keep bringing attention to her troubled homeland.

Joya has a lot of valid criticisms of NATO’s involvement in Afghanistan. Sadly, all of it was pretty much ignored as the crowd droned internally with their “Out Now” mantra – a position which Joya doesn’t actually seem to share, if one listens carefully enough.

“Out Now” and “Leave as soon as possible” are not the same thing.

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Oct 25 2007

The masks are coming off the stooges

So says Vancouver journalist Ian King, about shallow moronic apologists for anti-Western zealots. The smug jerks are hitting out blindly at the latest Tyee column from acclaimed author and deadly accurate journalist Terry Glavin.

Glavin once again rips into the significant segment of the anti-imperialist left in Canada that is mute about the struggle of Iranian dissidents against the Islamic Republic’s thuggish regime.

Time and again in the comments section, the usual suspects trot out the same tired and dishonest rhetoric to defend their hero, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Once more, they gloss over the regime’s failings to strike at phantom Neo-con spies.

Yet Glavin couldn’t be clearer that Canadians who are upset with the totalitarian Iranian regime can condemn it without fearing to be seen as puppets of Bush:

Ottawa has taken a leading role at the UN in the focus on Iranian human rights, and after Kazemi’s murder in 2003, diplomatic engagement with Tehran was confined to human-rights questions. Canadians are well placed, then, to focus on shaming the regime and exposing its tyrannical violence, simply by helping pro-democracy forces tell their stories to the outside world.

King is dead-on with his own take on condemning Iranian human rights abuses, supporting dissidents and protesting any invasion of the Islamic Republic:

It is possible to hold all three views at once, rather than simply defaulting to “the enemy of my enemy is my friend”. This is not rocket science.

Exactly.

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Oct 22 2007

No thank you, Anti-Poverty Committee

Vancouver is tied with Calgary as the most polite major city in Canada (Moncton actually finished first of any municipality in the survey, so small-town values still count for something). Evidently, the pollsters were never in touch with any member of Vancouver’s Anti-Poverty Committee.

Here is a group which has abandoned any effort to protest its legitimate concerns over housing the homeless in favor of shock tactics and thuggery.

The Hell on Earth that is Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside has many causes, among them a decision long ago to release all mentally ill Canadians from asylums on to the streets, a thriving drug trade (the bane of any city with a half-decent port) and an extreme climate that makes most other Canadian cities uninhabitable six months out of the year for those without shelter.

But breaking into buildings for illegal squats that will inevitably get broken up by police is becoming a very tired tactic for getting attention, and a useless one in terms of actually getting homeless people indoors. So long as homeless people are represented by such dorks, they are badly served.

By the way, kudos to the Campbell government for providing $41 million in new funding for homeless shelters.

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Oct 18 2007

Canada’s Afghan mission gets unexpected boost

“We were wrong,” says dumbstruck Mobilization Against War and Occupation Vancouver representative Kira Koshelanyk. “Most Afghans actually think their country is headed in the right direction, and just 15 per cent of them want foreign troops out of their country right now. The rest think NATO should stay, at least until the country is secure. Who knew?”

Well, the statistics from the CBC and the Munk Centre are true, even if the quote and attribution shown above are entirely false. Koshelanyk and her colleagues at MAWO said no such thing.

Of course MAWO has no intention of issuing a press release showing that more than 70 per cent of Afghans think their president is doing a good job in running the country (Try to remember the last time a Canadian leader got such high marks). Considering the guy is leading the largely corrupt administration of a country that is facing an existential threat from opium-financed jihadist thugs, that’s a lot of admiration for a so-called puppet regime.

Will Afghanistan ever become the kind of country where Canadians can travel anywhere safely outside of a NATO convoy? The history of the country certainly doesn’t lend itself to optimistic predictions. But progress has been made; A real estate building boom in Kabul speaks volumes about the Afghan population’s morale.

Thanks to 24 Hours Vancouver reporter Ian King for the heads up on the poll. Nice post, Ian.

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Oct 17 2007

Third Tuesday Vancouver: face to Facebook

Published by jnarvey under MyLife, Vancouver, social media

At Third Tuesday Vancouver, a cool mix of Vancouver-based marketers, public relations experts, writers and technologists are doing their darndest to get a handle on social media for communications, marketing and society – over a couple of beers, natch.

There’s a lot to learn from social media experts like Tod Maffin and Tanya Davis. One point (of many) that I took last night from a talk with featured Third Tuesday Vancouver presenter Joseph Thornley of Thornley Fallis: It doesn’t take all that long to become an expert and potentially monetize social media applications. (Full disclosure: while Joseph did not actually get to give his presentation due to a sudden venue change, I did manage to pick his brain later in the evening).

The process of figuring out how to convert Facebook links and Twitter messages into cash is sort of like a gold rush where no one actually knows where the gold is. The central problem is mitigated somewhat by the fact that you can Digg for the stuff from the comfort of your living room.

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